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lJrlny~
Speaking of
and for
Floyd County
'PRESTONSBURG.
KENTUCKY 416J3
O!n.unty Mimrs
USPS-2027-0000
Volume LVII
No.1
WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 4, 1984
Read Each Week by More Than 11,700 Families.
Two Floyd Natives Named
To State Cabinet Posts
Evans, Wells Are· New Secretaries ~ARRIAGELICENsEs
.
' Lab0 r
Of Energy
Two former Floyd residents were
the final three Cabinet appomtees named last week by Gov. Martha Layne Collins Auxier native John
Calhoun Wells, Jr. is Secretary of the
new Labor Cabinet. George E. Evans,
Jr:,. formerly of Wayland, replaces
Wilham B. Sturgill as head of the
Energy Cabinet.
Wells, 38, was state commissioner of
labor from October, 1981 until December, 1982, when he resigned to manage
Grady Stumbo's campaign for governor.
Before his term as labor commissioner,
he had served as commissioner of the
Department of Manpower Services
while Stumbo was head of the Human
Resources Cabinet. He returned to state
government last July as deputy
secretary of tht> Public Protection and
Regulation Cabinet.
Collins <:4llled Wells a man of "broad
background and vast knowledge of the
field of labor," and said his term as
labor commissioner under Gov. John Y.
Brown gave him the experience needed
for his new post.
In fullfillment of a campaign pledge,
Collins said she would sign an executive
order raising the Labor Department to
Cabinet status. It was formerly part of
the Public Protection and Regulation
Cabinet.
Evans, who is board chairman of the
Bank of Lexington, was once president
of National Mines and later president of
the coal development division of the National Steel Corporation.
a~ong
Reduced Terms
Meted Two In
Plea Bargains
Two men began serving four-year
terms in the state penitentiary last week
as the result of plea bargains in circuit
court here.
Curtis Moore, 35, of Inez, who was
originally indicted for first-degree
burglary, pleaded guilty to third-degree
burglary, Dec. 13. Barry Dean Moore,
19, of Minnie, who faced a second-degree
manslaughter charge, pleaded guilty
earlier in December to a charge of reckless homicide. The two men are not
related.
Poiice said-Curtis Moore broke into
the house of Rhoda Stone on the PikeFloyd Hollow, August 16, 1980, stealing
firearms and ammunition valued at
$740. The crime remained unsolved,
however, until May 10 this year, when
Linda Sue Moore, his ex-wife, implihim in the break-in.
A certified mine foreman, Moore has
oeen unemploy~d recently. He is the
father of three children and four stepchildren. He could have received a
20..year sentence if convicted of the
original charge.
Barry Dean Moore was driving a vehicle that allegedly crossed the center line
and collided with one being driven by
Parcella Collins, killing her. Police said
Moore had been drinking beer at a
friend's house just prior to the accident,
which happened April 29, 1982.
Less than a week earlier, he was convicted in district court of speeding. Four
earlier charges- of reckless driving,
drunk driving, attempting to elude
police, and drinking on the highwaywere dismissed. In May last year,
Moore pleadec! guilty to a charge of
public intoxication.
A resident of Sizemore Branch, Moore
is married, with one child. He could have
received a 1Q-year sentence if convicted
the original charge.
Ricky Lee Elkins, 28, of Prestonsburg
and Marcella Burchet~, 32, of Martin.'
Keith Edward Bolen, 21, of Wayland:
and Donna Sue Gore, 17, of Lackey; Bobby Eugene Hall, 26, of Emma, and Bon
me Jean Fraley, 18, of Prestonsburg·
Basil Lee Gar~in, 33, of Pikeville, and
Shelvy Jean Riffe, 21, of Betsy Layne.
SUITS FILED
Pikeville National Bank vs. Kenny
and Jerri O'Neil; Larry Branham vs.
Angela Michelle Branham· Edmond
Watkins vs. West Virginia Rebel Coal
Co. Inc. et al; United Federal Savings
and Loan vs. Lester and Edna Hall·
Kentucky Finance Co. vs. John Spradli~
et al; Karen Jean Hall Deerfield vs.
Charles Van Deerfield; Marrow
Bentley, Jr. vs. Old Republic Ins. Co.;
Gayle Flannery vs. Thurman Flannery·
Palmer Crider vs. Betty Cride;
DeRossett; Tractor and Crane of Dallas
vs. Rebel Coal Co. Inc.
Three men arrested last month when
state police raided a building at Beaver
pleaded guilty yesterday (Tuesday) to
gambling or other charges.
Convicted of promoting and permitting gambling, Dester Hamilton, 54, of
Beaver, was fined $100 by District Judge
Harold J. Stumbo and also ordered to
pay court costs of $47.50. He also pleaded guilty to two counts of illegally selling whiskey, for which court costs alone
were levied.
Ermal Bentley, 56, convicted of promoting gambling, was put on 30 days'
probation, fined $100, and ordered to pay
court costs. Charles Bentley, 32, who
pleaded guilty to carrying a concealed
weapon, had the gun confiscated.
Hamilton was accused of running
poker games in an outbuilding on his
property and of selling half-pints of
(See Story No. 1, Page 4)
A LAKE FROZEN
<Photo by Allen Bolling}
.
almost solid and views of rugged ridgelines make the drive around .Jenny
Wiley State Park and its environs a pleasant experience, even in winter.
Watergap Church, Catholics
Negotiate Property Trade
Younce Claims
Self Defense
In Bar Fight
When he broke a pool cue over a
patron's head, he was acting in self
defense, the proprietor of a Melvin
saloon told Alcoholic Beverage Control
Administrator Denzil Allen at a hearing
last Thursday.
Johnny Younce, 25, who operates
Johnny's Place, on KY 122, faces possible suspension or revocation of his retail
beer license, following charges that he
allowed the premises to become disorderly on Dec. 5.
According to the citation issul'ld by
Allen, Younce, Jimmy Johnson, and two
other patrons became involved in a fight
which resulted in Johnson's being taken
to McDowell Hospital for treatment of
a head injury.
Deputy Sheriff Harold Johnson said
Johnson told him three men, one of
whom he identified as Younce, beat him.
He has responded on several other occasions to complaints involving
Johnny's Place, the deputy said.
The bar operator said the problem
began when Johnson lit up a marijuana
joint and he asked him to leave. "He
swung and I hit him with a pool stick,"
Younce said.
Questioned by Assistant County Attorney Janet L. Stumbo, Younce admit-,
ted he struck Johnson twice with the pool
cue, even though the victim began falling with the first blow. Because Johnson
was large of build and had a reputation
for violence, he feared for his safety,
Younce said.
In arguing that the saloon keeper
should be penalized, Stumbo said it was
Younce's responsibility to prevent a customer from becoming rowdy. Moreover,
Younce himself had become violent, and
apparently used excessive force, in
quelling the disturbance, she said.
"I do not feel that I'm a violent person," Younce replied. "I did ask him to
leave. I asked him in a calm voice. I feel
I did not do anything that could have
been avoided."
Younce was brought in handcuffs to
the tearing from a Floyd County Jail
cell where he has been held since Dec.
15 on a charge that he deserted from the
army two years ago.
He is the second Floyd licensee in a
month to face administrative action.
Lloyd Johnson, operator of P and L Carryout at Harold, had his license suspended for three days in December for selling beer to two juveniles. Shortly before
the penalty was announced, the beer
store was gutted by fire .
Yearly Observance Recalls
Early Mountain Tradition
The time for Santa Claus. gift-giving
and stockings hung with care may be
past but an almost unique observance
has become an annual event
r the years in the Prestonsburg
area mak-es the convincing point that
most folks' farewell to Christmas may
be a bit premature.
Following a centuries-old custom
which, like many other traditions,
lingered in the isolation of the Appalachians, "Old Christma s "
celebrates January 6 as the original
date for the observance of the birth of
Christ.
According to Edith F James. of
Prestonsburg, noted folk lorist and
musician who revived the custom here
in the 1930's, our European forebears.
3 Plead Guilty
In Beaver Raid
until 1752, celebrated Christmas on
January 6 a s prescribed by the older.
pre-Gregorian. or Julian calendar.
Reverance for tradition died hard in
the minds of the early settlers.
especially m the coves and hollows of
the southern mountains . and Mrs .
James. as a child remembers tales of
"Old Christmas" - of the cattle "lowing" at midnight and even acquiring
the ability of spt>ech . "We children
wert' determined to see thesP wonderful things, " she reca lis. "but . of
course. we always fell aslt>t>p."
Unlikt> many. who have sought to
escape their mountain background for
fear of being labeled "hillbilly," Mrs.
James was bleso;;ed with the rnre ahili cSee Story No . 4. Page 4l
Members and former members of the
Water Gap Freewill Baptist Church
disagree even about the nature of their
quarrel. Some call it an issue of doctrine; others a matter of personalities;
still others a question of money.
In any event, four years after they
dedicated a handsome church building
on the Lancer-Water Gap road, church
members are tr~ing to sell it.
Talks are under way between the
Water Gap church and representatives
of the Floyd county Roman Catholic
community, which operates churches in
P =tonsb g ar.d Ma rtin. A plan beinl1
considered would see an exchange of
church properties between the Water
Gap Baptists and Catholics of St.
Theodore's Church on Third Avenue
here.
Members of the Water Gap church,
burdened by debt and faced with a sharp
fall-off in membership, are said to be
anxious to conclude the deal by Feb. 1.
When appraisals of the two properties
are completed this week, the proposed
exchange will be discussed with the
Roman Catholic Bishop of Covington,
who would have to approve the deal , a
church official said.
The Water Gap church was opened in
November, 1979 by a group which had
split frotn the Highland Avenue Freewill
Baptist Church here. Value of the property and plant, which includes a
275-seat sanctuary, a fellowship hall,
and eight classrooms, was put at
$350,000.
TAKING DOWN CHRISTMAS decorations is always a bit
depressing-an official end of sorts to a special time of year.
But it's nice that the lights and tinsel aren't left for months to
weather as was the common practice years ago when
residents wagered whether or not the decorations would be
removed before the appearance of the first wild flowers.
All Not Well at Pike College
But Dispute Kept Under Wraps
All is apparently not well at Pikeville man of the board of trustees, insisted
College, but faculty, administrators, and that the differences between faculty and
trustees have reached agreement on at administrators were "a family matter"
least one issue- to keep their problems and refused to answer for the record any
questions about the nature of the colunder wraps.
The first public hint of disharmony lege~s problems.
The promised meeting between trusthere came three weeks ago in local
news reports that a large majority of the tees and faculty was held in fact that
private school's faculty had voted no night, with faculty members explaining
confidence in President Jackson 0. Hall. in turn the reasons for their dissatisfacIn a statement released Dec. 15 by . tion. <Of 42 faculty members eligible to
Burlin Coleman, a Pikeville banker who vote, 31 had reportedly voted no conis chairman of the college trustee's ex- fidence in the president. Of the remainecutive committee, trustees affirmed ing 11 , two voted confidence in Hall, six
their "continued confidence <inl and abstained, two blank ballots were cast,
support" of Hall and pointed to money and one person was absent.>
Mark Sohn, associate professor of psyworries as the source of the president's
chology and chairman of the faculty
differences with his teaching staff.
association's executive committee, said
"Financial problems the college is ex- his organization would have no comperiencing have caused an undue ment on the action, at least until the
amount of stress for the faculty and Dr. faculty's grievances had been presented
Hall," the news release said.
to the trustees. After meeting with
But the statement, which issued from trustees Dec. 14 and 15, Sohn said the
a joint meeting of the president, trustees faculty group had agreed to continue its
and faculty representatives the night silence
before, indicated no change of heart on
Neither Coleman nor Walter May. two
the part of faculty members who, two of the trustees who reportedly met with
days earlier, had expressed their dis- the entire faculty Dec . 15. returned a
satisfaction with Hall's administration
reporter's telephone calls after the
The statement distributed by Coleman meeting. And Sister Catherine Mahady,
to reporters m his office at the Pikeville the college's vice·president for business
National Bank, of which he is president, affairs, said she would have no comment
acknowledged "areas of difference" and until the administration had solutions to
said a meeting would be held soon bel· propose for the faculty's problems.
ween trustees and the entire faculty to
The statement issued Dec. 15 pointed
hear the teachers' concerns.
CSt>t> Story Nn 2. Page 4l
But Coleman and Bill Martin, chair·
The original pastor, the Rev. Paul E.
Daniel, was succeeded the following
year by Pastor Danny Curry, who came
here from Logan, WV. Active membership grew to around 100 and a private
school was opened there in the fall of
1982.
Hard economic times hurt the
school-in its second year, it still has only 14 youngsters enrolled- and the opening this fall of another private school
near Martin may also have reduced its
chances of prospering.
The church has also been crippled by
a loss of members- all but a handful of
whom have dispersed to other churches,
according to some reports- in the wake
of a dispute centering on the pastor, who
himself resigned in October.
One church member said Pastor
Curry was "driven from the church" by
a powerful family, for reasons of personal animosity. But others cite the
former pastor's predilection for a
pentecostal-type piety as the source of
disaffection among his congregation.
"He began to speak in tongues," a
practice of which the Freewill Baptist
community disapproves, and subsequently sundered the local church from
the Freewill Baptists' Bluegrass Con<See Story No. 3. Page 4 )
Trial De aye
By Weather;
New Date Set
Because ice-slick roads k~pt some
jurors at home last Wednesday, trial of
Alvis Randall Frasure and Linda Wilson
in the alleged slaying of Larry W. Wilson
was postponed until May 28 in circuit
court here.
Meanwhile, trial of Clyde Douglas
Marshall and Bobby Gene McGuffey,
accused of complicity in the June 20
death of Glenda Sharon Marshall, has
been set for Feb. 13 in Fayette Circuit
COurt. A Johnson county venue was considered earlier, when it was feared the
Lexington court would not be-available
Within an acceptable ~ime .
•
Frasure is accused of murder and
Mrs. Wilson of complicity to murder her
ex-husband at her home on Buck's
Branch, near Martin, on May 29 last
year. In preparation for the trial, attorneys had reconstructed the alleged
murder scene in a section of the district
courtroom. A shot was reportedly fired
at a mock human skull and the resulting
distribution of blood noted by attorneys.
While the indictments handed down by
a grand jury in September suggested a
planned murder, the defense is expected
to argue that the killing of Wilson was _
in self-defense.
Continuation of the trial apparently
means the defendants will need to hire
a new lawyer. Pikeville attorney Dan
Jack Combs, who has represented both
until now, took his seat yesterday (Tuesday) as a judge on the Kentucky Court
of Appeals.
(Photo by Ken Peters )
MARTIN'S NEW MAYOR, Raymond Griffith, is sworn to office, Monday night, by his daughter, Thomasine Whicker. City councils of both Martin and Prestonsburg also took the official oath the same night.
�Wedne.ciay, January 4, 1984
The Floyd County Tlmes
New P'burg Council Sworn In Monday
Paa• Two
Section One,
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Engagement Announced
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TOP DOLLARS PAID FOR YOUR COAL LEASE
t
local mining company is int erested in acquiri,g existing cool
leases or negotiating new leases for 1he purposes of mineral
exploro1ion , developmen1 and extrac1ion. Serious inquiries
1 please.
t
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Contoct Compony Representative At:
4
(606) 478-2577 or (606) 478-5700
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1982 FAIRMONT-3 BEDROOM
FURNISHED MOBILE HOME FOR SALE.
Retail Price .......... sn,995°0
Floyd County Judge-Executive John M. Stumbo (center in photo) was on hand Monday evening to administer the oath of office to members of Prestonsburg's City Council. Pictured from
left to right are William 0. Goebel, Bill R. Collins, Bobby Watson, Bob Ranier, Judge Stumbo,
Mayor Harold Cooley, Eunice Shepherd, Frank Adams, George C. Brown, and Paul Hunt
Thompson.
FLOYD COUNTY
HEALTH NEWS
FOR SALE-1979 Monte
Carlo; excellent condition.
Wine. Vinyl top. $5200.
Call 285-9261
Bailey
ELECTROLYSIS
Permanent Hair Removal
111
Certified by
State License.
EYEBROWS
FlEE
CONSULTATION
UNDERARMS
NO. LAKE DR .• PRESTONSBURG
Thurs. • Fri., 10 a.m. to 4:30 p.m.
Saturday by appointment
24 HIS. PIIONE
SfiVICf
886-8924
It
By JANE BOND
Health Educator
There will be a pap clinic at the Floyd
County Health Department on Wednesday January 4 and Wednesday January
11 . These clinics are free services of the
health department and are open to
women of all ages; those women age 45
and over are especially urged to take advantage of this free service since this is
the high risk age for the disease.
A nurse from the Health Department
will be in Wayland at the Methodist
Church on Monday January 9 from 10
until 2 She will offer T.B. skin tests;
urinalyses, anemia screening, blood
pressures, and immunizations. This
clinic is a service of the health department and the public is welcome.
CHRISTMAS GUEST
Mrs. Rebecca Rasnick spent the
Christmas and New Year's holidays
with her daughter, Mrs. Joyce Harris,
and family, in Lexington.
~~~~~~~-
ENTERTAIN TO DINNER
Mr. and Mrs. E.L. Bierman entertained to dinner, Christmas Day, members
of their family, Mr. and Mrs. Fred Bingham, and son, Aaron, and Mr. and Mrs.
Jeff Bingham and sons, Carl Edward
and Jeffrey. Friday evening, prior to
Christmas, they hosted a Christmas party dinner, having as their guests, Mr.
and Mrs. Palmer Gillispie, of Charmco,
W.Va.; Mr. and Mrs. Ed Blair and son
Chad, of Paintsville; Mr. and Mrs.
Charles Piercey, of Hager Hill, and Mr.
and Mrs. Jack McDowell, of Prestonsburg. Carols were sung, gifts were exchanged, and films of this event were
made during that time.
FAMILY DINNER
Mr. and Mrs. Winston Ford held their
family Christmas dinner at their home
here. Enjoying this occasion were, Mrs.
Vera Ford, and Mr. and Mrs. Jerry Fannin and their daughter, Jenna, of Prestonsburg, Mr. and Mrs. William Stubblefield and children, David and Amy,
of Lexington, and a friend, Miss Laura
Mollet, of Dayton, Ohio, the host and
hostess and their children, Kelli and
Winn.
Robert A. Hall, M.D.
announces
the opening of his new
office in the Paintsville
Medical Center
U.S. 23 South
DINNER GUESTS
Christmas dinner guests of Mr . and
Mrs. Fred Bingham and son, Aaron,
were his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Carl
Bingham, her parents, Mr. and Mrs.
E .L. Bierman, and Mr. and Mrs. Jeff
Bingham and sons, Carl Edward and
Jeffrey, and Freddie Lee Powers. On the
following day, their daughters from
Knoxville, Tennessee, Misses Shonna
and Christie Bingham, arrived for a visit
of several days with them.
Office Hours :
Mon., Tues., Thurs. , Fri. 8a.m.-3p.m.
Wed. &Sat. 8a.m.-lla.m.
Appointments available by calling
ABBOTT HOMEMAKERS
The Abbott Homemakers will hold
their next meeting Tuesday evening,
January 10, at 7 o'clock, at the church
annex, there. The hostesses will be Mrs.
Eukie Merritt and Mrs. Mary Ann
Adkins. All members and prospective
members are urged to attend.
789-7016
ARE YOU READY???
For the January Telephone Change!
CHRISTMAS EVE GUESTS
Christmas Eve dinner guests of Mr.
and Mrs. Andrew Frasure were members of their family, Mr. and Mrs.
Steward Ray Horne and children, Stacy
Renee and Steward Brent, Mr. and Mrs.
Eddie Stone and daughter, Terra Lee,
Mrs. Kay Ann Reynolds and daughter,
Andrea Jill, and Mrs. Lorena Horne.
Following the dinner, Christmas refreshments were served and gifts were
exchanged.
Contact the Communications Personnel
at
ELLIOT CONTRACTING, INCORPORATED
SYSTEMS DIVISION
Telephone and Intercommunications Systems
Modular Jack Installation
Residential Wiring-Single Line Telephones
Commercial Multiline Telephone Systems
Installation-Sales-Fu ll Service and Repair
Sa les Manager Gene 0 Justice
Prestonsburg 886·2781
Pikeville 432-0033
1-800-432-0033
II
ITT Manufacturer Trained Supervisor
14-21
We're glad
you asked!
John C. Hall
Founder
Hall Funeral Home
IS THERE HELP FOR PARENTS WHOSE CHILD IS TERMINAllY ILL?
The hnlllinent death of 1 child due to a tenninal Illness is an aaonizin& situation for
p•ents.. It was out of a tlnil• lif•uperlence thlt an orpnlzotion coiled "Coreli&hters"
w11 founded.
L«t onlll Poul Prorer founded Corellchters after their younrest son. Kevin. suffered for
two years witt. tennlnal cancer. Tht purpose of tt.e orpnlation is to help other parents
who hen heard the sentence of llleatfl pronounced for a child.
C•tllpters currently operetes out tf l!!ltlls Memorial Hospital in Harvey, Illinois. The
porenb eperote a 24-hour hotline (312-798-1020) for parents to call for any kind of help.
They also meet monthly to share feellnrs end offer etch other support.
If you hne any such a~nc.-ns, we lnwite yow inqliry in person or by phone.
WHITE ELEPHANT SALE
Mrs. Elizabeth Ramey, president of
the Prestonsburg Woman's Club,
reminds members that a white elephant'
sale will be held during the next meeting
of the club, tomorrow <Thursday) at 7:30
p.m. at the Emma Wells May Cultural
Center. She asks that items for this sale
be brought to the meeting. Mrs. Clarence Traum will be the program leader,
and Leonard Grant will serve as auctioneer. Hostesses will be Zelia Archer,
Alice Harris, Maman Leslie, Eva Collins, Martha Johnson, Abby Grant, and
Debbie Stumbo.
WHEELWRIGHT HOMEMAKERS
The Wheelwright Homemakers held
their annual Christmas dinner meeting,
Dec. 15, in the Senior Citizens Building
at Wheelwright. County dues were paid
for the coming year and gifts were exchanged by those members present.
Members voted to make contributions to
Peggy Bradford for the Christmas candy distribution to the children of the
area, and to the Senior Citizens of Wheelwright to aid in purchase of building insurance. Members will donate to the
Ovarian Cancer Research Fund at the
next meeting which will be Jan. 19. Present for the dinner were the following
ladies Frances Pitts, Alma Soulyrette,
Sandi Tinder, Katie Newsome and son,
and daughter, Linda Holbrook and
children, Barbara Johnson, Maxine
Osborne, Sue Johnson, Margaret Jones,
Dolly Hall, Mary Hall and husband
Parilee Hall and Doris Osborne.
20 FOOT PORCH AND CARPETED RAMP ........ $700.00
GUTTERING ... _ ..................... . . $600.00
SKIRTING ............ _.... . .......... $600.00
WASHER AND DRYER .................... $825.00
18,000 BTU AIR CONDITIONER
(used 3 months) ....................... $n5.00
• ELECTRIC POLE AND METER . - .............. $250.00
SALES TAX . . .......... -.- ............ $962.00
RETAIL VALUE ...... $20,212.00
'Three bedroom troller comes furnished with beds. store. refrigerator. All elecfrlcol wired and TV hook-up. Troller was used 10 months
(DAY) 285-3561
(NIGHT) 285-3051
• CASH SELLING PRICE .... $11,995 •
EMERGENCY ALARM LITE
Protect yourself and loved ones.
Pull the activator pin on new pocket size Emergency
Alarm Lite. A loud blasting scream demands anentlon ... calls for help. Does not stop until activator Is
replaced, carry with you everywhere for lnstanf'protectlon. No bigger than a pack of clgarenes. Convenient, built-In flashlight, perfect for finding dark
keyholes and checking the back seat of your car at
night. A must for your hotel room. Runs on Inexpensive
pen-lite banerles. Stay safe...get your Emergency Alarm
Lite today. Be ready tonight!
Send s4.95, add 51.00 per order for postage and handlIng. Check or Money Order (No cash, please).
To: L. Allen Imports/Export
Box 104 Dept. 1F
W. Prestonsburg, . 41668
Break away to a
seafood adventure
at Long John Silver's with
these money-saving offers.
••••••••••••••••w~oo~~••••••••••••••••
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50¢ OFF Shrimp Dinner
Each dinner has 7 tasty shrimp, fryes & slaw. (Good up to 4 offers)
Valid thru: January 31, 1984
Only at: U.S. Highway 23 North,
Prestonsburg
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Seafood Platter $2.99
Platter includes a fish fillet, 2 shrimp, 2 scallops, fryes, slaw & 2 hushpuppies.
(Good up to 4 offers)
Valid thru: January 31, 1984
Only at: U.S. Highway 23 North,
ATTENTION!
Pres~onsburg
Special Teaching Classes
on :
Baptism of Holy Ghost
Spiritual Gifts
I Cor. Chapters 12, 13, and 14
Each Thurday Evening 7 p.m.
Teaching by Rev. Mike Manual
Sponsored by Rock of
Revelation Church
HALL FUNERAL HOME
Phones 285-9261 OR 285-9262
Pastor Rev. D. Curry
••••••••••••••••w~coo~N••••••••••••••••
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Location:
Prestonsburg
Christian Academy
Riverside Drive
Prestonsburg, Ky.
For more informatiou
Near Junction tf Ky. 80 and Ky. 122, Martin
The engagement of Miss Rebecca Ann
Collins to Mr. Michael Ray Castle is being announced by her family. She is the
daughter of Mrs. Beulah Collins and the
late Charles Evan Collins.
Mr. Castle is the son of Mr. and Mrs.
Joe D. Castle, of Winchester, formerly
of Pikeville.
Miss Collins is a graduate of the University of Kentucky, Mr. Castle is also
a graduate of UK and is employed by
Kelly Galloway and Company accounting firm in Pikeville.
Vows will be exchanged at 6 p.m.,
Saturday, January 7, 1984 at the Carriage House in Paintsville, Ky. A reception will immediately follow the ceremony.
The custom of open church will be
observed, and all friends and relatives
have been invited to attend.
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$1.00 OFF Any Big Catch®
Includes 8 fish fillets or 12 Chicken Planks, or 4 fish fillets & 6 Chicken
Planks, fryes & slaw.
Valid thru: January 31, 1984
Only at: U.S. Highway 23 North, '
Prestonsburg
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886-1688
Everyone Welcom e
Hpd
�Wednesday, January 4, 1984
The Floyd County Times
OLW's New Year's Baby
McDowell's First Little Miss
Winter Wonderland Crowned
Section One, Pa&e Three
l Sale.
· ·on a Save 25°/o to 50°/o •••
big selection of men' s, women's and children's styles.
Here's just a sample...
Women's casual styles at
a very special sale price.
~hl!d~en•s sizes
1n ssmllar styles_
• All vinyl handbags...
<Photo by Ken Peters l
Gary and Lisa Ritchie, of Pinetop (Knott county) are
shown with their new baby, Crystal Lynn, who was born at
10:40 a.m. New Year's Day and was the year's first arrival at
Our Lady of the Way Hospital, Martin. As the hospital's first
of the year, the 8 lb., 6 oz. baby girl brought donations of
various gifts from area merchants totalling more than $1,000.
CHRISTMAS GUESTS
HAS GREAT CHRISTMAS
On Christmas Eve and Christmas
, Mr. and Mrs. Douglas Garrett had
as their guests, Mr. and Mrs. Michael
Patrick and daughter, Brandy, of Salyersville, and Gerald Doug, John,
Leslie, and James Alex DeRossett. Mr.
and 1rs. Garrett entertained during the
holidays with an old fashioned candymaking party <with Mr. Garrett making
the candy.>
Mrs. Lula Wallen reports a wonderful
Christmas. After mailing "shuckey"
beans to family members, Mr. and Mrs.
Sam Wallen, and Marty, of Spring
Valley, California; Mary and Ray
Mailer, and children, of Boise, Idaho;
Mr. and Mrs. Richardson Wallen and
children, of Ypsilanti, Michigan, and
taking some to Mr. and Mrs. Woodrow
Wallen and family and Mr. and Mrs.
Curtis Wallen, of Stanville, where she
spent Christmas with the Wallen
families. Mr. and Mrs. Dan Wallen and
family, of Richmond, Virginia, Mr. and
Mrs. Ronnie Wallen and Heather, Na,lcy, and Bryan Wallen joined the family
for the holidays. They enjoyed dinner on
Christmas Eve, at the home of Mr. and
Mrs. Ronnie Wallen, and after dinner,
they went to the home of Mr. and Mrs.
Curtis Wallen, where they exchanged
gifts, and visited with friends and
relatives who called to wish them a
"Merry Christmas."
Monday evening, the family accompanied Mrs. Wallen to her home in
Green Acres, and she entertained them
to dinner at Jerry's Restaurant. Afterwards they went back to her home and
talked by telephone to some of the family members who couldn't get home for
the Christmas holidays.
SHOWI:'-fG IMPROVEMENT
Mrs. Joe Buchanan, Sr., who has been
II at her home here for a few days, is
now showing improvement.
HOLIDAY GUESTS
Buster and Delphia Patton entertained at their home here during the Christmas holidays the following members of
their family:
William Patton, of Cincinnati, 0 .,
Larry and Susan Patton, of Alexandria ;
David and Margo Barber, Ron and ConCooley, Nicole Weinstein, Robbie
, Lonnie May, Angie Stumbo, Terry
Cooley, Harvey Patton, Matt Todd,
Mary Cavens, Amanda Cavens, Allison
Cavens, and Nigel Cavens, all of Prestonsburg.
It is my personal desire to
thank all relatives and friends
of my brother, Edgar Preston
STEPHENS, who passed away 7
December 1983: for the kind·
ness they have shown him, for
the compassion and assistance
they have given him, and for
their selfless devotion bestowed to him in his unfortunate ill·
ness and during his brief and
torturous thread of life. Final·
ly, beyond the clouds and the
blue skies of wonder. my
brother, " Dobbin" rests well,
for" Then shall the dust return t o
the
·
earth as it was:
And the spirit shall return unto
God who gave it "
!Ecclesiastes: 12· 71 .
" EN DIEU EST TOUT'
James Darwin Stephens
LTC·USA !Ret! !Brother)
Stephanie Johnson, six-year-old
daughter of Roger Johnson, of Prestonsburg, and Mrs. Eddie D. Meade, was
crowned McDowell's First Little Mis's
Winter Wonderland, 1983, at the pageant
held at the Mcbowell School Cafeteria
December 17. Contestants wen~- judged
on modeling, beauty, smile, {10ise and
grace.
Stephanie is in first grade at
McDowell.
1fa to 1/2
ar.
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suo
State of the Art in performance engineering- made in
America. Limited supply in
stock now.
ATTE:XD CHRIST;\IAS PARTY
Mr. and Mrs. Douglas Garrett were
among the guests who attended a
Christmas party at the home of Mr. and
Mrs. Ernest Wells.
I BIRD TURBO
FOOD PANTRY
The Loaves and Fishes Food Pantry,
sponsored by the Local Church Women
and the Prestonsburg Ministerial
Association needs to replenish its
shelves. Persons who wist to contribute
food and/or money should contact their
church, or call Mrs. Eva Colli:15, Rev.
Timothy Jessen, Mrs. Vera Ford, or
Mrs. Eleanor Robinson.
Members of these two organizations
would like to thank Mrs. Patsy Brown,
who recently donated a large usee!
refrigerator to be used at the groups'
food pantry.
The Bird is back and we have our
best selection this year in stock now.
A refined personal road car built to
compliment the abilities of the serious
driver. 15 now in stock.
HOME FROM HOSPITAL
Miss Alice Harris is doing nicely at
her home now, following a few days as
a patient at the Highlands Regional
Medical Center.
[APRIRS
OPEN HOUSE
Saturday, January 7, 1-4 p.m.
·mUSTADii liT
One of the best home buys we've had In many a day. New brick home ready for
oecupeney In a lovely area just outside Prestonsbw-&. Entry porch, foyer,
l-sh ped livi111 room with picture window and fireplace wall, eat-in-kitchen with
GE-11otpuint appliance5, and sliders to patlo. Master bedroom suite, two other
edrooms, ceramic tile baths, utility area and two car pn(e. This home Is fully lns~ated for ener~y effidency and the flreplue has blowers. City wat.-,
cable TV, lar&e level lot on 1 black top street. Value priced at $69,500. FLOYD
COUNTY BOND MONEY or let us help with flnancin&.
DIRECTIONS:
Rt. 1427 (Abbott Road) about 4 miles to Open House sign.
/(fJtliff & lenDx
f!&d gMak
Phyllis Ratliff Lenox. Real Estate Broker
Office (606) 886-6138
Prestonsburg, Ky . 41653
off
$5•$7
True musc le cars are bac k and
w e've g ot 'em. G ood selection including T-tops in stoc k now.
�Wedne.day, January 4, 1984
The Floyd County Times
Publishe-d En•t·y W«>dnesda-' by
Our Yesterdays
Prestonsburg Publishing Company
(Items taken from The Floyd County
. Times, 10, 20, 30, 40 and 50 years ago.)
NORMAN ALLEN Editor
~ubscription Ralt'!> Per
In Fl~·d Count)'. $!UIO
\'t>;u·:
Elsewht>r(' in Kl'nlu(·kv. $10.00
Outside Kentuck,\. S1:L;o
Enterl'd as second class matter June 18
1927. at the postoffice at Prestonsburg,
Kentucky, under the act of March 3, 1879.
--- 1 ---
<Continued from Page One\
whiskey to State Det. Donnie Jack
Phipps, on Dec. 1 and 8 last year.
In another case, William J. "Bill"
Hall, of the John Hall Branch, near
McDowell, was convicted of selling
alcohol on a Sunday. According to court
records, Hall sold a case of Stroh's beer
to Det. Phipps for $10 on Dec. 4. He
received a month's probation, was fined $100 and was ordered to pay $47.50 in
court costs.
Also sentenced, following guilty pleas
or verdicts, were : Randy Allen, Prestonsburg, drunk driving, possession of
marijuana, $162.50 in fine and costs,
referred to alcoholic driver education
(ADE); Virgil Moore, Knott county,
drunk driving, escape, 30 days' probation, $147.50, ADE; Frankie G. Goble,
Emll'}a, drunk driving, $137.50; Terry
Wayne Hall, Melvin, possession of marijuana, 30 days' probation, $57.50; Henry
Jenkins, Jr., Garrett, terroristic
threatening, 30 days' probation, not to
threaten Delilah Jenkins; Eddie Dean
Lowe, Betsy Layne, speeding, $37.50 ;
Thomas H. Waddell, Saltville, Va.,
drunk driving, hit and run, $287.50,
ADE; Albert D. Damron, Pikeville, no
tarp, $112.50; Willis Gibson, Garrett,
overweight, $37.50; Shannon Newsome,
Melvin, no motorcycle operator 's
license, $37.50; Homer Snodgrass, Prestonsburg, overweight, $37.50; Pearl
Watkins, Noctor, no tarp, $137.50; Clifton V. Arthur, Yanceyville, NC, drunk
driving, $70; Nick Horne, Prestonsburg,
speeding, $37.50, state traffic school
<STS> ; Michael D. Ousley, Martin,
speeding, $37.50, STS.
--- 3 ---
<Continued from Page One)
ference "so he could do what he liked,"
charged a former member, who asked
not to be identified.
Curry readily acknowledges his belief
in "spiritual gifts" but describes his
theology as "full Gospel" rather than
"pentecostal," a word he says is associated with a "fanatical" kind of
worship.
In any event, the doctrinal issue is only a pretext, the pastor said, "a kind of
springboard some have used" to dissolve the church and recover the money
they invested in it.
The bank note that financed the
church- on which about $300,000 is said
to be still due-was secured by church
members, at least one family mortgaging its home and several putting up $5000
and $10,000 certificates of deposit as
collateral.
Some realized only later the full extent
of the debt they had assumed, said
Curry, who added, "A lot of people will
be happy if the church is sold and they
get their money back."
Of the church's withdrawal from the
Bluegrass Conference in April, Curry
said it was voted on at a regular business
meeting and represented the wishes of
a majority of the congregation. The
church was founded as an independent
church and ·simply reverted to its
original status, he pointed out.
In the meantime, Curry is founding a
non-denominational church, known as
the Rock of Revelation Church, in rented
premises that also house the Prestonsburg Christian Academy. The school,
with two kindergartens and a first grade
this year, is run by his wife, Barbara.
Safety director for the Pontiki Coal
Corporation, Curry served for three
years without salary as pastor of the
Water Gap church. The dispute which
ended his ministry there "has been a
very hurtful experiencEJ_," he said.
------------
Finance Co. Sues
Ex-Deputy Clerk
A former deputy county clerk secured
a loan by fraudulently claiming his car
was paid for, a finance company alleges
in a suit filed here last week.
Kentucky Finance Co. claims John
and Sharon Spradlin took out a loan for
$4085 in May this year, putting up their
1982 Oldsmobile Cutlass as security.
To prove there were no prior liens
against the vehicle, the Spradlins produced a certificate of title and registration which indicated the lien held by
GMAC had been released three days
earlier. The finance company says it
later learned that GMAC still has a lien
on the vehicle.
Former County Clerk Thomas Lafferty, Jr., for whom John Spradlin worked
at the time as deputy clerk, is also named as defendant in the suit, as is the
Fidelity and Deposit Company of
Maryland, bonding agent for the former
clerk.
<Suits filed in court represent only one
side of the issue in dispute.)
Council Meeting Set
Prestonsburg City Council will meet
on Tuesday, Jan. 10, at 7 p.m., when the
new council is expected to set its regular
meeting time, hire employees and fill
vacancies on some city commissions.
The council has customarily met on
the second and fourth Mondays of the
month, but state law prohibits it from
doing business before Jan. 10.
--- 2 ---
<Continued from Page One l
out that Pikeville College's problems are
not unique. "Most independent colleges
are suffering," it said. The school's
fiscal woes became evident in April this
year when, in anticipation of a $300,000
end-of-year deficit, President Hall announced stringent budget cuts for
1983-'84.
<The 48-member faculty was reduced
by the equivalent of 12 fulltime positions
and about a dozen positions were cut
from the non-academic staff of 70. A
men's dormitory was closed and tennis
and baseball were eliminated as intercollegiate sports, among other economies. The cuts were designed to trim
$630,000, or 19 percent, from the budget.)
<The loss of about $600,000 in state and
federal support-including a $225,000
grant for the school's mining technology
program-and declining enrollment
were cited as reasons for the cuts.)
Sister Mahady, former president of St.
Catherine College, in Springfield, was
hired this summer to put order into
Pikeville College's finances. A Roman
Catholic nun with a reputation as an able
administrator, she was expected to
restore tight control over spending at the
school.
Pikeville College has a current enrollment of around 450 students and a budget of around $2.7 million, much of it
raised by private contributions .
December is a critical month for the
school's fundraising program.
--- 4 ---
<Continued from Page One)
ty to look at the traditional culture
sympathetically and with a keen interest. and it was this quality which
prompted her to preserve and
revitalize such customs as "Old
Christmas."
The "first" organized observance of
"Old Christmas" in the '30's was held
in a room of the old school building.
presently the Board of Education
building, and with old-time musicians
coming from "up and down most of the
creeks." Mrs. James recalls "We had
the biggest, finest party you ever
saw."
The gatherings were sporadic over
the years until the past decade when
Mrs. James. founder of the Kentucky
Highlands Folk Festival. made "Old
Christmas" an official part of that
well~stablished annual event. Now.
held each year at May Lodge. Jenny
Wiley State Park, the observances
assure that the memory of "Old
Christmas" will stay alive in the minds
of succeeding generations of Eastern
Kentuckians .
This year's celebration will get
under way at 2 p.m . at the lodge and. as
usual. will feature dancers. story·
tellers. and a variety of traditional
musicians. State champion old-time
banjo picker Dr. Harry Bickle will be a
feature of the day and traditional
refreshments will be served.
Mrs. Katherine Frazier. director of
the Kentucky Highlands Folk Festival.
is in charge of "Old Christmas" along
with the continuing contribution of
Mrs. James.
IN MEMORIAM
In Memory of Daddy, Hauley Hall, who
passed away Dec. 31, 1972
Eleven years have come and gone
Since you left us for your new home.
We know you're happy and we should be
glad
But sometimes "Daddy" we feel real
sad.
Words cannot express the grief we felt
But like ice, it has begun to melt.
Time goes on, it's passing real fast
It makes one wonder how long it can
last.
We miss you yet, more than words can
say
But we're looking forward to that sweet
day,
When we meet again, we'll kiss and
embrace
We'll come be with you, in GOO's heavenly place.
They say the streets are paved of pure
gold,
How it must please your precious soul,
To be home with Jesus and loved ones
you knew
We're anxiously waiting, to come be
with you, too.
Things have changed on this world
below
Some things, I guess you already know
Like Mommie Hall's passing, and others
you knew
God called them home, just like He did
you.
Now you keep your vigil on us here
below
Sometimes I feel your presence and I
just know
You're watching and waiting our turn on
God's list
Then we will all live together in
Heaven's Sweet Bliss.
Sadly missed by,
DOROTHY AND CHILDREN
ltpd.
Section One, Pa&e Four
Ten Years Ago
<January 2. 1974)
George Barker. manager of Jenn'y Wiley State Park and May Lodge.
said this week that he foresees no drastic loss of buiness at this tourist and
recreation center as a result of the fuel crisis ... Fioyd county officially
tossed its hat in the ring in the competition for one of the proposed coal
gassification plants when its fiscal court recently adopted a resolution requesting the location of such an operation in the county .. .But for the fact
that Robert (Bob) Damron. chairman of the Kentucky Railroad Commission. is from this county and IS vitally interested in it. approximately six
miles of C. & 0. main-line tracks on Left Beaver Creek would in all probability have been abandoned and removed ... With the last day of 1973
Dick D~vis ended 46 years as superintendent of the Prestonsburg Water
and Gas System ... Born: to Mr. and Mrs. Harold Johnson. Jr .. a son.
December 17: to Mr and Mrs. Roy Lawson. Jr .. of Price. a son.
December 23: to Mr. and Mrs. Allan Joe Hyden. of Lexington. a son. Joe
Shannon. December 11: to Mr. and Mrs. Ishmael Hopkins, Jr.. of Cynthiana. a daughter, Tracy Elione ... There died : William Green Hall. 20. of
Prestonsburg. last Saturday in a truck wreck in Leslie county: Ernest
Clark. 72, of David. December 19 at Highlands Regional Medical Center
<HRMC>: Paul Denver Kingsley. 68, of Toler Creek, December 12 at
Methodist Hospital. Pikeville: Richard Wills. 91. of Water Gap. Friday at
HRMC: Orvel B. Layne, 49. of Langley, Saturday while hunting near Hippo: Herman McKinney, 59, of Toler Creek. December 24 at Our Lady of
the Way Hospital, Martin : Mrs. Dora Belle Rickman Fraylen. 66. formerly of Tram. Christmas day at Columbus: Mrs. Goldia Lawson, 78. of Garrett. Sunday at Martin: Mrs. Luna J. Craft, of Hueysville, December 17 at
HRMC: Mrs. Goldia M. Justice. 55, formerly of this county. December 20
at Warsaw. Ind.: Charles T. Callison. 65. of Allen. December 24 at
Washington. D. C.: Charles F. Massie, 45. of lvel, Monday at Our Lady of
the Way Hospital : Mrs. Mary J. Anderson. 78. of McDowell. Saturday at
McDowell Appalachian Regional Hospital.
Twenty Years Ago
(January 2, 1964)
If Washington is inclined to provide the needed federal aid. there is a
possibility that the new year 1964 may see a road-building program
greater even than the record-breaking construction job done in 1963...The
building outlook for 1964, including both public and private construction.
is bright-perhaps as bright as that of the year just ended-was the opinion expressed here Wednesday by George Lee Shannon. architect ... A
six-inch snowfall two days before Christmas slowed traffic. the snow remained on shaded slopes. and it had an addition of two inches. New
Year's eve...The executive board of the Floyd County Committee of 500
<anti-bootlegging group) at a meeting last weekend employed Jean Auxier, Pikeville, as chief counsei. ..Born: to Mr. and Mrs. Vance Mitter, Jr ..
of Prestonsburg, a daughter. Elizabeth Ann, December 29 at the Beaver
Valley Hospital Martin: to Mr. and Mrs. Franklin "Set" Branham, of
Salt Lake City. Utah, a son, Blade, December 18... There died: Edward
Newman, 48, of Haver Hill. 0., formerly of Melvin, December 24 at King's
Daughters' Hospital, Ashland, from injuries received nine days earlier in
an automobile accident at Catlettsburg; Mrs. Minnie Mollett Clemons. 81,
formerly of Betsy Layne. Saturday at East Point; Barry Wayne Hayes,
22, of Stanville, Dec. 16 in an auto crash in New Mexico; Eugene Hall. 58.
Banner postmaster, December 21 at his home; Reuben D. Prater, 84,
Wednesday at his home at Brainard; Miss JoAnn Tackett, 26, of East
McDowell, December 26 at Lexington; Alex Hicks, 87, of Garrett, Tuesday at Our Lady of the Way Hospital, Martin; Clarence Carroll, 46, Sunday at his home at Hite; Mrs. Genova Jean Candrea, 39, formerly of
Lackey, December 22 at Buffalo, N. Y.; Ken is F. Tackett. 56, formerly of
Ligon, December 21 at Ypsilanti, Mich.; Mrs. Mary Alice Lawson. 31, of
Honaker, Monday at the Methodist Hospital. Pikeville.
Thirty Years Ago
(January 7, 1954)
Prestonsburg is considered certain to be selected by the U. S. Public
Health Service as the center from which its area-wide study of intestinalborne diseases will be made ... Three new officials began terms of office
Monday. They are: Sheriff Gormon Collins. County Attorney Hollie Conley, and Jailer Prock Hayes. Magistrate Grover Holbrook also took the
oath of office for the first time ... Forrest Burchett assumed on January 1
the duties of forest ranger in this county. He succeeds Palmer Crum, who
resigned ... Sgt. Gaylord Caudill, of Hi Hat, was recently awarded the Purple Heart for wounds received while fighting in Korea ... Barkley J.
Sturgill has opened law offices here and is associated with the law firm of
Combs & Combs ...There died : J . D. Harkins, 69, prominent Prestonsburg
attorney. here Sunday afternoon; Greenville Tackett, 81. Wednesday at
Ligon ; Hampton Tackett. 62. of Beaver. January 1 at a Lexington
hospital; Charlie Karozo, 59, December 28 at Ligon; Frank James
Meade. 48. of Wheelwright, at Louisa; Mrs. Laura H. Hamilton, 51. of
Teaberry, December~ at a Martin hospital; Beverly Cole, 41, December
24 at Drift; Mrs , America Clevenger, 32, on Town Branch, Sunday; John
Kimbler, 54. December 25, at the Prestonsburg General Hospital of injuries suffered when struck by an auto; Alexander Stephens, 88, of West
Prestonsburg. at the Prestonsburg hospital, December 30; Mrs. Nora
Wills Cooley, 73, of Cliff, at the hospital here. December 30; Thomas Lincoln Burke. 87. of East Point. December 30, of injuries sustained when
struck by an auto a week earlier; Mrs . Mary T. Porter. 76. Wednesday at
Betsy Layne ; Harvey Patton. 44. of Estill. December 26. three days after
suffering mine injuries; John J. Nelson, 81, Dwale minister, December24
here; Millard Brown. 36, December 26 at Ligon: Mrs. Julia Porter. 70.
December 28 at Allen ; William Kenis Jarvis. 61, December 27 at Endicott.
Forty Years Ago
(January 6, 1944)
Of 94 men called from this county for pre-induction examination. twothirds are fathers ... Four Floyd servicemen are reported missing. They
are: Pfc. Douglas Vaughan, 19, of Prestonsburg; Pfc . Denver Music. 22.
of Prestonsburg ; James Hamilton . of Hi Hat. and James Crisp, of
Lancer ... Mary Catherine Hutsinpiller, 13-year-old Prestonsburg girl, has
been awarded a prize by Child Life magazine for a poem written by her
several months ago ... Phm . 3-C Homer J . Thacker. of Banner, has been
cited for bravery in the recent invasion of Tarawa .. .There died : Mrs. Polly Sellards. 95. of Endicott. December 26; Orville Murray, 41, former
Floyd man and sales manager of a Hazard soft drink firm, December '1:7
at his Hazard home, of gas fumes; Mrs. Jim Bob Parsons, 38, last Thursday at Grethel; Former Knott Sheriff Henry Sturgill. 61, December 24 at
his Hindman residence; Ulysses Samuel Click. 65. Monday at his home at
Martin ; Mrs. H. S. Frazier. 28, January 1 at her Wilson Creek home: Mrs.
Rilda Henson McCown, December 30 at Ligon ; Glenn H. Mattingly. 36. of
Printer. December 28 at a Martin hospital; Mrs. Mary Bayes Lemaster.
67, December 26 at Dwale ; Mrs. Emma Burchfield. of Water Gap.
December 30 at Lexington ; Mrs. Jenny Prater Spradlin, 60, Saturday at
her home at Bonanza; Mrs. Alex L. Martin, 85, January 1 at her home at
Drift ; George W. Laven. 78. December 22 at his home at Dwale :
Beauregard May, 73. native of Floyd county. December 19 at his home at
Sandy Hook
Fifty Years Ago
<January 5. 1934)
L. E . <Lief) Crisp was shot and killed Sunday night at Martin ... A grand
jury investigation may be made into the death at Garrett. December 24 of
67-year-old Boone Childers who allegedly was pushed from a culvert ~t
the mouth of Stone Coal... Bill Music died December 24. shortly after hts
throat was slashed at Drift ... Townsel Combs, of Langley, was elected
chairman of the Floyd County Board of Education at the board's first
meeting of the year last Monday ... Inducted to office Monday ~ere Circuit
Judge John W. Caudill and Commonwealth's Attorney 0 . C. Ha!I..Harrison Borders was severely shocked and burned recently when hts hands
came in contact with an electric wire which he was attempting to remove
after the home of Ell Hicks had been destroyed by fire at
Maytown ... Gallie Friend, a Floyd county native. h~s been appoint~d trial
justice for Dickenson county. Virginia A com~tttee rep:esentmg 500
Wayland miners have procured a gift here wht~h they ~111 present to
Wayland Police Chief W. P . Blevins as an expressiOn of thetr esteem ... Dr.
Alex L. Hill was elected House floor leader at Frankfort as the General
Assembly·organized Monday ... Miss Mabel Louise Por~er. of Paintsville.
Monday was named official court reporter by Ctrcwt Judge John Y:J
Caudill. Judge Caudill named attorney Oscar P. Bond master commissioner ... There died : Albert Perry. 37. former Beaver Creek coal
operator. December 26 at his home near Alphoretta: Mrs . Rhoda Allen
Sizemore, 87. native Floyd woman. recently in Perry county: Mrs. Mary
E Rice. 89. December 28. near here
LETTERS
To the Editor
The views expressed here are ihose of the
writers, and not necessarily those of this
newspaper. No unsigned contributions will
be published.
My Good Old House
Today I said goodby to my good old
house. With a prayer in my heart, I
walked through quiet empty rooms. I
stopped in each room, and I asked a
blessing for the ones who had lived
there. I thought of all the little feet who
had clattered down the stairs and filled
the rooms with noisy laughter. I asked
a blessing for those who had lived here
so long. They knew they were welcome
in the warmth and security of this nice
old house. I wept for my darling who had
gone and left me so alone. I then picked
up my memories-some of joy and some
of sorrow-! held them close to my
heart. My tour was over. Each silent
room held a blessing. There was nothing
more I could do. So I closed the door. For
one brief moment I clung to it. Then I
closed it gently and my heart was tranquil.
LUCY J. RANSDELL
Zebulon Masonic Lodge
To Install Officers
Officers of Prestonsburg's Zebulon
Masonic Lodge No. 273 will be installed
at the meeting of the lodge to- be held
Saturday beginning at 4 p.m., at th
lodge hall.
The annual Past Master's banquet will
be held at 6 p.m., at the lunchroom of the
Prestonsburg high school.
Dr. Robert M. Sirkle, Past Grand
Master, Lexington, will install the officers and will serve as master of
ceremonies at the banquet.
Several Grand Lodge officers are
planning to be present.
Officers to be installed are:
Rodney W. Tackett, master ; Willar
Johnson, senior warden; Vaughn L.
Musselman, junior warden ; Manis E.
Gray, treasurer; James E. Goble,
secretary; Robert N. Moore, senior
deacon; Richard A. King, junior
deacon; Johnie C. Adams, senior
steward; James J. Carter, II, junior
steward; John M. Seely, tiler ; Kelly
Moore, chaplain.
Michael G. Halfhill is the retirin
master of the lodge.
OPEN HOUSE
Open-house was held Sunday, January
1, by the Rev. and Mrs. Ted Nicholas
A Pat on the Back
All of us at the Prestonsburg Donor and members of the First United MethoCenter would like to thank you and dist Church at the parsonage on Maple
everybody associated with the Floyd Avenue. Dr. and Mrs. Nicholas, their
County Times for your support during daughter, Miss Carol Joy Nicholas, and
the year of 1983. We have had some real- their son and daughter-in-law, Capt. and
ly slack periods during the year but after Mrs. Ted Nicholas, II, received guests
all the help we got from our paper when from 3 until 6 p.m.
Ass isting in the serving wer
it was sorely needed, we finished the
Mesdames Edna Carol Greenwade,
year with a bit of growth after all.
We also appreciate the times we have Vera Ford, Mabel Brown, Elizabeth
requested the services of a photogra- Ramey, Roslyn Burchett, Mary Sue
pher, the promptness of the response for Moore, and Ditty Tackett.
help and all help in getting the public's · Out-of-town guests were from Wilattention. Ronald Marstin's article more, Lancaster, Paintsville, and Pikehelped so much. His words are still men- ville, with over 100 guests calling during
tioned and the people who care believe the afternoon.
he really helped turn events around. In
October the Center had its best month HERE NEW YEAR'S DAY
Here to spend New Year's Day wi
with 171 donors. Our Third Donorama
was the best ever with 101 people Mr. and Mrs. Winston Ford, Jr., at their
registering and 90 donated on December home on Arnold ·Avenue, were her sisters, Mrs. Tipton Baker and children,
20 and 22.
To show you our growth, our donations Ben, Ronnie and Tara, of Harlan, and
Mrs . Ray Boley, Mr. Boley and children,
are as follows :
Tammy,
Keith, and Michael, of Paints1980-308 pints, 1981-1088 pints, 1982-1258
ville.
pints, 1983-1347 pints.
CKBC is the Regional Blood Center
serving our area (it's the second largest PRESTONSBURG HOMEMAKERS
The North Prestonsburg Homeblood center in Kentucky). The Center
supplies 40 hospitals in a 44 county ser- makers met at the home of Mrs. Elizavice area with all blood needs. It's not beth Ramey, at her home on May'
easy getting blood donors but there are Branch, Tuesday, December 20, at
some compensations accompanying the p.m., for their Christmas party. Miss
effort. We are happy to be associated Christine Spradlin gave the devotionals,
with CKBC and the very special people entitled "The Meaning of Christmas."
The hostess, Mrs. Ramey, served
we meet all over Floyd County.
Thank you again for your help. All of Christmas refreshments to Gladys
Allen, Mabel Allen, Agnes Bauers,
us wish you a very Happy New Year!
Sincerely,
Garnett Fairchild, and Christine
Spradlin. Due to inclement weather,
KIMBERLEE BOYD, R.N.
some of the members were unable to
JANECE COOK, R.N.
attend.
GEORGIA SANDERS, R.N.
The next regular meeting will be Tu
PAT PHILLIPS
day, January 17, at the home of Mrs.
Donor Resources
Agnes Bauers. All members and persons
who may be interested in becoming
members, are urged to attend.
-DINNER GUESTS
The Rev. and Mrs. Leven Burchett
were the Thanksgiving dinner guests of HERE FOR CHRISTMAS
Mr. and Mrs. Miles Whitaker had with
his daughter and son-in-law, Mr. and
Mrs. Darvin Lafferty, at Calf Creek. The them at their home on the Middle Creek
Burchetts' guests during that weekend Road during Christmas, their daughter
were Mr. and Mrs. Michael Young, of and son-in-law, and Chris Perkins, of
Hindman, Mr. and Mrs. Gary Whitaker
Chattanooga, Tennessee.
of Washington, D.C. Also visiting wit
them during that time was their grandRETURN TO OHIO
Mr. and Mrs. Woodrow Burchett, II, daughter, Miss Becky Stark, of Fort
and family have returned to their home, Mills, South Carolina.
in Delaware, Ohio, following a holiday
visit with relatives here.
Coles To Observe
HERE FOR HOLIDAYS
Mrs. Edward B. Leslie, of Lexington,
was here during the Christmas and New
Year's holidays for a visit with her sons,
Doctors Keith, Ronald, and Larry Leslie, and their families and other relatives
and friends . Mrs. Leslie has spent the
past several months helping to care for
her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Milford Hall,
formerly of this county, now of Lexington, who have been seriously ill. Mr.
and Mrs. Hall are presently patients in
a nursing home, there.
Express Appreciation
We, Joe and Rebecca Arnett, wish to
express our appreciation to our friends·
and relatives, who helped to make our
Golden Wedding Anniversary such a
very happy event. We thank those who
braved the record breaking chill of the
December 24 afternoon, to spend some
time with us . Special thanks to our own
dear children and grandchildren who
planned and provided for the whole
celebration. We thank our photographer
friend, Stuart Stephens, whose photographic skill will keep fresh the memories
of one of our happiest days.
ltpd.
50th Anniversary
Mr. and Mrs. James Cole, of Printer,
will be celebrating their 50th Wedding
Anniversary Saturday, January 14.
A reception will be held at their hom
from 2 until4 p.m., January 14. Frien
and neighbors are invited to drop in an
share this occasion with them.
BIRTH ANNOUNCEMENT
Mr. and Mrs. Delmer Johnson, of Hi
Hat, announce the birth of their first
child, a daughter, Jasmyne Nikko!, on
November 10 at Highlands Regional
Medical Center.
Grandparents are Mrs . Usley
Johnson, of Hi Hat, and Mr. and Mrs.
Shirl Hall, of Ashtabula, Ohio.
CARD OF THANKS
The family of Jesse Lewis would like
to express their appreciation to all who
stood by us in our time of sorrow. A very
special thanks to the Hall Funeral Home
for all their help, kindness and consideration, and to those who sent flowers
and brought food and gave us moral support, upon the passing of our dear
brother. Your kindness will be lo
remembered.
THE BROTHERS AND SISTERS
OF JESSE LEWIS
�Wednesday, January 4, 1984
------------------------T~~~F~IoydC
~~
~~
n~~T~
I~~s--------------------------~~~~~
Section One, P ace Five
FEDERAL
FOOD
STAMPS
WELCOME
.
TIDE
25-LB. BAG TUBEROSE SELF-RISING
LAUNDRY DETERGENT
CORN MEAL
$
toNG~P7GHEn• OR 4 / $ 1
ELBOW MACARONI ...
2S.LB. BAG TUBEROSE
SELF-RISING
FLOUR
~u~'Aw.~~~··· ··········
16-0Z. LOAF CASEY'S
8-LB.
BREAD
FISCHER'S LARD ..
$1
3/
1
MAXWELL HOUSE
INSTANT COFFEE .... .. .
$3
99
~~E
PARK
$13 9
~:iOUR TREET ... $ 1 1 9
PINTO BEANS ....
~~~ AMERICAN
~~,..CHEESE
SINGLES
$19
~ ·JENO'S PIZZA .....
4
~.
WHITE
POTATOES
$2°! $499
~f:.,vtl'E~K .......... s39~.
WM~
50-LB.
c
.
LEG QUARTERS ........... 79LB.
D UM STICKS ..... ... ....s1 °~.
THIGHS ..................... 89~.
LIVERS ....... ....... .. .. ... .69~.
BREAST ................ ... ..S1 2!
26-0Z. PKG.
PRE-PACKED
TOMATOES
sgc
3-LB.
YELLOW
ONIONS
.· sgc
3-LB. BAG
$1180
BACON .......... ..... . .
NECK
$480
BONES ...................
PLAmR
.~!!JI ::~Ft~:~KEN, TURKEY~J$1
PO PIES ......... ~
~yc:r::RK
CUBED STEAK ..... ....$2
9
ggc
·13-0Z.
·~..,'11
sgc
SLICED PEACHES ..
10-0Z. JAR
89
C
WIENERS ............... .
12-0Z. PKG.
WILSON' S CORN KING
STEW BEEF ............
$399
29-0Z. ROYALGUEST
~i1~~;__--=::..:..~$-1.;::~9-l
~::::-~
sgc
6.S.OZ. STARKIST
$369
~--=="· =~ICANA
~~t- ORANGE JUICE .. .
99
sgc
RED OR GOLDEN
·.DELICIOUS.
$1880
PORK CHOPS ...... .
APPLES
$1180
.
GROUND BEEF .....
CENTERCUT
·FRESH
$
1380
PORK
CHOPS
..........................
.
---------------------- ----------------------(ASSORlEDI
BUntRMILK ..... .
. 25-LB. BUCKET
FISCHER'S LARD
$999liMIT
.
SO EXTRA
SO EXTRA
FREE QUALITY STAMPS
FREE QUALITY STAMPS
WITH COUPON AND PURCHASE OF ANY
3-LB. CAN MAXWELL HOUSE COFFEE
WITH COUPON AND PURCHASE OF ANY·
2-LB. ROLL OF SAUSAGE
YAUP THRU JAN.• 8
YAUD THRU JAN. 8
------------------------------------------SO EXTRA
~
,
---- -- ~ ---------------- -
200 EXTRA
FREE QUALITY STAMPS
FREE QUALITY STAMPS
WITH COUPON AND PURCHASE OF
10-LB. BAG IDAHO POTATOES
WITH COUPON AND
$40 OR MORE ORDER
.
.
. YALIP THRU JAN. 8
----------------------(
.
VALID THRU JAN. 8
~--- - --- ~---~ - --~~--~- ~ ~
sgc
CALIFORNIA
LETTUCE
69E~H
·,
�Wedneaday, January 4, 1984
The Floyd County Times
Section One, Pqe Shl
E HOURS
Carla R. Boyd, Floyd County Court
Clerk announces that the office hours
for the County Clerk's office are:
• Monday-Thursday, 8:00 a.m.-4:30 p.m.
• Friday, 8:00 a.m.-7:00 p.m.
New phone numbers 886·3816; 886·3817
A PROVEN WINNER
1983 Super, latemodel Din Tracker.
Sui/It Chassis, few
runs on new Klein
engine, Goodyears·
quick change, etc.
RACE READY
with dual axiR lfaller
It much more.
• Will price car less motor, troller, It trans. Money winner In three
states.
CALL TONY HALBERT, 285-3691, OR PAUL HARRIS, 886-1825
H·Zl
PATRICK BROTHERS
TRUCK BODY & WELDING
Truck Bodies
•wreck!.
•Rebuilding
•Insurance Work
In Shop Crane Service
•
STEAM CLEANING
SERVICE
Specwltzmg In All Types
Alummum & Steel
Welding
*Mtcro-Wire *Heli-Arc
*Plasma ARC Cutting
1
606-'143-4511
White Oak, Ky.
1
r-H
JOE D. WEDDINGTON
REAL ESTATE
Prestonsburg 874-9633 Pikeville 432-4721
REALTOR
RESIDENTIAL:
ALL£N-A htn4ymen's specltl offered It price you won't wtnt to p15s up. Two
btclrooms, l•&e kitchen with cabinet" ps heat. House has llten raised above
flood plain doublllll livin& tret. A btr&tin at $22,500. Owner will finance on LAND
CONTRACT.
NEW AlUN- OYer 2,000-sq. ft. of livin& spece in ttis 4-bdrm. brick home. Co~
creta drive and patio, back yard fenced in. Conveniently located to sehool, dl•ches and shoppln&.
UTRE MUD CII£EK-l.ar&e 2-lldrm. home on 1 acre more or less. City water and
ps, one llr&e bid&. now beinl used ts 1 cerry-out store. Ctll for more informetion.
TRAM- 10 acres more or less with three exlstinc houses. Lots of room for more
dnelopment If desired. Only five minutes from U.S. 23.
PRESTONSBURG- Spacious, 2-lldrm., 1 V..-llath, town houses located in a most
desirable ntlatborhood. ldetl for people with little time for upkeep. Pttio, woodb•nln& fireplace, central lir/hett, washar and dryer hook.up, superior insul1tion
and sound-control.
SAUSBURY-Five (5) tracts of IIIMI on Left Ieaver Ck. Can be sold in separate
tracts or 111 whole. One tract is l00x800 with 11,000-14. ft. home tnd a stora&e
bid&. Call if intlrasttd in all or a part_
ALLEN AREA-Spacious, 3-lldrm., home located netr the Allen &olf course. Many
spedal fettures lncludinc fireplace, classic kitchen, dishwasher, tnd 150x300·ft.
lot
VACATION PROPERTY in Myrtle leach, S.C. 35-tt. permanently stt-up trailer on
Ocean Lakn Ptrtl. Scroened·ln porch tnd air-conditionin&. Easily rented when not
In use by ow.ner. Only $14,000.
JOHNSON C0.-70·acre f•m just ':!.-mile off new Hwy. 460, between Stlyersville
and P•lntsvllle, 10 teres bottomland with older house tnd b1m. All mineral rilflts
lncludtcl. Ideal for sub-dividin&.
WAYLAND-3-IIclrm. home on Front Street Block exterior. Moderately priced.
MAYO TRAIL-l.ar&e 2-lldrm. home 1ft\.."' near Green Meadows Country Club. All
tppllances tnd drapes included. Rt;~1or immediate occupancy. REDUCED.
UTTL£ PAINT- Brflthin& room and more can be yours in ttis 3-b~m-, 2-lllth,
brick home sltutted on 10 acres m/1. Ctll about the MANY other features.
PRESTONSBURG-3-bdrm. brick ranch. 2 baths, larae family room, 2·Ctr prtce,
ln-&round pool. Super location! REDUCED.
<Photo by KPn Pt>tPrs l
Mayor Raymond Griffith (left) looks on as members of
Martin'.s City Council are sworn to office by County JudgeExecutive J?hn M. Stumbo (far right). Those taking the oath
(from left) mclude Earrit Hays, Bill Eden, Denzil Halbert,
Frank Rudder and Johnny Maddox.
DAY HO:\lEMAKERS TO MEET
The Prestonsburg Day Homemakers
will hold their regular monthly meeting
next Tuesday afternoon at 1 o'clock at
Fellowship Hall of the First United
Methodist Church. Ho~tesses will be
Mesdames Phyllis Herrick, Eleanor
Horn, and Donna Culpepper. Floyd
County Home Economist, Mrs. Frances
Pitts, will lead the program, "Spark Up
Your Kitchen." If there is school on the
days on which regular Homemakers'
m_eetings are scheduled, the meetings
w11l be held. If there is no school
meetings will be cancelled.
'
CHRISTMAS GUESTS
Mr. and Mrs. Milton Ryan, of Allen,
had the following members of their
family for the Christmas holidays and
for the traditional Christmas dinner :
Mr. and Mrs. William A. Gregorv,
daughter, Elizabeth Ann son Paul
Richard, and guest, Deata' Shelton all
of Lexington, Mr. and Mrs. Da~ny
~tumbo and daughter, Angela, of Martin. The family gathering was enjoyed
b~ .all. While here, the Gregory family
VISited Mrs. Wanda Gregory, of Martin_
IN APPRECIATION
The family of Donald Spurlock wishes
to thank all of those who were so kind
and considerate during our time of grief.
We want to thank those who sent flowers
and gifts of love. We especially want to
thar_k the ministers, Junior Kidd and
Bennie Blankenship, and the Hall Fune.
ral Home for being so kind. All your
kindnesses were greatly appreciated.
THE SPURLOCK FAMILY
NOTE OF THANKS
The family of Polly Hunt would like to
take this opportunity to thank everyone
for their help in the loss of our loved one:
those who sent food and flowers, the
Baptist Fellowship Church of God, and
ministers , Rudolph Lewis, Harold
Lewis, RaymOnd Jarrell, Henry Cridt-r.
A special thanks to the doctors and
nurses of the Highlands Regional Medical Center and the Hall Funeral Home
for being so kind.
THE HUNT FAMILY
CARD OF THANKS
The family of Edna Key would like tf'
express their thanks to all who helped
during the passing of our loved one.
Thanks to all who sent food, flowers,
prayers, and words of comfort during
this time of sorrow. Thanks to the
minister, Edwin Doeir, for his comforting words and to the Hall Funeral Home
for its kind and efficient service.
THE KEY FAMILY
CARD OF THANKS
The fam1ly ofVannieSpurlock wishes
to express their appreciation and thanks
to all who sent food and flowers during
this time of sorrow. Thanks to the minister, Tommy Spears, for his comforting
words and to the Hall Funeral Home for
its kind and courteous service.
THE SPURLOCK FAMILY
BETSY LAYNE- Nett 2-bdrm. home In Pike-Floyd ho ow. Reduced to $34,000-
JOB OPENING
Tile Town of Wayland Is takinl jGb tpplicttlons for dty pollee tfflcar_ St•tinc stllry Is $600 1 month.
QUA UFICAnONS:
• Over aae 21 • Hip school diploma
• Police knowledle tnd 1kllls
Applications tccepted at the town
hall on T.. sdty, from 9 a.m. until 1
p.m.
Detclin~ Jln. 17, 1984
PATRICIA MURPHY
Mayor
1-4-Zl
JOB OPENING
The Town of Wtyllnd Is ttkln1 job tpplicatlons for dty dM'II- It Is a part.
time job. Sttrtinc stlary is $150 a
month.
QUAUFICAnONS:
• Hl&h sdlool diplomt • Typin& and
booklleepinc skills
Appllcaticns accepted 1t the torwn
hall on Tuesdays from 9 t.m until 1
p.m.
Oetdline: Jan. 17, 1984.
PATRICIA MURPHY
Mtyor
1-4-Zl
The world's largest peni nsula is Arabia,
with an area of about 1,250,000 square
miles.
RETUR!\:S FROM HOSPITAL
Mrs. W.E. !Myrtle) Hunt. whc; recently underwent major surgery, at the University of Kentucky Med1cal Center,
Lexington, is now showing improvement
at her home, here. Mrs. Hunt would like
to thank all the persons who have
remembered her with prayers, those
who sent flowers, cards, and letters. and
made telephone calls, showing their genuine concern. She would also like to express her sincere appreciation to her
family physician, Dr. James D. Adams,
and to the Rev. Ted Nicholas, and others
who have visited with her during her illness. She would like to ask that prayers,
for which she has been truly grateful,
be continued, and asks God's blessings
for everyone.
LOST BASSET HOUND-Female. tri-colored
(black, brown &white). Children'spet. Answers to name of Belle.
REWARD OFFERED for return or Information leading to return.
CONTACT JIM CARTER, 886-3993 OR 886_-2774
E
WINTER SALE
Y3 roy2
SPENDS HOLID:\ YS HERE
Gerald Douglas DeRossett, student at
Transylvania University, Lexington,
spent the holidays with his family here.
He was the houseguest during most of
this time of his grandparents, Mr. and
Mrs. Alex DeRossett. While here, he attended a party given by one of his U. of
Ky. fraternity brothers in Ashland On
Christmas Eve, he visited with another
grandmother, Mrs. Elizabeth Earl, in
Huntington, and went from there to
Charleston, for a visit with an aunt, Mrs.
Donna Bashaman.
FEDERATED BARGAIN
MARntl, ICY.
FURNITURE ON SALE
gooooooocrooooodbnociT:l"'tlooooooboooooooooo'c)'
FOR RENT
§.
• 1-Two bedroor\1 mobile home.
Unfurnished.
I·" • 1-Three bedroom mobile home.
l•
Call Ted Nelson 886-2993
ltpd
•1983
LINCOLN
TOW~ CARS,
LOADED.
5
g
0
IIYLTOlll
OMES
§
SERVICE DEPARTMENT
o
0
g Your Complete Mobile Home g
ga
Supp Iy and Parts Store
go
g USED APPLIANCES 'AND FURNITUIU FOR SALE g
g
to
0
~
u ; _23 PHONE 478-9594 Jv el . K>
•
Hours: Mon.-Fri. 8 a.m--6 p.m.- Sat. 9 1.m.-l p_m.
0
Ill !I'
li B.
PD9~oo~oooooo oo ooDP. D Ooooo opooqooo ooqqoo
13,995.
• YOUR CHOICE, 1983
THUNDERBIRD$, COUGARS,
REGALS, & CUTLASSES,
LOADED, $8,995.
FOR MORE INFORMATION
CALL 886-2919, or
TOM MUSIC. AT
606·2~5-4242
PAUL MILLER FORD
Enioy SUMMER
all WINTER LONG at
Stim-1/Jag
Lots of activity and a beautiful
Golden Tan in our Suntan Solarium.
Phone 874-2800
FOR
APPOI NT MENT.
Thursday Is BUCK NITE All Seats $1.00
STRAND I ·
STRAND II
Starts Fri., Jan. 6
Starts Fri.,· Jan. 6
,..~t.~()\)~··~~~
;~~t~
ACREAGI: AND COMMERCIAL
~eres
'ectional basketball tournaments Will
be played Monday , Tuesda y, and
Wednesday, January 9, 10, 11 , to determine the teams to compete in the Floyd
County Elemtntary Basketball Tournament scheduled January 16 through
January 30.
Maytown will host the Section I tourney at Allen Central where Maytown
will play Wayland, and Garrett will face
Martin in opening play. In the Section II
tourney at Wheelwright hosted by the
Osborne School. the host school drew a
bye in the first round, and McDowell will
play Melvin. Betsy Layne will host the
Section III play at Betsy Layne, playing
the Prater School in the first round. and
Stumbo Elementary will be up against
Harold Elementary. In Section IV,
hos.:!d by Prestonsburg. first round play
will see Prestonsburg verses Auxier,
and Allen Elementary playing with
Clark.
Winners of the first round games will
compete with one team from each section going on to the Floyd County Tournament for both boys and girls teams.
SUR G fo~HY
[r<.: Ha rry Hill , who has been ill , was
scheduled to undergo urgery. Monday.
at lhe Methodist Hospital, Pikeville.
~ s.llc\\~v-c¢l
INEZ- 3-bedroom home on 2 acres mil. Priced in mi.20's. SPECIAL FJNANCING
AYAILABL£.
MARnN AREA- 35 •cres. 33 hilly woodland and 2
located 3 miles west of Martin.
fO lJ, I>EHGO
Sectional Tourneys
Slated Jan. 9. 10, 11
Martin Councilmen Take Oath
of lewel bottom land,
PRESTONSBURG- A &ood commercial lot frontin& on U.S. 23 near Hi&hJands
HospitaL
\
MARTIN- If YCIII ere interested in 1 thrivin& business, let us show you one of the
Most deslrable properties In M•rtln. Three (3) wery succusful businesses
eparatlnc at present with aret for one other. Also, a spacious 2-bdrm. 1pt.
.,stairs. Call for specific detlils.
.t
MELINDA DILLON
DARREN MCGA.VIN
PEffiP. BILLINGSLEY
BRANDYKEG ESTAT£5- I.ar&e restricted residentitllluildin& lots near Jenny Wiley
Stlte Part and just minutes from u_s. 23 and Hwy. 80. $19,000 tnd up.
AUXIER- Conveniently loctted resldentitl bid&. lot. $12,000.
MAGOFFJN C0.-4i0 acres on the Short Fork Ck. of B•ninc Forti and adjoinlnc Mt_
Ptrtlwty netr Stlyersville.
PRAltR CREEK--4 llr&e residential bulldinc lots-one with drilled w1ter welt
,...FOR R E N T - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - .
BETSY LAYNE-2-IIdrm. home in 1 nk:e nei&hborflood.
ALLEN- 2-IIdrm. home •ith ful basement. Within w1llunc cistance of school.
JOE D. WEDDINGTON, Broker 874-9633 or 432-4721
DOROTHY HARRIS, Broker-Sales 874-9633 or 374-2050
DOUG HICKS, Sties 471-2518- STEPIIEN R. ALUN, S1les 886-8040
SUZANN[ REYNOLDS, Sales 874-9368-RANDALL STIWART, Sties 639-6950
Elliott Contracting Inc. is pleased
to announce that Gene D. Justice
ha<; bPt>n appoinlt>d Marketing
Salt's Manager for the Systems
Division. Gene will be available to
work with y~u at your com·enienct'
for Tt•lephone. CCTV, Securit~. Intercom. and Energy :\1anag«.>menl
Systems. liP can bt' contac!ed by
c~lling any of the follO\\ing
numbers : 1!1!6-271!1, 1!00-422-1083.
432-003:1. or e\·l'nings t:12-:120:1.
1-4·21
!
.
A-
'
~... ..
Showtimes 7:15-9:30-Sunday Matinee Open 1:00 Start 1:30 Over 2:20
�Wednesday, January 4, 1984
\'1 'ITS FA:\IILY
FRQ:\1 KY. TO CALli'.
D . S.J.C. Smiley, of Austm, Texas,
carpe here Xovember 21 and accompanied her mother, Mrs. Otelia Smiley,
to1Cynlhiana. They spent Thanksgiving
·eekend at the home of Mr. and Mrs.
('I. C. Taylor and sons, in Cynthiana,
where they were joined, Saturday, by
Dr. Dinah D. Smiley, of Louisville, who
spent the day with them.
Mrs Smiley and her daughter, Dr.
Smiley, went from there to Texas. On
their way to Texas, they stopped at the
home of friends , Mr. and Mrs. Donald
Bellows, in Arlington, Arkansas, and
went on to Plano, Texas, to spend the
night with Mr. and Mrs. Phillip Smiley.
While there they attended the farmers'
market, and other places of interest.
After a visit in Austin, Texas, they
motored back to Arlington, for a weekend with Mr. and Mrs. Bellows. They
were joined there by Mr. and Mrs.
Phillip L. Smiley and family, who had
dinner with them.
Mrs. Smiley and her daughter flew to
San Francisco, December 16, to visit her
sons, Wayne and Nicholas Ray Smiley.
After returning to Austin, December 19,
they went on December 24 to Plano,
Texas, to spend Christmas with Mr. and
Mrs. Phillip Smiley, and renewed some
old acquaintances, while there.
Mrs. Otelia Smiley flew from Dallas
to Louisville, Dec. 26, for a belated
Christmas with her daughter, Dr. Dinah
D. Smiley, at her residence there. Also
visiting were Mrs. John C. Sewell and
daughter, of Plantation, Florida, Mrs.
Jerry Thompson, Mr. and Mrs. J .F.
Smiley and son, Brad, all of Lexmgton,
and Dr. and Mrs. J .M. Smiley, of Morehead.
Mr. and Mrs. Frank C. Corley, and
their son and daughter, of Allen Park,
Michigan, and Dr. Dinah Smiley, and a
friend of Dr. Smiley's, accompanied
Mrs. Otelia Smiley home, December 31.
CORRECTION NOTED
The paternal grandparents of Miss
Ashley Taylor Gray, newborn daughter
of Mr. and Mrs. Huey Gray should have
been listed as Mrs. Marguerite Fannin
and the late Amos Gray.
FOR SALE
1979 MOBILE HOME
12x65
Nice. Underpinned. Porch.
Located on Middle Creek.
$6300.00
886-6985
The Floyd County Times
Section One, Paae Seven
Starting Off the New Ye ar Right ...
HRMC's 1st Baby Celebrated
SUCCESSFUL NEW CAR SALES BROUGHT IN
MANY LATE-MODEL TRADE-INS!
82 DODGE RAM D 150
81 FORD CUSTOM 100
This Is the perfect truck lor the person who doesn't want to spend
t12,000 to $13,000. Uke brand new, Immaculate condition, never
b11n on a dirt rood, only 23,599 one-owner miles, S·cyllnder,
automatic, power altering and brakes, air, 1111, cruise, AM/FM
stereo, 30~ollon gas tonk, transferable lllellme rustproof warron·
ty, rear sliding window. west coos! mirrors. rear chrome bumper.
molding, finished In red wllh while accent stripe ~nd gorgeous cloth
Interior, while cap, and II has the prospector package.
Only 27,3<40 miles, S-cyllnder, 3-splld, radio, west coast mirrors,
excellent tires, bench seal, whitt with red Inferior. Extra clean.
82 TOYOTA COROLLA WAGON
Sale Priced '8995
32,882 one-owner mlln, !5-speed, AM/ Fill stereo, !old-down rear
seat, tuggoge rack, rear window delrosllr, while finish With stunn·
lng blue lnllrlor and conllostlng Ioney accent slllpe and molding.
Local vehicle.
81 JEEP J10 TRUCK
Sale Priced '6995
Previous owner avo raged 17-la miles per gallon In this 6-cyllnder,
thunder black holl·lon truck, equipped wllh new shocks, power
steering and brakes, olr. AM/ FM radio, rear step bumper, west
coast mirrors, and locally owned.
Marcie Mowen pictured with her "New Year's" baby, Cassie.
Just as the Highlands Regional Medical Center is expanding, the Big Sandy expanded by one new citizen with the birth of the first baby of 1984 at HRMC.
Cassie Nicole Mowen is the 7lb, 1 oz. daughter of Marcie and Danny Mowen,
of West Van Lear in Johnson county. She arrived at 5:03a.m. on New Year's
morning. The grandparents are Brother and Dimple Watkins and Valerie and
Raymond Gamble, also of West Van Lear.
Nearly $1500 in presents were donated to HRMC's first baby and her parents
by 60 area merchants. The gjfts were collected by the Highlands Public Information Office.
Topping the list of gifts to the new mom and baby was a scholarship to Prestonsburg Community College. Others donating gifts were:
S & S Shoe Store, Paintsville Herald, Wright's Jewelry, Cox's Department
Store, Maggard's Furniture & Hardware, Jenny's Children's Apparel, Sherman's Florist, Terry Office Supply, Max Roberts Music Company, Mountain
Chronicle, First National Bank, Stephanie's Hallmark, K-Mart, Mick & Jim's
TV Sales & Service, Citizens National Bank, all of Paintsville.
Prestonsburg Community College, Free Lance Photo, Elliott Contracting,
Sears, Herrin & Johnson Pharmacy, Korner Drug, U~yd's Hardware, Fraser's
Radio Shack, First Commonwealth Bank, The Posie Peddler, Peggy's
Fashions, Piggly Wiggly, Wright's Jewelry, Dollar General Store, Western
Sizzlin, Russell May Gallery, Price's Pic Pac, Earl Castle Jewelry, Lad and
Lassie Shop, Ritchie's Hallmark, Francis Store, Music-Carter-Hughes
Chevrolet-Buick, Thompson's IGA, Bank Josephine, Jenny Wiley Flor1st, Floyd
County Times, C & H Rauch, Cooley's Apothecary, Clyde Burchett Jewelers,
Allen 's Florist, Home Medical Rentals, Ben Franklin, all of Prestonsburg.
Pikeville Furniture, Murphy Mart, Dawahare's, Western Steer, all of
Pikeville.
Tom Whitaker Art Gallery, of Salyersville.
Super Dollar Store, Maloney's, Reid's Drug Store, Martin Drug, Federated
Store, all of Martin.
Institutional Distributors, East Bernstadt, Ky., Frank's Food Service, Gray,
TN, Laboratory Supply, Louisville., Ky.
Next year's first baby will begin its life in HRMC's expanded facility. The
addition, which will include 47 patient beds and service facilities, will be completed by Thanksgiving. The new emergency room will be opened in late summer of this year.
Sale Priced '5995
Sale Priced '6995
81 PLYMOUTH ARROW TRUCK
One-owner local lady's truck, never abused, 4-cyllnder, automatic.
air, radio. dual mlrrora, bench seal, whitewall tlrts, rear step
bumper. beoulllul beige finish with matching Interior. Immaculate
condlllon.
Sale Priced '4995
81 TOYOTA STARLET
One-owner finished In beige wllh matching Interior and contrasting
block exterior stripes, !5-speed, AM/FM, rear window defroster, laid·
down rear seat, steel belled !Ires. and only 3a,9<44 miles.
Sale Priced '5695
81 CORVETTE
Has oil the goodies. not lor the talnt-heorled, v-a. outomollc. power
siHrlng and brakes, 1111. AM/ FM srereo cossene. only 35,SH miles.
and finished In sliver. This sliver buill! won't last long.
Sale Priced '13,495
81 TOYOTA DIESEL TRUCK
long wheelbase finished In red wllh matching cop and conllostlng
sport stripes, 5-speed, AM/FM, ulllo·mlrrors, tinted gloss. rear
sliding window. bench seat. rear block step bumper, excellent
whitewall !Ires, and only <46,4<4!1 one-owner miles.
Sale Priced '5495
79 DODGE RAMCHARGER 4x4
Go anywhere In this one-owner. beautiful blue and rugged Ram·
charger <4x<4 V·8, automatic, power steering and brakes. olr, and
radio.
Sale Priced '5995
77 FORD THUNDERBIRD
local trade-In, ftnlshtd In red with while lop and beoulllulred cloth
Interior. V-8. 351 c.l., automatic, power steering and brakes, olr,
AM/ FM stereo, tinted gloss, rear window delroster, molding, accent stripe. and IIFG lifesaver radials .
Sale Priced '2595
78 BUICK RIVIERA
luxury ear finished In platinum wllh landau top and red velour In·
terlor. v-a. outomollc, power st11rlng and brakes, olr. till, cruise,
AM/ FM stereo cosaene. 6-woy power HOI, power door locka and
windows. tinted glass. moon roof. reor window defroster. laney
whllls with whitewalls, and only 5<4.11<4 miles.
83 COUGAR
v-a. outomollc. power ll"rlng, power brakes. lilt. cruise, olr. stereo
cassene, center console. power seats. windows. door locks. rear
window delroster, llnted glass. molding. accent stripe. fancy wh"ls
with siMI belled whllewollllres. nnlshed In dHp blue metallic point
with light blue velour Interior, and only 3,158 on•owner miles.
Custom Deluxe 20 with only 4U70 miles, 3-speed, v-a. AM/ FM
llereo. nnlshed In white with controlling bluellrlpes, and reorllep
bumper.
Sale Priced '10,900
Sale Priced '5495
82 TOYOTA LANDCRUISER 4x4
14.464 one-owner miles. <4-sp"d wllh onrdrlve. 1111. air. AM/ FM
sllrea, tinted gloss, rear window defroster, llttl·belled tires wllh
rolstd while lener !Ires, while finish wllh beoullful cloth Interior.
78 CHEVROLET TOOL TRUCK
79 FORD CUSTOMIZED VAN
Sale Priced '13,500
Finished In dark blue metallic point with Ioney stripes, v-a.
outomallc, power steering and brakes, air, 1111, cruise, one-owner,
and factory conversion package. Be the captain In this oulston·
ding von.
82 DATSUN KING CAB
Sale Priced '7495
Mint condition, one owner, 12.055 miles, 5-speed with overdrive,
rear bench seal, steel·btlled whitewalls, rear step bumper, light
blue finish wllh matching Interior.
76 FORMULA
Sale Priced '7195
Finished In ey•oppeollng Cobtrntl mllallle paint, only 58,1117
milts, v-a, automatic, power stttrlng and brakes, air, radio, Ioney wheels with Michelin radial tires, and stripes.
82 PONTIAC BONNEVILLE
Sale Priced 1 3995
Four-door with light blue metallic polnl and deep blue velour In·
terlor, v-a. automatic, power steering and brakes and door,jocks,
olr, radio, tinted glass. radial whitewalls with wire wheel covers.
and only 2a.223 miles.
Sale Priced '8995
76 CHEVROLET MALIBU
Black <4-door sedan. v-a. automatic. power 1111rlng and brokll,
AM/ FM tope, perfect lor the lomlly.
Sale Priced 1 2495
81 PONTIAC FORMULA
Formula says II all, but this sliver Hop beoury Is exceptional! v-a.
automatic, power sreerlng and brakes, air, ttl!, rear window
defroster. AM/FM stereo S-track, tinted gloss, molding, Ioney
honeycomb wheels with sletl·btlltd tires and trim rings.
60 DODGE MATADOR
TuTone blue and while 4-iloor hardtop, v-a. automatic, power siMI·
lng and brakes, and whitewall tires.
Sale Priced '2195
Sale Priced '8495
56 STUDEBAKER PICKUP 4x4
82 CHEVROLET CLUB CAB
custom Deluxe 30 with 3+3 camper package. 7,807 on•owner
miles, v-a !1.7-lllre engine. automatic, power steering and brakes.
air, AM/FM stereo cossene, and like brand new.
Sale Priced '13,600
Award winning customized pickup llnlshed In bright orange with
block tonneau cover, new Ford v-a 351-c:ublc Inch engine.
outomallc, !Ill, power steering and brakes, rear step bumper. Only
seven of these custom deluxe models known to be In existence.
Sale Priced '6995
81 DATSUN 280ZX TURBO
48 CHEVROLET STYLEMASTER
A black beauty coupe you'll be proud to own! Gold leol~erlnlerlor,
automatic, power slterlng and brakes. AM/ FM a-speaker stereo
cossene. power windows. tinted gloss, air, rear window defroster.
toney gold wh11ls and radial tires. Hurry, If"s loaded.
4-door sedan finished In thunder block point with ganglier
whitewalls. a cylinder, 3-spltd on the column, and radio. All
original! For the serious-minded collector.
Sale Priced 1 12,495
Sale Priced '4995
79 JEEP WAGONEER
v-a 380·cublc Inch, automollc. lilt, power steering and brakes,
cruise. air. and AM/FM stereo with ca.
77 PEUGEOT 604
Sale Priced '5995
4-iloor sedan with all the goodies. S·cyllnder, automatic, power
steering and brakes. olr. AM/ FM stereo. power windows. velour
Interior. France says Peugeot Is lis best. We agrH and so will you.
81 TOYOTA DIESEL TRUCK
Sale Priced '3995
Lang whttlbose. bench seat. AM/ FM sterto cassene. tinted gloss,
dual ultra mirrors. mots. beautiful beige finish wllh matching
nbergloss top, contrasting laney sport stripes, slltl-btlled
whitewalls, and only 24,!101 one-owner miles.
Sale Priced '6195
82 KAWASAKI LTD 440
On•owner. 7,848 miles, mag whttls. seal rest bar, windjammer.
disc brakes, crash cor. finished In jet black wllh fancy accent
stripes.
Sale Priced '1895
81 CHEVROLET IMPALA
Aqua 4-iloor sedan. v-a 305, automatic, power siHrlng and brakes.
air, radio, tinted gloss, IFG lifesaver radial whitewalls with wire
wheel covera, accent stripe, sldeguord molding. 37,895 miles. and
room tor the entire family.
Sale Priced s6995
t----AS IS
71 BSA MOTORCYCLE
For the serious collector, only 9,9U miles. blutllnlsh. with sliver
1101.
Sale Priced '1495
SPECIALS----~
1976 PLYMOUTH FURY 4-DOOR
1972 CHEVROLET CATTLE TRUCK
'495
'2195
1973 CADILLAC ELDORADO
1965 TRANS-STAR TRACTOR
'3995
'995
1972 CADILLAC ELDORADO
1980 DODGE OMNI 4-DOOR
(Needs Transmission)
'1295
'2195
1972 FORD VAN
1976 CHEVROLET TRUCK
'1995
'1695
1971 CHEVROLET VAN
1976 JEEP
'1195
'2000
No ·Reasonable Offer Refu·sed!
PIKE-FLOYD MOTORS
US 23 NORTH, PIKEVILLE, KY
PHONE 478-9572
�The
loyd County Times, January 4, 1984
~1A YTOWN
NEWS
Mr. and Mrs. Paul Webb and Katina
Springfield, Ohio, were holiday guests of
his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Claude Webb.
They also were guests of her parents,
Mr. and Mrs. Alex Howard, in Prestonsburg, and attended the wedding of Mrs.
Webb's niece at the Prestonsburg Community Methodist Church, Saturday.
David Webb and Sharon Webb, of Lexington were the Christmas guests of
their mother, Mrs. Gertrude Webb
alor.g with local family members, Mr:
and Mrs. Earl E. Webb, Keith and Steve,
Mr. and Mrs. Walker Prater, Tammy
and Pamela, Keith Frasure, Merle
Webb, Ken Webb, Mr. and Mrs. Charles
G. May, Kari Lynn and Chuckie,
Patricia Webb and Dean Webb.
Stanley Ramey and Tim and Glennis
Ramey, of Alexandria, Ky. were Christmas weekend guests of Mr. and Mrs.
Howard Ramey and Mrs. Thurmal
Click.
Miss Connie Salisbury, of Beaver,
Ohio was the Christmas dinner guest of
Mr. and Mrs. Claude Webb and Mrs.
Rebecca Salisbury.
Mrs. Doris Robinson is a patient at a
Lexington Hospital following a recent
heart attack.
Mrs. Earl E. Webb and Mrs. Gertrude
Webb were shopping in Lexington on
Monday.
Stanley Ramey and Tim, Mr. and
Mrs. Howard Ramey and Mrs. Thurmal
Click were luncheon guests of Glennis
Ramey on Monday, at Hardee's in Prestonsburg.
Guests of Mr. and Mrs. Ory Bowling
during the holidays were: Mr. and Mrs.
Weldon Oakly and Mr. and Mrs. Randy
Swallow. of Sidney, Ohio, Mr. and Mrs.
Roosevelt Thornsberry and Robert, of
J...e'hisburg. Ohio; Mr. and Mrs. Bobby
JO<? Click and Charles, West Manche ter, Ohio; Mr. and Mrs. Timothy
l'hornsberry, Lewisburg, 0.; Mr. and
:\-Irs Robert E.•Bowling and Beth, Stone
~ 1untain, Ga.; Mr. and Mrs. Dennis
• '1nedy and children, Detroit, Mi.ch.,
al <1 ir and Mrs Harold Bowling and
R•ehard. Vandalia, Ohio.
· Holiday guests of Mr. and Mrs. James
E AJlenwereMr.andMrs. N.D. Turner
aud David, Vienna, Va., Mr. and Mrs.
{obert and Beth, Stone Mountain, Ga.,
i\'rr and Mrs. Norvel Fetty, Huntington,
W \'a , 1\Ir and Mrs. Dillard Prater and
.\like, Harlan, and Dr. and Mrs. Justin
·Turner, Murfreesboro, Tennessee.
} man Branham has been a patient
nt Our Lady of the Way Hospital for
.treatment.
;1'1r. and Mrs. John Harris, Jamie and
:Tony, of Louisville were here last week
to attend the funeral of his brother, Paul
•Harris
Beverly May, of Somerset and Mr.
• nd Mrs. Melvin May, of Morehead
.spent the holidays here with their
jJarents, Mr. and Mrs. Roy May.
: l\lr and Mrs. Ron Warfield and chiliren. Gibson City, Ill., Mr. and Mrs.
ark White and children, Richmond,
. Va , Judell Conley, Lexington and Hollie
· ,Iartin Conley, New York, N.Y., were
'the guests of their parents, Judge and
1rs. Hollie Conley, during the holidays.
Mr. and Mrs. Paul Miller and children
spent the holidays here with Mr. and
Mrs. Mitchell Prater.
Jimmy Ratliff underwent bypass open
heart surgery at UK Medical Center and
IS doing fine. Family members have
been there with him.
Mr and Mrs. Kent Webb, Chrita and
Roscoe, of Beaver, Ohio were the guests
of his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Claud Webb
on Thursday. This was the first visit for
baby Roscoe who was born several
weeks prematurely.
StJbscription
Rates Per Year
In Floyd County, $8.00
El-where In Kentucky, $10
C?utslde Kentuck~, $12.50
· Please ~ole expiration date
oppo•lte your name on wrapper or on yo~r copY of The
.Time•. Bec:au. . of lncrea.ed
malllna cos~•· notices ~f
•ubM:rlptlon ttxplratlon are
no
lonaer
mailed
to
IMibscrlbers.
Slibscri,tions ~nay be ~m~iled to:
The Flo)'d County Times
Box391
Prestonsbura, Ky. 41653
Tiny Miss Mistletoe
Section One, Pace El&ht
Two Years Old
~
Kristi Dawn Hall, four-year-old
daughter of Larry and Karen Hall, of
Bevinsville, was crowned Tiny Miss
Mistletoe at Martin, recently. She
received a crown, trophy, bouquet of
flowers. She also won first runner-up in
Tiny Miss Winter Wonderland pageant
held at McDowell, and participated in
the Tiny Miss Christmas Time pageant
where she was chosen second runner-up
and won a trophy for having the prettiest
dress.
She was sponsored by her maternal
grandparents, Conard and Norma
Isaac, of Melvin, and her sister, Misty
Brooke. Her paternal grandparents are
Zenith and Nora Hall, of Bevinsville.
Mining Regulations
Meet Slated, Jan. 24
A public hearing on twelve proposed
state coal mining regulations and three
proposed administrative regulations will
be held January 24 in Frankfort by the
state Natural Resources and Environmental Protection Cabinet.
The hearing, scheduled for 7 p.m. in
the auditorium of the Capital Plaza
Tower, will cover proposed regulations
400 KAR 1:030, 040 & 050, 405 KAR 7:020,
030 & 090, 40]5KAR 8:030&040, 405KAR
16:060, 090, 140 & 190,; 405 KAR 18:090,
140 & 190.
Proposed regulations under discussion
at the hearing deal with administrative
rules of procedure, applicability, definitions, hearings, surface and underground coal-mining permits and general
hydrologic requirements. ~o covered
by the regulations are bacKfilling and
grading, sediment ponds and disposal of
coal processing waste.
Open to all interested citizens, the
hearing will provide a chance for comment on the proposed regulations. Comments will be accepted by the cabinet in
either oral or written form. All comments must be received by January 31,
1984 to be included in the official hearing record.
._
Comments should be sent to: Steve
Taylor, Environmental Engineer Chief,
Division of Permits, Department for
Surface Mining Reclamation and Enforcement, 3rd Floor, Capital Plaza
Tower, Frankfort, Ky. 40601.
For additional information on the proposed regulations or the hearing, contact
Steve Taylor at (502) 564-2377.
"Collins Queen" Float
Still Seeking Donors
ContributiOns are still sorely needed to
help defray the cost of sending a float
from this county to the inauguration
parade for Gov. Martha Layne Collins,
Mrs. Laura Feamster, an organizer of
the Floyd entry, said this week.
Contributors not previously acknowledged include: Francis Stores, Dr.
Garland Godsey, Burchett and Barber,
Attorneys, Fountain Corner Drug,
Frank DeRossett, First Commonwealth
Bank, Hamilton Auto Sales, Action
Petroleum, Prestonsburg Bargain
Store, William L. James, Kentucky
Wholesale Tobacco Co., Marvin Music ,
Leo Roberts.
Jennifer S. Shepherd celebrated her
second birthday, Nov. 25. She is the
daughter of David L. and Emma Lou
Shepherd, of David. Care Bear cake and
ice cream were served. She received
many gifts from friends and relatives
who were present. She is the granddaughter of Tommy and Pearlie Mar·
sillett, of Blue River and the late Jay and
.Kitti Shepherd, of David.
off all other
Winter Merchandise
HOLIDAY GUESTS
Rev. and Mrs. Leven Burchett had as
guests during the holidays, members of
his family, Mr. and Mrs. Aster Hunter,
Jr., and son, Michael, Mr. and Mrs.
Larry Lafferty and daughters, Mr. and
Mrs. John Lafferty, Mrs. Beatrice
Yates, and Mrs. Dotty Lafferty, all of
Calf Creek. Mrs. Burchett's son and
daughter-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Fred
Miller, and their daughter, Diana, were
their overnight guests, December 25.
HERE FOR HOLIDAYS
Sandra Lynn Prater, daughter of Ruth
and Herbert Prater, spent eight of the
Holidays here with her parents and
other relatives, returning to Gainesville,
Florida on New Year's Day.
MAYO
PLAZA
Names Omitted
In the report of the death of Joe J .
Hall, of Grethel, who died November 29,
the names of a son, Keanas Hall, of Stanford, and a sister, Goldie Hall, of Harold,
were omitted. The Times regrets that
these names were inadvertently left out.
Mashed banana blended with peanut
butter and thinned with a little mayon·
naise makes a delicious sandwich.
PAINTSVILLE
!SAME BLDG.
AS ARBY'Sl
Fuller Figure Shop
FOR SALE
RATLIFF & LENOX REAL ESTATE
WE HAVE HOMEs-BOTH BRICK AND FRAME-THAT WILL
QUALIFY FOR THE NEW FLOYD-JOHNSON COUNTY BOND
MONEY. WE ALSO HAVE LOTS-:WOOOED, SECLUDED AND
CLOSE TO TOWN-AND WE WILL HELP YOU WITH
PRELIMINARY PLANNING. CALL FOF FURTHER INFOR\oiATION.
Two story home in Martin on big creekbank lot-room for garden . Lhing room with fireplace, dining room, den, eat-in kitchen, utility room,
three bedrooms, 2•z baths. Partial basement. Forced air furnace, concrete block double garagt>. downtown location. Great family home.
Small homl" in private location to rent in Prestonsburg.
Three-bedroom older home at an affordable price in Paintsville. l.iving
room. family room, kitchen dining combined. newer roof. ne\\ furnace
last year. Thret>-room apartment in back. Priced to sell at S45,000.
Small frame three-bedroom starter or retirement homl" in a t·t>al country setting. Present ownt>rs have given this four year old h<>ml" t"xcellent
cart', thf'rmopane windows. fully insulated. back patio. PossiblE'
Farn;ters Home Administration financing. Priced undE>r $40,000.00.
REDl'CED! Abbott Creek location for this brick ranch with level landscaped yard. Entry foyer. livftoom with bay wind<m. kitcht>n fa mil~·
room with woodburninP'ft_~.Y and sliders to outdoors. two utility
rooms, enclosed gar:r~~"atet· and cable TV. Priced at $57,500.00 t~
financE' under FLOY~ ,,UNTY BOJ\,"D MOJ\,"EY and sellet· will pa:~·
1:1.000.00 to\\ard closing costs. Call for dt>tails.
Owner transferrl"d. Bruncy-buill ranch hom!" on Abbott Crt'ek with
oversizl" lot and special decorating. Entry foyer. long living-dining
room with sliders to patio and above-ground pool. !"quipped kitchen with
GE applianC'I"S, an abundance of cabinets and counter spact' and an !"atin area. Famil~· room panelled. with woodburning fireplace. three
bedrooms. two full baths. and an attachl"d tw~car gara,gl". Storage
building to sta:~·. LovE>Iy area of wt>ll-kE'pt homes. Old !! 7/Xf10 bono
mont>~· assumablf' loan availabll".
We again have Kentucky Houliing money available for new homes in
Jenkins. Old-time interest rates for a few lucky buyers. Call for details.
New brick homE' read:~ for occupanc~· in a lov~>l~· area just outsidl'
Prestonsburg. Front porch, living room with picture window a.ld fireplace wall, dining room, eat-in kitchen with GE appliances, sliders to
patio, master bedroom suite, two other bedrooms. two ceramic tile
baths, utility area and tw~car garage. Central heat and air, fully insulated for energy efficiency. The fireplace has blowers and the roof is
pitched steep with pull-down stairway for extra overhl"ad storage. City
water, cablE' TV. Value prict'd. Floyd C~Junty Bond Moni"Y or ll"t us hl"lp
with financing.
Formerly Howard
Johnson's South
2280 Nicholasville Road
Lexington, Kentucky 40503
In Lexington call 277-1191
Outside Lexington call Toll Free:
1-800-432-9027
Outside Kentucky call Toll Free:
1-800-354-9096
The I ma-Assumablt> loan with the lowest closing costs in town! Ent>rgy
efficient brick ranch with attached garage. all freshly painted. on a
good level lot. Foyer. living room. large kitchen~ining-family room
with abundance of cabinets and counter spact> and range and dishwasher 'to stay. Master bedroom suite plus two othl"r bedrooms. two
utility rooms. all drapes to stay. Great neighborhood for children in
quiet residential area but orr the busy main road. See if this won't fit
vour budgE>t. Valul' pricl"d at S5!UOO. Call for dl"ti1ils.
a
of thr htrgt•t;l and most bE>autifuJI~· built and dt•turatt>d homt's it has
ht'l'n our plt>asurl' to offt>r this )'l"ar. Built of whitt• stonE' lbrkkl frum
~orth Carolina, 'hith privacy I 10 acres>. yt>t within thrl't' milt•s of
Prestonsburg. Approximate I~· :1200-sq. ft. of liYing Sl>a<'f'. plus ort'rSi7t'
garagt· of i:lU-sq. fl. and lfiH' patio inrt>a~ giw great spread-out room fur ·
famil~ or 1>a1·ti1's. Spal't" for pool if desirrd. Old hond !! i/!! 0 ;, partial
assumablE' mortgagE' availahlt>. Shown by appointmNlt.
Olll'
Buffalo Crl"l"k acreage-approximately one acre of bottom land is-included in this twelH-acre tract near Pikl" Co. lin I". Located on blacktop road
and priced to sell.
·
'On Daniels Creek we have a modulat· on 260 front feet, wedge shaped to·
the top of the hill. Extra insulation and double-pane windows and a fireplace in the family room makl" this three-bedroom. two-bath homt> with
beamed cathedral ceiling in living and dining room a real energy saver.
Special General Electric kitchen with sidt!·by-side refrigerator, selfclean range, pot scrubber dishwasher, compactor and disposal. is open
to panelled family room. Central heat and air, deck area, utility
·
building to stay.
Modified A-frame with wrap-around deck: lots of windows and light. 2
beautiful stone fireplaces, one is two-story height. Foyt>r , living-diningkitchen <grl"at room> area, three bt>drooms, plus lower levt'l rec room
and unfinished basement (utility, storage, workshop area>. Central
heat and air. Good buy with Floyd County Bond mone:~ financing
available. Adjoining lot could be added.
Close to Prestonsburg we have a 14 x 70 Windsor mobile on a verv
private lot with garden area and plenty of parking. Living room with
skylights, wood-burning stove, dining room with built-in buffet, equipped kitchen with appliances: also. washer-dryer to stay. Two bedrooms
and an extra unfinished add~n. carport and a storage building make
this a very good buy at $20,000.
Charming thrl"e-bedroom. two-story home with front porch, two baths,
kitchen with appliances and a fireplace in the living room . Remodeled,
with new carpeting and wallvaper. washer and dryer and window airconditioner to stay. Outside storage building with utilities.
Prestonsburg city water and gas. Located just below Sugarloaf on a
tree-shaded lot.
' Commercial Prestonsburg lot containing approximately one levE'I acre
at intersection of Porter and' University Drive. Adjoining Highland
·Plaza Shopping Center. E.xceUent location in a growing and busy area.
Two lots on May's Branch in Village Estates. City utilitit's; iiUr contractor. your plar.s.
High, dry building ground within walking distance to hospi~l. Coul4 be
two home sites or professional or business office. 192' front xl50' deep.
City water available.
Rarely available-wooded, secluded lots with acreage; also lO&s withl"ar.:reage. May Branch, Prestonsburg location.
Brick home-three bedrO\)mS, two baths, lull basement. bq!Hpped k.lt.:
chen, nice carpeting. Deck with built-in seating, central beat and a)r
Two-car garage. Professionally landscaped lot is 100'x200'.. Terrific
space for the _money.
We will help you sell what yotl have to sell-and try to find what yoe
want to buy. Apprai~s and counseling. You may be selling too low an•
buying too high.
OFFICE PHONE: 886-6138
We Invite You To Call U$.
Office Hours: 9 a.m.-3:30 p.m. or By Appointment
PHYLUS RATUf'F LENOX, Real Estate Broker
Phone 886-8689 after 7 p.m.
WAYNE W. RATLIFF, JR., S1lesm;n, Phone: Home 874-2720 after 6 p.m.
JOYCE LYNN BLACKBURN, Sales Representetive, Day 1-478-9450
ALTA JEAN GIBSON, Sales Representative, Phone 285-3797
VIRGIL 0. TURNER, Sales Representative, Phone 432-3367 after 4 p.m.
GUS KALOS, Sales Representative, Phone 1-789-1707 after 6
LINDA LENOX, Sales Representative, Phone 886-8689
JEWEL REED, Sales Representative, Phone 297-6424
CAROL McCARTY, Sales Representative, Phone 297·3168
�Wednesday, January 4, 1984
The Floyd County Tbnes
RETURNS TO Jo'ALMOUTH
Mi~s Rebecca Haywood has returned
to Falmouth, where she is a teacher,
after having spent the holidays here with
her parents, Mr.· and Mrs. Arthur
H .ywood, and other relatives and
ftiends .
.A.R. TO MEET
The John Graham Chapter, Daughters of the American Revolution, will
meet at the Emma Wells May Cultural
Center, Tuesday afternoon, January 10,
at 3:30. Mrs. Cordell Martin, of Hindman, will speak on "D.A.R. Schools."
Regent, Mrs. Ray Brackett, urges all
members to attend.
CHRISTMAS DINNER GUESTS
Christmas Day, Mr. and Mrs. Steward
Ray Horne and children entertained to
dinner at their home on Little Paint,
having as their guests, members of their
families, Mrs . Lorena Horne, Mr. and
Mrs . Andrew Frasure, Mrs. Kay Ann
Reynolds, and daughter, Andrea Jill,
and Mr. and Mrs. Seldon Horne and
daughter, Kim.
VISIT IN SHELBIANA
Mr and Mrs . Eddie Stone and Terra
Lee spent Christmas Day in Shelbiana,
1
visiting his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Ed
Stone, and his sisters, Misses Susan,
Lisa and Teresa Stone.
1/3 :TO
1/2
OFF
OPEN 6 DAYS A WEEK. NEVER ON SUNDAY
STOP lr SHOP
HIS lr HERS
OPEN 9-5
OPEN 10-8
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Arnold Avenue
Prestonsburg
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IN FLORIDA FOR HOLIDAYS
Mr. and Mrs. Richard Leslie and &on,
Gerald John, spent the holidays in
Sebastian, Florida
DOCIA B. WOODS, SOCIETY EDITOR
SPEND HOLIDAYS IIERE
Mrs. Alice G. Buchanan had members
of her family with her during the
holidays. They were her husband, Joe
Buchanan, Sr., who is employed in Bowling Green ; their son, Joe Buchanan,
Jr., and Mrs. Buchanan, of Durham,
North Carolina ; their daughter, Mrs.
Sarah Cross, and children, Alison and
Jeremie, and her brothers, Edmund
Burkt·, of Grand Blanc, Michigan, and
Bill Baker Burke, ..,r Tackson.
ATTEND CHRISTMAS PARTY
Mr. and Mrs. Dwayne Rodebaugh , of
Ivel, Mr. and Mrs . Frank Setser, and
sons, of Germantown , Ohio, and Mrs.
John Rodebaugh, of Prestonsburg, attended the Christmas play presented by
the Maytown Methodist Church Sunday
evening of last week. Two of Mrs . John
Rodebaugh's grandchildren w·e re in the
play.
ALL WINTER MERCHANDISE
Section One, Pqe Nine
HOLIDAY GUESTS
Mr. and Mrs. Leonard Grant and Mrs.
Myrtle Allen had with them during the
Christmas holidays , members of their
family, Mr. and Mrs. Mike Stark and
daughter, Becky, of Fort Mills, South
Carolina; Mr. and Mrs. Paul Henry, and
daughter, Jennifer, of Nashville, Ten·
nessee ; Mark Bolling, of Lexington ; a
family friend, Miss Elizabeth Burchett,
of Lexington, and Allen Bolling, of Prestonsburg.
Mrs. Allen's sister and brother-in-law,
:Mr. and Mrs. Ernest DeHart, of Olive
Hill, were here for a pre-Christmas visit
with her and the Grant family. While
here, they and Mrs. Allen spent some
time with another sister, Mrs. Nell
Howard, and family, and with their
brother, Glenn Burchett, at the home of
his daughter and son-in-law, Mr. and
Mrs. Kenneth Caldwell.
SPEND HOLIDAYS HERE
Mr. and Mrs. Danny Hall, of Lexington, spent the holidays here with her
father, Taulbee Johnson, at his home on
Graham Street. Mrs. Hall is a teacher
in the Fayette county schools, and Mr .
Hall is a pre-medical student at the
University of Kentucky.
VISITING IN HARLAN
Miss Kelli Ford, daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Winston Ford, accompanied her
aunt, Mrs. Tipton Baker, and family, to
their home at Harlan for a visit, following their New Year's visit with the Ford
family.
CHRISTMAS DINNER GUESTS
Mr. and Mrs. William 0 . Goebel, Jr.,
had as their Christmas dinner guests
members of their families, Mrs. Maude
Mayo, Mrs. Sally Goebel, Mr. and Mrs .
William 0 . Goebel, III, Sally Goebel,
Debbie Thomas , Mary Goebel, Matthew
Thomas and Jim Thomas.
MUCH IMPROVED
Harry Short is showing marked
improvement, at his home here, after
having been a recent patient at St. Anthony's Hospital, in Louisville.
CHRISTMAS IN GEORGIA
Mr. and Mrs. James E. Goble, Prestonsburg, and Mr. and Mrs. Connely
McCray, of Alexandria, Va., spent the
Christmas holidays with Mr. and Mrs.
Clifford ·schornak and son Michael, in
Kennesaw, Ga .
HERE FROM LOUISVILLE
Lana Goble, student at the University of Louisville, spent several days this
week with her parents, Mr. and Mrs.
James E. Goble.
NEW YEAR'S GUESTS
Mrs. Lorena Horne, and Mr. and Mrs.
Steward Horne and children, Stacy and
Renee, spent New Year's Day with Mrs.
Josephine Auxier and family, at Irvine.
DINNER GUESTS
Dr. and Mrs. Garland Godsey entertained with their annual Christmas dinner, Saturday evening, December 24.
Present were Mrs. Godsey's mother,
Mrs. Ora Bussey, their daughters, Mrs.
Darrell Leslie, Mr. Leslie and sons,
Blake and Jonathan, Miss Nancy Godsey, all of Prestonsburg; Mrs. Bruce
Williams, and Mr. Williams, of Pikeville, and a family friend, Brad Baker,
of Owensboro.
LEARN OF DEATH
Relatives and friends of former Kentucky Secretary of State, George Glenn
Hatcher, of Frankfort, formerly of this
county, were saddened to learn of his
death, Thursday, December 29, at the
University of Kentucky Medical Center,
Lexington. Mr. Hatcher was the last remaining member of the immediate
family of the late George and Mary
Fairchild Hatcher, who once owned and
operated the Hatcher Hotel at Bonanza,
near here.
DINNER GUESTS
Mr. and Mrs. John Allen entertained
members of their family to dinner on
Christmas Day. They were, John Allen,
Jr., Mr. and Mrs. Stephen Allen and ch!ldren, Stephen II, and Samantha, all of
Prestonsburg. Other members of their
family who visited them during the holidays were Mrs. Judy Colvin and her
daughter, Mrs. Elizabeth Harris, of Lexington, Miss Kathy Colvin, of Huntington, and another daughter, Mrs. Judy
Nelson, Mr. and Mrs. Robert Allen,
Robert II, and Rachel, and Mr. and Mrs.
David Allen, David II, and Jim, all of
Prestonsburg.
OLD CHRISTMAS PARTY
The annual Old Christmas party,
which was revived by Mrs. Edith James
during the early Depression years of the
1930's, will be held at May Lodge, Jenny Wiley State Park, January 8 at 2 p.m.
Traditional music and dances will be
presented, with story telling, especially of the Epiphany. One of the many outstanding features of this program will be
banjo picking by Dr. Harry Bickle, of
Louisville, who has been proclaimed the
champion banjo picker of Kentucky.
VISIT AUNT, HERE
Mr. and Mrs. Bob Bingham, of Jeffersonville, Indiana were here during the
holidays for a visit with their aunt, Mrs.
Carrie Hubbard, at her home on First
Avenue.
NE" YEAR'S EVE PARTY
Mr. and Mrs Ward Ha ll ga ve a New
Year's Eve watch party at their home
in Highland )r~rra.ce. Special guests Included Mr. and Mrs L B. Fairchild, Mr.
and Mrs. Dave Sizemore, all of Prestonsburg, and Mr . and Mrs . Mitchell
Prater, of Risner Following the returning of thanks with prayer by Roscoe
Evans, guests enjoyed a bountiful repast
was served by the ladies of the apartments, there. String music throughout
the evening was furnished by Mr. Fairchild and Mr. Sizemore. After " Auld
Lang-Syne" had been sung, the group
sang " Happy Birthday" to Kenneth
Allen, whose birthday is January 1.
FREE
EAR PIERCING*
~ ith
pure hast' o! earrings
A ·s tl'rile, medically approved procedlrre·
performed bJ trained personnel
Quick • Safe • Painless
CLYDE BURCHETT .
Jeweler
Phone 886-2734 Prestonsburg
ALL
WINTER MERCHANDISE
Y3
CHRISTMAS GUESTS
Mr. and Mrs. John Rodebaugh had as
their Christmas dinner guests a longtime family friend, Miss Myrtle Pugsley , and family members, Mr. and Mrs.
Dwayne Rodebaugh, of Ivel; Mr. and
Mrs. Frank Setser, of Germantown,
Ohio, and Mr. and Mrs. David Robinson
and children, Jenna Camile and David
Kyle, of Spurlock. Mr. and Mrs. Rodebaugh received a Christmas telephone
call from their daughter, Mrs. Geisella
Sue Krasucki, of New York.
RECUPERATING AT HOME
Mrs. Arthur Haywood is improving
nicely at her home, after having been a
patient a few days, at the Highlands
Regional Medical Center.
OFF
PHONE 886-1791
COURT STREET PRESTONSBURG
OVERNIGHT GUESTS
Mr. and Mrs. David Hanson, of Des
Moines, Iowa, were overnight guests
here last week of their aunts, Mrs. Grace
Sutherland, Miss Alice Harris, and Mrs.
Fannie Runne ls .
RETURN FROM DAYTON
Mr . and Mrs. Victor Hale have
returned to their home here after spending the holidays in Dayton, Ohio with
their daughter and son-in-law, Mr. and
Mrs. George Letton , and the Lettons'
daughter, Laura.
JENNY WILEY FESTIVAL MEET
Mrs. E.L. Bierman, director of the
Jenny Wiley Festival, announces that
there will be a meeting for the board
members, chairpersons, and all others
interested in this organization, Thursday
afternoon, January 26, at 4 p.m., at the
Prestonsburg Municipal Building.
The fashions You Need Nowf
ALL FALL AND WINTER MERCHANDISE
REDUCED
ALL
WINTER COATS
Y3
OFF
AND BELOW
CHILDREN'S
CLOTHES
$ 5 0 0AND
· up
BLOUSES, SKIRTS
AND SWEATERS
FULL FIGURE
BLOUSES, SKIRTS
AND SWEATERS
S400AND
UP
$600AND
UP
GROUP
CHILDREN'S
SKI JACKETS
REG. '24"
NOW
$1300
BLOUSES
$1200
Lots more too numerous to Include in ad.
Come In and put on layaway, charge or i:ash.
Big-City Fashion
At A Small-Town Price.
STORE-SHOE STORE-DENIMLAND
PRESTONSBURG
OPEN NIGHTS TILL 7 P.M.
Apply for
CatoCredit
oruseour
Layaway
Plan!
�Wednesday, January 4, 1984
Section One, Paae T en
The Floyd County Times
URNEWYE
RESOLUTIO !
PRICES GOOD THRU TUES., JAN. 10, 1984
MORE
FOR
i'AL{]£.
Foo~OR
~----------------------------.L~DOLLAR!
~_,-
·loin
eak
6
46 OZ. ASSORTED
IJ!i~ks . . ..... . . 69
HOLLY FARMS
GRADE 'A'
S.D.A. CHOICE
LB.
2
ryer
J~rts
9
99
329
T·Bone
Steak
....
LB.
FIELD'S 16 OZ. SLICED
s 69
Bacon............................. 1 e
FIELD'S 12 OZ. PRO LEAGUER
Wieners ....................... 89
U.S.D.A. CHOICE
~
LIMIT
PLE~SE
,
HOLLYFARMSGRADE'A'FRESH
Fryer Breast.... ..... ... ....... LB.
U.S.D.A. CHOICE BNLS. BOTTOM
Round Steak... .. ...... ... .. ..LB.
FRESH LEAN
1>
Stewing Beef.... ............. La.
16 OZ. FIELD' S
Sltced Bologna....... ...... ....
8139
8199
9
ARMOUR
8239
8
1
LB.
HILLSHIRE FARMS
8
12 OZ. LOUIS RICH
69~
49
Country Sausage ..... .. ... LB.
Turkey Franks .. ....... ... .... .
1
99
8279 16 OZ. LOUIS RICH
. 99~
Hamlet Halves ..... ..... .. .. LB.
Turkey Bologna........... ...
FRESH DELICIOUS
8119 KENTUCKY BORDER (BY·THE·PIECE)
9~
Pork Steak..... ........ ...... ... LB.
Chunk Bologna............ ....
FISCHER
7
U.S. N0.1 WISCONSIN
J~t~~o~':~~~-- s J79
CRISP MciNTOSH
Al;:ie':~~- . . . .·. 7 9<=
49 OZ. BOX
Bold
Detergent .... .
99<=
SWEET JUICY NAVEL
Seedless s·
Oranges.
LB.ONIONS
D'ANJOU PEARS
LB.
59
~
o;;;;~ON
Crisp Carrots... ....
GARY'S 10 OZ.
99 ~
WASH . .
STATE
PURE s
4ft<:
;, ·
1LB. PACKAGE
REG. OR
Peanuts .. ~~!-!~'? ..... . . . .
MILD
FLAVORED
LARGE FLORIDA
Egg Plant ....... .... u
.
8J29
39
e
99
Juice... .. .. ... .
59e
Mrs. Filbert's... .. ... ... .. .. .. ... .. .
1
16 OZ. QUARTERS
16 0~.
Jt;NO'~ PEPPERONI OR SAUSAGE
Mtnt Ptzza s .. ... ... .. .. . .. .... s PAK
8J79
fishRSti~k;.~~~~ ~~-~~~~-~-~ .......... 8 3 29
P~ddi~g~~-E~ .".~~~·-~ ...................... 8 1 og
15.5 CHUNKY GARDEN
TomJGariOnlon
~~~~~
Ragu Sauce .. . t:t~. ~~-...
Great Values for
your New Year's Resolution!
16 OZ. WEIGHT WATCHER'S
8Jftft
•
V7
S a 1a d D resstngs ??0
M~;;;~~HER~~ ~M~~A~:~~ . . . .. . . ... .. 8149
ITALIANOR
1
ISLAND • . . .
16 OZ. WEIGHT WATCHER'S
. .•.
·
~argalrine ............................. ..
79
e
Ch;:;;TWATCHER'~ASS.~ ... . . . . . ........... 8139
WEIGHT WATCHER'S ASSORTED~~-~~~~
8179
•~
zm
Entrees
OZ. VEAL PARMESAN
. • •9 OZ.
MACARONI
• ll. 7 lASAGNA
·
Cottage 01eese
8199
e
........... .. 69
~~~ MilkH~ . ~ ~~~~~.........
.... . . .8 1 69
16 OZ. WEIGHT WATCHER'S •a.-akc•Carroc Cak~
D esserts . ..
~or Bl.wbcny'Owrry
12 OZ. LIGHT 'N LIVELY SM. CURD
1
.. ...... .
89111te
~
2 LB. HYDE PARK ELBOW MAC. OR
99~
15.5 ARMOUR BEEF OR PORK
8119
32 OZ. HYDE PARK BUTTERMILK
89~
Thin Spaghetti . .. .... .. .. .. .. .. .. ..
Sloppy Joes
........................ ..
24 CT. FAM. SIZE BAGS
8159
Tetley Tea..... ....... . ......... .......
·
Pancake Mix....... .. . .. .. ............ .
r~;c::bi~ . . .. .. . .. ...
64 OZ. BTL.· 45' OFF!
. . . . . . . 88199
2 49
Final Touch ................................ .
250 COUNT NORTHERN
Paper Napkins ..................... .. ..
6 OZ. ASS'T. CAT FOOD
Purina 100. ........... .
8J29
3/89~
<i~;&; ........ . . . . . ... . . . ..8 1 29
Pled;e~~~-~. . ~#.~.~.................... 8J49
8849
Gravy Train .... .. ......... .. . .. .... ... .
16 CT. COMTREX TABLETS OR 24CT.
8289
Cold Capsules . ... .... .. ......... ...
25 LB. BEEF·UVER·BACON OR REGULAR
81•
Vaseline Lotion .. -~~~~~-~~~~ ............. .
10 OZ. INTENSIVE CARE
•
�EXTRA
ON SELECTED CHEVY'S AND BUICKS.
Buy a Cavalier, Citation II,
Skylark, Light-duty Pick-up,
S-10 Blazer or S-10 Pick-up
and not have a payment due
until March 1...
S-1 0 Sport Blazer
S-1 0 Pickup
AND WE HAVE A LARGE,
LARGE STOCK OF FACTORY·
FRESH CAVALlERS THAT
HAVE JUST ARRIVEDCOUPES, SEDANS,
AND WAGONS
AND THEY'RE PRICED RIGHT!!
Cavalier Type 10 Coupe
COME ON N!
SEE ONE OF THESE SALESMEN:
ED MUSIC, ESTILL LEE CARTER
PAUL HUGHES, NELSON BALDRIDGE
EDDIE MEADE, BOBBY BURCHETT
CARL CASTLE, ROGER DeROSSETT
DAVE ESTEPP, TOM ROSE
Special Deals With •
Illiteracy In U.S.
WAKE UP AND
SEE THE WORLD
WITHOUT REACHING
FOR YOUR
GLASSES!
WEAR EXTENDED WEAR CONTACTS
Minix Optical has been fining extended wear contact lenses
for seven years I they are now available In most
astigmatism prescriptions for extended wear up to two weeks.
MINIX OPTICAL
522 College St.
Paintsville, Ky. 41240
789-6000
Marcus S. Minix, Optician
Wm. Chalmer Frazier, Optician
TWO LOCATIONS:
205 H. Arnold Ave.
Prestonsburg, Ky. 41653
886·1349
The Kentucky Coalition for Literacy
will participate in the nationally syndicated documentary "Can't ReadCan't Write" to be aired on Kentucky
television stations January 13-14.
Hosted by Johnny Cash, "Can't
Read- Can't Write" surveys illiteracy
in America through personal experiences, graphic illustrations of the
economic impact and discussions with
political leaders who are active in the
fight for literacy. The hour long special
report will also feature a toll free hatline, 1-800-228-8813, that viewers can call
to find ways they may become involved
with literacy efforts in their own communities.
In Kentucky, one of the literacy program contacts will be the Kentucky
Coalition for Literacy, a private nonprofit corporation designed to assist the
expansion of existing illit.eracy efforts
and to help local communities to develop
literacy programs.
As Executive Director for the Coalition, Sue Draper explained, "The
documentary, "Can't Read- Can't
Write'' is part of a nationwide thrust for
ijteracy through the National Coalition
for Literacy funded to alert America to
its literacy problem and to urge people
to get involved by becoming literacy
volunteers."
·savings Bonds Sales
Are Reported Higher
THERMAL SOCKS
Reg. 2.49 pr.
2 pr.
350
•
or $2 pair
Miss Bureita Gearheart, Floyd county Savings Bonds Chairman, reported
purchases of $20,245 in United States
Savings Bonds were credited to the
county for October, 1983. Total sales
credited to the County through October
are $223,587.
Statewide sales of United States Savmgs Bonds totaled $3,237,182 for October, 1983 according to reports coming
to the County Chairman from Dennis R.
Hendrix, President and CEO of Texas
Gas Transmission Corporation, the Kentucky State Volunteer Chairman for the
U.S. Savings Bonds Division. Kentucky
sales through October of 1983 totaled
$35,037,015 which is a 3 percent increase
over the comparable period of 1982.
Nationwide sales for the first 10
months of 1983 are up 32 percent at $3.362
billion. Redemptions for the 10 month
period were down 29 percent from a year
ago . The value of United States Savings
Bonds held by the public was $70.9 billion
on October 31 .
Effective November, 1983, the
market-based interest rate for Series
EE Savings Bonds issued between
November I, 1983 and April30, 1984, is
9.38 percent for the1r first semiannual interest period. This is the third semiannual rate to take effect since marketbased, variable rates were mtroduced
on November I, 1982.
Celebrates Birthday
Jean's Bedspread outlet
at new locationMiddle creek Road
LOW, LOW PRICES
PHONE 886-6708
SATELLITE TELEVISION
Jennifer Lynn Bradshaw celebrated
her sixth birthday January 2. She is the
daughter of Mickey and Shirley Bradshaw, of Alexandria , Kentucky. She is
the granddaughter of Mrs. Margie Bradshaw, of McDowell, with whom she
visited during the Christmas holiday .
BETSY LAYNE NEWS
FAMILY GATHERI~G
AT CHRISTMAS
Mr. and Mrs. Lee Cecil. of Harold,
celebrated an old fashioned Christmas,
at their home with a Christmas tree, lots
of gifts followed by a nice dinner. All of
those who attended enjoyed themselves .
Their children who were present at this
family gathering were Mr. and Mrs. Bill
Ratliff, of Ashcamp ; Mr. and Mrs. Edward Cecil, of Owensville; Mr. and Mrs.
Joe Osborn, of Harold ; Mr and Mrs .
Billie Williams, of Dana ; :\lr. and Mrs.
Hoover Cecil, of Harold: 11 grandchil ·
dren, and seven great-grandchildren.
Mr . and Mrs. Lee Cecil are among the
older citizens of our community and arc
both in poor health but enjoyed all their
family and the many relatives and
friends who came to visit with them .
The largest coral reef in the world is the
Great Barrier Reef near the northeast
coast of Australia . It extends 1 250 miles .
r=·:·:;~~;~~,~~~;=;,:·:::::::-11
::;-Black with gold hardware, ;::·
::~ excellent condition.
:~:
1\t., _,_,_, _~,~,;~,~ ~,~ ~-~-:-:~)_, , ,II
NEWS
SPORTS
MOVIES
RELIGION
• Bank
Financing
. Available
USTOM ANTENNA
MARTIN, KY. • 285-3984
(Across the creek from Garth Vocational School
!HI
IMMEDIATE OPENING-REGISTERED NURSES
AT
HUMANA HOSPITAL LOUISA
MEDICAL, SURGICAL AND CRITICAL CARE UNITS
Humana Hospital Louisa is a small rural hospital.
Opportunity to advance within the company
throughout the country without ony loss of benefits
or seniority. Salary competitive with excellent
benefits.
Contact:
HUMANA HOSPITAL LOUISA
Personnel Deportment
P.O. Box 769
Louisa, Ky. 41230
606-638-9451
AN EQUAL OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYER
�•
The Floyd County Times
Section Two, Paae Two
~
CPhoto bv Laura Cooley>
IN SEMI-FINAL PLAY of the Jenny Wiley Invitational Tournament, eventual champions the
Betsy Layne Bobcats faced a tough Allen Central team, Friday afternoon here. The Bobcats'
Lester Newsome is shown here taking aim during the contest which Betsy Layne won, 59-68.
Ski Butler Opens
For New Season
Ski Butler at Carrollton opened for the
season Saturday, its general manager
announced last week.
The approach of cold weather permitted the ski facility to make snow and
open three of its seven slopes Saturday
afternoon and a fourth on Monday, said
Phil Janke. The remaining three are expected open by Wednesday, weather
permitting.
Janke said the slopes are in " beautiful" condition, with a 12- to 24-inch base
of groomed powder. Ski Butler is located
in General Butler State Resort Park, off
1-71 about halfway between Louisville
and Cincinnati.
·
The ski shop is open and renting equipment, including a limited supply of highperformance gear, Janke said. As with
last year, Ski Butler is served by six
lifts-two double chairs, three ropes and
one pony. A new trail for advanced
skiers makes it debut this year.
Ski Butler is open weekdays from 10
a.m. to 10:30 p.m., from 9 a.m. to 11 p.m.
Saturdays, and from 9 a .m . to 10 p.m.
Sundays.
Lodging is available at General Butler
park lodge and local motels.
Bobcats Nip PHS
To Win Jenny
Wiley Tourney
When the Prestonsburg Blackcats
and Betsy Layne Bobcats. two of the
strongest teams in the region, clashed
Saturday night for the Jenny Wiley Invitational Tournament championship.
it was the third time the two county
rivals had met.
The Blackats. who had fallen to Betsy Layne by one point in the finals of
the Floyd County Invitational tourney
a few weeks ago and by a wider margin
in recent regular season play. hoped
for "the third time's a charm" situation but. instead. suffered another
fruslrating one-point defeat. 58-57, at
the hands of the stubborn Bobcats who
took home the Jenny Wiley tourney
championship and upped their record
to 9-0.
Tourney play got under way Wednesday night. after being delayed from
Tuesday due to bad weather, with the
Wheelwright Trojans downing
McDowell's Daredevils, 63-59. In the
night's second game. Prestonsburg
handily defeated Magoffin County
High School. BB-66.
The following night. the Allen Central Rebels won over the Virgie Eagles.
69-53 in the first game, and in the second. Betsy Layne defeated the always
powerful Sheldon Clark Cardinals,
73-72 . in overtime.
Friday afternoon's semi-final play
saw Prestonsburg win easily over
Wheelwright , 81-57, and Betsy Layne
downed a surprisingly tough Allen Central Squad. 6~59. The Bobcats secured
their victory in the second half since
Allen Central led by a I(}.point margin
at halftime .
The championship game was practically a repeat of the final game of the
earlier Floyd County Pre-Season Tournament with the Betsy Layne ~obcats
edging out Prestonsburg 5~57 in a
definite "barn burner."
In the awards ceremony. the individual free throw trophy went to Jeff
Campbell of Betsy Layne who hit for 13
of 13, and the team free throw trophy
was presented to Prestonsburg.
Sheldon Clark's cheerleaders won the
top tr~'IJhY while second place went to
Prestonsburg's cheerleading squad.
<Photo by Laura Cooley>
THE PLAY WAS ROUGH during the championship game of
the Jenny Wiley Invitational Tournament as closely-matched
rivals Betsy Layne and Prestonsburg met for the third time
this year. The Blackcats were denied revenge for two earlier
losses as the Bobcats won the tourney, 58-57.
W.E. MAY PRESENTS
* SUPER STAR *
WRESTLING
EVERY TUESDAY NIGHT, BEGINNING JAN. 10
AT MARLOWE'S COUNTRY PALACE
SPECIAL BARBED-WIRE MATCH!
C
*
GRUDGE MATCH (NOT SANCTIONED BY K.A.A.I)
*
:J
BIG JOHN, THE MOUNTAINEER VS. THE ANIMAL
* SEMI-MAIN EVENT *
THE DIRTY DALTON$ VS. EDDIE WARD AND GILFORD HALL
{Eddie and GIHord are from the Prestonsburg area-See them!)
Despite common belief, most
monkeys cannot swing by their tails. But
some monkeys can use their tails almost
like an extra hand, says International
Wildlife magazine. A spider monkey, for
example, can open a door with its tail.
ALSO ...
* CUBAN ASSASSIN VS. MR. LEE *
* MIDNIGHT RIDER AND DARK SHADOW VS. DON BAKER AND ART CLANCY *
GENERAL ADMISSIONS: $5.00 CHILDREN UNDER 12: $3.00
<Photo by Laura Cooley>
PRESTONSBURG'S Kelly Cecil handles the ball under
pressure from Magoffin County defenders. The Blackcats
downed Magoffin County, 88-66 during the past week's tournament play.
Individual Scoring In BLHS Games
1Statistics compilt>d b~ Male-ta C'amp-
bt>ll.)
The following is a compilation of individual scoring in Jenny Wiley Invitational Tournament games involving
tourney champs the Betsy Layne Bobcats.
Betsy Layne vs. Sheldon Clark. Bet sy Layne-Jeff Campbell 31. Levi
Hamilton 19. Lester Newsome 8, Jimmy Parsons 4. Brett Meade 4. Chris
Conn 3. Mike Conn 2, Dwayne Kidd 2.
Final score : Betsy Layne 73. Sheldon
Clark 72 in overtime.
Betsy Layne vs. Allen Central. Betsy
Layne-Levi Hamilton 20. Chris Conn
16. Lester Newsome 13. Jimmy Parsons 11. Jeff Campbell 8. Brett Meade
2: Allen Central- Tim Lawson 17,
Craig Hall 17. Dale Pack 14. Greene 8.
Don Moore 2. Paul Rice 1. Final score:
Betsy Layne 68. Allen Central 59
Betsy Layne vs Prestonsburg <tournament championship>. Betsy
Layne-Levi Hamilton 18. Jeff Campbell 12. Chris Conn 12. Lester Newsome
4. Jimmy Parsons 4: Prestons burg- Todd Nairn 17. Marty Minix 13.
Tommy Whitaker 11 . Kelly Cecil 10.
Gordie Ratliff 6.
''I know every bolt and
beam. Block
knows every
deduction
and credit.''
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-
-·-----
:;.,
..··
·;.·.
:-:··
�•
Wednesday, January 4, 1984
The Floyd County Times
Section Two, Paae Three
.
'
PIICES
IN EFFECT
WEDNESDAY
JAN. 4 .
THIU S NDAY
JAN. 8
* *'* * * * * * * * * .• * * * * *
4 LOCATIONS!
**
* • PIKEVILLE • ZEBULON i'
!
t*
• WE RESERVE THE RIGHT.
TO LIMIT QUANTITIES
• WE ARE NOT RESPONSIBLE
FOR PRINTER'S ERRORS
BETSY LAYNE • ELKHORN CITY
t
t
OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK
8 A.M. TO JJ P.M. .i'
*****************i'
I
WE GLADLY
ACCEPT U.S.D.A.
FOOD STAM
'• ·
MARTHA WHITE
SELF-RISING MEAL
.
1~~:·$199
: .·
.$
..
.
49
· 1-LB. PKG.
PRIDE OF SUGAR CREEK
. BACON
~~ ......
2
99 C
GUNNoE'S SAUSAGE ... $
HALF
GAL.
. 12-oz. PKG. ARMOUR
HOT DOGS (BEEFORREG.) ............ . . .
f
ALKA-SELTZER PLUS
.2o.cr.$169
KRAFT
MACARONI & CHEESE.
~PKG.
TiLPNROAST
14-0Z.99c
99c .
$119
ruxsn.
89c STRAWBERRY $119
BOX
BATH TISSUE
DISH LIQUID..
B"REEzE
DETERGENT
DIXiELAND
ICE CREAM ..
·PRESERVES.
$339. BLuEBoNNET $159
MARGARINE
·w.zsK·
$259 MORToN
j fG
$119
DETERGENT
2
JAR
MAYONNAISE....
POT PIES .~- f~.~
PEANUt
$129
.BUTTER ........
TAsTE~o-sEA
DOG FOOD ...
Ci.OROx
n
$149 rc&~~LAKES
DRY BLEACH .....
PRE-WASH ..
$169
TALLCANS
CARNATION
EVAP. MILK ...
99
C
CHUNK BOLOGNA ........... .. .
LB.
HOLLYWOOD STYLE
PORK RIBS ................. ..
.
QUARTER
PORK LOIN
$
29
LB.
$1
00
CARROTS.
3-LB. BAG
s399
89c
9c
2
· · · · · · · · · · · · · - ~ ·-· · $1 !
9
VALLEYDALE
3 FOR
~~i.;~iRNIA
$149
18-0Z. BOX
CLOROX
79c
PERCH ......... .
CHUNirLAZER
$899 ,
2s.LBs.
ARMOUR LARD ................. .
DINNER
CHARMIN
49
,RED DELICIOUS
7
9
C
....
··
APPLES.~
.
·
\
~13!
�Wednesday, January 4, 1984
John B. Newsome
John B. Newsome, 69, of John Hall
Branch near Grethel, died Saturday at
his home afler a long illness.
Born June 24, 1914 at Beaver, he was
a son of the late Daniel and Rhodina
Hamilton Newsome. He was a retired
miner and was a member of the United
Mine Workers of America and of the
Zion Regular Baptist Church.
Survivors include his wife, Martha S.
Newsome; two sons, Charles Rex Newsome, of Amhurst, 0., and Larry Doug
las Newsome, of Vermillion, 0 ; five
daughters, Mrs. Geneva Holmes, of
Wakeman, 0., Mrs. Winona Tackett, of
Liberty, Mrs. Roberta Wallen, of Huron,
0., Mrs. Clara Sue Hall, of Galveston,
and Mrs. Willa Jean Tackett, of Teaberry; one brother, Chester Newsome,
of Craynor; three sisters, Mrs. Mary
Ailee McKinney, of Craynor, Mrs. Susan
Howell, ot Grethel, Mrs. Shirley
Hamilton, of Detroit, Mich.; 20 grandchildren and seven great-grandchildren.
Funeral services were conducted at 10
a.m., Monday, at the Zion Regular Baptist Church at Grethel by Regular Bap
tist ministers, and burial was made in
Davidson Memorial Gardens at Ivel
under direction of the Hall Funeral
Home.
Carl Howard
Carl Howard, 66, of Garrett, died last
Thursday at the McDowell Appalachian
Regional Hospital following a long illness .
Born September 30, 1917 at Garrett, he
was a son of the late Melvin and Dora
Cli<:k Howard. He was a retired miner
and member of the UMWA, District 30.
IrE' is survived by his wife, June T.
Martin Howard; two sons, Charles Randall and Bill) Howard, both of Marion,
0 .; three brothers, Morrow Howard, of
Kenton, 0., Eugene Howard, of Detroit,
Mich., and Melvin Howara, Jr., of
Fostoria, 0.; one sister, Mrs. Nadine
Shoffner, of Marion, 0.; six grandchildren and one great-grandchild.
Funeral services were conducted
Monday at the Stone Coal Regular Baptist Church at Garrett with Regular Baptist ministers officiating. Burial was
made in the Howard cemetery at Garrett under direction of the Hall Funeral
Home.
PALLBEARERS LISTED
Active pallbearers for the funeral of
Elva Hunt were Randall Horn, Jeffery
Horn, Dwayne Scalf, Steve Scalf, Larry
Crum, Richard King.
CARD OF THANKS
The family of Mrs. Elva Hunt would
like to thank all those who were so kind
and considerate during our time of
bereavement. We extend a special
thanks to friends who brought food,
those who sent floral arrangements, to
the ministers for their comforting words
and to the Hall Funeral Home for their
efficient service.
MACK HUNT,
EMMA LOU HORN,
DELORES JEAN SCALF
SANDY VALLEY
MONUMENT
I BUILDING STONE CO.c Inc.
874-2273 .• ALLEN, KY
"THE AREA'S OLDEST ESTABLISH£,.
IIONUIIIEIIT R#IM.~
BEST QUALITY MEMOR1ALS
QUICK, EFFICIENT SERVICE
AND INSTALlATION
SEE OUR URGE DISPLAY OF
COLORED & GRAY GRANITES
lOl:ATED ON .OLD U,S. 23
-
IN NEW ALLEN
Section Two, Paae Four
The Floyd County Times
.~
&- tf.
Obituaries
Jesse \Villiams
...
Jesse Williams, 83, of Paintsville, died ·
last Wednesday at the Paul B. Hall
Medical Center.
Born January 27, 1900, he was a son of
the late Elifis and Minerva VanHoose
Williams and was a retired carpenter.
His wife, Zora Williams, preceded him
in death in 1941.
He is survived by one son, Bill
Williams, of East Point; two daughters,
Mrs. Catheryn Melvin, of Paintsville,
and Mrs. Delores Davis, of Wabash,
Ind.; one stepdaughter, Mrs. Leora Dutton, of Paintsville; a brother, Willie
Williams, of Columbus, 0.; a sister,
Mrs. Josie Patrick, of Dayton, 0.; eight
grandchildren, two step-grandchildren
and eight great-grandchildren.
Funeral services were conducted at
2:30p.m., Friday, in the chapel of the
Jones-Preston Funeral Home by the
Revs. Roy Tincher and Bruce Daniels.
Burial was made in the Johnson County Memorial cemetery at Staffordsville.
Mrs. Victoria Mulkey
You Are Invited
Mrs. Victoria Mulkey, 89, of Banner,
died last Thursday at her home following a long illness .
Born June 27, 1894 at Honaker, she
was a daughter of the late Nathan and
Elizabeth Conn Smith and was a member of the United Baptist Church for 39
years. She was married to Earnest
Mulkey, who preceded her in death in
1964.
Surviving are four sons, Kenis and
Isaac Mulkey, both of Banner, Charlie
Mulkey, of Stanville, and Delzie Mulkey,
of Albion, Mich. , four daughters, Mrs.
Augusta Hurd, Mrs. Lizzie Spears and
Mrs. Atchie Spears, all of Allen, and
Lennie Mulkey, of Banner; two brothers, John Smith, of Betsy Layne, and
Jim Smith, of Stanville; two sisters,
Laura Smith, of Stanville, and Annie
Boyd, of Dana . Also surviving are 31
grandchildren, 75 great-grandchildren
and 16 great-great-grandchildren.
Funeral services were conducted at 10
a.m. Sunday, at the home by United
Baptist ministers, and burial was made
in the Rice cemetery at Dana under
direction of the Hall Funeral Home.
To the
Jesse Lewis
Jesse Lewis, 40, of Detroit Michigan,
died Thursday at the Veterans Hospital
in Dearborn following a long illness.
A son of the late Jack and Poky Bentley Lewis, he was born Aprilll in Alpharetta. A member of the Church of Jesus
Christ of Latter Day Saints, he was a
disabled employee with the Chrysler
Corporation.
He is survived by his wife, Mrs.
Marcella Adkins Lewis; two sons, Jesse
Lewis, Jr. and Brian Keith Lewis, both
at home; two daughters, Beverly Denise
and Allison Marie Lewis, both at home;
four brothers, Jimmy Lewis, in Ohio,
Johnny Lewis, of Edgerton, 0., Jerry
Lewis, of Lima, 0., Jack Lewis, Jr., in
Ohio; two sisters, Mrs. Janie Hamilton,
of Banner, and Mrs. Jeanette Marcum,
of Drif
Funeral services were conducted at 11
a.m. Sunday in the chapel of the Hall
Funeral Home by Elders of the Church
of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints.
Burial was made in the Martin cemetery
at Martin.
Brett Inmon
Graveside services were conducted
Saturday at 1 p.m. at the Dingus cemetery at Dinwood for Brett Inmon, infant
son of Buford and Karen Reane Inmon,
of Martin, who died Thursday at the
Highlands Regional Medical Center.
In addition to his parents, he is survived by his grandparents, Earnest and
Bobbie Ward, and Clester Jo Inmon, all
of Martin.
Services were under direction of the
Merion Funeral Chapel.
John Woodrow Scalf
Funeral services for John Woodrow
Scalf, 70, of Beaver, who died Monday
at the McDowell Appalachian Regional
Hospital following a long illness, will be
conducted at 11 a.m. tomorrow (Thursday) in the chapel of the Hall Funeral
Home. The officiating minister will be
John Adams.
Mr. Scalf was born April19, 1913, a son
of the late John Tandy and Anna Lee
Gose Scalf. He was a retired miner and
grocery store owner and was a member
of the Missionary Baptist Church at
McDowell. He was twice married, first
to Elizabeth Marie Elliott Scalf, who
preceded him in death in 1968, and later
to Bessie Slone Scalf, who survives him.
In addition to his wife, he is survived
by two sons, John Douglas Scalf, of
Hamilton, 0., and John Michael Scalf,
of Beaver; four daughters, Phyllis Griffith, of Hamilton 0., Mary Williams, of
Salem, Ind., Lisa Ann and Sandra Lee
Scalf, both of Beaver; two brothers,
Hubert Preston Scalf, of Middletown, 0.,
and Herbert Russell Scalf, of Gardenia,
Calif.; two sisters, Grettis Miller, of
Middletown, 0., and Mildred Wetzel, of
Jacksonville, Fla.; eight grandchildren
and two great-grandchildren.
Burial will be made in the StrattonScalf cemetery at Stanville.
Visitation may be made at the funeral
home.
-
First Assembly of God
Martin, Ky.
SPECIAL TEACHING SESSION
Each Wednesday Night On
THE NINE SPIRITUAL GIFTS
from
1 Corinthians, Chapter 12
SUNDAY WON'T DO!
God won't accept Sunday. He
sold the Sabbath, not the First
Day. Jesus sold It was a vain
worship to keep man's comandments and not God's-Mark 7:7.
North Lake Drive
REV. TIMOTIIY D. JESSEN
Pastor
CHURCH
SUNDAY SCHOOL
710 Burke Ave.,
Prestonsbui'JI, Ky.
Pastor
REV. TIMOTHY D.
West Prestonsburg, Ky.
WADE MARTIN HUGHES
Pastor
Sunday School. . ... .... 9:45a.m.
Morhing Worship .. ... .. . ll a.m .
Evening Worship . ....... . .7 p.m.
Wedn~sday Prayer Study . .7 p.m.
Auxier Freewill
Baptist Church
Sunday School ... 10:00 a.m.
Morning Worship .... 11 a.m.
Evening Worship .. 6:00p.m.
Prayer Meeting
·Thursday ....... 6:30p.m.
Pastor, Elder Douglas Burkett
Asst. Pastor Clyde Bowling
12-14-tf
ZION
DELIVERANCE
TABERNACLE
WAYLAND, KENTUCKY
Sunday School 11 a.m.
Evening Worship 7 p.m.
Wednesday Prayer Service 7 p.m.
Saturday Evening Worship 7 p.m.
Ada Mosley, Pastor
Everyone Welcome.
All The Earth Shall Worship Thee.12·14-tf
-~tile
COME .
WORSHIP
WITH US
AT
FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH
McDowell, Xy.
12-28-j;tpd
janux;
~
CEPISCOPALI
PREST._ONSBURG. KENTUCKY 41653,
60 so:Arnold Ave., Prestonsburg
Dr. Ted Nicholas. Minister
Sunday School . . . ... ... 9:45
Morning Worship . . . . . 11:00
Junior and Senior UMYF2 :30
Rhythmic Choir ......... 4:30
Wesley Bell Choir .. ... .. 5:15
Evening Service . ... . . . . 7: 00
A CHRISTIAN WELCOME
AWAITS YOU.
First Church of
UlliwersitJ Dr., PrestDasburg, Ky.
J5F,;}!IN COLLINS, Pastor
' SUNDAY:
S~day School .. . . . .. .. 9:45p.m.
Morning Worship ... . . 10:45 a .m.
Evening Service .... . .. 6:00 p.m .
TUESDAY:
Prayer Encounter ..... 7:00a.m.
SUNDAYS
UNITED
WEDNESDAY:
Prayer Service .. .. . .... 7:00p.m.
WDOC·AM
2:00p.m. Sundays
CATHOLIC CHURCHES.
Of Floy~ County
MI!THODIST
.~pu'Llock
Bible Chu\ck
R.R. #5
Presto'l.sburg, ,Kentucky 41653
Spurlo& Fork of Middle Creek
SERVICES
Sunday School....... .. .. . .
. lO:OQ a.m.
(Classes for all ages)
Sunday Moi-ning Worship Service 11 :,oo a.m.
Sunday Evening Service .. . . .. .. .. .7:00p.m.
Wednesday-Prayer and Bible Study?: 00 p.m.
West Prestonsburg, Ky.
Across From Clark Schow
fit.
WAlLAND
CHURCH OF GOD
FITZPATRICK
FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH
FIRST
UNITED
METHODIST
CHURCH
EVERYONE WELCOME
Free cassettes or written
literature-Specify which.
l2-21Htpd.
Taylor L . Biggs, Pastor
Phone: 886-8087
School and Bible Class
11 a.m ..!..Holr Co1111unio~
punish sinners forever in
a firel The wages of sin
Is death-Romans 6:23.
(SEVENTH DAY)
CHURCH
9:45 il.m.-Church
NO! God is not going to
Sunday School .......... . . 10a.m .
Morning Worship . . . ...... 11 a .m .
Evening Worship . . ...... . ... 7 p.m.
Wednesday Worship . . ..... 7 p.m.
SUN., WDOC AM-11:00
'EPISCOPAL
aa,rtist
Supda/'Seh<><!! ......... 9: 45 a.m.
Morning Worship . ... .. . . . 11 a .m.
Evening Worship ..... ... . . 6 p.m.·
Wednesday
Prayer Meeting . .. . .. ... 7 p.m .
H. Bailey Sadler, Pasttjr
7-i1-t(
Visitors ExP.ecled
"The Church Where Exciting
Things Are Happening" .
SUNDAY
·sunday School. .... .. . . . . 10 a .m.
Worship Service . ..... . .. 11 a.m.
e\rening Service .... . . . ·7 p.m.
WEQNESDAY
Pr-ay,er Meeting .... ... .. . . 7 p.m.
CLIFFORD H. AUSTIN, Pastor
'
HELL
c/o Jerry Bentley
Rt. 4, Box 737
Pikeville, Ky. 41501
9:30A.M.
·Highland A~enue
Freewill ~Baptist
Church
FIRST ASSEMBLY
·oE GOD
CHURCH OF GOD
c/ a Jerry Bentley
Rt. 4, Box 737
Pikeville, Ky. 41501
METHODIST
WORSHIP SERVICE
10:45 A.M.
Free cassettes or written
literature-specify which.
(SEVENTH DAY)
CGMMUN-ITY
UNITED
First Presbyterian Church
Church School 10:00 a.m.
Morning Worship 11:15 a.m.
~iiURCH
Welcome You
,St. Theodore, Prestonsburg
7 p.m., Sat; 11 a.m . Sun;
Sl Juliana , Martin
5 p.m. Sat. ; 9 a.m~un .
RADIO PROGRAMS
.A church with a message
fortc.hilf1ren of all ages.
Sunday School. ... .. ... 9:45a.m.
Morning Worship . .... . .. 11 a.m.
, (Nursery Provided)
Come and gr:ow with us!
Sun.-WMDJ Martin
' .
. .11 :05 a .m.
Sun.-WDOC·FM ~restonsburg .. 11:00 a.m .
twed.- WDOC Prestonsburg ... . . . 10:.55 a .m.
~.-WRLV Salyerville.
.. ... 7 . 50 a.m ;
WEYMAN McGUIRE, Pastor
Pastor: Father Ralph Beiting
358-4419
285-3254
!EVERYONE IS ALWAYS WELCOME!
Sunday School. ....... 10:00 MilL
Morning Worship . . . . .... 11 a.m.
Sun. Evening Worship .. 6:00p.m.
(except when school is out) 7.00 p.m:
Wed. Bible Study ....... 7:00p.m.
Youth Church for ages 5-10
during Sunday Mornirtg Worship
PHILIPPIANS 2:16
"HOLDING FORTH THE WORD OF·
LIFE..."
DJri
Box 850, Martin, Ky. 41649
Parsonage Phone-285-3444
"A Christ Centered Church
Built On Love"
•NURSERY PROVIDED•
REV. JOHN WOODS, Pastor
Heintzelm~n-Pastor
.
.......
MAYTOWN
UNITED
METHODIST
CHURCH
The growing church for
the growing Christian.
PROCLAIMING
NEW TESTAMENT
CHRISTIANITY
t
-.
No Book but the Bible.
No Creed but Christ.
No Name but Christia n .
FIRST CHRISTIAN CHURCH
PRESTONSBURG
CHURCH OF ·CHRIST
SOUTH LAKE DRIVE
LORD'S DAY
'BIIiJ-E CLASS .............•..•..... 10:00 A.M.
WORSHIP ......................... 10:45 A.M.
EVENING WORSHIP ............. 6 P.M. STD. TIME
7 P.M. D.S.T. TIME
WEDNESDAY
BIBLE STUDY ...........•................ 7 P.M.
RADIO BROADCAST
.
WPRT MONDAY thru FRIDAY 9:30A.M.
WMDJ SUNDAY 9 A.M.
••com.e Let Us Reason Together" Isaiah 1:18'
Evangelist Bennie Blanken.ship 886-3379, 886·6223.
Morning Worship
Sunday School
Youth Group
Evening Worship
9:30a .m .
11:00 a.m.
. . 5:00p.m.
. 6:30p.m .
Come and g row with
u.~!
We.vman McGuirt'. Pastor
358-4419
429 N. Arnold Ave.
Prestonsburg
Sunday School. . . . . . .... 10 a .m .
Morning Worship . . ..... 11 a .m .
Evening Worship ... . ... . .6 p.m .
Wed. Bible Study . . . .... . 7 p .m .
Dial-a-Prayer---386-8551
Walt Staude, Prc:acher---386-8773
L----------------------1- ~-tf~
. . . . . . . .__________________. . (
FIRST ASSEMBLY OF GOD
Lorie Vannucci, Pastor
Phone 285-3051
Martin, Ky.
Sunday School . .
10 a.m.
Children's Church
II a.m.
Morning Worship
11 a.m .
.6p.m.
Youth Worship ..
Evangelistic Service .. . .
7 p.m .
Family Night
Wednesday. 7 p.m .
LOOKING FOR SOMETHING DIFFERENT?
Attend Services At The
FIRST CHURCH OF GOD
(Little Paint) lf2 mile off Route 1428
Between Prestonsburg & East Point, Where
HTHE. DIFFERENCE IS WORTH THE DISTANCE"
SUNDAY SCHOOL .... .. 10:00 a.m.
MORNING WORSHIP .. . 10:45 a.m .
YOUTH SERVICE ... . . .. 6:00p.m.
EVENING WORSHIP . . . . 6:30p.m.
BIBLE STUDY <WED.> .. 7:00p.m.
. .........
As the New Year begins ... the spirit of thankfulness, peace and goo? will
is foremost in our thoughts. We pause and reflect on the value of friends
like you and convey our sincerest thanks and appreciation for the opportunity of serving you and fulfilling your needs. Because of your confidence and loyalty, our company has grown and prospered over the
past 38 years.
In a spirit of appreciation, we pledge ourselves to con~inue our best e~
forts to serve you. With deepest gratitude, our staff wtsh you prospenty in the New Year.
CARTER PRESTONSBURG,
FUNERAL
HOME
KY.
•
<NURSERY PROVIDED>
RADIO BROADCAST
WQHY-FM 95.5
MON.-FRI., 8-8:15 A.M.
ROY L. TINCHER, Pastor
Bible Study , . . 9:45 a.m.
Morning Worship . . II a.m.
Evening Worship 5:30 p.m.
Mid·Week Prayer Service] p.m.
FIRST AVENUE, DOWNTOWN PRESTONSBURG
NURSERY PROVIDED AND PLENTY OF PARKING
STEVE HOPKINS, PASTOR. MINISTER OF MUSIC, GUS KAlOS.
(,
~lornin g
lh e.
,en-iCf' broad ca ~t
II : IS. WQHY "I"'I 95.5
�Wednesday, January 4, 1984
The Floyd County Times
Children's Books .
Section Two, Paae Five
Some Good Wintertime Titles
Bv PATI\' UE!\IPSE\'
Chtldren's books are good for any ttme
and season of the year But, wintertime
is an extra specml time to read a good
book.
Some books that have winter settmgs
are lbted below. They range from simple books v.ith lots of pictures to storie ·
that include a lot of excitement and
adventure. What better way than to
some hours caught up in times
where the s now is so cold and
getting to know people who are
th all the fun and dangers that
brings
for children only, but for anyone
enjoys a good story, looking at lovework, and reading aloud to those
have not yet learned to read.
YOUNGER READERS
WEATilER by Lillian D. Chaffin,
by Helga Aichinger. Macmillan
It is so warm in the cave where big
bear and small brown bear are
that the snow and wind outside
t only by the humans . A winter
story of a mother bear and her baby.
Pictures fit so well with the story.
THE BIG SXOW by Berta and Elmer
Hader. .Macmtllan. The big snow comes
and the wtld animals are without food.
The liltle old man and woman put out
food and all the btrds and animals come
to enjoy the feast.
A HAPPY WI TER by Karen Qundersheimer Harper Row . For the little ones
who sit on adults' laps and look together
at these winter pictures
HAS WI:-lTER COME? by Wendy Watson. Philomel. A woodchuck family gets
ready for winter. Easy readmg.
KATY AND THE BIG SNOW by
Virgima Lee Burton. Houghton Mifflm.
Katy ts a big snowplow and there is no
work for her until it snows and snows
and snows. Then she rescues an entire
city.
THE SNOWY DAY by Ezra Jack Keats.
iking. Peter enjoys a walk in the snow,
making tracks a nd snowangels. Then he
returns home to a warm fire . Brightly
colored pictures.
STOPPING BY WOODS ON A SNOWY
EVEN!. "G by Robert Frost, Illustrated
by Susan Jeffers . Dutton. The poetry is
for older readers, but the pictures of the
animals and birds along with the old
man hts horse and sleigh make it a treat
for all.
A WINTER PLACE by Ruth Yaffe
Radin , Paintings by Mattie Lou
O'Kelley. Little Brown. Colorful paintings enrich all the winter activities included in this book.
OLDER READERS
FROZE~ FIRE by James Houston.
Atheneum. Matthew and Kayak search
for Matthew's father in the Canadian Artie. In turn, they become lost and their
search becomes a battle to survive.
There is much in the story about the
Eskimo way of life.
HELP, 1'1\1 A PRISO!\JER I. THE
LIBRARY by Eth Clifford, Illustrated
by George Hughes. Doubleday. Two
sisters become locked in the library and
have to spend the night there. Easy and
fun to read.
THE LONG WINTER by LAURA INGALLS WILDER. Harper and Row.
Laura and her father go to the farm and
twist hay into small bundles to use as
firewood because all the wood has been
burned to keep warm. They barely get
back to town before the heavy snow
begins again. The Little House Books
are much better than the TV series.
MARY OF MILE 18, The Story and Pictures by Ann Blades. Tundra Books
Mary lives in the unsettled part of
Canada with her family as homesteaders. There is no indoor water, no electricity, no telephones and no television.
l\lary finds a wolf-puppy, but father says
they can only keep animals that earn
their keep. Full-page paintings of the
family and farm.
MIRACLES ON MAPLE HILL by
Virginia Sorensen. Harcourt Father
wasn't well, so the family moved to the
farm where mother grew up. With the
help of neighbors, making maple syrup
and working together, the family
becomes stronger.
SNOW TREASURE by Marie McSwigan. Dutton. How does one hide gold
from the Nazis during World War II in
Norway? Put it on the children's sleds
and Jet them ride the hidden gold to the
harbor where it will be placed on ships
and to safety.
WINTER DANGER by William 0 .
Steele, Illustrated by Paul Galdone.
Harcourt. Caje, 11 years, followed his
hunting father in the Tennessee wilderness. They slept in caves and hollow
trees while hunting bear and deer. Then,
his father leaves him with relatives, and
Caje has to adjust to living with a family during a winter that threatens not only the animals but the family as well. A
frontier adventure.
WINTER SCIENCE ACTIVITIES by
John M. Youngpeter. Holiday House.
Science projects having to do with birds,
animals, plants, the weather, snow and
ice.
Continuing education can be fun and
helpful as four Riverview Manor residents will tell you. Elsie Wheeler <Gran- •
ny Cotton), Minnie Hopkins, Ollie Hall,
and Elma Kendrick were involved in a
series of classes on diabetes taught by
Carol Hollon, health educator at the Big
Sandy District Health Department.
Prevention and control was the message, placing the major responsibility
for the success of these on the person
having the disorder. Residents shared
freely and questioned their educator
about different aspects of diabetes that
were of special interest to them. All residents expressed a deeper understanding
of the disorder and the "why" of certain
medications, diets, and exercise. Elsie
Wheeler said she enjoyed the sessions.
" IIearned a lot", she said. Mrs. Wheeler
is 108.
In Floyd County, $8.00
Elsewhere ln' Kentucky, $10
Outside Ken~ucky, $12.50
Please note explr•tlon date
opposite your name on wrapper or on your copy of The
Times. Because of Increased
malltn& costs, notices of
subscription expiration are
no
longer
mailed
to
subscribers.
Subscriptions m1y be 1111iled to:
The Floyd County Times
Box 391
Prestonsbura, Ky. 41653
S
1¢4.
and
lc===~¥4
Ill
Pvt.. James E Layne, son of Scott E
and Gloriana Layne of Rural Route 2,
Martin, has completed a combat engi neer course at the U.S. Army Training
Center at Fort Leonard Wood, Mo.
During the course, students were
tramed in the techniques of road and
bridge building, camouflage and demolition . They'also received instruction in
combat.squad tactics as well as in the
use of infantry weapons.
He is a 1979 graduate of Allen Central
High School, Eastern.
HOMEMADE PillA- SPAGHETTI- SUBMARINE SANDWICHES
ALL INGREDIENTS MADE FRESH DAILY
WE USE FRESH PIZZA DOUGH • Not Frozen • Not Pr•Baked • No Substitutes
OPEN
CRISP FLAVORFUL PIZZAS
CUSTOM MADE IN
10" - 12" - 14
HOLII>A Y GUESTS
.
Felisha Dawn Bradford celebrated
her second birthday, December 22, at
her home, with her grandparents, Mr.
and Mrs. L.A. Johnson, of Melvin. It was
also their 33rd wedding anniversary.
She IS the daughter of Ronald and Colleen Bradford, of Middle Creek, and is
also the granddaughter of the late Mr.
and Mrs. Johnnie Bradford. Family and
friends attended and she received many
nice gifts.
Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Spradlin had
with them during a part of the holidays,
their son, Larry Spradlin, and Larry's
son, Jason, of El Paso, Texas, Mr. and
Mrs. Charles Spradlin, and children,
Tommy and Jennifer, of Lexington, and
Mr. and Mrs. Bob Spradlin, of Flatwoods.
9AM-1AM TUES-SAT
lOAM-lAM SUNDAY-CLOSED MONDAY
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17" SIZES
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YOU RING ...WE IRING
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OA
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"Friendship is a ship big enough to
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Ambrose Bierce
U.S.D.A. CHOICE PlAnER PWSING
CHUCK STEAK
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FAMILY PAK . ......... •J.75 LB.
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For Continue Ed.
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Rates J>er Year
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Completes Army
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Two Years Old
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PLAmlt IIUASING
PLAIN OR SELF-RISING
WHITE LILY FLOUR
$2 29
PEAifUj Slam
.I IELESS ££f
STEW MEAT
25-LB.$399
BAG
BUTTER ............ .
NORTHERN
BATH TISSUE
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4-ROLL
PKG.
MANUFACTURING
7
c
Manufacturers of Mining Equipment
U.OZ. CANS HY-TOP
L~rt ·- -3/sl
S and H MANUFACTURING, INC.
RT. 850 HUEYSVILLE (FLOYD COUNTY) KY. 41640
PHONE: 606-358-9251
PARTS FOR S & HAND OTHER POPULAR SCOOPS
l.OZ.
DESCRIPTION
•
•
•
•
•
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(RELIANCE) 288 TRAM MOTOR ...........•... .. . $4,285.00
(GE) 60 VOLT SCOOP HEADLAMPS ...••.•..• . .. . ..... 9.25
(SQ. D) 3 PRONG CONTACT TIPS •....•••••......... 20.00
(HB) DISCONNECT (PANIC) SWITCH . ........•... .. . . 58.65
(ANDERSON) 250 AMP BRASS RECEPTACLE . . .... . ..••• 112.50
(ANDERSON) 250 AMP BRASS PLUG (ONLY) ....... . .... 67.50
(.4 SECONDS) (3.4 SECONDS) TIME DELAYS ............ 22.50
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• (H-140 ROCKWELL) NEW 5/34 RATIO DIFFERENTIAL (HOGSHEAD) .• 675.00 EA.
• (H-140 ROCKWELL) USED 5/34 lr 5/ 36 RATIO DIFFERENTIALS
(HOGSHEAD)
399.00 EA.
• NEW H-140 RING GEAR and PINIONS 5/34 lr 6/37 RATIO .
. . . 250.00 SET
• GOOD USED H-140 RING GEAR AND PINION 5/36 RATIO ....... . 100.00 SET
• H-140 HUB ASSEMBLY . .
. • . . . • . . • • . . • .....• . 195.00 EA.
• H-140 AXLE SHAFTS . .
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• (TIMKEN) 493 WHEEL CUP . . . . . . . . • . . • • • .........••••• 4.82 EA.
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(TIMKEN) 495AX WHEEL TAPERED ROLLER BEARING . • . • • . • •.•.. 9.75
(SPICER) 1610 U·JOINT KIT . • . . . . . . . • • • . • . . . • . • . . . • . • 29.00
10" SCOOP RIM •
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(GOOD YEAR) 750 x 10 HEAVY DUTY TUBE W/ TR-75 VALVE •••..•.. 8 50
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Prices good thru 1/13/84.
OUR REBUILD PROGRAM-20% OFF PARTS AND 10% OFF LABOR.
FREE PICK-UP & DELIVERY WITHIN 50 MILES.
12 21 41
COFFEEMATE $
.CREAMER.
MAXWELL HOUSE
COFFEE .....
1-LB. PKG.
PLATTER PLEASING
U.S.D.A. CHOICE PUTTEI PLEASING
CHUCK ROAST
SEL£CTO SUNRISE
$
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smishers special snln1 of your choice.
Look for the Price Smuhers symbol in ow- ICI s 1nd In
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2. Paste 36 Price Smuhers sells on uch sner certlflc:lte (n1llable 1t the checkout).
3. Elch filled c.-tlfiute c1n be redeemed for the Price
BOLOGNA
TOMATOES LB.
10-LB. BAG
IDAHO
POTATOES
88-CT. SIZE
RED DELICIOUS
APPLES
69 C.
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69~.
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�_Wednesday, January 4, 1984
~OTICE OF
INTENTION TO MINE
Pursuant to Application
Number: 436·5159
( 1) In accordance with the provisions
of KRS 350.055, notice is hereby given
that Cow Creek Construction Company,
Prestonsburg, Ky 41653. has filed an application for a permit for an underground mining operation. The proposed
operation will affect a surface disturbance of 4.5 acres and will underlie an
additional 146 acres located 1.5 miles
east of Emma in Floyd county.
<2> The proposed operation is approx
imately 1.4 miles east from State Route
19-t's junction with St. Rt. 1408 and
located 0.1 miles south of Cow Creek.
The latitude is 37 deg. 38 min. 02 sec. The
longitude is 82 de g. 40 min. 21 sec..
(3) The proposed operation is located
on the Lancer U.S.G.S. 712 minute quad·
rangle map. The surface area to be
disturbed is owned by Kennis Burchett
heirs. The operation will underlie land
owned by Jim Burchett, Lack Hunter
heirs, Kennis Burchett heirs, Hansford
Spears, and Wayne Crider. The operation will affect an area within 100 feet of
State Route 194. The operation will not
involve relocation of the public road.
(4) The application has been filed for
public inspection at the Department for
Surface Mining Reclamation and Enforcement's Prestonsburg Regional Of·
fice, 503 South Lake Drive, Prestonsburg, Ky. 41653. Written comments, objections, or requests for a permit conference must be filed with the Director
of the Division of Permits, 6th Floor,
Capital Plaza Tower, Frankfort, Ky.
4060 I.
12-14·31.
This is the final advertisement of this
application; all comments, objections,
or requests for a permit conference
mu.;t be received within thirty (30) days
of today's date.
1t.
NOTICE OF
INTENTION TO MINE
Pursuant to Application
Number U6-0133
In accordance with the provisions of
KHS 350.055, notice is hereby given that
L.T. Ruth Coal Company, P.O. Box
116.3!1, 1351 Newtown Pike, Lexington,
Kentucky 40576, has filed an application
fer a permit for a surface coal mining
nnd reclamation operation of approximately 59.9 acres located 1.3 miles West
~f Prestonsburg, in Floyd county.
The proposed operation is approximately 1.6 miles southwest from S.R.
1427's junction with U.S. 23 and located
0.8 miles south of Abbott Creek. The latitude is 37• 40' 21". The longitude is 82°
49' 02". The surface area is owned by
Edward Music, Estill Carter, Paul
Hughes, and Willie and Georgia Allen.
The proposed operation is located on
the Prestonsburg U.S.G.S. 712 minute
'quadrangle map. The operation will use
the contour and auger method of mining.
The operation will affect an area within
100' of public road "Big Branch Road".
The operation will not involve relocation
of the public road.
The application has been filed for public inspection at the Department for Surface Mining Reclamation and Enforcement's Prestonsburg Regional Office,
431 S. Lake Drive, Prestonsburg, Ky.
41653. Written comments, objections, or
requests for a permit conferenc~ ~~st
be filed with the Director of the DIVISIOn
of Permits, 6th Floor, Capital Plaza
Tower. Frankfort, Kentucky 40601.
12-14-3t.
This is the final advertisement of this
application; all comments, objections,
or requests for a permit conference
must be received within thirty (30) days
lt.
of today's date.
NOTICE OF
INTENTION TO MINE
Pursuant to Application
No. ·136-5099
( 1) In accordance with the provisions
of KRS 350.055, notice is hereby given
that Triple Elkhorn Mining Company,
P.O. Box 140, Ivel, Ky. 41642, has filed
an application for a permit for an underground mining operation. The pro~sed
operation will affect a surface disturbance of 6.0 acres and will underlie an
additional 949 acres located 1/2 mile
northeast of Emma in Floyd county.
<2> The proposed operation is approximately 12 mile north from State Rt. 1428
junct~on with Cow Creek Road and loca~
ed 1 2 miles north of Cow Creek. The !alltude is 37° 38' 40". Longitude is 82' 29'
29''.
.
(3l The proposed operation is located
on Lancer U.S.G.S. 71z' quadrangle
map. The surface area to be disturbed
is owned by Peachie Merritt. The operation will underlie land owned by Peachie
Merritt, Rosie Woods estate, Leonard
Goble Roland Blackburn, Clyde Burchett 'William Jarrell, Irvin Harris,
Willi~m Amburgey, Columbus Jervis,
Roland Blackburn, Troy Whitt, Gale
Burchett, and Forest Burchett.
c4> The application has been filed for
public inspection at the Department for
Surface Mining Reclamation and Enforcement's Prestonsburg Regional Office at 431 South Lake Drive. Written
co~ments, objections, or requests for a
permit conference must be filed with the
Director of the Division of Permits, 6th
Floor Capital Plaza Tower, Frankfort,
Ky. 400ol. Comments must be received
within thirty (30) days of final advertise12-21-3t.
ment.
NOTICE OF PUBLIC SALE
A public sale will be held by The Bank
Josephine on the 13 day of January, 1984
at The Bank Josephine, Harold Branch.
Time of sale· 10:00 a.m. Sale is for the
purpose of disposing of a 1981 Dodge
Ram 150 Pickup, to satisfy a loan note
and security agreement dated the 12 day
of August, 1983.
The Bank Josephine reserves the right
to bid.
12-28-3t.
Terms of sale: CASH.
The Floyd County Times
<FACSIMILE>
NOTICE OF
INTENTION TO MINE
Pursuant to Application
Number 460-5072
In accordance with the provisions of
KRS 350.055, notice is hereby given that
Pembroke Coal Company, Inc , Star
Route J, Lambric, Kentucky 41340, has
filed an application for a permit for an
underground mining operation. The proposed operation will affect a surface
disturbance of 13 acres and will underlie an additional 419 acres located one
mile southwest of Garrett in Knott county and 170 acres located one mile southwest of Garrett in Floyd county.
The proposed operation is approximately 0.32 miles northwest of State
Route 80's junction with Rock Fork
County Road and located 0.32 miles
northwest of Rock Fork. The latitude is
37'-28'-10". The longitude is 82'-52' -23".
The proposed operation is located on
the Wayland and Handshoe U.S.G.S. 712
minute quadrangle map. The surface
area to be disturbed is owned by
Matewan Minerals, Inc. The operation
will underlie land owned by Mirna Conley heirs, Steve Conley, Buford Howard,
Clester Coburn, Mander Moore, Billy
Sexton, Delenger Cox, Joe Slone, Jasper
Moore heirs, Matewan Minerals, Inc.,
Clifton Moore, Henry Boleyn, Norman
Shepherd, John Reed, Ishmal Shepherd,
Coet Handshoe heirs, Mrs. S.J. Rocke,
Homer Crager, Matilda Gayheart, Dora
Turner, Phillip Neeley, Ida Martin,
Rebecca Martin, Billy Inman, Willis
Turner, and Kelsie Chaffins.
The application has been filed for
public inspection at the Department for
Surface Mining Reclamation and Enforcement's Jackson Regional Office,
Howell Building Howell Heights, Route
2, Jackson, Kentucky 41339. Written
comments, objections, or requests for a
permit conference must be filed with the
Director of the Division of Permits, 6th
Floor, Capital Plaza Tower, Frankfort,
Kentucky 40601.
12-21-Jt.
NOTICE OF
INTENTION TO MINE
Pursuant to Application
Number 436-5175
In accordance with the provisions of
KRS 350.055, noticr is hereby given that
Prater Creek Mining Co., lite:, P .O.
Drawer A, Harold, Ky. 41653, has filed
an applice>tion for a permit for an underground mining operation. The proposed
operation will affect a surface disturbance of 4.65 acres and will underlie an
additional 4.94 acres located 3 miles
southeast of Banner in Floyd county.
The proposed operation is approximately 3 miles southeast from State
Route 80's junction with Prater Creek
Rd. and located 0.10 miles south of Hall
Branch of Prater Creek. The latitude is
37' 35' 03". The longitude is 82' 41' ll"
The proposed OJWrMiou is located on
the Harold U.S.G.S. 712 minute quadrangle map. The surface area to be disturbed is owned by Ballard and Rolla
May Hall, Ellis Hall. The operation will
underlie land owned by Ellis Hall, Hazzie Boyd, J .J. Boyd.
The application has been filed for
public inspection at the Department for
Surface Mining Reclamation and Enforcement's Prestonsburg Regional Office, Prestonsburg, Kentucky 41653.
Written comments, objections, or requests for a permit conference must be
filed with the Director of the Division of
Permits, 6th Floor, Capital Plaza
Tower, Frankfort, Kentucky 40601.
.
l-4-3t.
PUBLIC NOTICE
ORDI~ANCE NO. ll-S2
PUBLIC NOTICE
ORDINANCE NO. 2-1!3
AN ORDINANCE OF THE CITY
COUNCIL OF THE CITY OF PRESTONSBURG, KENTUCKY, ANNEXING AS A PART OF THE CITY OF
PRESTONSBURG, A TRACT OF
LAND IMMEDIATELY ADJACENT
TO THE SOUTHERN LIMJTS OF THE
CITY LIMITS OF PRESTONSBURG,
KENTUCKY.
BE IT ORDAINED BY THE CITY
COUNCIL OF THE CITY OF PRESTONSBURG, KENTUCKY, AS FOLLOWS:
SECTION 1: That the City Council
have the first reading of an ordmance on
January 24, 1983, and publish the said ordinance according to law, to annex as a
part of the City of Prestonsburg a section of land immediately adjacent to a
section of the southern limits of the city
limits of Prestonsburg, K'entucky,
described as follows:
"Beginning at a line in the current corporate limits, said line being at the property line of the property owned by Ed
Music now being occupied by Maloney's,
Inc. going around the back property line
of the tract of land owned by Joe Weddington adjoining the Music property
and following a line behind Hobert's
Pizzeria and Jacobs Gulf, thence going
up the side of Jacobs Gulf and crossing
KY 1428 and connecting on KY 1428 with
the present city limits boundary".
For a more particular reference to the
section of land described, a map of said
territory is filed at the Municipal Building, Prestonsburg, Kentucky.
SECTION 2: If not less than sixty (60)
days after the enactment of this ordinance, if no petition has been received by
the Mayor as set out in KRS 81A.420(2),
or within sixty (60) days of the certification of election results in which less than
seventy-five percent ( 75% of the
qualified voters in the area oppose annexation, the City Council of the City of
Prestonsburg, Kentucky shall enact this
ordinance annexing to the City of
Prestonsburg, Kentucky, the property
described in Section 1 of this ordinance.
Upon enactment of the ordinance, the
territory shall become part of the City
for all purposes.
SECTI0N 3: The zone for this area
shall be C-4 <Highway Business}.
SECTION 4: All ordinances, or parts
of ordinances, in conflict herewith are
hereby expressly repealed to the extent
of such conflid.
SECTION 5: The City Council of the
City of Prestonsburg, Kentucky does
hereby declare it desirable to annex the
territory described here within this
ordinance.
SECTION 6: This ordinar.ce shall be
in full force and effect from the date of
passage, after publication as required
by law and the provisions of this ordinance.
PASSED AND APPROVED, THIS
THE 27th DAY OF DECEMBER, 1983.
HAROLD W. COOLEY, Mayor
ATTEST:
Sue Webb, City Clerk
AN ORDINANCE OF THE CITY
COUNCIL OF THE CITY OF PRESTONSBURG, KENTUCKY, ANNEXING AS A PART OF THE CITY OF
PRESTONSBURG, A TRACT OF
LAND IMMEDIATELY ADJACENT
TO THE WESTERN LIMITS OF THE
CITY LIMITS OF PRESTONSBURG,
KENTUCKY.
BE IT ORDAINED BY THE CITY
COUNCIL OF THE CITY OF PRESNOTICE OF
TONSBURG, KENTUCKY, AS FOLINTENTION TO MINE
LOWS:
In accordance with the provisions of
SECTION 1: That City Council have
KRS 350.05!:i, notice is hereby given that:
the first reading of an ordinance on
Wolverine Mining Corporation, Route 3,
November 22, 1982, and publish the said
Box 738, Salyersville, Ky. 41465, intends ordinance according to law, to annex as
to file an application for the surface a part of the City of Prestonsburg a secdisturbance mining of approximately
tion of land immediately adjacent to the
198.0 acres located northwest of David
most western limits of the City limits of
in Floyd & Magoffin county. The proposPrestonsburg, Kentucky, described as
ed operation is approximately 412 miles
follows:
southeast of State Route 1734's junction
"Beginning at a line in the current corwith State Route 7, and located south of
porate limits, said line being at the proRough & Tough Branch of Middle Creek.
perty line of the City owned Archer Park
Latitude 37' 37' 10", longitude 82• 54' 44".
and continuing up U.S. 23 so as to include
The surface of the area to be mined is
in the corporate limits all land running
owned by: Jim Prater, heirs, Herbert
along the State Highway Department
Prater, Roger Shepherd, Edward
Boundary in the northbound lane of U.S.
Music, eta!; Hames Degarmond, Aman23 including the Western Sizzling Steakda Moore, Wolverine Mining Corporahouse property and thence going back to
tion, Amos Miller, heirs; Minerva
the State Highway Department right-ofMiller. The application will be filed at
way in the northbound lane up to the first
the Bureau for .surface Mining Rehollow past the Western Sizzling Steakclamation and Enforcement, Prestonshouse and following the ridge of the hill
lt:
burg Area Office, 503 South Lake Drive,
of the property now in the Harim HarPrestonsburg, Kentucky 41653.
ris Estate, excluding all homes, and fallPersons wishing to file wntten objecing back to the State Highway DepartDEPARTMENT OF THE TREASUtions and/or request a formal adminiment right-of-way up to a line across RY/INTERNAL REVENUE SERVICE,
strative hearing in regard to the above
from the present property of East Public Auction Sale. Under the authoridescribed surface mine should notify the
Equipment Company, going westward ty in Internal Revenue Code section 6331,
Department for Natural Resources and
across the four (4) lane highway al~ the property described below has been
the back property line of East &{uip- seized for nonpayment of internal reveEnvironmental Protection within 30
ment and traveling thence n9rthward nue taxes due from Grant R. Rickman,
days of the date of the notice. A copy of
along the ridge to the proi*fty of Rudd P.O. Box 118, Tram, Ky. 41663. The prothe newspaper clipping must be attachEquipment and thence ~ontinuing along perty will be sold at public auction as
ed to the written objection. The objecthe State Highway Department Boun- provided by Internal Revenue Code section or request for a hearing will reference application Number 077-0031. Such dary to the property of Ed Music, ~x tion 6335 and related regulations. Date
objection or request must be in accor- cluding the property of Larcy Lew1s, of Sale: Monday, January 16,1984. Time
thence runnitig along the back proper- ofSale: ll:OOa.m. Place of Sale: At prodance with KRS 224.081 (2}, and must be
ty line of the Katy Friend Freewill Bap- perty which is located approximately 1
forwarded to the Director of Permits,
Bureau of Surface Mining Reclamation tist Church and thence continuing along mile north from junction of U.S. 23 and
the back property line of East Kentucky Camp Branch Road in Tram, Kentucky.
and Enforcement, Capital Plaza Tower,
Explosives and crossing KY 114 going to Title Offered: Only the right, title, and
Frankfort, Kentucky 40601.
the creek and following the creek to the interest of Grant R. Rickman in and to
2. Notice is hereby provided pursuant
to 30 CFR 715.13 (d) (10) and KRS 350 property of Grace Moore, excluding the the property will be offered for sale. If
Moore property and connecting with the requested, the Internal Revenue Service
that the proposed post :nining land use
State Highway right-of-way connecting will furnish information about possible
does constitute a change from the premining land use. Public comment regar- with the present City limit boundary". encumbrances, which may be useful in
For a more particular reference to the determining the value of the interest beding a proposed change in land use may
section of land described, a map of said ing sold. Description of Pro~rty: A cerbe submitted to the address listed above.
territory is filed at the Municipal Buil- tain tract or parcel of land lymg and be12-28-Jt.
ding, Prestonsburg, Kentucky:
ing in Floyd County, Kentucky, and thus
SECTION 2: If not less than s1xty (60) described: Lying and being on the
(FACSIMILE)
days after the enactment of thi~ ordin- waters of Camp Branch a tributary of
NOTICE OF
ance, if no petition has been rece1ved by Big Sandy River at or near the residence
INTENTION TO MINE
the Mayor as set out in KRS 81A.42~ (2}, of George Hobson, beginning on the lane
or within sixty (60} days of the cerllflca- fence and a fence post and running along
Pursuant to Application
tion of election results in which less than with the lane fence and with the Public
Number 460-5102
In accordance with the prov.isions of seventy-five percent (75%) of the quali· Road a north east direction forty eight
KRS 350.055, notice is he,eby giVen that
fied voters in the area oppose annexa- feet to a corner stone; thence a
tion the City Council of the City of Pres- westwardly course fifty six feet to a corPembroke Coal Company, Inc., Star
tons'burg, Kentucky shall enact an ordin- ner stone· thence a south east t:lirection
Route 3, Lambric, Kentucky 41340, has
ance annexing to the City of Prestons- sixty thr~e feet to the place of beginnfiled an application for a permit for an
burg, Kentucky the property described ing. Being the same land conv~yed to
underground mining operation. The proin Section 1 of this ordinance. Upon Grant R. Rickman by Edna R1ckman
posed operation will affect a surface
enactment of the ordinance, the terri- Johnson and Bruce Johnson, her husdisturbance of 14 acres and will underlory shall become part of the City for all band Harley Rickman, single, Floyd
lie an additional 84 acres located one
purposes.
mile southwest of Garrett in Knott counRick~an and Ruth Rickman his wife,
SECTION 3: All ordinances, or parts and Ruth Jennings, single, by deed
ty and 294 acres located one mile southof ordinances, in conflict herewith are dated June 13, 1974, recorded in Deed
west of Garrett in Floyd county.
The proposed operation is approx- hereby expressly repealed to the extent Book 216, Page 473. There is erected on
imately 0.32 miles northwest of State of such conflict.
this real property a vacant house the
SECTION 4: The City Council of the size of which is approximat(!ly 15 feet hy
Route 80's junction with Rock Fork
City of Prestonsburg, Kentucky does 20 feet. Property is located approxCounty Road and located 0.32 miles
hereby declare it desirable to ~n~ex t~e imately 1 mile north from junction of
northwest of Rock Fork. The latitude is
territory described here w1thm th1s U.S. 23 and Camp Branch Road m Tram,
37°-28'-10". The longitude is 82°-52'-23".
The proposed operation is located on ordinance.
Kentucky. Pro;>erty may be inspected at
SECTION 5: This ordinance shall be 1 mile north from juhctior. of U.S. 23 and
the Wayland and Handshoe U.S.G.S. 712
minute quadrangle map. The surface in full force and effect from the date of Camp Branch Road in Tram, Kentucky.
area to be disturbed is owned by passage, after publication as ~equir~d
Payment Terms: Full payment reMatewan Minerals, Inc. The operation by law and the provisions of thts ordm- quired on acceptanee of highest bid.
will underlie land owned by Henry ance.
Form of Payment: All payments must
PASSED AND APPROVED, THIS
Boleyn Norman Shepherd, John Reed,
be by cash, certified check, cashier's or
Ishmal,Shepherd, Coet Handshoe heirs, THE 27TH DAY OF DECEMBER, 1983.
treasurer's check !lr by a United States
HAROLD W. COOLEY, Mayor
Mrs. S.J. Rocke, Homer Crager,
postal, bank, express, or telegraph
City of Prestonsburg, Kentucky
Matilda Gayheart, Dora Turner, Phillip
money order. Make check or money
Neely, Ida Martin, Rebecca Martin, Bil- ATTEST
order payable to the Internal Revenue
ly Inman, Willis Turner, and Kels1e Sue Webb, City Clerk
Service. Signature, Susan K. Cooper.
City of Prestonsburg, Kentucky
Chaffins.
Susan K. Cooper, Revenue Officer, Date
lt.
The application has been filed for
12/29/83. Address for information About
public inspection at the Department for
the Sale, Attn: M.A. Rutledge, Internal
Surface Mining Reclamation and EnRevenue Service, P.O. Box 1308, PaintBats are the only major predators of
forcement's Jackson Regional Office,
sville, Ky 41240. Phone <606> 789-6700.
night-flying
insects, and they're good at
Howell Builaing Howell Heights, Route
1-4-2t.
2, Jackson, Kentucky 41339 Written it too, says International Wildlife
comments, objections, or requests for a magazine. A single gray bat may con"Education makes a people easy to lead.
permit conference must be filed with the sume 3,000 or more insects during a
night's
feeding;
and
a
single
cave
of
but
difficult to drive; easy to govern, but
Director of the Division of Permits, 6th
Baron
Floor, Capital Plaza Tower, Frankfort, free-tailed bats in Texas may eat 500,000 impossible to enslave_"
pounds
of
small
insects
nightly.
Brougham
Kentucky 40601.
12-21-3t.
Section Two, Pace Six
~OTICE
OF PUBLIC SALE
A public sale will be held by Ashland
Finance Company on the 16th day of
January, 1984 at Bill & Sam's Welding
& Minmg Equipment Repa1r, Box 268,
Martin, Kentucky 41649. Directions out
of Prestonsburg, Kentucky: On New
U.S. Rt. 80, 5 miles toRt. 122. Turn right
on 122, known as Buck's Branch . Go 11-z
miles to shop on right. Time of sale
11 : 00 a.m. Sale is for the purj)Ose of
disposing of:
<1>S & S Mine Scoop, Serial Number
UAT7418
<1 >Elkhorn Scoop, DLEl, 1034, Serial
Number 1032
Belonging to Lonnie Lewis and John
L. Elder d/b/a Double L Coal Company,
to satisfy or reduce Security
Agreements and Note Business Use.
Ashland Finance Company reserves
the right to bid.
Terms: Sale will be for cash. The
parcels will be offered separately and
then as a unit (group ) with sale to the
highest and best bidder. Equipment will
be sold as is/where is . Sold under KRS
355.9-504.
ASHLAND FINANCE COMPANY
Richard L. Couchot
Executive Vice President
12-28-Jt.
------------
NOTICE OF PUBLIC SALE
Notice is hereby given that the undersigned Eastern Kentucky Mack, a Division of Worldwide Equipment Inc., a
Corporation, will sell at public auction
to the highest bidder for '=ash, on Monday, January 16, 1983, at 9:30a.m. at the
company's offices located at Kentucky
Rt. 1428 East, Prestonsburg, Ky. the
following vehicle:
(1 l Mack Model DM886SX SIN
1M2B156CA002896.
The undersigned reserves the right to
bid.
Eastern Kentucky Mack, A Division
Of Worldwide Equipment, Inc.
FRED MCCARTY
Collection Manager
1-4-2l.
ADVERTISEMENT FOR BIDS
The Floyd County Fiscal Court is now
accepting bids on all County Insurances.
This includes the following: Health Insurance, Unemployment Insurance,
Workman's Compensation, ComprehenSive & Collision, Public Liability Insurance, Fire & Theft, Officials Liability,
and Physical Damage on Heavy Equipment. All specs may be obtained by calling the County Judge/Executive's Office
at 886-9193 between the hours of 8:30
a.m. and 4:00 p.m. , Monday thru Friday. All bids will be opened at the next
meeting of the Fiscal Court on January
13, 1984 at the hour of 10:00 a.m.
JOHN M. STUMBO
Floyd County Judge/ Executive
Floyd County Fiscal Court
12-21-Jt.
NOTICE OF HEARING
Notice is hereby given that a hearing
will be helcl on the 12th day of January,
1984 at the hour of 10:00 a.m. i:1 the Conference Room of the Floyd County Annex, Prestonsburg, Kentucky. The purpose of this hearing is to determine if
Douglas Fleming & Michael Hughes,
resident of 23 & 460, Prestonsburg, Ky.
should receive an entertainment license.
All interested parties should be present.
ARNOLD TURNER, JR.
Floyd County Attorney
1t.
PUBLIC NOTICE
The City of Prestonsburg does not
discriminate on the basis of handicapped status in the admission or access to,
or treatment, or employment in its programs or activities
Th.:: City of Prestonsburg, P 0. Box 31,
Prestonsburg, Ky. 41653, has been
designated to coordinate compliance
with the nondiscrimination requirements contained in Section 51.55 of the
Revenue Sharing Regulations.
HAROLD W. COOLEY
Mayor
lt.
Symposium Slated
On Legal Trends
A symposium entitled Researching
the Federal Courts in the South,
1789-Present, will be held in Atlanta
May 17-18
The symposium, sponsored by the
Atlanta Regional Archives Branch of the
National Archives in conjunction with
Emory University School of Law and the
Eleventh Circuit Historical Society, will
focus on recent research involving
political, constitutional, and socioeconomic currents found in the litigation
records of Southern Federal Courts.
For further information contact Gayle
Peters, Regional Archives Branch of
General Services Administration at 1557
St. Joseph Avenue, East Point, Georgia
30344, telephone404/763-7477. Paper proposals are invited before January 15.
Winter Fair Winners
At Riverview Manor
Creativity was the word for the 1983
Winter Fair held at Riverview Manor
last month. Ac-Teens from the Calvary
Baphst Church acted as judges fer the
event.
Ollie Hall won first place with her
hand-made ''Ma" and "Pa" dolls,
needlework, and Christmas wreaths,
Amanda Lafferty was second w1ti1 her
beautiful cross-stitch of blue and white;
and Elsie Wheeler won third place with
her hand-made quilts. Several residents
entered exhibits ranging from handmade wooden planters to hand-painted
posters. Julian Murrill, Minnie Hopkins,
George Harless, James Reynolds,
James Williams, and Jewell Hooper
were given green ribbons for outstanding effort.
UNITED STATES OF AMERICA FEDERAL ENERGY REGULATORY
COMMISSION. Notice of Application
Filed with the Commission, <December
23, 1983). Take notice that the following
hydroelectric application has been filed
with the Federal Energy Regulato~y
Commission and i~ available for public
inspection: a. Type of Applica~ion: Preliminary Permit~ b ProJect No .
7845-000· c. Date Filed: November 1
1983; d. 'Applicant: HydroE~ginee~in
Associates; e. Name of ProJect: Fishtrap; f. Location . Levisa Fork of the B1g
Sandy River, Pike County, Kentucky. g.
Filed Pursuant to: Federal Power Act
16 U.S.C. §§791 <a> - 825 tr>. h.
Person: KD. Tice, P.E ., P .O.
Pauline, South Carolina 29374.
ment Date: Feb. 24 , 1984. j. nnrnw•; ....t
of Project: The proposed
utilize the existing U.S.
Engineers Fishtrap
and would consist of a
one or more turbine-generator
ing a total rated capacity of 1,
a 112 -mile-Iong transmission
project would be capable of
uf to 5,440,000 kWh annually. .
o Project: Energy produced at
ject would be sold to
Company. I. This notice also
the following standard
A7, A9, B, Cand D2. m. 0 r•,nr.·c<>t1
and Cost of Studies under
preliminary if issued, does not
construction. A permit, if issued
the permittee, during the term .
permit, the right of prior~ty of applH;:ation for license. The Applicant seeks ISsuance of a preliminary permit for a
period of 18 months . The work to be pe~
formed under this preliminary perm1t
would consist of gathering necessary
data, completing surveys and .environmental studies, obtammg
neces~ary F.ederal, S~te ~nd lcx;al permits mcludmg coordmabon w1th
Corps of Engineers, and
necessary documentation for
mission's licensing re<lUi1renner1ts.
cant estimates that
cost of
to
be performed under the permit would
not exceed $20,000. A5. Preliminary Permits: Existing Dam or Nat~r?l Wat~r
Feature Project- Anyone desmt:~g !O file
a competing application fo~ prehmmary
permit for a proposed project a t an exIsting dam or natural water feature project, must submit t~e ~ompeting application to the CommiSSion on or before
30 days after the specified comment dat
for the particular application (see
CFR 4.30 to 4.33 (1982 ). A notice of inten
to file a competing application for
preliminary permit will not be accepted
for filing. A competing preliminary permit application must conform w1th 18
CFR 4.33(a) o.nd (d). A7. Preliminary
Permit-Except as provided in. ~he
following paragraph, any qualified
license conduit exemption, or small
hydro~lectric exempt~on aprlic'!-nt
desiring to file a competmg a~;>plicatwn
must submit to the Commisswn, on or
before the specified comment date for
the particular applicat~on , eiti1er .a com
peting license, condmt exemptwn,
small hydroelectric exemption application or a notice of intent to Ele such an
application. Submission of a timely
notice of intent to file a license, condUit
exemption, or small hydroel~ctric exemption application allov.:s an mt~res~ed
person to file the competmg applicatiOn
no later than 120 days after the specified
comment date fur the particular application. In addition, any qualified
license or conduit exemption applicant
desiring to file a competing applicati
may file the subject application unti.
(1) a preliminary permi.t with wh~ch the
subject license or condmt exemption application would compete is issued, or (2)
the earliest specified comment date for
any license, conduit ex€~ption , or s~all
hydroelectric ex~mpt~on appllcat10!1
with which the subject hcense or condwt
exemption application would compete;
whichever occurs first. A competmg
license application must conform with
18 CFR 4.33(a ) and (d ). A9. Notice of
Intent-A notice of intent must specify
the exact name, business address, an
telephone number of the prospective a ,
plicant, include an unequivocal statement of intent to submit, if such an application may be filed, either (1) a
preliminary permit appli<;ation or<?) a
license, small hydroelectnc exemphon,
or conduit exemption application, and be
served on the applicants named in this
public notice_ B. Comments, Protests, or
Motions to lntervene-Anyone may submit comments, a orotest, or a motion to
intervene in accordance with the requiremen~ of the Rules of Practice a '
Procedure, 18 C.F.R. §§31!5.2l0, .211, .2I I
In determining the appropriate action to
take the Commission will consider all
prot~ts or other comments filed, but only those who file ~ motion to in~erye~c
in accordance w1th the CommiSSIOn s
Rules may become a party to the proceeding. Any comments, protests, or
motions to intervene must be received
on or before the specified comment date
for the particular application. C. Filing
and Service of Responsive Documents-Any filings must bear in all
capital letters the title "COMMENTS",
"NOTICE OF INTENT TO FILE CO '
PETING APPLICATION". as appli
able, and the P1 OJect Number of the particular application to which the filing is
in response. Any of the above named
documents must be filed by providing
the original and the number of copies required by the Commission's regulations
to: Kenneth F. Plumb, Secretary, Federal Energy Regulatory Commission, 825
North Capitol Street, N.E ., Washington.
D.C. 20426. An additional copy must be
sent to : Fred E . Springer. Deput.y Director, Project Management, Div:sion
Hydropower Licensing, Federal Energ
Regulatory Commission, Room 208 RB
at the above address. A copy of any
notice of intent, competing application
or motion to intervene must also bE: served upon each representative of the Applicant specified in the particular application. D2 . Agency Comments-·
Federal, State, and local agencies are
invited to fi!P. comments on the described application . <A copy of the application may be obtained !:>y agencies oirect·
ly from the Appli<'ant > If an agency
does not file comments w1thin the ti
specified for filing comments, it will .
presumed to have no comments . One
copy of an agency's comments must also
be sent to the Applicant's represen
tatives. Kenneth F Plumb, Secretary .
1-4-4t.
Though Albert Einstein formulated
his general theory of rela tivity in 1916.
astronomers have only recently found
evidence to confirm one of the concepts
he proposed-the so-called gravitation:1
lens effect. It is a phenomenon Einst
himself thought would never be observed.
--------~----- ~~~--------------------------~-------------------------------------------------
�eclneaday, January 4, 1984
The Floyd County nmes
Sec:tlon Two, Paae Seven
OUR OWN
COUNTRY STYLE
~xu~AGE........
OPEN Sro 10
2/$1
$149
10-0Z. JAR
iNSTANT
$389
COFFEE ....... ..
'~fht·=~~-~~-~$ 3~~~
14'12-0Z. CANS HUNT'S
WHOLE TOMATOES ........ .
15-0Z. CAN DOUBLE Q
PINK SALMON ................ .
15-0Z. CAN DOUBLE Q
99 C
KETA SALMON ................. .
$189
LAUNDRY DETERGENT
_
PH: 478-5275
HAROLD, KY.
EVERY DAY
49-0Z. BOX TIDE
79 c
SPARE RIBS ..................LB.
FIRST CUT
·
PORK CHOPS ................. LB.
FRESH PORK
NECK BONES ........................ LB.
STEWING BEEF ........... :.LB.
0~
•
•
•
EXTRA L£AN BONELESS
69
C
5
FOR
SCOn PAPER TOWELS ....·..
7
9
C
$ ·\
:: BUTTERMILK BISCUITS .
7
9
c
""·
FROZEN DINNERS ..
$1' 9
$1 09
CUT-UP FRYERS ...................LB.
/
PEARS
COUNTRY STYL£
La
49 C
·
79(:
$1 89
•
1-ROLL PKG.
BALLARD OVEN-READY OR
.
FRESH
~:~~~
GROUND BEEF
,
l
·j '
c·
'·
11-0Z. MORTON'S
CHICKEN, TURKEY,
~~~~;.:;.~~~f.·
.....,.. FOOD ............
$2
'•
/
RED OR.GOLDEN
LB.
DELICIOUS
APPLES
CAKE MIX
c
Jamie Lynn Hall, three-year-old
· daughter of James G. and Michelle Hall,
of Topmost, was crowned Tiny Miss
Winter Wonderland December 17 at
McDowell.
She is the granddaughter of Dewey
and Mary Hall, of Wayland, and Howard
nd Marie Hall, of Topmost.- ·
Miss Hall's gown was ·designed by
Gracie Taylor, oiWayland.
-.--
59
BErrY CROCKER
Crowned Tiny Miss
· inter Wonderland
........
..
$
•
•
•
•
PRICES EFFECTIVE THRU JAN. 8
NOT RESPONSIBLE FOR PRINTER'S ERRORS
WE HAVE FEED FOR LIVESTOCK.
WE WELCOME FEDERAL FOOD STAMPS.
MINE PERMITS ISSUED ...
State Issues 104
Mining Permits
Wee Miss Mistletoe
Fairchild's New
Eastern EQuipment
and Distribution
Center Is-Centrally
Located To Serve
You BeHer
Of the 104 mining permits issued by
the state Department of Surface min·
ing Reclamation and Enforcement for
the month of November, three were for
Floyd county mine operations.
The November permitting authorized the disturbance of 3,227.29 new
acres of land statewide with 222.62
acres permitted in Floyd county.
Floyd county jobs receiving permits
included those of Ligon Preparation
Co., an underground operation calling
for the disturbance of 2.68 acres;
Somerset Coal Co., underground rr.ine
involving 218.04 acres; Jeremy Construction, surface operation authorizing the disturbance of 1.9 acres.
The types pf permits issued were: 62
original permits, 34 revision permits,
one amendment permit, four transition
permits and three succession permits.
Of the 104 permits issued, 80 were for
surface mining operations, 21 for
underground mining operations, one
for construction of a haul road and two
for preparation plants.
Permitting activities during the
month resulted in the collection of
$127,400 in fees.
The small letter "a" first appeared during the fourth century. It was a rounded letter used in place of a capital. By
about 1500 it was seen in its present
shape.
DENTAL TIPS
Dr. H.G. Salisbury
RICHMOND PLAZA,
PRESTONSBURG
Heather Louise Little was crowned
Wee Miss Mistletoe Dec. 3 at Martin
Elementary School The two-year-old
daughter of Kimberly and Kenny Little,
of Wheelwright, she was presented a
crown, trophy, title banner and a "HugMe-Doll."
Her paternal grandparents are Mr.
T.J. Little, of Melvin, and Billie Jean Lit·
tie, of Fort Pierce, Florida. Maternal
grandparents are Mrs. Mary Howell
Mosley, of Wheelwright, and the late
Johnny Howell. Her step-grandfather
was the late Kinne! Lee Mosley, of
Wheelwright.
PHONE 886·2676
SCHEDULING YOUR DENTAL APPOINTMENT
Q. How often should one see his/her dentist?
A. It has been more-or-less standard to schedule patients
for check-ups every six months, ev~n if there are no problems, simply as a form of health insurance-and
reassurance. Although you may practice good oral
hygiene, it's unlikely that you are able to remove hidden
tartar, surface stains, and stubborn plaque. A dentist has
the skills and the tools to do this, and is also able to
probe to make certain that periodontal disease is not
developing.
Since conditions of teeth and mouth, predisposition to
decay, and other problems vary considerably from patient to patient, a check-up four times a year may be advisable for some while once-a-year can be sufficient for
others. Your dentist is able to determine your needs.
Fairchild International has
recently purchased Eastern
Machine, a division of Elmac Corporation in Whitesburg, KY,
located at the Pine Mountain
Junction. The name of this new
facility will be the Fairchild
Eastern Equipment and Distribution Center. The facility is
situated on several acres of land
and offers the complete line of
new Fairchild products and product servicing, including Fairchild
replacement parts, component rebuilds, and a wide inventory of
used and rebuilt mining equipment for your inspection. This
facility is geared to giving the
fastest service and Fairchild's
usual high quality to the coal
operators in the eastern coal
"Our new Equipment and Distribution Center in
fields.
Whitesburg increases our ability to serve you
For the past eighteen years ,
faster ... , " Myrleen and Jack Fairchild .
Fairchild has been dedicated to
serving the needs of the coal industry, and the new Eastern Equipment and
Distribution Center is continued evidence of this commitment.
Stop by the Fairchild Eastern Equipment and Distribution Center - you will be
glad you did.
Interested? Call lten Peters at
&a6 .aso6 and he'll call on you!
The Floyd County Times
Fa~rchild Eastern EqUipment and O!stnbut1on Center • P 0
BoK 969 • Wh1tesburg , KY 41858 • (6061 633 2 223
�Section Two, Pace El&ht
•
25!b~"fiour ......................... $4
29
•ll
99C I
3/$1 . ..
Muffin Mixes ..... .... .. .. ... .. ... .
3/8
.
9C
}l
Tomato Sauce.. . .. . .. .. .. .. .. ..
··
Hi~CD~i~k·:~ .......................... 79c il]
8-0Z. ASSORTED
Pringles Chips.... ... .. .. ... .. .. .. ...
~
MARTHA WHITE 7-0Z.
--=-- ~
HUNT'S 8-0Z. REG. OR NO SALT
PET 12-PAK
$ .. 39
.
1
•
Brown Mules Fudgesicles . .. . _- ~
r:..-::: .
Miik:~l~O~·....................... 2/99¢
II
GLAD 10-CT.
'
$129
Trash Bags ...................... $
CLOROX II ..................... -~~~
............................
139
fGlli
•
I
;~:..w~:;.
s1 89 't.l.
~---~STOKELY
--
~
Tomato Julca I
'
I
�•
48
90
64
r
oz.
ERA
22
oz.
DAWN
LIQUID LAUNDRY DISHWASHING
DETERGENT
LIQUID
3·. 29 1.19
REG. 3 .99
REG. 1.49
Pampers
DISPOSABLE DIAPERS
Choose from 40 count tod dler maximum
absorbency, 48 count toddler day or night,
60 count extra absorbent daytime, 90 count
newborn, 72 count regular, and 54 count
super absorbent.
8 00
•
REG. 8.97 BOX
BOX
15 oz.
24
oz.
SCOPE
MOUTHWASH
oz. LIQUID OR 7 oz. TUBE
PRELL SHAMPOO
16
J
150Z.
PERT
SHAMPOO
NORMAL DRY OR OI LY FORMULA
HEAD &
SHOULDERS
SHAMPOO
REGULAR OR CONDITION FORMULA
2.00
2.00EACH
1.88EACH
2.
77
EACH
----~-r-----~;:====~~~~------------1-----~~--~r-------~~~;
;p.l]
Wondra
32
oz.
PURITAN
COOKING OIL
1.69
SECRET
DEODORANT
4 OZ. REG. ANTI·PERSPIRANT SPRAY
OR 5 OZ. SUPER SPRAY
1.58EACH
2 OZ. SOLID
1.25 oz.
10 oz.
LILT
SECRET
SECRET
WONDRA
LOTION
SPECIAL PERM
REGULAR OR UNSCENTED
REGULAR OR UNSCENTED
REGULAR OR UNSCENTED
1.77
1.38
1.59
2.47
DEODORANT
ROLL-ON
•
·~
�Wednesday, January 4, 1984
Section Three, Page Two
SElL
BUV
Water Well
Drilling
EMMA, KY.
Most wells drilled in half a
day by Rotary Machine.
• CRAFT STOVES •
FOR RE, T-One bedroom furnished
tratiC'I. no children, no pets !l86-2145.
1-4 21pd
WOl\lAl\ N~~EDE!J to stay with elderly
lady C'all 358·91J1
l-4-2tpd.
FOH RENT. 3 bedroom home,
carpeted. LocatPd in Harold Grethel
area $175 month with $100. deposit.
Couple or small famtly only. 'lo pets
587-2802
H 2tpd
DARKROOM EQUIPMENT FOR
SAU: Omega color enlarger with all
accessoric::; Perf(ct condition $400.00
After 6:00pm 447-2669
1+2tpd
HANDYMA='J FOH HIRE Experience
m plumhmg Phone 886-9577 anytime.
1-4-2tpd
HJ<:PO HOMES FOR SALE $99.00
down and take over payments I 1 $99.00
down on selected repo homes in stock! !
Some hke new!! FREE 30-day warrantv on selected models!! We service what
~e sell!! Clayton Mobile Homes, US 23,
Harold, Ky 606-478-9246.
ll.
IWMMAGE SALE- 1 4 mile on Spurlock
Fork of Middle Creek. Inside warm
building Quilts, baby quills and other
crafts, miscellaneous items. Wed.,
Thurs., Sat. of each week.
1-4-3l.
CHANCE OF A LIFETIME MOBILE
HO:\.IE only $99.00 down and payments
as low as $124.21 per month. Two and
threE.' bedroom total electric only at
Clayton 1\lobile Homes, Richmond, Ky.
606-62:~-9-IO.:t.
1-4-3l.
Sr:CTI00:AL HOMES IN SIZES 24'x45'
HOUSE F OH SALE AT l\10l'SII<:, KY
• and up We also have many fine double
Stx rooms, bath, car port, central
wtdes m stock V.A.- F.H.A. and convenheat!air Formerly home of Anna Ward.
tiona! financing available. Only at
Nice lot and landscape. mce neighborClayton Mobile Homes. Richmond, Ky.
606-623-9404.
1-4-3t.
hood Call358-.:t·H!> Will show any time.
1-4-2tpd.
TEXAS HJ<~I<'INERY CORP., offers GOOD FIREWOOD-Hay and Hogs for
PLI-:NTY OF :'.10:--IEY plus cash sale. Call after 3 o'clock. 886-2200.
bonuses, fnnge benefits to mature ml-4-3tpd.
dtv1dual in Prestonsburg area Regardless of experience, write A.D. Sears, THE PAPER BACK BOOK STORE, 121
Pres., Texas Hefil'ery Corp . Box 711,
Francis Court, next to the courthouse.
Fort Worth. Texas 76101.
ll. We have thousands of paper back books
10¢ each or 15 for $1.00. All other books
1 2 price
1-4-4tpd.
FOR All YOUR INSURANCEAuto, tire, homeowners, hospitalization,
lite. With 0-25% savings. Call Darby and
Allen Insurance Agency,
814-2347.
FOR RENT-One store building, $200.
month ; one trailer, 2 bedrooms, 2 b~lh,
$175 month. Grace Jacobs. Call anytime.
:377-6521.
1-Htpd.
12-2llf
WALLEN'S TRADING POST & TIRE
SALES. Retails & wholesales: New & usMASONRY SERV.ICES
ed tires, wheels, caps, lugs, wheel
•
CiQvers, batteries, tubes, auto parts,
,
...
~.
Concrete basement walls, and ··
stereos & boosters, tubes & much more.
foundations. Retaining walls, colWe trade for most anything of value
ored concrete floors and patios.
874-2289.
1-4-4tpd.
Block work and concrete repair.
Phone 886-1541
12-lHI·pd
FOR SALE
Spinet-Console Plano Bargain
Wanted: Responsible party to lake over
tow monthly poym&nls on spinel plano.
Con be seen loco lly. Write Credit
Manager: P.O. Box 537 Shelbyville, IN
46176
1-Htpd
Have you up-dated your personal insurance to meet todays needs. If not,
Call us , we can insure the entire family
from 0 to 80. Call Sam Wallen Insurance
Agency. I have been serving the insurance needs of Ky for over thirty
years. Phone 874-2289.
1-4-4tpd.
WANTED Woman to live with and
care for eld~rly lady. Phone 358-9134.
Rhoda Napier.
1-4tf.
3Bedrooms
$5,995° 0
Free Delivery!- Free Blocks!
Free Set Of Steps! !
Call Larry K ene AI:
4 7·4078
Roof Trusses for
Commercial & Residential
Purposes.
ANY TYPE WILL BE MADE TO YOU!l SPECIFICATIONS. FREE ESTIMATE-FilEE DELIVEilY
East Kentucky Roof Truss Co.
Phone 606-886-9563, Prestonsburg, Kentucky (anytime)
USED CONCRETJ<: BLOCKS: ll"xtfi"
Used rough lumber. One Case backho<'
580. Allis-Chalmer dozt>r HD5.
Chevrolet dump truck. Ca II 886-1454.
12-21-31pd
HOSPICE OF BIG SANDY. INC. is
now accepting applications for thtfollowing positions: Executive Director: Qualifications - a Bachelor of
Arts or Bachelor of Science Degree in
health care. human services or administration. or has equivalent ad
ministrative work experience in a
health-care facility. Patienl Care Coordinator: Qualifications R N.. with at
least two years of expE'rience and
preferrably knowledgE'ahlE' of homebased skilled nursing services for thr
terminally ill. Secreta rv: Qualifications- P~eferrably with.t>xperience in
a medical facility and with Medicare
and insurance bllling An application
may be obtained by calling 886-3863.
Ext. 211. or by writing to: Hospice of
Big Sandy. Inc .. Prestonsburg Community College. PrE'stonsburg. KY
41653.
12-21-31.
Going Out Of Business
Sale!!
-Mobile Homes Reduced
AsLowAs
$3,995°
0
Ollie Watts Or John Wright
432-1401
RAY
&
•
•
•
•
•
;;.2.i If
R&R TELEPHONE & SECURITY.
Main St. Martin <located in same office
as Custom Waterbeds l. Pre-wiring and
jack installation. Telephone repair and
sales. One year conditional guarantee.
Service on any kind. 285-9400 or
285-3727 after 6:30.
12-14-4tpd.
ATTENTION ALL STORES with dirty
floors. Professional stripping to the
rescue. No job too big or small. Call for
free estimates. 285-5090. Brett Ha II.
12-14-41.
3-BEDROOM HOME FOR SALE near
school in Maytown. Located on three
lots. Central heat. full basement. Adjoining building, 16'x24' with full ~ase
ment. Good neighborhood. beautifully
landscaped. Complete fence. In the
mid-30's. Call2115-3494.
12-7-5tpd .
MINI-WAREHOUSE AVAILABLE .
Convenient local ion. Two sizes
available. Located on U.S. 23 at
Harold, Ky. Phone 432-1!1111. After 5:00.
phone 478-9546.
12-14-6t pd .
BOLEN'S MOVING & DELIVERY
SERVICE: We move a house full or
deliver one piece
anywhere. Phone
358-9617,358-4009.
12-14-12tpd.
USED
FURNITURE
GUARANTEED APPLIANCES:
Moore's Discount Furniture Located
about 3 miles from Martin on Rt. 122.
Low prices. Call285-9354
9-28-14tpd.
FOR SALE: Two-story. I !-room apart ment building. $40.000. At Twin
Bridges. Martin. on 100X50 corner lot
Call J R. Samons. 21!5-3914.
12-14-tf.
FOR LEASE. OR SALE: 3-bedroom
house. 2 baths. dining room. living
room. family room. built-in kitchen
Excellent neighhorhood. ThrE.'e
minutes from Heck's on Abbott Creek
road. $550 per month plus deposit wtth
option to purchase. Selling price
$67.500. Call 1174-921!8 during day and
leave name and numbPr for return
call. Evenings and week<>nds . call
t-304-755-281!.1. Bill Merica!
12-14tf.
IPhone 874-22581
1·12-tf
• FENClS
• STORAGE BLDGS.
• nc.
FOR RENT
OFFICE
SPACE
Remodeling. Siding, Roofing;
Heating & Air Conditioning, Addi
tions, Garages & Custom Homes
CALL 886-1640
RESIDENTIAL
BUILDERS
CONSTRUCTION
·oLLIE JONES
Box 282, Prestonsburg, Ky.
(606) 874-9314
or 874-9633
Dozers • Backhoes
• Dump Trucks
in Prestonsburg
~
.._r
.Phone 886-1312
Prestonsburg, Ky.
9·14lf
FREE ESTIMATES
Call 886-3544
NELSON'S
CONSTRUCTION CO.
Near City limits of Prestonsburg
For further information, call
We do: • Dozer and Loader Work
• Sewage Systems Installed • Mobile
Home Moving & Furnace Repairs
REASONABLE UTES.
Call Ted Nelson, Jr.
789-5164
886-2993 or 886-8549
HOUSE FOR RENT
12-28 2tpd.
I;ALL 358-4520
or 358-9348
Call 478-9407
An equal opportunity employer.
ll -2· lf
SAMPUNG AND ANALYSIS Of
WATER AND WASTE WATER
• Bacteriological Analysis of Domestic & Well
Water Supplies • Completion of ~arterly
N.P.D.E.S. forms As Required By State & E~
• Euironmental Impact Statements &
Assessments
Membe1 of AST 111 & The National Enwironment
Healtll Association. LABORATORY MEETS All
STATE OSM & EPA REGULATIONS.
LEXINGTON LOCATION:
New 1984, 3 Bed, 2 Bath, Solid Construction, Garden Tub, Total Electric,
Wood Siding, Shingle !loot, Cathedral
Ceiling, Stove, Frost-Free llelrlgerotor,
House Doors & Windows, Carpet.
Delivered & Sef-up. ONLY $16.995.00.
See this home at 537 New Circle lld.,
Lexington. Phone (606) 293·1609.
~ •• ( I
WILL DO TYPING
OR SHORTHAND.
15 YEARS EXPERIENCE.
CONTACT NORMA WRIGHT
AT 886-9181
OR 886-2527
12-21-st.
PHONE 789-3258
U.S. 23 So., P1intsrillf
DOWN!!
Selected repo homes in stock
only '9900 down and assume
loan!! This is NOT a misprint!!
'99° 0 down and take over
payments!! Call Hubert.
See us Today!!
b:-w.
COMMERCIAL & RESIDENTIAL
Bldg. Floors • Sidewalks
Footers • Driveways
Patios .. Basements
Exposed Pea Gravel
• ·Free E-stimates •
JAMES OUSLEY
Phone 886-8373
10 other doubles on display, 50 new 14
wldes. 20 repossessed homes. 50 Used homes. V.A. no down payment. FHA
loans with 10% down.
Cl.ag_.---.tD'"'=,.._
HD~t4ES
l1u.Lid ~.
;
GREAT AMERICAN HOMES
I f.
OUSLEY
CONCRETE
CONSTRUCTION
RICHMOND LOCATION:
New Floor Pion. 1984, 55x24. 1224·Sq.
Ft., 3 Bed, 2 Both, Garden Tub, Utility
Room, Total Electric, All Walk-In
Closets, Cathedral Ceiling, Wood
Siding, Shingle !loot, Bay Window In
Master Bedroom. Fireplace, Frost-Free
Refrigerator, Stove, Deluxe Carpet &
Pod, Side Gable, oil other Deluxe Options. ONLY $21,995.00. See this home
at Exit 1197 Otl 1-75, HalfWay ·between
Lexington It Richmond. Phone (606)
624-0200.
~9900
'l(lq.
Only 3 left. Latest model. New
5-year warranty.
TWO NEW
DOUBLEWIDE
SPECIALS
•Free esti,;.ates •Insured
Ralph O'Ouinn
REPO CLEANERS
ENVIRONMENTAL MONITORING
SERVICE, INC.
MOBILE HOME
MOVING SERVICE
FOR SALE-25 acres hillside with nice
hollow with four house sites. Privacy. City water and gas. ~4-mile off Route 80,
near junction of 23 and 80; nice building
lots, just off blacktop road, on Route 80,
junction of 23 and 80; 10-15 acres, 3 4-mile
off Route 23. Good commercial property; for lease-lot with modular office
building, located across from Maloney's
at Lancer. Call 886-3114.
12-14-tf.
FOR SALE: Lots off Mountain Parkway. Financing available. Call886-3466
after5p.m.
12-21-3tpd.
Allen, Ky.
KENNETH [ESLIE.
• DECKS
• ROOFING
BOB WHITE
ALL NEW QI<~FICE SPACE for lease:
Consisting of reception - library and
four <4l connecting offices. with five
<5l assigned parking spaces. LocaiNl
on Third Avenue near th(' Courthouse.
downtown banks. postoffice. town
center parking lol. and th(' Floyd County Times building. Ideal for physicians.
attorneys. accountants. realtors. and
other businesses and professions Immediate occupancy. Jim Hammond.
886-2376
I 0-19-lf.
HOUSE FOR SALE: Two bedrooms
and garage. Reduced to $19,000. House
No. 394-1/2 in Wheelwright Some appliances in kitchen.
12-21-3tpd.
~PROVEMENTS
FOR All JOUR HOM! IA4PIOVIA41HI NIIOS,
FOR SALE: 12x60 3-bedroom trailer.
plywood floors. new furnace. new
water heater. 358-9617 Mack Bolen.
12-21-61.
FOR SALE OR TRADE. Cardox
auger. conveyor. 24-inch steel. Phone·
874-9033.
11-24-lf.
FOR SALE: 6-room house. 2 baths.
central heat and air. fully carpeted.
walk-in basement. carport and chain
link fence. Near school and highway.
Wells Addition. Auxier. Phone 299-4511.
12-21-3tpd.
HOME
Kinzer Drilling Co.
874-9430·
HOWELL BUILDING
RlMODHING
PAINTING
DRYWALL
TEXTURING
Wlll PAPlRING
FOR RENT: Farm house near Pres
tonsburg. Call 886-34fifi after 5 p.m .
12-21-3tpd .
FOR SALE: 16'x32' abnve ground
swimming pool with fence and 12'x16'
deck. Whitney piano by Kimball. bas!';
guitar with amp. Call after 6 p.m ..
,6-6212, Charles Rose.
12-21-4tpd.
FOR SALE: 600 Mack coal truck, new
Xt tires. Phone 285-9496. Tom•
Williams.
12-14-41.
Call:
LESLIE'S
STOVE SHOP
r
"HEN WE BUILD IT, YOU GET MORE
BUILDING FOR YOUR MONEY.
1-4-5!.
VIDEO MACHINES
Fo~ location-
50/50 basis-Mrs. Pac Man,
Popeye, Gallaga, and all the
rest.
Call 606·298-7226 or
nights-606-298-4717.
Evans Amusement 1z.J4-st
'
We custom-design and construct
build1ngs to fit your precise
needs-without cost pen a!ties or
added construction time. Industrial, commercial, w3rehouses,
agricultural, recreational and Institutional. Durable, attractive
and energy eff1c1ent.
11-2-tf.
$15,995.00
New 1984, 3 Bed, 2 Bath, Garden Tub,
Total Electric, Wood-Siding, Shingle
Root, Cathedral Ceilings, Beams, Stove,
Retrlg.. House Doors & Windows.
Carpet, Delivered anywhere and ser.
You choose colors. Veterans no down
payment. Others pay $1700.00 down
and $217.00 per month. Fireplaces
available. TREEHAVEN HOMES. Office In
Clubhouse by swimming pool. Between
Exit 1187 and Exit #94 otl 1-64. Winchester Ky. Phone (606) 744-n62.
•
HERE'S WHY:
Goble Townhouses. Two-bedroom,
unfurnished, total electric. $350
per month, plus deposit. Couples
preferred.
PHONE 874-9281
SCOTT
DOUBLEWIDE
1
NEW
TOWNHOUSES
FOR RENT
1-Hl.
TROY'S
CABINET
CENTER
~
VARCO.PRUO£N AUTHORIZED BUilDER
F. E. E., Inc.
606-886-8852
Prestonsburg, lly. 41653
WHEN YOU KNOW WHO WE ARE,
YOU WON'T BUILD ANY OTHER WAY.
US 23, I vel, Ky.
Stock or Custom-Built Cabinets
Kitchen Cabinets, Vanities
Thermador Appliances
on Display
Free Estimates
CHEAP'S
ANNUAL
l CLEARANCE SALE
•
Discount Prices
BEAUTIFUL BUILDING STONE
Sandy Valley Monument'
and
Building Stone Co.
Call 478-5344
line.)
HHf.
We Hove Alreody Bought 31 Show Cooches Direct
From South Bend Mobile Home Show To Arrive Sept.
111
' MUST LOWER INVENTORY
TO MAKE ROOM
FOR SHOW COACHES
Now On Display
Are Bargains like Tll•se!
2 BEDROOMS - House windows & house door wi.lll
storm door, c•llledrol <filing in living room and kit·
chen, totally •lectric, tllrpel throughout, A-frame
roof, looks like a cottage, was $12,900, Now
$1995.
BIAUTlfUL- l·bedroom, 14' wide, carpel, '?"nana
bar Iorge bay window on front, full house w1ndows
11. and doors total electric. A house anyone would be
' proud to ;wn, completely lumished, was $13,900,
Now $11,500.
EXPANDOS-Only 21oft in stock! 6" side wall odd·
ed insulation, fireplace, 3 bedrooms, 2 full baths,
carpel, Iorge utility room, living room, 7h26', wos
U1,900., Now $17,900.
14 WIDI-2 bedroom, full bay window, wolk·in bay,
carpel, woodbuming fireplace, front li~ing room,
private formal dining room, total ele<lrlt. A Beau·
tyl One of the best floor plans on loll Was
$15,900 ., Now $12,900 .
14 WIDE- High·rlse front kitchen, bay window,
om/1m/cassette stereo, microwav•. carpel, garden
tub, toto! electric, Iorge sunken bar. A Becutyl Was
$18,900., Now $15,900.
14 WIDI - 2 bedroom, I ft. ceilings, ca'Jiet, hou.se
door with storm door, dishwasher, total electriC,
Iorge bay with curved front end, no hall, no wosted
space. Was $13,900., Now $10,900.
"If you buy a new mobile home ~nd don't consi~.~r
Cheap's prices and quality, you II lose money.
FRU!!
300 Mill DIU VERY AND SET UP ON FOUNDATION.
PAYMENTS TO SUIT YOUR NEEDS.
OPEN 7 DAYS - After church on Sundays
HYLTON
TRUCKING &
EQUIPMENT
COMPANY
WE CAN MOVE YOUR
MOBILE HOME-LARGE OR SMALL
WE ALSO DO:
• EXCAVATING WORK
. • SEPTIC TANKS • DIRT HAULING
Insured and Bonded for your protection.
CALL BILL HYLTON
FOR FREE ESTIMATE
478·9593, Day; 432·5678, Night
WE PAY CASH
j
[FOR USED MOBILE HOMES
Jo-6-tf
MANY VARIETIES OF BEAUTIFUL
BUILDING STONE FOR THE HOME
'• LIMESTONE VENEERING
• MAftBLE LANDSCAPE CHIPS
• PORTABl£ CONCRETE STEPS
• VERMONT SLATE
Located On Old U.S. 23·
In New Allen
COLLINS SECURITY SERVICE
CHEAP'S
MOBILE HOUSING, INC.
• LICENSED • BONDED • INSURED
• 17 YEARS SECURITY EXPERIENCE •
• 24-HOUR GUARD SERVICE •
Only 60 minutes drive hom downtown lexington.
(606) 886-9867 OR 886-3665
Flemingsburg, Ky. •
....
606-845·2261
.......
JESSIE COLLINS, President
�•
_WW_ed
___
nes
___
da~y~,_Ja__n_u~ar~y~4~,_1_9_8~4------------------------------------------------------~T~h~e~F~Io~y~d~C~o~u:n:ty~T:=I~:=:s__________________________________~--------------------~S:ec:tionThree,PageThree
SElL IT MST.I
BW IT INfiiiT.I
INTERIOR AND EXTERIOR Porter'
Paint. 1,000 colors to choose from. BEN
- 'RANKLIN STORE, phone 886-2169,
~restonsburg.
5-16-tf.
TREATED utility poles, 18ft. 20ft. and
25ft. lengths. Also fence posts at GOBLE
LUMBER CO., phone 874-9281. 4-11-tf.
GRAVEL FOR SALE: $8.75 per ton,
plus delivery charge. Call 886-3425, JIM
cox.
6-23-tf.
LIGHT FIXTURES: 1'2 price at GOBLE
UMBER COMPANY, phone 874-9281.
4-11-tf.
WATCH REPAIR: If you ~ant the best
job, ?ring watch repairs and jewelry
repa1rs
to
WRIGHT
BROS.
JEWELERS.
11-12-tf.
PERMA-SHIELD Anderson windows.
All styles, 20 percent off regular price
at GOBLE LUMBER CO., phone
4-9281.
4-11-tf.
CUSTOM-MADE drapes and matching
bedspreads by R.W. Norman and
McCanless. Measured to fit. BEN
FRANKLIN STORE, phone 886-2169, or
SALLY GOEBEL, phone 886-2657.
5-16-tf.
HOUSE FOR SALE: Full basement,
forced air, natural gas. Call after 4,
86-3860, Ann Slone.
9-14-tf.
FOR SALE: 197412x60 Memory mobile
home, $5000. Can be seen at the Bank
Josephine, Harold Branch. For information, call Doug Woody at 886-9101,
Ext. 244.
9-14-tf.
PROPERTY FOR SALE : Ten acres,
more or less, located on Spurlock Fork
of the ieft fork of Middle Creek. For information, call Doug Woody at the
'ank Josephine, 886-9101, Ext. 244.
9-14-tf.
HEY LOOK! We repair washers,
dryers, ranges, all types appliances.
Parts ordered for you. Call 358-4009 or
358-9617.
11-3-tfpd.
FOR RENT: Rooms, weekly, monthly,
nightly. Also waterbeds available.
886-2385, 886-9310, Sandy Valley Motel,
N. Lake Drive.
1-5-tf:
OR SALE : Cabin at Cave Run Lake .•
hree bedrooms, air conditioned, all
new carpet. Reasonable price. Call
784-7250 or 784-9203, J .C. SPENCER.
5-25-tf.
DAMRON NEW & USED FURNITURE : Living room suites starting at
$159. A-1 appliances. Rt. 122, Drift, Ky.
Phone 377-2071.
5-25-tf.
ARPENTRY WORK: Home building
nd remodeling. Complete interior and
exterior. Masonry and concrete work,
all types interior and exterior painting.
Also have spray equipment to spray
barns and metal buildings. Free
estimates. Will furnish references . 15
years' experience. Call 886-8896, anytime. Robie Johnson, Jr.
9-21-tf.
WILL DO ALTERATIONS : Have large
department store experience. Call
886-9640.
8-3-tf.
FOR SALE- Black & tan, female,
Doberman puppy. Already has ears &
tail cut and has all shots. $150.00.
886-1648.
12-28-2tpd.
"FINANCING ·• now a va ilable on certain models. L & H Used Cars Inc. , Rt.
· 23, North Auxier Rd. 77 Buick Regal
$2550 ; 79 Plymouth Volare $2995; 78
Toyota Corolla $2500; 76 Granada $1595;
Caprice Classic $1500; 74 Pontiac Venura $1625; 73 Dodge Dart Sport like
new . 71 Pontiac Ve ntura $750;
Trucks- SO GMC automatic $3550; 74
GMC automatic $1,000; 70 Chevy 6 cyl.
$1,000.
ltpd.
ACREAGE WANTED- Couple wants to
buy 3-10 acres for home and garden. Call
B. Green, 478-2768.
1-4-2tpd.
WANTED- Men and women who want
to work. You will be selling specialty
dvertising items, business premiums
nd safety awards to banks, businesses
and industries in your area . You will be
earning the highest commissions while
working your own hours. We offer a
complete benefit and training program.
Call collect 502/ 396-6757, ask for Mr.
Thomas .
lt.
FOR SALE- Boston Terrier. One-yearold, registered. Call 452-2249.
ltpd.
W)0000000000000000
STAYING IN
BUSINESS SALE
GOING ON NOW!
Over 27 years of experience in
Manufacturing/Sales of Mobile
Homes and we will be here
many more years for your
Housing and Servi ce needs !!
LOOKII: New 1984 Clayton
14- Wlde Homell 2 large
bedrooms, tota l e le ctr ic !
Chape l roof, full ba y-window,
de luxe furniture a nd ap ·
pliances, wood cabinets and
more!! FREE de live ry and setup!! We servi ce what we se ll!
Call Hube rt .
b..::;;.,
CbMglbra,
HDNIEB _
We Budd~
.Now.: OPEN·~:-~:-:.~ . -~·. ,:·:.: ...
JOHNSON'S , fURNITU~R.E ~CO .
Urge Transferral
Of Severance Tax
Revenue To Roads
NOTICE TO
ADVERTISERS
All classHied ads scheduled
for only one week, muat be
,Paid In advance. All classllled ads with only telephone
numbers must be paid In ad."
vance.
CLASSIFIED
ADVERTISING RATES
10c Per word, If paid In advance
15<: Per word on charae account
($2.50 minimum)
DI8Piay classified advert! sin&
$3.00 per column Inch.
Deadline for ads: 4 p.m. Monday•.
NOW BUYING: Used washers, dryers,
ranges, refrigerators. Working or nonworking condition. Phone 358-9617.
11-16-12tpd.
APARTMENT FOR RENT: New Allenon 4-lane U.S . 23. midway bel ween
Pikeville and
Prestonsburg .
2-bedroom . C'ompletely furnished .
ground floor . Fireplace. dishwasher.
washer. dryer. microwave. disposal.
trash compador. central heat and air
All utilities paid. including trash
removal. city water and cable TV. but
not private telephone service. Singles
or couples only No children. no pets.
Available November I. Jim Hammond.
886-2376.
10-19-tf.
NOW PAYING TOP DOLLAR for
mobile home wheels and axels. Ask for
Patty Wright, 639-4772.
12-7-tf
1982 LINCOLN: Best deal in town. This
one has it all! Call Patty Wright .
639-4772.
12-7-t f.
1984 MOBILE HOME: 2 bedroom, 12'
wide. front kitchen. double windows .
Furnished. Total electric. Only $8,995.
Call John Wright, 432-1401 .
12-7-tf.
PAYMENTS LESS THAN RENT:
14-wide mobile home. Only $10.995. Call
·
12-7-tf.
John Wright. 432-1401
ROCK DUST AND GRAVEL for sale:
20-ton minimum on gravel. Call
874-9427, Bennie Crace.
11-3<Hit.
FOR SALE: 15 acres of land with 2-car
garage, concrete breezeway. concrete
sidewalks, dri1 1 ~d well with pump and
water line, septic system . Price reduced. 297-4916, Donna Moore.
11-30-tf.
CLEAN FURNACE FILTERS save
energy dollars and service call costs .
Sandy Valley Hardware S&T at Allen is
your one-stop furnace filter headquarters.
11-30-tf.
Ladies, Unlimited earning potential. Sell
UndercoverWear lingerie at home parties. Representatives will be at Starfire
Motel, in Paintsville, January 7, from
10:00 to 5:00 to answer your questions,
or phone 836-2519.
ltpd.
CLASSIFIED ADVERTISERS
PLEASE NOTE!
Classified ads will no longer be accepted after
12 noon, Mondays. For the coming week, these ads
are also accepted on Thursday, Fridays, and
Saturdays.
We trust this will not unduly inconvenience you,
and we will greatly appreciate your cooperation.
FOR RENT : New Allen, 1-1/2 bedroom
mobile unit suitable for one or two people. Completely furnished . Private
deck, air conditioned, cable TV. garbage pickup. water furnished . You pay
electricity only . Jim Hammond .
886-2376.
10-19-t f
FOR RENT : Trailer lot, M&D Trailer
Park. Located at lower end of Auxier.
Call 886-2965 for information, Monday
thru Saturday. No Sunday business.
ll-23-8t.
FOR RENT : 4-room unfurnished
apartment, $200 rent, $150 deposit.
Couples only. no pets. Call Jeanette
Hubbard, 886-2557.
5-18-tf.
FOR RENT : Thelma Apartme nts .
Furnished or unfurnished . Two ,
bedrooms, bath, washer dryer connection, air conditioning, dishwasher,
disposal , balcony, wall -to-wall
carpeting, inside swimming pool, coinoperated laundry. Phone 789-6072.
10-5-tf.,
PHOTO CHRISTMAS CARDS : See our
selection of cards. Bring in your
favorite negative today and pick a
style. Photo-Pro, Weddington Plaza,
Pikeville.
11-2-tf.
FOR SALE : 1975 Mercedes-Benz 450-SL,
excellent condition. Metalic green. New
top. Price $20,500. Call 886-8506.
tf.
ATTENTION : 88 ways to fix potatoes.
Delicious and good for you . $5.95 per
book. N.B. Crum, P .O. Box 1025, Martin , Ky. 41649.
11-23-tf.
CHAIN LINK FENCE : Residential
and commercial. Prestonsburg Fencing Company. Call HENRY SETSER,
phone 886-2073 or 886-1556.
4-30-tf.
RAISE, LEVEL OR MOVE houses or
mobile homes. Also, do block a nd concrete work. Hall 's House Raising.
Phone 447-3242 or 447-2610.
11-9-tf.
FOR SALE- 1977 Datson B210 rebuilt
motor; new paint & snow tires. $1,900.00.
Call Len 377-2314 or 377-6741 12-28-2t.
FOR RENT- three bedroom home at
new Cliff Subdivision. One car garage,
built-in kitchen with range and
dishwasher. Furnished. Carpeted
throughout. 11~ baths, large livingroom,
mud room, plenty closet space, prefer
couple with one child. $455 month. Call
886-2831. Ernest Gibson.
12-28-2t.
FOR RENT OR SALE- Four-bedroom
home. Located convenient to Prestonsburg on four-lane U.S. 23. For more information, call 886-8381, ask for Mike
Damron.
12-28-2t.
FOR SALE: Llama .45 auto. pistol with
holster and extra magazine. Everything
like new. Sell $200.00.--A:lso Harrington
and Richardson model158, .22 Hornet riue. Lt!Ce new. Sell $65.00. Call 874-9344.
ltpd.
FOUR ROOM APT. FOR RENT ; 1970
Station Wagon Dodge Coronet, green,
for sale. $300. Call 358-4458. 12-28-2tpd.
LOW PRICES ON USED FURNITURE & APPLIANCES ~
HELD-OVER
SPECIAL!
0
. - -~•,..
Give this personal stereo for dynamic listening
Has AM/FM stereo • detachable 2-way speakers·
cassette deck • plays on AC/optional DC car cord
or batteries. JX500.
REG.
$199
95
$14900
NOW
UNTIL SUPPLY IS EXHAUSTED.
Curtis Mathes
HOME ENTERTAINMENT CENTER
339 MAIN STREET
HAZARD
439·4A77
OWMID AMO OH.UTfO ll SHA1fU TfUVI~ON
PRf:STONSIURC STORE HOUt S
10 JO 6 MOH THUI S 10 TO 7 fR; 10 TO l SAT ClOSED SUNOAT
HIGHLANDS PLAZA, PRESTONSBURG
PHONE 886-8381
NOTICE-NOW HIRING
Taking applications for full
and part-time employment.
For appointment call:
E.O.E.
FOR RENT with option to buy , just new
2-bedroom home . No pets . Ca rpet
throughout. 886-3445
12-28-2tpd.
,_..tt.
FOR SALE- 1974 El Camino, duel exhaust, good condition, $1400.00. 1980
Grand Prix, lots of new parts, $3900.00.
12-28-2tpd.
Phone 377-6606 after 6.
FOR RENT- 3 bedroom trailer at Price,
Ky. Partly furnished. Phone 377-2904 or
377-6153.
12-28-2tpd.
VANs·
ON
SPECIAL
TOO!
FOR SALE- Very rare muscle car . 1972
440 magnum Charger. Factory 375 h.p.
All original, never abused. Factory airconditioning, p.w., p.b., p.s., perfect
body. Car is nea r show condition. $3,000
negotiable, or poss ible trade . Call
452-2422, days, or 452·4200 evenings and
weekends. Da le Compton. 12-28-2tpd.
WILL BABYSIT IN MY HOME at Auxier with children new born thur age 5. $2.'5
per week. Valeria Harrison, 886-3738.
12-28 3t
FOR SALE Firewood , $25 a load.
Phone 285-9937. George Da vid Bush.
12-28-4t.
FOR ALL YOUR INSURANCE - Auto.
fire, homeowners , hos pitaliza tion, life.
With 0·25% savings . Ca ll Darby a nd
Allen Insurance Agency. 874·2347
) 2-28 tf
---- - ----
:r
9:30-4:30, Monday thru saturday
APARTMENTS FOR RENT in Prestonsburg. For more information call
886-2094 or 886-2132.
ltpd.
874-9041
. '.
692 so. Lake or ...; Prestonsb.u rg
FOR SALE- Philico Ford, green
refrigerator, good condition, $150.00.
Coppertone Norge Slimline No. 10
clothes dryer , $100.00.
12-28-2tpd.
FOR GLASS REPLACEMENT, bring
your window frames to Sandy Valley
Hardware at Allen. We specialize in
Plexiglas, cut to size.
11-9-tf.
FOR SALE- Coin-operated pinball machine. Bicentennial model. In good condition . $200 or best offer. Phone 377-1164.
l -4-2t.
MOBILE HOME SALE : While the
others hCt ve called it quits, we're calling
a 'STAYING IN BUSINESS SALE!!
We'll be here to ser~ice what we sell for
many years to come !! Special ; New 1984
60'x12' home, 2 bedroom, large kitchen,
plywood floors, sheetrock walls, 200 amp
electrical service with breakers, and
much more!! On Sale- $9,995.00!!
FREE Delivery and Set-up!! Come by
and see us ! ! We'll be here- Guaranteed!! Cla yton Mobile Homes, US 23,
Harold, Ky. 606-478-9246.
ll.
• NEW AND USED .. •
FOR RENT- House on Mtn . Parkway,
$300. per month. $100 security deposit.
886-6041.
12-28-2tpd.
HOUSE FOR SALE- 7-room, 2-story in
Auxier. Small down payment required.
Assume loan with interest rate of only
12-28-2tpd.
8.125%. Call 886-6394.
FOR RENT- 3-room apartment and
bath, furnished. Located minutes from
Prestonsburg or Pamtsville. We pay TV
cable and water bill. Like new carpetling. No children or pets . $215 a month.
Call 789-3071. Kretzer Apartments.
1-4-2t.
. ,
FOR SALE- Nice brick five room
TABLE AND 4 CHAIRS, $50 ; Polaroid house. Reason for selling, bad health.
camera, $50 ; new typewriter, $50; talk- Call 452-4498. Dora Mitchell
1-4-2t.
ing machine, $30; also, some clothes. I
want someone to stay with me, a woman STEAKHOUSE FOR SALE at Mayor man. We could get married to keep town. Includes two basement apartpeople from talking about us. Chester ments, in-ground swimming pool , and
Fairchild, Box 1123, Martin, Ky. 41649. house trailer. P hone 285-5082. Lorraine
1-4-2t.
12-28-2t. Beach.
FOR SALE- R 600 Mack truck with 26 FAMILY DOG needs new home.
foot aluminum dump trailer. $15,000.00 F emale, fiv.e yea rs old, excellent dispoor best offer. Contact Fred or Cliff sition, good with children. Honey brown,
Branham. 874·9911.
12-28-2t. short hair. Has shots. Call886-8851. ltpd.
FOR RENT : 4-room apartment near
·Clinic and college. 886-3154, T.E .
Neeley.
11-9-tf.
FOR SALE- 1981 R.&S 30ft. aluminum
trailer. Has 90-% tread on 10:00 x 22
radial tires. Low mileage. Call478-9175.
8:30 till4 :30 Monday thru Friday. Evenings 886-1609. Big D Excava ting. i -4-2t.
Not transferring coal severance tax
revenue to the Road Fund to pay off coal
road bonds, as required by Kentucky
law, costs motorists the equivalent of
nearly ·2.5 cents on every gallon of gas
they buy, according to a spokesman for
Kentuckians for Better Transportation.
"It just doesn't make sense," sa1d
Jack Fish, president of the group, "to
continue to solve General Fund problems with highway user revenues. The
truth is the Road Fund is really in worse
shape than the General Fund. For the
10-year period ending fiscal year 1982,
the Road Fund was up by 42 percent,
while the General Fund was up 189
percent- a growth rate more than four
times that of the Road Fund. "
When the resource recovery road pro
gram was created to make major improvements in highways in coal producing areas of the state, the bonds that
were sold were to be amortized with the
coal severance tax revenue. The bonds
were sold, and the improvements were
made. Now, the bonds must be paid
off $46.6 million annually over a
30-year period, said Fish.
Kentucky statutes provide that they
are to be paid off with coal severance tax
transferred from the General Fund to
the Road Fund, Fish said.
During the Brown administration, to
help meet the General Fund shortfalls,
only part of the transfer was made, Fish
noted. In fiscal year 1983, the Road Fund
absorbed the entire cost ofdebt service
for the coal road bonds. The Brown administration recommended that the
transfer to the Road Fund not be made
again in its fiscal year 1984.
The coal road bonds are a major factor in Road Fund debt, Fish noted. The
present annual debt service payment is
$120 million. "This means 28 cents of
every highway user dollar going into the
State Road Fund is spent for debt service," Fish said.
With the sale of all bonds authorized,
he noted, debt service will rise to $150
million annually- taking 34 cents out of
every dollar.
Presently, Fish said, each penny of
the motor fuels user fee generates $19.1
million annually. On that basis it takes
the equivalent of nearly 2.5 cents on
every gallon of gasoline sold to meet the
debt service on the coal road bonds, he
said.
"The new administration and Kentuckians face some enormous financial problems in transportation," Fish continued. He noted that the state's current
multi-year state construction plan,
designed by the Brown administration,
assumes the return of $46.6 million of
severance tax revenue to the Road Fund
beginni~~~~~~r~~~~-~
355 SOUTH MAIN
HARLAN
573·7111
�Wednesday, January 4, 1984
The Floyd County Times
Darlene's Ha·r Shop
Section Three, Paae Four
Make 1'rip to California
IMM
Men or women
AT
HUMANA HOSPITAL LOUISA
Open 10:00 till 6:00;
Open earlier or later
by appointment.
Humana Hospital Louisa Is a small rural hospital. Opportunity to advance within the company throughout
the country without any loss or benefits or seniority.
Salary competitive with excellent benefits.
Contact:
or 285-3609
HUMANA HOSPITAL LOUISA
Twenty-three members and families of the staff of Drs. Elvis R. and
Marguerite T. Thompson, who have offices in the Professional Associates
Building, Pikeville, are pictured following a trip to Southern California where
staff members attended classes at the Anaheim Convention Center and then
with their families toured places of interest.
Pictured above are Charles and Mary Elswick, Etta Kiki Vass, Juanita and
Cletus May, Jack and Louise Blanton, Delbert and Mae Coleman, Teresa Colley, John and Betty Ratliff, Bessie Mullins and children, Ann and Eric, Paula
Ratliff and children, Kathy and Michelle, Bethel Beane and daughter, April,
Anna Thacker, Julie Spencer and Lucille Bush.
THIS IS THE
GOLD STANDARD
FOR QUALITY
IN BLACK & WHITE!
NAME BRAND
Says, Thanks!
QUALITY
WITHOUT THE
NAME BRAND
PRICE.
L1ghts: 14 mg. "tar'', 1.1 mg. n1cotine; Ultra Lights: 6 mg. "tar",
0.7 mg. nicotme av. per cigarette by FTC Method
Warning: The Surgeon General Has Determm.ed
That Cigarette Smoking Is Dangerous to Your Health.
12·21·31
Austin Lumpkins, who was recently
named fourth runnerup in the National
Little Master U.S.A. finals in Dallas,
Texas, would like to thank those who
bought ads from him. They are the following:
Snodgrass Insurance, Allen; Diet
Center, Prestonsburg, Pelphrey Real
Estate, Prestonsburg, and his grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Chester Porter,
Allen. A special thanks to Mrs. Maxine
Dobson, of Prestonsburg, for the
wonderful wardrobe she created for
him.
lt-pd.
Pikeville IRS Office
Offers Tax Assistance
The following schedule for taxpayer
assistance at the Pikeville IRS Office
will be observed through April13, 1984:
January 23-January 27, and 1-4:45,
Monday through Friday; January
3(}-February 10,8-4:45, Monday through
Friday; February 20-April6, and 1-4:45,
Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday; April
9-April 13, 8-4:45, Monday through
Friday.
Taxpayers who come to the local office in the Post Office Building at Main
and Huffman Sts., can receive answers
to their tax questions and receive guidance in the preparation of their own
returns. Tax forms and IRS publications
on individual tax topics may also be ob·
tained at the local office.
John J. Jennings, District Director for
Kentucky, suggested that taxpayers who
come to the local IRS office for assistance should bring the tax package they
received in the mail, all W-2 forms, interest and dividend statements, and any
other information supporting claims for
tax credits or adjustments to incmpe.
Jennings also suggested .,that taxpayers may want to use the IRS toll-free
telephone service to get answers to their
tax questions or to order ulx forms. The
number for toll-free service in the Pikeville area is 1-800-424-1040. Telephone
assistance is available Monday through
Friday, 8:30a.m. to 4:30p.m EST
WITH IRA.
Today could be very special for you. If you make it a
point to plan for a very special day in your future ...
retirement. We can help make your retirement more
rewarding, more financially secure with a taxsheltered Individual Retirement Account (IRA).
An IRA is a high-yield savings plan to which you
make annual tax-deductible contributions. All
annual contributions and interest earned are taxdeferred until retirement, at which time you will
probably be in a lower tax bracket. Imagine the nest
egg waiting for you ...
Take a good look at our IRA plans today. You'll find
your future never looked so good.
~u
In Floyd County, $8.00
Elsewhere In Kentucky, $J.O
Outside Kentucky, $12.50
AND EASTERN KENTUCKY TOO!
TilE BANK ·:Bj:-j()SEPHINl~
Prestonsburg • Garrett • Harold • Allt'n •
lll•mbfor F. U.I.C.
0MCMLXXXIV Leon Shaffer Golnlck Adv , Inc
Wheel~right
Please note. expiration date
opposite your name on wrap·
per. or on your copy of The
Times. Bec:ause of Increased
mallln& costs, rtotlces of
subscription exPiration are
no
lorleer
mailed
to
subscribers.
Subscriptions m1y be m1~ed to:
The Floyd County Times
. Box 391
Pre~tonsbura, Ky. 41653
AN EQUAL OPPORTUNITY EMPL
R
12·28-21
Pharmacy
•· _J! · Footnotes
~·
By HAROLD COOLEY
Consumers will often purchase an over-the-counter
drug without noticing the letters "U.S.P." or "N.F." on
the label. U.S.P. stands for "United States Pharmacopeia". N.F. stands for "National Formula". These
two independent organizations set standards for the
manufacture of drugs. A drug, with these letters on the
label, comes with the assurance by these organizations
that the drug was made to official standards. The consumer can buy it and use it with confidence. It is but one
more assurance that the drugs purchased in your pharmacy are of the highest quality.
Our pharmacists are pledged to fmther and maintain
the highest ethical standards of our profession and stay
up to date on all the latest changes in the pharmaceutical world. When your physician prescribes
medication for you or a member of your family have
him call COOLEY APOTHECARY. We are located at
No. 2 Town Center Bldg., 886·8106. Master Olarge and
Visa. Hours: Mon.-Fri., 9-5:30, Sat., 9-4.
HANDY HINT:
The F.D.A. is responsible for assuring the safety, efficacy and proper labeling of all medicines.
ON WINTER-TIME
FAVORITES
The University of Kentucky King
Library has received a $10,000 grant
from the National Endowment for the
Humanities to plan a program to access and preserve copies of Kentucky's
newspapers by computer cataloging and
microfilming.
"The grant will assist in on-site
surveys including visits to newspaper
publishers, historical societies and
libraries," said Frank Levstik, project
coordinator who heads the program.
"More than 300 questionnaires have
been mailed to publishers, libraries, colleges and universities, historical
societies and museums- any place we
think newspapers are kept," Levstik
added.
Newspapers have been published in
Kentucky since 1787 and many copies of
older newspapers are extraordinary
brittle and fragile, Levstik explained.
One repository of old newspapers, The
Filson Club in Louisville, has 300 or
more titles that have not been filmed,
Levstik added
Although the UK Library has been
filming Kentucky newspapers since 1954
through gift subscriptions and purchase
from publishers, there is a need to Identify the location and quantity of newspapers maintained on a permanent
basis.
After this identification has been
made by visiting 250 or more locations
in the state, the information will be
entered into an on-line computer data
base in Columbus, Ohio, a national computer network.
The library then expects the NEH to
assist with funds for the microfilming of
those newspapers in imminent danger
of destruction but that is several years
down the road, Levstik said.
Subscription
Rates ·Per Yea,r
Personnel Deportment
P.O. Box 769
Louisa, Ky._41230
606-638-9451
·sAVE 2.30
Grant To Preserve
Old State Newspapers
YOUR FUTURE
LOOKS GOOD
GS
• PHYSIC L THERAPIST DIRECTOR
• STAFF PHAR ACIST, REGISTERED
Langley, Ky. Cold Ky. 80)
PHONE 285-9902
E
Ward off winter chills
and enjoy big savings
with Paramount Chili
and/or Tamales. Stock
up now and make meals
simple and super with
the meaty, zesty taste
that everyone will love!
I
I
I
I
I
I
------~---------Save 30¢
I $2.00 savings on a variety
SToRE coUPON
on .a_nr two cans or Paramount
Chilt and/or TamaJes
Mr.Rttalkr:We,.iJiredeemthl,couponfor.'\0<
pi"" "• handling provided (a)dealtr ha.~ ac<·ep1 ·
ed ltln e><change for any mo can' ofParamount
ChU I and/ or Tamale<; (b) dealer mail' to Para·
mount Foock, loulw!Ue, 10" " 0 23 2 -Customc:l"o
muM pay ""'les 12X whenever applicable. Ca:.h
value t / 201h of H . Im·olce sho,.ina deale:"'
punha,t:d 'uffident sto<:k to co,Tr coupon.•
pte'it'Ditd for payment must be: bhown upon
~que~t. This coupon Is void If duplicated,
12Xed. prohibited or re.trloed by law.
Coupon Expi,-.,s: Febna&l') 29, 198~.
Paramount
of Paramount Chili
dT
I
d cts
1 an ama es pro u
I
I
I
I
( ~ith this maU-in certificate and four UPC label<> from
Paramount Chili and/or Tamales products)
S.,nd labc:l\ and thl' certificate to: J>aramount Chili and Tarnal.-.. Offer.
Paramoum fo<.xh, In<., P.O. Bo>< jll ~0. IA>ui.wilk, KY <Ol:\ l
!'fame
-----
Addre'~
Clf}
Stall'
Offer Expi~s: Febnaary 29, 1984.
7ip
b200~4-----..1--------~2~r
J
�•
Wedne.tay, January 4,1984
The Floyd County Times
Section Three, Pa&e Five
FAST FRIENDLY SERVICE ALL THE WAY TO YOUR CAR!!
We reserve the right to limit quantities and correct printer's errors.
Prices in effect thru January 8, 1984.
RIB cur
PORK
STEAK
PORK
CHOPS
$J39
$
69
LB.
LB.
PORK LOIN
RIB
HALF
SliCED INTO CHOPS
1lmerica,you're
leaning on
$14~
~k.~M
LB.
WHOLE
$129
PORK LOINS SUCED FREE . .
LB.
$
QUARTER LOIN
PORK CHOPS .........
COUNTRY STYLE
PORK RIBS .................
LB.
·3
LB.
LOIN END
$
PORK ROAST .............
BONELESS PORK
$
BUTTERFLy CHOPS ..
rg~KHALF .uc•• ,.,......
·
ABRMouR sTAR
LB.
9
LB.
s1 sl•.
7
TURKEY FRA KS ...... .
ARMOuR sTAR
39
$
ARMOUR STAR-SLICED
·
$
COOKED HAM ..... .
SOUTHERN STAR
BOLOGNA
BYTHE PIECE .. .
BEEF
PATTIES
$
59
c
ARMOUR STAR
49
BOLOGNA ..... ..... .. ... .. .
12-0Z. PKG.
ARMOUR STAR
CHICKEN FRIED
CHOPPED
HAM
$
69
39
.
�Wednesday, January 4, 1984
The
Times
We welcome Federal Food Stamps.
Prices in effect thru January 8.
We reserve the
ri&ht tq limit
quantities 1nd
correct printing errors.
•
age
TOMATOJUICE..............
46-0Z. CAN
RED GOLD
·
! - - -
12-oz. CANS
SAOFT DRINKS ....... ::;~SJ$1
64-0Z. CARTON
TROPICANA
ORANGE ,. . .~..---:-;
. ..
10-0Z. CAN
3/79c JUICE ·
Ciilll HOT iEANS ....... 3JS1
WLHiTE HOMIN\' ...... 3/79 c
3/$1
KIDNEY BEANS .. .. .. .....
·. 1G-OAZ.
3/$1
AMERICAN OR
~!~!0 BEANS.·············
PIMENTO SINGL~ ·
3/$1
PORK & BEANS ...........
DYSHwASHING LIQUID ........S1 29 BISCUITS ....... .
SHREDDED KRAUT
15-0Z. CAN
14.5-0Z. CAN BUSH
15·0Z. CAN
BUSH-UGHT RED
12
PAK
15-0Z. CAN
BUSH
SHOWBOAT
22-0Z.
12-0Z.
16-0Z.
IGA
ORANGE JUICE
c
ICEBERG
TOTINO PIZZA
HEAD LETTUCE
0
2/$129
CAUl-IFLOWER ...
CHOPPED
2/89c CORN MINI COB ....... $129
BROCCOLI .. .. .. .. .
2/$119 MIXED VEGETABLES ... .. .2/99 C
BROCCOLI SPEARS. ... ...
59C
SHOESTRING POTATOES......
12-0Z. ORE-IDA
10-0Z. IGA
50-LB. U.S. NO. 1
$
5l g
~iTs~fNGTON STATE4/ $1
~:li~oES . . . . . .
10-0Z. IGA
a-EAR IGA
10-0Z. IGA
:J:z.TEXAS STYLE
,
BUTTERMILK OR HOMESTYL£
.
LARGE
HAMBURGER, SAUSAGE,
PEPPERONI OR CANADIAN BACON
$
A
10-0Z. IGA
6
9
C
TATER TOTS ...................................... ..
RED DELl. APPLES ..
16-0Z. ORE-IDA
.
~
�The Floyd County Times
10-PAK
CAPRI SUN
$249
.
c
.
FRUIT DRINKS ............ .
18-0Z.
IGA
79
·
·:
QUICK OATS ......... _....... .
2o:oz.
$199
CARNATION-RICH CHOCOLATE
HOT COCOA ................ .
20-0Z.
$199
CARNATION-MILK CHOCOLATE
HOT COCOA ................ .
20-0Z.
$199
CARNATION-HOT COCOA
ARSHMAL~
WITH
WS ..... .
12~Z.VARIETIES
ALL
29
age
SUNSHINE COOKIES ....
REG.
6-PAK
Nowggc
TOOTSIE ROLL.st.so .~~.~~
75
BATH TISSUE ............... .
$
2/
1
PAPER TOWELS ........ .
c
FOUR ROLL PAK
GENERIC
SINGLE ROLL
GENERIC
FRESH
GREEN
ONIONS
DES
99
c
99c
$ 28 9
INCLUDES 2 VEGETABLES AND. ROLL
COLE SLAW
POTATO SALAD...
OR
LB.
4/$1
39C
SPANISH ONIONS......
$
~iw-~o,s . . . . .31 1
WA.SHINGTON STATE .
GOLDEN DELl. APPLES
-
YELLOW
Ll.
1-LB. BAG
COOKED- ECKRICH
DELl STYLE
HAM ........
LB.
LB.
1
16-0Z. LOAF
FRESH
GARLIC BREAD ....
FRESH
GLAZED
DONUTS .. ..
:
:
:
$16 9
0-----------F
~----s-~-~
89c
DOZEN
F-----~
ANY SIZE BIRTHDAY CA E
.
WITH COUPON
• CALL IN YOUR ORDER
I
I
I
-------------~-------------------------
�Wednesday, January 4, 1984
Friday Night Lineup
Keeps Public Informed
KET's fast-paced and provocative
public affairs lineup on Friday nights
tackles issues from economics to state
national and international politics and
informs viewers about events affecting
them close to home and far away.
The popular series "Comment on Kentucky," now in its ninth season, head~
up the evening's programming at 7:30
p.m. Host AI Smith and a panel of Kentucky journahsts discuss the maJor news
items from around the state.
Switching to the national scene,
"Washington Week in Review," airing
at 8 p.m., invites viewers to watch journalists from the nation's top newspapers
and magazines talk with each other
about the week's political news. Paul
Duke hosts this award-winning series.
Economic commentator and columnist Louis Rukeyser leads a group of
panelists and guests in a weekly discussion of economic activity, including a
review of the closing market report, on
"Wall Street Week," airing alB: 30 p.m.
KET presents coverage of the 1984
Kentucky General Assembly at 9 p.m.
With host Ray Holbrook, KET will fea
lure highlights of the day's committe
meetings plus House and Senate Chamber action.
Moving back to economic news, "The
Nightly Business Report," airing at 10
p.m., spotlights the newsbreakers and
makers of the financial world and explores the day's economic developments. Co-anchored by Del Frank, Linda O'Bryon and Paul Kengus, this series
combines hard news with analysis to
provide complete coverage of the national business news.
Beginning January 13 at 10:30 p.m.,
"International Edition" gives public
television viewers an opportunity to see
themselves as others do. The series uses
television reports and print stories on
important trends and events in the
United States filed by foreign correspondents stationed in this country. Host
Ford Rowan discusses the events with
many of these journalists.
The white shark is known to sp1t out
human victims after an attack, but it apparently has nothing to do with the
shark's distaste for flesh, reports National Wildlife magazine. It's simply a
clever protection technique. By first
retreating, giving the victim time to go
into shock, the shark can then dine in
leisure without risk of attack.·
s·coTT'S
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& CARPET
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RT. 122
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20 Years Expflrlence
e.o.w.
Section Three, Paae El&ht
The Floyd County Times
DONATE BLOOD.
IT ONL\ IIURTS WHEN YOU boN'T'.
Residents Present
Christmas Play
Named Primary Care Officers
!'\me Riverview Manor residents participated in a Christmas play before
more than200 people, Dec. 14. The play,
called "Christmas in Short," was written by Sherry Hall.
• Rent a Curtis Mathes TV with payments as low as $30.00 per month. That's right just pay your first month's renr, and toke
a color TV home with you; and enjoy the beauty of color TV In your home tonight. • We have Portables, Consoles, and Home
Entertainment Centers. • We have Remote and Non-Remote TV's. • We ulso give you a choice of cabinets. • Yes, we also
have VIdeo Cassette Recorders and a Tape Club. Ask about details.
STOP BY OUR STORE AND SEE OUR SELECTION OF TELEVISIONS AND VIDEO CASSETTE RECORDERS, TODAY, AND SEE HOW
EASY IT TO OWN YOUR OWN CURTIS MATHES.
Dr. Grady Stumbo, former head of the Human Resources Department and
recent gubernatorial candidate, has been named chairman of the Kentucky
Primary Care Association, and Ellis Buchanan, director of the Big Sandy
Health Care, Inc. , has been named secretary. The association represents all
licensed primary care facilities in Kentucky.
Mr. Buchanan is married to Terry Webb Buchanan, daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Virgil Webb, of Prestonsburg, and they have three daughters, Wende
Lee, Tracie Lynn, and Maurya Nancy.
Beef Not So Bad
·Food Experts Say
Beef, perhaps America's favorite
food, has taken a bum rap for cancer,
heart disease and assorted ills because
its saturated fats tend to raise the level
of blood cholesterol.
What is Jess well understood, however,
is that the normal human body needs
cholesterol-about 100 milligrams a
day- and that the difference between
the amount required and the amount
consumed will be produced by the body
itself. "In any event," food authority
Jack Denton Scott writes in the January
Reader's Digest, "a three-{)unce serving
of beef contains just 75 mgs. of cholesterol. In fact, the average daily U.S. diet,
including eggs, milk and meat, contains
only 300 to 550 mgs . of cholesterol."
Beef is also surprisingly digestible and
nutritious. Former president of the
American Institute of Nutrition George
M. Briggs points out that, in a normal
2400-calories diet for an adult male,
three ounces of Jean beef supply only 8
percent of a normal caloric intake while
providing 47 percent of the recommended daily allowance of protein, 79'percent
of vitamin B-12, 38 percent of zinc, 26
percent of iron and 19 percent of niacin.
The iron, Scott writes, is "heme iron,"
a type that is three to five times more
easily absorbed by the body.
Beef, he continues, is more digestible
than vegetables. Its healthful ingredients are 96 percent digested, and its
many nutrients almost completely used
by the body.
Nutritionists generally advise two
three-ounce servings daily from the
food group that includes beef, veal,
lamb, pork, poultry, fish, shellfish, dry
beans , eggs, seeds, nuts and peanut
butter- a wide variety from which to
pick.
"Although you don't need to eat beef
to . ge( a full comrlement of protein,
vitamins and minerals, red m~at unquestionably offers important, highquality nutrients in a relatively lowcalorie package that is tasty and satisfying," Scott concludes.
"Customer
must meet :
requirements.
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�Wedne.day,
Jan1111ry 4, 1984-Tue.day,
January 10, 1984
~~==~====~=e~~'
.redneaday»
1/4/84
MORNING
9:00
1:00
C6
MOVIE: 'Magnificent Obsession' A
playboy becomes a
doctor in order to restore the eyesight of a
woman whose blindness he caused. Irene
Dunne, Robert Taylor,
Betty Furness. 1935.
AFTERNOON
C6 MOVIE: 'The Movie
Maker'
4:00 II) (!)
ABC Afterschool Special 'Sometimes I Don't Love My
Mother.' A teenage
girl must cope with
her mother's dependence on her after the
death of her father. (R)
(60 min.) [Closed Captioned]
EVENING
6:oo
11 rn a m m ®
C!B (])News
C6 Little House on the
Prairie
fa(]) MacNeil/Lehrer
Newshour
0) (fi) Spaces
6:30
II (]) C!B 00
NBC
News
Iii (I) CBS
News
II) (]) ABC News
0) (fl) Business Report
7:00 II (]) PM Magazine
Iii (I) Wheel of
Fortune
II)(]) People's Court
C6 Carol Burnett
fa (])
Kentucky
General Assembly
0) (fi) MacNeil/Lehrer
Newshour
C!B (])
To
Be
Announced
7:30 II (]) Tic Tee Dough
Iii (I) Family Feud
Jeffersons
C6 Hogan's Heroes
8:00 II (]) C!B (I) Real
People Tonight's program features a threetime Olympic gold
medalist, a look at the
'fortune bagel' craze
and a three-wheel gocart race. (60 min.)
Iii (I) Domestic Life
(PREMIERE)
Harold
dumbfounds his family when he brings
home a girlfriend to
'meet his parents.'
II) (]) Fall Guy
C6 MOVIE: 'Buck and
the Preacher' A trail
guide who protects
former slaves seeking
to homestead is confronted by a con man.
Sidney Poitier, Harry
Belafonte, Ruby Dee.
m (])
QrQr 1J1lny~ Qtounty <irtmrs
eccentric judge presides over a Manhattan night court with an
assortment of lawyers. prosecutors and
oddballs vying for his
favor.
10:00 II (]) C!B (l) St.
Elsewhere A bag lady
and her boyfriend
charm Dr. Morrison
and a parole violator
learns that he has
been shot. (R) (60
min.)
II) @ Arthur Hailey's
Hotel
fa(]) Business Report
0) G]) Previn and the
Pittsburgh 'The British
Festival.'
10:15 C6 TBS Evening News
10:30 fa (]) Tony Brown's
Journal
11:oo 11 rna
C!B (l)
David Hasselhoff (1.) stars
as Michael Knight, driver of
the computerized supercar
KITT, and Edward Mulhare
and Rebecca Holden play feature roles in the NBC action
series, "Knight Rider," airing
SUNDAY, JAN. 8.
CHECK LISTINGS FOR EXACT TIME
@1984 Compulog
mm®
News
0) (j]) Dr. Who
11:30 II(]) C!B (l) Tonight
Show
Iii (I) Police Story
II)@ Nightline
CD Catlins
0)
(j])
Latenight
America
12:00 C6 MOVIE: 'Blindfold.
A New York psychia,rist gets involved in the
tug of war between
two opposing governments for the mind of
a scientist. Rock Hudson, Guy Stockwell,
Claudia
Cardinale.
1966.
12:30 II (]) Late Night with
David Letterman
(I) MOVIE: 'Curse
of King Tut's Tomb'
Mysterious events occur soon after an archaeologist discovers
the Egyptian ruler's
burial site. Eva Marie
Saint, Robin Ellis, Raymond Burr. 1980.
II) (]) CNN Headline
News
1:00 II) (]) Bionic Woman
2:15 C6 MOVIE: 'The Brain'
Two ex-convicts attempt to outwit the
mastermind of the famous
GlasgowLondon train robbery.
4:15 C6 Africans
Iii
KITT'S CATS
«~h~rsday
»
0) (fi) Spaces
II (]) C!B (l) NBC
News
Iii Cl) CBS News
II)@ ABC News
0) (j]) Business Report
MORNING
7:00 II (]) PM Magazine
Iii (I) Wheel of
9:00 C6 MOVIE: 'Tell Me
Fortune
My Name' A mother is
II) (]) People's Court
forced to face the
C6 Carol Burnett
truth about her life affa (])
Kentucky
ter she is confronted
General Assembly
by her illegitimate
0) (j]) MacNeil/Lehrer
daughter. Arthur Hill,
News hour
Barbara Barrie, Bar(!fj (}) Appalachian
nard Hughes. 1977.
Encounters
7:30 II(]) Tic Tac Dough
AFTERNOON
Iii (I) Family Feud
1:00 C6 MOVIE: 'Great Day
Jeffersons
in the Morning' This is
C6 Hogan's Heroes
the story of the action ·
C!B 00 Lorne Greene's
and excitement of the
Wilderness
Colorado gold rush.
C!B (}) Gimme II
8:00 II
Virginia Mayo, Robert .
Break A boyfriend of
Stack, Raymond Burr.
Sam tries to improve
1956.
their relationship by
taking advantage of
EVENING
her doubts about the
6:00 ll(])liJ(I)Ii)(])
world.
C!B (})News
Iii (I) Magnum P.l.
C6 Little House on the
Magnum becomes inPrairie
volved in some terrorfa(]) MacNeil/Lehrer
ists' attempt to kidnap
News hour
a prince. (60 min.)
6:30
1/5/84
m (])
rn
II) (]) Automan
C6 NCAA Basketball:
LSU at Georgia
fa® People's Business
0) (fl)
Life
and
Adventures of Nicholas Nickleby Conclusion . Nicholas saves
his sister from Mulberry
Hawk
and
Ralph's past is finally
revealed to all. (3 hrs.)
[Closed Captioned]
8:30 1J (]) (!fj (]) Family
Ties
9:00 II (]) C!B Cil Cheers
Carla persuades Sam
to accompany her to
her ex-husband's wed·
din9..:_
Iii (I) Simon & Simon
II)@ Masquerade
fa
Scholastic
rn
Challen~
II (])
(!fj Cil Buffalo
Bill After Bill is fired,
Newdell fills in and becomes an overnight
sensation .
10:00 II(]) C!B (]) Hill Street
Blues A man goes on a
murderous rampage
at a local gay bar and
the police chase ~a
9:30
Adventures of Nicholas Nickleby Third of 4
parts. Nicholas finds
employment with the
twin brother!f. Cheeryble and falls in love
with Madeline Bray. (2
hrs.) [Closed Captioned]
8:30 Iii (I) Empire (PREMIERE)
9:00 II (])
Facts of
Life
Iii (I) MOVIE: 'The
Gauntlet' An Arizona
cop escorts a prosti·
tute from Las Vegas to
Phoenix to testify
against
organized
crime. Clint Eastwood,
Sondra Locke, Pat
e (])
=(])
Hin~. 1977.
o;a~
9:30
Night
• • • . • • • • .Cou.'1 _(PREMIERE) An
man who think:~ he is ·
the 'Cisco Kid ,' (R) (60
min.)
0 (I) Knots landing
Mack is forced to commit Karen to the hospital and Greg Sumner
denounces Mack over
the Lotus Point project. (60 min.)
II)(]) 20/20
(6 TBS Evening News
fa ffi Business Report
10:30 fa ® Tony Brown's
Journal
m m oo m ~
11:oo 11
News
All In the Family
0) <IT; Dr. Who
11 :30 0 (]) C!B (I) Tonight
Show
0(1) News
II)@ Nightline
C6 Catlins
0)
(fl)
Latenight
America
12:00 Iii® Program JIP
C6 MOVIE: 'The Third
Day' An amnesia victim discovers he is accused by his cousin of
murder and his wife
believes he is guilty.
George Peppard, Elizabeth Ashley, Roddy
McDowell. 1965.
12:30 II
Late Night with
David Letterman
0 Cl) MOVIE: 'Topper' The classic tale of
two angels who have a
devil of a time getting
into
heaven. Kate
Jackson, Jack Warden, Andrew Stevens.
m
rn
1979
II) @ CNN Headline
News
1:00 II) (]) Bionic Woman
2:30 C6 MOVIE: 'The Day
the Fish Came Out' A
Greek island becomes
a mod tourist resort
while two pilots hunt
for a lost atomic bomb
dropped
by
their
plane. Tom
Courtenay, Candice Bergen,
Sam
Wanamaker. 1967.
4:45 m Candid Camera
· «fr[~v))
1/6/84
--Movie ·W eek--
MORNING
9:00
SUNDAY
(ABC) SUNDAY NIGHT MOVIE
"SLAPSHOT" ( 1977) Paul Newman. Strother Martin, lindsay
Crouse. A story about a minor-league hockey team
(NBC) SUNDAY NIGHT MOVIE
C6
MOVIE:
'The
Longest
Hundred
Miles' An assorted .•
group of people band
together in an attempt
to flee the Japanese
occupat1on of the Philippines during WWII .
Doug McClure, Katharine Ross. 1967. •
AFTERNOON
1:00 C6 MOVIE: 'Thunder
1972.
fa Cil 0) (fi) Life and
TV
SCHEDULE
Over the Plains' A
Union officer is assigned to the South·
west territory in the
post-Civil War period.
Randolph Scott. Phyllis Kirk, Fess Parker.
MONDAY
(ABC) MONDAY NIGHT MOVIE
"SOMETHING ABOUT AMELIA" ,( 1983) Ted Danson, Glenn
Close, Roxana Zal. An average middle-class family is plunged into
an emotional nightmare by the discovery of an incestuous relationship between a father and his 13-year-old daughter
1953.
I
(NBC) MONDAY NIGHT MOVIE
TUESDAY
(CBS) TUESDAY NIGHT MOVIE
"LICENSE TO KILL" (1983) James Farentino. Penny Fuller,
Don Murray. The death of a young girl hit by a drunk driver
threatens to destroy two families- the girl's and her killer's.
WEDNESDAY
(CBS) WEDNESDAY NIGHT MOVIE
"MODERN PROBLEMS" (1981) Chevy Chase. Patti D'Arbanville, Mary Kay Place, Dabney Coleman. Nell Carter. A man uses
his telekinetic powers for revenge and ends up with some b1zarre
problems.
William Hurt stars as a lawyer in a sleepy Florida town in
the steamy 1981 thriller "Body Heat," airing Saturday,
Jan. 14 on "The CBS Saturday Night Movies."
SATURDAY
(CBS) SATURDAY NIGHT MOVIE
"BODY HEAT" (1981) William Hurt. Kathleen Turner. R1chard
Crenna. A young lawyer is transformed by his obsessive love for a
beautiful woman who may not be what she seems.
EVENING
6:00
IICIJCI(J)Q)(])
fiB CI> News
0) little House on the
Prairie
fa(]) MacNeil/lehrer
Newshour
0) (fi) Spaces
6:30 II CD fiB Cil NBC
News
Q Cil CBS Nev.,.
C!)@ABCNews
@) (fi) Busineas Report
7:00 11 (]) PM Magazine
0
(I) Wheel of
Fortune
II) @ PeotJ.~· Court
�CD Carol
fB CID
7:30
5:00
Burnett
Educational,
Profile
@) (]]) MacNeil/lehrer
Newshour
liD ® Goins Brothers
0 (]) Tic Tac Dough
(;) ® Family Feud
@ Jeffersons
C6 Hogan's Heroes
fB (]) Comment on
Kentucky
(ti (]) This Week in
Country Music
0 (]) liD ® MOVIE:
'Jerk Too' A naive
young
white
boy,
raised by a poor black
Southern family, goes
to Los Angeles for the
wedding of his heiress
pen pal. Mark Blankfield, Ray Walston,
Stacy Nelkin. 1983.
(;) Cl)
Dukes
of
Hazzard
Ci)@ Benson Benson,
helping with a charity
telethon, surprises everyone when he performs with Gladys
Knight and the Pips.
[Closed Captioned]
C6 NBA Basketball:
Milwaukee at Atlanta
m
8:00
INCEST DRAMA
Glenn Close stars as a woman faced w ith the shatter ing
d iscovery o f incest bet ween
her husband and their daught er in "Something about
A melia," airing MONDAY,
JAN. 9 on ABC.
m m m
10:30
11 :oo
1/7/84
MORNING
5:00
5:30
6:00
6:15
6:30
7:00
7 :30
m
Night
Tracks
Cont'd
0!)@ Rev. Pete Rowa
0(]) Saturday Report
Ci)@ Farm Digest
C6 TBS Morning News
Ci)@ Forum 19
Ci> @ Town Crier
0
Joy
of
Gardening
(;) CID Captain Kanga.
roo
Ci)@ CNN Headline
News
C6 Between the lines
@) @
Nature of
Things
liD
®
Amazing
Spiderman/lncredible
Hulk
0 (]) Bugs Bunny &
Friends
Ci) @ ABC Weekend
Special 'Cougar!' First
of 3 parts. After having their house swept
away in a flood , a boy
and his little sister are
confronted by a mountain lion and a pair of
kidnappers.
[Closed
Captioned]
Romper Room and
Friends
0(])€6(1) Flintstone
Funnies
(;) CID Biskitts
Ci) @ Best of Scooby
Doo
C6 Starcade
@) @ Two Ronnies
® shirt
Tales
(;) CID
Saturday
Supercede
Ci) @ Monchhichis/
little Rascals/Richie
Rich
MOVIE: 'Thief of
Baghdad' A young
thief meets a genie in
old Baghdad . Sabu,
June Duprez, Conrad
Veidt. 1940.
@)@ Bless Me Father
0 (]) €& ® Smurfs
@) (]]) To the Manor
Born
CID Dungeons and
m
m
8 :00
8:3o
o m m
m
o m moo moo
m
m CID News
9:00
9:30
m
Dra~ns
Ci> (!) Pac-Man/Rubik
Cube Hour
@) (]]) Dave Allen at
large
10:00 (;) CID Plasticman
@) @ Top Sec. life of
E. Briggs
10:30 0 (])liD (1) Alvin &
the Chipmunks
(;) ® Charlie Brown
& Snoopy
Ci)@ Littles
MOVIE: 'The Sea
Chase' The German
captain of a WWII fugitive ship carries an
unusual cargo and assorted crew. John
m
m
East-West
Shrine
Game
@) @ River of Sand
3:30 Ci) @
Big
Bud
Shootout
fB (]) Another Page
4:00 0 (]) Hula Bowl
Ci>@ liD (1) NCAA
Basketball: Florida at
Auburn
C6 High Chaparral
fB (]) GED Series
@) @ All Creatures
Great and Small
4:30 fB (]) GED Series
Ci> @ Sportsbeat
Championship Wrestling
fB ® Matinee at the
Bijou ' Masks and Memories.'
@)
@
Undersea
World
of Jacques
Cousteau
liD (1) At The Movies
(;) CID Concern
m@ Dance Fever
€&® NBC News
0
(]) Can't Read,
Can't Write
(;)@ Hee Haw
Ci>@ Solid Gold
@) (]]) Dr. Who Movie
€&®Jamboree
fB ® Sneak Preview
0 (I) €& (J) Diff'rent
Strokes Mr. Drummond discovers that
he is attracted to an
aerobics
instructor
that his company is
trying to promote.
[Closed Captioned]
(;)@Whiz Kids
m@ T. J. Hooker
m World
' 7:00
fB (]) Tony Brown's
Journal
@)@ Inside Business
Today
€&(I) News
@) (]]) Dr. Who
11:30 0 (]) liD (I) Tonight
Show
(;) Cl) MOVIE: 'Eivisl'
Overcoming a povertystricken childhood, Elvis Presley becomes
one of the most popular and enduring entertainers of our time.
Kurt Russell , Shelley
Wmters, Season Hubley. 1979.
Ci)@ Nightline
Catlins
@)@MOVIE: 'Man on
the Flying Trapeze'
12:00 C6 NJ.sht Tracks
12:30 0 CV €& (I) Friday
Night Videos
Ci)@ CNN Headline
News
1:00 Ci)
@
Pentecost
Today
1:30 0) @ Bionic Woman
2:00 EJ (]J News
6:00
6:30
m
m mWeek/
®
Washington
Review Paul Duke is
joined by top Washington journalists analyzing
the
week's
news .
8:30 Ci> @ Webster
G1l wall
Street Week Louis Aukeyser analyzes the
' 80s with a weekly review of economic and
investment matters.
9:00 (;) Cl) Dallas Sue Ellen
has to fight her own
emotion when she
tries to convince Peter
that he should not jeopardize his future because of her. (60 min .)
Ci) @ Blue Thunder
(PREMIERE)
fB (])
Kentucky
General Assembly
@)@Dinner at Julia's
9:30 @) @ Sneak Preview
10:00 0
(]) liD (1) New
Show (PREMIERE) Tonight's
guests
are
Steve
Martin
and
Catherine O' Hara . (60
min .)
(;) CID Falcon Crest
Chase becomes determ i ned to stop Richard
after he wins the electi on to build his race
track. (60 min .)
Ci) @ Matt Houston
C.J . and Matt assist F.
Lee Bailey when he
has to defend a man
who has confessed to
killing four teenagers.
fB (]) Business Report
@) @ Israeli Diary
1 0:15 C6 TBS Evening News
m
@)1 98-4 Compulog
«~turd;.y))
Fishin' w/Orlando
Wilson
fB (]) Firing line
@) (]]) Masterpiece
Theatre 'The Citadel .'
Andrew's luck takes a
turn for the better
when he treats a
woman in a fash ionable boutique. (60 min .)
[Closed Captioned]
Motorweek IIIUS·
trated
EVENING
5:30
CHECK LISTINGS FOR EXACT TIME
Wayne, lana Turner,
Tab Hunter. 1955 .
@) (]]) Housewarming/ Charlie Wing
11:00 0 (])€& (J) Mr. T
CID Benji/Zax/Alien
Prince
m @ Puppy/Scooby
Doo Show
@) (]]) All New This
Old House
11 :30 0
(])
Amazing
Spiderma n/1 ncredi ble
Hulk
(;) ® Bugs Bunny/
Road Runner
@)@ Woodwright's
Shop
liD (1) Fishing Fever
AFTERNOON
C6
7:30
8:00
m
m (])
8:30
~mes .
9:00
liD (1) That Nashville
m
NBA Basketball:
Atlanta at New Jersey
life
and
Adventures of Nicholas Nickleby Conclusion . Nicholas saves
his sister from Mulberry
Hawk
and
Ralph's past is finally
revealed to all. (3 hrs.)
[Closed Captioned]
0
(]) €& ® Silver
Spoons Derek cons
Ricky into using his
computer to figure the
odds
on
football
W @
·12:00 m @ America's Top
Ten
@) (]]) Washington
Week/Review
Paul
Duke is joined by top
Washington journalists
analyzing
the
week's news.
Music
12:30 0 (]) Thundarr
Ci)
@
American
Bandstand
@) @ Wall Street
Week Louis Rukeyser
analyzes the '80s with
a weekly review of
economic and investment matters.
liD (1) Kentucky Afield
1:00 0 (]) let's Go To The
Races
(;) ® NCAA BasketOklahoma
at
ball:
Syracuse
MOVIE:
'Sh·ort
Walk to Daylight' An
earthquake
levels
New York City and
traps eight people in a
subway tunnel. James
Brolin, Dan Mitchell,
James
McEaken .
1972.
@) @ 1983 United
States Ballroom Grand
Championships
€& ill America's Top
Ten
1 :30 0 (]) That Nashville
Music
m
@
News That
Rocked'83
liD (1) Greatest Sports
legends
2:00 0 (]) €& (1) NCAA
Basketball: North Carolina at North Carolina
State
2:30 Ci) @ 1983 Parade
High School Football
Special
MOVIE: 'Montana'
A sheep rancher, determined to move his
herds into cattle country, meets opposition
from wealthy ranchers. Errol Flynn, Alexis
Smith, James Brown,
S. Z Sakall , 1950.
@) (]]) Barbershop
Jamboree
3:00 (;) ® NCAA Football:
m
SILKWOOD (20th Century-Fox - R)
Starrmg Meryl Streep, Cher. Kurt Russell
* * *
By J.T. YURKO
Ka ren Silkwood was a worker at an pluton1um plant. While
work1ng w1th the union to gain
safer working conditions. she
uncovered what she called
"irregulantles" 10 the plant's
operation. She was on her way
to a meet1ng w1th a New York
T1mes reporter, bu t she never
made 1t. Her car was found
demolished on the s1de of the
road. She was probably killed
Instantly.
Was Ka ren Silkwood carryIng papers wh1ch would prove
so harmful that she was murdered to prevent her from telling her tale? Is Karen Silkwood
a contemporary martyr to;
worker's nghts 1n a nuclear
age? Or IS she something far
less. but made to appear as
more because of th1s wellmade movie?
The facts of the case are
contradictory Two books talk
abou t how she was murdered,
others believe she was guilty of
planting evidence. of contaminating herself w1th pluton1um
to make her employer look
bad. and that her death wa s
accidental
Taken s1mply as a mov1e.
Mike Nichols' film is a warning
of what might happen in the
nuclear age, and on that bas1s
the film IS powerful and
eloquent. The message IS clear
- the c1t1zen has to be protected from toxic substances.
Us1ng the story of Karen Silkwood. however. may be to
take a contradictory ta le and
try to eulog1ze someone who
may not deserve the honor.
"Silk wood" hasn't the pyrotec hnics of a "Ch1na
Syndrome." But 1n 1ts own way
1t IS often as powerful Nichols
tells the story from the perspective of the "little guy." lettmg us 1dent1fy w1th Silkwood.
Help1ng that along is the
usual superb JOb by Meryl
Streep. assisted by Kurt Russell and a f1ne performance by
Cher. Had N1chols en titled the
film differently, and only alluded to the Silkwood tale, the·
story m1ght have had more of
the general wa rning N1chols
want s to present.
Hitch Hikers
Guide/Galaxy
0 @ €&®WeGotlt
Made
(;) ® MOVIE: ' Death
Hunt'
A
veteran
mounts
a
crossCanad ian manhunt to
find a fur trappe r
wrong ly accused of
murder. Charles Bronson. Lee Marvin, Angie Dickinson . 1981 .
m @ love Boat Two
show-biz
veterans
plan a scheme to get
the ir memoirs published , an ex-husband
meets his ex-wife's fiance and Capt. Stubi ng is baffled by a
man 's rough behavior
toward his wife. (60
m in.) [Closed Capt ioned]
@) @ World War I
9 :30 0 (]) €& ® Mama's
Family
@)
@
Men
of
Company 208
9 :45 C6 Sports Close-up
10:00 0 (I) Yellow Rose J uliette takes her father's offer to drill for oil
and Chance meets a
woman who has a special interest in him .
(60 min .)
m @ Fantasy Island
TBS Evening News
@) @
Battle for
Cassino
11 :00 0 (I) (;) CID News
Ci) @ ABC News
C6 Unknown War
fB ® Austin City
limits
@) @ MOVIE: 'Three
Cases of Murder' This
trilogy examines three
separate bizarre murder
cases.
Orson
Welles,
Leueen
McGrath, Alan Badel.
1953
€& CV Music Magazine
11:15 Ci) @ News
11 :30 0 (]) €& (]) Saturday
Night live
(;) ® MOVIE: 'Two
For the Roacl' A bickering couple stop to reminisce about their
twelve years of marriage and try to wo'rk
to save their happiness. Audrey Hep-
m
�LICENSE TO KILL
Don Murray and Millie Perkins portray a couple who
must face the consequences
of his drunk driving when he
kills a young girl in an accident
in "License to Kill," a drama
airing TUESDAY, JAN. 10 on
CBS . .
CHECK LISTINGS FOR EXACT TIME
@1984 Compulog
burn, Albert Finney.
1967.
&) @ NCAA Basketball: East Texas State
vs. VMI
12:00 ai N!.g_ht Tracks
1:00 0
C1.J MOVIE: 'A
House Divided' A widowed
fisherman
must learn to deal
with a mail order bride
that doesn't suit him.
Walter Huston, Kent
Douglass,
Helen
Chandler. 1931
·«aund~y»
@) (ll) Nova
€D (]) Big Creek
Baptist
10:30 0 CID Dr. D. James
Kennedy
9 ® Ernest AnRiey
18 @ Jimmy Swaggart
ffi
MOVIE:
'The
Searchers' A Texas
Civil War veteran returns home to find his
brother and sister-inlaw killed and his two
neices captured by
Commaches.
John
Wayne, Jeffrey Hunter, Natalie Wood.
1956.
f!l ([) Electric Company
11 :00 f!l ([) Sesame Street
[Closed Captioned]
@) (ll) MOVIE: 'Man
from Sonora'
€6 (]) Leonard Repass
11:30 0 (])At Issue
9 ® Viewpoint
&) @ World Tomorrow
€ti (1) Rev. R.A. West
AFTERNOON
Reporter Martin Crane
(Martin Mull) and his wife
(Judith-Marie Bergan)
are
happy to be home after a disastrous island vacat ion that
leaves him determined to nail
the travel agent who sold them
the package, in " Domestic
Life," airing WEDNESDAY,
JAN. 11 on CBS .
l
5:00
6:00
Edition
1:00
0
CID €6 (1) NFL
Football: AFC Championship/or Alternate
Programming At press
time, the teams had
not been determined.
Should the game air at
this time, it will be followed by alternate
programming.
9 ® NFL Football:
NFC Championship/or
Alternate
Programming At press time.
the teams had not
been
determined.
m
f!l
Should the game air at
this time, it will be followed with alternate
programming.
&) @ Biblical Viewpoint
ffi
MOVIE:
'They
Came to Cordura' An
Army officer, accused
of cowardice, is sent
to find five men worthy of the Medal of
Honor. Gary Cooper.
Rita Hayworth, Van
- Heflin. 1959.
f!l ([) Capitol Connection
(ll) Victory Garden
1:30 &) @ Virgil Wacks
Presents
f!l ([) Comment on
Kentucky
Working
!ITl
Women
2:00 &) @ Love Connection
f!l ([) Mystery
(ll) MOVIE: 'The
Young
People'
A
show-business family
leaves the big city and
heads for a farm in
New England. Shirley
Temple, Jack Oakie,
Charlotte Greenwood.
1940.
2:30 &)@Hands On
3:00 &) @ NCAA Basket·
ball: Mississippi at
Tennessee
MOVIE:
'Girlsl
3:30 ffi
Girlsl Girlsl Elvis is
chased by a bevy of
beauties and can't decide which one he prefers . Elvis Presley,
Stella Stevens, Laurel
Goodwin. 1962.
(ll) Mormon Tabernacle Choir
4:00
NFL
Football: AFC Championship/or Alternate
Programming Should
the 9ame air at this
time,
it
will
be
preceded by alternate
programming.
9 ([) NFL Football:
NFC Championship/or
Alternate
Programming Should the game
be played at this time,
it will be preceded by
alternate
programmin!.L_
f!l W Percussion in
Concert
(ll) Newton's Apple
(ll) New Tech
4:30
Times
5:00 &) @ Sarajevo '84
f!l ([) All New This
Old House
(ll) Two Ronnies
@
\:hristmas
5:30
Special
ffi Portrait of America: Indiana
f!l ([) Woodwright's
Shop
(ll) To the Manor
Born
EVENING
7:00
m
m
Journalist Bill Moyers takes viewers on "A Walk
Through the 20th Century."
'Walk Through 20th Century'
"A Walk Through the 20th Century with Bill Moyers," a
series of documentary specials exploring the major e'£ents.
personalities and mores that shaped our century. is journalist
B1ll Moyers' personal attempt to rediscover . in his own words.
" the vivacity of the past." {Please check local listings tor
t1me.)
The specials will each be one hour long. except for the 90minute prem1ere. "Marshall. Texas; Marshall. Texas. " which
a1rs on Wednesday. January 11 on PBS. {Please check local
listings for time.)
Marshall. Texas was the small East Texas town in Which
Moyers was raised . For him, the town holds memories . of
neighborliness and .Southern hospitality. of strict but lov1ng
teachers. the bustle of a thnving railroad with 1ts promise of
b1gger C1t1es far away. and the warm embrace of a community
where everyone knew your name ..
But there was another Marshall, Texas than the one Moyers
knew. Half the town was black. and ruled by Jim Crow - the
old laws of segregation. Black and white alike shared the small
town's bucolic lifestyle. but little else. The show explores th1s
dichotomy.
Although many segments on " A Walk Through the 20th
Century" use old motion picture film to explore even:s. th1s
week's episode .relies on oral h1stones from the towns residents to dramatize its points.
'
@) 1984 Compulog
7:30
8:00
m
o m m m
m
m
m
12:00
m
6:00
&) @ Star Search
m
o m m m
o mmm
m
m
m
8:30
!ITl
m
f!l ([)Dinner at Julia's
'Beef: Braised and
Stuffed.'
Julia's
guests are chef Louis
Evans, Jr. and wine expert Warren Winiarski.
[Closed
Captionedl
(ll) Top Sec. Life of
E. Briggs
&) @ Dance Fever
ffi Nice People
f!l ([) Wild America
(ll) Bless Me Father
First
Camera
9 ® 60 Minutes
&) @ Ripley's Believe
It or Notl
ffi Best of World
Championship Wrestlin9_
f1} ([) Nature 'The Discovery
of
Animal
Behavior.' First of 6
parts. Tonight's program looks at some of
the people who have
come closest to understanding the behavior
of animals. (R) (60
min.) [Closed Captioned]
(ll) Tony Brown's
Journal
(ll) Lawmakers
Knight
Rider In the course of
investigating the theft
of some construction
equipment,
Michael
Knight is buried alive
with KITT. (60 min.)
9 ®Alice Vera risks
getting arrested when
she tries to save a mistreated horse at the
circus.
&) @ Hardcastle &
McCormick ·
T.he
Jud-ge enters his race
horse in a high stake
event but a poor lady
already has the race
fixed. (60 min.)
ffi
MOVIE:
'Centennial' Part 1 First of
12
parts.
FrenchCanadian trapper Pasquina! rescues a Scot
fugitive,
McKeag,
from the Pawnees and
then returns to St.
Louis where he marries Lise, a silversmith's. daughter. Robert Conrad, Richard
Chamberlain,
Sally
Kellerman, Raymond
Burr.
f!l ([) Raphael
(ll) Naturot 'Search
for the Mind.' Tonight's program ex- ·
plores the efforts of
naturalists who delve
into the mysteries of
the animal mind . (R)
(60 min.)
9 ([) One Day at a
Time A letter from Julie threatens to tear
the whole family apart
and end her marriage
to Max.
m
6:30
m m
Masterpiece Theatre
'The Citadel.' Andrew
establishes himself as
a doctor for the rich
and becomes involved
with one of his married patients. (60 min.)
[Closed Captioned]
9:30 9
®
Goodnight,
Beantown While on
assignment, Matt and
Jenny spend a night
out in the wilds.
10:00 9 ® Trapper John,
M.D. The establishm'ent of an E.S.P. lab
at the hospital and the
appearance of Trapper's long-lost medical school roommate
become an eerie combination of circumstances. (60 min.)
f!l ([)
Debono's
Thinking Course
(ll) Poldark
10:30 f!l ([) New Tech
Times
11:00 9 ®News
ffi Sports Page
(ll) Not the Nine
O'Clock News
11 :30 0 CID News
9 ® This Week in
Country Music
&)@ABC News
ffi Oral Roberts
(ll) Monty Python
Flying Circus
€6 (1) It's Your
Business
11:4518@ Forum 19
@1984 Compulog
m
m
m
CHECK LISTINGS FOR EXACT TIME
L
in the
spotlight
MORNING
18@ Rev. Pete Rowe
&l@Omni
ffiNews
6:15 ffi Week/Review
6:30 0 CID TV Chapel
9 ® Better Way
18 @ What Does the
Bible Say?
ffi TBS Morning News
7:00 0 CID Music and the
Spoken Word
9 ® Jerry Falwell
18 @ Roger Sparks
Religion
ffi World Tomorrow
(ll) MOVIE: 'Calling
Dr. Kildare' Kildare
gets involved in a murder. Lionel Barrymore,
Lew Ayres. Lana Turner. 1g39
W (1) Time for
Refreshing
7:30 0 CID Fountain of Life
&) @ James Robison
ffi It Is Written
8:00 0 CID Hour of Power
9
®
Day
of
Discovery .•
&) @ Jerry Falwell
ffi Cartoon Carnival
f!l ([) Sesame Street
[Closed Captioned]
W (1)
Gateway
Gospel
8:30 0
CID Expect a
Miracle
9 ® Christ for the
World
ffi Starcade
(ll) Wild America
€6 (1) Biblical Viewpoint
9:00 0 CID Rex Humbard
9 ® Sunday Morning
&) @Kenneth Copeland
ffi Leave It to Beaver
f!l ([) Sesame Street
[Closed Captioned]
(ll) Survival Special
€ti (1) Sunday School
9:30 0 CID Kenneth Copeland
ffi Andy Griffith
€ti (1) Rev. R.A. West
10:0018@ Rev. R.A. West
ffi Good News
f!l ([) Mr. Rogers'
Neighborhood
MARTIN MULLS
12:00 0 CID Meet the Press
9
®
Sanford and
Son
&) @This Week with
David Brinkley
f!l
([)
Working
Women
@) (ll) Sesame Street
[Closed Captioned]
€ti (1) Old Time
Gospel
12:30 0 CID NFL '84
9 ® NFL Today
f!l ([) International
1/8/84
0 CID €ti (1) MOVIE:
'Bronco Billy' A naive
New
Jersey
shoe
salesman heads out
west to become another Wild Bill Hickock. Clint Eastwood,
Sandra Locke, Scatman Crothers. 1 g79 ,
9
®
Jeffersons
Louise's inability to
convince an artist to
go back to school .
draws out the best in
George.
&) @ MOVIE: 'Slapshot' An ice-hockey
team decides to start
winning, even if it
means playing dirty.
Paul Newman, Michael Ontkean. 19 7 6.
9:00
m
m
m
0 CD MOVIE: 'Caught
in the Draft' To get on
the right side of his
girl, a draft dodger entertainer pretends to
enlist and discovers
he actually did . Bob
Hope, Dorothy Lamour, Eddie Bracken.
1941
9 ® Face the Nation
Protect your employees.
your company. and
yourself from the
personal suHenng and
f1nanc1alloss of
cancer . call your local
un1t of the Amencan
Cancer Soc1ety and ask
for the1r free pamphlet.
"Help1ng Your
Employees to Protect
Themselves Agamst
Cancer." Start your
company on a
pOliCY of gc.od
health todayl
4
'~ CRer Society
�(~
(!)
Pentecost
Today
C6 Jerry Falwell
@) [D Dave Allen at
Large
€8 Cil MOVIE: 'In
Search of Historic
Jesus' The startling,
true account of the
Shroud of Turin: a
piece of cloth which is
said to bear the impression
of Jesus
Christ. John Rubenstein, John Anderson,
Nehemiah Persoff.
12:30 0 (])MOVIE: 'Murder
In Mind' A young policeman sorts out an
eerie mystery concerning a writer and
his
wife.
Richard
Johnson,
Zena
Walker, Robert Dorning. 1973.
eEl@ Jim Bakker
1:00 C6 MOVIE: 'Valentino'
The life and loves of
Rudolph
Valentino,
famed star of the 20's.
Eleanor Parker, Anthony Dester, Richard
Carlson . 1951 .
1:30 CE) (!) Star Search
3:15 C6 Africans
3:45 C6 Candid Camera
4:15 C6 World/Large
4:30 C6 Open Up
MORNING
C6 Varied Programs
CE)@ Rev. Pete Rowe
0 @ NBC News at
Sunrise
0 (])
@ Jimmy
Swaggart
C6 TBS Morning News
6:30 0 @ News
0 ® CBS Early
Morni'!9 News
eEl
GJ
Assembly
Echoes
6:45 CE)@ ABC News This
Morning
@)@Weather
7:00 0 @ €8 Cil Today
0 (]) CBS Morning
News
5:00
5:30
6:00
m
( · eEl (]) Good Morning
America
C6 SuperStation Funtime
@) [D Varied ProQ!_ams
7:30 W I Dream of Jeannie
8:00 C6 Bewitched
fB (J) Weather
@) [D Sesame Street
[Closed Captioned]
8:15 fB (]) Instructional
Programs
8:30 C6 I Love Lucy
9:00 0
@
Braun and
Company
0 (]) Andy Griffith
eEl@ Jim Bakker
C6 Movie
@) @
Instructional
Pro9!ams
€8 (].) 700 Club
9:30 0 (]) Here's Lucy
10:00 0 @ €8 Cil Facts of
Life
0 (]) New $25,000
Pyramid
eEl C!l 700 Club
10:30 0 @ Sale of the
Century
0® Press Your Luck
€8
(].)
Morning
Stretch
11:00 0 @ €8 Cil Wheel of
· fortune
0 (]) Price Is Right
CE)@ Benson
C6 Catlins
11 :30 0 @ €8 (].) Dream
House
eEl(!) Loving
C6 Texas
AFTERNOON
3:00
3:30
4:00
4:30
5:00
0 (]) €8 (].) News
CE) @ Family Feud
Perry Mason
12:30 0 @ News
0 (])Young and the
Restless
CE)@ Ryan's Hope
€8 (l) Search For
Tomorrow
1:00 0 @ Days of Our
Lives
eEl@ All My Children
C6 Movie
Cil Sale of the
Century
1:30 0 ® As the World
Turns
€8 Cil Days of Our
Lives
0 @ Another World
CE) (!) One Life to Live
@) (ll) 3-2-1, Contact
0 (]) Capitol
@) [D Instructional
PrOQ!_ams
€8 C2J Another World
0 @ Match Game/
Hollywood
Squares
Hour
0 (]) Guiding Light
CE) @ General Hospital
C6 SuperStation Funtime
@) (ll) Varied ProQ!_ams
W Flintstones
fB (]) Electric Company
€8 Cil Match Game/
Hollywood
Squares
Hour
0@ Mr. Cartoon
0 (]) Hour Magazine
CE)@ Hawaii Five-0
C6 Munsters
fB (J) Sesame Street
[Closed Captioned]
@)@Untamed World
C6 Brady Bunch
@) @ Mr, Rogers'
Neill!:'borhood
€8 C.2.J Gol
0@ B.J./Lobo Show
0 (]) Hawaii Five-0
eEl @ Superfriends
C6 Leave It to Beaver
fB (]) Mr. Rogers'
Neighborhood
@) @ Sesame Street
[Closed Captioned]
€B(l) PTL Club
eEl (!) Tic Tac Dough
C6 Beverly Hillbillies
fB (]) 3-2-1, Contact
C6
m
~
SJ]IJris 1.11.
1. Which college basketball team does Jerry
Tarkanian coach?
2. Name the WBA heavyweight boxing champion.
3. Who led the USFL in rushing during the
1983 regular season?
4. Name the basketball champions of the
Pac-10in 1982-83.
5. Which team drafted Rodney McCray in the
first round of the 1983 NBA draft?
6. Who was chosen·the NHL rookie of the
year In 1983?
7. Who coaches the Princeton football
team?
8. Name the three Philadelphia 76ers chosen
on the NBA all-defensive team in 1983.
9. Name the auto racer who retired with a
record 27 Grand Prix victories.
10. Which nation, besides the United States,
USSR and Canada, has won an Olympic
gold medal in ice hockey?
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1/9/84
MORNING
7:30
@) @ Sasame Street
[Closed Captioned]
9:00 C6 MOVIE: 'Foxflre' A
husband's continued
search for gold almost
wrecks their marriage.
Jane Russell, Jeff
Chandler, Dan Duryea.
1955.
AFTERNOON
1:00
6:oo
C6
MOVIE:
'The
Hanged Man' A former
gunslinger, who is unjustly hanged, retl.}rns
to life hours later as a
mysterious avenger of
justice. Steve Forrest,
Cameron
Mitchell.
1974.
EVENING
o rn o
®
€BCil News
m C!l
C6 Little House on the
Prairie
fB ®
MacNeil/Lehrer
Newshour
@) @ 3-2-1, Contact
6:30 0 @ €8 (]) NBC
News
O®CBS News
Q)@ABC News
@)@ Business Report
7:00 0 @ PM .Magazine
0 (§) Wt>.tal of
Fortune
eEl@ People's Court
C6 Carol Burnett
fB
~
,..
c======·
~
...
2:30
5:30
12:00 0 @ Gol
Compiled by the staff of the World Almanac
~
2;[;,
®
K.~ntucky
General Assembly
@) [1) MaoNeii/Lellrer
Newshour
€8 ~ How the West
Was Won
7.30 9 Gil Tic Tac: Dough
(!J (]) .:amity Feud
(!) Jeffersons
VI Hogan's Heroes
P:OO 0 I:ID TV's Bloopers,
ComrT'ercials & Pratica! Jokes Dick Clark
and Ed McMahon host
this look at scenes
never intended for
viewhg by an audiencf. (60 min.)
0 ~ Scarecrow and
W·s. King
mJ @ NCAA Basketbell:
Alabama
at
m
ON HIS KNEES
When Sam (Ted Danson)
hires Norm (George Wendt,
1. ) as Cheers' accountant and
then fires him after an argument about his tax return,
Norm privately pleads for the
job back, on the " No Help
Wanted" episode of NBC's
" Cheers," airing THURSDAY,
JAN.12.
.
CHECK LISTINGS FOR EXACT TIME
@)1984 Compulog
K.ontucky
MOVIE:
'Cen·
:ennial' Part 2 '.iecond
of 12 parts. fhough
just married, Pasquinel returns t ·J the Colorado indian land
with
his
partner,
McKeag and takes a
second wrfe, Clay Basket. Robert Conrad, Richard
Chaml;erlain,
BarbarJ Carrera .
fB ® @) @ Skate
America Host Judy
Sladky presents highlights of the thrtle day
ice skating competition held in Rochester,
NY. (60 min.)
€8 (}) NCAA Basklltball:
Georgia
at
Alabama
9:00 0 @ MOVIE: 'Secret
Air ;:orca' The governMent :lttempts & massive coverup mission
when a UFO collides
wrth a NASA satellite
that was on a routine
mission. Gary Collins,
Robert
Vaughn,
James
Hampton.
1980.
0
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Father Mulcahy battles the VA when he's
to:d he will have -co
foot the bill for the operation that saved his
hearing.
fB (]) @) @ Great
Performances
'The
Magi.:; Flute.' Host
James Levine explains
the mysteries of 'The
Magic Flute; Mozart's
meditation on the
meaning of life:. (3 hrs.,
JO min.)
~:30 0
(]) Newhart Stephanie attends a poetry read!ng to check
out the eligtble men .
10·')0 0 (]) Err.erald Point
N.A.S.
CE)@ That's Incredible!
C6 TI3S Evening News
Cil Movie JIP·
11:oo
®
C!l
€BOO News
C6 All In the Family
11:30 0 @ €B
Tonight
Show
0 (]) Hart to Hart
CE) @ Nightline
C6 Catlins
12:00 C6
MOVIE:
'The
Prince 11nd t'1e Snowgirl'
An
American
showgirl is invited to a
private dinner by the
Prince of Carpathia.
Sir Laurence Olivier,
Mariiyn Monro•.• Sybil
Thorndike. 1957.
12:30 0 @ Late Night with
David Letterman
O®Columtx.
CE) @ CNN Headline
News
1:30 Q) C!l Bionic Woman
2:30 C6
MOVIE:
'Nora
Prentiss'
C6
m
om o
m
m
{(!-..ue~dav»
1/10/84
MORNING
9:00
C6 MOVIE: 'Children's
Hour" Two teacher'>
face diff:culties when
a pupil tells her grandmother that they ar€
involved in an 'unnatural' relationship. Audrey Hepburn, Shirley
MacLaine, James Garner. 1962.
AFTERNOON
1:00 Cfj MOVIE: 'Human
Desire' After a woman's husband kills her
ex-lover, she finds a
new lover to kill her
husband who will not
let her leave him.
Glenn Ford, Gloria
Grahame, Broderick
Crawford . 1954.
EVENING
6:oo
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liB Cil News
«6 Little House on the
7:00
7:30
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8:00
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CE)@ABC News
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0 @ PM Magazine
0
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Fortune
. C6 All In the Family
eEl@ People's Court
@) (fl) Dr. Who
C6 Carol Burnett
11:30 0@ Tonight Show
fB ®
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0 ® Magnum P.l.
General Assembly
CE) (!) Nightline
9)@ MacNeil/Lehrer
C6 Catlins
Newshour
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€8 (]) At The Movies
America
0@ Tic Tac Doug!!
€8 Cil NCAA Basket0 ([) Family Feud
ball: Mississippi at
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Kentucky
C6 Hogan's Heroes
12:00 (6 MOVIE: 'In Enemy
fB (J) Play Bridge
Country' A French in€8 (]) Headwaters
telligence
Colonel
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must find and disco•1er
The A Team goes to
how to build a defense
the sky to battle a
against a new German
'Blue
Thunder'-type
torpedo. Tony Franheli::opter being flown
ciosa,
Anjanette
~ terrorists. (60. min.) .
Comer, Guy Stock0 (]) Mississippi
well. 1968.
CE)@ Foul ups, Leaps/
12:30. 0@ Late Night with
Blunders
David Letterman
C6 MOVIE: 'Cen0 (]) McCloud
tennial' Part 3 Third of
eEl (!) CNN Headline
12 parts. Now in h1s
News
60s, McKeag meets
1 :00 CE) (!) Bionic Woman
Levi Zendt and his
2:15
MOVIE: What's So
wife Elly who have
Bad About Feeling
headed west from
Good?' An East Village
Pennsylvania dreamartist and his girlfing of a new life in Oreriend live in squalor
gon. Richard Chamuntil .a toucan bird inberlain, Sally Kellerfects them with euman, Barbara Carrera,
phoria. George PepGre~ry_Harrison.
Mary
Tyler
pard,
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coholics: Life Under
the Influence.' The
1968 .
of 4:15 C6 Africans
many
faces
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8:30
alcoholism-medical,
historical and socialare examined
(60
mil).)
8:30 eEl@ Happy Days An
studeiJt
amorous
wreaks havoc with
Joanie's first teaching
assistant's
job.
[Closed C~tioned]
Riptide
9:00
0 (]) MOVIE: 'License to Kill' When a
drunk driver kills a
young girl, her death
threatens to destroy
two families-the girl's
and the, killer's. James
Farentino,
Penny
Fvller, Don Murray.
1983.
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C6 TBS Evening N~Jws
fB(]) Business Report
Ei) [D Firing Line
10:30 fB (J) Tony Brown's
Journal
m
�Wednesday, January 4, 1984
The Floyd County Times
Americans Would Be Wise To
"Prepare" For Next Energy Crisis
It's true that the gasoline lines have
disappeared, the price of fuel has stopd spiraling upward and today there's
oil surplus instead of shortfall, but
still there's no cause for complacency.
As long as "we remain hooked on
Arab oil, energy crisis No. 3 is as likely
as future upheaval in the Middle East,"
Reader's Digest reports in its January
issue.
The next energy crisis, of course, may
never happen. But "given the risks involved, it would be wiser to err on the
side of caution-and prepare in adnee,'' notes business writer Irwin
oss.
Ross adds that "for the long term
there is an ongoing need for conserva-
GIVE SOMEONE A LIFT
SEND A BOUQUET OF BALLOONS
ALL OCCASIONS -DELIVERED
5-ll·tT
tion, the discovery of new supplies of oil
and natural gas, and the development of
alternative energy sources-coal,
nuclear, solar, wind."
In addition, there are these options to
consider:
Levy an import fee on oil. A tax of $10
per barrel as proposed by Sen. Pete
Domenici <R., N.M.l would help keep oil
prices stable. The continuing decline in
prices will inevitably undermine incentives for conservation, exploration and
the development of alternative energy
sources.
Top up the Strategic Petroleum Reserve. The underground oil reservoirs,
if filled to 750 million barrels, would give
us nearly 300 days of protection, at the
1980 consumption rate, if all imports
from Arab OPEC countries were cut off.
Decontrol natural gas. Decontrol
would ultimately bring prices down and
make available a more abundant supply
by encouraging more drilling. One
estimate is that decontrol of natural gas
could lead to a reduction in oil imports
of one million barrels a day.
Increase government support for
energy research and development. The
Reagan administration's current program of cutting back support is "pennywise but pound-foolish," says John
Lichtblau, president of the Petroleum
Industry Research Foundation.
Pageant Winner
LITTLE BEAR
MARKET
ALLEN, KY.•
874-2290
.HOURS: MONDAY-SATURDAY 8 A.M.-8 P.M. SUNDAY 10 A.M.-6 P.M •. ,
HORMEL SLICED
PLATTER
BACON.....
105 North Lake Drive, Near the U.S. 23 Intersection
PHONE 886-1396 PRESTONSBURG
WEDNESDAY SPECIAL
Try Our Famous
3 Piece Dinner!
3 pieces of golden brown Famous Recipe
Fried Chicken, mashed potatoes and gravy,
creamy cole slaw _and one fresh, hot biscuit.
79 c
LB.
CES IN EFFECT
WED., JAN. 4
THRU TUES., JAN. 10
• QUANTITY RIGHTS
RESERVED
• NOT RESPONSIBLE
FOR PRINTER'S ERROR
· SIRLOIN STEAK
Amy Michelle Bates, three-year-old
daughter of Danny and Alma Bates, of
Bevinsville, was crowned "Baby Sweetheart" in a beauty pageant held at
Wheelwright, December 3.
Amy is the granddaughter of Arlis and
Vonda Bates and Zenith and Nora Hall,
all of Bevinsville.
PCC Registration
Starts Tomorrow
-You Make Us Famous!
Section Three, Page Eleven
Registration for the 1984 Spring
Semester at Prestonsburg Community
College will begin on Thursday, January
5, with returning students whose last
name begins with the letters S thru Z
registering from 8:30a.m.- to 11:30 a.m.
From 1 p.m. to 4 p.m. returning students
whose last name begins with the· letters
M thru R will register.
Friday, January 6, returning students
whose last name begins with the letters
F thru MC will register from 8:30a.m.
to 11:30 a.m. Returning students with
last names beginning with the letters A
thru E will register from 1 p.m. to 4 p.m.
Registration will continue on Monday,
January 9, for new students and returning students who have not registered.
Night class registration will be held on
Thursday, January 5 and Monday,
January 9 from 5:30 until 7:30.
Registration will be in the Pike-Technology Building.
LB.$3.19
CUBED STEAK
$2.39
ARM ROAST
8
$1 !
CHUCK ROAST
6
$1 !
La
BONELESS
BONELESS
1-LB. PKG. FISCHER'S
SLICED $149
BOLOGNA ...
12-0Z. PKG. VALLEYDALE
CS~s . . . . 99c
9-LB., 3-0Z. FAMILY SIZE
TREND $329
DETERGENT
WEB_BER'S SAUSAGE
2·LBS. . . ..$3.09
The onion was regarded by the Romans
as a god who guarded the kitchen and
guided the healing of battle wounds and
skin diseases.
• SEE OUR FULL PAGE AD ELSEWHERE IN THIS PAPER •
Will social security still be in effect
when you retire?
Will your pension provide for all
your needs in retirement?
Do you have enough in savings to
see you through your retirement
years?
Ask your accountant about an In-
j
dividual Retirement Account. If
the advice is to open one, come
see us at First commonwealth
Bank. we will see that you get a
good ·return on your retirement
fund and a timely income when
you retire.
I
Substantial Penalty for Early Withdrawal
"Just Think What We Can Do Together! "(_- .·~~----\ ~)( -~
• t
F
~jjt~
BANKER
Bank
··~ =-:!:~''·
r
·~
~
~~.t~/!.0
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-;
.
..
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~-·
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Member FDIC
Martin ·• Betsy Layne • Two Locations In Prestonsburg
.!
�Wednesday, January 4, 1984
Section Thr-, Pace Twe4ve •
The Floyd County Tlrnro;;
AT THESE
SIX COMBINED FOOD MARKETS .
PRICES EFFECTIVE JAN. 4 THRU JAN. 8~
.WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LiMIT QUANTITIES.·
POSTox
$159
.SUGAR CRISP .. .
ARMOuR LARD . $8
99
FLOUR . . . . . . . . $4
19
25-LBS.
i
•,
------··--··~-~--- -
· MARKET
.
:
..
Ei
.
GARRETT, KY. · · · .
M,,.. THRU SAT. 8 TO 7; S':-fN• ~o TO •
~
:~
)
�
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Floyd County Times 1984
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Floyd County Times January 4, 1984
-
http://history.fclib.org/files/original/41/3333/01-11-1984.pdf
7cff0c6694d07ce759d053f2d1e1be6b
PDF Text
Text
•
otoun y atimts
Speaking of
and for
Floyd County
PRESTONSBURG,
Read Each Week by More Than 12,500 Famil_ies.
USPS·2027 .0000
Volume LVII
No.2
25~
WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 11, 1984
Board To Ask 3% Utilities Tax
In Bid To Gain Needed Revenue
TUESDAY'S SNOW, which had the school children chuckling and parents and motorists griping, transformed normally unremarkable scenes, like this stretch of roadway, into beautiful
winter settings.
Board Whittles Deficit,
Commended by Auditor
As a result of overspending in eight
out of 11 departments, a school district
balance of $465,753 at the beginning of
the 1982-'83 school year was whittled to
a mere $28,404 by year's end, according
to audited financial statements presented to the Board of Education last
Wednesday.
Auditor Don Wallen praised the board
and administration, nevertheless, noting
that the district's internal accounting
controls <de 'working very well. •
In other business, the board decided
to hire contract drivers to help transport
some Bonanza Elementary School
students. A delegation of parents told the
board that, because their bus called at
Prestonsburg schools before takil'lg
them home, about 23 Bon.anza "Sti.1dents
living on the lefUork of Abbott Creek
were being forced to ride nearly 10 extra miles each day.
Spoktsman John Clark also claimed
the 71-passenger bus once carried 92
students between Prestonsburg High
Wallen also had praise for book- School and Meade Branch of Abbott
,-: keepers who keep track of the individual Creek.
schools' lunchroom and activity funds,
The board bought 20 Franklin comremarking that there remained "one or puters, four for each high school, acceptwo minor problems" and that "one ting the low bid of $27,345 from the East
school was still trying to overcome a
Kentucky Educational Development
deficit budget," but that the situation · Corporation.
there was "getting better."
Hired were:
Kathryn Anne Burchett, Jerri Ward
In fact, five school funds reported endof-year deficits, contrary to state law, Turner, Jane Webb Jones, R'oy Dean
and the Prestonsburg High School lunch- Burke and Sandra T. Newsome, cerroom fund, which ended the previous tified substitute teachers; Donald R.
year $14,867 in the red, reported an even Craft, Georgia Allen, Tammy Lynn
Martin, Ruth Irene Little and Gary R.
larger deficit, ending 1982-'83 with a
Newsome, substitute bus drivers; Ruth
negative balance of $21,008.
The auditor found no records at all of Ann Hamilton, Christina Compton,
the McDowell High School lunchroom James 0. Spurlock, Reka Woods and
fund and administrators of five other Teresa Bradley, emergency substitute
school funds were said either to have teachers; Frank Baldridge, lead
written no receipts for monies received mechanic; Jeff Campbell, bus inspector
and mechanic; and Steve Spriggs, Mitor to have lost the receipt stubs.
Wallen represents the Pikeville ac- chell Prater, Jeff Stumbo, Joe Bailey,
counting firm of Linton and Company. and Lloyd Hall, mechanics.
State Panel
ABC Admr. Rules
Urges Tougher Younce Was Right
Teacher Review In Saloon Fracas .
In firmly-worded recommendations to
the Board of Education, a state panel
said last week that Floyd teachers
should be better evaluated, administrators should "follow through" on
their evaluations, and board members
should not interfere.
The advice, read to last week's board
meeting by a state Department of
Education official, is contained in a
report to the ~rd by the Task Force for
School Effectiveness, created two years
ago to help Kentucky school districts
scoring low on standardized achievement tests.
The panel also called for better training for principals and supervisors, better use of test results, and rewards for
teachers and students who do well.
The three-page report, which bears
the signature of Dr. Gene C. Wright,
director for school effectiveness, contains 29 recommendations under four
headings-leadership, instructional
planning, instructional time, and evaluation and rewards system. It follows an
inspection of this district's 25 schools by
the task force, which came here in the
all at the board's invitation.
Floyd's system for evaluating
teachers on how well they teach and
manage a classroom needs to be improved and expanded, the report says.
For teaching to improve, administrators
must have the authority to "follow
through with the evaluation process ...without board interference," it
says.
Problems of staffing and discipline
. hould be resolved by principals, supervisors and superintendents and the
board should back their authority, the
(See Story No.3, Page 4l
Arguing that owners have a right to
protect their property, Alcoholic
Beverage Control Administrator Denzil
Allen decided this week not to impose a
penalty on a Melvin saloon keeper who
last month broke a pool cue over a
patron's head.
Allen said it was not clear that Johnny
Younce, 25, had used inordinate force in
subduing Jimmy Johnson on Dec. 5.
Younce admitted striking Johnson twice
on the head but claimed he acted in self
defense.
The bar owner said a fight broke out
when Johnson lit up a marijuana joint
and he asked him to leave. Johnson
swung at him and he retaliated, Younce
said.
"If we don't give bar owners some
latitude in taking care of a situation like
this, the drunks are going to take over,"
Allen said, explaining his decision.
The ABC administrator reprimanded
Younce for not calling police when the
incident occurred. A deputy sheriff was
summoned by relatives of the injured
man.
The Board of Education will sound out
the public on a proposal to levy a three
percent utilities tax to help fund county
schools.
A public hearing on the proposal has
been set for next Thursday, January 19,
at 6 p.m. in the Board of Education offices here. A special meeting of the
board will follow immediately.
An identical proposal was quickly
dropped when it ran into strong opposition, especially from persons on fixed incomes, five years ago. But Ralph
O'Quinn, principal of Garrett grade
school and chairman of the task force,
said the group considered a utilities tax
"the most fair and equitable" and "the
quickest way to get the revenue we
need." And Board Chairman Dr. J.D.
Adams noted that Pikeville Independent
and Pike, Johnson and Martin county
school districts all levy such a tax.
While the tax would be imposed on
utility companies' gross receipts, the
firms could be expected to pass it on to
customers. Electricity, gas, water and
phone users would be affected.
A public hearing on the proposal is required by law. Should the board then
decide to pass it, the tax could still be
challenged by a petition asking for a
-
Somewhere back there the thread
snapped, and now I don't know how or
where to pick it up again. Which obliquely refers to, and seeks excuse for, this
confounded column.
MARRIAGE LICENSES
Allen Keith Stanley, 22, and Patricia
Lynn Moore Hall, 17, both of Hi Hat;
Charles E. Hicks, 36, and Terina Ann
Webb, 17, both of Prestonsburg: Roy
E. Hall, 50, and Mary E. Collins, 34,
both of Emma; Steven E. Carver, 26,
and Vikki Allison, 22, both of Harold;
James Wmiam Porter, 47, of Salyersville, and Ethel M. Wireman, 4e, of
Royalton; Henry Case, 34, of New London, Ohio, and Linda Jo Mynhier, 36, of
Allen.
SUITS FILED
Chloride, Inc. vs. Little H Coal Co.;
GeorgE' C. Brown et a1 \'.-.. 1i~.e LU:l" t
al; First Commonwealth Bank vs. Elli
Castle, Jr. et al; Denvil Tackett vs.
Donald Reffett; Raudo F. and Joyce D.
Rivera vs. Sherman Rogers and Don
E. Hall; Elsie Wright vs. Edgar E.
Wright; Plina Parsons Hicks vs. Orville and Gail Parsons; Glenda Faye
Samons vs. Johnny Franklin Samons;
Gladys (Jarrell) Hall vs. Burley Hall;
Verlean Osborne Moore vs. Roland
Moore; Robert Skeans vs. Raymond
Boyd; Marvin Crider, Jr .. vs. Emit
Lawson; Pete Webb, Jr. vs. Ina Faye
Webb.
Four Houseboats
Damaged by Fire
Fire damage estimated at nearly half
a million dollars was done to four houseboats moored at the Jenny Wiley boat
dock about 11:30 Monday night.
Houseboats belonging to Emmitt
Conn, of Harold, and Demorris Martin,
of McDowell, were completely
destroyed in the blaze; a houseboat
belonging to Goble Martin, of McDowell,
was gutted; and a fourth owned by Paul
Pelphrey, of Paintsville, was damaged
by heat and smoke.
Prestonsburg Fire Department
responded to the blaze, the cause of
which was said by Fire Chief Tom
Blackburn to be under investigation.
have textbooks in all subjects and that
librarians and teachers of art, music,
physical education and driver's education be hired;
-minimum standards set by state accreditation authorities, who have insisted the school district hire guidance
counselors for the elementary schools
and add math and science teachers in
the high schools; and
-the "perennial need" to repair the
more than 100 school buildings in the
district and to replac.e older buildings,
some of which date to the 1930s.
Of the new tax revenues raised this
year, half would go into the general fund
"to purchase buses <and) meet emergency needs;• while the remainder
would be divided equally between instruction and building maintenance,
Grigsby said. In 1984-'85, half the proceeds would be earmarked for construction, 25 percent for building repairs, and
25 percent for new programs and teachers, he said.
Task Force Vice-Chairman Billy
Arms told the board "it is time for
eastern Kentucky to come out of the
Dark Ages." The question of a utilities
tax, he said, comes down to the question,
(See Story No. 1, Page 4)
' !_hiB Tou:_n .•.Thal World
ZEROED IN
Believe it or not, I haven't written it
1983 since 1984 moved in--for the simple
reason that I have written neither check
nor letter this year.
<~hoto
by Betty Rowland\
FIDDLER DAVE SIZEMORE and a group of local musicians
provided the hoe-down tunes and reels for square dancers
and cloggers of all ages who performed at Sunday's annual
Old Christmas observance.
In District Court
Sentenced in district court, following
guilty pleas or verdicts, were:
Wilburn J. Mitchell, Teaberry,
drunk, possession of marijuana,
prescription drugs not in proper container, 30days' probation, $97.50 in fine
and court costs; Ray A. Moore, Price,
drunk driving, $137.50, referred to
Alcoholic Driver Education (ADE);
Donald R. Slone, Inez, drunk driving,
$137.50, ADE; Patrick Shell, West
Prestonsburg, drunk driving, $137.50,
ADE; Raymond D. Moore, Flat Gap,
drunk driving, $137.50, ADE; Jack
Clark Hyden, Prest<,msburg, drunk
driving, amended to public drunk.
$57.50; Henry Jenkins, Jr., Garrett,
terroristic threatening, 30 days' probation. not to engage in threats or
violence towards Delilah Jenkins.
Proclaims Jaycees Week
Police Arrest Two
In Cliffside Raids
Simultaneous raids on two apartments
in the Cliffside housing project Monday
resulted in two arrests and the seizure
of a quantity of marijuana and some
stolen silverware, according to Police
Chief William R. Campbell.
Rose Mary Lafferty, 24, was booked
on a charge of trafficking in marijuana,
after an undisclosed amount of the drug
was recovered from her apartment.
Bobby McA.Ilister was charged with
<See Story No.4, Page 4)
special election. According to law, the
petition would have to be filed with the
county board of elections within 30 days
of the tax's passage and be signed by 'a
number of registered voters equal to 15
percent of the votes cast in the county
during the last presidential election.
In making the task force recommendation his own, Grigsby said demands
by citizens and state agencies for costly improvements in the schools made
the tax necessary. Each of the school
district's five educational divisions
would see upgraded facilities, perhaps
within the next 4~ years, if the tax were
adopted, he said.
Among the demands listed by the
superintendent were:
-recommendations made by state
Education Department inspectors that
Floyd buy 12 new buses and 12 used
buses for next year and install six
gasoline tanks and pumps, improvements expected to cost $350,000;
-requirements by the state Fire Marshal's office that Wheelwright High
School be rewired, other old buildings be
rewired, panic hardware be repaired
and hoods installed over all kitchen
stoves;
-citizen demands that all students
In conjunction with a yt>arly nation-wide obst>rvance, tht> wt-t-k of Monda~· .
Januar~ 16 through Saturday. January 21 was proclaimt>d Ja)'t't>t>S Wt>t>k in
Floyd rounty by C'ounty Judgt>-Ext>cutivP .John M. Stumbo. Picturt>d with
Judgt> Stumbo during signing of tht- proclamation Monda~· are Prt'stonsburl{
Art>a JavcePs offict>rs. from left-John Griffith, administrati\'t' vi<'t-presidPnt; John McC'auley. prt>sidt-nt, and John Earl Hunt. I. ll. vkPprt-sidt>nt. Thf' local .Jayct-t-s plan to kick off .Jaynt- wPek a coupiP of da~·s
t'arly with an awards dinnt'r, Saturday . .January 14 at May Lodgt-. During
ohP dinnt'r, which is open to the public. an Outstanding Young Man <tnd
Outstanding Young Educator will be honort'd.
MAY REQUIRE INVESTIGATION
It apparently was something of a
shock, too, for the birds when we upped
and left them, house, family, friends,
lock, stock and barrel, last month. It was
for only two weeks, but changes followed that won't unchange.
The birds are an example. They left,
too, and haven't come back. A few sparrows, once in a great while a stray .
chickadee or titmouse, a redbird couple
and three pine siskins have showed up
at our feeder. But the numbers are so
slim! Even the despised starlings and
swashbuckling jays are no longer seen
cSee Story No. 2, Page 4)
40 To Be Laid Off at HRMC
As Payments, Occup-ancy Down
Effective Sunday, 40 workers will be
laid off by Highlands Regional Medical
Center, AdmfnishtatQr Clarence C.
Traum announced Monday.
A dramatic rise in the number of patients who cannot pay their bills, coupled with tighter reimbursement policies
on the part of insurance companies and
the federal government, were cited by
Traum as reasons for the layoffs.
A somewhat lower occupancy of hospital beds and the treatment of more
people as outpatients for illnesses that
would formerly have meant a hospital
stay were also said to have figured in the
retrenchment.
Workers laid off are said to be drawn
from most job categories and represent
nearly 10 percent of the hospital's work
force.
"Having to tell someone they no
longer have a job is the most difficult
thing a manager ever has to do," said
Traum, "but there ·does come a time
when all the other alternatives have
been exhausted and steps like this
become essential."
Highlands is the second area hospital
to have announced a major retrenchment recently. Pikeville Methodist
Hospital shut down a whole floor several
weeks ago, closing the area's only facility for inpatient p~ychiatric care.
The staff reduction at Highlands
comes at a time when the hospital is in
the midst of a $10 million expansion project and follows by three months the
opening of the new $10 million Paul B.
Hall Regional Medical Center at Paintsville.
Highlands officials who fought against
construction of the new Paintsville
hospital, claiming it meant unnecessary
beds and duplication of services, were
nevertheless reluctant to blame the new
hospital for their current problems.
Occupancy rates at Highlands, which
generally ranged from 90 to 95 percent
in good years, currently range from 80
to 85 percent, said Amy Lively, the hospital's public relations officer. While the
opening of the Paintsvile hospital may
have had some bearing on the reduced
usage, the occupancy rate here is still
relatively high, she said.
Nor does the lower occupancy rate
suggest that Highlands' expansion
might be ill-advised, according to the
hospital spokeswoman. While the new
wing will mean an additional47 beds, it
is mainly designed to add badly-needed
service areas, including a laboratory
and an emergency room, she said.
Primarily responsible for this week's
staff cuts, Miss Lively said, is the fact
that the percentage of patients unable to
pay their hospital bills has doubled in recent years. Moreover, where a hospital
could in the past simply present an insured patient's hospital bills to the
federal government or a private insurance company and be reimbursed,
insurers now have much stricter reimbursement policies.
All hospital procedures are now classified and insurers have set a cap on what
they will pay for each class of procedure. If the bills exceed the cap, the
hospital must absorb the difference,
Lively said.
Tackett Death
Ruled Suicide
A 19-year-old Knott county woman
found hanged in a jail cell here last
November died by her own hand, Floyd
County Coroner Roger Nelson found last
Wednesday.
The coroner accepted a verdict of
s1,1icide handed down by a jury after it
had heard seven hours of testimony and
deliberated for 18 minutes. The inquest
had been requested by the dead
woman's parents.
Their attorney said later the parents
planned to challenge the coroner's
ruling.
Mary . Vinamae Tackett was found
hanging by a narrow belt from .b ars in
the jail cell on Nov. 21. She was beginning a month's sentence for attempting
to steal $55 worth of goods from a "Martin grocery.
She had earlier been jailed for several
months in Knott county on a conspiracy
charge stemming from a June 7 incident
in which Rosetta Hall, 22, was shot and
Miss Hall's seven-month-old fetus killed. She was released after agreeing to
testify against others in the case.
Associate State Medical Examiner
<See Story No. 5, Page 4)
�Wednesday, January 11, 1984
The Floyd County Times
Says, ''1'1lan ks'
Don't Risk an Explosion .
Brandy 1\lichell Samons recent first
runnerup in the Wee :\Iiss Golo~.::- liarvest pageant, would like to thank thol>~
who sponsored her. They are Hair It Is,
of Banner; Porter Industries, of Allen;
Village Chevrolt>t. of Eastern, Price's
Pac-Pac, Maloney's, Audio Showcase,
Jane's Dress Shop, Martin Floral Shop.
Jane's Flonst Shop, all of :\lartin.
lt-pd.
There's a Safe Way To Boost a Dead Battery
CCourtesy West-Virginia Gas Co.>
Don't look now but there's a bomb
under the hood of your car! Concerned?
You have every right to be. Many
drivers are blissfully unaware of the
potential danger to "that innocentlooking little package" under the hood
known as a dead storage batlery. A battery is a deadly anti-personnel device
which could explode with a blast of lead
and corrosive acid causing disfiguration
and sometimes death.
If you have ever used jumper cables
to start your vehicle not following the
correct procedure and your battery did
not explode, you may count yourself
very fortunate. The facts are that any
lead-acid battery, those types used in
vechiles, generates explosive gases
while the battery is being charged which
in turn leaves an ignition source such as
a match, cigarette or even a spark from
the battery itself to trigger an explosion.
There is a safe way to boost a vehicle
battery which will virtually eliminate to
a degree the risk of explosion. The
following steps should be followed :
1. Shift both vehicles into neutral or
park and set the emergency brake.
2. Ignition and all accessories such as
defroster, windshield washer, radio,
etc., should be in the " off" position to
reduce the change of electrical sparks
EMPLOYMENT
OPPORTUNITY
The Floyd County Hetlth Deptrtment
hn I veuney for Clerk Typist II. le&ir.nlq ullry is $3.41 per hour. Appllc:Jitlolls Ire 1vlillble tt the Floyd County
Heelth Department.
Reqlllremttrts for this position tre:
Grtduetlon from hlp school lncludln&
or lllpplemttrtecllly • COIIf'se In typfnc
tncl one year of experience In cleriCJII
worl which .., bean In the perforlnlllet of moclerttely cliffkult cleric:tl
end typlne duties, or tn equivllent
c0111blnatlon of related trainin& tnd ex-
P.-f•ce.
Applications must be received by the
Mtrlt System Office, Bwetu for Hetlth
Services, Ctblnet tor Humin
Resowces, 275 E11t Mlln Street,
Fr...for1, Kentucky 40621, on or
lltf•e •hlnicht Fellnl•y 1, 1984.
AN EQUAl OPPORTUNITY [_.LOYER
1-11·31
as well as the load on the charged battery ; thus reducing substantially the
amount of explosive gases that the
booster battery emits.
3 Battery posts should be thoroughly
cleaned. The vehicles should be aligned
but not touching as this will ground the
vehicles and promote sparking while attaching the jumper cables.
4. The booster battery and the dead
battery must be of the same voltage. A
quick way to determine your battery's
voltage is to double the number of filler
caps. I An example : three (3l filler caps
are found on a 6-volt battery. ) Remove
the filler caps from both batteries and
if necessary add water to the full level
mark. Do not attempt to boost a frozen
battery.
5. Place a piece of cloth over the vent
holes of both batteries to prevent the
chance of acid getting on your clothes
and/ or skin when the sudden surge of
current transmitted by the battery being charged in turn causes the electrolyte to bubble.
6. The next step is to make the jumper
cable connections. Attach the positive
end of the jumper cables to the positive
terminal of each-the charged and the
discharged battery. Most batteries will
be marked with a " + ", a "P" or a
" POS" and is known as the hot wire.
7. Connect the second jumper cable to
the negative or ground of the charged
(Jive) battery with the remaining end
connected as far from the battery as
possible completing the circuit and
*NEW!. .Bonus 8x10 with parents or grandparents
20 portrait package contains:
2-8x10's, 3-5x7's, 15 wallet size
88¢ depos1t at sitting balance o~ d~livery. ~roups $1.00
each extra person this package , llm1t 5 subjects.
COMPARE-if we are not your portrait company,
you may be paying way too much. COME ~ee why
young families are turning to us for portra1ts.
l
II
Babiesthruadults.
Thursday thru Sunday, January 12 thru 15
Thurs. & Fri.: 10 1m-l pm, S1t 10 1111-6 pm,
Lunch Hour: 1 pm-2 pm, Sun.: 1 pm-5 pm
Plaza _Pikeville
IT·N·GO
FOOD MA.RT
886·8936
Private James E. Layne, son of Scott
E . and Glorania Click Layne, of Martin,
has been assigned to Fort Carson, Colo.
after completing basic training at Fort
Leonard Wood, Mo. During Basic, Private Layne trained in Combat Engineering. He is a 1979 graduate of Allen Central High School.
Paternal grandparents are Curtis
Layne and Virginia Nicholson, both of
Martin, and maternal grandparents are
Lum and Ida Click, of Banner.
TERRY LYKINS
HEINERS
BY POPULAR DEMAND
Manager
GOEBEl. BEER
I Cor. Chapters 12, 13, and 14
Each Thurday Evening 7 p.m.
Teaching by Rev. Mike Manual
Sponsored by Rock of
Revelation Church
Location :
Prestonsburg
Christian Academy
Riverside Drive
Prestonsburg, Ky.
For more information
886-1688
Everyone Welcome
Pastor Rev. D. Curry
''Saving lives is my business.
Saving money on
·my taxes ts•
Block's business."
"To be a paramedic, you don't just jump in an ambulance. You
need lots of training. But I'm not trained in income taxes. So I
rely on H&R Block to come to the rescue. Block preparers are
trained to know every deduction, every form, you name it.
And that not only saves me money, but helps me breathe a lit·
tle easier, too."
...
H&RBLOCK
88 Richmond Plaza
Main Street
Prestonsburg
Martin
886-3685
285·9879
Open 9 AM-9 PM Weekdays, 9-5 Sat.
Consult your Yellow Pages for the office nearest you.
MasterCard and Visa accepted at most area locat ions
Break away to a
seafood adventure
at Long John Silver's with
these money-saving offers.
WE NOW STOCK
BREAD & ROLL PRODUCTS
Auxier, Ky.
If these steps are followed, there
should be no problem in s\-3rling your
dead battery without mishap. In the
event acid does find its way to your
clothes or on your skin immediately
wash affected areas with large amounts
of water If contact is made with eyes,
flush immediately with large quantities
of water and seek medical attention.
These steps, if followed accurately,
should enable you and your family to
feel more confident in your car's maintenance program.
Last call is being issued to the Solar
Competition sponsored by the Kentucky
Energy Cabinet. All solar homes and
other solar buildings located in the state
are eligible for entry , including single
and multi-family residences and commerci~l. industrial and institutional
buildings.
The purpose of the competition is to
recognize Kentucky 's outstanding solar
projects A follow-up publication will
contain photographs, drawings and
highlights of the award winning designs .
Solar homeowners, a professional
designers or builders who have been involved with a solar project are eligible
to enter the competition. The deadline
for entering is January 27 .
For competition rules , guidelines and
entry form contact Kentucky Energy
Cabinet, P .O. Box 11888, Lexington, Kentucky 40578, or call : (606) 252-5535.
Special Teaching Classes
on :
Baptism of Holy Ghost
Spiritual Gifts
I
1
I
VALENTINES DAY
150
8. Try to start the disabled vehicle. If
the engine does not start immediately
start the engine of the boosting vehicle
to avoid drainage on its battery. When
both vehicles are idling, disconnect the
negative cable attached at the engine
block first followed by the removal of the
same jumper cable from the " live" battery; however, the second cable (positive) is removed from the "live" battery
first.
Playwright Sam Shepherd's first
dramatic work to be produced for television, "True West," premieres Tuesday,
January 31, at 9 p.m. on KET. The twohour production is part of the " American Playhouse" series.
A contemporary comedy/drama set in
a rural southern California community,
" True West" focuses on the relationship
between two brothers- one a clean-cut,
successful screenwriter played by Gary
Sinise and the other a desert rat portrayed by John Malkovich. The play is
the story of the slow but inevitable
reversal of roles . Malkovich and Sinise
re-create their Off-Broadway roles in
this Obie Award-winning play adapted
for television.
.
"American Playhouse" is made possible by grants from public television stations, the Corporation for Public Broadcasting and the National Endowment for
the Arts.
a super value-only $12.88
'1
allowing current to flow from the "live"
battery to the dead battery. This step
could create a spark and is the reasoning behind making the last connection
from the negative or ground post of the
live battery to the generator, alternator
or any accessible metallic part attached to the engine block as far away from
the dead battery as possible so that any
sparks created when the cable is connected or disconnected is away from the
explosive gases generated by the battery .
ATTENTION!
Solar Competition
. Sponsored by State
Completes Basic Training Playwright Sam Shepherd
Featured On 'Playhouse'
THE LOVING PORTRAIT PACKAGE
r:ExmA8oNU'S:Sx10P;t;aTotparent(s) ~nd/or grandparent(s) taken
with one or more children with the
purchase of our $12.88 portrait package.
Present this coupon to photographer at
·: ·'or a Good Look sitting. Limit one special per family.
Tom Jones Studtos, Ltd. The
-------exclusive VIP Club company. SPECIAL FOR
•
Section One, Pqe Two
.................WITH COUPON••••••••••••••••
I
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I1
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JOBO DOG FOOD
50¢ OFF Shrimp Dinner ·
Each dinner has 7 tasty shrimp, fryes & slaw. (Good up to 4 offers)
Valid thru: January 31 , 1984
Only at: U.S. Highway 23 North,
Prestonsburg
I
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!
1
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I
••••••••••••••••WITH COUPON•••••••••••••••:
I
Seafood Platter $2.99
1
BUD LIGHT
$89 9
24-12-0Z.
CANS OR
.
Budweiser.
BOTTLES
~~ ...4--------..:::::;;~W~AS-:---t
LIGHT
DIET PEPSI, PEPSI,
MTN. DEW, OR PEPSI FREE
8-16-0Z.
RETURNABLE
BOTTLES
$18 9
5 FOR
FRUIT DRINKS .... sl.OO
I
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Platter includes a fish fillet, 2 shrimp, 2 scallops, fryes, slaw & 2 hushpuppies.
(Good up to 4 offers)
Valid thru: January 31, 1984
Only at: U.S. Highway 23 North,
Prestonsburg
1
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8-0Z. DAILY'S
"LinLE HUG"
NOW 12 FOR Sl.OO!
"WE'RE HERE TO SERVE YOU MQRE IN '84!
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••••••••••••••WITH COUPON••••••••••••••••
$1.00 OFF Any Big Catch®
Includes 8 fish fillets or 12 Chicken Planks ~ or 4 fish fillets & 6 Chicken
Planks ~ fryes & slaw.
Valid thru: January 31, 1984
Only at: U.S. Highway 23 North,
Prestonsburg
!
I
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L_!!:x!
•
�•
The
Section One, Paae Three
Complete Cub Scout Leader Basic Training
LADIES
WINTER COATS
Y2
LADIES
Y2
OFF
WHEELWRIGHT NEWS
1
Mrs Alma Souleyrette had members
of her family with her during the
holidays. They were her son, R. Roy
Souleyrette, his wife, Ruth, their three
sons, Reggie, Jeff and Alan, of Austin,
Texas, and Mary and Rodney Souleyrette, of Wheelwright.
The annual Wheelwrigbt Women's
Club party was held at the home of Alma
Souleyrette. Christmas presents were
exchanged and dinner was served to
Myra Salisbury, Betty Mullins, Ruth
Daniels, Margot Fain and hostess, Alma
Souleyrette.
DAV Rep To Be Here
The letters D-A-V stand for the Disabled American Veterans, a non-governmental agency serving men and women
disabled during active military duty. If
you were hurl or disabled in the service
and you have questions about VA
benefits, contact your nearest D.A.V.
Representative.
·
Earl Francies, D.A.V. State Service
Officer, will be at the National Guard
Armory m Prestonsburg, Tuesday and
Thursday, January 17 and 19, from 9
a.m. till4 p.m. both days."
OFF
MOST ALL LADIES
ONE RACK
WINTER
MERCHANDISE
RUSS
SPORTSWEAR
Y3
Y2
Training ~or C~b Scout leaders is provided by the Lonesome Pine District, Boy Scouts of America, to adult volunteers
under the d1rectwn of Lowell T. Parker and J. Parker Locke, district executives. The Lonesome Pine District includes
sco~ts in ~-agoff~n. Johnson, Martin, Floyd, and Pike counties. Those adults who completed their Cub Scout Leader
Baste Trammg th1s fall were, seated from left, Burl Scott, Scouting coordinator of Troop and Pack 878, Martin; Patricia
Crum, den leader of Pack 830, Inez; Charlotte Smith, den leader of Pack 32, Prestonsburg; and Vicki Preston, den leader
of Pack 830, Inez. Standing, from left, are James Allen, den leader of Pack 32, Prestonsburg; Andrew Slone, committee
member of Pack 32, Prestonsburg; D.B. Kazee, committee chairman of Pack 1, Paintsville; Dennis Hughes, Cubmaster
of Pack 830, Inez; John Wells, III, Cubmaster of Pack 1, Paintsville; and James E. Williams, Webelos leader of Pack
1, Paintsville.
PRICE
LADIES
BOOTS
Y2
OFF
L STYLES
OF MEN'S SHOES
CONNIE & BASS
SHOES
Y2
OFF
OFF
ALL MEN'S
WINTER SPORTSWEAR
V2
OFF
K
MEN'S SUITS
OFF
REG.
'130 NOW
LADIES
GLOVES
$5995
SEVERAL STYLES
TENNIS SHOES
ON SALE
ON SALE
Funds Released
For Ky. 3 Design
Design work on reconstruction of KY
3 between Auxier and Inez may go ahead
as the result of the settling of a dispute
between the state Transportation
Department and Brighton Engineering
Company.
Transportation Secretary Floyd Poore
last week agreed to a settlement giving
the engineering firm $2.7 million in state
engineering contracts, mostly for design
of KY 3.
The case was a holdover from the administration of former Transportation
Secretary Frank Metts, who tried to
cancel Brighton's state contracts. Under
the settlement, Brighton receives a $2.2
million contract for designing the
Auxier-Inez road, work on which began
in 1979 and was cancelled by Metts the
following year.
The expression "pulling the
wool over his eyes" goes
back , it is said, to the days
when gentlemen wore powdered wigs. If you pulled
a man's wig {wool) over his
eyes, he would be unable
to see what was going on.
NUNNERY REALTV
RESIDENTIAL PROPERTY
----
---
----- -
A better approach to certificate of ·
deposit investment accounts!
FLEXIBILITY:
You choose the length of time to invest your
money. Long or short term: the choice is yours.
OPPORTUNITY:
~-====~--~-~~;~- = ~ ~~~-
allows you to invest with just
-$500. You can however, earn higher interest
rates by investing larger sums.
ACCESSIBILITY:Shepherd Subd. Near Clark School. Approx. 2,000-sq. ft. of living area, with 3
bem-oorns, two blths, liv. nn., din. rm., Ia. fm. nn. with stone fireplace,..blt.·in
kit. lg. lot with public water and sewage. Market priced in low SO's.
Your invested funds are as near as a First
Commonwealth office. After your investment
has matured, you are free to use your money as
needed or to reinvest: absolutely free of account
servicing fees.
SECURITY:
Your invested funds are insured to $100,000 by
the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation: an
agency of the fed.eral government.
PRESTONSBURG-Located Central Ave. Fo.. bedrooms, 2% blths, blt.·in kit·
chen. fm. rm. with fireplace, central heat and a.c., enclosed sun porch. Lg.
swimming pOOl and privacy patio. Much more. Call for additional details. Shown
by appointment only. OWNER SAYS SELL. PRICE REDUCED!
For more information on ~~--"'-:.~~;~- = ~ ~t~- , call 886-2324, ask for
customer services. Substantial penalty for early withdrawal.
"Just Think What We Can Do Together!''
PRESTONSBURG-Located S. Amold Ave. Fo .. bedrooms, 2 baths, btl.·in kit·
chen, fm. rm. with fireplace, central heat and a.c., utll. rm., 1&. bllckJard with
patio, much more. Excellent location within walking distance of downtown.
Owner says SELL! RtDUCED!
.AUptTIONAL RESIDENTIAL PROPERTY
PRESTONSBURG-Central
nice apts. with offstreet parkin&. Renta1UM0 .. ~ .. month with potential for more.
bi!E'R·...-coM'fRl~lree
DAVID-Good condition. Nice tlwee bem-oom house with liv. rm., elt·in kitchet~,
one bath. New alum. siding and storm windows. Lanclsaped lot. Owne! says
sell. PRICE REDUCED!
DIXON NUNNERY,
Real Estate Broker, 886-6464, Day or Night
• WE BUY REAL ESTATE •
Member FDIC
Martin • Betsy Layne • Two locations In Prestonsburg
�Wednesday, Januar-y 11, 1984
The Floyd County Times
Our Yesterdays
Prestonsburg Publishing Company
(Items taken from The Floyd County
Times, 10, 20, 30, 4.0 and 50 years ago.)
Ten Years Ago
NORMAN ALLEN Editor
<January !1, 1!174 >
Subsniptimt Halt's Pt••· Yt•ar:
fu Fie~~ rl Count~. S!UI(I
EIS!'\\ lwn• in Kt•niUl'k\. $111.11(1
Outsidt• K('nl!Kk). Sl:!..;u
Enlt·rl'd a~ Sl'l'OIHI l'lass matter June 18,
1!127. at tlw postofllrt' at Prestonsburg,
Kl·nlul'k~. undt>r llw art of !\larch 3, 187!1.
Another Way
At a time when many people, not only senior citizens, but
those of moderate income, are hard put to meet the burden
imposed on them by utility companies, the Floyd County Board
of Education seeks to add a utility tax in order to raise
undeniably much-needed funds.
We can understand that the county school system is in need
of revenue just as are other educational and government units
across the country. We can well understand its looking for
ways to increase revenue.
And it is true that Floyd countians pay lower taxes than are
levied in the Bluegrass or Louisville. It !~ dlso true that the
per capita income in Eastern Kentucky is lower than in many
other areas of the state Floyd county has for the past several
months led this district in the number of unemployed and::!('cording to the latest figures released by the Cabinet for HuJ!!~!!
Resources does so again.
No one, of course, wants to pay more taxes, but a property
tax, such as was proposed last summer, seems infinitely
preferable to a tax on utilities, which in themselves, without
added taxes, are a public burden. This, perhaps, is not the most
expedient answer, but it seems a singularly inappropriate time
to place further onus on those who already have their backs
against the financial wall.
--- from
]. --Page One'
I Continued
"Do we want to upgrade our schools or
let the schools go down?"
Treasurer Brackett warned recently
tnat the school district faces a possible
$225,000 deficit this fiscal year. A bid to
increase property taxes last summer
failed when county tax officials said it
would delay the mailing of tax bills.
Members of the task force are:
Educational Division 1: Billy Arms,
vice-chairman, Carolyn Polk, Arnold
Turner, Jr., David Collins, Greg Stumbo, Marthann Damron, Paul P. Hughes,
and Norma Stepp. Division 2: Ralph
O'Quinn, chairman, Neil Watson, David
Scott, James F. Francis, Marilyn Issac,
and Brenda Lawson. Division 3: Rosemary Hall, Doris Stumbo, recorder,
Marie Reynolds, Hiram Couch, Draxie
Newsome, Ruby Damron, and Gary
Frazier . Division 4: Thomasine
Whicker, Bill Hughes, William Reynolds
III, Laura Feamster, Mrs. Alan Joe
Hyden, Wilma May, Benjamin Akers,
Alice Martin, J.B. Carr, and Eulene
Ratliff. Division 5: James McKinney,
Troy Cole, Joe Yates, Russell M
Frazier, and Madison Hale.
--- 3 --I Continued
from Page One)
panel report says.
According to the state panel, the board
should adopt a policy for the review of
teachers' lesson plans and principals
and supervisors should be trained in how
to carry it out.
In all subjects and grade levels there
should be a curriculum guide and a list
of minimum skills to be mastered;
lesson plans should be dtsigned to meet
needs revealed by the annual Comprehensive Test of Basic Skills; and
some staff members should be trained
in administering, interpreting and using
the test results, the task force
recommends.
Quality teaching and high academic
performance by students should be
recognized and rewarded, the panel
says; it does not suggest what forms the
rewards might take.
Basketball practice is still taking up
class time in two Floyd schools, said Don
Burchett, the state official who read the
report to the board. Six hours of instruction a day is mandatory, the task force
noted. Non-curricular activities regarded as having instructional value should
be spelled out, the panel said.
Among other recommendations, the
state team suggested that: the board
provide the schools with more classroom
supplies; a district-wide program-ofstudies handbook be developed, listing
and describing all course offerings; an
orga11izational chart be drawn and
teachers given job descriptions; a procedure be developed for involving the
community in school activities; and that
there be "more continuity in the
philosophy and practice" of discipline.
About $20,000 in state funds in
available to assist the county in implementing the task force recommendations, Burchett said. Assistant
Superintendent Ron Hager heads a committee responsible for developing a plan
of improvements based on the
recommendations.
--- 4
1Coni inued
from Page One 1
receiving stolen property after silverware valued at $300 was found in his
apartment. Police said the silverware
had been stolen earlier from a house on
Abbott Creek.
Lafferty was released Monday after
posting bond of $5000. McAllister was
still being held here Tuesday under a
$25,000 bond.
Search warrants for both apartments
had been issued on the basis of information gathered by Officer David Caudill
from confidential informants.
Chief Campbell said police would be
aided in curbing traffic in drugs if more
citizens came forward with information.
2 --<Coni inued from Page One l
hereabouts ... not even the neighborhood
cat on whom we've 'heaped so much
blame for his forays into 'the peaceful
realm of bird-life.
If the situation doesn't improve, I'm
thinking of getting a committee appointed and hearings held.
A LITTLE STORY
This is a story about four people named Everybody, Somebody, Anybody and
Nobody. There was an important job to
be done and Everybody was sure that
Somebody would do it. Anybody could
have done it, but Nobody did it.
Somebody got angry about that, because
it was Everybody's job. Everybody
thought Anybody could do it, but Nobody
realized that Everybody wouldn't do it.
It ended up that Everybody blamed
Somebody when Nobody did what
Anybody could have done!
THE BRIGHTER VIEW
There is a certain pathos pervading
the picture showing a child peering
through swirling snowflakes to a window
on the inner side of which a family sits
in the warmth and light of a comfortable
home at a table loaded with food. I
assume the child was hungry.
That in the picture was the view from
the outside. But I bear witness to the fact
that in real life the view from the inside
can be just as uninspiring. If you aren't
careful, you can let what you see get you
low. Outside, there's a drab sameness,
even the lowering skies adding to the
gloom; no ray of sun, a mere breeze
turned into bone-chilling blast. The view
from the other perspective can be equally forbidding.
But beauty truly lies in the eye of the
beholder. There is, for example, the case
of one who had no view whatsoever of
the outside and little of what was inside,
because he lay, immobilized, flat on his
back in a hospital room. And he said:
"If I couldn't see beyond that ceiling
that stares me in the face, I'd be mighty
discouraged.''
THANKS
So many have been so kind to me and
my family, these recent weeks, that I
cannot write each of you. But I can, and
will, always remember. Your kindness
has meant more than you can ever
know.
Special Judge Named
In Stumbo's Absence
In the absence of Floyd District Judge
Harold Stumbo, who began an extended leave of absence last week, cases
scheduled for trial in district court here
will be heard by Boyd District Judge Edwin D. Rice, of Catlettsburg, court officials said this week.
Some court work, such as the issuing
of warrants, presiding at arraignments,
and accepting guilty pleas, will be handled by Trial Commissioner Thomas
Lafferty.
Stumbo appeared in court last Tuesday and was expected to ()Versee arraignments on Wednesday, when he
called in sick. It was later learned he
had notified state court authorities he
would be on leave, reportedly for about
two months.
Associates of the judge said they did
not know the reason for his abrupt leave·
taking but some noted that he has occasionally expressed a dislike for the
pressures of the bench.
CARD OF THANKS
The family of Julia Lee Hackworth
would like to thank all those wh·· were
so kind and considerate during our t•r P.
of bereavement. We extend a spec ...!
thanks to friends who brought food or
helped in any way; those who sent floral
arrangements; the ministers for their
comforting words; and the Carter
Funeral Home for its efficient service.
County officials got going with new four-year terms of office Monday.
and a new city administration for Prestonsburg took office at induction
ceremonies conducted at City Hall. Monday evening ... Jackson. Mich
police said Tuesday that two of three persons found dead in a home there
late Sunday night had been shot to death and that the third. apparently
their slayer. was Charlie Miller. 74. formerly of this county ... Removal of
the D & D Car Wash and associated service station to a new location was
begun this week to make way for a major food outlet at the corner of Patton street and North Lake Drive ...Gwen Clark. 17-year-old Bel<>y Layne
senior. was crowned homecoming queen during halftime activities at
Betsy Layne High School's recent game with Wheelwright. .. Born: to Mr.
and Mrs. Bobby J. Flanery, of Ligon. a daughter. Dec. 24 at the McDowell
Appalachian Regional Hospital There died· Mrs. Mary Jane Anderson.
78, of McDowell. Dec. 29 at the McDowell Appalachian Regional Hospital
<MARHl; Mrs Eunice M. Rickard, 75, Prestonsburg native. Dec. 26 at
Letart, W.Va.; Mrs. Mary Emma Richmond. 92, of St. Paul, Va .. sister of
Mrs. Ethel Gravely Heinze, of Prestonsburg, last Wednesday at Briston;
James Edward <Red> Slone. 46. Friday at his home at "Winchester."
south of here; Miss Minnie Hoover. 67. of Hueysville, last Wednesday at
Highlands Regional Medical Center; William V. Woods. Sr.. 85. of Emma.
Dec. 31 at Our Lady of the Way Hospital. Martin.
Twenty Years Ago
(January !l, 1!164)
Three newly elected circuit court officials were sworn in here Monday.
Taking the oath of office were Circuit Judge Hollie Conley. Commonwealth's Attorney Harold J. Stumbo and Circuit Court Clerk Frank
DeRossett...Addressing the grand jury of the Floyd circuit court for the
first time. Judge Hollie Conley served notice Monday morning on property owners whose tenants are bootlegging to get them out ..The Floyd
County Board of Education voted unanimously Saturday to renew the
contract of Superintendent Charles F. Clark for another four
years ... Floyd County Judge Henry Stumbo. in commenting on the food
stamp program in this county noted this week that 7,000 persons are
receiving aid from the stamps ... Curtis Clark. former Prestonsburg
mayor. was employed by the City Council Monday night as new city
manager ... A review of the first half of the 1963-64 high school basketball
season in the 15th region indicates that Wheelwright and Paintsville are
the choices to dethrone Garrett as the regional champion although John
Campbell's Black Devils are still in contention ...There died: James Edward Jarrell. 29. of Dwale. Tuesday at home: Mrs. Mary Hobbs. 76. of
Allen, Saturday at the Beaver Valley Hospital. Martin; Magdelene
Hamilton. 73. of Ligon. Monday at McDowell Appalachian Regional
Hospital CMARH l; Mrs. Katie Friends. 76. of Garrett. Tuesday at
MARH; Cecil M. Bower. 74. of Prestonsburg. Friday at the Prestonsburg
General Hospital; Mrs. Hazel Estep Bailey. 61. formerly of Garrett.
December 31 at LaPorte. Indiana; Eugene Hall. 58. Banner postmaster.
December 21 at home; Mrs. Stella Patton. 81, formerly Floyd woman.
Christmas Day. at Columbus. Ohio.
Thirty Years Ago
<January 14. 1954)
The fiscal court last Monday diretted County Judge Henry Stumbo and
County Attorney Hollie Conley to make inquiry as to the legal procedure
to follow toward getting a new courtheuse built .. .Snow and ice closed
schools and circuit court Monday and slowed traffic to a walk ...The In·
land Steel Company announced this week that Edwin R. Price, manager
of its coal properties at Wheelwright since 19~0. will retire at the end of
this month ... Fire destroyed the No. 1 commissary and general appliance
building of the Inland Steel Company at Wheelwright and for a time
threatened a large section of the town ... George P. Archer, cashier of the
Bank Josephine here till forced his retirement. was named chairman
emeritus of the board of directors last week ... A petition filed in county
court asks a local option election for the town of Martin. February
27 ... Miss Mary Ordell Ray. of Bypro. has been elected to Phi Beta Kappa
at the University of Kentucky ..Born: to Mr. and Mrs. William Harvey
Howard. formerly of Prestonsburg. a daughter, Barbara Lynn, January 8
at El Paso, Texas ... There died: Mrs. Liza Lewis Crum. 72, Monday at
West Prestonsburg; Mrs. Liza Hamilton. 72. Wednesday at Teaberry;
John Osborne. 70. formerly of Clear Creek, Tuesday at Hillsboro. 0.; N.
F. <Budl Potter. 84, of McDowell. last Thursday at Grundy. Virginia:
Mrs. Nellie Martin King. native Prestonsburg woman. January I at Huntington.
Forty Years Ago
<Januarv 13, 1!144>
A feature story published in The ·Times this week says the Rev. Isaac
Stratton. of Banner, has in the 31 years of his ministry officiated at 1,866
funerals ... Melvin Anderson, 55. of McDowell, was killed. and Wayne
Stumbo. of Minnie was seriously injured Monday in the collision of their
car with a truck near Louisa .. Lt. Raymond N. Stephens. of Prestonsburg, received his " Wings"as a fighter pilot recently at Pampa.
Texas ... Two children died at Martin hospitals this week of burns-Ernie
Moore, 2 of Gearheart, and James Walter Graham. 2, of Neon ... Born: to
Mr. and Mrs. Buck Baldridge. of David. twins, January 4; to Mr. and
Mrs. John Hinton, of Allen. a son. January 9...There died: Mrs. Alonzo
Hall. 70. at her home on Turkey Creek. Tuesday; Glen H. Mattingly. of
Printer. at the Beaver Valley hospital, December 28; Mrs. Callie Wells
McGuire, 81. at the home of her daughter. in Prestonsburg, Friday; Noah
Hall. 72. of Drift. at the Beaver Valley Hospital. Monday: Mabel Kilburn.
8 years old, at home at Cracker. Wednesday.
Fifty Years Ago
(January 12. 1934)
County Judge W. L. Stumbo· has been formally requested .by
Magistrates M. C. Wright. Willie Hall and Jim Clark to .call a spec1~l
fiscal court session to set aside alleged misappropnatwns of pubhc
funds ... Lewis Wells, Auxier was killed and five other persons were injured Monday when a car plunged over the hill near th~ intersection of t~e
Auxier road with U.S. 23 at East Point. .. Wendell H. N1cholls assumed h1s
duties this week as CWA disbursing agent. succeeding Carl H Fraim who
resigned recently ... Union services Will be held Sunday morning at lrene
Cole Memorial Baptist Church to welcome the new pastor. Dr. Josef
Nordenhaug ... An auto bearing the House of David basketba~l team to
another scheduled game crashed into another last Thursday mght on the
Mayo Trail after the bearded wonders had swamed the Betsy Layne R~d
Devils. The team's car later was attached and members were temporanJy set afoot.. Mrs. Ben Norris. of Martin. who took the oath as F~oyd county coroner. January 1. is the first woman ever to hold the off1ce 111 th1s
county ... Mrs. Grace D Ford was guest of honor December 30 at a s~r
prise birthday party given here ... Born: to Mr. and Mrs. Edward P . H1ll.
Jr.. January B. a son at the Wells Hospital. Paintsville; to Mr. and Mrs. J .
0. Webb. a son. January 3 in Louisville .. There died: Mrs. Clara Jane
Maddox. 76, mother of Dock Maddox. of Martin. Tuesday of last week at
Pikeville.
Donate blood.
It only hurts
when you don't.
CENTRAL KENTUCKY BLOOD CENTER
PRESTONSBURG STATION
(Mun1c1pal Bldg)
N. Lake Dnve/Prestonsburg, Kentucky 41653
Secilon One, Paae Four
•
But ()an She Teach?
By RON MARSTIN
members and administrators care more
about classroom effectiveness than they
Education members surveyed the do about how many votes a teacher's job
month's hiring list at last Wednesday's represents; they may need to be permeeting, the name of a teacher on the suaded that teachers who press openly •
list caught the eye of one.
for the means to teach well need not fear
"Who is that?" the board member in- recrimination.
quired. "Is that so-and-so's daughter?"
No doubt, there are principals in this
It was the only question asked. Yes,
district who routinely review teachers'
she was so-and-so's daughter. The list Jesson plans and who hold them to acwas approved.
count for the quality of their work, just
A lot of other questions might be ask- as there are teachers who would do a
ed, of course, about so-and-so's daugh- professional job regardless of whether
ter-as they might be asked about Floyd anyone is looking over their shoulder. No
county's other 530-or-so teachers. How doubt there are already principals who
do they come to be hired? Does the observe and help their weaker teachers
district attract the most qualified peo- and who challenge lazy teachers to prople available? How effective are they? duce, just as there are teachers whose
To whom must they account for the training and dedication makes that sort
quality of their work? What incentives of attention unnecessary.
are there to encourage good teachers
But is this kind of professionalism
and help poor teachers? What can be typical of the Floyd school district or is
done about the incorrigibly incompe- it the exception? Is the periodic evaluatent?
tion of teachers, already required of
But these are not matters that are principals here, a conscientious review
likely to be raised at a meeting of the or a perfunctory gesture? The report of
Floyd Board of Education. Nor might the state panel which recently surveyed
the omission be cause for particular our schools suggests that procedures for •
notice now except that two other items holding teachers to professional stanon last week's meeting agenda throw it dards need to be strengthened. Can the
into sharper relief.
Board of Education assure us they will
One item was a report implying, to no • be?
one's surprise, that politics is partly to
Most citizens can understand that betblame for the Floyd school district's cur- tering our schools will cost money. But
rent doldrums. The other was the they also know that spending more
;board's decision to rally public support money will not necessarily translate into
for a utilities tax.
more effective classroom teaching. ConThe report was issued by a team of viction on that point will come more
state Department of Education officials easily when school officials show they
who recently surveyed Floyd schools as care at least as much about competence
part of the School Effectiveness Project, as they do about loyalty, when concerna program designed to help 10 low- ed teachers do not fear to speak out, and
scoring districts boost their scores on when incompetent teachers can be made
achievement tests. The three-page docu- to do the job right or find employment
ment was read to the board in a flat, elsewhere.
barely intelligible monotone by a state
"Whose daughter is she?" might be a
official who explained, perhaps apologe- matter of concern to board members.
tically, that he had been "1nstructed to The rest of us could care less. What we
read it verbatim."
want to know is, "Can she teach?"
If the delivery was meant to discourage discussion, it worked. Of its 29
recommendations, none drew any immediate response from the board and
only one item-a reminder that basketEd~tor
ball practice is not to be held in class
The views expressed here are those of the
time-moved the superintendent to comwriters, and not necessarily those of this
ment. (He said he was insisting on six
newspaper. No unsigned contributions will
hours of daily instruction and w11nted the
be published.
names of the offending schools.)
Perhaps the report is too touchy. It No Handouts Needed
says that the job of the superintendent
I was born and raised.on Little Mud
is to provide leadership; that principals Creek and Big Mud Creek in Floyd
and supervisors need to be checking on County, Kentucky. The people who
the quality of teachers' work; that prin- wrote about me having no feelings for
cipals and supervisors themselves need
those children who must walk to a school
to be shown how to help teachers, how
bus obviously are assuming a lot about
to evaluate them, and how to analyse my background. I began school in a onetheir lesson plans; and that the system room school in the head of Little Mud
should have some teeth, with rewards Creek. I walked, at the age of 5, approxfor good teachers, help for teachers with imately one mile to school and one mile
problems and, presumably, desk jobs or back. As I grew up I continued to walk,
pink slips for those who cannot or will to catch a school bus, to go to the store,
not measure up.
even to church and friends. We used to
A clear implication of the report is walk several miles to catch a bus to ride
that politics has no business in the hir- to Pikeville to pay our bills or shop ...
ing and firing of teachers.
Walking is not new to me, nor did it
These may not be ideas the board is cause me such anguish that it scarred
anxious to push too hard, but they will me for life.
be of interest to many citizens-the
As for the roads that are impassable
same people whose support for a utilities except for a four-wheel drive, yes I am
tax school officials will be trying to win familiar with roads like that. I lived in
in the coming weeks.
the head of Little Mud, the last house!
Taxpayers will need little persuading Unfortunately we had no four-wheel
of the need for more teachers, programs drive vehicle. We could not afford one
and buildings. But many will be looking and I still cannot. This did not send me
for assurance that, in this school district,
out to stand in the welfare lines. Maybe
performance means more than politics.
I should have written to my con
They may want evidence that board gressman and asked for one? Maybe we
would have gotten started on those
poverty projects in eastern Kentucky a
lot sooner! My grandfather kept a mule
<Continued from Page Onel
called Old Dory. You know she could
Dr. John C. Hunsaker III, who perform- always get us out when we had no other
ed an autopsy, told the jury he believed means and could not walk for one reason
Miss Tackett died as a result of hanging or another. The point I am making here
and recommended the death be ruled a is that people planned and prepared for
the things which make up everyday life
suicide. Tests indicated the victim had
here. We depended on ourselves and our
not been sexually abused, he said.
The dead woman was first buried families. We did not depend on th
without autopsy but her body was ex- government to carry us through.
humed after inmates in another part of
No, I am not ashamed of the poverty
in eastern Kentucky. I am poor and I am
the jail said they had heard her scream
for help. A state police investigation
certainly not shamed of myself. As I said
before poor is one thing and pitiful is
later concluded the inmates' petition
was merely a ruse to embarrass Jailer quite another. While I do not deny that
the exposure such as the much
Lawrence Hale.
belabored Kennedy visit does bring
One witness told the inquest jury that
money to the area, I object to what the
Miss Tackett called her three times the
money carries along with it. In the 35
day she died. Geraldine Roberts, of Topyears of my growing up and living in
most, said Miss Tackett asked her for
clothes and cigarettes and was upset at Kentucky, I have seen that money
handed down through poverty pr
being separated from C.B. Hall, a man
grams, result in apathy and loss of
with whom she apparently lived at
desire of many people to take charge of
times. "Without (Hall), she didn't have
their own lives. Once the people of
anything to live for," Roberts said.
eastern Kentucky were industrious peoThe inquest was marked throughout
ple... I saw the change come over the
by tension between the coroner and
area ...
Gary Johnson, the lawyer representing
I have never said that poverty condithe victim's parents, Denver and Lula
tions do not exist. I am not blind. The
Tackett. Johnson, who was not allowed
point I have made from the start is that
to cross-examine witnesses or to call
the conditions could be improved by the 1
witnesses of his own, told the jury the inpeople concerned if they did not wait fo
quest was being used to perpetuate a
someone else to do it for them . In so docover-up.
ing they would recover something very
When Nelson refused his request to
precious that has been lost, pride.
call Assistant County Attorney Janet L.
I visited on both Mud Creeks this past
Stumbo to the stand, Johnson said "this
weekend. I heard about one family who,
proceeding is a farce and a mockery"
as a result of the publicity from Kenand was ordered from the courtroom.
nedy's visit, had been given two new
Johnson said later his clients might
stoves. This family, who were so in need
file a civil complaint against jail
of these stoves that it made national
authorities. "Somebody killed her or let
news, sold them both. I heard many
her die and we're not going to quit until
other things which I choose not to write
we find out," he said of Miss Tackett's
here. All of them reaffirmed my convi
death. "If she committed suicide,
tions about this issue.
something happened to her to make her
Let me say again, I did not object to
do that. Everyone testified she was .
Kennedy coming to this area . I objected
belligerent, not suicidal.''
to only the negative side being publicisJohnson and his clients were permited and indeed searched out. The Bible
ted to "feed" questions to County Atsays that the poor shall be with us
torney Arnold Turner, Jr. during the inalways. That does not mean that we
quest. Turner and Nelson questioned the
shall exploit them .
witnesses. But "the hard questions can
LINDA SUE NIECE LYON ,
only be asked on cross-examination,"
Cutuno, Ky. 41414
Johnson said.
Nelson said later he did not want the
inquest used by Johnson as a way to
The U.S. Coast Guard was created i
gather possible evidence for a civil suit.
1790, when the first Congress authoriz·
"We were simply there to determine the
ed the construction of 10 vessels for the
cause of death," he said.
collection of revenue.
It was a familiar routine. As Board of
LETTERS
To the
--- 5 ---
�.
Wednesday, January 11, 1984
I
I
The Floyd County Times
Section One, Paae Five _
�Wednesday, January 11, 1984
The Floyd County Times
-------
Section OIM:., Pa e Six
5
NOW
At
S&m-U'ag
10 a.m.-2 p.m.
5 p.m.-7 p.m.
Franklin O'Neil Reynolds, son of Debbie Reynolds, of Ligon, celebrated his
second birthday, Wednesday, January
4. He had cake and ice cream at the
home of his grandparents, and he
received many . nice gifts. He is the
grandson of Arnoid ·and Bernice
Reynolds, of Ligon
Present to help celebrate were his
aunt and uncle, Shelvia and Charles
Wellman, and cousins, Mary and Edward Wellman, all of Ligon.
* Equipment for
all parts of
the body
*
Free Nursery
Mon.-Wed.-Fri.
9:30-11
..-sc\
Danskin Leotards and Tights
McGinnis Retires
From Columbia Gas
Boy Scout Troop 871, Harold P TA, placed second in the '83 fall camporee of the Lonesome Pine
District, Boy Scouts of America. Competition included cooking, campsite inspection and improvement, and Scouting skills. Kneeling, from left, are Chris Saylor, Patrick Spradlin, Tim Parsley,
Dwayne Akers. In first row, standing, from left, are Scoutmaster Vance Akers, Dean Hall, Jamie
Collins, Bryan Kidd, Michael Kidd, and in second row, Sie Hamilton, Willie Watson, Alton Moore,
Frank Gillespie.
·
Competition in cooking, pioneering
skills, and campsite development
highlighted the 1983 Fall Camporee for
Boy Scouts of the Lonesome Pine
District held this fall at B.S.A. Camp
Shawnee in Floyd County. Over 140
Scouts and leaders from 11 troops participated in the three-day event. The
Lonesome Pine District includes Scouts
from Magoffin, Martin, Floyd, Johnson.
and Pike counties.
Major events of the competition began
on Saturday with judges eating the noon
meal with the troops. Each troop had
received a foods list of items to bring to
the camporee and at the flag-raising
ceremony Saturday obtained preparation directions. Campsite inspections on
Saturday afternoon looked for general
camp setup, avoidance of safety
hazards, proper cleanliness, and focused on special pioneering improvements
made to the site. All troops prepared
aHar fires. An altar fire is a table-like
platform covered with mud, so cooking
may be accomplished while standing.
Other pioneering items some troops
prepared included pack racks, shoe
stands, wash stands, tables, and, of
course, flag poles and entranceways.
During the inspections, the Scouts
were gathered for fun, non-competitive
games. Dog patch softball, tug-of-war,
Indian scalp hunt, and capture the flag
were some of the games. At the Saturday night campfire, there were songs,
skits, and jokes performed by patrols
from each of the troops present. Mike
Parker, a Scout from Troop 27, Prestonsburg, directed the campfire
Rev. Charles Elswick, associate
minister at Pikeville United Methodist
Church, presented a devotional time for
the Scouts and leaders on Sunday
morning.
Johnny Ratliff, camporee chairman
and unit commissioner for the Virgie
area, Pike county, closed the weekend
with the presentation of ribbons to winning troops. First place went to Troop
The forget · me - not is
803, sponsored by the Dorton Woman's
the state flower of Alaska.
Club. Harold PTA's Troop 871 won second place. Sponsored by the Pikeville
. .- - - - - - - - - - - - - • United Methodist Church, Troop 10 took
the third place ribbon. All participating
troops received a participation ribbon
and each Scout and leader was given a
;. BUILDING STONE CO., Inc.
patch which can be worn on the uniform
denoting the event.
874-2273 .• ALLEN, KY
Those troops participating and their
"JHE AREA'S OLDEST ESTABUSHEl
members and adults in attendance
MONUMENT RRM..!!
were:
TROOP 803, Dorton Woman's Club:
John Anderson, Jason Beverly, Kevin
Potter, John Gable, William Bentley,
Barry Lucas, Derrell Anderson, Ricky
Wright, Todd Coleman, Johnny Lowe,
and Chester Mullins; leaders John
Anderson a nd Bob Hurston.
TROOP 871, Harold PTA: Dwayne
Akers, Patrick Spradlin, Tim Parsley,
Alton Moore, Chris Saylor, Frank
Gilispi, Willie Watson, Michael Kidd,
BEST QUALITY MEMORIALS
Brian Kidd, Jammie Collins, Sie
QUICK, EFFICIENT SERVICE
Hamilton, Dean 0. Hall ; adults Vance
AND INSTAUATION
Akers, Larry Parsley, Frank Gilispi,
SEE OUR LARGE DISPLAY OF
Toney Spradlm, Bascom Hall, Linnie
Kidd , Dona ld Akers, and Robert
COLORED & GRAY GRANITES
Fink bone.
lOCATED ON OLD U.S. 23
TROOP 10, Pikeville United Methodist
IN NEW ALLEN
.:
Church : John Smith, Chris Smith, Eric
6- tf
Morrison, Donald Tackett, Bryan
ftSn]
SANDY VALLEY'
MONUMENT
~--
.,- Jl ,
Pharmacy·
Footnotes.,
By HARULD COOL.t;Y
Since the Poison Prevention Packaging Act requires
childproof containers for over-the-counter drugs, accidental ingestion of aspirin has declined by 20 percent.
However, these child-resistant caps have also proved to
be annoying to to many adults who could not unlock the
secret of opening them. If you are one of these adults, the
posison Prevention Packaging Act also allows the
manufacture of easy-to-open tops for those who live in alladult households. The exception was made in consideration of elderly or handi-capped consumers. It also benefits
non-mechanical consumers. If unavailable in your area,
ask the pharmacist to transfer the contents of a medication to a conventional container.
At C00LEY APOTHECARY we take great pride in the
role we play in promoting the health of folks in our community. We are your physician's consultant and source
of information about many of the newest drugs and products available. Call your doctor first and then have him
call us. We are located at No. 2 Town Center Bldg.,
886-8106. Open: Mon.-Fri., 9-5:30, Sat., 9-4.
HANDY HINT:
Added ingredients increase the price, not the effectiveness, of aspirin.
WOLFF
Sl'SI»I
1f2 PRICE
Wallace McGinnis, of Inez, will retire
Jan. 1 from Columbia Gas of Kentucky.
He joined the gas company in 1952 as
a laborer at Inez, where he later served
as a customer serviceman.
McGinnis and his wife, Alice, have
' five daughters, Blanche, Barbara, Norma , Patsy and Ruby Ann, and a son,
Ted.
For the shape of _ ton~orrow,
Start today.
PHONE 874-2800
tHJ~tHJ~tt!JtHJ~tS=SJ~~~tt
Stalker, Mike Hale, Mike Bartley, Eric
Melton; adults Ray Bartley, Jim Brown.
TROOP 832, Clark Elementary PTA,
Prestonsburg: Michael Chaney, Ronnie
Slone, Michael Goodman, David Stanforg, Kevin Huddleson, Eric Sizemore,
Kevin Huston, Peter Williamson,
William Marsilett, James Campbell,
William Thompson, George K. Elste;
leader Carl Glendenning.
TROOP 801, Lick Creek, Pike County:
T.J. Stanley, Eric Hackney, David
Hackney, Ray Mullins, Chris Mullins,
Randy Maynard; leader Larry Dotson.
TROOP 891, Prater PTA: Jeff Watson, Binnie Akers, Chester Akers Jr.,
Tom Dillion, Russell Conn, Chris Case,
Danny Page, Brian Boyd; adults Bobby
Boys, Vaughn Watson, Juan Boyd,
Chester Akers, and Teddy Ray Akers.
TROOP 870, McDowell · Regional
Clinic: Steve Martin, Phil Lucas, Chris
Lucas, Brian Patton, Mark Patton,
Brian Howell, Brett Traver, Ray
Cooper, Mike Cooper, Scott Farley ;
leader Phillip Lucas.
TROOP 877, Bonanza, sponsored by
Abbott Creek Development Club : Don
Adkins, Billy Grimm, William Ward,
Joe York, Richard Naylor, Jackie York,
Robert Boggs, Johnny Naylor, Jimmy
Naylor, Matthew Thornbury; leaders
Johnnie Ross, Tommy Grimm, Clyde
DeRossett.
TROOP 880, Wheelwright United
Methodist Church: Steven Berger, Edward Wellman, Dave Damron, Brent
Huff, Chris Boldman, Vince Newsome,
Kevin Isaac, Chris Bates, Craig Martin,
Chad Hall, Barlon Isaac, Barry Bates,
John Meade, Millis Call; adults Steve
Damron, Steve Berger, Bobby Isom,
Shane McCoy, Johnnie Patton, Charles
Wellman.
TROOP 822, Elkhorn City Church of
Christ: Clayton Potter, Trent Hackney.
TROOP 328, Ashcamp, sponsored by
Hylton Freewill Baptist Church: Mike
Cook, Chris Phiprs, Larr!' Bartley, Paul
Bartley, Robert Bartley, James Little,
Mark Little, Wayne Spears, Vernon
Childers, Tim Kelly; leader Clayton
Swindall.
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�The Floyd County nmes
:.;:;m
tc th" Sound of t e
und
Section One, Paae Seven
i:JIUII!E'
oog·
Wed., Jan. li-8 p.m. to 12 p.m.
a! !he
EAGLES CLUB
South Lake Drive
Prestonsburg, Ky.
. For more lnlormatlon call Barry Potier
or James Hall
886-241
Harold 6th Grade
Honor Students
Christmas '83
Harold Elemo.tary sixth grade honor
roll students from Mr. Akers class are
the following:
Craig Akers, Dwayne Stevens,
Melissa Harmon, Raetta Damron, Leigh
Ann Smith, Crissy Howell, Sherri
Hurley, Elaine Hunter, Tina Boyd,
Bryan Kidd, Danny Conn, Teressa
Spears, Sherry Salisbury, Pam Smith,
Craig Hunter, Jamessa Howell.
DENTAL TIPS
Dr. H.G. Salisbury
RICHMOND PLAZA,
PRESTONSBURG
PHONE 886-2676
BLEEDING GUMS
. It's that time of year again! Greetings-in the name of the risen Savior!
This is a difficult season for me
because seven years ago, Dec. 18, 1976
my Stephen went to be with the Lord.
Seems like yesterday-l miss him so
much, but when I remember how he suffered I say "Thank you Lord for taking
him to live with you where nothing can
ever hurt him any ·more."
I want to share with you another of his
poems. When Stephen was in his teens,
we lived with my parents, Mr. and Mrs.
Will Stephens. Dad used to get aggravated at Steve when he was slow
about doing his chores and would say to
him, "Why don't you grow up, young
man'!" In later years after Dad was
gone, Steve wrote the following poem:
GROWTH
"Grow up boy," they tell you.
"Take responsibility by the hand."
Make some plans,
Go to work,
Sweat for it,
Plow the earth,
Become a man."
But God, can't they see
That growth's a gradual thing?
That even an eaglet,
Before it can flee
The safety of the nest
Must first test
Its wing.
Say instead, "go, boy.
Find for yourself what you're worth.
See this land,
Learn it,
Love it,
Revel in it,
For it gave you birth.
Run,
Jump,
Fly,
Crawl,
Discover.
Then, perhaps,
.
You'll be ready to become a man."
May each of you know the true meaning of Christmas and may the holiday
season be the best you have ever known.
In the words of Tiny Tim "God Bless us
every one," and remember Jesus loves
you-and I love you too!
FRANKIE SUE BEST
Q. Are bletdlnc cums a sure sian of pyorrhea?
A. Bleeding gums are only a sign that something is not quite right.
That "something" may not be serious at all. For example, you may
simply be brushing your teeth the wrong way, or gums may be sensitized from your learning how to floss correctly, or from hor:monal changes due to pregnancy.
On the other hand, if the bleeding gums stem from gingivitis or
pyorrhea, your dentist can tell you what may be causing this and
how to stop it. If you have gum-bleeding in combination with other
symptoms such as persistant bad breath, loosening of teeth, puffy
or red gums, or shifting teeth, then it is imperative that you visit
your dentist or a qualified periodontist for treatment
'
'/
-
ALL WINTER
MERCHANDISE
PRICE
W.M.U. MEETS
The Annie Allen Circle W.M .U. of the
.frene Cole Memorial (First) Baptist
"'''"' " met Monday evening, January
2, at the ho••.. "f the vice president, Mrs.
Patti Minns, with l:.:.> !)resident, Mrs.
Ruby Garrett, presiding.
The president made the followm~ :mnouncements: Clear Creek Baptist
School is in need of clothes and shoes,
and those who may wish to contribute to
this cause should bring the items to the
basement of the annex of the First Baptist Church by the last of February; the
W.M.U. annual meeting will be held at
the Emmanuel Baptist Church in Lexington, March 29-31. Those interested· in
attending should get in touch with Mrs.
Garrett before that time. The Loaves
and Fishes Food Pantry which the local
church women, in cooperation with the
Prestonsburg Ministerial Association
sponsors, is in need of money and food,
and those wishing to make donations
should contact officers of these organizations. The Baptist associational meeting
and dinner will be held at the local
church, Tuesday evening, January 17, at
6 p.m. The menu was planned during the
meeting and it is asked that other
women of the church contact Mrs. Garrett regarding the kind of food needed.
Mrs. Eva Collins was in charge of the
program entitled "Evangelism in the
Sun Belt." Others participating in this
program were, Mesdames Ruby Garrett, Patti Minns, Patsy Evans, Ora
Bussey, Docia Woods, Myrtle Allen,
Zelia Archer, and Lucy Regan. Mrs. Vivian Fraley read a list of missionaries
who were observing birthdays on that
date, and prayer was held for them and
their works. The hostess, Mrs. Minns,
served a salad course to those in attendance. Mrs. Eva Collins dismissed the
meeting with prayer. Attending, other
than those taking part in the program,
were Mrs. Versa Moore, Mrs. Rella
Evans, and her two little daughters,
Bethany and Emily.
The next meeting will be Monday
evening, February 6, at the home of
Mrs. Ora Bussey, with Mrs. Docia
Woods as co-hostess.
will show o film, titled;
"SENIOR YEAR"
Sunday, January 15
7:00P.M.
ABBOTT TV
& STEREO REPAIR
Evening TV 8r Stereo Service.
'12.50-Servlce coli, city limits
of Prestonsburg.
OVER 20 YEARS EXPERIENCE.
Honest and Reliable
Vikki McGuire, pictured, was certified
recently by the International Childbirth
Education Association, an organization
which promotes family-centered
maternity care. She is the first Ken·
tuckian to be accredited by the group.
To become certified, Mrs. McGuire
studied under the auspices of the
American Society of Psychoprophylaxis
and Obstetrics and passed an examination. She works as a childbirth educator
with the Big Sandy Family and Childbirth Education Association.
In 1873, St. Louis established the first public kindergarten in the United States.
.INCOME TAX
PREPARATION
Federal and State
********
Vernon Slone
or
886-9007
$
Shoe
Show
5. 10
Store Hours:
Mon.-Sat, 10-9, Sunday, 1-6 -
Highland Plaza, Prestonsburg
Part of a series of messages from South Central Bell.
Where do I get local
phone service?
On January 1, 1984, South Central Bell and other local Bell
telephone companies were separated from AT&T.
But as part of a holding company
called BeiiSouth, we're still your
phone company. And divestiture will
have little immediate effect on your
basic local home or office phone
service.ln fact, you can choose
to keep your service just as it is.
South Central Bell still provides local telephone service for your home
and your business. Call on us to order new phone service, to transfer
existing service, to add new lines, or
to order new sets and equipment.
-~ays!
..~
How to get special
services. ·
South Central Bell still offers convenient services such as Touch-Tone"
dialing, Call Waiting, Call Forwarding, Speed Calling and Three-Way
Cafling (available in some areas).
And new services (available tn
some areas) such as Prestigesm Service
that gives expanded calling capabilities to business and residence customers with more than one line. And
ESSX Service that uses advanced
electronic switching service technology to give businesses PBX features.
• Downtown- Pikeville
• Weddington Plaza- • South Side Mall- So. Williamson
Roy Greer, Owner
Options let you keep
costs down.
One change you've probably
heard about is that local rates will
go up. Competition and deregulation in the telecommunications industry mean an end to local service
subsidies from long distance and
other competitive services. That
means local phone rates must increase to reflect more of the true
costs of providing local service.
Local Measured Service options
(available to homes and businesses
in many areas) can help keep local
service charges down. local Measured Service is especially attractive
to people who don't use the phone
a lot to make local calls and for
people who can't. or don't wish to,
pay for Premium Flat Rate Service.
Coping with change.
We're doing everything we can to
see that the changes brought about
by divestiture and increased competition are as easy for you as possible. And nothing will affect the high
quality of service you've come to expect from us.
If you have questions or want
more information, return the
coupon below. Or call on us at the
Bell Answer Center, toll free,
I 800 555-5000, 9 a.m. till 9 p.m. EST,.
Monday through Friday.
We're still your phone company.
r-------------------,
I CALL ON US.
I
Senctto· BeiiAnswerCenter,P.O.Box34040.Loulsvllle.KY40232
I
I
I
lnformati~m please! I'd like to know more about changes in my telephone service.
Name·
Address:
I :,~,
I
1-11-lC.
3 GREAT
BUYS!
According to the Audubon
society, the optimum depth
of birdbath water is 2 1/2
inches. Less makes
it difficult for birds to
bathe, more frightens them.
last five
Only five days left to
take advantage of a store full of fabulous
buys during Watson's Winter Sale.
Hurry, sale ends Monday, January 16.
After 6 p.m. call 886-9619
Call 886-6060
S.A.R. INFORMATION
The Sons of the American Revolution,
S.A.R., offer opportunities to serve the
community, further patriotic education,
and establish an understanding and appreciation of the principles of government that our forefathers established.
The S.A.R. will guide you in researching your family lineage to establish
your right to membership, and once you
become a member, will record this infQrmation, making it available to your
descendants.
For information concerning the
S.A.R., call874-2325 or write James B.
Goble, Star Route 1, Box 20, Prestonsburg, Kentucky 41653.
In ancient Rome, a form of
Valentine's Day was cele·
brated on February 15, in
honor of the goddess Juno.
.·/' ....,....
LANCER BAPTIST
CHURCH
,,,
@ ~~~!
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L_-.:~=---------------..:__j
�Wednesday, Januar,- 11, 1984
The Floyd County Times
Section One, Paae Elaht
CPhoto bv Laura Cooley !
THE PRESTONSBURG BLACKCATS were winners over Allen Central's Rebels, 90-61, when
the two teams met Friday night here. The Rebs, last week, handed the powerful Betsy Layne
Bobcats their first loss of the season, a team which Prestonsburg, as yet, has been unable to topple. In photo, the Blackcats' Kelly Cecil becomes airborn to deliver a pass to a teammate. Rebel
defenders pictured include, from left, Dale Pack, Tim Lawson, Jeff Powell and Dan Moore.
(Photo bv Laura ('oolt•v l
AN EXCITING CONTEST was the result of Friday night's meeting of the Allen Central Lady
Re bs and Prestonsburg's Lady Cats as Allen . Central defeated PHS, 50-48, in overtime.
Prestonsburg's Paula Harris is shown here going for a layup. Her teammate pictured is Melinda Deerfield. Lady Rebs pictured, from left, include Pam Fraley, Robin Roop, and Lisa Green.
* KENTUCKY AFIELD *
GO HUNTING AND FISHING NOW
Although Kentucky's squirrel and
deer bow hunting seasons closed Dec. 31,
there's still a couple of month's worth of
hunting for quail, rabbits and grouse, as
well as almost a month until the waterfowl season closes after Jan. 20 and
furbearer season ends after Jan. 31.
The grouse season will extend through
Feb. 28 this year, while quail and rabbit hunters have to call it quits after Feb.
12. Even though most bird or rabbit hunters stop hunting long before that, there
is a small group of dedicated die-hards
who stick with it until the last day of the
season.
These late-season hunters fare pretty
well, too. Perhaps they are successful
because they do persist and learn a little more about the game they're hunting
than the "fair weather" nimrod who
hangs it up after the Christmas holidays.
Or maybe those who hunt in January
and February are intent on getting the
full value out of their hunting licenses.
1983 sport licenses expired at midnight,
Dec. 31, so those who buy their licenses
earl)" in January and hunt until the seasons close get an extra two months of
hunting for their money over those who
wait until the fall seasons roll around to
buy their licenses.
·
Since fishing licenses are also issued
on a calendar year basis, the angler who
wants to get the most for his money will
also buy this license early in the year
and take advantage of what is often
some very good late winter and early
spring fishing.
Crappie school tightly during the
winter months and the fishermen who
locates the fish can have some "hot"
~old weather fishing . Since the fish are
'i:uggish in cold water and don't move
around much, so you can usually locate
schools of crappie in just about the same
location day after day.
Trout are active in cold weather, so if
Bassin' Buddies
Fishing Tips
By TOM MARTIN
A lot of people get caught up in fishing
just one way. This is 0!(, but if you want
to catch fish consistently you must
change your tactics every once in a
while. In the Spring when most of the
fish are in shallow water, they are fairly easy to catch. If you go back to the
same place three months later, chances
are you will end up with a big goose egg.
The fish are still there but probably a little deeper than before. To be a good consistent fisherman you can't just master
one way of fishing and expect to catch
fish all year long. You have got to
change Y:ith the elements. As the old
saying goes, you have to be a "jack of
all trades and a master of none."
The crank bait will probably cover
more water in a shorter period of time
than any other bait that I know of. To cut
down on wasted ti~e fishing the crankbait, I usually fish 1t parallel to the bank.
The best way I have found to do this is
to pull my boat 5 to 10 feet away from
the shoreline, put my trolling motor on
high speed and make long casts directly in front of the boat. By doing this you
also keep the bait in the strike zone
much longer than fishing straight at the
shoreline.
When fishing plastic worms, the most
important thing is kE:eping it on the bottom as much as possible. Doing this
seems to make it look more lifelike. One
rule to remember is to use the lightest
sinker possible that will still keep the
worm on the bottom. Keep in mind that
if the wind is blowing or the water has
current you will have to use a heavier
sinker.
there's a nearby lake, stream or tailwater that's stocked with these fish, you
might give it a try some warm, sunny
day this winter. You're likely to find the
trout, which were in the depths last summer, swimming around in !Jhallow water
and not too difficult to catch.
Sauger and walleye also remain active in winter and begin their spawning
runs very early in the year, offering the
cold-weather fisherman another chance
to bring home some fresh fish for the
table- and there's no better eating than
fish caught in the middle of winter. Even
species which taste a little "muddy"
when caught in the summer will be firm,
fresh and delicious when pulled out of
40-degree water.
Even if everything is completely frozen over, you can still catch fish. Test
the ice on your favorite farm pond and
if it's over four inches thick, go ice
fishing . An ultra-light spinning outfit, a
small hook, a light line and some meal
worms or other suitable bait is all you'll
need, plus an ice auger, a hatchet or
some similar instrument to make a hole
in the ice. You'll generally find a school
of bluegill near the bottom of the deepest
part of the pond, and the fish will amost
always bite readily when you get the bait
down to them .
So there's no reason to sit around the
house this winter wishing for warm weather. Just put on an extra pair of socks
or two, bundle up good and get out of
doors for a while- you just might discover that you've been missing something.
Public Meets Slated
Abandoned Land Funds
Public meetings on the state's third
annual grant application package for
federal funds to reclaim Kentucky's
abandoned mined land and to control the
adverse effects of past coal mining will
be held in mid-January in Hazard and
Madisonville, officials of the state
Natural Resources and Environmental
Protection Cabinet have annol'nced .
The meetings, sponsored by the state
Division of Abandoned Lands, will be
held to gather citizen and industry comments on the proposed application
package before its submission to the
federal Office of Surface Mining of the
U.S. Department of the Interior.
The application package lists specific
reclamation projects in the coalproducing regions of the state to be
undertaken with funds from OSM.
Revenue for the reclamation projects
will come from a program which derives
its funds from fees collected by the
federal government on each ton of coal
produced in Kentucky.
The meetings will be held January 17,
at the Hazard-Kentucky River ADD office at 7 p.m., and January 19, at Madisonville Community College.
Division of Abandoned Lands person-·
nel urge all interested persons to attend
either or both of the meetings to ensure
maximum public participation in the application process.
For additional information on the application package or the meetings, contact the Division of Abandon~d Lands,
618 Teton Trail, Frankfort, Ky. 40601,
telephone (502) 564-2141.
GUESTS HERE
Miss Betty Rowland had as her guests
Sunday, her mother, Mrs. Hattie Rowland, her brother and sister-in-law, Mr.
and Mrs. Bill Rowland, and a family
friend, Russell Everman, all of Ashland.
While here, they attended the old
Christmas program at May Lodge on
Sunday.
Goose Season Cut
Short.in Ballard
c
Photo bv Melinda Sellards l
COUNTY RIVALS Allen Central and Betsy Layne met Saturday night and a fired up Rebel team gave Betsy Layne its
first loss of the season. Betsy Layne's Jeff Campbell is shown
going up for a jumper during the contest which went to the
Rebels, 52-51.
Bernheim Hunt Set
To Reduce Deer Herd
Governor Martha Layne Collins s'igned an emergency regulation today
authorizing deer gun hunting- .on Btrnheim Forest Refuge and adjacehLprivate lands in Nelson and Bullitt
Counties.
The hunt, necessary to reduce the
overcrowded deer herd in the area, is
scheduled for Feb. 3-6. Approximately
1,200 hunters will be selected by a random drawing for the Bernheim Forest
Refuge hunt. Hunters on the refuge may
use only muzzle-or breech-loading
shotguns from ten through 20 gauge firing single projectile <slug) ammunition.
Those wishing to apply should write
their name, address, telephone number
and age on a 3x5 index card and mail it,
along with a self-addressed, stamped
envelope, to Deer Hunt, Dept. of Fish
and Wildlife, No. 1 Game Farm Road ,
Frankfort, Ky. 40601.
Those wishing to apply as a party
should mail their cards together in a
single envelope. Parties may not contain
more than five hunters.
Applications must be received no later
than 4:30p.m., Jan. 13 to be eligible for
the drawing. More than one application
from an individual will disqualify that
applicant. Specific hunting dates (one
day per hunter >and hunt locations will
be assigned at the time of the drawing .
No advance application will be required to hunt on the lands surrounding
Bernheim Forest Refuge. However,
hunters must obtain permission from
the property owner before hunting on
private lands. Any firearm legal for deer
hunting may be used on the surrounding
private lands.
.
The open area of Nelson and Bullitt
Counties will be between the Bernheim
refuge boundary and the following
roads: In Bullitt County from the Nel:;on
County line north on State Roote (SR>
61 to 1-65 north on 1-65 to 'SR 480, east
on SR 480 to SR 1604, south on SR 1604
to Deatsville Rd., south on Deatsville
Rd. to the Nelson County line. In Nelson
County from the Bullitt County line
south on Deatsville-Cedar Grove Rd. to
SR 523, west on SR 523 to SR 245, south
on SR 245 to US 31E, south on US 31E to
US 62, west on US 62 to SR 61, and north
on SR 61 to the Bullitt County line.
In addition to a 1984 hunting license,
all hunters participating in these hunts
must have a valid 1983 deer permit.
Biologists say that it is necessary to
reduce the herd in the area by 60 percent
so the forest can recover from overbrowsing and so the remaining deer will
have sufficient food to make it through
the rest of the winter. Officials say that
this hunt should give all parties a few
years to work on a long-term solution to
the deer population on Bernheim.
PHS Boys, Girls
See Net Action
By LAURA COOLEY
The Prestonsburg Blackcats ana
Lady Cats were in action Tuesday
night, playing the ~hee!wright Trojans, and Friday mght, meetmg the
Aller. Central teams.
In Tuesday night 's action .
Wheelwright's Trojanettes defeated
the Prestonsburg girls in a close game.
51-48. The Blackcats then faced the
Wheelwright Trojans winning 8~57.
Friday night, the girls' game was
again the more exciting contest as lhe
Allen Central Lady Rebs beat
Prestonsburg's Lady Cats in an overtime thriller. 50-48
When the Prestonsburg boys played
Allen Centra!'s Rebels it was a fairly
easy win for the Blackcats. 90-61. ~he
Rebels showed their stuff the followmg
night, however. as they beat the
previously undefeated Betsy Layne
Bobcats 52-51 at Allen Central.
Hunters who have reservations at the
Old Man Winter has thrown Western
Kentucky goose hunters a real curve this Ballard wildlife area for goose hunting
year, causing the early closing of the after Jan. 5 will have their hunting fees
Ballard Quota Zone, the state's most refunded. Those who have reservations
for duck hunting on the area will be
productive goose area.
Normally, waterfowl hunters hope for allowed to hunt as scheduled. However,
bad weather, since snow, ice and sub- because of the large number of goose
freezing temperatures up north force hunters and the limited availability of
ducks and geese south along the duck hunting areas, no one will be allowed to switch from goose to duck hunting.
Mississippi Flyway into Kentucky.
The late December cold snap brought
the birds down in droves, a mass migra- SAVE THOSE LABELS
tion that swelled the goose population to
Clark Elementary School P.T.A. is
approximately 1.5 million birds on the collecting labels from Campbell proBallard Wildlife Management area and ducts. The goal of 25,000 labels will prosurrounding private lands.
cure much needed phonographs for
When the goose season opened Dec. 23 classrooms.
·
<Dec. 26 on the wildlife area), hunters
Participating grocery stores in the
began enjoying unprecedented success. area will display boxes to collect your
But after only a few days of hunting, it discarded labels of Campbell, Swanson,
became obvious that this season would Prego, Franco-American, or V-8 juice .
be a short one.
The deadline is March 3.
According to this year's regulations,
Clark is also participating in the Post
the goose season in the Ballard Quota Cereal Fun and Fitness program. Pos
Zone (the northwest portion of Ballard will supply a computer for the school for
County bounded roughly by US 60 and 6,250 Fun and Fitness proofs of purstate route 358) was to continue through chase. The deadline for this program is
Jan. 31 or until a quota of 6,000 Canada , June .
geese was harvested. Such quotas are
For more information, contact the
established by the U.S. Fish and Wildlife school by calling 886-2487.
Service and the states represented in the
Mississippi Flyway Council (including
"Many bores are so obviously
Kentucky) to regulate thE'. harvest of
happy that it is a pleasure to
geese on a flyway-wide basis.
watch them ."
Robert Lynd
On Monday, Jan. 2, Fish and Wildlife
Commissioner Carl E. Kays made the
_l_ decision to close the Ballard Quota Zone
on Jan. 5, since harvest figures were indicating that the quota would be met by
then.
Although this is not the first time a
quota has been placed on the goose
In Flo~ County, $8.00
harvest in the Ballard zone, this is the
Elsewhere In Kentucky, $10
first year that a season has been dosed
Outside Kentucky, $12.50
early because of the quota being met.
Please note. expiration date
Under normal conditions, it would have
opposite your name on wrap·
been late January before 6,000 Canada
per, or on your copy of The
geese would be taken in this zone and
Times. Because of lncrea~
with a mild winter, hunters probably
malllna costs, 110tlces of
would not have "shot out" at all before
subscription expiration 'are
the season closed Jan. 31.
no
lorfaer
d."a lled
to
The closure applies only to this one
subscriber!#.
portion of Ballard County, which does inSubscription~ may be malfed to:
clude the Ballard Wildlife Management
The Floyd County Times
Area. In the rest of the state, goose
Box 391 ...,,.
seasons will continue through Jan . 20,
Prestonsbura,
Ky. 41653
the scheduled closing date . Duck
seasons will not be affected.
Subscription
Rates-Per Yea,r
W.E. MAY PRESENTS
•
•
•
*
*
*
* SUPER STAR *
•
WRESTLING
•
EVERY TUESDAY ~IGHT, BEGINNING JAN.
AT MARLOW'S COUNTRY PALACE
SPECIAL BARBED-WIRE MATCH!
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
C
•
~
GRUDGE MATCH (NOT SANCTIONED BY K.A.A".I)
*
* SEMI-MAIN EVENT *
THE DIRTY DALTONS VS. EDDIE WARD AND GILFORD HALL
~
(Eddie and Gifford ore rrom fhe Presfonsburg area-see theml)
ALSO ...
* CUBAN ASSASSIN VS. MR. LEE *
GENERAL ADMISSIONS: $5.00 CHILDREN UNDER 12: $3.00
~
~
*
*
*
*
·~
. ..... ...... .
* MIDNIGHT RIDER AND DARK SHADOW VS. DON BAKER AND ART CLANCY *
~
*
*
:J **
BIG JOHN, THE MOUNTAINEER VS. THE ANIMAL
.•
•
•
*
*
*
~
~
~
~
~
**
~
�Wednesday, January 11, 1984
The Floyd C o unty Times
Section One, Pace Nine
PRICES
IN EFFECT
WEDNESDAY
JAN. 11
THRU SUNDAY
JAN. 15
CENTER CUT
--
ORK CHOP
,. .
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69
.
.
·:·
*****************
!
4 LOCATIONS!
!
- -
:
*
!
*
• WE RESERVE THE RIGHT
TO LIMIT QUANTITIES
• WE ARE NOT RESPONSIBLE
FOR PRINTER'S ERRORS
• PIKEVILLE • ZEBULON
BETSY LAYNE • ELKHORN CITY
.
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·:~· .::.
·:.
.
·:·:
ie
!
•
!
OPEN 7 OA YS A WEEK
8A.M.TOJJP.M.
*****************.
WE GLADLY
ACCEPT U.S.D.A.
FOOD STAMPS.
KRAFT
ITALIAN/FRENCH/CATALINA
DRESSINGS
EACH
8-0Z. BTL.
69c
CHICKEN NOODLE SOUP
10Yz-OZ.f$1 00
CANS
.,_1.
2~ig~.J89c
~
.
FISCHER'S
IIJMILII.a
·
REG. OR BEEF
VAN CAMP'S
BEANEE WEENEE
2~fis/79c
BANNER
4~~~Lagc .CHILDREN'S LIQUID
BATH TISSUE
SANDWICHES ...
FLAVORICH
FUDGESICLES ..
TIDE LAUNDRY
DETERGENT .
12-PAK
$119
u -PAK
$189
DISH LIQUID
BANNER BRAND
$119
SAUSAGE .....
a
LUCKY LEAF
LUCKY LEAF
.
APPLE JUICE.
CASTLEBERRY
COUNTRY CROCK
~~~- MARGARINE
24-oz.
VALVOLINE
PERFECTION
BIG COUNTRY
SANDWICH
MATE .......... - ~1:~~:
gge
.
~
'
.
BONELESS
CHUCK ROAST
...oz.
Z4-0Z.
.......
59
LB•
4·
J$1
89 e BANANAS......
$349
:t:·
59C
$349 LETTUCE ........... .
3-LBS.
TRASH BAGS
GOLDEN
RIPE
LBS.
QT.
ICEBERG
2
HEAD
HEAD
25
age
·LBS.
10-cT.
2
/79C
~PORK &BEANS..
Ji~
VAN CAMP'S
La.
79 e $
age
$15 9
.. . .. ... .. .
BES PAK
HOLLYWOOD STYLE
C
10W40 OIL....
LOG CABIN
4-STICK
FISCHER'S
2-0z.
APPLE BUTTER ...
59C·
MARGARINE .
CORN MEAL.
3/$109
BISCUITS.......
FLOUR
PARKAY
1
79
G~~:r
BEEF STEW ...
BOX
$119
2
IVORY
$
-PANADOL .
$13 9
FLAVORICH
2-LBS.
39
LB. $1
39
CHUcK......................LB.$1
age
WIENERS .......................... 12-oz.
.
29
ROAST ............... .............LB.$1
$13
9
S'PARE RIBS ......................
BOLOGNA ............................
WHOLE KERNEL CORN
Tropican!
llmllll!D
BACON .....
FISCHER'S
FRESHLIKE
DIAIIG£
JUICE
$
·LIVERs.·. .... . ... ... . . ...... . . ~~-.sgc
CAMPBEU'S
3
ARMOUR
�Wednesday, January 11, 1984
Section One, Paee Ten
The Floyd County Times
0\'~N t\'tS
fQ.\D"~ N\G tA
UN't\l 1 p. .
STORE-SHOE STORE-DENIMLAND
SAVE ON FIRST-QUALITY CLOTHING AND SHOES
WOMAN'S CLUB MEETS
STEEl BUilDING FACTORY SALE
30
40
50
X
X
X
50
50
75
X
X
X
12 $4,071
15 $5.586
15 $9.679
Large• S•zes A•a I able
1-800-241-8339
ARGO STEEL BUILDINGS
JOB OPENING
The Town of W1yllnd is liking job •pfor city derk. It Is 1 J)lrttime job. Startinc Slllry is 5150 •
plle~tlons
month.
QUAUFICATIONS:
• High sc:hool diplom• • Typing 1nd
bao,.kteping skills
Applie~tions accepted at the town
hill 011 Tuescl1ys from 9 1.m until 1
p.m.
Deadline: Jan. 17, 1984.
PATRICIA MURPHY
M1yor
PRESTONSBURG
1+21
NOTICE
Dave Stephens did not cut anyone's gas
ott on Slick Rock. Several people
unhooked themselves from Mr.
Stephen's line, and hooked onto the line
supplying gas owned by Brodls Goble
and leased to Cecil Gene Jarrell. The
ones that hooked on ron a gas line over
my and Alvin Joe's land wlthaul our permission. We wont this line moved or pay
us 530 o month and bury the line 18 Inches. If not, they will bP sued.
RUSSELL JARRELL
ALVIN JOE JARREll
II pd
l\lr and Mrs. Jack M. Vaughan, of
Auxier, Ky., announce the engagement
and forthcoming marriage of their
daughter, Sandra Lea. to Gregory Kirk
Howard, son of Carlotta Howard, of Salversville, Kv.
· Miss Vaughan is a 1983 graduate of
Morehead State University and is presently employed by the Johnson County Board of Education. Mr. Howard is
also a 1983 graduate of Morehead State
University and is presently employed by
the London Bridge Company, of London.
Ky.
The couple will exchange vows at 6:30
p.m .. on Saturday, January 14, at the
East Point Church of Christ, East Point,
Ky . The gracious custom of an open
church wedding will be observed.
You Make Us Famous!
105 North lake Drive, Near the U.S. 23 Intersection
PHONE 886-1396 PRESTONSBURG
WEDNESDAY . SPECIAL
Try Our Famous
3 Piece Dinner!
3 pieces of golden brown Famous Recipe
Fried Chicken, mashed potatoes and gravy,
creamy cole slaw and one fresh, hot biscuit.
Regular or Mild Spicy
•10 Pieces of delicious
Famous Recipe Fried
Chicken
•2 Salads of your
choice
[5]
EFFECTIVE
ANY DAY
*ANY DAY*
The Prestonsburg Woman's Club met
Thursday evening, January 6, with the
president, Mrs. Elizabeth Ramey,
presiding. The devotionals, the theme of
which was "Women of the Bible, and
You and Me," were given by Mrs.
Dorothy Harris. The Pledge of
Allegiance to ·the American Flag was
said in unison by those in attendance.
The secretary, Mrs. Joyce Allen, gave
her report, and the treasurer's report
was given by Mrs. Dorothy Harris.
The secretary, Mrs. Joyce Allen, read
.a note from Mrs. Elizabeth Ramey and
Mrs. Dorothy Harris thanking the club
for their remembrances following the
recent death of theirfather, T.J. Leake.
Mrs. Eileen Burchett, chairman of the
arts and crafts committee, suggested,
and members in attendance agreed, that
money made by this department should
be used for repairs for the arts and
crafts building, which is operated by the
club at Archer Park. She announced that
there would be an arts and crafts
meeting for interested members, there
Thursday, January 12, at 7:30.
Mrs. Garnett Fairchild, chairman of
the community improvement committee, presided a plan for planting
dogwood trees at the entrance of the
Highlands Regional Medical Center
here, and this was met with approval by
the club.
Mrs. Carolyn Traum, finance committee chairman, announced that dues for
the Prestonsburg Woman's Club had
been raised from $12.00 to $14.00, beginning with the club year, 1974-75.
Mrs. Traum, program leader,
presented Leonard Grant, who served as
auctioneer for a spirited "white
elephant" sale. Approximately $110.00,
which is earmarY.ed to be used for the
purchase of dogwood trees for the
hospital, was realized. Mrs. Traum, on
behalf of the club, presented Mr. Grant
with an appreciation gift.
Present for Thursday night's meeting
were Leonard Grant, a guest, and
members, Arnita Snavely, Joyce Allen,
Dorothy Harris, Carolyn Traum, Phyllis
Herrick, Dacia Woods, Garnett Fairchild, Mabel Brown, Dorothy Stover,
Judy Kettle, Dolly Pettrey, Boots
Adams, Mabel Donahoe, Sharon Sparr,
Susie Poe, Katherine Poe, Christine
Spradlin, Rebecca Rasnick, and Eileen
Burchett. The hostesses, Zelia Archer,
Eva Collins, and Abby Grant, served a
dessert course to those in attendance.
The next meeting will be Thursday
evening, February 2, at 7:30 at the same
location. The hostesses will be Wonnell
Godsey, Ora Bussey, Boots Adams,
Turp Combs, and Nancy Martin. The
program leader will be Eva Collins, and
Nancy Howard, an employee of the First
Commonwealth Bank here, will speak
on "Women and Banking." The devotional leader will be Eileen Burchett.
MT. MANOR PATIENTS
Patients presently at the Mountain
Manor Nursing Home on College Layne
here, and their home addresses are:
Kate Adams, Ada Alley,.. Minerva
Arnett, Kathryn Bentley, Eula Branham, Lona Cole, James Cornett, Mabel
Fannin, Vernie Gibson, Lincoln Gilbert,
Myrtle Hale, Jordan Hatfield, Mabry
Lafferty, Gladys Martin, Ethel Reffitt,
Beatrice Roberts, Alice Setser, and Cora
Smith, all of Prestonsburg; William
Adkins, Glenn Clarke, Ruie McFadden,
Birdie Monk, Louise Selvage, Osa Stafford, Martha Stambaugh, Bobby Travis,
,Proctor Vanhoose, ~md BPrtha Spears,
Paintsyille; Mousie Howell, Harold;
Niza Bevins, South Williamson, W.Va.;
Josie Blanton and William Hall ,
McDowell; Fred Hall, Galveston;
Patr-icia Burton and Imajean Hall,
Somerset; Jenettia Taylor, Nippa;
Gladys Carter, Sidney; Lizzie Sturgill,
Endicott; Henry Griffith, Blaine; John
Wells, Chattaroy, W. Va.; Elmer Castle
and Emma Workman, Inez; Nancy
Tackett, Lackey; Hattie Collins,
Langley; Haley Hamilton, and Eunice
Hamilton, Beaver; Mary Hale, Pilgrim;
Geddie Lykins, and Mollie Patrick,
Salyersville; Edna Mil on and Willa
Rice, East Point; Rachel Martin,
Elkhorn City; Elon May and Henrietta
Sandefur, Pikeville, and Carol Riddle,
of Stanton.
Mrs. Goldie Rorrer is the director of
Mt. Manor.
SAVE ON NATIONALLY ADVERTISED MERCHANDISE
Brothers Enlist
In AF Training
Delmer and Elmer Frasure, sons of
Mr. and ~Irs . Delmer Frasure, of Grethel, enlisted in the Air Force Delayed
Enlistment Program CDEPJ recently,
according to Air Force Master Sergeant
Jim Brooks, of the Ashland recruiting
office.
The Betsy Layne High School graduates are already accruing time in the Air
Force for pay purposes although they
will not report for active duty until
February when, they will board a jet airliner for Lackland Air Force Base, Texas. There they will undergo six weeks
basic training prior lo receiving specialized training.
Of all the 250,000 species
of flowering plants, there
are just two that don't
need water from the soiL
One is the pygmy cedc:r
and the other is the caper
plant of the Sahara. Both
take all the moisture they
need f~om the night air.
An old toothbrush can
loosen
sticky dirt on
the kitchen can opener_
�Wednesday, January 11, 1984
A'M'END OLD CHRISTMAS
Besides the large number of guests
from Prestonsburg, who attended the
Old Christmas program at May Lodge,
Sunday afternoon, there were others
from as far away as New Mexico. Those
from a distance who signed the guest
egister, were: WiJiiam P. Runnels,
Jbuquerque, New Mexico. Glenda
Blackburn, Erich Blackburn, Osie
Slone, Goldia Williams, Beatrice Porter,
Nellie K. Lafferty, and Danese Amburgy, of Allen; Mr. and Mrs. Jack
Crider, and son Byron, Mr. and Mrs.
Walter Snavely, Herbert Spradlin, and
Elva Spradlin, East Point; Roland
Vaughan, and Susan Vaughn, Greenfield, Ohio; Ousley Johnson and Eiben
and Willia Stiltner, Elkhorn City; Clyde
lien, David; Lita Jo Nelson, Meally ;
Anna Sue Stumbo, McDowell, Ruby
Akers, Drift; Cecelia Little and Edith
Hopkins, Minnie; Carrie Stamper,
Grayson; Helen Ison, Mr. and Mrs. Errit Hayes, and Sunny Davis, Martin ;
Hattie Rowland, Mr. and Mrs. Bill Rowland, and Russell Everman, Ashland ;
Georgia Muncy, Ardena Wheeler, Mary
Ann James, Bernice Alley, Emma Lou
Thompson, Gwen Daniels, Misty
aniels, and Ruth Blankenship, Pikeille; Kay Roberts Baird, leader of Girl
Scout Troop No. 160, of Pikeville and girl
scouts Elizabeth Baird, Lin Valera, Jenny Smith, Paula Dye, Bartie Oyster,
Kristy Branham, Becky Lockhart and
Gina Dameron.
Old-time music, dancing, and storytelling furnished an afternoon of entertainment, and guests helped themselves
from the traditional wassail bowl' and
the plates of old-time sugar cookies.
rs. Edith James, founder, Mrs.
Kathryn Frazier, director, Miss Kathy
Harris and Miss Betty Rowland, assistant directors, and all who participated
in this yearly event, have reason to be
proud of this presentation.
FIRST CHILD BORN
Mr. and Mrs. Timothy Steffey, of
Eastern, announce the birth of their first
child, a daughter, Ashley Nichole, Dember 23 at Our Lady of the Way
ospital.
The maternal grandparents are Mr.
and Mrs. Romie Gene Osborne, of
Eastern, and the paternal grandparents
are James Steffey, of Tram, and Janelle
Steffey, of Dwale.
The Floyd County nmes
Section One, Paae Eleven
Golden Anniversary
HERE DURING HOLIDAYS
DOCJA B. WOODS, SOCIETY EDITOR
ASK CLOTHING DONATIONS
Women of the Irene Cole Memorial
<First) Baptist Church will be collecting
clothing for students and their families
at the .C lear Creek Baptist School, during the months of January and
February. Persons wishing to donate
clothing and shoes for infants, children
and adults, are being asked to take them
to the basement of the church Annex.
DINNER GUEST
Mr. and Mrs. Fred A. Wells celebrated
their fiftieth wedding anniversary with
an open house at the First Christian
Church at North Arnold Avenue here,
December 18. The celebration was
hosted by their children and grandchildren. Gifts were presented to the
couple by their family and friends.
MRS. MOORE OBSERVES
9JST BIRTHDAY
Mrs. Bill (Granny) Moore, of Prestonsburg, celebrated her 91st birthday
Dec. 23. She received many nice gifts.
Her pastor and several members of the
Fitzpatrick First Baptist Church came
by to wish her a happy birthday, and she
also received phone calls from all her
grandchildren.
Granny says she isn't getting older the
numbers are just getting bigger. She is
the mother of Wade Moore, Grace
Moore, Opal Bolen and Mable Hicks.
HERE FOR HOLIDAYS
Mr. and Mrs. Carl Wise, of Ten Mile,
Tenn., spent the Christmas holidays
with Mr. Wise's son, Jimmy, daughterin-law, Valerie, and granddaughter,
Shirley Ann Wise.
RETURN HOME
Dr. and Mrs. Forest Skaggs have
returned to their home at Lynch, Kentucky after spending the holiday week
here with her mother, Mrs. Troy B.
Sturgill, and other relatives.
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Arnold Avenue
Prestonsburg
Mrs. Edith James was the dinner
guest on Old Christmas Day (Friday,
January 6), of Mr. and Mrs. Ellis
Buchanan and their daughters, Misses
Tracee, Maurya, and Wende Buchanan,
at their log house at Oaklawn Estates,
Hager Hill.
NEW HOMEMAKERS MEMBERS
New members recently welcomed to
the various homemakers' clubs of this
county have been, Melvina Scott, Maytown; Donna Caudill, Allen; Ella Jane
Hall, Middle Creek, and Jewell Young,
Prater Creek. Members-at-large
welcomed have been, Hala Mae Hale,
Joyce Duff, Wanda Duff, Vessie Hunt,
Teresa Taylor, Ann Davis, and Carolyn
Cornett.
HOSTS NEPHEW, FAMILY
Mrs. Dorothy Sturgill had as her guest
recently her nephew, Terry Wicker, of
Morehead, who came here for a visit
before leaving, with his wife and children, for a three-year assignment in
Egypt by Wright Air Force base. Mr.
Wicker is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Monroe Wicker, formerly of Martin and
Prestonsburg, presently of Morehead.
SPENDS CHRISTMAS HERE
Mrs. Winnie Merritt spent Christmas
wil.h her daughter, Mrs. Willie Frasure
and Mr. Frasure. Other guests were the
Frasures' daughter and son-in-law, Mr.
and Mrs . David Justice and daughter,
Melissia Dawn, of Prestonsburg.
RETURN FROM TENNESSEE
Mr. and Mrs. Bradie Shepherd have
returned home after spending a threeweek vacation in Johnson City, Tenn.
They spent Christmas and New Year' s
with their daughter, Mrs. Kathy Sample,
granddaughter, Mrs. Gary Walker, Mr.
Walker, Rebecca and Jillian.
Their great-granddaughter, Rebecca
Jean, celebrated her seventh birthday,
January 3.
CHRISTMAS GUESTS
Mrs. Oak Mullins, of David, had as her
Christmas guests , Miss Charlotte
Mullins, of Frankfort; Mr. and Mrs. Joe
Mullins, of Ashland, and their daughter,
Mrs. Philip Thompson, and Mr. Thompson, also of Ashland. On Christmas Eve,
they were joined by Mrs. Faye Mullins
and children, Sarah, Alison and Chad.
all of Athens Ohio, and Mr. and Mrs.
Robert Price, of Pikeville.
LUNCHEON GROUP
Prior to the Old Christmas program
at May Lodge, this past Sunday, Mrs.
Edith James, foupder, Miss Ethel
Burke, Miss Betty Rowland, and Mrs.
Margare.t Alley, who are among the
members of the Jenny Wiley Chantresses taking part in the program that
day, and Mrs. Docia Woods, formed a
group for lunch at May Lodge, annual
site of the event.
Mrs. Jack F . Wells and daughter, Miss
Susan Wells, had members of their family with them at their home during the
holidays. They were Mrs. Wells' son,
Jack Carter Wells, a student at Centre
College, Danville ; her mother, Mrs.
Estill Carter, of Pikevile, and her sister,
Mrs. Saundra Toussaint, of Lexington.
WELCOMED TO CONGREGATION
Welcomed by letter into the fellowship
of the Irene Cole Memorial <First) Baptist Church, during services there last
Sunday morning were Roy and Joy
Shepherd and their daughter Celeste
Shepherd, who recently moved here
from Florida. Standing with them at the
altar was their small son, Jeremy.
ASKS ENTRIES
Mrs. Frances Fitts, Floyd County
Home Economist, asks that homemakers interested in entering the poetry
and short story contests, sponsored the
Kentucky Homemakers, please call her
at her office for further information. The
deadline for submitting material for
these contests is February 1.
RETURN AFTER VISIT
Mr. and Mrs. Ben Conley, formerly of
this county, now of Ada, Ohio, have
returned to their home following an
after-Christmas visit of several days
with their mother, Mrs . Grace Conley,
and other relatives and friends.
WELCOMED BY NEW NEIGHBORS
Mrs. Lucy RatJ.:>(leiJ is being welcomed into the South Arnold Avenue community here . Mrs. Ransdell, who had
resided on North Lake Drive for many
years, wa s a ccompanied by her
daughters, Mrs. Helen Schroeder, of
Maryland, and Mrs. Sue Shields, of
Texas, and their families, and others in
making the move to her new home.
Other recent additions welcomed to this
community have been Mr. and Mrs.
Oliver Webb, Jr., of Dayton, Ohio, and
Mr. and Mrs. Paul Spencer and family,
of Allen.
Bailey
ELECTROLYSIS
Permanent Hair Removal
Certified by
State License.
*flEE
CONSULTATION
HOLIDAY GUESTS
CHRISTMAS EVE GUESTS
On Christmas Eve Mr. and Mrs.
Wayne Wendell Ratliff had as their dinner guests, at their home at Allen, their
sons, Chris and Chip Ratliff, his mother,
Mrs. Wayne Ratliff, Sr., his sister and
brother-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Paul
Lenox, the Lenoxs' son, Kean and
daughter Linda, and a family friend,
Mrs. Grace Conley.
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas LeMaster with
them through holidays, their daughter,
Mrs . Edwin Wingham, Mr. Wingham,
and the Winghams' son, Matthew
Thomas and daughter, Amy Elizabeth,
of Tipp City, Ohio. Joining them on
Christmas Day for the traditional
Christmas dinner was Mrs. Florence H.
Reynolds.
LEGS
NO. LAKE DR., PRESTONSBURG
Thurs. &t Fri., 10 a.m. to 4:30 p.m.
Saturday by appointment
24 HRS. PHON£
SERVICE
886·8924
MOVES HERE
Mrs. Clare Cass, who for the past
several years, has resided in Lexington,
has moved to an apartment at Highland
Terrace here. Mrs. Cass spent the
Christmas and New Year's holidays
with her sister, Mrs. Lucy Regan, prior
to occupying her new home.
AARP SLATES COURSE
FOR ADULT DRIVERS
Jenny Wiley Chapter AARP will hold
an age 50 and over mature driver's
training course, Monday and Tuesday,
January 23-24, at First Presbyterian
Church, here, from 9a.m. tilll2 :30 p.m .
Registration fee must be in no later
than Jan. 13. Send to Wilma Montgomery, East Point, Ky. 41216. For further information, call 886-3473.
SPEND CHRISTMAS HERE
The Rev. and Mrs. Hondel Adams and
sons, Less and Lance, spent Christmas
here with her mother, Mrs. Hager May,
and sons Wayne and Wilkie, at their
home. The Adams family recently moved from Kokomo, Indiana, where he was
pastor of the Church of Christ to Vinton;
Virginia where he is pastor of a church
of the same denomination. Their son,
Lance remained in Kokomo to finish his
high school year, and to continue playing on the baseball team the remainder
of the year. Less has been attending college in Nashvile, Tennessee.
ALL
WINTER MERCHANDISE
Y3· OFF
PHONE 886·1791
COURT STREET PRESTONSBURG
4 BIG VALUE DAYS!
VISITORS HERE
Mrs. Zelia Archer had as her
houseguests this past weekend, her
daughter, Mrs. Bill Trosper, Mr.
Trosper, and their daughters, Misses
Lori Ellen and Elizabeth Anna Trosper,
of Somerset. While here, the Trosper
family also visited with her grandmother, Mrs. E .A. Smith, who is a patient at the Mountain Manor Nursing
home.
WED. THRU SAT., JAN. 11 THRU JAN. 14
PRESTONSBURG, KENTUCKY
STOREWIDE
RETURNS FROM OHIO
Mrs. Ella Prater has returned to the
home of her daughter, Mrs. James E.
Goble after spending the Christmas
holidays with members of her family in
Portsmouth, Ohio.
BIRTH ANNOUNCED
Mr. and Mrs. William C. Frazier are
the parents of a baby daughter, Corlie
Michelle, born January 5 at King's
Daughters' Hospital, Ashland. The
baby's paternal grandparents are Mr.
and Mrs. Chalmer Frazier, and the
paternal great-grandmother is Mrs.
E.A. Stumbo, all of Prestonsburg. The
maternal grandparents are Mr. and
Mrs. Wilbur Taylor, of Argillite, Kentucky.
STORE
HOURS:
9 TO 5
(ENTIRE STOCK NOW ... )
20%ro50%oFF
• VISA • MASTERCARD • AMERICAN EXPRESS • COX'S CHARGE •
~lltWIJ~~
$SAVE$
�Wednesday, Jan uary 11, 1984
The Floyd County Times
Section One, Page Twe lve
Stock·u
d
v
on all your favorite
-~rands at Pic·Pac!
•
s
j ;yz. ·
30' OFF LABEL
Liquid..
.
1
59
BLADE-s'
CUT
LB.
U.S.D.A. CHOICE ENGLISH OR
Shoulder Roast
Beef For Stew ......
HOLLY FARMS FRESH
Fryer Thighs.. . . . .. . . .. .LB.
F;ooM WEIGHT. WHITING (5 LB. Box. ' 3.89)
ozen Ftsh .... .. .. .. . .
tB.
12 OZ. OSCAR MAYER (BEEF OR REGULAR)
Sliced Bolo~na .
T~;;T~t~EL
s 09
Catsap .. ~LSo.:No_sALT 1
MONTE
.
Slicj
S I 99
LB.
'119
ge
7
8J29
8
Superior Hot Dogs .....
12-0z. Pkg.
Ba '
•
LB.9
C
9
'699
3 Lb. Canned Ham ..... .
Pork Spare Ribs ...... 79c
HORMEL BONELESS
QUART JAR WHOLE & SLICED
Clauss~n
19
p or k Chops ...
MIXED 61 . .
... LB.
ARMOUR VERIBEST FAMILY-PAK
2-Lb. Roll
.......... 8J59
Pickles
A
Gunnoe's Sausage ....
$279
GARDEN FRESH
a:!~~!~~~~ . 7 ~
R;~pes... .... ...... . LB.89t
Jl!fn'!toas. . . . ..LB.2 9~
...
BUNCH
s
PLUMP JUICY
. 1
12 OZ. REGULAR OR
1:::~~
GOLDEN
Fruit
RollS
I
oz.
sMEi~:;.r~F.
Tangerines
79
3/6 1F~t~Rs LB~A~l
15 OZ.
~A~MOUNT REGULAR
.Cbala
ALso
1&1/Beans...~~T. ...
69
~/~tt
.,
.
GALLON BOTTLE • '1.00 OFF LABEL!
10 COUNT GLAD HANDLE-TIE
Garbage Bags
Lysol Cleaner ...
BIG QUART JAR!
Puritan Oil .. ..
13 OZ. RAGU CHEESE,PEPPERONI OR SAUSAGE
Pizza Quick Kit . .. ........
60Z.HUNT
Tomato Paste. ... .. ....
7 oz. MARTHA WHITE
. M·txes.
M U fftn
•BLUEBERRY
•STRAWBERRY
.".APP~~CINNAMON
18 OZ. CRISPY WHEAT & RAISINS OR 14 OZ.
2/7fte
7
3/8 1
Lucky Charms
18 OZ. GENERAL MILLS
.Golden Grahams . ... ..
600Z. BOX
Bisquick Mix....
c~~~i:::;~~-~-~~~-~
.
'2"
'149
.. .. ..... . .. .. ...
i " .. . .... .. . .... ... , ...
8189
'219
8249
•t •
e
8 OZ. REGULAR OR GENTLE SHAMPOO
Vidal Sassoon .
20 COUNT COLD TABLETS
Alka Seltzer Plus
200 COUNT · A GREAT VALUE!
Filler Paper
10 COUNT PACKAGE
Hillbilly Biscuits
8 OZ. LIGHT 'N LIVELY
Yogurt ......
2 LB. HYDE PARK CRINKLE CUT
'1 09
...
. . . . . . .'log
15 OZ. PINE ACTION
Beef Tamales
J'~~~~'i::ons. 5/99e
8669
Wisk Detergent .
15 OZ. PARAMOUNT
G~:;~vo;l'c;~'!" 2/89e
...
ALSO . NEW
... 59~
..... 69e
9~
li:~~~~ol:i;:~e 59~
99
~:!~::~ .. . . . . . . . . 99
~~r:s~~---·····
·
·
·
·
·
·
'159
Grapefruit Juice. .. ............ .
8 OZ~ REGULAR, RIPPL~D OR LIGHT
Prtngles Chtps .. .. _cHEEZ·UM~
Merit Saltines
':K'b'
~
2 LB. TUB BLUE BONNET
48 OZ. OCEAN SPRAY UNSWEETENED
160Z. M>X
Fresh
sgnach
.......... 8129
'199
. '189
. .· 89~
. 2/8 1 .
.2/79e
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more at
Pic-Pac!
gge
Cottage Cheese.... . .. .. . .. ....
99""'
Broccoli Spears
99""'
caut•nower .. . .. .. .. .
'249
Chicken Breast Patties . .
16 OZ. BREAKSTONE LOW-FAT OR CREAMY
10 OZ. GREEN GIANT (IN BUTTER SAUCE)
.Al5~ i..'W~~iE~J~~our~
10 OZ. GREEN GIANT BROCCOLI OR
1
IN CHEESE
s AucE......
~
~
12 OZ. TYSON TURKEY BREAST OR
HALF GALLON HYDE PARK
Ice Cream .....
8J29
�•
MANY
MODELS!
Cavalier Type 10 Coupe
MUSIC-CARTER-HUGHES invites you in for a test drive today!
2-doors, 4-doors, wagons, AND PRICED JUST RIGHTI
* FREE Rust-Proofing on any new Chevy or Buick
Purchased between Jan. 1.1 and Jan. 31st!
WE HAVE JUST RECEIVED A
LARGE SHIPMENT OF CAVALIERS,
AND MORE ARE ARRIVING/
1
• SEE ONE OF THESE SALESMEN: .
ED MUSIC, ESTill lEE CARTER
PAUl HUGHES, NELSON BALDRIDGE .
EDDIE MEADE, BOBBY BURCHETT ·
CARL C~Tt~.l JO~ER De~OSSETT
DAVE ESTEPP, TOM ROSE
.
!!FRIDAY ONLY!!
AT
FAMILY SIZE BOX
12-0Z. CAN . ·
16-0Z. LOAF
• NOT RESPONSIBLE FOR
PRINTING ERRORS.
• WE RESERVE THE RIGHT
TO LIMIT QUANTITIES.
1-LB. PKG.
SAVORY
FRYING CHICKEN
. LEG QUARTERS
BREAKFAST
BACON
V2 GALLON
3-LB. CAN
16-0Z. CAN
IGA
ICE CREAM
MAXWELL HOUSE
COFFEE
IGA
TOMATOES
$109
12-0Z. PKG.
FRESH
IGA
BREAKFAST
SAUSAGE
WILSON'S
CORN KING
WIENERS
PORK
SPARE RIBS
79c
GROUND
BEEF . .. .. .. ... ..
69c · L8.79c
$109 iGA~K
LB.
BOLOGNA .... .
$139
~lfl:E~ l.\rEGRS ...................... 49L~
1
IGA
POTATO CHIPS
ss,:? 2/89c 79c
46-0Z. CAN
1-LB. PAK
TWIN PAK
STOKELY
TOMATOJUICE......
age
2/79·c
~~~s · · .. ...... ·
g
9 C
3/89C
::itau~u~~N~T
59c
:RGJAN
TOOTSIE ROLL
CANDY BARS . . . . . . . .
8-0Z. TUMBLERS
,
SHEDD'S
MARGARINE ...
MARGARINE . . . . . . . . .
'
4/ J$1
GOLDEN .
RIPE · · - ..
BANANAS ...
FRESH
HEAD LEnUCE
·
QUART SIZE
SALAD
TOMATOES
69 C age
HEAD
�Wednesday, January 11, 1984
The Floyd County Times
Section Two, Paae Two
(Reproduced below is page 2 of the 21st issue of The Floyd County Times
published Nov. 4, 1927)
•
. . . . . ·:.:);•_..::. . . . . . .
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lo(
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VOTE FOR.
Mrs. Harper are now concSucttna a
re~taurant at Pikeville.
Mr. and Mn. J. W. Huff were villtlne
1Lackey Saturday. Mr. HUff ta havtna
I dell~~ w~rk done by Dr. o. c. Collina,
·, uf b.ckty,
~rl. l!:ltza Reed and Mrs. Ellen Gear- 1
heart were vlsitlng their pnrents, Mr. :
and Mrs. Wm. Hutr, here Monday.
1 Bert Gearheart, of Raccoon, Salt
Lick, ls vts!~ing relatives at Columbus,
1
Ohio.
•
! Chester Howard, this place, was visit- 1
ing at Lackey Sunday.
Mildred Duke, daughter of Dr. lnd
· Mrs. r.. W. Duke.• of this place, WllS
v:s't'ng her parents here during the
r:rc~t \\'eek-end. Miss Duke is a stuc!E:~!: in :\:ayo C'llege 1 Paintsville.
I
..
WILL GOBLE, a son of the late Judge James Goble, who has had
twenty-five years' experience in this office, will be chief deputy,
which assuaes the public that the office will be efficiently kept.
Mr. Stumbo will give personal attention at all times, and the office
will be kept open early and late to accommodate the people. He
wants the office for himself and is under no obligation to any one.
..
.."~Lat'n.
·"'b-tt.t '
J'ttzpatrlck 8-~
~e•tonsburr,
~
'
A. J. MAlf
Attorney and ca.msetor
Practices ·i n eJ{ oourta
Firs& Natiellal n.~ Bulicllnc
Prestonsburg,
L!~ht Fanta~.tic?
I
a.d
;.g
•~
I
CHURCH -COLUMN
.·
This column Is dewted to churCh
announcements, and all churches are
invited to use this department, co~
ftnJna'
B. M. James
E. Hampton Barnett, R., E;d., M. A.,
Pastor
·
SunHay School, 9:30; Preach1ng, 11;
Epworth League, 6:45; Preaching, 7:38;
Prayer Meetina', Wednesday, 7:30;
Choir Practice, Prtda.y, 7:30.
We have claases for all ages and
grades In the Sunday School, ta~ht by
competent teachers. We will be pleased to see you and have you worship
The Motto of this office under
Stumbo will be:
with us in any or all our services.
PRESBYTERIAN CBURCB
I. BASCOM CLARKE
Attorney-at-Law
omce in Howard Building
Prestonsburg,
JIABKINS AND HARKINS
9:45 a. m., Sunday schoOl service. In
closing Dr. Barbour makes 15 minute&
Attonteys aJUl counsellors at Law
~.
2 p. m ., Junior Endeavor.
7:15 p. m ., lilenior Endeavor.
7:30 p. m., preaching service.
to
Pres n5barg,
A coJ:dlal invitaUon to all. "Come
with us and we will do thee good."
1
j
Ke~,ttackJ
=============1
Reo/. John Barbour, D. D., M1n1ster
"SERVICE FIRST, LAST AND
ALL THE TIME"
Joe Hobson
JAMES & HOBSON
Attorneys and Counselors
Practice In All Courts
OMce Over Modern Drug ShOi!
au
contrtb-u.tlons to .. small
space as po&atble.
IT IS YOUR DUTY TO VOTE FOR HIM. HE HAS ALWAYS BEEN
ACCOMMODATING, AND IS TRUE TO HIS FRIENDS.
On November 8, vote for
.
.I......-..
I
METHODIST CBUBCJI
AlKentucky boy, hom and reared in your own
home mountains. A man of the common people
who knows your needs, and who will serve you
to the best of his ability.
•
EDWARD L. ALLEN
Oldtime:·~ r-:... J spend an enjbyable
Attomey-:d-La~
ten minutes by checking up on the
calls for the old-time square dance, as
Filllt NaUoDal
·~
given below from the B!g Sandy News:
treskoabarr,
K:r.
C:'!ute yer :- ::.rr.~-:-r~! L~t her go!
~
·"'a:at.;e dl~ ;,.n' c~:-st•dol
\
}
Si'!;ng ~·our &il'ls &n' run fl.Way!
~=:;:==::;===:;:::::;~;-~
·#,
Right :ln' lefts an• gents sashay!
Gents to right an' swing or cheat!
On to next girl a.n' repeat!
CAUDu.L \& .TA~
B:llance next an• don't be shy!
A~J'I-aHawSwing your pard an' swing her !Ugh!
6eDe~
!'racUoe ·,ba
~
Bunch the gals an' clfcle round!
p..._.f~ke
·~~DCWhack yer feet until they bound!
Form a basket! Break away!
Swing an• kiss, an• all git gay!
All men left an' balance all!
Lift yer hoofs an' let 'em fall!
Swing yer op'site! Swing again 1
Kiss t~e sage hens if you kin!
Ba~k to pardners, do-se-do!
HOWARD & MAYO
All jlne hands an' off you go!
Attorneys and Counselors
Gents salute yer llttle sweets!
Hitch an' promenade to yer seats!
Prestonsburg, Ky.
Circuit Cour Clerk!
Born and Reared on Beaver Creek
Cf'i,. ,
I========t:==~:t;.:"'~.,:
I
............................~.....s....aaa....-..~~~~~...u.........a..........~~~~~~"~~ ~
... ;..-,
1
. Trip the
Democratic Nominee for
0
Kentnck7
_
Mrs. Maggie Hatcfler and ~n James,
W. H. Jones; of Le~ngton, chief in- went to Pikev!Ue Saturday.
spector of mines, ls visiting bere.
I
0. H. STUMBO
James Frazier, of Friend street, has
Miss Josephine Spradlin, of Auxier, ~ 1
sumciently recovered from a reeent m- the gue:.L this week of her sister, Mts.
I ness to be on the streets.
W. W. Wililams.
GET
~~~~~~~
~
~
~
·
lAcquai·ntedl
1
BOSCO NET TEAM
WINS OVER LACKEY
place, transported Bosco's team as far
as Garrett ~ his truck. The remainlng cftl!tat:lce was made on foot. Players !rom. Bosco were Claude Huff, Bert
Hueysville, Ky., oct. 31 <SpU - A Hutr, Leroy and Ray Coburn, George
ivery interesting and hard-fought bas- U)d Frank Balley, and Beecher Allen.
ketball game was staged between Bosco The Bosco boys found Lackey's goals
and Lackey sunday afternoon, drawing higher than those of their home court,
:a considerable attendance and ending 1 and this was some hindrance to their
with a very close score. Bosco won, best playing. Beecher Allen was "high
h5-13.
man."
j Bosco's team had practiced \'ery litBosco fans attending were Mrs. Robtie prior to the game, havin~ finished · ert Huff, Mr. and Mrs. Alex Damron,
• work on their court only a day or two 1Misses Gola Huff and Clarice Webb,
1prevlous to the contest, and it was, Jimmie Prater, Edgell Baldridge, Tal•rather surprising to see them play so madge Allen,. Coley Martin and Earl
: wen. Lackey's team had not practiced Allen. They were well pleased with the
;much either, it is said.
. ftn~ score of 15-13, favoring Bosco.
Fred Bailey, former merchant of this :However, they admitted that the Lack-
!
I!
L~;=Y~Ia~~s~~7di:~~e
ey
1
to Bosco
next Sunday for another trial, and to his work.
everything points to an interesting
game.
MOVE To GAltR£TT
/ Ellis Conley and wife, teachers, have
HURT IN PRACTICE
moved from their Salt Lick home to
I Taulbee Bailey, teacher of this place,
suffered an injured knee Saturday Storte Coal, 10 U to be near the Garwhile practicing basketball. TM knee re~t pUblic school, which they are now
is badly !!Wollen, and Mr. Bailey is un- teanhlfig. Kendall Conley and wife,
able to get about easily. lil! was to former teachers of this school, were
have played with the Bosco team 1 offered a higher salary in another
against Lackey Sunday a fternoon, bUt I school, and they accepted; the present
he was not able to compete on account teachers then took up the work.
of the injury. It is hoped that he ma.y
be able to enter the coming game next
PERSONALS
Sunday, for he has played much and iS
James Harper, formerly of this place,
one of Basco's best players.
was visiting here Monday. Mr. and
I
I
TO M_O_V_E- CAMP
I The camp of the Byllesby Engineer-
Stuart's Pressing Shop
CLEANING, DYEING. ALTERING, REPAIRING
Pressing While You Wait
Clothes Called for and Delivered
l\I..Wotk Guaranteed.
~~ PHONE 199
,_
Mail Orders
FIRST AVENUE
a.iven
Special Attention
PRESTONSBURG . KY.
~ar;;~r:~;e~:~~:/:: ~:lttoL~: ~:::
ing Company, located on Salt Lick, and
keeping the large number of men workl1g on the big pipe line now being laid
into the head of Rock Fork by way Of
Salt Lick, w!ll be moved this week, It is
reported. The largest majority of the
workers will return to West Vlrgil\M.,
along with the camp, the work 1n th18
, county belng near completion.
1 ;::=:=:=:::::::::::=====~
1
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1
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LET ME BE YOUR
INSURANCE AGENT
Writing Life, Accident,
and Automobile·
Accident (Personal).
Get your Auto Accident
po-licy before .an auto .gets
you.
Health
RUSH DRILLING WORK
The New Domain Oil and Gas Company, which recently drilled In a good
gasser on t~ E!lther Horton farm, Rock
Fork, are now ruShlRg work tQ drill anI 1 other well on the same farm sever.'al
men are em~lo~ed making a ~ t(.~
Prestonsburg,
present loCation, and ~he r~ 'Will be
moved 1100n, it fs reported. Wm. Sexj ton, field ·eupedn~llde!lt ~or this -ooiJt'- 1!.~--=-=-=-=-~----......J
I
B. W. PENICK
tty..
1
•
THIS STORE IS OPENING A GET-ACQUAINTED CAMPAIGN. WE SOLICIT
A VISIT FROM YOU. YOU WILL FIND
IN OUR STORE ANYTHING YOU
NEED
At Reasonable Prices
I
1
1:
GENERAL MERCHANDISE OF ALL
SORTS, FEED- EVERYTHING SOLD
BY A STORE GO TO FORM OUR
STOCK AND ENABLE US TO SERVE
YOU BEST.
You will find this store a real
friend to the buyer
K. Moore & Co.
KENTUCKY
GARRETT,
Located in the J. W. Sutton Building
�•
Wednesday, January 11, 1984
The Floyd County Times
Section Two, Paae Thret:.
•
u.s.D.A. CHOICE.
FEDERAL
FOOD
STAMPS
WELCOME
CHUCK
ROAST
19
$
LB.
.
MARTHA ·WHITE .
-~
1SS1Jt
c
~
·SELF-RISING
FLOUR
··:···.. 5-LB.
·: BAG
16-0Z. CAN .
PRELATE
79c
·
.
147-0Z. FAMILY SIZE
PINK
SALMON
PURE X
-LAUNDRY DETERGENT
C
49
NECK BONES.·.. .. .. .. .. ..
$159
FRESH PORK
.
LB.
$13 9
U.S.D.A. CHOICE
CHUCK STEAK .. .. .. ... .
. 64-0Z.
6-PAK
DOWNY
fA~LA'r~s $119
BISCUITS .
FABRIC SOFTENER
li~o~~a~~~ho2/89c
~....-.--------. MARGARINE .
99
$1.
99
c
~f~,r~.~~~
.
MRS. BUMRWORTH'S
.
COMPLETE
$15
9
·PANCAKE
24-0Z.
MRS. BUTIERWORTH'S
~<>if
SYRUP ... .. .
~uALVOLINE
~ 10-W-40
!~
64-0Z. CARTON
$119·.
MINUTE MAID
ORANGE
JUICE ........
INIZ. PKG. BANQUET
~"8::~.
$19 9
88 C ·PPETIE SHELLS
RITZ 79c
...
c
9
512
79 FROSTING.... . .
·PILLSBURY
:~.CAKE MIX...
16.5-0Z. PILLSBURY
ASSORTED FLAVORS
READY·TO-SPREAD
-
50 EXTIIA
FREE QUALITY STAMPS
$209
U.S.D_.A. CHOICE
STEW BEEF ... . !~o!'!l!s~l.. ..
LB.
249
89C
SLICED BACON .... ..... .
gc
ROASTING CHICKEN . ..7
$
U.S.D.A. CHOICE
CUBED STEAK ..!~~~~~! . .
LB.
16-0Z. PKG. SAVORY
.GRADEA
LB.
U.S.D.A. CHOICE BONELESS
NEW YORK
·
$ 399
BROCCOLI
$199
79~~ ·
STRIP STEAK..... .. .. ...
FISCHER'S SMOKED
LB.
PORK CHOPS ...... .. .. ..
LB. .
12-0Z. PKG.
:~r,.r.;s. ~~~~ . ~~~~ sgc
WILSON'S CORN KING
89 C
CHUNK IOLOGNA. ..... .
LB.
2 COUNT PKG.
MOTOR OIL ..
~:s~~T~:~LAVORS
LB•
SO EXTRA
FREE QUALITY STAMPS
WITH COUPON AND PURCHASE o·F
2-16 OZ. LOAVES CASEY'S BRE~D
·_; _____V,!.YI!.tH!.UJ:!~------
•
----liO-E)(;r-l(___ _
.
.
. FREE QUALITY STAMPS
WITH COUPON AND PURCHASE OF
2 PAKS WILSON'S
CORN KING WIENERS
'·--..:!!!JJ!Ii!!L!:!§:!!. ___ ..;;,_~
•»
20-LB. BAG
LEG QUARTERS ........... 79~.
DRUM STICKS ......... .. .51°~.
THIGHS ........... ... .... ... 89~.
· LIV.ERS ........ .............. 69~.
,BREAST ...... ..... .... .... .s1 2~.
--
--~~-
. WHITE
POTATO
$25
~-~- ---~----~
SO E)(TRA
FREE QUALITY STAMPS
WITH COUPON AND PURCHASE OF
2-29 OZ. CANS
"OVAL GUEST PEACHES
VAUD THRU 1·15-84
~ ~ -----~--------------
200 E)(TRA
FREE QUALITY STAMPS
WITH COUPON AND $40 OR MORE ORDER
VAUD THRU 1-15-84
·
�Wednesday, January 11, 1984
The Floyd County Times
Two Years Old
Martin Heirs
Ky.-W.Va. Gas
Dispute Lease
Michael Wade Shepherd celebrated
his second birthday, December 22. He
had an E T. cake and received many
nice gifts. Pre::.ent were his sister, Missy
Shepherd, uncle, Henry Nelson, and
grandmother, Martha Nelson. He is the
son of Rosa Lee Shepherd
IN MEMORIAM
memory of Ted l\liller, who passed
away January 10, 1982.
It has been two years now since the
Lord called you home to dwell with him
forever in peace and no more troubles
We know you are living in peace now and
enjoying yourself with the Lord and your
friends. The day never goes by that we
don't think of you and shed some tears
for you, but the good Lord knows best
and he k•ows which one of his children
has had enough trouble down here, so he
says, "come on home, child."
We miss your face and you in every
thing we do. It is so sad for us without
you, but we have to understand that the
Lord needed you more than we did and
when we have troubles it seems you are
always near to help us overcome.
You will always be in our hearts.
Sadly missed by your wife and
children.
In
Fiscal Court Named
In Spat Over Road
A dispute over reconstruction of a
road serving Rice Branch of Middle
Creek wound up in circuit court here last
week, George C. and Bertha Mae Brown
claiming in a suit that the road being
· built by Mike Little will be dangerous
and hard for long vehicles to negotiate.
• The Browns, who own property there,
are challenging a 1975 fiscal court
resolution authorizing Little to change
the existing road. The authorization was
given without due process and violated
the rights of adjoining landowners,
plaintiffs claim.
<Suits filed in court present only one
side of the issue in contention.)
The seldom seen aardwolf is an unusual
hyena that lives in southern and eastern
sections of Africa. Because of its weak
jaws and teeth, it feeds only on insects
&••···············:
•
•
•
•
•
4lt
-NEEDEDEIGHT PEOPLE
•
•
4lt WHO ARE INTERESTED IN MAK· •
4lt lNG MONEY, GETTING AHEAD, •
•
& BEING SUCCESSFUL.
•
$300 PLUS WEEKLY
•
•
CALL 606-478-2883
•
:
FRIDAY & SATURDAY ONLY
:
••
8:30 a.m.-4:30 p.m.
••
41t
•
•
JSSSISSISISSSSSSSSI
MAKE MORE MONEY WORKING
OVERSEAS IN COUNTRIES UKE KUWAIT.
SAUDI ARABIA, VENEZUELA, ETC. ALSO
POSITIONS ARE AVAILABLE IN NORTHERN REGIONS OF CANADA, ALASKA
AND THE NORTH SEA. PERMANENT/TEMPORARY WORKERS NEEDED ARE
TRADESPEOPLE, LABORERS, PROFEsSIONALS ETC. FOR FULL INFORMATION
SEND A SELF-ADDRESSED, STAMPED
EffVELOPE TO:
Overseas. Dept. 5032,
701 Washington Street
BUFFALO, N.Y. 1420!5
USA
1·11 ·51 .
I
....------;l
In 1921, when A.L. and Melvina Mar
tin leased the natural gas on their
87-acre Drift property to the Kentucky
Coke Company, they concluded what
seemed to be an enviable deal-with
free gas for their own use and a unique
provision allowing them to buy gas back
from the lessee at a bargain rate as long
as the gas lasted.
But Kentucky-West Virginia Gas
Company, successor to Kentucky Coke,
now says it is not bound by the deal, and
the Martin heirs have so far spent two
years in court trying to hold the firm to
it.
The latest round in the complex legal
battle was fought in cir.cuit court here
last week; nobody expects it will be the
last. Whatever the decision on last
week's motion for summary
judgment-Circuit Judge Hollie Conley
promised one within two weeks-it
seems certain to be appealed to a higher
court.
The gas well known as Kentucky-West
No. 41 turned out to be one of the company's most prolific. In operation since
1926, it currently produces over 300,000
cubic feet a day-gas that sells at
around $4 per thousand cubic feet.
The late Gomer R. Martin, Sr., son of
A.L. and Melvina, sought in 1981 to buy
back some of the gas, under a provision
in the 1921 lease allowing the property
owner to purchase it for 30 cents per
thousand cubic feet Martin, who died
last March, said he wanted to sell the
gas "to the people up and down the road
(from) here to Weeksbury."
Gas company officials balked. They
are governed by federal regulations and
are not subject to the jurisdiction of the
Floyd court, they argued. And, in any
event, they rejected a similar bid by
Martin in 1966 and are now protected
against a lawsuit by the statute of limitations, they said.
Martin denied he had tried to exercise
the option in 1966 and Judge Conley ruled last June that an inter-office
memorandum produced by KentuckyWest as proof that he did is not conclusive on that point.
Conley also found that the Floyd court
was entitled to try the case, which now
names Gomer Martin's widow, Golda,
and Harry Martin, administrator of his
estate, as plaintiffs.
The suit seeks a court order compelling Kentucky-West to furnish gas to the
plaintiffs under the terms of the lease
and to pay damages for their lost profits.
After losing the earlier arguments
over jurisdiction and the statute of
limitations, the gas firm's attorneys
recently renewed their attack, citing ancient legal rules that govern the extent
to which successors in title may be legally bound by conditions attached to a contract signed years before.
Arguing for the plaintiffs, Richard E.
Fitzpatrick said the 1921lease conferred
a right on the Martins that they are free
to exercise at any time. But Morris Kennedy, attorney for the gas company, said
the Martins could claim a vested right
only if they exercised it within a
reasonable time.
Kentucky-West earlier agreed to pay
the plaintiffs a royalty amounting to oneeighth 02.5 percent) of net proceeds, in
settlement of the suit. Plaintiffs insisted
on a three-eighths (37.5 percent> royalty, retroactive to December 31, 1981.
Trial has been set for April but the
case will presumably not go before a
jury until the Kentucky Court of Appeals
gives a ruling on the applicability of the
rules-known as the rule against
perpetuities and the rule against illegal
restraint of alienation-cited by the
defense.
PUBLIC NOTICE
The City of Martin does not
discriminate on the basis of handicap·
ped status in the admission or access to,
or treatment, or employment in its programs or activities.
The City of Martin, P.O. Box 1077,
Martin, Ky. 41649, has been designated
to coordinate compliance with the non·
discrimination requirements contained
Section 51.55 of the Revenue Sharing
lt.
Regulations.
RAYMOND GRIFFITH, Mayor
in
1982 FAIRMONT-3 BEDROOM
FURNISHED MOBILE HOME FOR SALE.
Ll-------,
j
Rttall Price .... . . . ... '11,99'"'
•
•
•
•
•
• 700.00
20 FOOT. PORCH AND CARPETED RAMP . . • . . . . • •
GUTTERING
· ••· ••
SKIRTING
••
· ••••
WASHER AND DRYER • . ..••••••
18,000 ITU AIR CONDITIONER
(uted 3 montna)
•• .
• WCTRIC POL£ AIID lifTER
.. .•••
tOflltt
Funding of medical care for people
Jiving in rural areas is, in many parts of
the country, hard to obtain, but in
Alachua county, Florida where Prestonsburg native, Sandra Prater, is director of the Alachua County Organization
for Rural Needs (Acorn) , services are
being expanded.
In the past year, the non-profit organization has acquired new personnel,
established a children's clinic, provided a pharmaceutical outlet, and begun
a weight-reduction course. Another project under way is the addition of a dental clinic. All of these services are
available to any of the 9,000 residents in
rural LaCrosse and Monteocha-Gordon
in northern Alachua county.
Miss Prater, who recently spent the
holidays here with her parents, Mr. and
Mrs Herbert Prater, is a graduate of
Prestonsburg High School and of Berea
College. She received her master's
degree, and is presently working on her
Ph.D at Florida State College in Gainesville. She has been director of the clinic
since 1980.
Appalred Announces
Personnel Changes
Because of funding cuts, only one attorney will be hired to replace the two
experienced attorneys who resigned
recently from t!le staff of the Appalachian Research and Defense Fund
of Kentucky (Appalred), Program
Director John Rosenberg announced
this week.
Joining the program is Karen Alfano,
a recent graduate of Georgetown
University Law School. She is a member
of the District of Columbia Bar and is
applying for admission to Kentucky
courts.
Kathleen O'Sullivan, staff attorney in
Appalred's Prestonsburg office for the
past five years; recently resigned to take
a position with a law firm serving New
York city employees. Laura Bowers,
who has worked with the legal services
agency for eight years, also resigned.
Appalred's Prestonsburg office serves
clients in Floyd, Johnson, Martin,
Magoffin and Lawrence counties and is
the administrative center for 10 other
area offices.
The Lackey-Garrett-Wayland
WOMAN'S CLUB
The Lackey-Garrett-Wayland Woman's Club observed Christmas with a
dinner at the home of the treasurer, Mrs.
James E. Martin, Wayland.
Mrs. MarshaJI Bradley gave the devotions which included two poems on the
Christmas theme.
Following the dinner, the club president, Mrs. Otto Martin, gave out llie club
yearbooks and also "Breast Cancer
Testing Cards" from the American Institute for Cancer Research. She also
read a Jetter from Mrs. W.T. "Granny"
Hatcher thanking the club for its tribute
to her at the November dinner meeting
at Vest. She also re-read the article
which Granny had given at the club's
50th anniversary celebration in 1976 on
" What the Club Means to Me" . A contribution was voted to the Town of
Wayland for its Christmas treat for
under-privileged children.
Following the business session, the
club members retired to the family
room where gifts were exchanged
around a beautifully decorated Christmas tree.
Those attending were: Mrs. Marsella
Bradley, Mrs. Marie Mullins, Mrs. Felix
Coburn, Mrs. LaFaye Hughes, Mrs.
Blanche Barner, Mrs. Maxine Martin,
Mrs. Avanelle Wells, Mrs. Elizabeth
Duff, Mrs. Louise West, Mrs. Libby
Martin, and the hostess, Mrs. Loretta
Martin .
The next program meeting will be at
the home of Mrs. LaFaye Hughes, Garrett, on the subject of public affairs.
Wheelwright Mayor
Is Arrested Friday
8y KATn; NEWSOME
Whecl~right Mayor Elml'r Ferguson
was arrested Friday evening following
a reported a r gum<'nl with a
Wheelwright cit y policeman earlier
that afternoon
Ferguson was a rrl'sted at his home
at Wheelwright by Wheelwright Officer Tom Engle and two stale troopers
on charges of disorderly conduct.
resisting arrest and publi c int oxica
lion .
According to Officer Engl e.
Ferguson approached him at about 4
p. m . Friday outside the old
Wheelwright clubhouse to discuss city
business. Engle said Ferguson then
began yelling, using profane language,
" and pushed me in the chest." Engle
said when passersby began to stop he
told the mayor to "go on home and we
will talk later." At that point, he
reported that Ferguson "just became
more violent and verbally abusive "
It was then that Engle placed
Ferguson under arrest although he
reported that the mayor refused to get
into the police car. Later, accompanied
by two state troopers. the arrest was
made at Ferguson's home and he was
booked at the county jail where he was
released later that night after executing bond.
Ferguson. wh o has serve d as
Wheelwright mayor intermittently for
the past 20 years and was the
Republican candidate for Floyd Coun ty Court Clerk in the past general election. said he had just returned from a
funeral at Holly bush (Knott county )
and saw Engle's police car parked illegally on the sidewalk . " I got onto him
over the illegal parking and checked
with him on some junk cars I asked
him to lag earlier in the month, "
Ferguson said. When he and Engle
began to quarrel he claimed the
policeman " was in a rage ." He
reportedly admitted that he refused to
get into the police car
At a special meeting of the Wheelwright City Council, Monday night, the
three council members present, Freddy
Johnson, Bill Meade and Elva Wenk,
voiced support of Officer Engle in the
matter.
FLOYD COUNTY
HEALTH NEWS
By JANE BO~D
Health Educator
Glaucoma is the second leading cause
of blindness in adults ; this disease usually strikes without symptoms. It is for
this reason that it is important to be
screened regularly for the disease. Persons age 40 and over should be aware of
the need for screening since this time is
the high-risk age for the disease.
The Health Department is having
glaucoma screenings on Friday ,
January 13 and January 27. These
clinics are free services of the Health
Department and are open to persons of
all ages, but those persons age 40 and
over are especially urged to take advantage of these clinics since this is the highrisk age.
A nurse frorn the Health Department
will be in Harold at Ward's Health Food
Store on Monday, January 16, from 10
until 2. She will offer T.B. skin tests,
urinalyses, anemia screenings, blo~d
pressures, and immunizations. This
clinic is a service of the Health Department and is open to the public.
There will be a Pap clinic today,
January 11 , 1984 from 8:30. un~il . 11. : 30
and from 1:00 unti12:00. Th1s chmc IS a
free service of the Health Department
and is open to women of all ages, but
those women age 45 and over are
especially urged to attend since this is
the high risk age for cervical cancer.
..... . .
~
$20.212.00
"'""shtd wtlh beck. stOit. •tf••rtutOf All tlttlnul •ud and ll hook 110 Tu•lt• •11 wSf\1 10 monllll
(DAY) 285-3561
(NIGHn 285·3051
• CASH SELLING PRICE.....$11,500
ARE YOU READY???
For the January Telephone Changel
Contact the Communications Personnel
at
ELLIOTT CONTRACTING, INCORPORATED
SYSTEMS DIVISION
Telephone ond Intercommunications Systems
Modular Jack Installation
Residential Wiring·Single Line Telephones
Commercial Multiline Telephone Systems
lnstallation·Sales·Fult Service and Repair
Sates Manager Gene D. Justice
Prestonsburg 886 ·2781
Pikeville 432·0033
1·800·422-1083
"'l ~ i iEI!TiTIM!a!niulfactlur!eriTi~ ~ ineidiSu;p;e;ri,vi s~o;riiii:•!H 31
HOUSE FOR RENT
350.00 month
Lancer Addition
3 bedroom home, 2 baths, Iorge
lot, built-In kitchen with
appliances.
can
886-2403
8:00 a.m.-5:00 p.m.
·886-6961 after 6:00 P·{!bt
BIG
WINTER
CLEARANCE SALE
AT THE
FEDERATED STORE
-j==== •
MARTIN, KY.
All Ladies Winter
Shoes and Boots
Connie and Bass .... . ... ......... ... ..... . . 1/2 Price
1 Rack of Ladies Coats . ... . .......... ....... 60% Off
Bobbie Brooks Merchandise . ... . . . ... .. . . . . 1/2 Price
All Ladies Sportswear . .. .. . . . . .. . ... .... . .. 1/2 Price
• Girts' Dresses and
Sportswear ..... ... ..... . . . ....... . .. .. . . ... 1/2 Price
Ladies Lee Jeans ..... . ... ...... . .. .. . . ........ $16.88
One Rack of Men's Suits ....... ..... . . .. . . .... SS9.88
• One Rack of Men's Sportcoats ................. SSO.OO
Boys' Shirts ... ... .. . .. .. ... ...... .. . ... . ... 1/2 Price
Men's Sweaters . . ............. . .. . . .. .. .... 1/2 Price
Men's Suits and Jackets ......... . ... . . .... 1/2 Pr~ce
• Men's Winter Pants .. . .....
. ... 1/2 Pnce
• Special Rack of Men's Sweaters ............... $12.00
All Ladies Lee, Levi, Chic,
Calvin Klein Jeans . . . .. . . . .... . .......... . ON SALE
• Ladies' Dresses and Coats ... . . .. . . ... . .. . . 1/2 Price
• Boys' and Men's Sweatsuits ...... . ... ...... 1/2 Price
-
=:: ••
==:
'== •
=: •
=:
== •
== ••
=
,= •
-
-0
- .·
-
!:i
--
Big Sale At
FEDERATED BARGAIN STORE
• 1 Dishwasher .. .. ...... Reg. $590 .......... SALE SJSO
• 1 Dinette Set . .... ..... . Reg. $400 ...... .. ... SALE $190
• 1 Dryer .... ....... Reg. $370 .. ...... .. . ON SALE $200
• 1 Freezer .. ....... . Reg. s58o ....... . . . oN sALE sJ7s -1~~~r~
• Black & White TV .. . . . . Reg. $290 ...... ON SALE $179
• All Lamps ...... .... ...................... .... 60% Off
• 1 6·Piece Living Room Set ... Reg. $850 ... SALE SSSO
• 1 5·Piece Living Room Set ...... Reg. $600 . ... . . $399
• 1 Bedroom Set .... .. ...... Reg. $600 .... .. .. . $399
• All Mattresses . . .... ..... Reg. $125 . .... . . . $62.SO
• 1 Stereo . ......... . . Reg. $470 ..... $288
. . Reg. $150 . . .
I nco me Tax by
Dan Tax.
The People's Choice
WITH 20 OFFICES throughout the tri·state area,
DanTax is becoming a force to be reckoned with.
With highly trained tax preparers and fees that
start at $7.50 for both a Federal and State return,
more and more people are choosing DanTax as
the firm to assist them in filing their Income Tax
Returns. Thousands of taxpayers in Kentucky,
West Virginia and Ohio have enjoyed the plea·
sant, professional atmosphere of a D,anTax office.
Do yourself a favor . This year give DanTax a try.
DanTax
Coal Run Village
Pikeville, Ky.
DanTax
112 West Court St.
Prestonsburg, Ky.
437-4131
886-9952
H1·12t
Thursday Is BUCK NITE AU Seats $1.00
STRAND I
STRAN.D II
.
Starts ·FrL, Jan. 13
Starts Fri., Jan. 13
A different kind of love story...
His child was torn
between two cultures.
COMMUNITY CHORUS TO MEET
The Prestonsburg Community Chorus
will meet Monday, January 16 at Prestonsburg Community College, Room
J155, at 7 p.m. At this time the chorus
will begin work on "The Creation" by
Joseph Haydn. The work will be performed in May, 1984.
The chorus, which has been in existence ninteen years, is composed of lay
musicians. Anyone interested in singing
good choral literature is eligible .and is
invited to join the group by attending the
meeting. According to Gus Kalos, t~e
director of the group, the Chorus w11l
need to add many new voices this
semester.
Little M1ss Muffet not only sal beside
spiders, says National Wildlife~s Ranger
Rick magazine. She lived w1th them .
Miss Muffel's father, a medical doctor
who lived in the 1500s, let spiders drape
all over his house in the belief that
spiders would protect his family from
diseases. Dr. Muffet even gave his
daughter pills made from spiders when
Miss Muffet got sick .
"The object of teaching a child is to
enable him to get a long without his
teacher."
Elbert Hubbard
A NOTE OF THANKS
Better late than never, however, no
less sincere. We wish to thank the vari
ous business establishments and other
citizens of our and surrounding communities for their generous support of
our annual Christmas Trees for children
and elderly shutins. You made it possible for us to distribute 400 bags of candy and fruit for children and 46 packages
of fruit, candy and nuts to the elderly
shu tins. Again, thanks to each one who
contributed.
I want to especially thank each member of our department who bereaved the
cold weather to distribute these treats.
HOWARD FERGUSON, Chief
Auxier Volunteer Fire Dept.
. . . . . . . . . $775.00
. . . . . . . . . . . •. . . . . .
. t250.00
SALfS TAX
••••••...•
RETAIL VALUE
• T\•te bt6~ 1,,,."
•aoo.oo
•aoo.oo
•a25.oo
Clinic Director
Section Two, Paae Four
TIM MciNTIRE and JACK ELAM
w""'" and Dne<:ted by CHAllt.ES 8 P<Eila Producea by .AmlfJilll DU8S
,.,.,ng
A eA(.)f-
tNHrlNATIONA:. ENTEill'lliSf:.IIELEA:k COlO< by C FJ
Showtimes 7:15-9:30-Sunday Matinee Open 1:00 Start 1:30 Over 3:25
�Wednesday, January 11, 1984
Coburn-Thurman
Announcement was made Christmas
of the engagement and forthcoming
marriage of Miss Tamberlyn <Tamil
Coburn, of Pleasanton. Calif. to Mr.
Hoger L. Thurman, of Concord, California. A garden wedding is planned at the
Century House in Pleasanton Caltf on
July 21
'
'
.\1r. Thurman IS the son of Mr. and
~r~ Lige Thurman. of Los Angeles,
( ahf., and IS employed with Magnussen
Dodge in Concord, California.
'\'!iss Coburn 1s the daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Joe Coburn, of San Lorenzo
Calif.. formerly of Prestonsburg, and i~
employed as a traffic specialist with
Merayn's, Dayton-Hudson Corporation.
Mrs. Coburn, mother of the bride to
be, is the former Helen Price, daughter
of Lillia Mae Price, of Prestonsburg.
DRIFT NEWS
HOLIDAY GUESTS
Holiday guests at the home of Mrs.
C' .J Cahill, of Drift, were her niece, Mrs.
Rosemary Allen, of Cleveland, Ohio, and
he1· son, Rev. John Cahill, of Mary dale
Center, Erlanger. who was the celebrant
of the Christmas Eve Midnight Mass at
St. Juliana Church.
Section Two, Paee Five
The Floyd County Times
REBEKAHS MEET
The regular meeting of Miriam
Rebekah Lodge No. 31 was held Januai')<
3, with the Noble Grand, Mrs. Hope
Whitten, presiding.
Mrs. Wilma Castle, of Paintsvllle,
district 4 deputy president, Mrs. Ada
Mallette, page of the Rebekah Assembly
of Kentucky, Mrs. Hazel Steele, and
Mrs. Reba Mallette, all of Paintsville,
were introduced and welcomed. Mrs.
Castle was present to install the officers
of Miriam Lodge No. 31. Those assisting
her were: Ada Mallette, deputy marshall; Norma Stepp, deputy warden;
Mary Zemo, deputy secretary and deputy chaplain; Rebecca Bingham, deputy
treasurer, and Reba Mallette, deputy inside guardian. Installed for the year 1984
were: noble grand, Miss Kelly Sue
Moore; vice noble grand, Mrs. Nancy
Duff; secretary, Mrs. Mabel Jean
LeMaster; treasurer, Mrs. Violetta
Wright, right supporter to the noble
grand, Mrs. Theckley Short; left supporter to the noble grand, Mrs. Helen
Ormerod; conductor, Mrs. Sue Moore;
warden, Mrs. Paulena Owens; chaplain,
Mrs. Norma Stepp; outside guardian,
Mrs. Lorena Wallen; assistant chaplain,
Mrs. Nola Stepp; right supporter to vice
grand, Mrs. Rebecca Bingham; left supporter to the.,vice grand, Mrs. Jean
Hickman, and musician, Mrs. Venelia
Rinehart.
The retiring noble grand, Mrs. Hope
Whitten, was escorted to the chair of the
past noble grand, and was presented a
gift from officers, and a past noble
grand jewel frflm the lodge. She graciously expressed her appreciation to all
the members, and, at the close of the
meeting, presented each officer with a
small gift. Mrs. Whitten served refreshments to those in attendance.
Present for this meeting were: Kelly
Sue Moore, Nancy Duff, Violetta Wright,
Mabel Jean LeMaster, Venelia Rinehart, Norma Stepp, Hope Whitten,
Theckley Short, Helen Ormerod, Sue
Moore, Paulena Owens, Nola Stepp,
Rebecca Bingham, Jean Hickman,
Lorena Wallen, Myrtle Allen, Dorothy
Osborne, Mary Zemo and Nell Howard,
all of Prestonsburg, and Wilma Castle,
Ada Mallette, Hazel Steele, and Reba
Mallette, of Paintsville.
The next meeting will be January 17,
at 7 p.m. at the I.O.O.F. Hall.
CHRISTMAS GUESTS
Mr. and Mrs. Joe H. Arnett had as
guests during the Christmas weekend
their children and grandchildren. They
are Joe Jack Arnett, his wife, Jean, and
sons, Alan and Patrick, of Louisville;
Glenn Philip Arnett, his wife, Sharon,
a.'nd children, Lesli and Matthew, of
neston, Va.; Lolita Campbell and children, Dwayne, and his wife, Donna,
Richard, Joe and Tina. Mr. and Mrs. Joe
Jack Arnett and children returned
home, Monday evening, while the Glenn
Phillip Arnett family remained until
Wednesday. While here, Lesli was the
overnight guest of her aunt, Mrs. Campbell, and cousin, Tina.
That popular and delicious
melon, the cantaloupe, gets
its name from the village of
Cantalupo, Italy, where it
was first grown in Europe.
Interested? Call Ken Peters at
886-8506 and he'll 'all on you!
The Floyd County Times
Outstanding Young Woman
Erma L. Johnson, of Hi Hat, has been
named one of the Outstanding Young
Women of America for 1983 in recognition of ability, accomplishments and service to her community. She was nominated for the award while a student at
Mayo State Vocational School.
She is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Shirl Hall, of Ashtabula, 0., fomerly of
McDowell and is married to Delmar
Johnson.
Annual Christmas Parade
Held by Allen Woman's Club
The Allen Woman's Club held its annual Christmas Parade, Saturday, Dec.
17. Santa led the parade on a truck of the
Allen Volunteer Fire Dept. Snow Royalty for the parade as follows:
Snow King, Keith Parsons, son of
Elmer and Cindy Parsons, of Allen ;
Snow Queen, Amy Akers, daughter of
Patty and Everett Akers, of Allen; Snow
Prince, Brian Osborne, son of Dennis
and Wanda Osborne, of Ivel; Snow
Princess, Bridget Akers, daughter of
Joyce Akers, of Hunter, and the late Dr.
Roger Akers ; Tiny Snow Princess, Jami
Conn, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Virgil
Conn, of Martin; Tiny Snow Prince,
Jason Gayheart, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Fletcher Gayheart, Jr., of Eastern.
Winners of the parade entries were
Dazzlin Darlings Majorettes, accompanied by instructor Missy Reynolds,
first; MaDonna Prater, Miss Golden
Harvest, and escort Stacey Hale, second; and Donna Robinson, 1983
Homecoming Princess, and escort Marc
Hale, third.
The
the
West Coa.t citrus
first trainload of
RALPH'S
TIRE SERVICE
U.S. 23 No., Prestonsburg • 886-8806
• Computer Wheel Balancing
• New Tires (Steel & Glass Belted & Polyester)
• Recaps-Regular & Radial All Season,
4-Wheel Drive 10 & 11x15
• New Batteries-36 mo. $39.95 installed
plus exchange
Please NoteName Correction
• Rebuilt Batterles-90-day warranty $25.00
plus exchange
Grandparents of Jamie Lynn Hall, of
Topmost, were incorrectly listed in an
item in last week's Times. They are
Dewey and Mary Hall, of Wayland, and
Harold and Marie Hall, of Topmost. We
regret the error.
TEA
ALL VARIETIES
LUCK'S
BEANS ..
BAGS .........
industry was born on February 14, 1886 as
oranges left los Angeles for eastern markets.
• Shocks-Lifetime warranty $19.95 each Installed
39
$
U.S.D.A. CHOICE PLAmR PLEASING
CUBED
100-CT.
STEAK
$25~
SUNSHINE
HON Y
GRAHAMS
01
PLATtEi PLEASING $
HY-TOP
CHOPPED SIRLOIN . ..
'INSTANT
POTATOES ~~~~--
·--.
WHITE STAR
,S-LB.
BAG
8-FT.
$
WISK
SUGAR
oVYriGENT ...
$129
SATELLITE
DISH
FISCHER'S
ANQUET
POT
PIES .......
3
WIENERS.-~~;~·.
ggc
1
FISCHER'S
1
$1·BEE°F .............. s1 ~
8-0Z.
PIES
HI-BRAND
51695
HY-TOP
'---~ ~lfl.Ys ~~~~....
INSTALLED
$1!~
$139
HY-TOP
HY-TOP
Multiple receiver
systems available for one or two households.
Deai(IJI" for Yamaha, Technics, Kenwood, J.V.C., Advent,
D.A., Paisley Research, Audio Tech, zenith TV
CHICKEN NOODLE
SOUP
3
10-0Z.
CANS
$1
LAUNDRY DETERGENT
49-0Z.
BOX
$159
25" zenith
Color console TV
Reg. $899
NOW
5 650
..-------SPECIAL-------..
JVC HOME STEREOSEMI-AUTOMATIC TURNTABLE, CASSETIE DECK,
RECEIVER PLUS CABINET AND 2-WAY SPEAKERS.
Reg. 5714 Now
5 549
Listen to WOHY for weekly specials!
LANCER-WATERGAP RD.,
PRESTONSBURG, KY.
874-2635, 10 TO 7, MON ·FRI. 10 TO 5, SAT.
SPREAD .. -~-~~=.
DAWN
DISH
LIQUID
HELPER ..... .8;9~·-
. • PRICE SMASHERS •
Smashers special savln& of your choice.
Look for the Price Smashers symbol in our ads and in
the store to identify the weekly Price Smashers
spesjals.
·• QUANTifY RIGHTS RESERVED.
• NOT RESPONSIBLE
FOR PRINTER'S ERRORS.
• PRICES GOOD..THRU JAN. 17.
a·
C
9
ONIONS ........ --~~9.
YELLOW
FLORIDA
12~z.
ggc
............ $1!~~
HAMBURGER
1. You cet one frice Smuhers seal for each $1 ,.ou spend
(excludinl products restricted by blw).
2. Paste 36 Price Smashers sells on each saver certificate (avaiblble at the checkout).
3. Each filled certificate can be redeemed for the Price
LB.
63t21"oz.9 =~~h:~~~ . .~~~; $169
BREADED
CHUCKWAGON
LOW lANK AA TES
PMTS. APX. $70
MO DOWN PMT ..
OR *52 PERMO
WITH t500 DOWN
23 9
ggc
3-LB.
5-LB.
ORANGES ...... -~~~.
$15 9
89 C
89
C
APPLES .......... ~~9.
WINESAP
3-LB.
RED
DELICIOUS
l·LB.
APPLES ..........~~~-
VINE-RIPENED
TOMATOES
69~.
�Wednesday, January 11, 1984
FLOYD CIRCUIT COt:RT
2-C'l-79-
l'nitcd FcdP.ral Sa\ il g aud Loan ssociation ............................... Plaintiff.
\'S: :-;OTJ('E OF SALE
Oa\·id Bruce- Spradlin, ~am·) Spr·adlin,
F.S., \'anhoo. c Company, Inc-.. F lo)d
Count). Ke-ntuck.). and City or Prt•stonsburg .............................. Orfendants.
A:'I:D
Clay In gel Com pan), LIO.) d Crum,
d/b/a Llo) d'!> Hardware, John Goble,
d/b/a Goble Lumber Compan). We-lls
Ready :\lix Company ...... lntcnening
Plaintiffs
\'S:
Da\id Bruce Spradlin and !\\anry Spradlin .................................. Defrndants
A!\\D
Brock :\lc\"ey Electric Suppl) Com1)any
...................... Intenening Dcfl'ndant
\"S:
Brunchy Enterprises, Inc. Third Parh
Defendant
·
By virtue of a judgment and order of
sale of the Floyd Circuit Court rendered
at the January 6 term, 1984, in the above
styled cause I shall proceed to offer for
sale at the Courthouse door in Prestonsburg, Kentucky, to the highest and best
bidder, at public auction, on the 26 day
of Janu&ry, 198-l, at 10:00 o'clock a.m ..
same being a day of the regular term of
the Floyd Circuit Court. for cash or upon
a credit of thirty (30) days, the following described property, to-wit:
That certain tract or parcel of land, lying and being in the City of Prestonsburg, Floyd County, Kentucky, and being the same land conveyed David
Bruce Spradlin and Nancy Spradlin by
deed of July 18, 1980 from Harry Hale
Ranier and Juda Raniet. as recorded in
Deed Book 249, page 338, FliJyd C'.cJunty
Clerk's Office, and described more particularly as follows:
Beginning at a point on the back or
north side of the sidewalk on the north
side of Goble Street, said point being the
southwest corner of the acjacent Paul
Combs lot and also being 98 feet from the
west edge of the west sidewalk of Second
Street; thence with Combs southwest
line <a fencel, N 35 W a distance of 56.0
feet to a corner tree in Rosenberg's
southeast line; thence with Rosenberg's
line <a fence l, S 55 W a distance of 30 feet
to a post; thence with Rosenberg's
southwest line, <a fence), N 35 W a
distance of 98 feet to a corner; thence S
56-20 W a distance of 350 feet to the low
water mark of Levisa Fork; thence with
said low water markS 35 W a distance
of 179.2 feet to a corner; thence N 55 E
a distance of 147 feet to a point in the
west R/W line of First Street; thence
with said west R/W N 35 W a distance
of 15 feet to a point; thence with the back
(north l side of the north sidewalk of Goble Street, N 55 E a distance of 233 feet
to the point of beginning. Said tract containing 1.5 acres, more or less.
The amount of money to be raised by
this sale shall be in the principal sum of
$469,700.00 with interest thereon @
13 1 z% ANNUALLY ($168.75 per diem)
from the 31st day of October, 1983 until
satisfied and the costs ot thiS actwn. mcluding costs of advertising of this sale
and the fees and commissions for conducting this sale.
For the purchase price the purchaser
must execute bond with approved surety or sureties, bearing legal interest
from the day of sale until paid and having the force the effect of a judgment
with a lien retained upon said property
as a further security. Bidders will be
prepared to comply with these terms.
Given under my hand, this 6th day of
January, 1984
MARSHALL DAVIDSON,
Master Commissioner
1-11-31.
NOTICE OF PUBLIC SALE
A public sale will be held by Ashland
Finance Company on the 30th day of
January, 1984 at 1032 Greenup Avenue,
1\shland, Kentucky 41101. Time of sale
1:00 a.m. Sale is for the purpose of
.. l:iposing of:
(ll Galis 300 Roof Bolter, 250DC,
Serial Number 3056911; <lJ Joy 12RB
C-utting Machine, 250DC, Serial Number
15960 belonging to Lonnie Lewis. Dana
R. Reinhardt, and John L. Elder, partners, d/b/a Double L Coal Company, to
satisfy or reduce Security Agreements
and ]";otes.
Ashland Finance Company reserves
the right to bid
Terms: Sale will be for cash The
parcels will be offered separately and
then as a unit <groupl with sale to the
highest and best bidder. Equipment will
be sold as is/where is. Solei une1Pr KR~
355.9-504.
ASHLAND 1-'INANCE COMPANY
By; Richard L. Couchot
Executive Vice President
1-11-Jt
NOTICE OF PUBLIC SALE
Under the terms of an installment contract dated 12-13-82, signed by Palmer
J. and Betty Lou Crider, the undersigned
will on January 26, 1984, at 11:00 a.m.
sell at public auction to the highest bidder for cash a 1978 Mack Tractor, Model
Number R686ST, Serial Number 18941,
and a 1978 Summit Trailer, Model
Number AD30, Serial Number
1118772702, in front of Eastern Ky.
Mack's "Sales Office" Allen, Ky., to
satisfy the unpaid balance in the said
vehicle. The vehicle may be inspected
prior to sale at the above mentioned
premises. The undersigned reserves the
right to bid.
THE 1-'IRST COMMONWEALTH BANK
COLLECTION DEPARTMENT
PRESTONSBURG, KY.
1-11-31.
When buying potatoes, avoid those with a green color. This is known as "sunburn" and can be caused
by too much exposure to
either sun or store lights.
The Floyd County nmes
NOTICE OF
PERMIT CO 'FERE!\;CE
NOTICE '1U ( L'STOMERS
OF B & H GAS COMPANY
Pursuant to Application
NumbPr 431l-5214
In accordance with the provisions of
.f05 KAR 8:010 Section 11, notice is hereby gl\·en that a perm1t conference is
scheduled for January 2-l, 1984 at 2:00
o'clock at the Department for Surface
Mming Reclamation and Enforcement,
503 South Lake Dri\·e. Prestonsburg, Ky.
41653, concerning the above application
filed by Premium Elkhorn Coal Corporation, McDowell, Kentucky. The application is for a permit for a surface
coal mining and reclamation operation
of approximately 3.3 east of East
McDowell in Floyd county.
The proposed operation is approximately 3.3 miles east from KY 680's
junction with KY 1929 and located 200
feet south of Hamilton Branch. The
latitutle is 37° 26' 52". The longitude is 82°
41' 10" The surface area is owned by
Butler and Earl Evans and J .B.
Newsome. The proposed operation is
located on the U.S.G.S. 71 z minute
quadrangle map. The operation will use
the underground method of mining. The
operation will underlie land owned by
Sam Eversole, Grover Sammons,
Nicholas A. Cooley, Stumbo heirs, Curt
Bentley, Dorothy Bentley and David
Akers.
The application has been filed for
public inspection at the Department for
Surface Mining Reclamation and Enforcement's Prestonsburg Regional Office, 503 South Lake Drive, Prestonsburg, Ky. 41653. Any person whose interests are or may be adversely affected
by the issuance of the proposed permit
may present information relevant to the
permit, in oral or written form, at the
time of the conference.
lt.
B & H Gas Company will file an application for a purchased gas adjustment with the Public Service Commission to reflect the increased cost of gas
that the company must pay for gas it
buys from Bradley and Son Oil and Gas
Company. The supplier will increase its
price on January 1, 1984.
The company seeks to increase its gas
rates by 20¢ per Mcf, effective January
1, 1984. If approved by the Public Service
Commission, the gas rates will be as
follows:
RATES: Monthly
First 2 Mcf. $5.4807 <Minimum Bill>
Next 8 Mcf. ............ 2.5183 Per Mcf.
Next 20 Mcf. ........... 2.1965 Per Mcf.
Over 30 Mcf ........... 2.0033 Per Mcf
These proposed rates will not be effective until an order is issued by the Public
Service Commission. If you have objections you may contact the Public Service
Commission, P.O. Box 615, 730 Schenkel
Lane, l''rankfort, Kentucky 40602.
B & H GAS COMPANY
P.O. Box 427
Stanville, Kentucky 41659
1-11-21.
NOTICE OF
PERMIT CONFERENCE
Pursuant to Application
Number 458-0067
In accordance with the provisions of
405 KAR 8:010 Section 11, notice is
hereby given that a permit conference
is scheduled for January 24, 1984 at 3:00
o'clock at the Department for Surface
Mining Reclamation and Enforcement,
503 South Lake Drive, Prestonsburg, Ky.
41S53, concerning the above application
filed by Gateway Coal Company, Inc.,
P.O. Box 468, Paintsville, Ky. 41240. The
application is for a permit for a surface
coal mining and reclamation operation
of approximately 26 acres overlying an
additional 6 acres of auger area located
0.5 miles east of Williamsport in Johnson
county.
The proposed operation is approximately 1 mile south of Kentucky Route
40's junction with Left Fork of Two Mile
Creek Road approximately 0.4 miles
east of Two Mile Creek. The latitude is
37' 48' 49". The longitude is 82• 43' 17".
The surface area is owned by Gateway
Coal Company, Inc., Lloyd Williams,
Keith Stratten and Dr. Franklin
Belhasen. The proposed operation is
located on the Offutt U.S.G.S. 7 1 ~ minute
quadrangle map. The operation will use
the contour strip, auger and area
method of mining.
The application has been filed for
public inspection at the Department for
Surface Mining Reclamation and Enforcement's Prestonsburg Regional Office, 503 South Lake Drive, Prestonsburg, Ky. 41653. Any person whose interest are or may be adversely affected
by the issuance of the proposed permit
may present information relevant to the
permit, in oral or written form, at the
time of the conference.
lt.
NOTICE OF
INTENTION TO MINE
Pursuant to Application
No. 836-0008
<1) In accordance with the provisions
of KRS 350.055, notice is hereby given
that Triple Elkhorn Mining Company,
Inc., P.O. Box 140, I vel, Kentucky 41642,
has filed an application for a permit for
a surface coal mining and reclamation
operation of approximately 43.9!1 acres
located one mile southeast of Allen, Kentucky in Floyd county.
(2) The proposed operation is approximately 11 4 miles southeast of Star
Route SO's junction with US 25, and
located 1 2 mile south of the Levisa Fork.
The latitude is 37• 35' 38", longitude is 82'
42' 51" Surface area is owned by Herman and Berniece Porter, Bill and Belle
Jones; Palmer Crisp Estate, Katherine
Stratton; Adams Real Estate Limited
Partnership; El DuPont DeNemours;
Inc., George and Jean Rice; Olga and
Howard Allen; Robert Jones heirs and
Cecil Webb:
(3) The proposed operation is located
on the Harold U.S.G.S. 71 2 minute quadrangle map. The operation will use the
mountaintop removal method of mining.
<4J The application also includes a
proposed land use change from undeveloped w/trees premining land use to a
undeveloped w/various grasses post
mining land use.
(5) The application has been filed for
public inspection at the Department for
Surface Mining Reclamation and Enforcement, Prestonsburg Regional Office, South Lake Drive, Prestonsburg,
Ky. 41653. Written comments, objections, or requests for a permit conference must be filed w1th the Director
of the Division of Permits, 6th Floor,
Capital Plaza Tower, Frankfort, Ky.
41601.
l-11-31.
NOTICE OF SALE
Circuit Court Clerk Frank DeRossett
v. ill offer for sale at 9 a.m. on Thursday.
January 26, 1984, in the Circuit Court
Clerk's Office· One Smith and Wesson
38 Special Colt revolver, serial no.
C 395668. The gun was confiscated by
court order from Johnny McKinney on
his conviction of being a convicted felon
in possession of a handgun.
1-11-Jt.
NOTICE OF
INTENTION TO MINE
Pursuant to Application
Number 836-0080
In accordance with the provisions of
KRS 350.055, notice is hereby given that
Raschella Coal Company, Rt. 4, Box
962-Y, Pikeville, Ky 41501, has filed an
application for a permit ~or a surface
coal mining and reclamatiOn operation
of approximately 70.00 acres located 4.1
miles south of Grethel, in Floyd county.
The proposed operation is approximately 1/8 miles east from State Route
979 junction with Akers Branch Road
and located •.z miles west of Branham
Cr.eek. The latitude is 37• 27' 41". The
longitude is 83• 31' 21". The surface area
is owned by Goldie Clark, Russell Clark,
Akers heirs and B. & M. Coal Company.
The proposed operation is located on
the McDowell U.S.G.S. 71 z minute quadrangle map. The operation will use the
mountain top removal method of
mining.
The application has been filed for
public inspection at the Department for
Surface Mining Reclamation and Enforcement's Prestonsburg Regional Office, at 431 South Lake Drive, Prestonsburg, Ky. 41653. Written comments, objections, or requests for a permit conference must be filed with the Director
of the Division of Permits, 6t.h Floor,
Capital Plaza Tower, Frankfort, Kentucky 40601.
l-11-3t.
NOTICE OF HEARING
Notice is hereby given that a hearing
will be held on the 19th day of January,
1984 at the hour of 6:00p.m. in the Board
Room of the Floyd County Board of
Education building at Prestonsburg,
Kentucky. The purpose of this hearing
is to discuss a 3% Utility Tax proposed
by the Floyd County Board of Education. Interested parties are asked to
attend.
PETE GRIGSBY, JR.,
Superintendent
Floyd County Schools
l-11-2t.
Section Two, Pa&e Six
Stationed in Missouri
Five Years Old
J?UBLIC NOTICE
POLICY OF
NONDISCRIMINATI0:\1
ON THE BASIS OF .
HANDICAPPED STUDENTS
The Floyd County Fiscal Court does
not discriminate on the basis of han·
dicapped status in the admission or ac
cess to, or treatment or employment in,
its programs or activities. Delores F.
Dingus, Courthouse Annex, Prestons
burg, Ky., has been designated to coor
dinate compliance with the non·
discrimination requirements contained
in section 51.55 of the Revenue Sharing
Regulations.
11.
TREE TRIMMING
OF ANY KIND
30 YEARS EXPERIENCE.
LIGHT HAULING
PHONE 886-3n1
Richard E. Layne, son of Scott E. and
Glorania Click Layne, of Martin,
entered the U.S. Army, Dec. 29 and is
stationed at Fort Leonard Wood, Mo
A 1980 graduate of Allen Central High
School, he is married to Carolyn Blakeman Layne, of Allen. Paternal grandparents are Curtis Layne and Virginia
Nicholson, both of Martin, and maternal
grandparents are Lum and Ida Click, of
Banner.
Abortion Issue
Explored On KET
One of the most difficult decisions a
woman can make is whether or not to
have an abortion. "Frontline" examines
this controversy on "Abortion Clinic,''
which encores Monday, January 30 at 7
p.m. on KET.
The film's deeply emotional impact
gains its power by the portrayal of two
pregnant women who experience abortions and two who decide to have their
babies. "Abortion Clinic" was filmed in
and around Chester, Pennsylvania, a
small industrial town. The filmmakers
spent several months with doctors and
staff of a private abortion clinic in
Chester. They film a young woman in
the counseling session that precedes
abortion, and the operation itself.
The documentary also focuses on the
activities of a "Right-to-Life" doctor
who pickets the abortion clinic every
Saturday.
"Frontline" is produced by KCTS
Seattle; WGBH Boston; WNET New
York; WPBT Miami, and WTVS Detroit.
Jennifer Lynn Prater celebrated her
fifth birthday, Dec. 30. She is the
daughter of Robert L. and Kathy Prater,
of Hueysville. She had cake and ice
cream and received gifts from family
and friends . She is the granddaughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Ora Meadows, of Langley,
and the late Jackson and Lula Prater,
of Hueysville.
1tpd.
After spending millions of dollars to
stop erosion along creeks in the West's
arid sagebrush hills, engineers turned to
beavers for help, reports National
Wildlife magazine. Grass is now growing and trout have returned to Wyoming
creeks, thanks to dams built by eight
beavers that were trapped and then
released there two years ago.
Jtpd
A $25 REWARD.!'.
WILL BE GIVEN FOR THE RETURN OF MY
DOG. HAS BEEN MISSING SINCE DEC. 31.
LAST SEEN AT DAN-DEE'S SUPER·
MARKET, STANVILLE. HE'S A BLOND
PEEK·A·POO, NAME "FLUFFY". ANYONE
KNOWING WHERE THIS DOG IS PLEASE
CALL "78-5266. HE IS THE FAMILY PET.
OWNERS ARE ROBERT 6 HAZEL HUNTER,
STANVILLE, KY.
Jtpd
PUBLIC NOTICE
Pursuant to 405 KAR 8:010, Section hi(4) (b), the following is a summary of permitting decisions made by the Department for Surface Mining Reclamation and
Enforcement, Division of Permits with respect to applications to conduct surface
coal mining and reclamation operations in Floyd county.
Allen & Newsom Coal Companr Inc.
Branham & Baker Coal
C & H Coal, Incorporated
Coal Mac, Incorporated
Coal Mac, Incorporated (Rev)
D.K.T. Cool Compony
G&CCoal
G & I Coal <:ompany
Gosling Branch Compony
Jack Mining Company
Maple Ridge Mining
Newsome Coal, Incorporated
Re-Mine Coal Company, Incorporated
Re-Mine Coal Compony, Incorporated
Somerset Coal Companr
Square Cirde Coal Company, Inc.
Triple Elkhorn Mining
836-5011
836-0069
836-5010
836-0013
836-0013
136-5007
136-5020
836-5015
136-0034
136-5026
836-5006
836-5004
836·8001
836-8001
836-5017
836-5014
836-8000
lnued
lnued
luued
luued
luued
Issued
lnued
lnued
lnue4
lss.ed
lnued
lnued
Issued
lnued
lnue4
lnued
Issued
831228
831202
830701
830503
131205
130601
131215
130921
131215
831215
130509
130512
830720
130726
131129
131228
131205
SPECIAL BOARD MEETING
A Special Board Meeting of the Floyd
County Board of Education is called for
January 19, 1984 at 7:00 p.m. in the
Board Room of the Administration
building at Prestonsburg, Kentucky.
PETE GRIGSBY, JR.,
Superintendent,
Floyd County Schools
1-ll-2t.
PUBLIC NOTICE
Gwvanni's Pizza Den doing business
at US 23, one mile south of I vel post office, !vel, Ky., by Archer D. Boyd and
Jeff Mullins, P.O. Box 165, Betsy Layne,
Ky., hereby declares their intention to
apply for a license as a retail beer dealer
under the state law.
lt-pd.
POSITION AVAILABLE
The Sandy Valley Senior Citizens, Inc.
is now taking applications for homemaker/home health aide to service the
Prestonsburg area. Duties include
assisting homebound elderly with household activities, personal care and respite
care. Requirements are daily access to
automobile, valid driver's license, and
able to pass physical exam. Prefer experience in elderly care or as nurse's
aide. Wage $3.35 an hour plus travel
Applications may be picked up at the
Sandy Valley Senior Citizens office, 2nd
Floor Municipal Building, Prestonsburg
from 8-4, M-F. Deadline January 20,
1984.
Equal Opportunity Employer
l-ll-3t.
POSITION AVAILABLE
The Sandy Valley Senior Citizens, Inc.
is now taking applications for one fulltime RN and one part-time RN to service the five county Big Sandy area
Prevent-A-Care program. Responsibilities include supervision of nurse's aides
in the five county area and case
management of clients. Must be licensed RN with administrative experience,
preferably two years. Salary negotiable.
Applications may be picked up at the
Sandy Valley Senior Citizens office, 2nd
Floor Municipal Building, Prestonsburg
from 8-4, M-F. Please submit application and resume by January 20, 1984.
Equal Opportunity Employer
1-11-31.
The longest lived birds are
the ravens, which have been
known to live to age 69.
• IDEAL LOCATION-SUIT ABLE FOR COMMERCIAL USE!
• IN-TOWN LOCATION-OWNER WANTS
TO SELL NOW! MAKE AN OFFER!
• BETWEEN PIKEVILLE AND
PRESTONSBURG. APPROX. 1700
SQ ••n. FOR UNDER $70,000.
• ASSUMABLE 8.8% MONEY-GREAT OPPOR·
TUNITY TO OWN AN EXCLUSIVE HOME!
FOR
RENT-PRESTONSBURG,
DOWNTOWN LOCATION WITHIN
WALKING DISTA~CE TO SCHOOLS,
BANKS, AND SHOPPING. 3-BEDROOM,
2-BATHS, $350.00 PER MONTH.
$350.00 SECURITY DEPOSIT.
REFERENCES REQUIRED.
• APPROX. 3Q eotnli~ClJLOSE TO
PRESTO()tlO~••.,.
• A FOUR-BEDROOM, TWO·Sle-flY COLONIAL
ON ABBOTT &(t\tOt'1J\.n 2Y2 BATHS
AND APPRliUl''tiNE ACRE.
0.---,
• RANCH-STYLEe_'"
~)'PROVED, JUST
OFF MTN. PAi~ 1.~
RON LAWSON, Broker
Phone 886-9100 • Pikeville 432-0194
INC.
�Wednesday, January 11, 1984
The Floyd County Times
Section Two, Pace Seven
79c
CROUNiiiY
SAUSAGE
HORMEL
OPEN Sro 10
BACON....
PH: 478-5275
HAROLD, KY.
EVERY DAY
BANANAS
PUREX
BLEACH ......................... 12a.oz.
WALDORF
BATH TISSUE .............. 4-ROLL PKG.
PILLSBURY
SELF-RISING FLOUR .....
.5-LB. BAG
0
$12 9
PRE-PRICED
DOVE
DISH LIQUID ...
SPAM .
0
0
-~~:~? ...
77C
89C
89 C
0
32-0Z. BTL.
••
29
••••••
0
0
•••••
0
••
0
•
0
•••
12-0Z. CAN
BOUNCE
FABRIC SOFTENER ..
0
40-CT. PKG.
••••
,.ZEST
BATH SOAP .... 0.... 0.......
2soz$100
0
0
0
Dr. and Mrs, Melvin K. Stewart, of
Catlettsburg, announce the forthcoming
marriage of their daughter, Kathy
LuAnne, to Jeffrey David Rexroat, of Indianapolis, Indiana , son of Mrs. Mary
Ovalene Rexroat, of Campbellsville,
Kentucky and Mr J .D. Rexroat.
Wedding vows will be exchanged at
2:30p.m. Saturday, January 21, in the
Oakland Avenue Baptist Church, Cattsburg. The gracious custom of a open
rch will be observed .
The bride elect is a graduate of Boyd
County High School and the University
of Kentucky.
The prospective bridegroom is a
graduate of Taylor County High School
and the University of Kentucky. He is
employed by Naval Avionics, Indianapolis, Indiana .
iss Stewart is the granddaughter of
t·s. James W Salisbury, of Prestonsburg, and the late Mr. Salisbury, and
Mrs. Walter E . Stewart, of Allen, and the
late Mr Stewart.
THANKS FROM MOUNTAIN MANOR
The staff and residents of Mountain
Manor Nursing Home of Prestonsburg
would like to take this opportunity to
thank all those who helped to make the
1983 holiday season a very special time.
r thanks goes out to all those who
ave donations, brought in gifts, fruit
and flowers for the residents. We would
also like to thank all those who visited
with us through the holidays, and contributed their time and efforts to mak·
mg this Christmas a huge success.
Finally we would also like to express our
gratitude to all area ministers and churches and all volunteers who helped us
thro~ghout this past year. We look into
4 as a successful year as well and
e all of you will continue to spend
time with us. Our invitation ~s .ext~nded
to the public to come and visit with us
here at Mountain Manor.
U.S.N0.1
POTATOES ...... 20-LB.BAG
1-LB.
BAGS
Modern postage stamps
came into use in 1840.
- ;
.
TWIN SONS BORN
Ronald D. and Glenna Jo Allen, of
Grethel, announce the birth of twin sons,
Marcus Crandall and Joshua Neil Allen,
November 14 at the Methodist Hospital
in Pikeville .
Maternal grandparents are Lee and
Verdie Akers, of Grethel.
377-
FARMER'S STYLE
$287 SPARE RIBS.....................
98
LB.
GIVE SOMEONE A LIFT
ALL OCCASIONS- DELIVERED
o-ll' ti
.·
FRESH
GROUND ·BEEF.
c
[SORRY WE RAN OUT LAST W££1(}
FREE DEliVERY WITH MINIMUM $20 PURCHASE
WITHIN 3 MilE RADIUS.
PRICES EFFECTIVE THRU JAN. 15.
NOT RESPONSIBLE FOR PRINTER'S ERRORS
WE HAVE FEED FOR LIVESTOCK.
WE WELCOME FEDERAL FOOD STAMPS.
Fairchild's New
Eastern EQuipment
and Distributio·n
.Center Is Centrally
Located To Serve
You BeHer
Fairchild International has
recently purchased Eastern
Machine, a division of Elmac Corporation in Whitesburg, KY,
located at the Pine Mountain
Junction. The name of this new
facility will be the Fairchild
Eastern Equipment and Distribution Center. The facility is
situated on several acres of land
and offers the complete line of
new Fairchild products and product servicing, including Fairchild
replacement parts, component rebuilds, and a wide inventory of
used and rebuilt mining equipment for your inspection. This
facility is geared to giving the
fastest service and Fairchild's
usual high quality to the coal
operators in the eastern coal
"Our new Equipment and Distribution Center in
fields .
Whitesburg increases our ability to serve you
For the past eighteen years,
faster . . . , " Myrleen and Jack Fairchild .
Fairchild has been dedicated to
serving the needs of the coal industry, and the new Eastern Equipment and
Distribution Center is continued evidence of this commitment.
Stop by the Fairchild Eastern Equipment and Distribution Center - you will be
glad you did.
'2391
SEND A BOUQUET OF BALLOONS
..
SIRLOIN
•
•
•
•
Members of the Southeast Floyd County Volunteer Fire Department who
gathered to see the check written for the final payment of the department fire
truck are, above, from left, Fi.rechief Haskell Hall, Virginia Hall, Peggy Bradford. In back, from left, are Mike McCown, Denver Compton, Jr., Elmer
Fields, Bill Wells, Ronnie Shrewsberry, Larry Dean Johnson, and Craif Huff.
By: KATIE NEWSOME
In January, 1983, the Southeast Floyd County Volunteer Fire Department
began a $10,000 fund-raising drive to make final payment on its fire truck.
Doubt was expressed that this amount of money could be raised within a
year's time. There is no doubt today! On Dec. 12, at the fire department's
annual Christmas dinner, a check was written to erase this debt.
Community volunteers from several towns in the Left Beaver Creek section worked together on a variety of money making projects to reach their
goal. Committees were organized and sponsored bake sales, gospel sings, rummage sales, country and western shows, road blocks, Bike-A-Thons, dinners,
and in addition individual donations were solicited. Volunteer member,
William P. "Bill" Wells, collected over $5,000 in donations from Floyd and
surrounding counties.
The Southeast Fire Dept. serves several communities at the southern tip
of Floyd County on Left Beaver Creek. When called upon, Southeast will assist
as back-up for other fire departments throughout the area
According to Fire Chief, Haskell Hall, their fund-raising activities are far
from being over. " We can take a short breather." He said, "we're already
planning to buy two "Air Pacs," or breathing respirators, to be used by firemen
to enter a burning house and rescue people caught in a fire or to put out an
existing fire. Each of these respirators will cost $1,000, so, we have our work
cut out for us. "
I~ I
0
3 97c
c
AUXIER HOMEMAKER'S CLUB
The new Auxier Homemakers Club
held its third meeting, Jan. 5. There
were 10 members present, Betty Curnutte, Kaye Hall, Henrietta Osborne,
Helen Music, Sue Wells, Brenda McKenzie, Marty Ward, Audrey Hall, Pat
Salyers, Peggy Wells, and all dues were
paid The club meets the first Thursday
each month at 7 p.m . at the Auxier
Methodist Church. Next meeting will be
Feb. 2. If there is no school on this date,
the meeting will be cancelled also. Mrs,
Pitts had a class on chicken scratch and
a lot of fun was had by all. New
members are welcome.
.·
LB.
CARROTS
$14 9
4-PAK
LB.
0
49c
HAM SHANKS..................
CUBED STEAK . .. . . . . $24!
TIP STEAK .. . . . ... . . . .. . $22!
2
TIP ROAST .......................$2 !c
PEARS .. :....... 6/97c
32-0Z. BOX
COUNTRY STYLE
OR BUTTEMILK
PILLSBURY
GRAPES .................. LB.
BARS
·tHICKEN &DUMPLING, SALISBURY STEAK, TURKEY
BANQUET BUFFET SUPPERS
$1
$189
APPLES .............. 3-LB.BAG
RED
67 C
67c
-·
RED DELICIOUS
LAUNDRY DETERGENT ..... 147-oz.
0.
DELICIOUS
LBS.
$367
0
LB.
6::·
PUREX
0.
SMOKED
2
~~1~·
.
0
9839C
PORK NECK BONES ... LB•
$129.
STEW.
4
97c
APPLE~
3
f$1
SAUCE...
iTfff
FRESH
0
c~
BY THE
CHUNK
SLAB
0
Energy
Fairc hold Eastern Equopmcnt and Dostrobullon Certer • P 0 Box 9 69 • W hitesburg. KY 41858 • 16061633 2 22 3
.·
�• Wednesday, January 11, 1984
Funeral services for Charlie Hale 77
of Martin, who died last Wednesday:
January 4, at the Riverview Manor Nursing Home following a long illness, were
conducted at 1 p.m., Saturday, at the
Merion Funeral Chapel
He was born at Manton, November 1,
1906, and was a son of the late Wes and
Sarah Kennedy Hale. He was a retired
• coal miner.
Survivors include his wife, Mrs . Opal
Cook Hale, a brother, Jake Hale of
: Websterville, Oh.; two sisters, Deltlah
Click, and Syntha Dove, both of Manton.
The Rev. Herman Joseph officiated at
funeral services and burial was made in
• the Hale family cem!'!tery at Manton.
Mrs. Virgie Hamilton
The Floyd County Times
Obituaries
Mrs. Julia Lee Hackworth
Mrs. Julia Lee Hackworth 77 of
Bonanza, died last Thursday' at' the
Robert B. Hall Medical Center at Paintsville after an extended illness.
A member of the United Baptist
Church at Bonanza for 62 years, she was
born May 20, 1906 and was a daughter
of the late Frank and Laura Fairchild
Spradlin.
She is survived by her husband, Jerry
J. Hackworth; a daughter, Mrs. Janice
O~ley, of Walbridge, Ohio; a son, Jerry
LIOnnel Hackworth, of Haubstadt, Ind. ;
a b~othe~, Huey Spradlin, of Walbridge,
OhiO; five grandchildren, and four
great-grandchildren.
Funeral services were conducted Sunday at 11 a.m. at the United Baptist
Church at Bonanza with the Revs.
Fl?r!da Lyons, Charles Selvage, Lemuel
Williams, and Kennith Trimble officiating. Burial was made in the
Spradlin family cemetery at Bonanza
under direction of the Carter Funeral
Home.
Pallbearers were Harold Green
Frankie Snipes, William, Eric, and
Jason Hackworth, Bill Fairchild and
Jobie Ousley.
'
-------------
Mrs. Virgie Tackett Hamilton, 94, of
• McDowell, died last Wednesday, January 4, at the home of her daughter, Mrs.
Margie Parsons, at McDowell, following
a long illness.
She was born February 17, 1889 in Pike
county, and was a daughter of the late
James and Mary Ann Martin Tackett.
A member of the Regular Baptist
Church for 77 years, she was preceded
in death by her husband D. Emit Hamilton, in 1947.
She is survived by three sons, Noah
Hamilton, of Michigan City, Ind., Foster
Hamilton, of Alexandria, Oh., and
James Ed
d S . b
Elmer Hamilton, of Kettering, Oh., , .
war ~ a 1IS Ury
three daughters, Stella Howell, of New · James Edward ~lisbury, 47, of Toler
Carlisle, Oh., Margie Parsons, of Cr~ek, Harold, d1ed Sunday at his
McDowell, and Draxie H. Newsome, of residence of a sudden illness.
Ligon; a sister, Gracie Little, of PikeBorn June 13, 1936 in Floyd county, he
ville, 31 grandchildren, 46 great-grand- was a ~on of the late J~mes Penbrooke
an~ Mmdy Ho~ell Salisbury He was a
children, and 16 great-grandchildren.
Funeral services were conducted Fri- retired coal mmer.
day at 11 a .m. at the Little Rosa Regular . Survi":'ors inclu~e his wife, Mrs. DixBaptist Church at McDowell with Regu- Ie McKmney Salisbury; a daughter,
lar Baptist ministers officiating. Burial Penelope (~enny) Boomer, of Mt.
wasmadeintheLucyHallcemeteryat Cle~ons, Mich.;~ brother, Jay B.
McDowell under direction of the Hall Salisbury, of Lorrame, Oh.; three half
F uneral Home.
brothers, Herbert Salisbury, of Island
- - - -- - - -- - - Creek, Walter Salisbury, of Lorriane,
Oh., and Ishmael Salisbury, of Harold;
Pearl Martin
five sisters, Lurlie Harrington, of
Pearl Martin, 80, of Galveston, died Belcher, Ella Bandy, of New Hall, West
S&turday at the Pikeville Methodist Virginia, Novella Spears, and Mary Lou
McKinney, both of Harold, and Darlene
Hospital following a short illness.
She was born April 8, 1903 in Akers, of Betsy Layne; a half-sister,
Galveston, and was a daughter of the Reathel Rogers, of Harold, and one
late Joe and Martha Akers Hall. She was grandchild.
Funeral services will be conducted toa member of the Boldman Free Will
Baptist Church for 10 years, and was day (Wednesday) at 11 a.m. at the
preceded in death by her husband. Mother's Home Regular Baptist Church
at Toler Creek with the Revs. Luther
Hiram Martin, in 1974.
She is survived by four so'ls, Stanley Conn, Ed Kidd, Walter Akers and other
Martin, of Xenia, Oh., Eugene Martin, ministers officiating. Burial was made
of Mclean, Va., Howard Martin, of Glen in the Spears cemetery at Toler Creek
Burnie, Marylan<j, and Harold Martin, under direction of the Justice-Bake!"
of Lorraine, Oh.; six daughters, Nadine Funeral Home.
Smith, of Fairborne, Oh., Faye Floyd,
of Nancy, Ky., Irene Miller, of Bowling Mrs. Aggie Reynold Isaacs
Green, Lexie Barr, and Joyce Walden,
Mrs. Aggie Reynold Isaacs, 60, of
both of Cincinnati, Oh., and Shirley Teaberry, died January 4 at her home
Goad, of Oberlein, Oh.; a sister, Goldia of an apparent heart attack.
Clark, of Galveston, 25 grandchildren,
A daughter of the late Dock and Hat27 great-grandchildren, and one great- tie Reynolds, she was born November
great-grandchild.
11, 1923 at Grethel.
The Revs. Arnold Belmont Johnson
Survivors include her husband,
and Don Crisp officiated at funeral ser- Earmel Isaacs; four sons, Kennith Ray
vices conducted at 11 a.m. Monday at Isaacs, of Lorraine, Oh., Boge and Larry
the Hall Funeral Home chapel. Burial Dean Isaacs, both of Ypsilanti, Mich. ,
was made in the Davidson Memorial and Clyde Isaacs, of Teaberry; four
Gardens at Ivel.
daughters, Brenda Akers, of Grethel,
Bonnie Bentley, of Hueysville, Sharon
Booth, of Ypsilanti, and Vickie Blazer,
Frank B. Conley
of Belleville, Mich.; six brothers,
Frank B. Conley, 67, of Lackey, died Waltust Reynolds, of Teaberry, Edgar
last Wednesday, January 4, at the Reynolds, of Cleveland, Oh., Demas,
Highlands Regional Medical Center Phillip Dale, and Vernon Reynolds, all
following a short illness.
of Lorraine, Oh., and Dock Reynolds, of
A retired machinist, he was born Grethel ; two sisters, Edith Isaacs, of
March 29, 1916 at Lackey, a son of the Teaberry, Louellen Frasure, of Grethel,
late Milton and Martha Waddles Conley. and nine grandchildren.
He is survived by one daughter,
Funeral services were conducted
Sharon Kay Mullins, of New Lebannon, Saturday at 10 a .m. a~ the Samaria
Ohio; a son, Frank Randal Conley, of Regular Baptist Church at Teaberry
Fairborne, Ohio; three sisters, Mrs. with Regular Baptist ministers ofVirginia C. Howard, of Prestonsburg, ficiating. Burial was made in the Joe
Mrs. Laura McClure, of Columbus, Ga., Reynolds cemetery at Beaver under
and Mrs. Louise Patton, of Hueysville, direction of the Hall Funeral Home.
and seven grandchildren.
The Rev. Timothy Jessen officated at
Jennie Friend Staton
funeral services conducted at 2 p.m.,
Jennie Friend Staton, 88, of North
Friday, at the Hall Funeral Home
chapel. Bwial was made in the Milt Con- Mayo Trail, Pikeville, died Thursday,
December 15, at the Pikeville Methodist
ley cemetery at Lackey.
Hospital.
She was born in Floyd county, March
30, 1895, and was the daughter of the late
Brett Inmon
Bud and Jennie Layne Friend. She was
Graveside services were conducted
preceeded in death by her husband,
Saturday, December 31, 1 p.m. in the
Ireland Monroe Staton, in 1951.
Dingus Cemetery at Dinwood for Brett
Mrs. Staton is survived by one son,
Inmon, infant son of Buford and Karen
Leo Staton, and one daughter, Mrs.
Reree Inmon, of Martin, who died
Virginia Taylor, both of Pikeville, 10
Thursday, December 29, at Highlands
grandchildren, and 13 greatRegional Medical Center.
grandchildren.
He was the grandson of Ernestine
Funeral services were held Sunday,
• Ward and the late Bobby H. Ward, of December 18, at the home, with the
• Martin, Clester Inmon, of Chapman,
Revs. Montie Fugate and Larry Keene
Kansas, and Jo Inmon, of Prestonsburg.
officiating. Burial was made in the
Services were under direction of the
Staton cemetery at Pikeville, under
Merion Funeral Chapel.
direction of the Justice Funeral Home.
Section Two, Paae El&ht
John Lee Garrett
You Are Invited
John Lee Garrett, 91, of Calf Creelr
Emma, died Saturday at the RivP: , lL'W
Manor Nursing Home follov·ir.g a long
illness.
He was a son of th<' ldte Bart and Mary
Conn Garrett. :-~no was born December
24, 1892. A •eteran, he served with the
Unitt>d :=:tates Army during World War
I. He was preceded in death by his wife
Mrs. Florence Miller Garr~tt. in 1976'
He is survived by two daughters, Mrs.
Grace Leslie, and Mrs. Laura Collins
both of Emma; four sons, Dallas, Gor:
don, and Wannie Garrett, all of Emma,
and Joe B. Garrett, of Chelsa, Michigan;
21 grandchildren, and 20 great-grandchildren.
Funeral services were conducted yesterday <Tuesday> at 1 p.m. at the Carter
Funeral Home Chapel with the Revs.
Le~en Burchett, Abe Vanderpool, and
Phil Robinson officiating. Burial was
made in the Richmond Memorial cemetery.
Pallbearers were Kenneth and Amos
Leslie, Randall, Roger, Dallas Ray,
Stanley Joe, John Gordon, and James
Gregory Garrett, David, Duane and
Larry Keith Collins.
To the
SUNDAY WON'T DO!
God won't accept Sunday. He
said the Sabbath, not the First
Day. Jesus said It was a vain
worship to keep man's comandments and not God's-Mark 7:7.
North Lake Drive
' a.m.
Church School 10:00
Morning Worship 11:15 a.m.
SUNDAY SCHOOL
Prestonsbur~,
WADE MARTIN HUGHES
Pastor
Sunday School. . ...... .9:45a.m.
Morning Worship ... ... . . 11 a .m.
Evening Worship . . . . . ... .7 p .m.
Wedn~sday Prayer Study .. 7 p.m.
SUNDAY
·sunday School ..... . ... 10 a .m.
Worship Service .. . . ... . 11 a .m.
i~ening Service ..... · ... 7 p.m.
WEQNESDAY
Pr-ay,er Meeting ........... 7 p.m.
, CLIFFORD H. AUSTIN, Pastor
West Prestonsburg, Ky.
Auxi·er Freewill
Baptist Church
Sunday School .. .10:00 a.m.
Morning Worship .... 11 a.m.
Evening Worship .. 6:00p.m.
Prayer Meeting
Thursday .... ... 6:30p.m.
Pastor, Elder Douglas Burkett
Asst. Pastor Clyde Bowling
12·IHf.
Sunday School . . . ........ 10 a.m.
Morning Worship . . . . . . . . 11 a .m.
Evening Worship .. . . . . ..... . .7 p.m.
Wednesday Worship . . ....... 7 p.m.
1
Taylor L. Biggs, Pastor
Phone : 886-8087
ZION
DELIVERANCE
TABERNACLE
~~-
FIRST
UNITED
METHODIST
CHURCH
'60 so.-Arnold Ava .• Prestonsburg
Dr.
Ted Nicholas, Minister
Sunday School .. . ....... 9:45
Morning Worship . ..... 11 :00
Junior and Senior UMYF2 :30
Rhythmic Choir .. . .. . . . .4:30
Wesley Bell Choir .. .. .. . 5 : 15
Evening Service . ....... 7:00
WAYLAND, KENTUCKY
Sunday Schoolll a.m .
Evening Worship 7 p.m.
Wednesday Prayer Service 7 p.m.
Saturday Evening Worship 7 p.m.
Ada Mosley, Pastor
Everyone Welcome.
A CHRISTIAN WELCOME
AWAITS YOU.
All The Earth Shall Worship Thee.I 2-IHf
SUN., WDOC AM-11:00
p:;:n
' EPISCOPAL
~
FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH
McDowell, 'Ky.
Sl.JPd~ehool. . .' ...... 9:45a.m.
Morning Worship . ... . . . . 11 a .m.
Evening Worship .......... 6 p.m .
Wednesday
'Prayer Meeting .
. ... 7 p.m.
H. Bailey Sadler, Pastdr
7-ii -t(
Visitors Expected
.
COME .
WORSHIP
WITtl US
AT
~
\v
CHURCH
fll.$ame6
The First Church of God
U1irersity Dr., Presbmsburg, Ky.
l_{EVIN COLLINS, Pastor
SUNDAY:
Sunday School . .... . ... 9:45p.m.
M~rn~g Wor~hip .. ... 10:45 a .m .
Evenmg SerVJce ....... 6:00p.m.
~
I EPISCOPAl )
t
TUESDAY:
PREST.ONSBURG. I<ENTUCKY -41653
Prayer Encounter .... . . 7:00a.m.
WEDNESDAY:
SUNDAYS
9:45 a.m.-Church
Prayer Service .. . .... . . 7:00p.m .
WDOC·AM
2:00p.m. Sunday•
School and Bible Class
11 a.m.-Holy Co111m~niQ&
EVERYONE WELCOME
WAlLAND .
UNITED
MITHODIST
CHURCH OF GOD
~ATHOLIC CHURCHES t
Of Floyd County
CHURCH
(SEVENTH DAY)
c/o Jerry Bentley
Rt. 4, Box 737
Welcome You
St. Theodore, Prestonsburg
7 p.m., Sat; 11 a.m. Sun.
Sl Juliana , Martin .
5 p.m. Sat.; 9 a.m~un .
RADIO PROGRAMS
:A church with a message
R.R.#5
Kentucky 41653
SpurlocJ( Fork of Middle Creek
SERVICES
Presto~sburg,
Pikeville, Ky. 41501
Ky.
"The Church Where Exciting
Things Are Happening" .
Paslor
FIRST ASSEMBLY
Of GOD
NO! God Is not going to
punish sinners forever In
a flrel The wages of sin
is death-Romans 6:23.
Free cassettes or written
literature-Specify which.
12-2Htpd
Sunday School .. .. .. . .. . . .. lO:OQ a.m.
(Classes for all agES)
Sunday Morning Worship Service .11: oo a .m.
Sunday Evening Service . . . . .. . . 7:'oop.m.
Wednesday-Prayer and Bible Study7 :00 p.m. ·
FITZPATRICK
FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH
· West Prestonsburg, Ky.
Across From Clark School .
for· children of all ages.
Sunday School. ........ 9:45a.m.
Morning Worship ........ 11 a .m .
(Nursery Provided)
Come and gr:ow with us!
WEYMAN McGUIRE, Pastor
358-4419
Sun.-WMDJ Martin .' .. . . .11:05 a.Jll.
Sun.-WDOC·FM ~restonsburg .. 11 :00 a .m. •
{W~. -WD0C Presto~sburg .
. .10:55 a.m .•
~.-WRLV Salyervllle
. .. . .7:50a.mJ
f>astor: Father Ralph Belting
285-3254
!EVERYONEISALWAYSWELCOME!
Sunday School. . .. . ... 10:00 a.m.
Morning Worship . .. . .... 11 a .m.
Sun. Evening Worship .. 6:00p.m.
(except when school is out) 7.00 p.m.
Wed. Bible Study ... . . . .7:00p.m:
Youth Church for ages 5-10
.d uring Sunday Morning Worship
rn
·
PIIILIPPIANS 2:16
,
" HOLDING FORTH THE WORD OF
LIFE... "
Dll'll Heintzelman-Pastor
Box 850, Martin, Ky. 41649
Parsonage Phone·285-3444
"A Christ Centered Church
Built On Love"
•NURSERY PROVIDED•
REV. JOHN WOODS, Pastor
~1"tR TO BE LIKE THE·l£lt1J
4
~\~~ 10
ACTS ~:1-47
S
~~~
710 Blirke Ave.,
Highland Avenue
Freewill ~Baptist
Church
(SEVENTH DAY)
HELL
CHURCH
9:30A.M.
REV. TIM011I\' D . JESSEN
Pastor
CHURCH OF GOD
I2·28-6lpd.
WORSHIP SERVICE
10:45 A.M.
Free cassettes or wrl:ten
literature-specify which.
c/o Jerry Bentley
Rt. 4, Box 737
Pikeville, Ky. 41501
CGMMUtliTY
UNITED
METHODIST
First Presbyterian Church
PROCLAIMING
NEW TESTAMENTt
CIIRISTIANITY .
.
No Book but the Bible.
No Creed but Christ.
No Name but Christian.
The growing church for
the growing Christian.
,.
FIRST CHRISTIAN CHURCH
L£• CM
PRJSTONSBURG
~~C/f .
CHURCH OF ·~HRIST
SOUTH LAKE
MAYTOWN
UNITED
METHODIST
CHURCH
DRIVE
LORD'S DAY
·alllLE CLASS .........••.
10:00· A.M.
WORSHIP .................. ·....... 10:45 A.M.
EVENING WORSHIP ....•....•... 6 P.M. STD. TIME
7 P.M. D.S.T. TIME
WEDNESDAY · .
BIBLE STUDY .......................... 7 P.M.
RADIO BROADCAST
WPRT MONDAY thru FRIDAY 9:30 ~.M.
WMDI SUNDAY 9 A.M:
429 N. Arnold Ave.
Morning Worship .... 9:30a.m.
. 11:00 a .m.
Sunday School
Youth Group . .
.. 5:00p.m .
.. 6:30p.m.
Evening Worship
Com e and g row w ith
u .~!
We.vman McGuirt-, Pastor
358-4419
. ______________________I-+·l~f.
Prestonsburg
Sunday School .......... . 10 a .m .
Morning Worship ........ 11 a .m.
Evening Worship ......... 6 p.m.
Wed. Bible Study ... . ... .. 7 p .m.
Dial-a-Prayer--886-8551
Walt Staude, Pr~acher--886-8773
·--------------------------1
o •• o . . . . . . o
ucome a.et Us Reason_Together" Isaiah 1:18'
Evangelist Bennie Blankenship 886-3379, 886-6223
"FIRST ASSEMBLY OF GOD
Lorie Vannucci, Pastor
Phone 285-3051
Martin, Ky.
Sunday School . . . . . . . . .10 a.m.
Children'sChurch .......... Ila.m .
Morning Worship . . . . .
11 a .m.
Youth Worship
.. .. . .6p.m.
Evangelistic Service . . . . . 7 p.m.
Wednesday, 7 p.m ..... Family Night
LOOKING FOR SOMETHING DIFFER£Nt?
Attend Services At The
When writing, Ernest Hemingway often subsisted for days at a time on a
"moveable feast" of crackers, raw green vegetables, and peanut butter sandwiches.
FIRST' CHURCH OF GOD
(Little Paint) 112 mile off Route 1428
Between Prestonsburg & East Point, Where
uTHE DIFFERENCE IS WORTH THE DISTANCE"
SUNDAY SCHOOL . .. .. . 10:00 a.m.
MORNING WORSHIP ... 10:45 a.m .
YOUTH SERVICE . .. .... 6:00p.m.
EVENING WORSHIP .... 6:30p.m.
BIBLE STUDY <WED.) . . 7:00p.m.
~
,
. ......
<NURSERY PROVIDED>
CARTER FUNERAL HOME
RADIO BROADCAST
WQHY-FM 95.5
MON.-FRI., 8-8:15 A.M.
47 SOUTH LAKE DRIVE • PRESTONSBURG
Phone 886-27i4
ROY L. TINCHER, Pastor
FIRST AVENUE, DOWNTOWN PRESTONSBURG
NURSERY PROVIDED AND PLENTl OF PARKING
REV. STEVE HOPKINS, PASTOR. MINISTER OF MUSIC, GUS KALOS.
.\ lorning
broadcast
' ~n·ic~
liH, 11 : 15. WQH\' F M 95.5
�Wednesday, January 11, 1984
NOTE OF THANKS
T.he Irbnon family wishes to express
the1r deepest appreciation to everyone
who helped during the loss of our beloved little son, Brett Inmon. We would like
to thank those who sent flowers food and
comforting words during o~ time of
rief. Thanks to the minister, Rev. Bob
ottoms, for his comforting words and
to the Merion Funeral Chapel for their
kind and efficient service.
BUFORD AND KAREN INMON
The Floyd County Times
In Christmas Parade
Section Two,
Pea• Nine
COUNTRYI ...........VI"ft'il''il'
RECORDS
Wheelwright Masonic Lodge Officers
Rare, hard-to·flnd MIICtiCiftl of
most all artists such as Williams,
James, Jtnnlnga, Stanltya, Moft.
roes, Oabornta, Martin. Plus alf re-
A shoebag hung on the back
of a closet door can also
hold stockings, scarves,
gloves or rolled-up belts.
....,..
- Y
cent releaae. available. Write:
Records, lox H, Prtlfontburg. ky.
41853, or call 808 88H08t.1
Jl
HAIR PRODUCTIONS
WANTED
CAMPBELL
LABELS
INVITES YOU TO
VISIT
COSMETOLOGIST
Jennifer Hall
Jones
Renee Lynn Tackett, Fall Festival
Princess, 1982-83, represented the Mud
Creek Volunteer Fire Department in the
Christmas parade held at Pikeville,
November 18.
She is the nine-year-old daughter of
Glen and Willa Tackett, of Teaberry.
Wheelwright Masonic Lodge No. 889, F&AM, held its annual election of of·
ficers, Tuesday, December '1:1. Those elected are, in front, from left, Marcus
Owens, installing officer; Gary L. Day, junior deacon; Harold Tackett, senior
warden; Glen Tackett, master; Charles "Speed" Rollins, senior steward; Gary
Fain, junior warden; Ray E. Childers, chaplain. In back, from left, are William
"Bill" England, senior deacon; Charles L. Hall, treasurer; Levonne Baker,
secretary; Roy Johnson, tiler. Not pictured is Earl Hughes, junior steward.
Specializing in
facials, manicures,
braids.
Pike County Shriners Help Child
It's nothing new to have Reelken, Zotoz, Revlon, Lamaur, Image. We use and sell them all.
886-6736
ALLEN WOMAN'S CLUB
Chartes Claril Elementary School will
participate In Campbell's Labels for
Education Proaram and you can help.
Please collect and 51Ye these Campbell
labels: Campbell's, Franco-American,
V-8, Swanson's, Preao. Our school c:en
redeem these labels for free school
eqlipment. All sizes of labels are eligiltle.
H you han Campbell product labels you
would like to donate to Clark Element•y School, from now till March 3,
please &In them to a Claril Elementary
student, or call the school at 886-2487
and we will send someone to pick them
up. Thank you.
The Allen Woman's Club held its
January meeting at the home of Mr. and
Mrs. Warren Blanton, of Allen, Jan. 3.
The meeting was called to order and the
Pledge to the Flag led by President
Hollie Blanton. A devotion, "This Is All
I Ask," by Helen Rice Steiner was read.
Secretary Mary Hinchman read the
minutes from the previous business
meeting. The club approved of a dona·
tion to the GFWC "Woman History and
Resource Center," President Blanton informed members of coming events in
the Club's regular program including
letters for the Allen Volunteer Fire Dept.
and the annual Little Miss Floyd County Pageant to be held April 28.
Members present were Joan Adams,
Hollie Blanton, Belle Conn, Judy Hester,
Mary Hinchman, and Janie King.
·B.&M.
SATELLITE
ria milton's Discount Furnitur
SPECIAL SERVICES
'
Phone: 377-2897, Price, Ky.
SUNDAY, JANUARY 15, 6:00 P.M.
John Hobson-Preaching at
Rock of Revelation Church
LOCATION: PRESTONSBURG CHRISTIAN ACADEMY BEHIND
GREY I GREY AUTO SALES, RIVERSIDE DR., PRESTONSBURG
For more Information, call 886-1688
Home .P.h one: 587-2816 or 587-2775, Beaver,
WILL NOT BE UNDERSOLD ON ANY
SATELLITE SYSTEM •
.
Shriners Howard Stratton and Adam Estep recently presented a check for
$316, on behalf of the Pike County Shrine Club, to Mrs. Eunice Robinette, chair-
• All Major brands available
• 60-day free service
• 3-year warranty on mounts
man of the Christopher Keathley wheelchair fund. The chair will be ordered
by Mrs. Debbie Thorpe, therapist at Paintsville Hospital, and will enable the
family to better care for Christopher, who has been an invalid since birth.
In addition to the $316 check, Hillbilly Clan 1, Outhouse 2, donated $48 dollars
to the fund.
New Location
Don V. Bryson, M.D.
1160 Madison Avenue
Paintsville, Ky. 41240
EffectiveJan.16, 198~
Banlc Financing Available
LITTLE BEAR
MARKET
ALLEN, KY.
874-2290
-HOURS: MONDAY-SATURDAY$ A.M.-8 P.M, SUNDAY 10 A.M.-6 P.M.'
U.S.D.A. CHOICE
Bryson Medical Clinic
NEW YORK
STRIP STEAK....
OLD FARM
3
$ 39
.
LB.
PRICES IN EFFECT
WED., JAN. 11
THRU TUES., JAN. 17
• QUANTITY RIGHTS
RESERVED
• NOT RESPONSIBLE
fOR PRINTER'S ................
99 C·
SLICED
BACON
~~::
ARMOUR SAUSAGE
•.,.,lrR.n
ROUND STEAK
LB.$189
c
S CHUNK
LB.
$109
LB.
SLICED )
( $119
LB.
IUZ.
79c
KEEBLER
SIRLOIN
TOWNHOUSE CRACKERS
TIP
STEAK
I-LB. BOX
$1 19
LEAN BONELESS
BEEF FOR STEW
$
SIRLOIN
'~AST ...
La.
89
$1
24 9
LB.
No appoin tm.ent necessary
Phone 789-3797
$1
79
:K~Cr . .
BONELESS
CHIPSIES COOKIES
SALT BACON
Behind Kentucky Fried Chicken
Formerly Owned by Dr. J.D. Parikh
Ky.
MRS. SMITH'S
FIIOZEN
n.oz
PIE SHELLS PKG. OF 2
99
• SEE OUR FULL PAGE AD ELSEWHERE IN THIS PAPER •
C
�Wednesday, Janual")' 11, 1984
The Floyd County Times
Section Two, Paae Ten
Shop Piggly Wiggly this week during our •..•
Prestonsburg, Ky.
North Lake Drive
Items and prices good
January 8-14, 1984.
• Quantity Rights Reserved
Armour Hickory Smoked Summer
U.S .D.A. Choice
.Sausage
Stick .... 6
Sausage 31b.•tick 5
bed Steaks
U.S. Grade A Piggly Wiggly
199
lib.
Armour Hickory Smoked Summer S
99
99
o~;;.sticks 99~
8
9
Thighs . . . .
U S Grade A Piggly Wiggly
Frying Chicken
U.S. Grade A Piggly Wiggly
Frying Chicken
~
lb.
Fresh Pork Shoulder
Picnics
Breasts
SJl?.
79~
, we welcome
FOOD STAMP
SHOPPERS
•
No. 1
Red o r Golden Delicious or
Red Romes
U.S D.A. Choice Lean
Piggly Wiggly Wafer Thin Sliced
Stewing
6
Beef . . . . . .
lb.
Steaks . . . .
lb.
99
BDiognauoz.pkg.
Luncheon
~
Meats . 2.soz.pkg.49
199
U.S .D A. Choice Round Tip
S239
Elm H11l Sliced Cooked
Piggly Wiggly Sliced
99
59~
Pears . . . . .
;:;;t:;;;~;;s99~
lb.
California Navel
119
4JS 1
Oranges size
5'6
c;~iifi.;;;~s 1 79
Luck's Pinto With Pork
Hormel Chunk
Hunt's
Beans
3
Kraft Macaroni & Cheese
Ham
6.75 oz.
Ketchup
Dinner
SJ 09
Dairy Charm
Ice
Cream . sqt.paiiS3
Fleischmann's Quarters Stick
32 oz. bottle
Triple Pack
yogurt . oz.
8
Dog
Food
Btscutts oz.
12
ctn.
Milk • • • •
1/z gal.
Flavorich Sour
2/89~
Creams oz.
Mr.
Clean
Fabric Softener
Luncheon Meat
Spam
~
3fSJ
12 oz . can
P1ggly Wiggly Pancake/Waf~le
SJ29
Syrup . oz.
24
btl.
Golden Best Whole Kernel
Corn . . . oz.
17
can
Towels
Assorted, Designer, White. jumbo roll
69~
Bags
Bounce
10 ct., 30 gal.
40 ct. box
SJ29
SJ99
B lu eberr~'·
Strawberry,
Apple Cinnamon,
7 oz . pouch
unty
bath size
Glad Handle Tie Trash
Martha White Muffin
Mix
Zest
2fSJ
28 oz.
SJ29
SJ29
Deodorant Soap
SJ79
Creamy or Crunchy,
18 oz.
24 oz. can
Beef. Pork
•
Cleaner
Peanut
Butter
Stew
Mushroom. Ch1cken.
SfSJ
ctn.
Supermafl
Dinty Moore Beef
SJS
1
Noodles 3oz.pkg.
Sanwa Ramen Pride
Beef, Liver, Chicken
15.5 oz can
89~
Flavorich Skim
Cracker
~
clacks 31oz.boxes69
Tony
2f89e
Butter;ilk or Good ~N Buttery
3JS 1
3fSJ
Regular or Ltght
Pillsbury Big Country 10 count
Flavorich Swiss Style
7.25 oz. box
99~
M:;~garine. 89~
49
~
3 lb. bag
D'Anjou
S 199
Ham .. uoz.pkg.
s
Bacon . 12 oz. pkg.
~
Piggly Wiggly Sliced
Apples .
Ham. Turkey. Chicken
7
3
9~
Charmin 1-Piy Bathroom
Barna Pure Grape Jelly or
Jam ... 16oz.jar
9~
Toney Flavored
69
Beef lover Ch!Ckell
5
Dog Foodo!. ~!n
5 fS 1
~
Tissue
996A
White , Yellow & Blu e, Pink &
Green,
4roll
package
4.5"
X
4.5"
....
�•
Wednesday, January 11, 1984
The Floyd County Times
WAKE UP AND
SEE THE WORLD
WITHOUT REACHING
FOR YOUR
GLASSES!
Beware of Danger
In Woodcutting
WEAR EXTENDED WEAR CONTACTS
Minix Optical has been fitting extended wear contact lenses
tor seven years 8r they are now available in most
astigmatism prescriptions tor extended wear up to two weeks.
MINIX OPTICAL
!522 College St.
Paintsville, Ky. 41240
789·6000
Marcus S. Minix, Optician
Wm. Chalmer Frazier, Optlcfan
TWO LOCATIONS:
205 N. Arnold Ave.
Prestonsburg, Ky. 41653
886-1349
IT TAKES
T EBEST
TOBE
RICAN.
At American Buildings, we honestly believe we offer the best metal building system on
the market today.
However, our future heavily depends on
our authorized builders.
So, we make sure we pick the very best
construction company we can find in a given
market.
In Martin, Kentucky, American Buildings
is proud to announce the association with Martin
Engineering and Construction, Inc.
When it comes to builders, we seek out
only the best.
When it comes to your next building project, we invite you to do the same.
......TIN ENGINEERING &
U I ;INC.
Route 122 West/ PO. Box823/Martm,KY 41649
16061 285-9232
If you plan to cut your own firewood
this year, be careful, especially if you
are going to use a chain saw. In recent
years they have become popular and
made cutting wood much easier, but the
biggest hazards associated with wood
cutting come from these saws, according to Dr. Larry Piercy, Extension
agricultural safety specialist in the
University of Kentucky College of Agriculture.
About two million chain saws are sold
each year. Hospital emergency rooms
report some 25,000 chain saw-related injuries treated every year.
Two out of three accidents are associated with the cutting chain itself, said
Piercy. "These can happen when someone releases the throttle and it continues
to spin down and accidently comes into
contact with some part of the body."
Another injury associated with the
cutting chain comes when the operator
is finished cutting through the log and
the saw swings down. "You don't have
any control over it and the saw strikes
a part of the body," Piercy explained.
"Just plain loss of control for one reason
or another can also cause this to happen."
Probably one of the ·most serious injuries associated with chain saw use is
the "kickback." When a person is cutting the tip of the chain saw or the blade
itself hits a log or rock, it will kick the
blade back towards the operator and
cause some very serious and severe injuries, Piercy said.
These accidents are not limited to the
amateur. Kickback also poses potential
injury for the experienced chain saw
user. Almost 25 percent of reported injuries are believed to be associated with
kickback, said Piercy.
· Other injuries happen when the cut
material hits the operator. There also
are reported instances of operators being shocked or electrocuted by electric
chain saws. Another hazard is an excessively noisy gasoline powered saw
which can damage hearing.
One way to minimize the danger of a
chain saw is to keep the tool in good condition, Piercy advised. "If the chain is
sharp and the tension adjusted, a lot of
problems can be eliminated. All it takes
is good maintenance activity."
When cutting wood, be sure that you
are in a balanced position and have good
footing. "If you are working in a place
where you are off-balance or in an awkward position, there is just that much
more potential for getting injured if the
saw were to kick back," said Piercy.
Be sure your thumb is wrapped
around the bar on the front handle gua
so that you will have a good firm grip in
case the saw kicks back.
Safety aids for chain saws include a
tip guard that covers the end of the chain
bar when the saw is in use. This helps
-------------------------------------------------------
eliminate the possibility of a kickback.
A chain brake is a device which is activated after kickback occurs. It is
designed to stop the movement of the
chain in a fraction of a second to prevent
injury to the operator.
Safety devices are only one way to
reduce injury. Another way is to learn
how to operate your chain saw properly. First, start out by reading the instructor's manual, Piercy said.
"If you are inexperienced with a chain
saw, be sure to work with somebody who
knows what they are doing," advises the
specialist. "Instead of going out on your
own, go out with someone who can give
you some added tips and steps to use
that will help assure your safety."
Start out with vertical cuts and don't
try to fell trees right away. Work up to
it when you feel comfortable with the
saw. "Don't go out and start like Paul
Bunyan, cutting up the biggest trees and
timber in the woods," Piercy said.
Use personal protection equipment
when cutting wood. Wear hard hats to
protect yourself from falling limbs, and
use hearing protection when using a saw
for a long period of time. Wear tight fitting clothing that doesn't have any loose
ends that might catch in the saw Also
wear safety goggles to protect your eyes
from flying chips, advised Piercy.
When operating a chain saw, Piercy
reminds users to keep others out of the
way. Don't have something holding the
log close to where you are cutting in case
the saw slips, Piercy advised.
Piercy offers some other tips to ensure
proper use of your chain saw:
Cut wood at high engine speeds (full
throttle). At low speed, the chain can
catch in the wood and throw the saw.
Keep all parts of your body and clothing away from the chain when starting
or running the engine.
Don't start a saw on your leg or knee.
Carry your chain saw safely. Stop the
engine, point guard bar and saw behind
you and point muffler away from your
body.
Do not smoke near fuel can or chain
saw.
Do not work alone.
Keep the saw below shoulder height
where you have good control over kickback reactions. ,
Use only the fuel mixture recommended by the manufacturer.
Before felling a tree, Piercy suggests
checking the area around it. "Notch the
side on which it is expected to fall. Make
the feeling cut about two inches higher
than the notch. Use wedges if necessary
Shut off the saw and remove it from the
tree before it falls, then get to a safe spot
quickly."
When limbing, Piercy recommends
cutting the limbs on the top side before
removing those resting on the ground,
being careful when cutting small limbs
because they are more apt to get caught
in the saw. It's safer to use an ax or a
handsaw for small limbs, according to
the specialist.
"Keep all your hand tools sharp.
Check the handles for soundness and use
axes and splitting mauls with care. Keep
bystanders safely back, assume a stable
stance, and aim true," said Piercy.
When you are splitting woOd, the
specialist recommends wearing safety
goggles. "Also, watch your step when
you are carrying the stacking wooddon't carry, lift or toss more than you
can comfortably handle. And wear sturdy leather gloves to protect your hands
from cuts," he adds.
Using these safety measures will help
ensure that you have a warm and safe
winter.
SALE PRICES GOOD THRU JANUARY 16, 1983
OR WHILE SUPPUES lAST
NEW YEAR SAVINGS
AT YOUR SUNDRY STORE!
BIG 49 OZ.
TIDE
19
ONLY!
30 TABLETS
TYLENOL
JUNIORS
199
ONLY!
ANGEL
SCENTED ORNAMENT
COLGATE
TOOTHPASTE
7 OZ. REGULAR or 6.4 OZ. GEL
ONLn
$1
19
SUNLIGHT
DISH SHING Ll UID
BIG 22 OZ.
NEW ARRIVALS AT...
Any Large Pizza and a
Pitcher of Soft DrintvS9.95
Every Tuesday Evening 4 to 9pm.
OUR LADY OF THE WAY
A daughter, Tracey Nicole, born
December 14 to Troy and Wanda Watkins, of Garrett; a daughter, Khristy
Lynn, born December 15 to Tony and
Linda Baril, of Prestonsburg; a daughter, Carla Leann, born December 14 to
Carl and Elouise Gibson, of Mousie; a
son, Brandon Eugene, born December
16 to Preston and Kathie Hale, of
Gunlock; a daughter, Kj;lyla Rochelle,
born December 16 to Douglas and Stella
Gearheart, of Hueysville; a son, Freddie Jay, born December 18 to Freddie
and JoAnn Samons, of Martin; a son,
Jackie Dwight, born December 21 to
Jackie and Kathy Hall, of Topmost; a
daughter, Ashley Brooke, born December 22 to Henry and Dianna Stephens, of
Pr~stonsburg ; a daughter, Ashley
Nichole, born December 23 to Timothy
and Deborah Steffey, of Eastern; a son,
Jonathan Clark, born December 23 to
Calvin and Debbie Johnson, of Dema; a
son, Reynold Alan II, born December 24
to Reynold and Regina Hall, of Martin;
a son, Curry Dean, born December 28 to
John and Charlotte Lawson, of Price; a
son, Nathan Jerome, born December 29
to Terry and Debra Hamilton, of Teaberry, and the first baby of 1984, a
daughter, Crystal Lynn, born January
1, to Gary and Lisa Ritchie, of Pinetop.
JOB OPENING
The Town of Wayland Is taklnl ,.. appleatlons for dty pollee llfficer. St..-.
tin1 salary Is $600 a month.
QUAUFICATIONS:
• Over ace 21 • Hlp school diploma
• Pollee knowlectce and skills
Applications ilccepted at the town
hall on Tuesday, from 9 a.m. until 1
p.m.
Deadline: Jan. 17, 1984
PATWICIA MURPHY
Mayor
H21
Nor good wtth a!'l~ other ducounts Offc- good on rc~ula· me.1u pncel only
01984 Pma Hu1. lnc
~~----~---~~~~~~~;--~
20c OFF
I
YOUR CHOICE!
111111 COUPO~
_)
·---------------;N;R-;-;;0;--,
Lilli! I
UPI~(S
IIU4
SELSUII BLUE 11 oz. ~ILY
$459
IUlliCOUPON
liiUI I UPIRES I IU4
-----------
I
II
~
�Wedne.clay, January 11, 1984
Section Three, Pace Two
NOTICE-NOW HIRING
SElL·IT M$1.1
Taking applications for full
and part-time employment.
BIN IT RlfJm.t
FOR RENT-One bedroom furnished
trailer, no children, no pets. 886·2145.
1-4-2tpd.
WOMAN NEEDED to stay with elderly.
lady. Call 358-9134.
1-4-2tpd.
FOR RENT: 3 bedroom home ,
carpeted. Located in Harold-Grethel
area. $175 month with $100. deposit.
Couple or small family only. No pets.
587-2802.
1-4-2tpd.
DARKROOM EQUIPMENT FOR
SALE-Omega color enlarger with all
accessories. Perfect condition. $400.00.
After 6:00 p.m. 447-2669.
1-4-2tpd.
HANDYMAN FOR HIRE-Experience
in plumbing. Phone 886-9577 anytime.
l-4-2tpd.
HOUSE FOR SALE AT MOUSIE, KY.Six rooms, bath, car port, central
heat/air. Formerly home of Anna Ward.
Nice lot and landscape, nice neighbor·
hood. Call358-4475. Will show any time
1-4-2tpd.
FOR RENT : Two-bedroom trailer.
Couples or working men only. 886-6602.
lt-pd.
STOVE FOR SALE- 30" white electric
Kenmore. Like new. Phone 886-1541.
lt-pd.
ELECTRICAL WORK
Troller Hook-ups, Residential Wlr·
lng. Appliance Repair. Experienced.
Call JIM GOBLE
886-6253
l-1 1·21pd
STRIKE IT RICH
Start 1111 year out right. Earn MO,OOO.tlOO.OOO year
comrnlulon. Must hOYt llo 3 years aalts txptrltnct,
nMd kngt Income to pay lor house, cor. family, oc·
culfomed to luxurious Nvlng. Needed by AAAA Corpora·
lion with 2• year track record 100% "nonclng, tx·
penu paid rralnlng. Call Mr. Lynn a a.m. Ia 10 p.m
CST 1-8oo-2•7·2..S. No lnvutment. we Invest In you
Comm. paid wttkly.
ltpd
FOR SALE
$5,550
PHONE 874-2172
1·11·21
i'''''''"''''"'''~~;·=;~,r~,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,ll
~ ~\ ~~~~:::, L::i~=~·l ~lj\
~ ~ Black with gold hardware, ~ ~j
::~ excellent condition.
I
•••.
:~:~
PH:::~~~~36
CHANCE OF A LIFETIME MOBILE
HOME only $99.00 down and payments
as low as $124.21 per month. Two and
three bedroom total electric only at
Clayton Mobile Homes, Richmond, Ky.
606-623-9404.
1-4-St.
SECTIONAL HOMES IN SIZES 24'x45'
and up. We also have many fine double
w1des in stock V.A.-F.H.A. and conventional financing available. Only at
Clayton Mobile Homes, Richmond, Ky.
606-623-9404.
l-4-3t.
I
MOBILE HOME
MOVING SERVICE
358-4520
or 358-9348
l•· u
Ralph O'Quinn
F OR SALE- Block house coal, 4-wheel
drive Jeep truck. Call 886-1882. 1-1t-pd.
FOR SALE: 1976 Ford Granada Ghia
4-door. 351-V8, leather upholstery, power
steering, brakes and windows, cruise
control, aluminum wheels. Other extras.
$1800. 874-9321.
lt-pd.
NEED- reliable person to pick child up
from school. Call aft.er 4 p.m. 886-9985.
lt-pd.
F OR SALE : 1976 VW camper. Sleeps 4.
In good condition. Call after 5:00p.m.
886-8231.
lt-pd.
Pomeranian Stud Service-White or
black. Also, 350 Honda motorcycle, $250;
and Cabbage Patch type doll, $30. Call
377-6800.
It-pd.
APARTMENTS FOR RENT-Each
4-rooms, furnished. Couples only. No
children, no pets . Call 886-6239 .
References required.
lt-pd.
FOR SALE-1978 Honda Civic wagon,
$2300. Also ladies size 12 full-length
leather coat. Call 874-2272.
lt-pd.
FREE PUPPIES-Shepherd pups. Six
weeks old. Call 874-2857.
lt-pd.
Dozer Work
FOR SALE:
• Experienced • Good Machine
• Reaso111ble Rates • Free Estimates
• D8H 1973 CATERPILLER DOZER
TRANSMISSION, $8,000, A-1
SHAPE.
• NEW 24-INCH TRACKS FOR D8H,
886-9551
I·
1~:· Badger
Construction Company
$6,000.
• 150 KW CATERPILLAR GENERA·
TOR, 3 PH AC POWER, $5,000.
• 1974 INTERNATIONAL TRACTOR
TANDEM WITH 5TH WHEEL
NEW 11x24 TIRES, $8,000.
• !50 HP 3 PH AC MOTOR, $1,500.
• 1978 60-TON GOOD MACK LOW
BOY, LIKE ·NEW. NEW RUBBER,
$20,000.
Backhoe Work
• Experienced • Good Machine
• RNsonallle Rates • Free Estimates
886-9551
I·
~:· Badger
Construction Company
Septic Tanks
Installed and Hooked-up
• All Material Fwnished • Free Estimates
DAY PHONE:587-2787
NIGkT PHONE:
886-9551
587-2954 OR 478-5755
I·
~t Badger Construction Company
WILL DO BABYSITTING in my home.
From 6 a.m. to 9 p.m. weekcl":· "·
Anytime on weekends. Call .b ' Sellors
at 886-3397.
l -ll-2t.
WILL DU BABYSITTING at my home
at Hi Hat. Debbie Slone, 377-6395. 1-ll-2t.
ONE BEDROOM APT. FOR RENTon
South Lake Drive. Two bedroom on Auxier road. Business will remodel if
necessary adjoining E. Ky. Auto Parts
on South Lake Drive, 886~56 or after 5,
886-3442. Branham Mining.
1-11-2t.
-
FOR SALE-GE washer. Sell or trade
Encyclopedia Britainnica. New edition
Base CB antenna. Ludwig snare drum
and case. 874-2272.
lt-pd.
•Free estimates •Insured
FOR RENT- 2-bedroom unfurnished
apartment on Arnold Ave. Utilities paid.
Call 886-8991. Lonzo Bowling. l-11-2t.
1-11·~
Roof Trusses for
Commercial & Residential
Purposes.
ANY TYPE WILL BE MADE TO YOUR SPECIFICATIONS. FREE ESTIMATE-FREE DEUVERY
East Kentucky Root Truss Co.
Phone 606-886-9563, Prestonsburg, Kentucky (anytime)
H.l. Setser. President
11·:
FOR PURCHASING COORDINATOR
Position available for qualified Individual with a good
background In Industrial manufacturing. Business degree preferred with three to five years· experience. Experience/familiarity
with purchasing. scheduling, expediting and forecasting for multiplant, multi-part facility, working knowledge of computerized
material control system.
Excellent salary and fringes.
Qualified applicants send resume to: Employment Manager, P.O.
Box A. Paintsville, Ky. 41240
Equal Opportunity Employer
1-11-21
FOR SALE-212 acres, 445ft. road front.
14 mile up Mare Creek on left side. Call
886-3444. Bill Smith.
1-ll-2t.
2 BEDROOM TRAILER FOR RENT:
Rice Branch at Banner, $230. Lilly Compton. No pets. 874-2633.
1-ll-2t.
FREE PUPPIES : To a good home. Call
after 5:00p.m. 886-9583. Larry Prater.
1-11-2t.
TRAILER FOR RENT on old 23 between Allen and Prestonsburg, quiet
neighborhood, garden space. Chuck
1-ll-2t.
Akers, 874-2069.
AKC reg. Pomeranian pup for sale. Call
886-6690 or 886-3184. Teresa Prater.
1-ll-2t.
TWO TRAILERS FOR RENT in Allen.
One furnished. Call after 5, 285-9971.
Harold Hall.
1-ll-2t.
CARPENTRY WORK: Any kind, painting. Also will tear down houses or
buildings, will haul trash away.
Reasonable rates . Call Dewey Howell,
phone 377-6045.
1-ll-2t-pd.
FOR LEASE- Nice clean Beauty Shop
at mouth of Cow Creek. Good opportunity for right person. Security deposit. See
Bert or Malta Porter at mouth of Cow
Creek.
·
1-11-2t-pd.
FOR SALE OR RENT: HOUSE- 3 bedroom house. RENT $225.00 plus utilities,
$100.00 security. BUY $5,000.00 plus take
over payment. Call after 4 452-4179.
l-11--2t-pd.
FOR SALE-1978 Mercury. One owner.
Loaded. $2500.()(). 1980 Olds Cutlass,
$4000.00; 1979 Fiat, $3200.00. If interested, call 874-9191 after 6:30p.m .
l -ll-2t-pd.
FOR LEASE-Building suitable for 2 office spaces and 1 reception room of
-small warehouse. Owner will fix inside
structure for either. Located at intersection of U.S. 23 and 80 and Ky. 3. Centrally
located to serve Pikeville, Prestonsburg
and Beaver Creek area. Call Curtis Ha t1-11-2t-pd.
field, 874-9939.
FOR RENT- Two bedroom trailer
across from Floyd Funeral Home. Married couples only. Will accept children.
Call Curtis Hatfield, 874-9939. l -11-2t-pd.
FOR SALE-14 x 70 Mobile home. Call
886-9065.
1-11-2t-pd.
HOUSE OR TRAILER FOR RENT at
Ivel. No children, no pets. References
required. Call 478-5970, 478-9221 or
478-9600.
1-ll-2t-pd.
RAY HOWELL BUILDING
& HOME ~PROVEMENTS
•
•
•
•
•
REMODELING
PAINTING
DRYWAll
TEXTURING
WlLL PAPERING
•
•
•
•
•
DECKS
ROOFING
FENCES
STORAGE BLOGS.
ETC.
fOR All JOIR NOMI IMPIIOVIMINT NffDS,
5·25 1(
CALL
.- 886-1640
Wonted: Responsible party to toke over
low monthly payments on spinet plano.
Con be seen locally. Write Credit
Manager: P.O. Box 537 Shelbyville. IN
46176
H-4tpd .
INCOME TAX PREPARATION
sa
and up.
Clarissa Conley
1-11 ·2~
WILL DO TYPING
OR SHORTHAND.
1!5 YEARS EXPERIENCE.
CONTACT NOR.MA WRIGHT
AT 886-9181
OR 886-2527
12-21-St
FOR ALL YOUR INSURANCEAuto, lire, homeowners, hospitalization,
111e. With 0.25% savings. Call Darby and
Allen Insurance Agency.
874-2347.
12·21·tf.
BOB WHITE
CONSTRUCTION
Box 282, Prestonsburg, Ky.
Dozers • Backhoes
• Dump Trucks
FREE ESTIMATES
Call 886-3544
HITCHCOCK
REPAIR SERVICE
24-Hour
Emergency Service
• Heating • Refrigeration
• Laundry & Cooking
Equipment
......_
PARTS
AVAILABL-E
PHONE:
886-6900
OR
886-1473
VIDEO MACHINES
For location50/50 basis-Mrs. Pac Man,
Popeye, Gallaga, and all the
rest.
Call 606-298-7226 or
nlghts-606-298-4717.
Evans Amusement 12. 14.8t.
Remodel ing, Siding , Roofing;
Heating & Air Conditioning, Addi·
tions, Garages & Custom Homes
RESIDENTIAL
BUILDERS
OLLIE JONES
(606) 874-9314
or 874-9633
~
~
Prestonsburg, Ky.
CHEAP'S
MOBILE HOUSING
"Eastern Kentucky's
Largest Dealer"
(There Has To Be A Reason)
COME TO SEE
47
New Models
Direct From The
Mob1le Home Show
THREE LOTS FOR SALE at Lakeview
Village. Lots on point overlooking
Dewey Lake. Reduced price to $19,800.
for all3. Call432-1863 after 5. 1-11-2t-pd.
DON'T BUY AN OLD FLAT ROOF
SHOE-BOX LOOKING TRAILER
COME TO CHEAP'S WHERE
COACHES LOOK LIKE "HOMES".
FOR SALE : 1977 Pontiac Phoenix.
Looks good, runs good . One owner.
$3,000 firm. Call 452-2270. Damon
DeRossett.
l -ll -2t-pd.
If You Buy A New Mobile
Home And Don't Consider
Cheap's Prices and Quality,
You'll Lose MoneJ.
ACREAGE WANTED : Couple wants to
buy 3 to 10 acres for home and garden.
Call B. Green at 478-2768. l -ll -2t-pd.
FOR RENT- Approx. 1,200 square feet
of office space in downtown Prestonsburg. Call886-9444, Monday-Friday, for
details.
l -ll -2t-pd.
TRAILER FOR SALE OR RENT-Call
285-3419 after 5 p.m.
1·ll -2t-pd.
REWARD FOR INFORMATION on
missing cat- Adult male with long white
hair and blue eyes. Information confidential. Call 874-9135.
l -ll-2tpd.
NELSON'S
CONSTRUCTION CO.
We do: • Dozer and Loader Work
• Sewage Systems Installed • Mobile
Home Moving 1r Furnace Repairs
REASONABLE RATES.
Call Ted Nelson. Jr.
FOR SALE
358-9446
H·"·
E.O.E.
886-2993 or 886-8549
Spinet-Console Plano Bargain
FREE
300 Mile Delivery And Set Up
On Foundat1on. Payments To
Su1t Your Needs.
I
Most wells drilled in half 1
day by Rotary Machine.
Kinzer Drilling Co.
874-9041
IMMEDIATE EMPLOYMENT- Large
GOOD FIREWOOD- Hay and Hogs for regional manufacturing co. has opened
sale. Call after 3 o'clock. 886-2200.
an office in P-burg, Ky. We need ag1+3tpd. gressive hardworking individuals who
F OR SALE : Two-story, 11-room apart- are interested in a career opportunity
ment building. $40.000. At Twin who are interested in a career opportuniBridges. Martin, on 100X50 comer lot. . ty as a manufacturing representative.
Call J .R. Samons, 285-3914.
12-14-tf. Income $30,000.00 plus excellent fringe
WALLEN 'S TRADING POST & TIRE benefits. Mwst have servicable auto. Call
SALES. Retails & wholesales: New & us- Greg' Kendziorski, 606-874-8171 Hl-2t.
ed tires, wheels, caps, Jugs, wheel
covers, batteries, tubes, auto parts, FIREWOOD FOR SALE-William Anl-11-2t.
s tereos & boosters, tubes & much more. derson, 886-6571.
We trade for most anything of value
874-2289.
1-4-4tpd. FOR SALE-1975 Chrysler New Yorker,
has new transmission, $800 ; white gas
cook
stove ,$75. 886-6349. David Wyatt.
Have you up-dated your personal in1-11-2t.
s ura nce to meet todays needs. If not,
Call us , we can insure the entire family
from oto 80. Call Sam Wallen Insurance FOR SALE-1974 Cadillac Deville
Agency. I have been serving the in- Sedan. Good condition, $895. Call
1-11-2t.
surance needs of Ky. for over thirty 789-3904. Bob, Music.
years. Phone 874-2289.
1-4-4tpd.
ABBOTT TV & STEREO REPAIR.
Interested in doing housecleaning. Evening TV & stereo service .
References available. Phone 285·9318 or Reasonable and reliable. Ray Greer,
1-11-2t.
886-8931.
lt-pd. after 6 p.m. 886-9619.
l-4·2t . ••.
:::;:;:;:.:~:•:·:•:•:·:·:~:-:·:·:·:·:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:~:·:·:·:·:·:·!·!·!·!·!·!·!·
~ALL
RUMMAGE SALE~ 1 ~mile on Spurlock
Fork of Middle Creek. Inside warm
building. Quilts, baby quilts and other
crafts, miscellaneous items. Wed.,
1+3t.
Thurs., Sat. of each week.
E XCELLENT BUY-1982 14' x 58'
2-bedroom mobile home for immediate
sale- owner transferred and wants payoff only. Call 478-9798.
lt-pd.
1980 Executive 98 Regency
Oldsmobile. Loaded.
Approx. 65,000 miles.
Ada Samons
For appointment call:
Water Well
Drilling
SCOTT
DOUBLEWIDE
$15,995.00
New 198-4, 3 Bed, 2 Bath, Gorden Tub,
Total Electric. Wood·Sidlng, Shingle
Root. cathedral Ceilings, Beams. Stove,
Retrlg.. House Doors lr Windows.
Carpet, Delivered anywhere and set.
You choose colors. Veterans no down
payment. Others pay $1700.00 down
• and $217.00 per month. Fireplaces
available. TREEHAVEN HOMES. Ottlceln
Clubhouse by swimming pool. Between
Eltlt 187 and Exit 1194 ott 1-64. Win·
chester, Ky. Phone (606) 744-n62.
l-4·5l
NEW
TOWNHOUSES
FOR RENT
Goble Townhouses. Two-bedroom,
unfurnished, total electric. $350
per month, plus deposit. Couples
preferred.
PHONE 874-9281
11·2-l!....
TWO NEW
DOUBLEWIDE
SPECIALS
LEXINGTON LOCATION :
New 198-4, 3 Bed, 2 Bath, Solid Con·
strucllon. Gorden Tub. Total Electric.
Wood Siding, Shingle Root, Cathe~ral
Ceiling. Stove, Frost·Free Refrigerator,
House Doors lr Windows, Carpet.
Delivered lr Set-up. ONLY $16,995.00.
See this home at 537 New Circle Rd.,
Lexington. Phone (606) 293·1609.
Allen, Ky.
IPhone 874-22581
FOR RENT
OFFICE
SPACE
in Prestonsburg
.Phone 886-1312
9·14·tf
REPO CLEANERS
Only 3 left. Latest model. New
5-year warranty.
Call 478-9407
An equal opportunity employer.
11·2-tf
ENVIRONMENTAL MONITORING
SERVICE, INC.
SAMPUNC AND ANALYSIS OF
WATER AND WASTE WATER
• Bacleriologi cal Analysis of bomestic & Well
Witer Supplies • Completion of Quarterly
II.P.D.E.S. Fonns As Rl!quired By Stale & EPA
• Enwironmental Impact Statements &
Assessments
Member of AST M & The National Enwironment
Health Association. LABORATORY MEETS AU
STATE OSM & EPA REGULATIONS.
PHONE 789-3258
U.S. 23 So., Paintsviii~
l f.
OUSLEY
CONCRETE
CONSTRUCTION
COMMERCIAL & RESIDENTIAL
Bldg. Floors • Sidewalks
Footers • Driveways
Patios .. Basements
Exposed Pea Gravel
• ·Free E-stimates •
JAMES OUSLEY
· Phone 886-8373
RICHMOND LOCATION:
New Floor Plan, 198-4, 55x24, 1224-Sq.
Ft., 3 Bed, 2 Bath, Garden Tub', Utility
Room, Total Electric, All Walk-In
Closets, Cathedral Ceiling, Wood
Siding. Shingle Root. Bay Window In
Master Bedroom, Fireplace, Frost·Free
Refrigerator, Stove. Deluxe Carpet &
Pad, Side Goble, all other Deluxe Op·
lions. ONLY $21.995.00. See this home
at Exit !197 Ott 1-75, HalfWay between
Lexington 1r Richmond. Phone (606)
624-0200.
WHEN WE BUILD ll, YOU GET MOR.E
BUILDING FOR YOUR MONEY.
10 other doubles on display, 50 new 14
wldes. 20 repossessed homes. 50 Used homes. V.A. no down payment. FHA
loons with 10% down.
We custom-design and construct
butldtngs to fit your precise
needs- without cost penalties or
added construction time. Industrial, commercial, warehouses,
agricultural, recreational and institutional. Durable, attractive
and energy efficient.
GREAT AMERICAN HOMES
l + St.
TROY'S
CABINET
CENTER
~
VARCO-PRUOEN AUTHORIZED BUILDER
F. E. E., Inc.
606-886-8852
Prestonsburg, Ky. 41653
WHEN YOU KNOW WHO WE ARE,
YOU WON'T BUILD ANY OTHE~ WAY,
US 23, lvel, Ky.
Stock or Custom-Built Cabinets
Kitchen Cabinets, Vanities
Thermador Appliances
on Display
Free Estimates
HERE'S WHY:
Discount Prices
BEAUTIFUL BUILDING STONE
Sandy Valley Monumen ·
and
Building Stone Co.
Call 478-5344
(Inc.)
1-14-tf.
HYLTON.
TRUCKING &
EQUIPMEN·T
COMPANY
WE CAll MOVE YOUR
MOBilf HOME-lA,GE OR SMALL
WE ALSO DO:
• UCAYATIIUI WORK .
• SEPTIC TANKS • DIRT HAUUIIG
Insured and Bonded for your protection.
CALL BILL HYLTON
FOR FREE ESTIMATE
478-9593, Dar. 432·5678, Mi&llt
---WE PAY CASH
[FOR USED MOBIL£ HOMES_) ·
l~lf.
MANY VARIETIES OF BEAUTIFUL
BUILDING STOIC£ FOR THE HOME
'• · LIMESTONE VENEERING
• M.BLE LANDSCAP£ CHIPS
• PORTABLE CONCRETE STEPS
• VERMONT SLATE
Located On Old U.S. '23.
In New Allen
Open After Church
On Sunday For
Your Inspection
COLLINS SECURITY SERVICE
CHEAP'S
• LICENSED • BONDED • INSURED
• 18 YEARS SECURITY EXPERIENCE •
• 24-HOUR GUARD SERVICE •
Only 60 M1nutes Drive
(606) 886-9867 OR 886-3665
FLEMINGSBURG , KY.
From Downtown Lexington
JESSIE COLLINS, President
l-11-tf
�•
Wednesday, January 11, 1984
INTERIOR AND EXTERIOR Porter
• >aint. 1,000 colors to choose from. BEN
FRANKLIN STORE; phone 886-2169,
Prestonsburg
5-16-tf.
TREATED utility poles, 18ft. 20ft. and
25ft. lengths. Also fence posts at GOBLE
LU~IBI<:R CO., phone 874-9281. 4-11-tf.
GRAVEL FOR SALE: $8.75 per ton
plus delivery charge. Call 886-3425 JIM
cox.
6:23-tf.
IGHT FIXTURES: price at GOBLE
LU::\1BER COMPANY, phone 874-9281.
4-11-tf.
1 '2
WATCH REPAIR: If you want the best
job, ?ring watch repairs and jewelry
repairs
to
WRIGHT
BROS.
JEWELERS.
11-12-tf.
PERMA-SHIELD Anderson windows.
II styles, 20 percent off regular price
t GOBLE LUMBER CO. phone
874-9281.
4-11-tf.
0
CUSTOM-MADE drapes and matching
bedspreads by R.W. Norman and
McCanless. Measured to fit. BEN
FRANKLIN STORE, phone 886-2169, or
SALLY GOEBEL, phone 886-2657.
5-16-tf.
HOUSE FOR SALE: Full basement
orced air, natural gas. Call after 4:
86-3860, Ann Slone.
9-14-tf.
FOR SALE: 197412x60 Memory mobile
home, $5000. Can be seen at the Bank
Josephine, Harold Branch. For information, call Doug Woody at 886-9101,
Ext. 244.
!H4-tf.
PROPERTY FOR SALE: Ten acres
more or less, located on Spurlock Fork
of the left fork of Middle Creek. For inormation, call Doug Woody at the
Bank Josephine, 886-9101, Ext. 244.
9-14-tf.
HEY LOOK! We repair washers,
dryers, ranges, all types appliances.
Parts order€d for you. Call 358-4009 or
358-9617.
11-3-tfpd.
F_OR RENT: Rooms, weekly, monthly,
mghtly. Also waterbeds available.
886-2385, 886-9310, Sandy Valley Motel,
N. Lake Drive.
1-5-tf.'
OR SALE: Cabin at Cave Run Lake.•
Three bedrooms, air conditioned, all
new carpet. Reasonable price. Call
784-7250 or 784-9203, J.C. SPENCER.
5-25-tf.
DAMRON NEW & USED FURNITURE: Living room suites starting at
$159. A-1 appliances. Rt. 122, Drift, Ky.
Phone 377-2071.
5-25-tf
ARPENTRY WORK: Home building
and remodeling. Complete interior and
exterior. Masonry and concrete work,
all types interior and exterior painting.
Also have spray equipment to spray
barns and metal buildings. Free
estimates. Will furnish references. 15
years' experience. Call 886-8896, anytime. Robie Johnson, Jr.
9-21-tf.
FOR RENT: 4-room unfurnished
apartment, $200 rent, $150 deposit
.ouples only, no pets. Call Jeanette
ubbard. 88&2557.
5-18-tf.
APARTMENT FOR RENT: New Allen·
on 4-lane U.S. 23. midway between
Pikeville
and
Prestonsburg.
2-bedroom. completely furnished.
ground floor. Fireplace. dishwasher.
washer: dryer, microwave. disposal.
trash compactor. central heat and air
All utilities paid, including trash
removal. city water and cable TV. but
ot private telephone service. Sin~les
or couples only. No children. no pets.
Available November 1. Jim Hammond.
88&2376.
10.19-tf.
FOR RENT: Trailer lot, M&D Trailer
Park. Located at lower end of Auxier.
Call 886-2965 for information, Monday
thru Saturday. No Sunday business.
ll-23-8t.
FOR SALE: 16'x32' above ground
swimming pool with fence and 12'x16'
deck. Whitney piano by Kimball, bass
uitar with amp. Call after 6 p.m ..
88&6212, Charles Rose.
12-21-4tpd.
FOR SALE: 12x60 3-bedroom trailer,
plywood floors. new furnace, new
water heater 358-9617. Mack Bolen.
12-21-6t.
HOUSE FOR RENT-Two bedrooms,
bath, cabinets, w/w carpet, air, fully furnished. Gas and water paid. Good locaion near parkway-David road. No
ts. Evenings-weekend, 886-3902. lt-pd.
I<'OR SALE: 1975 Mercedes-Benz 45o-SL,
excellent condition. Metalic green. New
tf.
top. Price $20,500. Call 886-8506.
CLEAN FURNACE FILTERS save
energy dollars and service call costs.
Sandy Valley Hardware S&T at Allen is
your one-stop furnace filter headquarters.
ll-3o-tf.
'OW PAYING TOP DOLLAR for
mobile home wheels and axels. Ask for
Patty Wright, 639-4772.
12-7-tf.
1982 LINCOLN: Best deal in town. This
one has it all! Call Patty Wright.
639-4772.
12-7-tf.
1984 MOBILE HOME: 2 bedroom, 12'
wide. front kitchen, double windows.
Furnished. Total electric. Only $8.995.
all John Wright. 432-1401.
12-7-tf.
PAYMENTS LI<.::SS THAN RENT:
14-wide mobile home. Only $10.995. Call
.John Wright. 432-1401.
12-7-tf.
The Floyd County Times
Section Three, Paae Three
FOR SALE OR Rl!.:N1' 'House- 3
bedroom's, 11 2 bath. Would considc1 a
contract Call 886-2579 after 5:00p.m.
It-pd .
One 8ft. picture window. $100. Plus other
windows for sale. 285-3656 after 6. It-pd.
NOTICE TO
ADVERTISERS
All classified ads scheduled
for only one week, must be
paid In advance. All classllled ads with only telephone
numbers must be paid In ad-'
vance.
CLASSIFIED
ADVERTISING RATES
10c Per wont, If paid In advance
15c: Per word on charae account
($2.50 minimum)
Dlloplay classified advertl•lna
$3.00 per column Inch.
Deadline for ad•: 4 p.m. Monday.,
WILL BABYSIT IN MY HOME at Auxier with children new born thur age 5. $25
per week. Valeria Harrison, 886-3738.
12-28-3t.
FOR SALE-Firewood, $25 a load.
Phone 285-9937. George David Bush.
12-28-4t.
FOR ALL YOUR INSURANCE-Auto
fire, homeowners, hospitalization, life:
With 0-25% savings. Call Darby and
Allen Insurance Agency, 874-2347.
12-28-tf.
FOR SALE-Nice brick five roorr.
house. Reason for selling, bad health.
Call 452-4498. Dora Mitchell
1-4-2t.
STEAKHOUSE FOR SALE at Maytown. Includes two basement apartments. in-ground swimming pool, and
house trailer. Phone 285-5082. Lorraine
Beach.
1-4-2t.
ACREAGE WANTED-Couple wants to
buy 3-10 acres for home and garden. Call
B. Green, 478-2768
l-4-2tpd.
CHAIN LINK FENCE: Residential
and commercial. Prestonsburg Fencing Company. Call HENRY SETSER,
phone 88&2073 or 88& 1556.
4-3o-tf.
FOR SALE-1981 R&S 30ft. aluminum
trailer. Has 90.% tread on 10:00 x 22
radial tires. Low mileage Call478-9175.
8:30 till4:30 Monday thru Friday. Evenings 886-1609. Big D Excavating. 1-4-2t.
WANTED-Someone to live in with
elderly lady. References required. Prestonsburg area. Phone 886-8755.
It-pd.
Beauty pageant at Allen Central gym
January 22 For more information call
285-5022.
1-ll-2t-pd.
FOR SALE-Singer Sewing Machine
Zigzag Model Touch & Sew. 886-8764. Itpd.
FOR SALE-25" RCA color TV in very
good condition. Cherry cabinet mediterranean styling. Picture is good. $150,
886-3563 after 6.
lt-pd.
FOR•GLASS REPLACEMENT. bring
your window frames to Sandy Valley
Hardware at Allen We specialize in
Plexiglas, cut to size.
11-9-tf.
Business & house all in one package in
Floyd County Grocery Store, gas station
and carry out. Complete with stock. 3
bedroom brick house and double car
garage. 606-874-2314.
l-11-2t-pd.
FOR SALE OR TRADE: Cardox
auger. conveyor. 24-inch steel. Phone
874-9033.
11-24-tf.
FOR SALE-2 homes located in Prestonsburg. 886-8076.
l-ll-2t-pd
BOLEN'S MOVING & DELIVERY
SERVICE: We move a house full or
deliver one piece - anywhere. Phone
358-9617, 358-4009.
l2-14-12tpd.
"fi'OH. SALE: Wards Signature 80,000
B.T.U. Natural Gas Stove. Thermostat
controlled, built in blower. Only used
about 3 seasons. Sells for approx. $500.00
new. Take $250.00. One large, behind cab
truck tool box. Doors swing up on each
end. Sells for $239.00 new. Will take
$75.00. Phone 886-6036 after 5:00 p.m.
lt-pd.
BABYSITTER NEEDED-Someone to
babysit in my home, Mon.-Fri.,
7:30-5:30, location of Abbott road area.
Call after 5:00p.m. 886-8814.
lt-pd.
FOR SALE-Four bedroom house, 40 x
44 ft., gas or electric, large kitchen,
large entrance hallway, $30,000. May
consider rent. 358-4906.
ll-pd.
AN OHIO OIL CO. offers high income,
plus cash bonuses, benefits to mature
person in Floyd county area. Regardless
of experience, write M.V. Read, American Lubricants Co .. Box 426, Dayton,
Ohio 45401.
lt.
FOR SALE-New large women's clothing never worn. Lost weight sizes 16 to
22. Also lot of used women's clothing in
excellent shape. Name brands. Wigs,
shoes size 9. Call 886-3563 after 6. It-pd.
FOR SALE-Matching pine and brass
table lamps, 34", excellent condition
3-way. Miscellaneous household items
also. Call 886-3563 after 6.
lt-pd.
F'tm I;l.ENT-House in town partly furnished. No pets, no children, $325.00.
886-9918.
l-11-2t-pd.
FOR RENT-3-bearoom house on U.S.
23, Boldman, Ky. Security deposit required. No pets. Call: 478-9170.1-11-2t-pd.
FOR PHONE installation, call 886-3770.
1-ll-2t-pd.
FOR RENT-Five-room, unfurnished
house, carpeted. Prefer couple only
$250.00 monthly. Near Court House.
886-3032.
l-11-2t-pd.
Same as new clarinet for sale. Bought
at school. $150. Dining table and chairs
Like new. $75. 452-4498. 886-6051. lt-pd:
NOW BUYING: Used washers, dryers,
ranges, refrigerators. Working or nonworking condition. Phone 358-9617.
11-16-12tpd.
FOR RENT: 4-room apartment near
1clinic and college. 886-3154, T.E.
Neeley.
11-9-tf.
MINI-WAREHOUSE AVAILABLE.
Convenient location. Two sizes
available. Located on U.S. 23 at
Harold, Ky. Phone 432-8181. After 5:00,
phone 478-9546.
l2-14-6tpd
G!X_.
INDIAN ARROWHEADS and relics
It-pd.
wanted. Phone 886-8755.
Classified ads will no longer be accepted after
12 noon, Mondays. For the coming week, these ads
ore also accepted on Thursday, Fridays, and
Saturdays.
We trust this will not unduly inconvenience you,
and we will greatly appreciate your cooperation.
ALL NEW OFFICE SPACE for lease:
Consisting of reception - library and
four (4) connecting offices. with five
(5) assigned parking spaces. Located
on Third Avenue near the Courthouse.
downtown banks, postoffice. town
~nter parking lot. and the Floyd Coun"
ty Times building. ldeaffor physicians.
attorneys. accountants. realtors. and
other businesses and professions. Immediate occupancy. Jim Hammond.
88&2376
I 0.19-tf.
BUY CARS WHOLESALE: Classic Car
1969
440 engine, torque flight
transmiSSion, all original, like new. Has
factory price sticker on window $4500·
1975 Lincoln Town car, all opti~ns, in~
eluding sun roof, sharp, $1650; 1975
Buick LeSabre, real sharp, $950; 1974
Malibu Chevelle station wagon, $350;
1979 Chevy passenger van with all windows, low mileage, has all options, real
sharp, $3950. 452-4498, 886-6051. lt-pd
LIGHT DELIVERY. Must have economical vehicle. Must know Eastern
Kentucky. Louisville 502-581-9870. Triple
C Advertising. Call Bob Cross collect.
1-11-2t.
CLASSIFIED ADVERTISERS
PLEASE NOTE!
RAISE, LEVEL OR MOVE houses or
mobile homes. Also, do block and concrete work. Hall's House Raising.
Phone 447-3242 or 447-2610.
11-9-tf.
HOUSE FOR RENT: 3 bedrooms, 11'2
baths, family room, large Jiving room
with dining area, washer/dryer hookup,
located 6 miles from Prestonsburg in
nice neighborhood, on Mountain Parkway, central heat and air, no pets.
References required. $375.00 per mo.
lt-pd.
plus security deposit.
Tires at prices you can afford. Computer
wheel balancing. Western wheels at sale
prices, friendly service. Where can you
find this and more? Jim's Tire Shop, of
course. 285-5058. Maytown.
1-11-3t.
Three year batteries $?9.95. Computer
wheel balancing (most wheels) $3.99.
Free valves with each tire purchased.
Where? Jims Tire Shop. 285-5058. 1-11-3t.
FOR SALE-25 acres, 2 bedroom house
and 22 x 46 out building, 478-5205.
1-ll-3t-pd.
DANS APPLIANCE REPAIR. We
repair washers, dryers, stoves. All work
and parts guaranteed. Wanted Washers,
dryers, stoves, working or not, 358-9892
day or night.
1-11-3t-pd.
FOR SALE-Honda XR 350 motorcycle.
'83 model-excellent condition. Phone
874-2259.
1-ll-3t-pd.
FARM FOR SALE-200 acres. Near
Lake Cumberland. 2-story colonial
house, 5-miles from Somerset. Call at
night 606-382-5643. Larry G. Vanhook.
l-11-4t.
FOR SALE: 600 Mack coal truck, new
X1 tires. Phone 285-9496, Tom Williams.
l-11-4t.
FOR SALE: 1983 doublewide,
3-bedroom, 2 full baths, 20x20 carport,
20x20 and 8xl2 decks, $24,000. 874-8941,
Jim Wipp.
1-11-4t-pd.
THE PAPER BACK BOOK STORE, 116
Francis Court, next to the courthouse.
We exchange and sell paper back books.
We have thousands of paper back books
10¢ each or 15 for $1.00. All other books
1 2 price.
l-ll-3t-pd.
FOR SALE OR RENT-1979 2 bedroom
Fairmont trailer. 2 miles up Daniels
Creek at Banner. Call 874-9572. Dallas
Justice.
1-11-6t.
SALISBURY USED FURNITURE. Two
miles up Arkansas. 285-3549.
1-ll-8t.
USED FURNITURE, guaranteed appliances: Moore's Discount Furniture.
Located about 3 miles from Martin on
Rt. 122. Low prices. Call 285-9354.
l-ll-8tpd.
FOR RENT-Executive Apartments,
New Allen 2-bedroom, upstairs apartment, completely furnished including
TV. Fireplace, dishwasher, central heat
and air; all utilities paid including cable
TV. Located on 4-lane U.S. 23 midway
between Pikeville and Prestonsburg. No
pets; no children. Jim Hammond
886-2376.
1-11-tf.
APARTMENT FOR RENT-One
bedroom, furnished kitchen, central air
and heat. All utilities furnished. Mountain Parkway, near Prestonsburg. $300
month. Cleo DeRossett, 886-6568, day, or
886-1368, night
1-11-tf.
OUTSIDE SALES-Prestonsburg area
:w-ants an aggressive sales person lookmg for a career opportunity with an
established multi-million dollar comp~ny. Requirements are: hard working
with a good track record, and a welding
supply background would be a plus.
Please reply, Outside Sales, Box 638,
Prestonsburg, Ky. 41653.
l-11-2t.
FOR SALE-1978 Toyota Corona station
w~gon. $4,000.00. Under 45,000 original ·
miles. Great condition. Phone 886-9172.
Barry Prater
l-l1-2l.
R. D. fv\ARSnAL..L, u.M.D.
takes pleasure in ANNOUNCING that
MELVIN K. STEWART, D.M.D:
will be ASSOCIATED with him in the
PRACTICE of DENTISTRY including
ORTHODONTICS (BRACES)
PHONE: 874-9134
DR. STEWART
DR. MARSHALL
Monday only
Hours by Appt.
Tues. thru Sat.
Hours by Appt.
I· 1·21.
We're glad
you ask~d!
John C. Hall
Founder
Hall Funeral Home
HOW MUCH ABOUT DEATH CA-N A CHILD UNDERSTAND?
The younc clild of thrtte to fin USIIIIIIy undersbnds little of de.th nd seems to be
disturlted ebout It for only e short time or for short internls.
The dllld from five to rine mey express pllt rememberlnc put feellncs tnd qUirrels with tile dec:eued. They will be very much Influenced by the way in which
edults In the femlly behave durinc the deeth end funer~l.
Of utmost impartence to children of any ece is thet they receive the support of e
Iovine edult to help sort out their feellncs, essure theta thet they ere in no wey
responsible for the deettt, entl encour~ce them te shere their feellncs wlttt you.
If you heve e question feel free to contect us. Sometimes we cen be of help in
li&trteninc your l011d In these Intensely personel sltuetions.
HALL FUNERAL HOME
Near JUAction of Ky. 80 and Ky. 122, Martin
Phones 215·9261 OR 215·9262
Census Survey Seeks
D~splaced Worker Data
The U.S. Bureau of the Census will
conduct a regular survey on employment and unemployment in this area
during the week of January 16-21 1984
according to JosephS. Harris, di~ecto;
of the Bureau's Regional Office in
Charlotte.
In addition to the usual questions on
current employment, the January survey will include others concerning
displaced workers and occupational
training. Displaced workers questions
will be asked of persons 20 years of age
and older, who have lost or left a job involuntarily in the past five years, in an
effort to determine which industries and
occupations have been affected the
mos.,f, and what earnings or benefits
losses may have been incurred. The occupational training questions will be
asked of persons 14 years of age and
older who have attended any occupatio.aal.training..program fn-the past two
years.
Households in this area are part of the
sample of 72,000 across the country
scientifically selected to represent a
cross section of all U.S. households .
The monthly survey is conducted for
the U.S. Department of Labor and provides a continuous record of activity in
the labor force. The November survey
indicated that of the 112.0 million men
and women in the civilian labor force,
102.7 million were employed. The nation's unemployment rate was 8.4 percent, down from the 8.8 percent reported
in October.
Information supplied by individuals
participating in the survey is kept strictly confidential by Jaw and the results are
used only to compile statistical totals.
Surface Mine Dept.
Acting Comm. Named
Gov. Martha Layne Collins has appointed Charles W. Martin, of Wickliffe,
as acting Commissioner of the Kentucky
Department for Surface Mining
Reclamation and Enforcement.
Secretary Charlotte Baldwin of the
Natural Resources and Environmental
Protection Cabinet commented that
Martin "will provide competent oversight for surface mining during the
'transition period' within the cabinet."
"As acting commissioner, Martin will
contribute his extensive professional experience to stablize this crucial area of
operations in our cabinet," Baldwin
said.'
Martin, named Deputy Secretary to
Baldwin, December 14, by Gov. Collins,
will oversee the issuance of permits for
both surface mining and the surface ef·
fects of underground mining in Kentucky. He will also be responsibie for the
enforcement of state and federal mining
laws and regulations.
Having earned a master's degree in
environmental engineering technology
from Murray State University, Martin
formerly served as environmental affairs coordinator for the Westvaco Corporation's facility in Wickliffe.
Martin's professional background in·
eludes the vice-chairmanship of the Ken
lucky Environmental Quality Commission, membership on the Region IV EPA
Administrator's Industry Advisory
Committee and membership on Gov.
Collins' transition team for the Natural
Resources and Environmental Protec·
tion Cabinet.
The deepest lake in the
world is Lake Baykal in the
Soviet Union. At some
points it is more than a
mile deep.
,.,~POSIT
14 COLOR PORTRAITS
2(8x10s), 2(5x7s), 10 wallets
TRADITIONAL POSES ONLY
Poses our selection. Beautiful backgrounds ava1lable .
+ $1 00 sitting fee for each add1t1onal subject in portrail
PHOTOGRAPHY DAY$:
Wed.-Sun. -Jan. 11th-Jan. 1Sth
PHOTOGRAPHY HOURS:
Wed. & Sat. 10-1,2-6 -Thurs. & Fri. 10-1,2-5:30,6-11
Sunday 12-4- Lunch 1-2
Big Sandy Village
South Side Mall
�Wednea
y, Aanuary 11, 1984
Dart
The Floyd County Times
's Hair Shop
Langley, Ky. (Old Ky. 80)
Men or women
Open 10:00 till 6:00;
Open earlier or later
by appointment.
PHONE 285-9902 or 285-3609
12·21 41
SATELLITE TELEVISION
NEWS
SPORTS
MOVIES
RELIGION
• Bonk
Financing
Available
M ANTENNA
MARTIN, KY. • 285-3984
(Across the creek from Garth Vocational School
Htf
Wil§!Jtij
HOMEMADE PIZZA - SPAGHETTI • SUBMARINE SANDWICHES
.
ALL INGREDIENTS MADE FRESH DAILY
WE USE FRESH PIZZA DOUGH • Not Frozen • Not Pr.-Baked • No Substitutes
9AM-1AM TUES-SAT
OPEN lOAM-lAM
SUNDAY-CLOSED MONDAY
CRISP FLAVORFUL PIZZAS
CUSTOM MADE IN
10" ·12" • 14" -17" SIZES
DK1CIOUS GONDOLA I STEAK
NDWICHES
YOU RINCLWE BRING
FOR PIOMPT CARRY OUT CALL
886-8118
OR
886-8119
BERT'S
ZZARIA
...
a::
LANCER KY
S
and
tc:=1J4 i¢AI
_
MA.NUFAC.T.URING
Manufacturer$ of Mining Equipment
S and H MANUFACTU-RING, INC.
RT. 850 HUEYSVILLE (FLOYD COUNTY) KY. 41640
PHONE: 606-358-9251
PARTS FOR S lc H AND OTHER POPULAR SCOOPS
DESCRIPTION
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(RELIANCE) 288 TRAM MOTOR . : •. .. . ........ .. . $4,28!5.00
(GE) 60 VOLT SCOOP HEADLAMPS ... .. . . . . . . . . .. .•. . 9.2!5
(SQ. D) 3 PRONG CONTACT TIPS • •.. .. '.. . • •• . • . • ... 20.00
(HB) DISCONNECT. (PANIC) SWITCH • . • . . . . . • . . . . . . . !S8.6!S
(ANDERSON) 250 AMP BRASS RECEPTACLE. . . . . . . . . . . 112.!50
(ANDERSON) 250 AMP BRASS PLUG (ONLY) ~ . .... . . . . . . 67.!50
(.4 SECONDS) (34 SECONDS) TIME DELAYS . . . . . . . . . . 22.!50
EA.
EA.
EA.
EA.
EA.
EA.
EA.
• (H-140 ROCKWELL) NEW 5/34 RATIO DIFFERENTIAL (HOGSHEAD) .. 675.00 EA.
• (H-140 ROCKWELL) USED 5/34 6 5/36 RATIO DIFFERENTIALS
(HOGSHEAD)
399.00 EA.
• NEW H-140 RING GEAR and PINIONS 5/34 6 6/37 RATIO
250.00 SET
• GOOD USED H-140 RING GEAR AND PINION 5/36 RATIO . . . • . . . 100.00 SET
• H·140 HUB ASSEMBLY . . . . . . . • .
. . . . . • . . . . 195.00 EA.
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H-140 AXLE SHAFTS . . . . • . . • . . . . . . . . . . . .
. .. ... · . 64.75
(TIMKEN) 413 WHEEL CUP .. .. '. . . . .. • . . .. . .. . .. . .. .....•. 4.82
(TIMKEN) 495AX WHEEL TAPERED ROLLER BEARING . . . • .
...•.. 9.75
(SPICER) 1610 U-JOINT KIT . . . • . . . •
. • • . . . . . • . . • 29.00
10" SCOOP RIM . . . . . . • . . . . . . .
. . . . . •• . ..•..•... 35.00
(GOOD YEAR) 750 x 10 HEAVY DUTY TUBE W/TR-7!5 VALVE .
. . • • B.50
EA.
EA.
EA.
EA.
EA.
EA.
s 1c H reserves the right to limit quantities on sale Items.
Prices good thru 1/13/84.
OUR REBUILD PROGRAM-20% OFF PARTS AND 10% OFF LABOR.
FREE PICK-UP 1r DELIVERY WITHIN 50 MILES.
12·ll ·41
- --
Section Three, Paae Four
A Budget Balanced by Constitution
<which now threatens our representative form of government), to be
restricted, even for the good of the country. even to overcome the peril we now
face . Irresponsibility fits the needs of
thousands of pressure groups and
disregards the vital needs of all the
people - the nation itself.
The people should act. have the right
to act , and act at once. The danger of
financial collapse can not longer be
tolerated .
I find it regrettable that past Congresses, the present Congress, and
several presidents of the United States
have been reckless in the handling of
federal revenues and expenditures.
They will continue in this mood, for they
prefer to vote for what will re-elect ,
rather than to vote for what is right. This
is precisely the type of self-serving attitude the framers of the Constitution
foresaw. Perhaps it is what de Tocqueville meant years ago when he said ,
"Democracy contains the seeds of its
own destruction."
Dr. Eisenhower is president emeritus
of the Johns Hopkins University.
-
local. mining company is mlerested rn ocqui rrng exi sting cool
leases or negotiatmg new leases f o r t he purposes of mineral
exploration, development and extrac1io n. Serious inqu1ries
please.
<Reprinted by permission of The Baltimore Sun)
A recent article by Attorney Gener·,!
Stephen H. Sachs asserted that :. constitutional convention called by the required number of states for the purpose
of checking runaway defici( financing by
the federal government _would place
"America on the threshold of a reckless
experiment that could endanger our constitutional liberties and even alter our
form of government."
· This extreme nonsense is not upheld
by a special committee of the American
Bar Association, by numerous other
legal authorities, and by the common
sense of anyone who will study the origin
and reason for Article V of the Constitution.
Mr. Sachs' article, and others of like
nature, are more emotional than logical.
There 1s no reason to believe that
delegates to a constitutional convention
would be any Jess committed to
upholding our basic liberties and form
of· government than are members of
Congress. Congressmen have unlimited
power to propose a constitutional
amendment on any subject at any time.
In this sense, the Congress is an
unlimited constitutional convention. Yet
this has never disturbed anyone.
Nothing proposed by the Congress can
become part of the Constitution until it
is ratified by three-fourths, or 38, of the
states. The same would be true of
anything proposed by a constitutional
convention called under the provisions
of Article V of the Constitution.
Candidly, I wish it were not essential
to have 34 states call for a constitutional
convention which will require the president and the Congress to maintain a
balanced budget, with exceptions to
meet emergencies. But the alternative
to this promises to be disastrous. In only four years- 1980 to 1984-we shall add
50 percent to the debt of the United
States accumulated from the beginning
of our history down to 1980. The deficit
will be at least $2 trillion . Under current
policies of both major political parties
one can see an acceleration of deficits.
fn time, the interest on the debt will consume a huge share of the revenues
received by the federal government
from all forms of taxes. That could lead
to a repudiation of all federal debts. It
is a far greater and ~ore realistic
danger than a constitutional convention called by the states to bring sanity
into the management of federal
revenues and expenditures.
The Constitution for good reason provides two different methods of bringing
about a constitutional change. The proposal of amendments by the Congress
and approval by three-quarters of the
states is one method. The other is for
two-thirds of the states (34) to adopt
resolutions calling for a constitutional
convention for the sole puri>ose of adopting a single amendment. It would then
be sent to the states by the Congress and
would require 38 states to ratify.
Those who object to the second
method of amending the Constitution
really do not believe in the Constitution
as it is now written. If they believe, as
Mr. Sachs does, that there is danger in
permitting the states to amend the Constitution, they should say so and propose
that this power be deleted by an amendment proposed by the Congress.
The framers of the Constitution
recognized that those in power in the
federal government might be disinclined to give up unforeseen prerogatives.
Today, most Congre:;smen do not want
a convention called by the states, for
they foresee their undisciplined spending threatened (voting for appropriations deemed likely to re-elect rather
than for what is right and in the national
interest
Congress has the power to establish
procedures limiting a convention to the
single subject matter slated in the applications from the state legislatures.
Congress has.the power to determine
exactly under what conditions the
delegates to a convention would ~e
chosen, when the election of delegates
would be held, where they would meet,
how the delegates would be paid and
precisely how the convention would be
limited to a single topic.
But suppose-the delegates to a convention did not hold their actions to the call
for a single amendment. Does anyone
believe it is conceivable that the state
delegates chosen for a limited purpose,
namely to approve a single constitutional amendment that would be strictly in harmony with the call of their own
states, would now turn around and propose an amendment or amendments
that went beyond the legal call? The
delegates of the other states would have
to go along with this revolt. Later, 38
states would have to approve the amendment or amendments . These would be
the very state legislatures that had called for a single constitutional change. Instead, many of the states have said that
if convention enactments strayed
beyond the original amendment the
enabling petition would be considered
''null and void.'' If this were overridden
and multiple amendments ensued, does
anyone believe that three-fourths of the
states <38> would ratify the runaway
amendments?
Thirty-two states have called for a
constitutional convention for the sole
purpose of bringing the federal budget
under control . When two or more additional states take similar action, the
Congress will be compelled to act. But
today, or tomorrow, or any time before
the thirty-fourth slate takes similar action now envisaged by the states, the
Congress could, if it Wished. write its
own balanced budget amendment. The
Congress could offer this to the slates
and we would usc the same metuod of
amending the Constitution we have
always used
Candidly, the "runaway convention",
argument is raised by those who do not
wish to force an Irresponsible Congress
---
TOP DOLLARS PAID FOR YOUR COAL LEASE
I
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Contoct Compony Representative At:
(606) 478-2577 or (606) 478-5700
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''A
smile
can be
affordable.''
Free Training Offered
Volunteer Tax Counselors
An IRS instructor will conduct a class
for volunteer tax counselors beginning
at 9 p.m . Monday, Jan. 9, through Jan .
13. In cooperation with the AARP, the
I.R.S. instructor will conduct an additio~WI week of more mdepth classes
beginning Jan . 16. Those completing this
second week of tax instruction can be
certified as a tax counselor. These
classes meet at the Floyd County Public
Library on Arnold Avenue in Prestonsburg.
The local chapter of AARP offers free
tax counseling to older persons during.
the tax season. Those who would enjoy
helping disabled and older persons with
their tax returns are urged to become
certified as counselors.
For more information write or call
Aaron Akers, River Drive, Box 2, Banner, Ky 41603, 874-992l.
ALC REGISTRATIO:"i
Spring registration at the Alice Lloyd
College will be held in the June
Buchanan Alumni Center, Tuesday,
January 10 with seniors and juniors
registering from 8-9-:30 a.m. Sophmores
will register from 9:3o-10:30 a .m. Freshmen will register from 10:3Q-12 noon.
Students who register after January
10 will have to pay a late registration
penalty. Regular classes for the spring
semester will begin Wednesday, January 11.
RELY ON THE
PROFESSIONAL DENTIST
MEMBERS OF
c:X:I;venng affordable dentiStry.nc
OUR PLEDGE:
1. AFFORDABLE PRICES.
2. ONE-DAY SERVICE ON DENTURE REPAIRS AND RELINES.
3. AVAILABILITY: FILLINGS, EXTRACTIONS.
4. NO SURPRISES; TREATMENT AND CDST ARE DISCUSS£D FIRST.
5.
YOU
DETERMINE THE AMOUNT OF SERVICE.
PERSONAL AMNTION; OLD FASHIONED COURTESY AND CONCERN
ARE ASSURED IN THE OFFICE OF A DAD MEMBER DENTIST.
6. HIGH STANDARDS.
DENTURES PER UPPER OR L O W E R - - - - - - ,
STANDARD
DENTURES . . . .
$129
CHARACTERIZED
DENTURES ....... .
$169
DENTURE REPAIRS: RELINES ALSO AVAILABLE
ALLEN DENTAL CENTER
PHONE 606/87 4-2020 ALLEN, KY.
DR. R.I. GOODMAN D.M.D.
DR. W. FU D.M.D.
SAVE 2.30
ON WINTER-TIME
FAVORITES
Ward off winter chills
and enjoy big savings
with Paramount Chili
and/or Tamales. Stock
up now and make meals
simple and super with
the meaty, zesty taste
that everyone will love!
I
I
I
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I
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I...
-----;:,------I
Save 30¢
nou:coUPON
on any two cans of Paramount
Chili and/ or Tamales
~.Re'"'Uer;We,.iUredeemthiMouponfor .i&
7
plu' ~ handllngJJfU"ided(a)dealt'r ha.,ano:pt·
edit in •·xdunge for an} rwocan.,ofPar.•.rnoum
<hUi and for Tamales: (b) dealer mall\ to l'ara
mount food.,, Loui'iVille. KY -t0l3l. <:u.\lonwro.
mu\t pa) "3les tax whene-·er applkablr. CL'h
value t / 20th of H . tn..oice sho,.ing dralc.-ro.
purd•a.•ed wffident Mod< to co"" coupon•
presenu:d for pa)ment mu.•t be sho,.n upon
n-qu 1,.1• This coupon ls void If duplic·. urd.
taX<:d, prohibited or ...,.,tricted h) Ia"'·
Coupon bplrrs: February 29, 198•.
.Paramount
~~-----
1
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1
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$2.00 savings on a variety
of Paramount Chili
and T ama}es prod u cts
(with thh mail-in certificate and four l ' PC label., from
Paramount Chili and/ or Tama les produc~)
Send labeh and thi., n :rtlnc.ot<• too Paramount Chih a nd Tama ll' ' Offer,
Paramount F<><Xh. Inc., P.O . Bo " .UI SO, l.ou lwilk. K\ tOl.U
-.;arne
Add,..,.,_,
01)
Zip
---------Offer Expires: February 29, 1984.
.I
M2001-1a4
�•
Wednesday, January 11, 1984
High Point \Vinn{·r
Georgia Ann Slone. daughter of
George and Jerry Slone, of Allen. won
he High Point Trophy m the Little Miss
Golden Harvest Pageant, Nov 12. She
was first n;nnerup in beauty and won
sportsware, westernware, churchware,
and photogenic categories.
Georg1a Ann is the maternal granddaughter of Mrs Christma Johnson, of
Allen and the late Palmer Compton.
Her paternal grandparents are Tommy
and Alice Slone, of Prestonsburg.
lt-pd.
Live From The Met'
Presents 'Don Carlo'
Placido Dommgo stars in the title role
when "Live from the 1\Iet" presents Verdi's ·Don Carlo," airing Wednesday,
February 1, at 8 p.m.
A central idea of the opera is one of
Verdi's favorite thematic pursUits: the
contmumg struggle against tyranny and
•he pain of divided loyalty. The setting
.s 16th century France and Spain. Prince
C'arlo of Spamsh royalty has covertly
journeyed to France to meet his future
Wife; the betrothal arranged by his
elders. Carlo meets the young woman,
Elisahetla, daughter of King Henry II,
and they fall in love.
But blossoming Jove is quashed when
C'drlo .s mformed that Elisabetta is to
become the wife of his father, King
Phillip of Spain, as the condition of a
peace treaty between the two countries.
"iis spirits crushed, Carlo retreats to a
monastery for solace. There he is
befriended by Rodrigo, Marquis of Posa,
and together they begin the ill fated
quest for the hand of Elizabetta <who is
now Carlo's s•epmotherl.
"L1vc from the Met: Don Carlo" is
produced by WNET, New York.
Serving In California
Marine Lance Cpl. Mark D Halbert,
or. of Linda and John Halbert, of Route
1. Prmter, has been promoted to his present rank while serving at Marine Corps
Base, Camp Pendleton, Calif.
Elliott Contracting Inc. is pleased
to announce that Gene D. Justice
ha!> bet•n appointed Marketing
Sales i\Ianager for the Systems
Dh·ision. Gem• will be available to
work with _you at your convenience
for Telephone, ('CTV, Security, Intercom, and Energy :\IanagcmPnt
Systems. lit> can be contacted by
calling any of the following
numbers: 1!86-2781, 800-422·108:1,
4~2-110:1:1. or evenings 4:12-3203.
The Floyd County Times
Section Three, Paa:e Five
Use Caution In Applying
Ashes To Your Garden
The use of wood ashes in the garden
should present few problems for
gardeners, and coal ashes can be applied with caution, according to an Extension horticulturist in the University
of Kentucky College of Agriculture.
"Questions about applying wood and
coal ashes to the garden often arise during the winter months," said Dr. Jean
English, who works at Robinson
Substation-Quicksand.
The main value of wood ashes.lies in
their potassium and calcium carbonate
(lime) contents, explains English. Wood
ashes are about 45 percent carbonate,
with hardwood ash being about one-third
higher in lime than softwood ash. "Thus,
you would have to apply about twice the
weight of wood ashes as lime to meet a
particular lime requirement," the
specialist said.
If the pH of a soil is 6.7-7.8, no lime is
required, according to English. On a soil
with a pH of 6.1-6.7, an average application of limestone is about 50 pounds per
1,000 square feet, so about 100 pounds of
wood ashes per 1,000 square feet could
be applied safely.
"If you remove about five pounds of
ashes from your stove each week, you
could make 20 trips to a 1,000 square-foot
garden without worrying about raising
the pH of the soil too much," English
said.
She added that gardeners who apply
wood ashes to their gardens year after
year should have the soil pH checked
regularly, "Also, wood ashes should not
be applied to soil around acid-loving
plants, such as azaleas, rhododendrons,
blueberries and pin oaks."
Wood ashes contain no nitrogen, 1-2
percent phosphate and 4-10 percent
potash. Thus, 100 pounds of wood ashes
would supply about two pounds of phosphate and 4-10 pounds of potash per 1,000
square feet. Since the highest recommended amount of potash per 1,000
square feet needed on a low potassium
soil is four pounds, 100 pounds of wood
ashes could meet all of your needs for
this element, English said.
"Soil tests should be done regularly to
make sure your soil is not becoming too
high in potassium, since too mucb potassium can interfere with the uptake of
other essential elements, such as calcium and magnesium," explained English.
Recommendations for phosphorus
range from 1-7 pounds of phosphate per
1,000 square feet, so little danger of oversupplying phosphorus from wood ashes
exists.
The application of coal ashes to
gardens can present problems of salt
and boron toxicity to plants, and the
coarser particles of coal can make a soil
too gravely, according to Engli<>h.
She recommends that coal ashes be
sifted to remove anything larger than
sand-size particles. Then apply the fine
particles in a layer about one-third inch
deep over the garden. Such an application probably can be repealed for three
or four years before potentially toxic
levels of salt or boron are reached,
English said.
These applications will supply most of
the potassium, calcium, magnesium and
sulfur needed by crops while elements
such as nitrogen and phosphorus will
have to be supplied by other fertilizers.
English points out that most coal ash
has a pH of 6-7, so it should not be used
around acid-loving plants. "You should
also avoid adding much or any ash to
boron-sensitive and salt-sensitive crops,
such as fruit trees, garden beans, celery,
radishes, cucumbers, squash, peas and
Jerusalem artichokes," advises English.
Plants that can tolerate boron and salt
are asparagus, beets, spinach, broad
beans, turnips, cabbage, broccoli, cauliflower, Brussels sprouts and rutabaga.
"If areas of leaves begin to die or appear scorched, especially along leaf
margins, toxic levels of boron may have
been reached," notes English. Toxic
levels will be reduced by weathering and
leaching within three years if no more
boron is added to the soil, she said.
A!'JNOl'NCE BIRTH
Mr and Mrs. Dale Slone, of Garrett,
announc:e the birth of their first child, a
daughter, Ashley Gayle, on December
29 at Pikeville Methodist Hospital.
Paternal grandparents are Mr and Mrs.
Glen Slone, of Maytown, and maternal
grandparents are Mr. and Mrs. Lowell
E. Martin, of Wayland, and Etta Elizabeth Hobbs, of North Manchester Ind.
Mrs. Slone is the former Lisa Martin, of
Waylan9
2280 Nicholasville Road
Lexington, Kentucky 40503
In Lexington call 277-1191
Outside Lexington call Toil Free:
1-800-432-9027
Outside Kentucky call Toll Free:
1-800-354-9096
ON~
Lots of activity and a beautiful
Golden Tan in our Suntan Solarium.
Ph One 874-2800
FOR
APPOINTMENT.
121Hf
FL='-=RIDA
l-11·8l.
uo
StateoftheArt in performance engineering~ made in
America Limited supply 1n
stock now
I BIRD TURBO
The Bird 1s back and we have our
best selection this year in stock now
A refined personal road car built to
compliment the abilities of the serious
driver. 15 now in stock.
lAPRIRS
m STADii liT
Formerly Howard
johnson's South
SUMMER
You can always count on Jerry's for
value. Like our Husky Breakfast ..
2 large eggs, cooked to order, 3 sizzling
bacon slices. 2 pancakes. syrup and
chilled juice- all at a great price. Come
111 and see for yourself how at Jerry's,
value is one more. way
Anglo-Irish Cult1:1re
Clash Sparks Comedy
Irish. humor is often a bog wherein
many _an unsuspecting Englishman
flounders. How one turn-of-the-century
Englishman becomes mired in that bog
provides the background for "The Irish
R.M.," a whimsical "Masterpiece Theatre" series debuting on KET Sunday,
January 29, at 9 p.m.
The six-part series stars Peter Bowles
(Gutherie Featherstone in "Rumpole of
the Bailey" on the "Mystery!" series),
as Maj. Sinclair Yeates, a British officer
who arrives in the west of Ireland in 1895
hoping to find the good life as an R.M.
(Resident Magistrate, whose job it is to
make peace between British law and
Irish practice ·thereof.) His co-star is
Penelope Keith ("To the Manor Born").
Yeates soon discovers nothing in Ireland, at least to the British, is what it
·seems. His house leaks, his -chimneys
smoke, his whiskey vanishes and his efforts to prepare the house for his soondue fiance Philippa (Doran Godwin) are
constantly thwarted by the antics of his
impish landlord, Flurry Knox (Bryan
Murray). The R.M. becomes an unwitting participant in a stolen horse caper,
falls into a bog on a duck-hunting expedition after he mistakenly bags his hostess' pet drake, and discovers squatters
have set up housekeeping in his attic.
All the while the poor Englishman
tries desperately to understand his new
neighbors' unique view of the letter o(
the law-they can judge innocence or
guilt through their grassroots knowledge
of the person-or that's ~hat they say,
..- .
all WINTER
True muscle cars are back and
we've got 'em Good selectionincluding T-tops in stock now.
�Wedneaday, January 11, 1984
The Floyd County Times
Section Three, Paae Six
FAST, FRIENDLY
SERVICE
ALL THE AY
TO YOUR CAR!
PRICES IN EFFECT WED.,
WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QU
$2
29
CANDY BARS·..................................................................... .
10-PAK-PETER PAUL
MOUNDS OR ALMOND JOY
$17
9
JOY DISHWASHING LIQUID ........................................... .
~·c'(. PEAS ..................................................................3/$1 19
c-~·E~rlltl'S--~~~~~- ............................................ ,........................ $1 2 5
2/ $1
WHOLE PEELED TOMATOES ............................. ........... .
32-oz. aonL£
16-0Z. CAN-IGA
2-LB. ROLL
FRESH
TENNESSEE PRIDE
PORK SPARERIBS
COUNTRY SAUSAGE
Yz-GALLON
IGA
BUTTERMI
LB.
TOP
ROUND STEAK
:0NE~~~
F:~l:~:G
ROUND STEAK
LIVERS
0
$19!
49~
ROUND STEAK
.
$
89
$26!
\~&rJ
69
C
1-ts.PKc• .
~-------1-2-0.....
Z.-PK-G• ....___.......-....liiiiii........__1_·LB
....P-KG-.-..iiiiiiiiiiiii-__.y...__....~l-~LB~.P~KG~.- - - - 1
WILSON CORN KING
WIENERS
gc
IGA
COOKED HAM
9
IGA
BOLOGNA
$139
$259 TENNESSEE PRIDE
$199
BEEF CUBE STEAK .................. LB. LINK SAUSAGE ................. LB.
U.S.D.A. CHOICE
$229 12.0Z. TENNESSEE PRIDE
$159
STEW BEEF........................
LB. SAUSAGE PATTIES ................ ..
29
KINGSFORD CUBED BEEF PATTIES ................................. t4-oz.sl
U.S.D.A. CHOICE
~
Yz-GALLON
IGA
2%
MILK~
PARKAY SOFT MAR
16.oz.
~~~~YSOFTMAXI
IGA FROZEN PIZZA ..... .
24-0Z. BOTTLE
IGA CORN OIL .................... .
12 COUNT BOXES
BISHOP SNACK CAKES ....... .
16-0Z. CAN-JOAN OF ARC
WHOLE KERNEL CORN ........ .
16-0Z. CAN
IGA APPLESAUCE .............. .
15-0Z. CAN-ARMOUR
CHILl-WITHOUT BEANS ..... .
�Wednesday, January 11, 1984
The Floyd County Times
Section Three, Paae Seven
WE
WELCOME
FEDERAL
FOOD STAMPS.
~'l~~w- '~~ELS .............................................. 2/ $1
1:tt~Y~E~~~~E ................................................... 7 5 c
0
Ji li~.tE~~~PER ............................................... 59 C
.
I
4/$1
3/$1
LIGHT RED KIDNEY BEANS ............................... .
7-0Z. BOX GENERIC
·
MACARONI AND CHEESE ................................. .
BUSH'S
5-0Z.
ANQUET
C OKING BAGS ....
·
20-LB. BAG
FRESH CRISP
WHITE
POTATOES
HEAD
LETTUCE
ET
URKEY, SALISBURY,
HICKEN & DUMPLING
NNERS .............. .
69
6-0Z. PAK
GA
ERICAN
INGLES .........
$189
sgc
3-LB. BAG
5-LB. BAG
YELLOW
ONIONS
FLORIDA
ORANGES
5
.ggc
INE ...... ... ................s5c
P ........ .-......................85c
.. .................................... ...
229
ggc
$129
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .......... .
c
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ...
.I 1o9
......................... I s1
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . ..... .
$119
. . ... .... . . . . . . . . .... . .....
"'-------------------_,
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�Wednesday, Janual")' 11, 1984
l'~lTED STATES OF AMERICA FE·
DERAL l<'NJ<;HG
REGULATORY
C0\1:\ll 01
•i e of Appl1<:at~nn
Flied \Htlt the Cormms... wn <Decl:'mbe.r
23, 19831 Take notice that the folio\\ mg
h}_'droelectnc application has hcen filed
wtth t~e Federal Ene~gy Regulatory
~ommt~siOn and 1s avatlahle for public
1~s~ctwn a. Type of Application: Pre-.
hmmary Permit: b. Project No.
7845-000; c. Date Filed: November 14
1983; ~- Applicant: HydroEngineering
Assoctates; e. Name of Project Fishtrap; f. Location: Levisa Fork of the 'Big
~ndy River, Pike County, Kentucky. g.
Ftled Pursuant to: Federal Power Act
16 U.S.C. §§791 <a>- 825 <rl. h. Contact
Person: E.D. Tice, P.E. P.O. Box 24,
Pauline, South Carolina 29374. i. Comment J?ate: Feb. 24, 1984. j. Description
of Project: The proposed project would
utili~e the existing U.S. Army Corps of
Engmeers Ftshtrap Dam and Reservoir
and would consist of a powerhouse with
~me or more turbine-generator units ha vmg a total rated capacity of 1,080 kW and
a 1 z·mile-long transmission line. The
project would be capable of generating
up to 5:440,000 kWh annually. k. Purpose
of Project: Energy produced atthe project would be sold to Kentucky Power
Company.!. This notice also consists of
the following standard paragraphs: A5,
A7, A9, B, C and D2. m. Proposed Scope
and Cost of Studies under Permit: A
preliminary if issued, does not authorize
construction. A permit, if issued, gives
the ~rmitt~. duri~. th~ term of the
permtt. ~he nght of_:P.nor!tY of application for hcense. The Applicant seeks issuance of a preliminary permit for a
period of 18 months. The work to be performed under this preliminary permit
would consist of gathering necessary
d?ta, completing surveys and envtronmental studies, obtaining
neces~ary F_ederal, State and local perputs mcludmg- coordt!'lation with the
·Corps of Engineer$'; ..and preparing
necessary documentation f.or the Commission's licensing requirements. Applicant estimates that the cost of work to
be performed under the permit would
not exceed $20,000. A5. Preliminary Permits: Existing Dam or Natural Water
Feature Praiect-Anyone desiring to file
a competing application (or preliminary
' pe~mit for a pro'pos~j)i>Qject at an extshng dam or natural water feature project, must submit the competing application to the Commission on or before
30 days after the specified comment date
. for the particular application <see 18
CFR 4.30 to 4.33 <1982 >. A notice of intent
to file a competing application for
preliminary permit will not be accepted
for filing._ A c_<nupeting:tft'eriminary permit appltcahon mu--st conform wtth 18
CFR 4.33(a) and (dl. A7. Preliminary
Permit-Except as provided in the
following paragraph, any qualified
license, conduit exemption, or small
hydroelectric exemption applicant
desiring to file a competing al?pEcation
must submit to the CommissiOn, on or
before the specified comment date for
the particular application, either a competing license, conduit exemption, or
small hydroelectric exemption application or a notice of intent to file such an ·
application. Submission of a timely
notice of intent to file a license, conduit
exemption, or small hydroelectric exemption application allows an interested
person to file the competing appEcation
no later than 120 days after the specified
comment date for the particular application. In addition. any qualified
license or conduit exemption applicant
desiring to file a competing application
may file the subject application until:
<1) a preliminary permit with which the
subject license or conduit exemption application would compete is issued, or (2)
the earliest specified commen.t date for
any license, conduit exemption. or small
hydroelectric exemption application
with which the subject license or conduit
exemption application would compete;
whichever occurs first. A competing
license application must conform with
18 CFR 4.33<al and <d>. A9. Notice of
Intent-A notice of intent must specify
the exact name, business address, and
telephone number of the_pr-OSpective applicant, include ..an unequivocal statement of intent to submit, if such an application may be filed, either 0) a
preliminary permit application or (2) a
license, small hydroelectric exemption,
or conduit exemption application, and be
served on the applicants named m this
public notice. B. Comments, Protests, or
Motions to Intervene-Anyone may submit comments, a prote~t, or a motion to
mtervene in accordance with the reumrements of the Rules of Practice and
l'rocedure,18 C.F.R. §§385 210, .211, .214.
[n determining the appropriate action to
take, the Commission will consider all
protests or other comments filed, but only those who file a motioQ to intervene
tn accordance with th~ .Commission's
RUles may become a party to the proceeding. Any comments, protests, or
motions to intervene must be received
on or before the specified comment date
for the particular application. C. Filing
and Service of Responsive Documents-Any filings must bear in all
capital letters the title "COMMENTS",
"NOTICE OF INTENT..TO FILE COMPETING APPLICATION", as applicable, and the Project Number of the particular application to which tht: filing is
in response. Any of th~ above named
documents must be filed by providing
the original and the number of copies required by the Commission's regulations
to: Kenneth F. Plumb, Secretary, F'ede·
ral Energy Regulatory Commission, 825
North Capitol Street, N.E ., Washington,
D.C. 20426. An additional copy must be
sent to: Fred E. Springer, Deputy Director, Project Management, Division of
Hydropower Licensing, Federal Energy
Regulato::y Commission, Room 208 RB
at the above address. A copy of any
notic€ of intent, competing application
or motion to intervene must also be served upon each representative of the Ap·
plicant specified in the particular ap·
plication. D2. Agency CommentsFederal-, State, and local agencies are
invited to file comments on the describ·
ed application . <A copy of the applica·
lion may be obtained by agencies directly from the Applicant.> If an agency
does n0t file comments within the time
specifted for filing comments, it will be
presumed to have no comments. One
copy of an agency's comments must also
be sent to the Applicant's representatives Kenneth F. Plumb. Secretary
1-4-41.
Could insects ever evolve mto those
monstrous sizes you see on horror
movies'? Probably not, says National
Wildlife magazine. Every living thing
has its proper size. Biologists note that,
because of their physical structun•. in
sects couldn't breathe if they were the
size of a dog, or an elephant
Section Th..-, Paae Elaht
The Floyd County Times
<FACSIMILE)
.:\'OTICE OF
I~TE1 TIO~ TO MI~E
<FACSIMILE)
l\'OTJCE OF .
INTENTIO~ TO MI[';E
Pursu:ml to .\ .plication
:\ um bl•r 160-:itl;:!
In accordance \\ ith the provisions of
KRS 3.50.055, notice is hereby given that
Pembroke Coal Company, Inc .. Star
Route 3, Lambric, Kcntucky'-11340, has
filed an application for a permit for an
underground mining operation. The proposed operation will affect a surface
disturbance of 13 acres and will under·
lie an additional 419 acres located one
mile southwest of Garrett in Knott county and 170 acres located one mile southwest of Garrett in Floyd county.
The proposeti operation is approximately 0.32 miles northweSt of State
Route SO's junction with Rock Fork
County Road and located 0.32 miles
northwest of Rock Fork. The latitude i1;
37'-28'-10". The longitude is 82'-52'-23".
The proposed operation is located on
the Wayland and Handshoe U.S.G.S. 712
minute quadrangle map. The surface
area to be disturbed is owned by
Matewan Minerals, Inc. The operation
will underlie land owned by Mirna Conl(:y lmirs, Steve Conley, Buford Howard,
Clester Coburn, Mander Moore. Billy
Sexton, Delenger Cox, Joe Slone, Jasper
Moore heirs, Matewan Minerals, Inc.,
Clifton Moore, Henry Boleyn, Norman
Shepherd, John Re'ed, Ishmal Shepherd,
Coet Handshoe heirs, Mrs. !:).J. Rocke,
Homer Crager, Matilda Gayheart, Dora
Turner, Phillip Neeley, Ida Martin,
Rebecca Martin. Billy Inman, Willis
Turner, and Kelsie Chaffins.
The application has been filed for
public inspection at the Department for
Surface Mining Reclamation and Enforcement's Jackson Regional Office,
Howell Buiiding Howell Heights. Route
2, Jackson, Kentucky 41339. Written
comments, objections, or requests for a
permit conference must be filed with the
Director of the Division of Permits, 6th
Floor, Capital Plaza Tower, Frankfort,
Kentucky 40601.
This is the final advertisement of this
application; all comments, objections,
or requests for a permit confeliCnCe
must be received within thirty (30) days
lt.
of today's date.
Pursuant to Application
:'liumbrt· ~60-5102
In accordance with the rrovtsions of
KRS 350.055, notice is hereby given that
Pembroke Coal Company, Inc., Star
Route 3, Lambric, Kentucky 41340, has
filed an application for a permit for an
underground mining operation. The pro·
posed operation will affect a surface
disturbance of 14 acres and will underlie an additional 84 acres located one
mile southwest of Garrett in Knott county and 294 acres located one mile south·
west of Garrett in Floyd county.
The proposed operation is approx
imately 0.32 miles northwest of State
Route SO's junction with Rock Fork
County Road and located 0.32 miles
northwest of Rock Fork. The latitude is
37"-28'-10". The longitude is 82'-52'-23".
The proposed operation is located on
the Wayland and Handshoe U.S.G.S. 7t 2
minute quadrangle map. The surface
area to be disturbed is owned by
Matewan Minerals, Inc. The operation
will underlie land owned by Henry
Boleyn, Norman Shepherd, John Reed,
Ishmal Shepherd, Coet Handshoe heirs,
Mrs. S.J. Rocke, Homer Crager,
Matilda Gayheart, Dora Turner, Phillip
Neely, Ida Martin, Rebecca Martin, Billy Inman, Willis Turner, and Kelsie
Chaffins.
' The application has been filed for
public inspection at the Department for
Surface Mining Reclamation and Enforcement's Jackson Regional Office,
Howell Building Howell Heights, Route
2, Jackson, Kentucky 41339. Written
comments, objections, or requests for a
permit conference must be filed with the
Director of the Division of Permits, 6th
Floor, Capital Plaza Tower. Frankfort,
Kentucky 40601
This is the final advertisement of this
application; all comments, objections,
or requests for a permit confer~nce
must be received within thirty (30) days
lt.
of today's date.
NOTICE OF
INTENTION TO MINE
In accordance with the provisions of
KRS 350.055, notice is hereby given that:
NOTICE OF
Wolverine Mining Corporation, Route 3,
INTENTION TO MINE
Box 738, Salyersville, Ky. 41465, intends
Pursuant to Application
to file an application for the surface
:'lio. -136-5099
disturbance mining of approximately
<1) In accordance with the provisions
198.0 acres lot:!ated northwest of David
of KRS 350.055, notice is hereby given
in Floyd & Magoffin county. The proposthat Triple Elkhorn Mining Company,
ed operation is approximately 41 2 miles
P.O. Box 140, Ivel, Ky. 41642, has filed
southeast of State Route 1734.'s junction
an application for a permit for an underwith State Route 7, and located south of
ground mining.operation. The proposed
Rough & Tough Branch of Middle Creek.
operation will affect a surface disturLatitude 37' 37' 10", longitude 82' 54' 44".
bance of 6.0 acres and will underlie an
The surface of the area to be mined is
additional 949 acres located 12 mile
owned by: Jim Pr~ter, heirs; Herbert
northeast of Emma in Floyd county.
Prater, Roger Shepherd, Edward
(2) The proposed operation is approxMusic, etal; Hames Degarmond, Aman1
imately 2 mile north from State Rt. 1428
da lVloore, Wolverine Mining Corpora-junction with Cow Creek Road and locattion, Amos Miller, heirs; Minerva
ed 12 miles north of Cow Creek. The latiMiller. The application will be filed at
tude is 37' 38' 40". Longitude is 82• 29'
the Bureau for Surface Mining Re29".
clamation and Enforce'ment, Prestons<3> The proposed operation is located
burg Area Office, 503 South Lake Drh·e,
on Lancer U.S.G.S. 1 12' quadrangle
Prestonsburg, Kentucky 41653.
map. The surface area to be disturbed
Persons wishing to file written objecis owned by Peachie Merritt. The operations and/or request a formal adminition will underlie land owned by Peachie strative hearing in regard to the above
Merritt, Rosie Woods estate, Leonard
describeO surface mine should notify the
Goble, Roland Blackburn, Clyde BurDepartment for Natural Resources and
chett, William Jarrell, Irvin Harris,
Environmental Protection within 30
William Amburgey, Columbus Jervis,
days o{ the date of the notice. A copy of
Roland Blackburn, Troy Whitt, Gale
the newspaper clipping must be attachBurchett, and Forest Burchett.
ed to the written objection. The objec(4) The application has been filed for
tion or request for a hearing will referpublic inspection at the Department for
ence application Number 077-0031. Such
Surface Mining Reclamation and Enobjection or request must be in accorforcement's Prestonsburg Regional Ofdance with KRS 224.081 (2), and must be
fice, at 431 South Lake Drive. Written
forwarded to the Director of Permits,
comments, objections, or requests for a
Bureau of Surface Mining Reclamation
permit conference must be filed with the
and Enforcement, Capital Plaza Tower,
Director of the Division of Permits, 6th
Frankfort, Kentucky 40601.
Floor, Capital Plaza 'Tower, Frankfort,
2. Notice is hereby provided pursuant
Ky. 40601. Comments must be received
to 30 CFR 715.13 _(dJ 00) ·and KRS 350
within thirty <30) days of final advertisethat fhe proposed post mining land use
ment.
does constitute a change from the pre._ This is the final advertisement of this
mining land use. Public comment regarapplication; all comments, objections,_ ding a proposed change in ianduse may
or requests for a permit conference
be submitted to the address listed above.
must be received within thirty (30) days
12-28-3t.
of today's date.
lt.
---------------
NOTICE OF
TO MINE
INTENTIO~
Pursuant to Application
Number 436-5175
In accordance with the provisions of
KRS 350.055, notice is hereby given that
Prater Creek Mining Co., Ii1c:, P.O.
Drawer A, Harold, Ky. 41653, has filed
an application for a permit for an underground mining operation. The proposed
operation will affect tl surface disturbance of 4.65 acres and will underlie an
additional 4.94 acres located 3 miles
southeast of Banner in Floyd county.
The proposed operation is approximately 3 miles southeast from State
Route 80's junction with Prater Creek
Rd. and located 0.10 miles south of Hall
Branch of Prater Creek. The latitude is
37' 35' 03" . The longitude is 82' 41' 11 ".
The proposed operation is located on
the Harold U.S.G.S. 7 12 minute quadrangle map. The surface area to be disturbed is owned by Ballard and Rolla
May Hall, Ellis Hall. The operation will
underlie land owned by Ellis Hall, Hazzie Boyd, J .J. Boyd.
The application has been filed for
public inspection at the Department for
Surface Mining Reclamation and Enforcement's Prestonsburg Regional Office, Prestonsburg, Kentucky 41653.
Written comments, objections, or requests for a permit conference must be
filed with the Director of the Division of
Permits, 6th Floor, Capital Plaza
Tower, Frankfort, Kentucky 40601.
1-4·31.
The heroism of the tmv minno~ is
espcLially noteworthy. While in the jaws
of an enemy. minnows retease a scent
to alert other minnows to flee for their
lives, says National \\'tldlife's Ranger
Rick magazine
~OTICE OF
I~TK 'TION TO MINE
Two·Acre·or-Less
\pJIIitation ,'\;umber &36·0081
In accordance with the provisions of
KRS 350 055, notice is hereby given that
r'rank Hall. Box 34, Kite, Kentucky
4l!t'-8, has filed an apphcat10n for a permit for a surface coal mining and reclamatiOn operation of approximately
1 97 acres located 1.19 miles northwest
of McDowell, in Floyd county.
The proposed op<!ration is approxImately 1.13 miles south from the junction of State Route 1086 with State Route
122 and located .04 miles east of Lucy
Hall Branch. The latitude is 37 degrees,
27 minutes, 36 seconds. The longitude is
82 degrees, 45 minutes, 11 seconds. The
surface area is owned by Edward Martin .
The proposed operation is located on
the Wayland U.S.G.S. 71,2 minute quadrangle map. The operation will use the
contour, and auger method of mining.
The operation will affect an area within
100 feet of public road Lucy Hall Branch
Road. The operation .will not involve
relocation of the public road.
The application has been filed for
public inspection at the Department for
Surface Mining Reclamation and Enforcement's Prestonsburg Regional Office, 431 South Lake Drive, Prestonsburg, Kentucky, 41653. Written comm<.!nls, objections, or request for a permit conference must be filed with the
Prestonsburg Regional office, 431 South
Lake Drive, Prestonsburg, Kentucky
41653. This is the final advertisement of
this application; all comments, objections , or request for a permit conference
must be received within thirty (30) days
• It.
of today's date.
Pursuant to
NOTlCE OF PUBLIC AUCTION
The Eastern Kentucky Concentrated
Employment Program, Inc., P.O. Box
1035, Hazard, Kentucky 41701, Phone:
(606) 436-5751, will condlict a Public Auction at Wheelwright, Kentucky at 10:30
a.m., January 23, 1984. Among the items
to be auctioned are typewriters,
calculators and office furniture <file
cabinets, desks, chairs, etc.) and some
older carpentry tools.
Item5 to be auctioned may be viewed
between the hours of 7:30a.m. until4:00
p.m., Monday through Friday. Condi·
lions of the auction are cash or certified
check to be paid in full at the time of
sale. Location of auction: old Island
Creek Maintenance Shop. Take Ky. 122
to Wheelwright Jet. (306) then follow
auction signs.
1-11-2t.
NOTICE OF PUBLIC SALE
Notice is hereby given that the undersigned Eastern Kentucky Mack, a Division of Worldwide Equipment Inc., a
Corporation, will sell at public auction
to the highest bidder for cash, on Monday, January 16, 1983, at 9:30 a.m. at the
company's offices located at Kentucky
Rt. 1428 East, Prestonsburg, Ky. the
following vehicle :
( L> Mack Model DM886SX S/N
1M2B156CA002896.
The undersigned reserves the right to
bid.
Eastern Kentucky Mack, A Division
Of Worldwide Equipment, Inc.
FRED MCCARTY
Collection Manager
1-4-2t.
NOTICE OF
I~TE~'J'ION TO MINE
Pursuant to Application
Number 436-0099
( 1) In accordance with the provisions
of KRS 350.055, notice is hereby given
that Buck Coal Company, Inc., Branham Village, Star Route 2, Prestonsburg, Ky. 41653, has filed an application
for a permit for a surface coal mining
and reclamation operation of approximately 67.0 acres located 3.29 miles
south of Langley, Kentucky in Floyd
county.
(2) The proposed operation is approximately 2.6 miles east from KY 777's
junction with KY 80 and lo€ated 0..!.1
miles west of Turkey Creek. The latitude
NOTICE OF PUBLIC/ SALE
is 37' 29' 58". The longitude is 82' 47' 05".
A public sale will be held by Ashland The surface area is owned by Elkhorn
Finance Company on the 16th day of Coal Corporation.
(3) The proposed operation is located
January, 1984 at Bill & Sam.'s Welding
& Mining Equipment Repair, Box 268, on the Wayland U.S.G.S. 71 2 minute
Martin, Kentucky 41649. Directions out quadrangle map: The operation will use
of Prestonsburg, Kentucky: On Ne\(• the contour, auger and area methods of
U.S. Rt. 80. 5 miles to Rt. 122. Turn right mining. The operation will affect an
onl22, known as Buck's Branch. Go 112 area withm 100 feet of public road KY
miles to shop on right. Time of sale '777. The operation will not involve
11:00 a.m. Sale is for the purpose of relocation of the public road.
(4) The application has been filed for
disposing of:
(}) S & S Mine Scoop, Serial Number public inspection at the Department for
Surface Mining Reclamation and EnUAT7418
<1) Elkhorn Scoop, DLEl, 1034, Serial forcement's Prestonsburg Regional Office, at 431 South Lake Drive, PrestonsNumber 1032
Belonging to Lonme Lew1s and John burg, Ky. 41653. Written comments, obL. Elder d/b/a Double L Coal Company, jections, or requests for a permit conto satisfy or reduce Security ference must be filed with the Director
of the Division of Permits, 6th Floor,
Agreements and Note-Business Use.
Ashland Finance Company reserves Capital Plaza Tower, Frankfort, Kentucky .10601.
1-11-31.
the right to bid.
Terms: Sale will be for cash . The
parcels will be offered separately and
Notice Of Public Hearing
then as a unit <group> with sale to the
highest and best bidder. Equipment will
On January 19, 1984, the Kentucky
be sold as is/where is. Sold under KRS Public Service Commission, in its office
355.9-504.
at 73ll Schenkel Lane, FranKfort, KenASHLAND FINA:"\!CE COMPANY
tucky, beginning at 9 a.m., Eastern
Richard L. Couchot
Standard Time, will hold a public hearExecutive Vice President
ing to examine the application for Ken- - - - - - - ;____ _!2-28-3t. tucky Power Company's fuel adjustment clause covering the period May 1,
NOTICE OF PUBLIC SALE
1983. through October 31, 1983.
A public sale will be held by The Bank
ROBERT F MATTHEWS
Josephine on the 13 day of January, 1984
President
at The Bank Josephine, Harold Branch.
Kentucky Po~er Company
lt.
Time of sale:.JO 00 am. Sale is for the
...
purpose of disposing of a 1981 Dodge
Ram lfiO Pickup, to satisfy a loan note
Lightening can sti~_I;:_e more than once.
and security agreement dated the 12 day
According
to Nallonal Wildlife's Ranger
of August, 1983
Rick
magazine.
the Empire State
The Bank Josephine reserves the right
Building in New York City is struck
to bid
Terms of sale: CASH.
12-28·31. more than 100 times each year.
_______ ____
A PROVEN WINNER
1983 Super, latemodel Dirt Tracker.
Bu/1/t Chassis, few
runs on new Klein
engine, Goodyears'
quick change, etc.
RACE READY
with dual axle troller
& much more.
• Will price car less motor, troller, & trans. Money winner In three
states.
CALL TONY HALBERT, 285-3691, OR PAUL HARRIS, 886-1825
H-2l.
NOTICE OF APPOINTMENT
I, Frank Derossett, Clerk of the Floyd Circuit Court, do hereby certify that
the following persons have been appointed by the Floyd District Court and
QL'l 1ify according to law, and all persons indebted to the said estate are entitl~
ed to file with the undersigned persons at the designated addresses within 6
months from date of appointment:
Estates
83-P·290
Raymond Crum
Allen, Ky.
Fiduciary
Date Approved
Attorney
Anna Jean Crvm
Allen, Ky.
12-1-13
John D. Caudill
Martin, Ky.
83·P·291
Maggie Roach Haywood
Prestonsburg, Ky.
Arthur W. Hoy wood
Prestonsburg, Ky.
12-1-83
M•ushall Davidson .
Prestonsburg, Ky.
83-P·292
Owen K. Damron
Betsy Layne, Ky.
Blooma Damron
Betsy Layne, Ky.
12-1·13
Dan Rowland
Prestonsburg, Ky.
83·P·294
Hazel Jones
Be¥insville, Ky.
Monroe Jones
Bevinsville, Ky.
12-1-83
Janet Stumbo
Prestonsburg, Ky.
83·P-29S
Elirabeth J. Spurlock
Prestonsburg, Ky.
Burl Wells Spurlock
Prestonsburg, Ky.
12-2-83
Martin Weinberg
Louisville, Ky.
83-P-296
Biddie Jane Prater
Hueysville, Ky.
Maggie Allen
Hueysville, Ky.
12·2·83
W. W. Burchett
Prestonsburg, Ky.
83-P-298
Effort Henson
Beaver, Ky.
Opal Henson
Beaver, Ky.
12·6-83
Janet Stumbo
Prestonsburg, Ky.
83·P·299
Willard Ratliff
Wayland, Ky.
Wallace Ratliff
Auxier, Ky.
12-7·83
J. Logan Griffith
Prestonsburg, Ky.
83-P-300
Tina Alice Tuttle
Prestonsburg, Ky.
lula Branham
Prestonsburg, Ky.
12-7-83
C. V. Reynolds
Prestonsburg, Ky.
83·P-301
Edgar Preston Stephens
Prestonsburg, Ky.
James D. Stephens
Georgetown, Ky.
·12-9-83
Albert Burchett
Prestonsburg, Ky.
83-P-303
Edgar Preston Stephens
Prestonsburg, Ky.
Lanny Ray Hamil!on
Prestonsburg, Ky.
12-9-83
Janet Stumbo
Prestonsburg, Ky.
83·P·304
John H. Butler
Wheelwright, Ky.
James H. Butler
Wheelwright, Ky.
12-13·83
Eric Hall
Prestonsburg, Ky.
83-P-306
Walter Scott Collins
Prestonsburg, Ky.
Rose Collins
Prestonsburg, Ky.
12-14-83
Gregary Stumbo
Pr~stonsburg, Ky.
83-P-307
Carl Douglas Hom
West Prestonsburg; Ky.
Etta Jane Horn
West Prestonsburg, Ky.
12·16-83
Janet Stumbo
Prestonsburg, Ky.
83·P·308
£stil Boyd
.Janner; Ky.
Georgia Boyd Akers
Dana, Ky.
12-19-83
Janet Stumbo
Prestonsburg, Ky.
83-P-309
Marie D. Stumbo
McDowell, Ky.
Edith Cook Martin
Prestonsburg, Ky.
12-19·83
13-P-310
Donald Hugh Spurlock
Harold, Ky.
Maybeth K. Spurlock
Harold, Ky.
12-19-13
Janet Stumbo
Prestonsburg, Ky.
83-P-312
Virgil Smith
Allen, Ky.
Rena Smith
Allen, Ky.
12-21-13
W. W. Burchett
Prestonsburg, Ky.
83-P-313
Joe Slone
Wheelwright, Ky.
Ellis & Russell Slone
Halo, Ky.
12·21·83
Jerry Patton
Prestonsburg, Ky.
83·P-315
Audra Boyd
DallG, Ky.
Herman Conn
Dana, Ky.
12·28-83
Eric Hall
Prestonsburg, Ky.
FRANK DEROSSETT, tloyd Circuit Clerk
By: Charlotte Weddington, D.C.
lt.
NOTICE OF FILING OF SETTLEMENTS
I, Frank Derossett, Clerk of the Floyd Circuit Cour~, do h_ereby certify
that the following settlements of estates has been filed in the Flo,yd District
Court, and anyone desiring to take exceptions to said settlements must do
so on or before January. 30, 1984 at 10:00 a.m.
final
SO·P-037
Philmon Johnson
Eula Johnson
Annual
81-P-102 ,
H.f. Meade
Macla Meade
final
81·P-186
Lee Crisp
Rose Crisp
final
Bl·P-243
. Crit Mitc~ell
Daisy Hall Mitchell
Annual
82-P·098
Edna Simpson
Mary Jennings
final
79-P-027
Albert Beach Jr.
Lorraine Beach
ll·P-148
Emma C. Foster
Nell foster
final
81·P-026
Henry Woods
Patsy Crisp Osborne
Final
81 -P-217
Claude Prater
Biddie J. Prater
Final
82-P-1 27
Tom P. Dusina
Elira Dusina
Final
83·P·093
Thomas J. Hagans
Virginia Hagans
final
79·P-062
Howard Castle
Final
81 ·P-266
Landon R. Johnson
Edith Johnson
Final
83-P-166
Sam Rector
Doro Rech1r
final
13-P-158
Marion TeckeH
Walk Tackett
Final
82·P-214
Novo L. Hicks
L_oveda Snyder
final
83·P·146
Callie Marcum
Glenna Marcum
Final
80-P·090
Ola Watson
Vaugh Watson
Shadery Watson
Final
82-P-178
Thomas Montgomery
Christina Montgomery
Final
SO·P-011
Grecie Allen Bradley
Clint Brodley
Final
fRANK DEROSSm, floyd Circuit Court
By Charlotte Weddington, D.C.
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Wedneaday,
January 11, 1984-Tu-day,
January 17, 1984
f~dnesday»
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1/11/84
MORNING
9:00
16
· 1:00
6:00
MOVIE: 'Storm
Warning' A girl visiting her sister sees a
murder
committed
and recognizes one of
the killers as her
brother-in-law. Ginger
Rogers, Ronald Reagan. Doris Day. 1951
AFTERNOON
16
MOVIE:
'The
Command' A war is
waged to settle the
possession
of the
Wyoming
Territory.
Guy Madison, Joan
Weldon, James Whitmore. 1g54.
EVENING
OCilQCill!l@
€8(1) News
16 Little House on the
Prairie
fB (]) MacNeil/Lehrer
6:30
7:00
7:30
Newshour
@) @ 3-2-1, Contact
0
® €8 (]) NBC
News
Q Cil CBS News
I!)@ ABC News
@) (]]) Business Report
0 Cil PM Magazine
Q ®
Wheel of
Fortune
II) @ People's Court
16 Carol Burnett ,
fB (]) Kentucky
General Assembly
@) @ State of the
State Address
€8®Switch
0 ® Tic Tac Dough
Q Cil Family Feud
@ Jeffersons
16 Hogan's Heroes
@) @ Silver-Haired
Legislature
0
® €8 ®
Real
People Tonight's program features a special salute to the
Olympics and Olympians of the past and
present. (60 min.)
Q ([) Domestic Life
Martin blows up during a broadcast of the
evening news and immediately begins to
lose his nerve over
what he's done.
II)@ Fall Guy Terri
sends Colt after a 'hit
lady' who turns her
lethal talents on Colt.
(60 min.)
16 MOVIE: 'Centennial' Part 4 Fourth
of 12 parts. McKeag
sends his daughter Lucinda to heal Zendt's
sorrow after the death
of his wife. Richard
Chamberlain, Gregory
Harrison,
Cristina
Raines.
fB (]) @) @ National
Geographic
Special
'Among
the
Wild
Chimpanzees.'
Tonight's program documents the pioneering
research of Dr. Jane
Goodall who lived
among the wild chimpanzees in Tanzania.
(60 min.) [Closed Captioned]
Q ([) Empire
0 Cil €8 (]) Facts of
Life Problems develop
when Tootie's successful lawyer-mother
comes to lecture at
Eastland.
Q Cil MOVIE: 'Modern Problems' A man
becomes telekinetic
after
accidentally
being splashed with
nuclear waste. Chevy
m
8:00
8:30
9:00
mQr ~loy~ otnuuty Qrtmrs
Chase, Patti D'Arbanville,
Nell
Carter.
1981.
II)@ Oynas!Y
fB (]) @) (]]) Walk
Through the
20th
Century
with
Bill
Moyers
'Marshall,
Texas;
Marshall,
Texas: Bill Moyers returns to
Marshall,
Texas, where Moyers,
Y.A. Tittle, Ladybird
Johnson and James
Farmer all grew up.
(90 min.)
9:3o
Night
Court
1o:oo
st.
Elsewhere Dr. Auchslander and Joan Halloran press for an
investigation into the
circumstances
surrounding an exclusive
private hospital's refusal to admit an elderly patient. (60 min.)
Ill @ Arthur Hailey's
Hotel
16 TBS Evening News
10:30 fB (]) Tony Brown's
Journal
@)@ MacNeil/Lehrer
Newshour
arms over a serres of
cop
slaymgs
and
Joyce tells Frank a secret that may redefme
their relationship. (60
min .)
Q Cil Knots Landing
om e CI> m@
€8®News
16 All In the Family
11:30 0 Cil €8 (])Tonight
Show
Q Cil Police Story
Ill@ Nightline
16 Catlins
@)
@
Latenight
America
12:00 16 MOVIE: 'Trouble
Along the Way' The
story of a football
coach whose wife left
him and a child, and
whose
hard-taught
team wins the big
game. John Wayne,
Donna Reed, Charles
Coburn. 1953.
12:30 0 Cil Late Night with
David Letterman
Q ®MOVIE: 'Voices'
A struggling rock singer and a deaf dance
18@20/20
ALICE
16 TBS Evening News
Vic Tayback is featured as
Mel. the 1rasc1ble d1ner owner
on "Alice.· a1nng SUNDAY,
JAN. 15 on CBS In ton1ght's
episode. Mel forms a softball
team to beat out h1s compet•tJon's squad and w1n a bet.
o mmm
o m m m
11 :oo
TV
·SCHEDULE
CHECK LISTINGS FOR EXACT TIME
@1984 Compulog
fl.)(]) Business Report
@) (.fi) Avengers
10:30 fB ill Tony Brown's
Journal
11:00 0 Cil Q Cil
@
€Bill News
16 All In the Family
@)(]])Or. Who
11:30 0 Cil €8 (I) Tonight
Show
Q (I) Trapper John.
M.D.
II)@ Nightline
16 Catlins
@
Latenight
America
12:00 16 MOVIE: 'Operation
Secret' During WW II.
a U.S. Marine takes on
a dangerous mission
at the risk of his own
life. Cornel Wilde, Karl
Malden, Steve Cochran. 1952.
12:30 0 (I) Late Night with
David Letterman
Q Cil MOVIE: 'The
Billion Dollar Threat'
m
teacher
find
the
strength to realize
their dreams. Michael
Ontkean, Amy Irving,
Alex Rocco. 1979.
Ill @ CNN Headline
News
1:00 II)@ Bionic Woman
2:15 16 MOVIE: 'The Killer
Who Wouldn't Die'
The search for the
killer of an undercover
agent almost costs the
detective his life. Mike
Connors,
Samantha
Eggar, Clu Gulager.
1976.
4:30 16 Africans
(~hursd.ay))
1/12/84
MORNING
9:00
16
MOVIE: 'Confessions of the O.A. Man'
AFTERNOON
1:00
16
6:00
OCilQCill!l@
MOVIE: 'My Six
Convicts'
EVENING
€8®News
16 Little House on the
Prairie
fB (]) MacNeil/Lehrer
News hour
@)@ 3-2-1, Contact
6:30 0
® €8 (]) NBC
News
Q Cil CBS News
I!)@ ABC News
@)@ Business Report
7:00 0 Cil PM Magazine
Q (I) Wheel of
Fortune
II)@ People's Court
16 Carol Burnett
fB (]) Kentucky
General Assembly
@)@ MacNeil/Lehrer
News hour
€8 (I) Appalachian
Encounters
7:30 0 Cil Tic Tac Dough
Q ® Family Feud
@ Jeffersons
m
i6 Hogan's Heroes
€8 (1) Lorne Greene's
Wilderness
8:00 0®€8illGimmea
Break Addy and Angie
take Nell on a girls
night out to help her
forget that her ex- .
husband is remarrymg
Q (]) Magnum P.l.
II)
@
Automan
16 MOVIE: 'Centennial' Part 5
@)@Sneak Previews
8:30 0 ® €8 (]) Family
Ties
@)@Good Neighbors
9:00 0 ® €8 ® Cheers
Q ®Simon & Simon
Ill @ Masquerade
fB ®
Scholastic
Challenge
@) @ Stanley Kramer
9:30 0 ®
® ~uffalo
Bill
10:00 0 Cil €8 ® Hill Street
Blues The officers at
Hill Street are up in
Ill @
CNN Headline
News
1:00 II)@ Bionic Woman
2:15 16 MOVIE: 'Virgin
Island'
4:00 16 Africans
@day»
1/13/84
MORNING
9:00
16
1:00
16
m
--Movie Week-SUNDAY
(ABC) SUNDAY NIGHT MOVIE
MONDAY
(ABC) MONDAY NIGHT MOVIE
MOVIE:
'That
Funny Feeling' Two
aspiring
actresses
who support themselves by maintaining
a house-cleaning service try to impress a
new friend by using a
client's
apartment.
Sandra Dee, Bobby
Darin . 1964.
AFTERNOON
MOVIE: 'Hercules
Against the Mongols'
The three sons of
Genghis Khan, rivals
for the princess, encounter the mighty
Hercules. Mark Forrest. Jose Graci. 1960..•
EVENING
6:00 OCIJQ(I)I!l@
€8(2) News
fB ill MacNeil/Lehrer
Newshour
(fi) 3-2-1. Contact
6:30 0
Cil €8 ® NBC
News
0 (I) CBS News
I!)@ ABC News
@) (fi) Business Report
7:00 0 (I) PM Magazine
Q
CJ) Wheel
of
Fortune
II)@ People's Court
CD Carol Burnett
fl.) ill Flying Wing
@) (]]) MacN ... iVLehrer
Newshour
€8 (]) Goins Brothers
7:30 0 ® Tic Tac Dough
Q ® Family Feud
@ Jeffersons
CD Hogan's Heroes
fB Cil Comment on
Kentucky
€8 ill This Week in
Country Music
8:00 0 (I) ffj (I) MOVIE:
'Hard Knox' A career
Marine Corps officer,
facing forced retirement, takes OIIGr the
running of a military
school and ftnds "t
m
(NBC) MONDAY NIGHT MOVIE
"A MATTER OF SEX" (1983) Jean Stapleton. Dinah Manoff. A
World Premiere drama about eight valiant women. who. frustrated
over unequal pay and unfatr promotiOn opportuntties in companson to men, wage a bitter two-year battle at great personal sacri·
f•ce as they strike thetr employer, a small W1llmar. MN. bank.
TUESDAY
(CBS) TUESDAY NIGHT MOVIE
WEDNESDAY
(CBS) WEDNESDAY NIGHT MOVIE
m
"CARBON COPY" ( 1981) George Segal. Susan Saint James.
Jack Warden. A successful businessman's nearly perfect life is
turned around when h1s •llegtltmate black son turns up.
SATURDAY
(CBS) SATURDAY NIGHT MOVIE
"MAKING LOVE" (1981) Michael Ontkean. Kate Jackson.ljarry Hamlin. A happily married doctor's life changes after meeting a
homosexual writer and he find himself hav1ng to come to terms
w1th the des•res he has never admitted to himself.
@1984 Compuiog
Michael Ontkean (I.) stars as Zack, a California doctor
who decides he must end h1s marriage to Claire (Kate
Jackson) . when he falls in love with Bart (Harry
Hamlin), in "Making Love." airing Saturday. Jan. 21 on
"The CBS Saturday N1ght Movies.'
�8:00
more challenging than
h
thought. Robert
Conrad, Frank Howard, Joan Sweeney.
1983.
0 ® Charlie Brown
pecial 'Is This Goodbye, Charlie Brown?'
he world of thq Peanuts gang IS turned ups de down when Linus
and Lucy move away.
MATTER OF SEX
Jea n Stapleton IS the leader
of a group of female bark
employees who bnng a sexdtScPm lnatlon sutt aga nst
the1r employer 1n " A Matter of
Sex " a1nng MONDAY, JAN.
16 or " NBC Monday Night at
the Movies."
(R)
GC Benson A boy
starts a campaign to
et h1s widowed mom
nd Benson to the altar.
[Closed
Captioned]
16 NCAA Basketball:
Kentucky at Auburn
[j)
Was;1ington
Week/
Review Paul Duke is
joined by top Washington journalists analyzing
the
week's
news.
Q (§) How B. Bunny
Won the West
&) @Webster
~
CHECK LISTINGS FOR EXACT TIME
m m m
8:30
m
fB 00
[l) Wall
Street Week
9:00 Q ®Dallas J.R.'s capacity
for
doublecrossing comes close
to running over as he
sets up for a ride in
risky offshore oil exploration. (60 min.)
&) @ Blue Thunder
The Blue Thunder battles a right wing group
that uses a fighter
plane as air support.
(60 min .)
@1984 Compulog
«~turd;.y))
1/14/84
MORNING
5:00
5:30
6:00
6:15
6:30
7:00
fB
®
Kentucky
General Assembly
&) G]) Session '84
9:30
@) [l) Inside the
Whit., House Four veteran White House
correspondents, who
will follow the election
campaign,
discuss
preparations for the
primaries and outlme
the key areas to
watch.
10:00 0
(I) (ifi (Z) New
Show
Tonight's
guests
are
John
Candy al"'d Paul Simon. ·(60 min.)
0 ® Falcon Crest Michael Ransom must
face his past and perform surgery on Sheriff Robbins to save his
life. (60 min.)
G) @ Matt Houston
0) TBS Evening News·
&) G]) Israeli Diary
10:30 fB 00 International
Edition Ford Rowan
hosts this look at
trends and news events as they are reported
by
foreign
journalists.
&) [j) Inside Business
Tod.!}'
11:000WQ®&l@
(ifi(Z) News
16 All In the Family
&l CITl Dr. Who
11:30 0 (]) l!fi (Z) Tonight
Show
0® MOVIE: 'Birth of
the Beetles' The Baaties are shown in their
early years which culminate in their appearance
on
the
Ed
Sullivan show. Stephen Mackenna, Rod
Culbertson, John Altman. 1979.
&)@ Nightline
16 Catlins
&) @ MOVIE: 'Mrs.
Wiggs of the Cabbage
Patch'
12:00 16 N.Jllht Tracks .
12:30 0
GV l!fi (}) Fnday
Night Videos
G) @ CNN Headline
News
@
Pentecost
1 :00 II)
Today
1:30
2:00
W@ Bionic Woman
8 (]) News
16
Night
Tracks
Cont'd
&) @Rev. Pete Rowe
O@Saturday Report
&) @ Farm Digest
16 TBS Morning News
&) @Forum 19
0 ® T.V. Classroom
&) @Town Crier
0
Joy
of
Gardening
0 ® Captain Kanga.
roo
&) @ CNN Headline
News
16 Between the Lines
[l)
Nature of
Things
(ifi
(Z)
Amazing
Spiderman/lncredible
Hulk
0 ill Bugs Bunny &
Friends
&) @ ABC Weekend
Special 'Cougarl' Second of 3 parts. After
having their house
swept away tn a flood,
a boy and his little sister are confronted by a
mountain lion and a
pair of kidnappers.
[Closed Captioned]
16 Romper Room and
Friends
Oc.Dl!fi(Z) Flintstone
Funnies
0 ® Biskitts
&) @ Best of Scooby
Doo
16 Starcade
&) @ Two Ronnies
ill Shirt
Tales
0
®
Saturday
Supercade
&) @ Monchhichis/
Little Rascals/Richie
Rich
16 MOVIE: 'Seminole'
m@ Bless Me Father
0 ill €8 ® Smurfs
[l) To the Manor
Born
0 ® Dungeons and
m
m
7:30
8:00
8:3o
9:00
9:30
o m m
m
Dra~ns
&) @ Pac-Man/Rubik
Cube Hour
[l) Dave Allen at
large
10:00 0 ® Plasticman
&) [l) Top Sec. life of
E. Briggs
10:30 0 (I) €8 (Z) Alvin &
the Chipmunks
0 ® Charlie Brown
&Snoopy
&)@Littles
16 MOVIE: 'Rebel
Without a Cause'
&) @ House For All
Seasons
11:00 0 (]) l!fi (1) Mr. T
0 ® Benji/Zax/Alien
Prince
&) @ Puppy/Scooby
Doo Show
&) (fl) All New This
m
Old House
11:30 0
(I)
Amazing
Spiderman/lncredible
Hulk
0 ® Bugs Bunny/
Road Runner
@) [l) Woodwright"s
Shop
(ifi (Z) Fishing Fever
EVENING
6:00
8:30
ship Wrestling
fB 00 Matinee at the
Bijou
@
Undersea
World
of Jacques
Cousteau
0
(I) (ifi (}) NBC
News
0 ® Concern
&) @ Dance Fever
0 ill NCAA Basketball: Chattanooga at
Marshall
0 ® Hee Haw
&) (!) Solid Gold
m@ Dr. Who Movie
(ifi ill Jamboree
9:00
m
6:30
m
m
&) @ Sportsbeat
16 World Champion-
AFTERNOON
12:00 &) @ America's Top
Ten
@
Washington
Week/Review
(ifi (}) That Nashville
Music
12:30 0 ill (ifi (Z) Volvo
Masters Tennis Coverage ofthe singles semifinals is presented·
from Madison Square
Garden, New York,
NY. (2 hrs.)
® American
Bandstand
[l) Wall Street
Week
1:00 0 ® New Fat Albert
Show
16 MOVIE: 'Fighter
Attack'
&) @
Together in
Concert: Tex Beneke
and His Orchestra
1:30 0
®
Fishing w/
Roland Martin
&) @ Andy Griffith
2:00 0 ®NCAA Basketball: North Carolina at
Wake Forest
m@ lifestyles of the
Rich and Famous
&) [l) Store
2:30 0 ill NCAA Basketbatl: Virginia Tech at
louisville
(ifi (}) NCAA Basketball: Teams to be
Announced
2:45 16 MOVIE: 'Springfield Rifle'
3:30 fB 00 Another Page
4:00 0
®
CBS Sports
Saturday Today's program features a 10round
lightweight
bout between Robin
Blake and Harry Arroyo,
World
Cup
Skiing and John Madden's Journeys. (2
hrs.)
&) @NCAA Basketball:
Georgia
at
Alabama
16 Portrait of America: Indiana
fB 00 GED Series
[l) All Creatures
Great and Small
4:30 0 (]) NCAA Basketball: VMI at Appalachain State
fl.) crl GED Serjes
(ifi (}) NCAA Baskeball: Auburn at Geor-
O CID 0 ® News
7:00
Q®Whiz Kids
&) @ T. J. Hooker
Hooker goes undercover to infiltrate a
large narcotics ring.
(60 min.) [Closed Captioned]
16
MOVIE:
'The
longest Yard' A team
of convicts is given a
chance to tackle prison guards in a football
game.
Burt
Reynolds, Bernadette
Peters, Eddie Albert_
1974.
fB 00 Nature 'The Discovery of Animal Behavior.' First of 6
parts. Tonight's program looks at some of
the people who have
come closest to understanding the behavior
of animals. (A) (60
min.) [Closed Captioned]
€fj
(})
Diff'rent
Strokes Arnold and
Dudley succumb to
peer pressure and decide to try smoking cigarettes. [Closed Captioned]
@ Hitch Hikers
Guide/Galaxy
(ifi (}) Silver Spoons
Ricky's attempt to
play his mother off
against
his
father
backfires when she
buys him a motorcycle
that his father did not
want him to have.
0 (I) (ifi (])We Got It
Made
0 ®MOVIE: 'Body
Heat' The love affair of
a lawyer and a married woman unfolds
into a crime of passion. William Hurt,
Kathleen Turner, Ri-
m
7:30~~fB~®~s~S~n~e~a~k;P~r~e~v~ie;w~s~~~~~c~h;a:rd~C~re;n:n~a~.~~19!8~1::
m
m
~
Fishin' w/Orlando
Wilson
fl.) (I) Firing Line
&) (fl) Masterpiece
Theatre 'The Citadel.'
5:30 16 Motorweek Illustrated
5:00
&)@Love Boat A rich
widow
and
her
brother create a special cruise for charity,
a bride gambles away
her wedding money to
avoid living with her
new in-laws and a
school teacher becomes obsessed with
a slot machine. (60
min .) [Closed Captioned]
fB 00 All Creatures
Great and Small
[l) World War I
9:30 0 ill l!fi (Z) Mama's
Family
&) (ll) Bear Next Door
10:00 0 ill (ifi (Z) Yellow
Rose
&) @ Fantasy Island
A
career
woman
wants to get married
and a soaring enthusiast enters a contest.
(60 min.) [Closed Captioned]
16 TBS Evening News
!'BOO Pallisers
&)
@
Operation
Barbarossa
11:00 0 ill News
&)@ABC News
16 Unknown War
fB 00 Austin City
Limits
(ll) MOVIE: 'Trent's
last Case' Amateur
detective,
covering
death of financial ty·
coon for newspaper
discovers verdict of
suicide is actually accidental homicide. Michael Wilding, Margaret
Lockwood.
1953.
(ifi (}) Music Magazine
11:15 0®&)@ News
1 1:30 0 ill lifi ® Saturday
Night Live
&) @
ETSU
vs.
Citadel
11:45 0 ® Visions of '84
12:00 16 Night Tracks
1:00 0 (I) MOVIE: 'Wake
Me When It's Over' A
soldier planning to
build a resort hotel on
a lovely radar outpost
in the Far East using
Army surplus material
advertises it as the 'sin
spot of the Orient' and
finds himself courtmartialed. Ernie Kovacs, Margo Moore,
Jack Warden. 1960
m
m
*
TO BE OR NOT TO BE (20th Century-Fox - PG)
Starrmg Mel Brooks, Anne Bancroft, Tim Matheson Produced by Mel Brooks, dlfected by Allan Johnson.
* *
~
By J.T. YURKO
Mel Brooks IS a fan of old
mov1es. H1s rather curious way
of show1ng affection for them
1s to do lavtsh, nd1culous sendups of such genres as horror
ftlms ("Young Frankenstein") ,
thnllers ("High Anxiety") and
Westerns
("Blazing
Saddles) ."
Brooks tS a big fan of the
onginal version of "To Be or
Not to Be," released 1n 1943.
He is such a big fan that he
doesn't spoof this film, but virtually remakes the onginal.
Both films concern a Polish
theater company at the start of
World War II. Both films are set
against the German 1nvas1on of
Poland and how it affects the
company, combining a drawJng-room comedy with pratse
for Polish patriotism.
Ernst Lub1tsch's film tS a
favonte of many film buffs. and
Brooks knows not to mess with
a good th1ng He cannot avo1d
throw1ng tn a Brooksian shtiCk
or two. such as the bnef but
silly mus1cal numbers
The usually madcap Brooks
is forced tnto playing a s1ncere,
likable character tn thts film .
His performance is closer to
lhat of "The Twelve Chairs"
than any of his other films. But
when Brooks plays Herr Hitler,
the performance is strictly
slapsll~:k
A fine supporting cast b<;~cks
up Brooks and his w1fe, Anne
Bancroft . providing some
touch1ng
and
comical
moments. The humor is not as
broad as most of Brooks'
recent films, so those turned
off by the bathroom humor in
"History of the World. Part I"
will find this film a welcome
relief.
1:30
2:00
&) @ Music Mega·
zine
II) @ Rockford Files
(6
Night
Tracks
Cont"d
«aun~v))
1/15/84
MORNING
@1984Compulog
5:00
&) (!)Rev. Pete Rowe
�•
SEDUCTION OF GINA
Valene Be·h'lelh p.ays a
young woman who nsks her
marnage when .,he becomes a
compuls1ve gambler, and
M1chael Brandon portrays a.
coo perative casino employee
1n "The Seduc ti on of G1na,"
a1nng TUESDAY, JAN. 17 on
"The CBS Tuesday Night
Mov1e"
CHECK LISTINGS FOR EXACT TIME
@)1984 Compulog
I
James Dean. 19
fl) ® Electric Compan'l.._
11 :00 fl) (].) Sesame Street
[Closed Captioned]
Gil MOVIE: 'Man
From the Black P.ills'
® leonard Repass
11 :30 0 CID At Issue
0 00 Viewpoint
(E) @ World Tomorrow
(I) Rev. A.A. West
der kidna
is spon-sor's
thoroughbred
stallion and rides him
into the desert. Robert
Redford, Jane Fonda ,
Willie Nelson. 1979
m
m
ST. ELSEWHERE
m
Dr Cra.g (William Dar ets)
gets lost n a znowslorM ard
almost freezes to dealh before
he IS rescued by Dr. Kochnar
(Kav1 Raz) 1n the 'Blizzard"
episode of "St. ElsewherE'"
a1nng WEDNESDAY, JAN. 18
on NBC.
m
AFTERNOON
12:00 0 CID Meet the Press
0 ®
Addams Family
(E) @ This Week with
David Brinkley
fl)
ill
Working
Women
@ Sesame Street
[Closed Captioned]
Cil
To
Be
Announced
12:30 0 (I)
® Volvo
Masters Tennis Coverage of this tennis tournament is presented
from Madison Square
Garden, New York,
NY. (2 hrs., 45 min.)
0 00 Best/Beverly
Hillbillies
fl) ® Comment on
Kentucky
1:00 0 (]) NBA Basketball: Boston at Mil·
waukee
(E) @ Biblical Viewpoint
fl) ®Capitol Connection
@ Victory Garden
Telethon:
United Cerebral Palsy
9:30 0
CHECK LISTINGS FOR EXACT T,ME
m
m
@1984 Compulog
m
6:00 (i)@Omni
6:15
6:30
7:00
16News
16 Week/Review
0 CID TV Chapel
0 00 Better Way
(E) @ What Does the
Bible Say?
16TBS Morning News
0 CID Music and the
Spoken Word
0 ® Jerry Falwell
(E) @ Roger Sparks
Religion
16 World Tomorrow
@ MOVIE: 'The
Secret of Dr. Kildare'
Drs . Gillespie and Kildare
keep
secrets
from each other for
the other's apparent
good . Lionel Barrymore, Lew Ayres , Loraine Day. 1939.
CZ)
Time
for
Refreshing
0 CID Fountain of lifr.
(E)@ James Robison
16 It Is Written
0 CID Hour of Power
0
00 Day of
Discovery
(E)@ Jerry Falwell
16 Cartoon Carnival ,
fl) ® Sesame Street
[Closed Captioned]
®
Gateway
Gospel
0
}:xpect
a
Miracle
0 00 Christ for the
World
16 Starcade
m@ Wild America
® Biblical Viewpoint
0 (I) Rex Humbard
0 00 Sunday Morning
(E) @) Kenneth Copeland
16 leave It to Beaver
fl) ® Sesame Street
[Closed Captioned]
m@ Survival Special
® Sunday School
0 CI:l Kenneth Copeland
16 Andy Griffith
® Rev. R.A. West
m
7:30
8:00
8:30
fl) ® Business of
Management
(j])
Working
Women
2:00 (E) @ love Connection
fl) ®
Business of
Management
@ Great Performances
'The
Ma11ic
Fl.u te.' Host James
Levine explains the
mysteries
of
'The
Magic Flute,' Mozart's
meditation
on
the
meaning of life. (3 hrs.,
30 min.)
2:30 (E) @ Andy Griff!th
m
1:30 (E) @
Virgil Wacks
Presents
in the
spotlight
9:30
m
m
10:00 (E)@ Rev. R.A. West
16 Good News
fl) .® Mr. Rogers'
Neighborhood
@ Nova 'Alcoholics: Life Under the Influence.' The many
faces of alcoholismmedical,
historical
and social-are examined. (60 min.) [Closed
Captioned]
Big Creek
Baptist
10:30 0 (I) Dr. D. James
Kennedy
0 00 Ernest Angley
(E) @ Jimmy Swag-
m
m (])
~rt
m
MOVIE:
'Giant' A
strong-willed girl from
Maryland has to make
adjustments when she
marries
a wealthy
Texan. Elizabeth Taylor,
Rock
1-\udson,
1967.
3:30
4:30
·-
rn
fl) ®
Focus
on
Society
(E) @ NCAA Basketball:
Vanderbilt at
Florida
16 MOVIE: 'Guess
Who's
Coming
to
Dinner?'
A
young
white woman with
well-off,
liberalminded parents falls
in love with a distinguished black doctor
in Hawaii . Spencer
Tracy, Katharine Hepburn, Sidney Poitier.
fl) ®
Socie!Y
3:15
~
m
9:00
3:00
m
m (])
m
5:00
5:30
Focus
on
0
QJ SportsWorld
Today's program features boxing ( 1 hr., 15
min.)
0 (§) CBS Sports
Sunday Today's program features a 10round
lightweight
bout between Howard
Davis
and
Tyrone
Crawley, World Cup
Skiing and an Olymp ic
Figure Skating Preview. (2 hrs., 30 min .)
fl) ® Salt Poisoning
0 CID Bob Hope
Desert Classic Coverage of the final round
is presented from the
Bermuda Dunes Country
Club,
Palm
Spri~s . CA. (2 hrs.)
fl) W Social Problems/Ciassrm.
(E) @ Sarajevo '84
fl) ® All New This
Old House
16 Jacques Cousteau
fl) ® Woodwright's
Shop
@ To the Manor
Born
m
Author and historian David McCullough hosts the new
series "Smithsonian World ."
-
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EVENING
9:00
gates the murder of a
model. (60 mm .)
0
00
Wilson's
Reward
(E) @ Hardcastle &
McCormick Hardcastle discovers that someone does not want
him to be appointed to
the Supreme Court.
(60 min .)
16
MOVIE:
'Centennial' Part 6 Sixth of
12 parts. Young John
Skimmerhorn is hired
by a group of British
investors to drive Longhorn cattle through
the wild, open lands
between Texas ans
Colorado.. Cliff de
Young,
Dennis
Weaver, Glynn Turman .
fl)@ Raphael
m @ Nature ' A Question
of
Learning.'
Tonight's program investigates how an imals learn. (R) (60
min.) [Closed Captioned]
0 CID
® Bob
Hope's USO Christmas in Beirut Tonight's program features Bob Hope's first
overseas
Christmas
shows since 1972.
Guests
include
Brooke Shields, Ann
Jillian and Cathy Lee
Crosby. (2 hrs.)
0 (§) Jeffersons Florence's life is in danger
when she walks into a
police stake-out in the
Jefferson's
apa rtment.
(E) @ MOVIE: 'The
Electric Horseman' An
ex-champion rodeo ri-
m
16 Jerry
Falwell
m @ Not the Nine
O'Clock News
m (]) NCAA Basket-
ball:
Vanderbilt at
Florida
11 :30 0 CID MOVIE: 'The
Barbarian
and the
Geisha' A histoncal
drama of one man's
successful fights to
open Japan to the
western world . John
Wayne, Eiko Ando ,
Sam Jaffe. 1958
0 (§) This Week in
Country Music
(i)@ABC News
@ Monty Python
Flyin~ Circus
m
11:45 (E)@ Forum 19
12:00 0 ® Face the Nation
(E)
@)
Today
Pentecost
i6~en Up
m C11l
.
Dave Allen at
large
(§) MOVIE: 'One
Deadly
Owner'
A
woman purchases a
second Rolls Royce
but soon finds that the
car has a mind of its
own . Oonna Mills, Jeremy Brett. 1974
(E) @ Jim Bakker
1:00 16 MOVIE: ' Mary of
Scotland'
Mary
of
Scotland defies her
jealous rival. Elizabeth
I. of England, and is
beheaded Katharine
Hepburn,
Fredric
March, John Carradine. 1936.
1:30 (E) @ Star Search
3:45 16 Africans
4 :45 16 World/large
12:30 0
6:00 O®News
'Time and Light'
nnd Light
(§)
Goodnight,
Beantown Matt proposes to an old flame
10:00 0 (§) Trapper John,
M.D.
Trapper
and
Gonzo encourage an
orthopedic surgeon to
specialize in the field
of bon·e d isorders associated with dwarfism (60 min .)
16 Sports Page
fl)
®
DeBono's
Thinking Course
[j) Poldark
10:30 16 Oral Robtlrts
fl) ®
New Tech
Times
11:00 OCIDO® News
m
m
m
m m
®
Masterpiece Theatre
'The
Citadel .'
Andrew's dedication to
practicing
medicine
with integrity is remin.)
VIved . (60
(Closed Caotionedl
7:00
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whole
<l~lfll~l ySIC~ .. HI
@'1984 Compulog
7:30
8:00
(E)@ Star Search
fl) ® Motorweek
m@ Dad's Army
0 CID
® NBC
News
O®CBS News
16 Nice People
fl) ® Great Chefs/
San Francisco
m@ Bless Me Father
0 (I)
First
Camera
0 (§) 60 Minutes
(E)@ Ripley's Believe
It or Notl Tonight's
program features an
exposure of some of
the
world's
great
frauds, a look at cats
and Norton the First,
Emperor of the United
, states. (60 min.)
16 Best of World
C'Piampionship Wrestling
fl)@Nature
m@ Tony Brown's
Journal
@ lawmakers
0 (I)
(I) Knight
Rider Michael investi-
m
.m (])
m
m
'Best of Groucho'
by Kim Cooper
The "WOld .. at CBN Cable IS lhilt Groucno Marx IS back '"
"The Best of~Grc.ucho." one of TV's Z<lillesl qUJz shows It a~rs
Mondays through Fndays at 11.30 p.m (ET)
The half-hour show teatures segr(Jents from Groucho·s
1950s show "You Bet Your L1fe.' Guesl&on the show 1nclude
Loberace. Frank1P Avalon Pancho GonLales. Phyii1S D1ller and
a young Cand•ce Bergen
The program centers on il word game. usually Interrupted
by Groucho·s w1tty remarks A patr of contestants answer
quest1ons from a category of their cho1ce tryong to w1n a cash
pnze. Contestants could also w1r1 money by uttenng " the
secret word ... or "wo1d" as Groucho pronounced 1t. chosen at
the start of each show
Kim Cooper is publicity director of the CBN Cable
Network.
@1984 Compulog
�@l&ytime))
MORNING
5:00
5:30
6:00
C6 Varied
6:15
Programs
IE)@ Rev. Pete Rowe
0 Cil NBC News at
Sunrise
0 (I) m @ Jimmy
Swaggart
C6 TBS Morning News
@) [i) Varied Pro-
6:30
UCil News
~ams
6:45
7:00
0
(I) CBS Early
Morni'!.9 News
IE)
C!.l
Assembly
Echoes
IE)@ ABC News This
Morning
@) [i) Weather
Offi€fi(I)Today
0 (I) CBS Morning
News
IE) @ Good Morning
America
CD SuperStation Funtime
@) [i) Varied Pro-
11:3b4 Cil CiB (I) Dream
House
IE)@ Loving
C6 Texas
AFTERNOON
12:00 0 Cil Gol
0 (I) €fi (1) News
IE) @ Family Feud
C6 Perry Mason
12:30 0 Cil News
0 (I) Young and the
Restless
IE)@ Ryan's Hope
€fi (I) Search For
Tomorrow
1:00 0 Cil Days of Our
Lives
IE)@ All My Children
CD Movie
€fi (I) Sale of the
Century
1:30 0 (I) As the World
Turns
€fi (]) Days of Our
Lives
2:00 0 Cil Another World
IE)@ One Life to Live
@ 3-2-1, Contact
2:30 0 (I) Capitol
@) [i) Instructional
m
Pro~ams
~ams
7:30
8:00
W I Dream of Jeannie
CD Bewitched
fll®Weather
@) [i) Sesame Street
[Closed Captioned]
8:15 f1) ®
Instructional
Programs
8:30 C6 I Love Lucy
9:00 0
(]) Braun and
Company
0 ® Andy Griffith
IE) @ Jim Bakker
CD Movie
@) [i) Instructional
PrOQ!ams
€B~ 700 Club
9:30 0 ® Here's Lucy
10:00 U (]) €fi (]) Facts of
Life
0 (I) New $25,000
3:00
3:30
4:00
~ramid
W@ 700 Club
1 0:30 0
(]) Sale of the
Century
0 ® Press Your Luck
€fi
(])
Morning
Stretch
11 :00 U (]) €fi (]) Wheel of
Fortune
0 ® Price Is Right
IE)@ Benson
CD Catlin$
r
4:30
5:00
€fi W Another World
0 Cil Match Game/
Hollywood
Squares
Hour
0 (I) Guiding Light
IE) @ General Hospital
CD SuperStation Funtime
@) [j) Varied Programs
CD Flintstones
f1l ® Electric Company
€fi ® Match Game/
Hollywood
Squares
Hour
0 (])Mr. Cartoon
0 (I) Hour Magazine
IE) @ Rockford Files
CD Munsters
f1l ® Sesame Street
[Closed Captioned]
@) [i) Untamed World
C6 Brady Bunch
@) [i) Mr. Rogers'
Neighborhood
€fi(])Gol
0 (]) B.J./Lobo Show
0 ® Hawaii Five-0
IE)@ Superfriends
C6 Leave It to Beaver
Compiled by the staff of the World Almanac
~(JIJrls
..,
1.11.
1. Which right-handed pitcher has struck out
the most World Series batters?
2. Who was the PGA's leading money-winner
in 1983?
3. For which NFL team does Marvin Powell
play??
4. Which city hosts the annual Florida Citrus
Bowl football game (formerly known as
the Tangerine Bowl)?
5. Who won the 1983 Firestone Tournament
of Champions bowling tournament?
6. Name the first Toronto Maple Leaf player
to score 50 goals in a season.
7. Name the only two Minnesota Twins to
lead the American League in RBis.
8. Name the first University of Nebraska
player to win the Heisman Trophy.
9. Name the coach of the University of Florida basketball team.
10. Which NFL team holds the record for most
losses in a season?
© 1984 Compulog
,...
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5:30
CID Mr. Rogers'
Neighborhood
.
@) (j]) Sesame Street
[Closed Captioned]
€fi (]) PTL Club
IE) @ Tic Tac Dough
C6 Beverly Hillbillies
f1l CID 3-2-1, Contact
SIMON & SIMON
Jameson Parker (1.) and
Gerald Mc Raney star as si b- •
ling detectives A J and Rick
Simon on CBS' "Simon &
Simon," ai ring THURSDAY,
JAN.19.
«monday))
1/16/84
MORNING
CH ECK LISTINGS FOR EXACT TIME
7:30
@) [i) Sesame Street
[Closed Captioned]
9:00 C6 MOVIE: 'Fools' An
aging movie actor,
who is trying to find a
meaning to his life,
meets a young woman
and falls in love. Katharine Ross, Jason
Robards, Scott Hylands. 197 1.
AFTERNOON
1:00 CD
MOVIE: 'Mara
Maru' A former Navy
commander leads a
mobster to sunken
treasure, then battles
him for the diamonds.
Errol Flynn, Ruth Roman, Raymond Burr.
1952.
EVENING
6:00
OCIJO®m®
€fi® News
C6 Little House on the
Prairie
f1) ® MacNeil/Lehrer
Newshour
@) [i) 3-2-1, Contact
6:30 0
Cil €fi ® NBC
News
0 (I) CBS News
Ol@ABC News
@) [i) Business Report
7:00 0 (]) PM Magazine
0
®
Wheel of
Fortune
IE) @ People's Court
C6 Carol Burnett
f1)
®
Kentucky
G~rneral Assembly
@) [i) MacNeil/Lehrer
Newshour
€fi (2) How the West
Was Won
7:30 0 (]) Tic Tac Dough
0 ® Family Feud
m @ Jeffersons
C6 Hogan's Heroes
8:oo
TV's
Bloopers,
Commercials & Pratical Jokes
Dick Clark and Ed
McMahon host this
look at scenes never
intended for viewing
by an audience. (60
min .)
0 ® Scarecrow and
Mrs. King
0) @ NCAA Basketball: Mississippi State
at Georgia
CD MOVIE: 'Centennial' Part 7 Seventh
of 12 parts. A range
war
erupts
when
Messmore Gerrett arrives with thousands
of sheep. Gregory Harrison , Timothy Dalton,
Christina Raines.
f1) ®@) [i) Frontline
'Crisis at General Hospital.' Tonight's program looks at some
hospitals who market
themselves to treat the
wealthy, leaving the
poor with no place to
go. (60 min.) [Closed
Captioned]
9:00 0 Cil €fi (I) MOVIE:
'Matter of Sex' Eight
women, who are frustrated over unequal
pay and unfair promotion
opportunities,
wage a bitter two year
battle as they strike
against
their
employer. Jean Stapleton, Dinah Manoff.
1983.
0
(I) AfterMASH
Klinger writes a letter
o m m rn
@)1 984 Compulog
to his old buddy Radar, describing life at
General Pershing Hosp!tal.
f1l CID @) [j) Great
Performances 'Dance
in America : A Song for
Dead Warriors.' The
San Franciso Ballet
gives a special performance of Michael
Smuin's epic ballet.
(60 min .)
9:30 0 (I) Newhart Stephanie discovers that
her former 'Prince
Charming' is married
to her former high
school rival.
10:00 0 (I) Emerald Point
N.A.S. Glenn
Matthews forces Harlan to
make him a'vice president of Adams Industries and Kay discovers that Hilary is
named Glenn's new
assistant. (60 min .)
0) @ That's lncrediblel
C6 TBS Evening News
f1) ® Great Performances 'Ed ith Wharton :
Looking Back.' Kathleen Widdoes stars as
Edith Wharton in a
presentation based in
part on A.W.B. Lewis'
biography. (R) (60
min .)
@) [i) NCAA BasketMarshall
vs.
ball:
Furman
11:00 0 ( ] ) 0 (§)IE)@
CiB® News
C6 All In the Family
f1) ® Business Report
11:30 0 Cil Tonight Show
0 (I) Hart to Hart
IE)@ Nightline
CD Catlins
€fi (]) NCAA Basketball:
Georgia
at
Mississippi State
12:00 CD MOVIE: 'Corey: For
the People' A young
assistant district attorney refuses to knuckle
under to
pressure
from his boss and a
authority.
medical
John Rubinstein, Eugene Roche, Ronnie
Cox. 1977.
12:30 0 (]) Late Night with
David Letterman
0 (I) Columbo 'Dead
Weight.'
Columbo
faces the difficult task
of proving a military
hero guilty of murder.
(R) (90 min .)
IE)@ CNN Headline
News
1:00 0)@ Bionic Woman
1:30 C6 MOVIE: 'One Foot
In Heaven'
4:00 C6 MOVIE: 'Crime by
Night' Called in about
a child custody case, a
detective
discovers
murder, a spy ring and
sabotage. Jane Wyman, Jerome Cowan,
Eleanor Parker. 1944.
«~~~day»
.
1/17/84
MORNING
9:00
C6
1:00
CD MOVIE: 'McHale's
MOVIE: 'Joy of
Living'
A
carefree
globe trotter and a
career-minded stage
star have a whirlwind
courtship.
Irene
Dunne, Douglas Fairbanks Jr., Alice Brady.
1-938.
AFTERNOON
Navy' The nutty crew
of a PT boat is involved in a horse race
and some big betting .
Ernest Borgnine, Joe
Flynn, Tim Conway.
1964.
EVENING
0(])0@1!)@
C&®News
CD Little House on the
Prairie
f1) ® MacNeil/Lehrer
Newshour
[i) 3-2-1' Cpntact
(]) €fi ®
NBC
6:30 0
News
0 (I) CBS News
IE)@ABC News
@)@Business Report
7:00 0 (]) PM Magazine
0
(§) Wheel of
Fortune
IE)@ People's Court
C6 Carol Burnett
f1)
®
Kentucky
General Assembly
i!) [i) MacNeil/Lehrer
Newshour
€fi (I) At The Movies
7:30 0 Cil Tic Tac Dough
0 (I) Family Feud
m @ Jeffersons
C6 Hogan's Heroes
f1) ® Play Bridge
€fi ® Headwaters
8:00 0(])€fi®ATeam A
woman hires the A
Team to investigate
the theft of munitions.
(60 min.)
.
0 (I) Mississippi
IE)
@
Foulups,
Bleeps/Blunders
CD MOVIE: ' Centennial' Part 8 Eighth
of 12 parts. The
Venneford
Ranch
comes under a dua l
threat-a devastating
blizzard and charges
of fraud against Oliver
Seccombe. Timothy
Dalton,
Lynn
Redll!:ave; Brian Keith .
fE (I) @) [i) Nova
'The Case of ESP.' The
scientific evidence for
and against ESP is examined . (60 min .)
[Closed Captioned]
8:30 CIJ @ Happy Days
Fonzie pleads 'The
Fifth' ,at a school
board
hearing
at
6:00
m
which he is accused of
hitting a student,
[Closed Captioned]
9:00 0 Cil €fi (I) Riptide
Nick and Cody risk
their lives to rescue an
executive
analyst
being held captive by
an assassin . (60 min.)
0 (I) MOVIE: 'Seduction of Gina' A young
woman risks destroyi ng her marriage and
future when she is
lured int(,l the world of '
high-stakes gambling.
Valerie Bertinelli, Michael Brandon, Frederic Lehne. 1983.
IE) @ Tbree's Company_
f1) ([)@) [i) American
Playhouse 'The Ghost
Writer.' A young artist
recalls a visit with a
world-famous author
who lives in seclusion
with two women . (90
min .) [Closed , Captioned]
9:30 IE) @ Oh Madeline
1o:oo o
rn
m
®
Remington
Steele
Laura and Remington
infiltrate the circus to
investigate a homicide. (60 min.)
IE) @ Hart to Hart
CD TBS Evening News
10:30 fl)([) Business Repbrt
@) [i) Firi'!.9 Line
11:oo
®
€fi® News ·
C6 All In the Family
11:30 0 (]) €fi (I) Tonight
Show
0 ® Magnum P,l.
When afl image appears to ,Rick on the
beach, the idea leads
Magnum to .a deserted
plantation and a dangerous family servant.
(R) (60 min .)
om ow m
IE) @ Nightline
CD Catlins
@)
[i)
Latenight
America
12:00 CD MOVIE: 'StraitJacket' Released from
a mental hospital after
having committed axe
murders, a woman
goes to live with her
ch ildren and the murders
beg in
again .
J oan Crawford, Diane
Ba ker, Lief Erickson.
196 4.
12:30 0 (]) Late Night with
David Letterman
0
®
McCloud
0) @ CNN Headline
News
1:00 0)@ Bionic Woman
2:00 CD MOVIE: 'Seven
Days' Leave' This sincere, dramatic story of
mother love, is based
on James M. Barrie's
' Old Lady Shows Her
Medals' Gary cooper,
Beryl Mercer. 1930
4:00 C6 Rat Patrol
4:30 C6 Africans
�Wednesday, January 11, 1984
The Floyd County Times
Mysteries of Antarctica
To Be Revealed On KET
"NOVA'' visits a wilderness of ice
where the winds howl a hundred mile~
an hour and temperatures can slide to
126"F, m "Antarctica : Earth's Last
Frontier," airing Tuesday, January 31.
at 8 p.m . on KET.
In "Antarctica: Earth's Last Frontier." "NOVA" walks in the shoes of explorers and scientists, surveying the 200
years smce Captain Cook first entered
Antarctican waters. With archival footage from the early 20th century
"NOVA" rev1ews the heroic efforts of
:"1orwegians and Englishmen to reach
the South Pole and the first American
expedition in 1929, when Admiral
Richard Ryrd arrived there by airplane.
The documentary also explores the
scientific research in Antarctica today
and the continent's unusual' political
status in the political arena .
"NOVA" visits meteorological stations and field laboratories and listens
to these scientists, Antarctica's only
warm:blooded residents, apart from the
pengums, skuas and seals.
''NOVA" is produced by WGBH,
Boston.
Food Co-op Orders
The Good Day Food Co-op will receive
orders at 2 p.m. Sunday, January 15, at
the Floyd County Library.
f.~ •. "'
. > ••
•.
.
Andy Joe Hall celebrated his first
birthday, December 30. He is the son of
Andy Steve and Della Hall, of Grethel.
His grandparents are Mrs. Darkie Hall,
of Grethel, and the late Joe Hall, and
Cindia and Dennis Williams, of Harold.
CARD OF THANKS
·'lllERGY
. .;
First Birthday
. .
.
CHILDREN & ADULTS
S.K. JAIN, M.D.
Professional Building
Pikeville, Ky.
• HEADACHES • DIUINESS
• ASTHMA • SINUS
• COLITIS
For appointment:
606-432-3837
e.o.w.
The family of Rutha Tackett would
like to thank everyone for their help
upon the loss of our loved one. We deeply appreciate all the relatives and
friends who visited her at the hospital
and especially to those who sat with us
day and night during a great time of
need and comfort. We thank those who
sent money, food a nd flowers ; those who
prepared the grave and maintained the
roadways. We especially want to thank
the Old Regular Baptist ministers for
their words of comfort and to the Hall
Funeral Home for their kind and efficient service.
THE TACKETT FAMILY
Freel Tackett,
Elm a Tackett McKinney,
Dora Lou Tackett Roberts,
Donald Ray Tackett
newspaper
advertising done.
effectively! and inexpensively! We'll
help you do the entire
job from theme to copy
to artwork ... for the cost
of the ad space alone!
Interested? Call Ken Peters at
886-8506 and he'll call on you!
The Floyd County Times
Section Three,
The Toy Chest;
Potential Danger
Parents who take great care to protect
their preschoolers from household dangers like the stove or the furniture polish
may be overlooking another potential
hazard: the toy chest in the child's own
room.
A recent survey coordinated by the
state's Cabinet for Human Resources indicates that some toy chests with hinged lids do not comply with the industry's
own safety standards and can cause
serious injury to small children.
The survey was conducted by the cabinet's Radiation and Consumer Product
Safety Branch at the request of the U S.
Consumer Product Safety Commission.
Branch manager Edsel Moore said the
commission initiated the safety check in
several states because from 1974 to
mid-1982 it recorded 21 deaths of small
children who were strangled when hinged lids fell on them as they were look·
ing into the open toy chests. None of the
deaths occurred in Kentucky.
Commission records also show two
cases of permanent brain damage and
one case of partial paralysis and blindness because of accidents involving toy
chests. Moore said there are probably
many unreported cases of less serious
injuries such as mashed or broken fingers.
In Kentucky, 32 retail outlets were
checked in 14 towns and cities. Surveyors examined 42 items labeled, sold or
used as toy chests. Only 18 had lids that
did not fall from any open position. Fifteen lids fell no more than a half-inch
from various open positions. Nine of the
chests had lids that dropped beyond the
allowable distance from open positions
and so are considered potentially
dangerous to children.
"The trouble comes when a toddler
pushes the lid up and leans over the front
edge of the toy chest to see inside, '' said
Moore. "The child then turns loose of the
lid to reach for a toy. If there is no safeguard to hold the lid in position, it falls
and traps the child across the neck or
chest. A child who cannot or does not
push the lid back up is likely to strangle
or be deprived of oxygen long enough to
cause permanent damage."
Moore said the Consumer Product
Safety Commission initiated mandatory
safety standards for toy chests in 1982
but did not invoke them when the manufacturers asked to be allowed to set their
own voluntary standards. The industry's
standards took effect last August.
However, chests made before that time
are still in retail outlets, and commission
inspections indicate that not all
manufacturers observe the standards.
Because the standards are voluntary,
federal and state agencies have no
authority to order product recalls of
items that do not comply. Another problem, said .Moore, is that many items
not designed as toy chests are being
bought and sold for toy storage.
" The industry standard applies only to items designed, made and labeled as
toy chests," he said. "We're finding that
various kinds of trunks, benches and
boxes with hinged lids are being sold or
used as toy chests. Some have labels
warning of the potential danger, but
most do not. It's a difficult thing to
control."
Moore said he prefers not to release
the names of the makers and sellers of
the potentially unsafe chests because the
safety standards at this time are strictly voluntary and because most of the
items do not have labels that can be
identified by consumers. He advises
parents shopping for toy chests to perform the same safety test used in the re-
Free Hearing Tests Set
For Prestonsburg Area
FREE ELECTRONIC
HEARING TESTS
cent survey. Open the lid at least two inches or as high as 60 degrees from the
fully closed position, then turn loose. If
the lid drops more than one-half inch
from any position in that range, it does
not comply with accepted safety standards and could cause injury.
Moore urges parents to apply the
same test to all hinged-lid chests already
in the home. His office can recommend
ways to modify chests so the lids will nol
fall.
''Of course, the surest way to alleviate
the problem is to remove the lid- at
least until all the children in the home
are big enough to protect themselves
against the danger," said Moore.
For additional information, contact
the Radiation and Product Safety
Branch at 275 E . Main, Frankfort, Ky.
40621, or phone 502/564-4537.
Will Be Given By
Pea• Eleven
Thursday
Jan. 19
9:00 Till
12:00 Noon
Mr. Robert Black
BELTONE Consultant Who Will Be At:
Dr. Phillip Simpson's 22 Court St., Prestonsburg
Anyone who has trouble hearing is welcome to have a hearing test
using modem electronic equipment to determine If his loss is one
wh~h may be helped. Some of the causes of hearing loss will be
explained and diagrams of how the ear works will be shown.
We Also Service and Repair All Makes of Hearing Aids.
Batteries And Supplies For All Makes for Sale.
IF YOU CANNOT COME INCALL FOR A HOME APPOINTMENT.
PHONE 606-886-1416
YOUR FUTURE
LOOKS GOOD
WITH IRA.
Today could be very special for you. If you make it a
point to plan for a very special day in your future ...
retirement. We can help make your retirement more
rewarding, more fina.ncially secure with a taxsheltered Individual Retirement Account (IRA).
An IRA is a high-yield savin§s plan to which you
make annual tax-deductible contributions. All
annual contributions and interest earned are taxdeferred until retirement, at which time you will
probably be in a lower tax bracket. Imagine the nest
egg waiting for you ...
Take a good look at our IRA plans today. You'll find
your future never looked so good.
VANS
ON
SPECIAL
TOO!
AND EASTERN KENTUCKY TOO!
THE BANK -:BJ· JOSEPHINE
Prestonsburg • Garrett • Harold • Allen • Wheelwright
Member F .D.I.C.
@MCMLXXXIV Leon Shaffer Golnick Adv., Inc.
�Wednesday, January 11, 1984
Section Three, P aae Twelve
The Floyd County Time-;
.AT THESE·
SIX COMB NED FOOD MARKETS .
PRICES EFFECT IV~ JAN.ll THRU JAN.IS- WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES•.
.
.
-
32-0Z.
JOY ·
~~~~~P ................. $139
DISH LIQUID
8-0Z. CANS
32-0Z. ·
BTL.
$
·
·
.
3/$1
g~~lk\t~~s . . 3/$1
I
59
..
VAN CAMP'S
PORK &BEANS .. .... .
303-SIZE CANS
69c '
~
PAPERL GALA
TOWELS .. .... ... .
.TREND DETERGENT
._. .........
$309
FAMILY
SIZE
·
BOX
MAXWELL HOUSE
INSTANT COFFEE
10-0Z.
JAR
$399
$12
9
BATH TISSUE .....
CtORox BLEACH 99c
FABRiC SOFTENER ....99 c
$149
. I-ROLL PKG. PAGE
12-0Z.
TORO
CORNED BEEF .....
.
MORTON DINNER
ggc.
2-LBS.
$1 39
$239
LISTERINE .......... .
c
R:r::t~~ . . . . .. . .89
SUAVERRY
SHAMPOO ............... .
18-0Z.
'
3-CT. PKG. GILLETTE GOOD NEWS
-------------'·- -..................... .-,
~
ETj
·
. MARTIN,,KY:
OM. THRU SAT. 7 TO?; .FRI. 7 TO 8; St.zN. 9 T0.. -9 '
ARKET
'
ALLEN; KY •.
GARRETT, KY. ·
MO • THRU S T._a TO 8t SU .<,..:::::<:IO
.~
T,_'T..-.....- L.....,-~
M~~· THRU SAT. 8 TO 7; SUN.
I
TO 6
�
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Floyd County Times 1984
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Floyd County Times January 11, 1984
-
http://history.fclib.org/files/original/41/3332/01-18-1984.pdf
7e37367b35a8e32e598a708790af54cc
PDF Text
Text
Speaktng of
and for
Floyd County
m r lJrlnyb <ttnuttt
PRESTONSBURG,
No.3
Read Each Week by More Than 12,500 Families.
Utility Tax,
To Be Heard
WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 18, 1984
MARRIAGE LICENSES
Lon C. Hall, 71, of Paintsville, and
Dorothy J. Atkinson, 63, of South Point,
Ohio; Winford Lee Wilburn, 20, of
Harold, and Sherry Marie Robinson,
16, of Garrett; Paul Mullins. 34, of
Weeksbury, and Norma Riley, 39, of
Tea berry; Row land Harold .A.dkins.
Jr., 16, of Stanville, and Frances Ann
Eplen, 17, of Betsy Layne; Paul David
Shepherd, 19, of David, and Jessica
Lee Holbrook, 18, of West Prestonsburg; Jeffery Moore, 17, of Price, and
Patricia Lynn Moore, 15, of McDowell;
Billy Dean Hamilton. 22, of Galveston,
and Shellia Jean Hamilton, 16, of West
Prestonsburg.
<Photo by Ken Peters l
PRESTONSBURG CITY MANAGER David Evans <wielding flashlight> peers into the dark crevass which quite unexpectedly opened up Friday (the 13th) along Lake Drive in front of city hall here. The pavement began to give way about
3:30p.m. according to Fire Chief Tom Blackburn who was alerted by a passerby who told him the blacktop "had sunk
about a foot." By the time he walked from city haii ..Biackburn reported that the highway's surface had sunk at least
another foot and involved a depression about 12 feet across. While most passing autos stopped, some hit the massh·e
"pothole" and Blackburn reported the back ends of some cars "jumped clean off the ground." Clost>r inspeetion revt'aled a cavernous hole about nine feet deep underneath the cracked roadway.
Cause of the break is not yet known although city utilities officials say the sink occurred in tht> gt>nt>ral art'a of an old
culvert connection which splits off toward the river. Collapse of the culvert or erosion from runoff is belit>vrd to brat
fault. Other areas along downtown streets are suspect and efforts will be made to prevent such occurrt>ncrs. it was said.
Friday's break was safely filled with st>ctions of brokt>n pavement, sand and gravt>l.
SUITS FILED
Family Federal Savings and Loan
vs. Virgie Reynolds et al, Holland B.
and Julia Hurley vs. Ronald D.
Thacker; Adams Auto Parts vs. Tommy's Enterprises; Mary M. Barber vs.
Aetna Life Insurance; In re: Acquisition of Land to Non-Veteran, Paul
Timothy Murray; Art Long vs. Sherry
Hurley Long; Green Hall vs. Gala
Enterprises Inc. et al; Donna Jo Peeler
vs. Gary Robinson; Sharon Elliott
Frasure vs. Rex Frasure; Rita L.
Akers vs. Larry D. Akers; Opal Vicars
vs. Randall Vicars; Melissa Clay
CSee Story No. 2, Page 4)
Fiscal Court Denies
Mineral Tax Support
For a second time, Floyd fiscal court force appointed by Superintendent E.P.
declined last week to endorse a proposal
Grigsby, Jr. to study the financing of
to increase the tax on unmined minerals,
Floyd s~hools, the East Point farmer is
and discussion of the issue served notice active in seeking passage of both the unthat the Board of Education's current mined 111inerals and the utilities tax.
bid to levy a utilities tax may run into
One tariff for which the fiscal court did
trong opposition, too.
· vote --support was a tax on sales of
Judge-Executive John M. Stumbo told alcoholic beverages. On a recommendaBilly Arms that the court wanted to
tion by Floyd Alcoholic Beverage Conreview the report of a task force aptrol Administrator Denzil Allen, the
pointed by former Gov. John Y. Brown,
magistrates voted to ask local state
Jr. before deciding on whether to en- legislators to introduce a bill authorizdorse the unmined minerals tax. But ing county governments to levy such a
Magistrates Kenneth Roberts and
tax, which Allen said could yield as
Gerald DeRossett indicated they were
much as $300,000 annually here.
opposed to the tax, Roberts arguing that
A house-by-house survey of 17 comthe added cost to coal operators would
munities has so far resulted in the addibe passed on to power companies and · tion of 990 new subscribers to the counultimate!) to consumers.
ty's solid waste system, Deputy JudgeAlluding to the Board of Education's Executive Morris Isaac reported to the
current proposal to levy a three percent court.
tax on utilities, Roberts said he hoped
Isaac said the only way to forestall
that, if the tax passed, a petition would creditors' demands for an increase in
be filed to have the question put to a
the monthly garbage fee was to increase
countywide vote. "People ate burdened the number of subscribers and improve
to death with taxes already," he said.
the bill collection rate. In the 17 comArms said that an unmined minerals
munities surveyed, he uncovered 559
tax would primarily af(ect mineral past-due bills amounting to $88,315,
owners, not coal .operators, and that it Isaac said.
would result in a fairer distribution of
Communities surveyed to date include
e tax burden. As a member of the Ken- Betsy Layne, Beaver. Bevinsville,
tucky Fair Tax Coalition and of a task
CSee Story No. 5, Page 4)
cPhoto by Betty Hyden l
SMOLDERING REMAINS of the office and storage building of Mountain Comprehensive Care
Center's Greenhouse Training Project are pictured Monday morning following a fire which
leveUed the 30 X 120-ft. structure at around midnight, Sunday. A sizeable quantity of records,
seed, equipment and supplies were lost in the blaze which reportedly began in a section of the
wood frame and metal building where no utilities were present. Arson is considered a possibility.
Project Director David Gillespie said the fire "shouldn't interrupt our spring crop of bedding
plants,;, and he stressed that the project, which includes a large complex of greenhouse structures on the Auxier Road, "will continue to provide work for our clients."
--.
J> -
This Town ... Tiiat World
-.
-
January 17-time enough for a
sizeable portion of the populace to decide
that new resolutions are more easily
broken than old habits.
CPhoto courtesy Paintsville Herald>
Ground was broken Tuesday for the long-planned Big Sandy Rt>gional Airport with statt'. federal and local officials taking part in tht> cert'mony·. Pictured abovt> are, from left. state Transportation Secretary Floyd Poorr. AirJ)i)rt Board O.airman Bud Perry, Rep. Carl D. Perkins and Martin Count.v
Judge-Executive John Callaham. Floyd County Judge-Executive .John M.
Stumbo also participated in the ground breaking.
Construction on Phase I of the $4 million project has already begun by the
E. H. Hughes Company. of .Jeffersonville, Ind. and is rxpectE>d to be complete by this spring. Phase II will involve paving work. The airport. which
"'ill ft>ature a $,000-ft. runway and will accomodatt> business and commercial aircraft. is being built on 150 acres of reclaimt>d strip mint> nt>ar tht'
Martin-Johnson county line donated by Pocahontas Developmt>nt ('ompany·.
Transportation Secretary Poort' has already cleart>d funding to renew
dt>'>ign of Routt> 3 from U.S. 23 to providt> improvt>d acct>ss to the mountaintop sitt>.
Tht> projrct is 00 perct>nt frderally funded with thE> rrmaining to per<'t'nl
provioied equally by statt> and local monies.
Refunds Possible;
Senator Blames
Reagan Policies
The natural gas pipeline company
supplying 71 local distribution companies, including Columbia Gas of Kentucky, "recklessly disregarded" its legal
requirement to provide gas at the lowest
possible cost in 1981 and 1982, government regulators said last week
The Columbia Gas Transmission C'..orporation is the first of a dozen major Interstate pipelines to be heard on charges
that they imprudently bought highpriced gas when cheaper supplies were
available.
According to the charges, the pipeline
firms quit buying low-cost gas in order
to keep buying high-priced gas,
sometimes from their own affiliated
drilling companies, when demand fell
off with the recession and some industries switched to oil.
Columbia Gas TransmissiOn Corp.
sells gas wholesale in the District of Columbia and seven other states besides
Kentucky. Columbia Gas of Kentucky,
its local distributor here, serves about
110,000 customers in central and eastern
Kentucky.
'
Bill Chaddock, a spokesman for Columbia, said the company's decisions
were proper at the time they were made,
when gas was in short supply and demand was high.
In 1981 and 1982, the recession and a
sharp drop in oil prices resulted in a
falloff in the demand for gas. But the
company had already committed itself
in 1980 to long-term contracts based on
what customers predicted they would be
needing, he said.
CSee Story No. 3, Page 4>
Gibson Charged
In Indian Hills
Shooting Affray
Ground Broken For Airport
•
25~
Columbia Gas Cited
In 'Disregard of Duty'
Pro and Con,
A group representing the Floyd Board
of Education's most outspoken critics
has endorsed its proposal to levy a 3 percent utilities tax to help finance the
school district. But senior citizens have
been urged to voice their opposition to
the tax, which will be the subject of a
public hearing tomorrow (Thursday) at
6 p.m. at the Board offices.
The Floyd County Citizens' Education
Council CFCCEC>-which last June called on state officials to oust the board and
Superintendent E.P. Grigsby, Jr.-said
its support was "not an expression of
confidence" in the board or superintendent. And it appended to its endorsement
a list of improvements it said are needed in the schools.
In a statement released Monday,
FCCEC Chairman Kathy Hatfield, of
Drift, and Joyce Everly, of Prestonsburg, said school improvements are
"not likely without local support through
taxes" and noted that the proposed
utilities tax would raise the most
revenue in the shortest time.
The tax would also increase the school
district's bonding potential, enabling
construction of sorely-needed school
buildings, they pointed out.
Those on whom the tax would work a
hardship could have recourse to such
programs as the federal energy
assistance program and the Wintercare
programs sponsored by utility com<See Story No. 1, Page 4)
USP-2027-0000
Volume LVII
COMPETITION VIA TELEVISION
The more I sit and stare like a boob
at the Tube, the more convinced I
become that the old graces-courtesy,
chivalry, civility, the like-are doing a
fast fadeout.
TV commercials are a case in point.
Competition may be no less keen today than yesterday, but there's a
singular lack of respect for the other
fellow, these commercials indicate.
Some years ago, there were a few men
in business who carried guns, expecting,
or hoping for, a showdown with the competition. ·But when those individuals
advertised their wares or service in the
newspapers they carefully refrained
from mention of any rival by name.
Their vendettas were private affairs.
Now, in TV commercials, a razor
blade manufacturer or a breakfast food
producer isn't satisfied with extolling
the superiority of his own product but
must take a pot-shot- by name-at one
or half-dozen others that are in the same
business.
Wouldn't be surprised to see a certain
blade manufacturer reply to attack by
the other- old-fashioned, I mention no
names-by showing a blade holding
down a lone whisker with one foot while
its twin blade laboriously saws it off.
cSee Story No 4. Page 4 l
Liquor Licensees Urged
To Open or 'Show Cause'
Of the 21liquor licenses that the state
Alcoholic Beverage Control Board announced it was ready to hand down 13
months ago, all but two have been
issued, and applicants for whom those
two have been earmarked are being
pressed to start operations or surrender
their license claims.
Operators of a planned Holiday Inn
are reported ready to begin construction
in the spring, an arrangement that
Distilled Spirits Administrator Michael
Davidson says is fine with him.
But Prestonsburg businessman James
L. McClung, who already owns one liquor store here, said he and William L.
Smith may surrender their unused
license option.
The ABC board sent out letters of intent to 21 out of 137 license applicants in
December, 1982, six months after the
county voted wet, and one more was
issued later following a revision of
population figures .
Davidson said last week it is board
policy to give an applicant about a year
to begin operations, after which time he
or she is expected to show cause why the
board's letter of intent should not be
revoked.
The state official SClid he has been told
by prospective operators of the Prestonsburg Inn-listed as H.D. Fitzpatrick, Jr., Dr. J.D. Adams, Jack Absher and Tom G. Dingus-that they had
completed acquisition of a site on U.S.
23 at Katy Friend and expect to break
ground there in March. In view of the
fact that it is a large, complex undertaking and promises to be of significant
economic benefit to the county, their
delay in getting started appeared "fully justified," Davidson said.
The other unused license was intended for McClung and Smith, who planned to open BJ's Liquor and Wine on the
Mountain Parkway, just west of here. In
the meantime, however, McClung
bought the license originally issued to
Frank Adams and Tom Ed Music and
now operates the Beverage Mart on
South Lake Drive.
Davidson said last week he had asked that McClung and Smith be instructed to appear before the state board
soon to show cause why their letter of intent should not be revoked. But McClung
said later that he and his partner were
considering a voluntary surrender of
their license claim.
"Like all other businesses, the liquor
business is not all that great right now,"
McClung explained.
If the license is to be awarded to someone else, that fact will be advertised
and applications will be solicited, Davidson said. In that event, those who have
applications currently on file will be
notified and asked if they still want to be
considered, he said.
A 48-year-old man was arrested on
multiple charges Friday following an
early-morning disturbance in an Indian
Hills apartment during which he
allegedly shot his daughter.
AlbertGibson, whose address is listed
on court records as Otway, Ohio, was
charged with four counts of assault, two
of terroristic threatening, and one each
of drunkenness, disorderly conduct,
wanton endangerment, resisting arrest
and being a felon in possession of a
handgun.
Prestonsburg policemen Larry Woods
and Greg Hall were dispatched to the
Mays Branch apartment rented by Gibson's daughter, Char>dra Nelson, 26,
around 3 a.m. Friday. She had been shot
in the forearm. A .32 caliber pistol was
recovered nearby.
Officer Woods charged Gibson with
first-degree assault in the shooting of
MrS'. Nelson. He was also charged with
fourth-degree assault, terroristic
threatening and wanton endangerment
on a complaint by his mother-in-law,
who was also present during the row.
Dorothy Sue Branham said Gibson
punched her and pointed a loaded, cocked pistol at her head.
Woods further alleged that Gibson
punched him in the shoulder and, after
he was handcuffed, struck him on the
head and face with the handcuffs.
Mrs. Nelson was admitted to Highlands Regional Medical center, from
where she was released Monday. Gibson
was treated at the hospital for a cut to
the head and bruises on the face and
released.
Gibson received a probated one-year
sentence in Magoffin county in December after conviction on a charge of
assault under extreme emotional disturbance.
Released On Promise
Not To Harm Parents
Burlin Slone, 19, sentenced to a month
in jail after a New Year's Day altercation at his parents' Blue River home,
was released on probation this weekon condition that he not "engage in any
crime of violence, especially toward his
parents."
The youth was released at the request
of his father, Richard Slone, by order of
Trial Commissioner Thomas D. Lafferty, who set a year's probation
Also sentenced in district court,
following guilty pleas or verdicts, were
Billy Hall, Melvin, and Michael D.
Ousley, Martin, speeding, each to pay
$37.50 in court costs and referred to state
traffic school; Freddy Robinson, Pikeville, drunk driving, no insurance
sticker, $147.50, referred to alcoholic
driver education; Donnie G. Mullins,
Price, spilling coal $57.50; and Danny R.
Burkett, Prestonsburg, no mobile home
permit, $57.50.
�Wednesday, January 18, 1984
The Floyd County nmes
S.C:tlon One, P . .• Two
Observes IOOth Birthday
CARD OF THANKS
The family of Sol <BudJ Prater wishes
to thank all those who were so kind and
considerate during the loss of our loved
one. We want to thank those who sent
flowers, prepared food, and those who
prepared the grave. We especially would
like to thank the Salt Lick United Com
munity Church, the ministers and
members of the church, also the
H.R.M.C. staff and the doctors, and the
ones that donated money. We also thank
the Hall Funeral Home for their kind
and efficient services.
May God bless all of you.
Wife and Children,
THE PRATER FAMILY
SELLING AT WINTER PRICE
1981 Honda Sliver Wing Gl 500. Fully
dressed, AM·FM cassene, cruise, 2
helmets, and detachable trunks and
rear seat. Must seell Call Jim Clarke,
478·2614.
<Photo by Ken Peters l
Mollie Patrick shows off the birthday cake presented her
on the occasion of her tOOth birthday this week at Mountain
Manor here. The Magoffin county native was honored by
family and friends and presented with a number of gifts.
HOUSEBOAT belonging to Harold coal operator Emmitt Conn-reportedly the largest craft on
the lake-was among four damaged in a fire that broke out as they were moored at the Jenny
Wiley boat dock last week. State Arson Investigator James B. McKenzie was said this week to
be probing the cause of the blaze.
ASCS Announces
Cost-Sharing
Signup Periods
The Floyd County ASCS Committee
announces the beginning of signup
periods for cost-sharing for both annual
agreements and long-term agreements
under the Agricultural Conservation
Program _
Signup for a nnual agreements will be
held from January 16 to February 29,
and will be limited to the following
practices :
Permanent vegetative cover establishment; permanent vegetative cover
improvement; permanent vegetative
cover on critical areas ; planting trees ;
improving a stand of forest trees ; and
site preparation for natural regeneration.
Continuous signup for ACP will no
longer be used and applications will be
accepted only during signup periods
unless the farmer is prevented from applying due to reasons beyond his control.
No applications will be approved until
aft~r the end of signup and all applications will be considered on basis of need
and conservation benefits to be derived.
Practices must not be started before
County Committee approval.
Signup periods for summer practices
and fall practices will be announced at
a later date.
Applications for long-term agreements will be accepted from January 16
thru January 31. Long-term agreements
are cost-share agreements which last
from three to five years with the farmer
agreeing to complete a number of practices needed on his farm as determined
by the Conservation Plan of Operations
as developed jointly by the farmer and
the Soil Conservation Service (Forestry
Service for forestry practices.) These
agreements may include seeding practices, forestry practices, animal waste
control, grazing land protection, sod
waterways, diversions, erosion control
practices, stream protection, water impoundment reservoirs, and permanent
wildlife habitat.
Persons interested should contact the
Floyd County ASCS Office at 105 Cour-t
Street or phone 886-2802, prior to the end
of signup periods for the particular
agreements.
Blaze Destroys
Daniels Ck. Home
The Daniels Creek home of Donald
Harkins, well known developer, burned
to the ground early last Thursday morning.
Harkins and his wife were said by
neighbors to have left for Lexington
where they also maintain a home. only
hours before the blaze broke out.
The house. a relatively new log structure, was totally destroyed.
Reportedly lost in the fire were
valuable antiques including a 10(}-yearold table that had belonged to Harkins'
great-grandfather.
Loss is put at $200.000, according to
one estimate.
Legislature To View
Budget, Other Issues
The Kentucky General Assembly's
biennial 60 day legislative session officially began at noon Tuesday, Jan. 3,
and several key issues must be addressed prior to adjournment on April 14.
Among the first items of action will be
the filling of four vacancies in the House
of Representatives. The openings, which
must be filled through special elections,
were created when the four members
were elected to other offices.
Budget figures wtll be the dominant
topic during the session as the state continues its sluggish recovery from
economic woes. Several new programs
have been proposed during the 1982-83
interim, many of which would require
additional funds.
Among those proposals are pay increases for teachers, internships and
competency testing for beginning
teachers, the upgrading of the state jail
system and bills which would toughen
the state's drunken driving laws and
make changes in campaign-financing
statutes.
The establishment of a statewide
emergency medical service program
has also received a great deal of attention and will be discussed.
Some issues first raised during the
1982 session may also come under consideration in the coming months. They
include the overweight-truck tax, which
was declared unconstitutional by the
Franklin Circuit Court.
The tax would have permitted trucks
to pay a fee of 2.85 cents per mile to
operate in excess of the state weight
limits on Kentucky roads.
Gov. Martha Layne Collins, who took
office less than one month ago, was expected to address a joint session of the
General Assembly during its initial
week of activity.
The General Assembly calendar includes a 1(}-day break from March 31
through Aprilll to permit the governor
to review laws passed by the Legislature
and to sign or veto them.
The General Assembly will then
return to Frankfort, Aprill2, for a threeday "veto session" to consider overriding any vetoes. The last day
lawmakers may draw up new bills is
February 23. No new bills may be introduced in the House after March 2,
while the final day in the Senate for such
action is March 6.
Senate President Pro Tern Joe
Prather, D-Vine Grove, and House
Speaker Bobby Richardson, D-Glasgow,
encourage Kentuckians to take an active
role in the legislative process.
Kentuckians who wish to contact individual lawmakers may call toll-free
1-800-372-2985. The number to check on
the progress of specific legislation is
1-800-372-2993. A schedule of daily events
may be obtained by calling
1-800-372-7100.
The first balloon flight
occurred in 1782, when
Jacques and Joseph
Montgolfier of Annonay,
France, sent up a
small smoke filled balloon.
PUBLIC NOTICE
An application for a place of entertain-
CARD OF THANKS
We wish to thank the hospital staff, the
nurses and Dr. Basha for the kindness
and care they rendered to our husband
and father, J .J. Terry, during his stay
at the Highlands Regional Hospital, to
the Hall Funeral Home for their help
and hospitality, to Local 5899, UMWA,
and to theD.A.V. , Chapter 128, the pallbearers, our friends , neil,{hbors and
relatives for their support. A special
thank you to the ministers for their comforting words. We wish to thank all who
sent food and flowers and to the New. some children for the floral collection.
It was all so greatly appreciated in our
time of sorrow
EDITH TERRY,
TOMMY TERRY
Although we know much
about Socrates and his sayings, nothing survives of
his writings. Much of the in·
formation we have about
his life and teachings
comes from the writings
of others of his time.
ment license has been ftled by Archer D.
Boyd, Jeff Mullins, of P .O. Box, General
Delivery, Betsy Layne, Kentucky, Stanville, Kentucky. The nature of business
will be a restaurant only.
The County Attorney's Office is required to file a written report to the
County Judge Executive's office reflecting if the person applying is "not of good
moral character or who will not, in the
judgment of the Court, (County Judge
Executive) obey the laws of the state in
the carrying on of the business".
Any interested citizen having information relative to said applicant's Jack of
"good moral character" or willingness
to obey the laws of the state in the carrying on of the business is requested to
file the same in writing, with the County Attorney's office. Said written information shall be signed, dated, and
reflect the current address of said
citizen. and must be delivered to the
County Attorney's office no later than
the 26th day of January, 1984.
ARNOLD TURNER, JR.
Floyd County Attorney
1-18-2t.
FOOD IS ASKED
Members of the First United
Methodist Church are being asked to
bring to services, Sunday, January 29,
non-perishable food for the Loaves and
Fishes Food Pantry, sponsored by the
Local Church Women and the Prestonsburg Ministerial Association. Many requests were made for food throughout
the holidays, and it is hoped that other
churches will join in this worthwhile
endeavor to replenish the shelves of this
food pantry.
ANNOUNCE MARRIAGE
Miss Suzanne Blackburn, of Prestonsburg, and Mr. Larry Parker Totten, of
Louisville, were united in marriage,
December 31, 1983. Following the
ceremony, a reception was held at the
home of Mrs. Tottens grandmother,
Mrs. Okie Hunt.
Mr. and Mrs. Totten have returned
from their wedding trip and are now
residing at Jenny Wiley State Park,
where they are both employed.
APPRECIATES CARDS
Mrs. W.E. (Myrtle) Hunt, who recently underwent major surgery at the University of Kentucky Medical Center,
Lexington, is presently a patient there,
and is spending the weekends at her
home, here. She is grateful for the cards
and letters she has received from her
friends and relatives, and hopes that she
will continue hearing from them at University of Kentucky Medical Center,
Room 840, Lexington, Kentucky, or at
her home.
Mrs. Hunt is especially grateful for the
prayers and asks that they be continued.
HISTORICAL SOCIETY
DUES ASKED
Members of the Big Sandy Historical
Society, who have not yet paid this
year's dues, and who may want to
receive the second copy of this organization 's quarterly newsletter, "Sandy
Valley Heritage," should mail their dues
to the treasurer, James F. Moore, 407
Madison Avenue, Louisa, Kentucky,
41230.
CARD OF THANKS
The family of Aggie Isaacs would like
to thank the Hall Funeral Home, all the
friends and neighbors for the food and
flOW#!rs. The Samaria Church and
ministers for their kindness and
consideration.
May God bless each of you.
NOTICE OF
INTENTION TO MINE
Pursuant to Application
Number: 860-5023
In accordance with the provisions of
KRS 350.055, notice is hereby given that
National Mines Corporation, Box 12022,
101 East Vine Street, Lexington, Kentucky 40579, has filed an application for
a permit for an underground mining
operation. The proposed operation will
affect a surface disturbance of 3.13 acres
and will underlie an additional 135.49
acres located 2.7 miles southwest of Garrett in Knott county.
The proposed operation is approximately 2.0 miles southwest from Route
550 junction with Route 7 and located 0. 7
miles southeast of Jones Fork. The latitude is 37' 26' 37". The longitude is 82'
50' 05" .
The proposed operation is located on
the Wayland U.S.G.S. 7112 minute quadrangle map. The surface area to be
disturbed is owned by Glen Click. The
operation will underlie land owned by
Glen Click, Mont Conley, Gordon
Howard, Arnold Fitch, National Mines
Corporation, Charles and Juanita
Thornsburg, James and Francis Allen.
This application also includes a proposed land use change from the forest land
pre-mining land use to a pasture land
post-mining land use. The operation will
affect an area within 100 feet of public
road Triplett Branch. The operation will
not involve relocation of the public road.
The application has been filed for public inspection at the Department for Surface Mining Reclamation and Enforcement, Jackson Regional Office, Howell
Heights Building, Route 2, Box 500,
Jackson, Kentucky 41339. Writtm comments, objections, or requests for a permit conference must be filed with the
Director of the Division of Permits, 6th
Floor, Capital Plaza Tower, Frankfort,
1-18-3t.
Kentucky 40601
Career Program
Mrs. Goebel To Represent EKU
Wins Innovation Award
Merchants in Frankfort
RICHMOND, Ky.- E .K.U.'s Division
Ruth Goebel, of B.F. Casual in Prestonsburg, will represent area Kentucky
Retail Federation businesses at a
legislative meeting scheduled January
25 in Frankfort. The workshop, cosponsored by the Kentucky Retail
Federation and Kentucky Restaurant
Association, will center on issues currently before the Kentucky General
Assembly affecting the retailing industry. Mrs . Goebel, as local chairperson of the Kentucky Retail Federation,
will be able to discuss the current issue
with key legislators and other elected
government officials clu..>ing the day and
at a reception set to follow the meeting.
According to Mack J. Morgan, Jr. ,
President of the state-wide trade
association, " It is critical that our local
people continue to be informed about the
issues before the General Assembly.
Proposed changes in wage and hour
laws , bad check laws and unemployment compensation laws and other
retail legislation will have a serious impact on local businesses."
Governor Martha Layne Collins is
slated to welcome the over 100 retail and
restaurant leaders expected to attend.
Among the key issues to be discussed
will be a presentation on the revenue picture in Kentucky by Senator Michael
Moloney CD-Lexington) and Representative Joe Clarke <D-Danville), the
chairman of the respective Appropriations and Revenue Committees in the
Senate and House. Other key legislative
leaders and state government officials
will also be on hand to discuss pending
legislation.
of Career Development and Placement
received the Innovation Award for its
Ambassador Program at the Southern
College Placement Association's annual
conference in New Orleans in December.
The award honored the unique program which trains students as ambassadors to promote EKU's placement
service to potential employers of graduates.
Entries for the award were received
from eleven southeastern states which
make up the BOO-member association of
placement officials and employers.
SANI)Y VALLEY
MONUMENT
& BUILDIN8 STOlE CO., IK.
874-2273 .• ALLEN, KY
"THE ARfA'S OI.DEST ESTABUSHED
MOM/MUtT FlllftC
BEST QUALITY MEMORIALS QUICK, EFFICI£NT SERYIC£
AND INSTALLATION
SEE OUR LARGE DISPLAY OF
COLORED & GRAY GRANITES
LOCATED ON OLD U.S. 23t
IN NEW -ALLEN
CARTER FUNERAL HOME·
47 SOUTH LAKE DRIVE • PRESTONSBURG
Phone 886-277 4
Of course, you can deposit
$2,000 into your I.R.A.
But yOu don't have to!!
Design an I.R.A. you can afford. we have the affordable plan. Because we understand how hard
5 2,000 is to come by-especially all at once.
I.R.A. made easy
contribute to your I.R.A. weekly, monthly, or any
other schedule you desire. Importantly, you get
all the tax advantages of the lump sum deposit.
I.R.A. reduces income taxes
Simply add up your I.R.A. contributions for that
tax year and deduct that total from your gross
income.
You still have time to reduce your taxes
for 1983.
AND EASTERN KENTUCKY TOO!
.
.
THE BANK ·:BJ: JOSEPHINE
Prestonsburg • Garrett • Harold • Allen • Wheelwright
Member F . D.I.C.
-
111!1'
�Wednesday, January 18, 1984
The Floyd County Times
Section One, Pqe Thr-
Church Group Opposes
Katy Friend Annexation
Wilce Rose, who led a delegation from
the Katy Friend Freewill Baptist
Church, told the new Prestonsburg City Council last week that they have no
desire to be incorporated in the city.
Although church property is taxexempt, Rose said he feared that future
changes in the law might make the
church subject to taxation.
Council members told the group that
th~ ordinance annexing part of Katy
ynend was already enacted-it passed
m December-and that the church's only remaining option was to file a lawsuit
challenging the ordinance. A group of
businessmen planning to build a motel
on Katy Friend indicated last month that
they intended to file such a suit.
Boswell Supports
Agri-Bonds Bill
State Agriculture Commissioner
David E. Boswell has thrown his full
support behind an agri-bcnds bill now
working its way through the state
Legislature in Frankfort.
Agri-bonds are the agricultural
equivalent of industrial revenue bonds
and assist farmers through low-cost
loans.
Boswell explained that farmers are
now paying the highest production costs
in our history. "These high costs coupled with prices that are at or below cost
of production, have been a disaster,
Boswell said.
"Even good farmers are being forced
out of business by these economic conditions. They are not incapable people
or bad managers. They are victims of
the times-unstable markets at home
and abroad, poor weather, high interest
rates and high fixed and variable production costs," he said.
Agri-bonds will provide a tool that
may enable some farmers to survive until the general agricultural situation can
be turned around, Boswell said.
"Turning that economic crisis around
should be a major concern of everyone.
Because farmers produce the food that
feeds all of us, " Boswell said.
Boswell, a former state representative, was a sponsor of agri-bond
legislation when it was first introduced
in the 1982 General Assembly. As a
member of the House Agriculture Committee, he was also a force in seeing that
agri-bonds were studied during the
legislative interim.
Boswell will be using his experience
in the Legislature and his ties with its
members as he works toward the bill's
passage. He will be speaking in support
of the bill when it appears before the
legislative committees.
A few drops of lemon juice in the cook·
ing water will whiten your rice.
.
.
In other business, the council read an
ordinance setting the second and fourth
Mondays as its regular meeting days,
decided to retain all current city
employees, and appointed Bill Ray Collins, George C. Brown and Eunice
Shepherd as members of the council's
personnel committee.
Larry D. Brown, son of Councilman
George C. Brown, was appointed city attorney at a fee of $50 an hour. Brown
replaces Paul P . Burchett in that post.
The council will next meet Jan. 23 at
7 p.m. when a reduction in the city's five
percent tax on sales of alcoholic beverages is expected to be discussed. Some
liquor dealers, citing marginal profits,
have reportedly asked that the levy be
reduced.
Job Training Program
To Get $48.8 Million
Kentucky expects to have more thlln
$48.8 million to spend during the 1985
fiscal year for Job Training Partnership
Act programs, according to Employment Services Commissioner James
Daniels.
"This l'lllocation is greater than the
nearly $40.3 million we have received for
the 1984 program year. But that appropriation was only for nine months
beginning Oct. 1, 1983, a transition
period from the Comprehensive
Employment and Training Act,"
Daniels said. ''The new money wil~ be
used for programs operating between
July 1, 1984 and June 30, 1985. Comparatively speaking, the new allocation
is about $1,700 less than the allocation for
the first year."
Kentucky's allocation is based on the
number of unemployed and low-income
residents, compared to those in other
'states. "We use the same criteria to
determine how much money will be allocated to the state's nine local service
delivery areas ," he said.
"Two-thirds of the grant is earmarked for a variety of programs , such as
classroom and on-the-job training and
employability skills development, for
youth and adults," Daniels said. "About
$12 million is expected to be available to
fund summer youth programs, which
are operated when school is not in session and are geared more toward keeping youngsters in school than preparing
them for gainful employment at the end
of the program."
The remainder of the allocation is earmarked for dislocated workers- those
who are or soon will be out of work
because of layoffs, plant closings or
other structural changes in the economy "We expect to have more than $4
million available for retraining programs for th~ workers,'' Daniels said.
"This figure includes state matching
funds, which are about 40 percent of the
total available to serve this group."
.
.
Discover Your ~atural Beal!ty!
Gerr.Y & Jerry's Shoes. located 1/i mile_
·north of Prestonsburg. Ky. tHl' ~U.,S;<;i:'k.~· ·.
welcomes. ·you to discover yo~i1t~11~fural
beauty through · colot. .
· ', ;· -.: 't'· · .
Intro.ducing coJor consultant Pat Emmett'
of Lexington. Ky.
• First. 20 appointments FREE. · .
Call toda.l·: 886-.19.'12 for :v(Jur free appointment as all ffieats, will be resen'ed.
.
• Appointm,e.n t dates are ·January 26.a)ld
27. .
. .
..
Shown above are officers of Zebulon Lodge No. Z73, F&AM, Prestonsburg,
who were installed at the meeting held Saturday, January 7, with Dr. Robert
M. Sirkle, Lexington, as installing officer.
Pictured from left, front row are Willard Johnson, senior warden; Vaughn
L. Musselman, junior warden ; Rodney W. Tackett, master ; Manis E . Gray,
treasurer ; James E. Goble, secretary.
In the back row, from left are Robert N. Moore, senior deacon; Richard
A. King, junior deacon; Johnie C. Adams, senior steward; Kelly Moore,
chaplain, and John M. Seely, tiler. James J . Carter, II, junior steward, was
not present when the photo was made.
Jones, McNally
Face Impending
Federal Trials
Of two well-known Prestonsburg businessmen currently facing federal
charges, jury selection in the trial of one
continued this week and trial of the other
is scheduled to begin Monday.
Jury selection began last week in the
trial in U.S. District Court, in Pikeville,
of coal operator Edgar Jones and 19
others accused of plotting to force a
competitor out of business. However,
close questioning of jurors by attorneys
ana adverse weather conditions have
slowed the selection process, which is
expected to continue for most of this
week.
Opening arguments in the case may
be heard next Monday, a court official
speculated yesterday (Tuesday) .
Jones and his co-defendants are accused of conspiring to drive Ray-Mac
Coal Co. near McDowell out of business
early in 1982. A federal indictment last
June said shot.c; were fired at the RayMac mine site, equipment was dynamited and a coal tipple wa-s burned.
Trial of auto parts dealer Charles J .
McNally and former state official James
E. Gray on charges of participating in
a kickback scheme involving state insurance policy commissions will begin
on Monday in Lexington despite a plea
by prosecutors for a postponement.
Prosecutors argued unsuccessfully
last Friday for a continuation of the
trial. They sa id they wanted time to appea l the dismissal last month of six of
eight mail fraud charges against the
defendants. But U.S. District Judge Bernard T. Moynahan said further delay
would violate their right to a speedy
trial.
Moynahan dismissed six of the original charges because he found a grand
jury indictment to be improperly
worded.
Local Man Arrested
In Pike Co. Robbery
Local Teacher To
Head Travel Group
Parenting-Skills
Support Group
Ron Robinson, of East Point, a
teacher at Prestonsburg High School,
has been selected by the American Institute for Foreign Study <AIFS> to accompany a group of students on travel
adventure abroad. This trip is organized by the American Institute for Foreign
Study of Greenwich, Connecticut. To
date, over 300,000 teachers, students and
adults interested in international educational travel have participated in AIFS
programs since it was founded 20 years
ago in 1964.
Group members of Heart of Bavaria
spend two weeks touring this beautiful
historic region. Once an independent
kingdom, and then a p3rt of the 19th Century German Empire, modern Bavaria
overlaps the national boundaries of
Austria and Germany. Highlights of this
program include visits to Salzburg and
Munich, a Rhine Rtver Cruise and an excursion to the Swiss city of Lucerne. This
program is especially attractive
because it combines sightseeing in the
"must-see" cities of Paris and Brussels
with an extended visit to an area of
Europe not generally included on
American tourist itineraries, thus enabling participants to observe firsthand its
rich and lively culture.
There are still places available in this
group. For further information, parents
and students, as well as other interested
adults, may contact: 606/ 886-8413.
If any new parents are looking for a
place in which to share ideas and conversation , the Big Sandy Family and
Childbirth Education Association is
sponsoring a parenting-skills support
group, Wednesday, January 25, at St.
Theodore Catholic Church in
Prestonsburg.
The purpose of this get-together is to
give parents an opportunity to discuss
their new babies, and the p~renting
skills they have found helpful with other
parents who are experiencing some of
the same problems and feelings . All
parents are welcome.
For more information, contact Ann
Slone at 886-3863, ext. 213.
CARD OF THANKS
The family of Sol <Bud) Prater wishes
to thank all those who were so kind and
considerate during the loss of our loved
one. We want to thank those who sent
flowers, prepared food, and those who
prepared the grave. We especially would
like to thank the Salt Lick United Community Church, the ministers and members of the church, also the H.R.M.C.
staff and the pastors, and ones that
donated money. We also thank the Hall
Funeral Home for their kind and efficient services.
May God bless all of you.
WIFE AND CHILDREN
THE PRATER FAMILY
Correction
Due to an editing error, an article appearing in last week's edition of The
Times O!l the certification of Vikki
McGuire as a childbirth educator misidentified the source of her training. She
was trained under the auspices of the International Childbirth Education
Association.
A Prestonsburg man was one of two
arrested last week in connection with the
robbery of a Pike county woman.
Kentucky State Police at the Pikeville
post said three men came around 9 a.m.
last Tuesday to the home of Lois Parker,
43, of Zebulon, identifying themselves as
census takers. They forced their way in,
made Mrs. Parker give them the combination to a safe, and took $40,000
from it. They then tied Mrs. Parker up
and fled.
Lee Mann, 30, was arrested here
within hours of the robbery during a
routine traffic stop. Police · recovered
about $15,000 when they apprehended
him.
A second suspect, Vernon Lee
Clemons, Jr., 34, of Frankfort, was arrested in Frankfort the next day. During a search of his home, police
recovered $16,190.
Police were searching for a third
suspect.
PLEASE NOTE
Bec.use of the inerenilll number of
pictures of pac•nt winners, runnersup, and participants submitted fOf
publlcatiOfl, The Times will no longer
accept fOf publication pictures af
events more than one month past.
New Office Space-First Floor
3,000 Square Feet. Will Lease All Or
Prestonsburg, Kentucky
George Custer was the
youngest American man
ever to make rank of
General in the American
army-he achieved that by
age 23.
P~rt
Offices Arranged To Suit The Tenant
Call: 886-2391
Part of a series of messages from South Central Bell.
Where do I find the
phone services I need?
On January 1, 1984, South Central Bell and
other local Bell telephone companies were
separated from AT&T.
But South Central Bell is still your phone
company. As part of a holding company called
BeiiSouth. w e'll continue to provide dependable
service. For your home.And for your business.
While there are many changes tak1ng place,
there will be little immediate effect on your basic
The South American country
of Brazil derives its name
from the reddish tree the
Spanish and Portugese call
brasil, and which we call
Brazil wood .
local home or office pt:lone service. ln fact. you
can choose to keep your servicejust as it IS. Ifyou
decide to make changes in your service, however,
you'll notice some differences.
Use these phone numbers.
Now, when you need help with your phone
or phone seNJce, you should use these phone
numbers, which may be different from some
you've used in the past.
lYPE OF SERVICE NEED
NUMBER TO CALL
GENERAL
Line Services
Order or change
Sale. Save 25°/o to 50°/o•••
745-5042•
Billing questrons
745-50 I I "
Repair of line
...on a big selection of men's, wOI'n6n's and children's styles.
Here's just a sample•••
I 800 822·2000
New South Central Bell Phones & Other Equipment
Single-lir>e
.
Women's & men's
BOOT SALE•••
BUSINESS
(502)562- 10 11 •
(502) 569-4400'
1800822-8000
I 800 25 1-6 122
I 800 25 1-6 122
MultHtne
I 800 235-5273
I BOO 235-5273
Repairlof SouthCentral!!ell eqwpmentobtatned after II 1184)
1800 255-8353.. 1800 272-2355
Disabled Customers
Speak1ng customer5
•••a great collection
RESIDENCE
I 800 544-5000
i 80025 1-5325
TDD or Teletype customer5
Equipment obtained before I I I 184 - Speaking
I 800 233-1222
Equ1pment obt;uned before II I184 - TDD
I 800833-3232
I 80063 1-33 11
BeiiSouth Stock Information
Ifyou,_ qu..nlon• about ~II equlpm~tthatwas In use ~fon! 19&4. use t~ num~rs:
I 800 555-8 1I I
S.lllng. Repa.rof Single-line set>
1800247-7000
I 800 242-2 12 1
I BOO 526-2000
• If the number listed IS out>>deyour be•I calling •rea. please doal " l ," then the number Long diStance noo>bers are toll free
" Dunng 30 days follow>ng purchase For rema1nder of warranty pPnoo. contact the manufacturer
Coping with change.
of service you've come to expect from us.
If you have questions or want more information, return the coupon below Or call on us
at the Bell Answ er Center, I 800 555-5000,
toll free, 9 a.m. till 9 p.m. EST, Monday through
Friday.
We're still your phone company.
By keeping these phone numbers handy,
you should have little or no difficulty in
obtaining the telephone services you need. We're
doing evel)'thing w e can to make things as
easy as possible during this period of change.
And nothing will affect the high quality
r------------~------~
CALL 0 N US.
• Alllegwanners, assorted colors...$2 & $3
• All leather and suede handbags ... 1f3 to 1f2 off
Send to Bell /\nswer Center, P.O.Box34040. LoUisville,KY40232
Information pleasell'd like to know more about changes in my telephone seNJce.
Name:_"--- - - -- - - - - - - - " ' Address· - - - - -- - --
U.S. 23 North
Near Sears Prestonsburg
Not alt sizes In alt s tyles.
Sale prices good thru Sun. MasterCard or Vi a . Open evenings and open Sun. 1·6pm.
1
~
z,p
stare -
TelephOne 1
_ )
_
L --------- At.-.Code
@ South Central Bell
A BELLSOUTH Company
- ------- ----
I
I
I
I
I
1
_j
�- --·
Wednesday, January 18, 1984
---~
The Floyd Counw Times
Our Yesterdays
Prestonsburg Publishing Company
(Items taken from The Floyd County
Times, 10, 20, 3 0 , 40 and 50 years a g o.)
Section One, Pa•e Four
Letters to the Editor
The views expressed here are those of the writers. and not
necessarily those or this newspaper. !'lo unsigned contributions
will be published.
A View on Beirut
If you don't mind, I'd like to express
NORMAN ALLEN Editor
Subsniption Hatt•s l't•r Yr:11·:
In Fh~d l'ount~. SlUW
Eh.t•"ht•t·t· in Kt>nlUt'kY. $111.4141
Outside Kc-ntul·ky. $tLiu
Ten Years Ago
(Januarv lfi. 1974)
Ent erecl as second class matter June 18.
1927. at the postofl!ce at Prestonsburg.
Kentucky. under the act of March :3, 1879.
--- 1 ---
cContinued from Page Onel
panies for help in paying their winter
heating bills, the Council statement said.
But Jack Freed, president of the Jenny Wiley Chapter of the American
•• Association of Retired Persons. said his
• group opposed the tax and he urged
' senior citizens to speak out against it at
Thursday's hearing. Opposition by older
citizens was held mainly responsible for
the scuttling of an identical tax proposal
here five years ago.
FCCEC officials took note of their own
role in bringing about recent improvements in the Floyd schools.
system-including a more efficient
transportation system, more textbooks,
and some building repairs-changes
which came about, they said, because of
their complaints to the state Board of
Education.
Among improvements they said they
still want to see:
-princ1pals and teachers should get
needed classroom materials and repairs
on request;
-all students should have a full set of
textbooks;
- efforts should be made to get
parents directly involved in education;
-new schools should be built soon and
learning opportunities should be equal
in all county schools;
-public money should be "extreme·
ly" well managed and other departments besides the transportation department should be "streamlined."
--- 4 --c Continued
from Page One)
Don't you sometimes find yourself
wishing that in those "blind" choice
commercials they would, somehow, turn
up the wrong can of coffee or jar of
peanut butter?
WELCOME!
Thomas Hereford called this. week to
report the return of the Evening
Grosbeaks which have been among the
missing from these parts since the cold,
cold winter of 1977. They were seen at
May Lodge last Sunday, and are hereby
formally invited to call at my house.
WAR~iiNG
One of the dangers inherent in being
laid up, hors d' combat, is that you may
be said to be enjoying bad health. Like
the bull who had been demoted to the
rank of steer and ever after wanted to
talk only about his operation.
ONE :\-IAN'S OPINION
We don't propose to indulge in a name·
calling contest with Bob Smith, the socalled "pre-eminent anchor of the tri. state," or with Channel 13 TV (Huntington>, but thought it might interest
some of our readers to know of the preeminent Mr. Smith's opinion of Prestonsburg.
At hand is a copy of "thirteen times,"
which apparently is a "house organ"
published by Channel13. Its December,
1983 edition features "Bob Smith's
' Story.'' a question-and-answer interview
with Smith.
In reply to the question, "Bob, how did
, you get started in broadcasting?",
Smith, according to "thirteen times,"
rambles through college days, work in
radio, time spent as an announcer for
bus arrivals and departures for
Greyhound, and graduation from Mar·
shall University in 1961. And then:
"I got a job in Prestonsburg, Ky., the
armpit of the nation."
It's true, that remark is only one
man's tasteless view of this community and it doubtless was not intended for
wide circulation, but it reflects a studied
contempt.
':Ne might well remember this, if and
• when Channell3 suggests "A Salute to
Prestonsburg," complete with advertis.·
ing paid for by Prestonsburg businesses.
We might respond with a salute of our
own that is known in some quarters as
The Raspberry.
Tri-County Raids
Net 'Hot' Machinery
State police recovered stolen
machinery valued at around $200,000
last Friday and several arrests are ex• peeled, according to Trooper Philip
• Tucker, public information officer at the
Pikeville post
Acting on information gleaned earlier
last week from a suspect in the robbery
of a Pike county woman, police raided
sites in Floyd, Pike and Martin counties.
Equipment recovered at the sites included two backhoes, a Silver Anniversary
Corvette, four two-ton trucks, two
"tagalong" trailers, a bulldozer and an
endloader.
The lead was developed in the course
of a police investigation into the robbery
last Tuesday of Lois Parker, of Zebulon.
Lee Mann, of Prestonsburg, and Vernon
Lee Clemons, Jr., of Frankfort, have
been arrested in connection with that
case.
"Good breeding consists in concealing
how much we think of ourselves, and
how tittle we think of the other person "
Mark Twain
--- 2 --cContinued from Page One l
Bowlds vs. James Edward Bowlds:
Myrtle Marie Sammons vs Robert Lee
Sammons. Jr.: Bebe Coal Co. vs. D V &
C Coal Co. et al: Barclays American
Financial of Ky Inc. vs. Jo Inmon:
Cornelius Collins et al vs. Ernest Collins: Betty J o CBush l Moore vs. Sherman Moore: Paul and Connie
DeRossett vs. Nelson Mob1le Homes
Sales.
--- 3 ---
<Continued from Page Onel
The Federal Energy Regulatory Com·
mission concluded in a report issued last
Wednesday that "Columbia's gas acquisition policies and practices evidence
reckless disregard of its duty to provide
service at the lowest reasonable cost."
But the panel said Columbia's practices did not amount to fraud or abuse
under the federal Natural tias Policy
Act. It found no "significant adverse effect on customers," the commission
said.
During the time the pipeline company
has been buying high-priced gas, retail
natural gas prices have increased by
more than 50 percent.
The commission left open the
possibility that refunds might be ordered
later for Columbia's estimated 4.2
million retail customers in Kentucky,
New York, Pennsylvania, Maryland,
Virginia, West Virginia, Ohio, New
Jersey and the District of Columbia. But
it did not issue such an order last week.
"Once again, Reagan administration
appointees have bent themselves out of
shape to find a way to come down on the
side of a major corporation rather than
the consumer," said Sen. Howard
Metzenbaum, D-Ohio, of the commission's findings.
--- 5 ---
<Continued from Page One l
Bypro, Emma, Galveston, Garrett,
Grethel, Halo, Harold, Hippo,
Hueysville, Lackey, Teaberry, Tram,
Wayland and Weeksbury.
A dispute between the fiscal court and
the sheriff's department over payment
of a $1900 claim was settled, the court
agreeing to pay the bill. First presented
by the sheriff two months ago, the bill
was said to be for overtime hours spent
by his clerks in preparing county tax
bills for mailing. By having them
presorted, he had saved three cents on
the cost of mailing each bill, the sheriff
said. But the county attorney said the
court could not legally pay a claim for
overtime.
As presented by the sheriff last week,
the $1900 claim was for gasoline.
The Hatton and Allen Insurance Agency will continue to handle workers' compensation for county employees but a
decision is yet to be made with regard
to health insurance. Hatton and Allen offered the low bid- $13,370- for the
workers' compensation policy. Other
bids were received by Hall-Clark In·
surance and the Kentucky Association
of Counties.
Bids for health insurance were
tendered by R.M. Hardy and Associates,
Blue Cross/Blue Shield, and Massachusetts Mutual Life Insurance. The bids
will be reviewed to compare the benefits
offered, it was said.
1,000 Seek
HEAP Aid
Here, Monday
A line stretching around the block
formed Monday as applications were
taken at the Department for Social In·
surance office here for help with winter
heating costs.
About 1000 applications had been filed Tuesday for benefits under the Home
Energy Assistance Program (HEAP J
said Charles Hackworth, a field service
supervisor in the Prestonsburg office.
He expected Human Resources officials
in Frankfort to instruct the local office
soon to accept no more applications, he
said.
Under the program, which is open on
a first-come-first-served basis to lowincome households facing a winter
heating crisis, assistance ranging from
$175 to $300 is available. Applicants in
public housing are eligible for half that
amount.
Human Resources Secretary AI Austin said about $10 million is available to
Kentuckians in this segment of the pro·
gram. "Kentucky received $25.6 million
in HEAP block grant funds this year,
$17 million is going for direct benefits
and we spent about $7 of that in Decem·
ber to assist the elderly and the han·
dicapped," Austin said.
Although the town of Martin was· perhaps the county's most dramatic
flood scene, with almost two feet of Beaver Creek water running down its
main street. last week's heavy rains brought considerable damage to
dozens of hollows and creeks...With a budget of $377,882 set for 1974 by the
retiring City Council last month, Mayor William 0 . Goebel, Jr. said last
week there is "no way" for the city of Prestonsburg to reduce the city's
occupational tax, the city's biggest single source of revenue ... The Kentucky '74 Bicentennial commemorative license tags for this county have
been delivered to the Floyd County Bicentennial Committee and are
available to residents desiring to purchase them, according to an announcement made Monday by Paul P. Hughes, chairman of license plate
sales for Floyd county ...The Mountain Comprehensive Care Center will
open bids at 10 a.m . Monday on renovation of the ground floor of the old
Prestonsburg General Hospital building which was purchased last year
by the Mountain Mental Health-Mental Retardation Holding
Corporation ... Three Mud Creek men who were jailed here during the
weekend by Sheriff Joe Wheeler Lewis, Deputy Sheriff Green Slone and
State Police Detective Gary Rose are accused of arson in the burning last
Friday night at Teaberry of a dwelling owned by Homer
Hamilton ... Born: to Mr. and Mrs. Ellis Page, of East McDowell, a son.
Jan. 1: to Mr . and Mrs. Ishmael Akers, of Grethel, a son, Jan. 2; to Mr.
and Mrs. John Perkins, of Bypro, a son, Jan. 6; to Mr. and Mrs. Vernon
Fouts. of Halo, a son, Jan. 5... There died: Miss Annette Crawford, 20, Friday at the home of her parents at Melvin : James Hughes, 82. of Hueysville. Saturday at Our Lady of the Way Hospital, Martin ; Claude C.
Napier, 50, formerly of Garrett, Jan. 8 in Dayton, 0: Mrs. Margaret Dale
DeBord. 75, last Monday at her home at Tram; Mrs. Belle Gayheart
Stumbo. 94, of McDowell, . Monday at Highlands Regional Medical
Center; Mrs. Mattie S. Wilbur, 91, Monday. Jan. 7 at her home at Martin;
Mrs. Nannie H. Bowling, 86, of Pike county. formerly of Prestonsburg.
Friday at Highlands RegionalMedical Center; Mrs. Myrtle Woods, 75, of
Martin, Jan . 7 at Highlands Regional M~ical Center; John Robinson, 66,
Saturday at his home at Langley; James L. Ousley, 81, of Risner. Monday
at Highlands Regional Medical Center.
Twenty Years Ago
<January 16. 1964)
The Piedmont Construction Co .. Vidalia. Ga .. is expected to be awarded
the contract on construction of the 4o-unit .low-rent public housing complex at Martin ... State Economic Security Commissioner Earle V. Powell
announced in Frankfort last Thursday that unemployed fathers and step·
fathers living with families including children under 18 years of age may
apply. beginning this week, for subsistence benefits under a new $1
million program ...Top winners in the Floyd County Fish & Game Club's
1963 fishing contest are Steve Stout, Langley, and Olarles Ferguson,
Prestonsburg ... Marvin Music, of Prestonsburg, was inducted to the office
of governor of the Kentucky-Tennessee district of Kiwanis International
at May Lodge last Thursday ... "Mr. Olips." a bulldog owned by the Harry
Hager family. of Auxier. is credited with saving the lives of Mr. and Mrs.
Hager and their son when the dog woke Mr. Hager bringing to his attention a fire on the first floor of the residence ... Born : to Capt. and Mrs. Kenneth E. Verley, a daughter, Eliza Lee, Jan. 6 at Montgomery,
Alabama ... There died : Walter Ray Preston, 50, of Prestonsburg, victim
of carbon monoxide poisoning here. Saturday; Alan Reed. 33, Prestonsburg engineer, Tuesday at his home here : Mrs. Daisy Withow, 60, of
Hueysville, last Thursday at a Lexington hospital; Mrs. Polly Wallen, 71,
of Melvin, Sunday at McDowell; Mrs. Hettie H. Miller, 84, Monday at the
home of a daughter on Abbott; Ark Prater, 80, of Pyramid, Sunday at
home; Dock Ward, 77, of Lackey. last Thursday at McDowell; Mrs. Elsie
Bell Bentley Frasure, 71, formerly of McDowell, Dec. 20 at Blackfoot.
Idaho, Lee Hopson, 84. of Auxier, Saturday in Dayton. 0.: Mrs. Nan Lit·
tie . 87, last Wednesday at home ; Willie Mullins. 37, formerly of Bevinsville, last Wednesday at Marion, Ohio.
Thirty Years Ago
<January 21. 1954)
A building development is in the planning stage here which would mean
the razing of 15 or more old residences owned by the Harkins estate in the
North Highland-Trimble Branch area of Prestonsburg and replacement
of these with modern ranch-style homes... The Martin Waterworks Commission announced this week it is considering a $350,000 bond issue to
finance the construction at Martin of a modern high school
gymnasium ... Negotiations between the state and the federal government
for the lease of an area on Dewey Lake for the creation of a new state
park have been completed, Henry Ward, commissioner of conservation.
announced this week ... Inland Steel Company announced Wednesday that
John T. Parker will become manager of its coal properties at
Wheelwright, succeeding E. R. Price, who is retiring... Control of dogs in
the Dewey Lake game refuge confronted conservation officials this week
as the second of 20 deer released there two months ago was found dead
Monday morning ...There died: Landon Martin. 78. last Friday at his
home at Hueysville ; William J . Vance, 24, of Melvin, Wednesday at the
Veterans Hospital, Huntington: Mrs. Randy Conley, 96, Tuesday at the
home of a son at Garrett; Mrs . Lizzie Hall Slone. 51, of Lackey, Monday at
Our Lady of the Way Hospital, Martin ; Mrs. Julia Dials Skeens, 86, at the
home of her daughter at Lancer, Sunday: John Ingram Stepp. 72. last
Thursday at his home on Calf Creek; Thomas Meade, 83, of Hi Hat. last
Thursday at the home of a daughter at Wayland .
Forty Years Ago
(January 20. 1944l
Fire destroyed the 14-room Weeksbury consolidated school building
and all of its equipment last Thursday afternoon. causing estimated
damage of $50.000.. F loyd county's fourth War Loan Drive, which began
Tuesday as the same work started in every community throughout the
nation, is being directed by Town Hall. superintendent of Floyd county
schools ... Mter having escaped the Germans when his bomber was shot
down over enemy territory, last August 17. Technical Sergeant Jarvis
Allen. 29, is now back home at Pyramid .. .!. B. Caudill, 49, well-known
merchant, of Estill. was shot and killed, last Thursday morning near
Hollybush, Knott county .. . Born: to Mr. and Mrs. E . P. Grigsby. of Martin. a daughter. Marina Ann, at the Martin General Hospital...There
died: Dr. E. E Robinson. 74, former pastor of the Prestonsburg
Methodis t Church, at Plainview. Texas; Elijah Dyson. 79, at his home at
Manton. Friday ; Mrs. Sarah Bradley, 62, Monday at her home at Dinwood: Mrs. Lula Kilburn. 65, former Floyd countian. at Savannah.
Georgia.
Fifty Years Ago
<January 19. t!J:l4l
Roy Shepherd and Hoy Shepherd, brothers. were both wounded in the
neck when shot from a mbush on Salyers Branch of Salt Lick Creek. Sunday ... F P. Howard has leased his restaurant on Court Street here to Ed
Dingus. Perry Osborne and Miss Mae Skeans. of Martin .. .Sheriff M. T.
Stumbo. Deputy Sheriffs J.D. Fitzpatrick. Bill Wills and Elson Kendrick
a rrested s ix persons in a raid Saturday on bootleg "joints" between here
and Allen ... Married : Miss Carrie Belle Rice and Mr . L<luis A. GoreII. both
of Prestonsburg. January 13. at Louisa: Miss L<luise Boyd and Mr. Gratz
Elkins. both of East Point. December 23, at the home of the Rev. A. C
Harlowe, Prestonsburg ...There died : Dr James Benton Messer. 74.
father of Dr. R. H. Messer. of Prestonsburg, Saturday at Bluestone.
Rowan county.
SEN. LEMASTER SETS
MEET HERE. THURSDAY
Fullfilling one of his campaign promises, Senator David Lemaster will be
BOOK AVAILABLE
Persons who may wish to purchase here tomorrow CThursdayl to meet with
the book entitled, Life Among the Hills · the public He will discuss upcoming
and Mountains of Kentucky. by the late legislation and hear questions and views
Professor W.R. Thomas, first published of those a ttending. The meeting will be
in 1926, may do so by contacting Mrs. held at 7·30 p .m . at the Municipal
Richard Hardiman, 108 Belfonte Drive, Building, here, and everyone is invited
to attend .
Ashland, Kentucky, 41101.
STATIONED IN JAPAN
Airman 1st Clas!> William J . Johnson,
son of Milton J . and Mary M. Johnson,
of Stanford, has arrived for duty at
Kadena Air Base, Okinawa, Japan.
Johnson, an inventory management
specialist with the 418th Aircraft
Generation Squadron, was previously
assigned at Luke Air Force Base, Ariz.
His wife, Susan, is the daughter of
Royce and Christene Killen, of Craynor.
my views on that Beirut issue in your
fine paper.
When my wife (who had been watching the news ) began telling me that
someone had broken thru the guard and
bombed our marines in Beirut: I said,
" Don't tell me the rest, let me tell youthey were guarding with empty guns,
were'nt they? " They did the same thing
to me in W.W. two. I do believe, that's
what happened in Pearl Harbor also. It's
just a carry over from the days when
they didn't have firearms.
They seem to reckon, what worked
then ought to work now. Course we can't
expect much more-from or out of folks
when they are educated in-ignorance;
we need some people with hoss sense.
They, (the big ones) put me to guarding
a warehouse, at night, on the edge of a
giant woods, with a stick-it was a fine
stick though. If a fellow had had a bow
and arrow, it'd seemed more like the
U.S. Army.
I was supposed to halt 'em three time
and if they didn't stop-hit 'em with that
stick. That was in '42 during our scuffle
with Japan or some COU.l}try. They didn't
tell me what to do if the enemy shot me
or if he wouldn't stop, or rather, obey.
I wasn't scared much though, I allus
knew that Uncle Sam and Aunt Mary
were right behind me.
They, (the authorities) put me to guarding a camp of soldiers, ammunition,
foodstuff, water supply etc., with one
cartridge. Naturally, I wasn't allowed to
put that round into the firing chamber
of the rifle. That was overseas in the
South Pacific, in that war that we wonI don't see how we won it so easy, I'll bet
it cost a lot of lives. Even our Bible
teaches, "He becometh poor that
dealeth with a slack hand." Prov. 10:4.
If I had not had some shells of my own
at that time, someone other than me,
would probably have to tell these things.
To illustrate what's going on all the
time in our services: We used Sterno,
canned heat, to give hot drinks to the patients with battle fatigue, wounded, etc.
This stuff was hard to get and so often
we were without. The writer purchased
a gasoline camp stove and presented it
to the 11th Inf. Med. Det. Hgs.: soon
every battalion section in the whole
Detachment had gasoline stoves. (If you
don't keep up in the army, you get run
over) Isn't that what we are talking
about? No, their observation post, their
out-post and or their guard wasn't sufficient at Beirut; can anyone refute it?
It's the leaders as usual. Kinda like, The
Little Bighorn, huh?
A common soldier, marine or what, is
in no position to fix policies. If their commanders are slack, the ordinary soldier
generally pays for this. The authorities
should be aroused out of their sleep. (I
believe, they aren't fully awake yet) A
bit of demoting, court martials, guard
house, etc. may help. They used to have
firing squads.
Doesn't everyone know that we are
dealing with desperate people. Such
folks are subject to do anything at
anytime. What do you say?
Sincerely,
ROGER REED, SR.
PCC Enrollment
At Record High
Prestonsburg Community College hit
an enrollment record Monday when its
spring semester registration stood at
1193, and when the registration ends to·
day (Wednesday) that record is expected to be broken again with a total of
more than 1200 students.
The enrollment is up 29 per cent from
the fall semester when 1154 enrolled.
Commenting on the record enroll·
ment, Dr. Henry A. Campbell, Jr., director of the college, said "Not only are the
facilities being strained to the limit, but
faculty teaching loads are reaching a
maximum peak . Also, during certain
periods of the day there are no parking
spaces available.
"Normally, an increase in the spring
signifies a large increase during the next
Fall," Campbell added. "These figures
point up the importance of securing a
new building for the campus during the
1984-'86 biennium . The present buildings
are crowded and the growth expected
next fall will strain all facilities to the
maximum limit. We are currently on the
priority list of the Council of Higher
Education for a new library building.
This would enable us to remodel a
substantial number of rooms for classroom purposes."
Appeals Court Affirms
Conviction of Doctor
The conviction of a Prestonsburg doc·
tor for using a minor in a sexual performance was upheld Friday by the state
Court of Appeals, the court holding that
the willingness of the minor was not a
valid defense.
In affirming the 1982 conviction of Dr.
Ernest C. Holbrook, the court ruled that
merely participating in a sexual act with
a minor is sufficient evidence of a
criminal act.
The physician's attorney argued that
the youngster's participation implied
consent. But Appeals Court Justice
Michael 0 . McDonald held that the boy's
willingness was irrelevant. "The statute
was designed to protect minors
regardless of whether their participation
was voluntary," he wrote.
Cauliflower can cook lo a bright white
if you add a little milk during cooking.
Rate, Rake or Rape
e
I've been worried about you citizens
of Prestonsburg. See by the Dec. 14, 83
issue of your paper that you folks of
Prestonsburg are in for another nice
" Rake' hike on your gas bills.
My wife and I were discussing this as
we read the headlines. I informed her
that you all were in for another rake. (I
had Section One of the paper. J She said,
" It isn't rake, honey, it's rape." (We're
kinda old and can't see so well-didn'
go much far to school, either. l I said, "
guess you're pretty close." She said,
"You've got to get close to do something
like that." "Guess a body's pocketbook's
about the closest thing to them!"
We wondered if you'd made a misprint
when you said, "Rate Hike?" Or
whether it wali supposed to be Rake or
Rape? Told my wife, it couldn't be rape,
'cause that was against the law ; but she
says, it's lawful to do lots of things we
used to couldn't do. '
I wanted to write my congressman but
wife warned me against it, said might
. cause him to lose his job if he did
anything about it. I jist don't think those
old monoplies ought to be allowed to
force us people, do you? We don't have
much choice, though, do we? Makes a
body wonder if maybe atomic energy
may not be the best, after all?
Say! let me know if they up the quality of that gas . It's such funny times, wif
says, "They've improved everything til
they've just about ruined everything."
Said, too, " People will do about anything
anymore to make an honest dollar."
Keep warm-best wishes!
ROGER REED SR.
Hueysville, Ky.
P.S. When people forget God, they're
a good bit worse than brutes, aren't
they? Thought our fathers let those companies have that gas quite reasonable .
Mayor Disputes Charges
I wish to take issue with the remarks
attributed to Policeman Tommy Engle
as stated in your paper of 1/ 11/ 84, in
regards to me.
Tommy .Engle's charges had no validity-I was neither drunk nor disorderly.
ltather, because of his refusal to carry
out his duties as the officer of our town,
I had just verbally relieved him of his
policeman's position. He then, in a rage
loudly proclaimed the charges agains
me and asked bystanders to assist him
in my arrest, all of whom refused.
. As for Mr. Engle's statement that I
was detained at the jail ; that remark is
totally false. I was not subjected to a
breathalizer test for drunkeness as I
would have been had I been intoxicated.
I merely filled out an ap~rance bond
and came home the same way I wentin my own automobile.
In addition, those Commissioners o
Wheelwright who purportedly backed
Mr. Engle in his actions met illegally
and without authority to discuss this
matter, according to Kentucky statutory
law.
ELMER FERGUSON, Mayor
City of Wheelwright
Pleasant Bl"eak
For Us, Too
Your readership is larger than th
11,000 you indicated in your paper.
Several of us here at Mercy Hospital in
Columbus, Ohio enjoy reading the Floyd
County Times. Mr. and Mrs. Robert
Anderson bring a copy each week to
Peggy Hughes Wears, who hails from
your fair county, and Mrs. Wears shares
the paper with her fellow workers, who
include Dr. Mandac from Hawaii . All of
us greatly enjoy the "Times" and comparing newsworthy items there an
here. We feel that you concentrate mor
on the people who live there and their
lifestyles, where here, the news is much
more general and impersonal and the
people being written about are strangers
to the people doing the writing. Your
writers give the impressions that they
know the people of whom they write
very well and make us feel that we know
them too.
Thank you for the pleasant brea k in
our week.
DR MANDAC,
PEGGY WEARS, I.V .T.,
JACQUELINE LAMBERT, I.V.T.,
DEBORAH PATTON, I.V.T .,
DAVID BURKEY, E .M.T.,
BILL BLAIR, I.V.T. ,
ROBERT DAVIS, R.N.,
DORIS WELCH, SEC.
Seeks Family Information
I am seeking information on the fa the
of Thomas C. Brown who settled in th ,
Paintsville-Prestonsburg ar ea in 1789.
He had a brother, Nathaniel; a daughter, Sarah, who married Samuel Auxier;
two sons, Daniel and Francis Asbury .
Francis married Addie P reston, and
they had nine children, one of which
(Thomas Stogden Brown) ma rried
twice, first to Ernaline Dameron, second
to Fannie Baldwin.
If you have, or know who may have,
the above information, please contact
me.
HENRY L. BROWN
6715 Hickman No. 28
Des Moines, Iowa 50322
Ph : 515-278-2914
HOLIDAY GUESTS
Miss Dallas Fay Sammons has returned to Morehead after spending the holidays here with her parents, Mr. and
Mrs. Dallas Sammons, of the Auxier
Road. Also spending Christmas and ~e
Year's with them was their daughter
and son-in-law, Dr. and Mrs . James D.
Lester, of Louisa .
�Wednesday, January 18, 1984
The Floyd County Times
Section One, Paae Five
. . . ...
QUARTER
FEDERAL
FOOD
STAMPS
WELCOME
PORK lOI
.
SLICED INTO CHOPS
19~
'
LB.
BOX
ASSORTED FLAVORS
18-0Z.
CAKE
MIXES ................................. .
7-0Z. BOX
KRAFT
BErn CROCKER
'READY TO SPREAD
MACARONI & CHEESE
$12 9
FROSTING ...
~~DINNERS
16.s-oz.
C
29-0Z. CAN ROYAL GUEST
:FRESH
$109
· 'GROUND
BEEF
LB.
89 c
$119
CHUCK ROAST .. .. .
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89
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PEACHES ......
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SOUTHERN
49-0Z. BOX OXYDOL$
$J69
MOUNTAIN DEW,
PLUS
22-0Z. BOnLE
PEPSI, PEPSI FREE
REoBaol.D
·TOMATO
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6-PAK
DEPOSIT
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DDEISTEHRGENT
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99 C
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CENTER CUT
$18 9
PORK CHOPS .. .. .. .. .. ..
LB.
U.S.D.A. CHOICE
$13 9
CHUCK STEAK .. .. .. .. ..
LB.
$169
! WILSON'S CORN KING
.WHOLE BONELESS HAM. . ...
LB.
16-0Z. PKG. SAVORY
C
SLICED BACON .. .. ... .. .
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PORK SAUSAGE 2-LB. ROLL $2.97
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�The Floyd County Times
Section One, Pap Six
h rmacy ·
~,
4~
..Jootnotes_
By HAROLD COOLEY-
Johnson Central
Johnson Central High School students, above, will be among those representing six schools in the state competing in KET's academic quiz series, " KET
Scholastic Challenge," Thursday, January 19, at 10 p.m. They are, seated,
from left, Jeff Able, son of Lindsey and Joyce Able, of Wittensville ; Jimmy
Pack, son of James R. and Barbara Pack, of Nippa, and Sayeed Ikramuddin,
son of Syed and Kamar Ikrenuddin, of Prestonsburg. Standing are host, Ralph .
Hacker, and alternates, Andy Keaton, Robin Watts, and Melinda Call, faculty advisor.
The {irst round of competition includes Laurel County, Pikeville, and Simon
Kenton high schwls. Following will be a match between Warren Central,
Johnson Central, and Lincoln County. Eighty-one high schools in the state will
participate in the series, and teams were drawn from a list supplied by the
state's Department of Education. Students are tested on their proficiency in
history, math, English and science, and winners will receive $500, runnersup, $250.
Members of the Pikeville team includes Kristin Leah Kelly, David Scott
Kirn, and Nelson Kelly Maynard, II. Alternates are Suparna Malempati and
Joseph Sean Anderson.
·'-----~-..4
Adrenocorticotropic Hormone (ACTH) is naturally produced in the pituitary gland of the brain. It directly controls the secretions of the adrenal glands which, in turn,
produce cortisone. The primary use of cortisone is the
temporary reduction of pain associated with inflammation. It does not matter where the inflammation is
located. Coritsone is prescribed, not to cure anything, but
to relieve discomfort. It may be injected, sprayed, rubbed on or swallowed by capsule. In prescribing cortisone,
doctors usually start with a low dosage because administration of cortisone from an external source causes
the pituitary to cease producing ACTH. In turn, then, the
body stops the natural production of cortisone.
At COOLEY APOTHECARY we iook forward to
meeting the complete pharmaceutical needs of every
member of your family ..from the newborn baby to Grandma and Grandpa. We invite your inquiries regarding our
pricing procedure. It is to both of our advantage to have
a full understanding about the price of our drugs. You'll
find us at No. 2 Town Center Bldg., 886-8106. Master
Cha~ge and Visa. Open: Mon.-Fri., 9-5:30, Sat. 9-4~
HANDY HINT:
Physical dependence upon externally administered cortisone can develop.
IRS Sends Out
Tax Packages
THE LEGISLATIVE BASKETBALL TEAM-the Lawmakers-will be playing with one less member this year. Rep. Greg Stumbo, D-Prestonsburg, suffered a leg injury while playing basketball in his hometown. He said the injury to his achilles tendon has permanently retired him from playing basketball. He may be required to wear a special shoe for up to a year, he added .
"It has always been difficult to manuver during legislative sessions in
Frankfort- but now it's harder than ever," Stumbo said with a twinkle in his
eye.
ABC Considering
State As Topic
.For TV Series
An ABC television series called Kentucky drew a step closer to reality
recently when ABC approved the concept for the Dallas-type drama .
KENTUCKY is the brainchild of film
producer Howar~ Koch and the
husband-wife scriptwriting team of
Stephen and Eli 10r Karpf. Lynda
Jalbert. director of the Kentucky Film
Office said that A3C has given the goahead for a script for a two-hour pilot for
the series, and a script is expected by
early March.
' 'If ABC likes Lhe script, they'll come
to Kentucky t is summer to shoot the
two-hour pilot," said Jalbert. "Then if
ratings are good on the pilot, KENTUCKY will become a weekly prime
lime one-hour show-perhaps as early
as next January. "
Director Koch has produced top TV
series like MAVERICK and THE UNTOUCHABLES and has also produced
a number of successful films like the
smash hit AIRPLANE and later,
AIRPLANE II, THE ODD COUPLE and
ON A CLEAR DAY YOU CAN SEE
FOREVER.
The Karpfs, who list the script for the
film LOVE STORY and the popular
daytime drama CAPITAL among their
many successful works, paid an extensive research visit to the Bluegrass with
Koch last year in preparation for the1r
writing of KENTUCKY.
"We' re delighted about all this said
Jalbert. "Not only because of the immediate impact on.the economy that the
two or three months of on-site filming
would have each year, but we're looking at the broader, long-range effects
KENTUCKY could have on tourism."
Jalbert explained that if the series is
well received, millions of people across
the nation would be exposed to the attractions of Kentucky every week. "You
know, thousands and thousands of people visit the Ewing's ranch (featured on
DALLAS l every year. A successful TV
series about Kentuckians could really do
great things for our tourist industry."
Letcher Festival
Slated Next Autumn
Letcher County is in the planning
stages for the second annual Mountain
Heritage Festival to be held September
16 thru September 23. The Letcher County Mountain Heritage Festival is different from many of the traditional
county festivals in that the entire culture
and history of the mountains is stressed.
This year's festival will include events
such as a horse show, dog show, beauty
pageant, home canning and cooking and
other events, also planned are "how to"
demonstrations in such areas of mountain crafts as weaving, soap making,
candle making, woodcarving and quilting. It is also hoped that during the
week-long festival, one night can be set
aside for square dance lessons.
The theme for the 1984 festival is "Our
Mountain Heritage Alive Today." The
parade and merchant display will stress
all aspects of the culture, social ,
economic and political history and
folklore of eastern Kentucky.
Any civic, social or business organization wishing to enter a float, display or
marching unit in the festival parade on
September 22, 1984 is encouraged to contact the Letcher County Courthouse,
Mountain Heritage Festival, Whitesburg, Ky. 41858. For further information,
call (606) 633-2129.
AEROBICS CLASSES SET
Aerobics classes will be taught
through the Center for Continuing
Education at Pikeville College during
the 1984 spring semester. For information on registration call 432-9234.
THANK YOUI
We would like to thank all of our customers In
the five-county area-Floyd, Johnson, Magoffin,
Martin, and Pike counties-for their great response
to our sale held during the Christmas season. We
very much appreciate your support and hope we
may serve you again In the future.
·customer
must meet
requirements.
The Floyd County Times
VANS
ON
SPECIAL
TOO!
.• Rent a Curtis Mathes TV with payments as low as $30.00 per month. That's right just pay your first month's rent, and take
a color TV home with you; and enjoy the beauty of color TV In your home tonight. • We have Portables, Consoles,, and Home
Entertainment Centers. • We have Remote and Non-Remote TV's. • We also give you a choice of cabinets. • Yes, we also
have VIdeo Cassette Recorders and a Tape Club. Ask about details.
•
STOP BY OUR STORE AND SEE OUR SELECTION OF TELEVISIONS AND VIDEO CASSETTE RECORDERS, TODAY, AND SEE HOW
EASY IT TO OWN YOUR OWN CURTIS MATHES.
CARD OF THANKS
The family of Vannie Spurlock would
like to express their thanks to all who
helped during the passing of our loved
one. ·Thanks to all who sent food,
flowers, prayers, and words of comfort
during this time of sorrow. Thanks to the
ministers for their kind and comforting
words and to the Hall Funeral Home for
its kind and efficient service.
THE FAMILY
lt.
Interested? Coli Ken Peters ot
886·8506 and he'll coli on you!
The Internal Revenue Service has
begun mailing out 1,292,420 1040A and
1040 tax packages to Kentucky taxpayers.
These tax packages contain blank tax
forms and instmctions on how to
prepare the forms. They also explain the
kinds of assistance available to help you
in the preparation of your return.
Taxpayers are urged to use the peeloff address label which is affixed to the
tax package. If your address or name on
the peel-off label is incorrect, you can
make pen and ink changes right on the
label. By using the peel-off label on your
tax return, you will help the IRS speed
up the processing of your return, and
assure correct return identification.
The 1040A package also contains the
Form 1040EZ that may be used by many
single taxpayers in the state. The Form
1040EZ is a simplified tax return that.requires only lllines for completion. Taxpayers who use Form 1040EZ will note
the numerical entries are to be made in
the blocks shown on the tax form . This
will enable the IRS to process these
returns using optical character recognition scanning, a procedure that ts used
at some supermarket check-out counters.
If you have any questions about the
particular form which was sent to you,
or whether you should be using a different form, please contact the IRS at
584-1361 in Louisville, or toll free
1-800-424-1040 elsewhere in Kentucky.
FREE
DELIVERY!
•
Curtis
l!l:liiii1Mathes
1
athes
FOUR
HOME ENTERTAINMENT CENTER
FREE
ur IS
339 MAIN STREET
OWNED AND OPERATED IY SHAFFER TELEVISION
PRESTONSBURG STORE HOURS:
10 TO 6, MONDAY THRU FRIDAY, 10 TO 3, SAT., CLOSED SUNDAY
HAZARD
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439-4477
PHONE 886-8381
355 SOUTH MAIN
HARLAN
573-7111
YEAR
EXQ.USIVE
LNITED
WARRANTY
FOURYEAR
WARRANTY
�Wednesday, January 18, 1984
The Floyd County Times
Pag~ ant
•
. Georgia Ann Slone, five-year-old
daughter of George and Jerry Slone, of
Allen, was c~rrunner-up in the :\1iss Red,
White, and Blue pageant held at Allen
Central, where she represented Allen
Elementary Grade School. She and her
escort, Justin Ross Jones, five-year-old
son of Larry and Sue Jones, of Prater
Creek, are kindergarten students at the
Allen school.
Georgia Ann is the maternal grandaughter of Christina Johnson, of Allen,
and the late Palmer Compton. Her
paternal grandparents are Tommy and
Alice Slone, of Prestonsburg.
lt-pd.
Education Expensive
Mediocrity More So
Americans spend an estimated $20
illion a year for tobacco products, $50
illion on alcohol, $6 billion on cosmetics, and $3 billion for dog food-but only $1 billion on student textbooks, according to a recent study by the McGrawHill Book Company's Gregg Division.
"Today many textbooks in use are obsolete," says Mary Hatwood Futrell,
president of the 1.7-million-member National Education Association. "School
budget squeezes are making the once
common five-year book replacement cycle a thing of the past."
While school districts' total budgets
ave increased over the years, the
percentages allotted for such key items
as teacher salaries and instructional
materials have declined, Futrell points
out. The average budget share for textbooks has plummeted 50 percent since
1966.
"For students trying to keep up with
the whirlwind pace of technological advances and social developments," the
NEA leader concludes, "the shortage of
urrent textbooks is a serious obstacle
to learning. We're going to have to keep
reminding ourselves that educational
excellence costs, but-as the President's
Commission on Excellence in Education
has warned-mediocrity costs more."
This questions and answer column 1s m greater than expedcd numbers of
provided as a public service by the people as long as 40 or "o years after irMcDowell Cancer Network. Questions radiation for benign conditions in childare answered by appropriate specialists hood.
Cancer of the thyroid is relatively rare
associated with the Network and represent some of the inquiries made by and accounts for only about one percent
of all cancer incidence. It is usually
callers who use our Hopehne.
The Cancer Hopeline is a toll free con- curable. Even those patients whose
sultative telephone service available to disease has spread to lymph nodes in the
any Kentuckian who has a cancer- neck at the time of diagnosis usually can
related problem. Qualified counselors be treated successfully. Surgery is the
take calls Monday-Friday from 9-5 and treatment of choice for all types of
return recorded messages the next thyroid cancer. The operation may be
working day. They do not diagnose followed by radiation to destroy any
cancer, recommend treatment for in- stray cancer cells. Chemotherapy has
dividual cases, nor dispense money. · been effective in some cases where the
Counselors do provide consultations with cancer has spread beyond the thyroid
specialists as well as support and itself, and the administration of thyroid
understanding. Because of its designa- hormones is part of the treatment of
tion by the National Cancer Institute as some thyroid cancers.
The National Cancer Institute recom· Kentucky's Cancer Information Service,
mends
that persons who received radiathe Hopeline has rapid access to the
latest cancer information. All matters tion to the head or neck during childare treated confidentially. Call the hood, as well as anyone w:10 feels a lump
Cancer Hopeline toll free at in the neck or throat area, should con1-800-4-CANCER, or write us at sult a physician Those who have a
McDowell Cancer Network, 915 South history o~ radiation treatment during
childhood should be re-examined every
Limestone Street, Lexington, Ky.
one or two years.
40536-0084.
For answers to your cancer or cancerQ. I have just learned that I may have
thyroid cancer. If so, it is probably the related questions, call the Cancer
result of radiation treatments which I Hopeline toll free at 1-800-4-CANCER
had for enlarged tonsils as a child. How weekdays from 9-5. You may also write
to us at 915 South Limestone Street, Lexcan this be since I was cared for by a
doctor'? How dangerous is thyroid ington, Ky. 40536-0084.
cancer'? Is there an alternative to
surgery'?
A. The cause or causes of thyroid
cancer are not fully understood .
However it is known that the incidence
of this disease is greater than would normally be expected among persons who
received radiation treatments to the
head or neck area during childhood or
infancy. For several decades beginning
in the 1920's, babies and children were
treated with x-rays or radium for
various head and neck conditions, including the enlarged tonsils you mentioned, fungal infections of the scalp
such as ringworm and acne. At the time,
no one was aware of the dangerous side
effects of such treatments. As a result,
both cancerous and non-cancerous
thyroid tumors are now being detected
3
Section One, Paae Seven
Contec;tant
reunlon is being orgamzed for the
Preston::;burg High School graduating
class of 1974. For more information call
Teresa Gibson, 886-6795, or Sue Jus'tice,
874·2748
extras.
• 1978 Ford
Ranchero,
GT
package, good condition.
Call 886-6469 after 5.
upd
SATELLITE TELEVISION
NEWS
SPORTS
MOVIES
RELIGION
• Bank
Financing
Available
Rebecca Ann Kidd, five-year-old
daughter of Garland and Anna Kidd, of
Kite, participated in the Miss Mistletoe
Pageant at Martin Grade School, recently. She received the first runnerup
trophy in beauty and in costume wear.
She was sponsored by Moore's Hardware, of Lackey, and was also first runnerup in MEPS Kentucky State Pageant.
USTOM ANTENNA
MARTIN, KY. • 285-3984
(Across the creek from Garth Vocational School
14-tl
U.S.D.A. CHOICE PLAmR PLEASING
FOR
ROUND BONE
SHOULDER ROAST
GRETHEL HOMEMAKERS
The Grethel Homemakers met Tuesday, January 3, at 6:30 p.m. at the
Grethel Baptist Church annex President Arietta Hall called the meeting to
order and devotions were led by Mrs.
Glenna Evans.
Each member brought an 18-inch
gingham square, embroidery thread
and hoop, and Mrs. Frances Pitts taught
them to do Tennerife, which is the same
as Mountain lace, or chicken scratch
Completed squares will be brought to the
February 6 meeting.
Those attending were Arietta Hall,
Christine Crisp, Shirley Hamilton, Glenna Evans, and Eileen Martin.
LB.$159
MEETING ANNOUNCEMENT
The Executive Committee of the
Council on Higher Education will meet
on January 12, at 2 p.m. (ET) at the
Capitol Plaza Hotel, Frankfort, Kentucky.
3 FOR
GREEN GIANT
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SARA LEE PECAN
Multiple receiver
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Dealer for Yamaha, Technics, Kenwood, J.V.C., Advent,
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COFFEE CAKE . .. .
1
SEA PAK
ONION RINGS.....
12-az.
$199
2-Las.
4-PAK
GREEN GIANT
CORN ON THE COB......
$1 •39
LANCER-WATERGAP RD.,
PRESTONSBURG, KY.
10 TO S, SAT.
29
GROUND
$149
CHUCK........
LB.
FRESH LEAN
89Cg:: ~:ff.~~- .... $1 !
SiZiLEAN $149 li~cfJ~ . . $1 59
1
JFG
SALAD
DRESSING
~~~·
1
BACON ......
GENERIC POP
6
OR
12-0Z. $119
CANS
$4.00
12-0Z. PKG.
SELECTO
WIENERS
ALL FLAVORS
CASE
$109
SELEcto
$149
BOLOGNA ..
StLEcto
$1 09
SAUSAGE ..
2-LB. ROLL ............. $2.15
• PRICE SMASHERS •
1. You &et one Price Smashers seel for e~eh Sl you spend
(exdudln& products restricted by lew).
2. P11te 36 Price Smeshers sells on eech saver certifleate (eveillble et the checkout).
3. Elch filled c.-tlflcate c111 be redeemed for the Price
• QUANTITY RIGHTS RESERVED.
• NOT RESPONSIBLE
FOR PRINTER'S ERRORS.
• PRICES GOOD THRU JAN. 24.
Listen to WOHY for weekly specials!
CREAM $1
STYLE....
•
$19 9
Smashers .opecill sevin& of your choice.
Look for the Price Smeshers symbol in ow Ids end in
the store to identify the weekly Price Smuhers
5pec:iel$.
874-2635, 10 TO 7, MON ·FRI
FOR SALf-• 1979 Mark Twain Inboard boGt i t .. 10Qded with
RE 'MO. SCHEIJllED
WHITE
$189
POTATOES .
1
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CALIFORNIA
RED DELICIOUS
APPLES ... ~~·
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HEAD
LETTUCE
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SIZE
69c
�Wednesday, January 18, 1984
Hun tin' And Fish in'
B) DOl G HE. SLEY
jth Distril'l Commissiont>r
Dcpartml'nt of Fish
& Wildlife Resources
The 1983 hunting and fishing season is
history. Many hunting and fishing success stories are floating around anrl ''"!I
have to be the judgP wheliler LO believe
or not believe. However, there is certain·
ly one thing you can believe; our hunting
and fishing in Kentucky is continuing to
improve. Every year we see more game
being harvE-sted and more fish being
caught. Our Department of Fish and
Wildlife is working hard to see that our
sportsmen get the full benefit of their
hunting and fishing license. We have the
only department in state government
that is self-maintained, and thanks to
our great sportsmen, we will continue to
improve and develop our fish and wildlife resources.
Here in Eastern Kentucky we are seeing our rabbit population coming back.
Our squirrel population is most always
great, as is our grouse population. Some
quail are starting to show up and our
turkey restoration is going very well. We
have an experimental deer stocking program already started in Knott Co. This
program will consist of stocking 500 deer
in the shortest period of time. Hopefully, these n\'mbers of deer will withstand
poaching and wild dogs so that we can
have deer herds in Eastern Kentucky as
do the other parts of the state. Our
thanks go out to Tom Young and his staff
at Ballard Co. Wildlife Management
Area for the great job they're doing in
• trapping the deer being sent to Knott Co.
Our fishing in Eastern Kentucky
seems to be progressing; however, one
problem that we face is that most of our
lakes are flood control reservoirs. This
means the water goes up and down and
this hinders our fish population. The
department will continue to stock our
lakes. streams, and ponds to insure that
our fishermen get the full benefit of their
sport.
In their last meeting the Department
of Fish and Wildlife Commission voted
8 to 1 to install an idle speed only regulation for Pan Bowl Lake in Breathitt Co
The former regulation was 10 H.P. limit.
The commission's feeling of this regulation was that an idle speed only would
give away every fisherm3n an equal opportunity to harvest fish at Pan Bowl
Lake. A survey through the Jackson
Times was taken and only 46 sportsmen
responded with only 2 wanting to keep
the 10 H.P. limit. The commission was
presented a petition with over 300 signatures wanting an idle speed only. I personally think this will be a fair and adequate regulation if it is not abused.
However, if the problem of speeding or
water skiiing on Pan Bowl Lake
becomes evident, then the commission
will change the regulation back to a 10
HP limit. The Department of Fish and
Wildlife is working hard to msure that
the Kentucky sportsmen receive every
opportunity to enjoy our fish and wildlife
resources. However, the sportsmen also
have an obligation. The department and
the sportsmen need to work together,
"United We Stand, Divided We Fall", to
insure that we have continuing success
in our great state.
We have sincere and dedicated conservation officers in our 7th District, as
well as in our entire state, and we need
to a~sist them in any way to insure the
progress of our fish and wildlife resources.
Please! If anyone sees any fish or
game violation, report it to your local
conservation officer. If you can't get in
touch with him, in the near future there
will be a toll free telephone number in
Frankfort for reporting violations.
Remember "Poachers are Thieves" and
as sportsmen we cannot let a few violators destroy everything we have work·
ed so very hard for.
Also, you can join your local Sportsmen Clubs and become active with the
League of Kentucky Sportsmen. That is
'me of the best ways I know to keep iniormed on what's happening within your
district and the department. Also, it's
the best way to voice your opinions and
ideas.
The Floyd County Times
Angler
To Conduct Bass
Seminar, Feb. 11
~.,amous
Renowned smallmouth bass angler.
Billy Westmoreland, will conduct a bass
fishmg seminar at Music-Carter-Hughes
Chevrolet Buick, Inc ., Saturday,
February 11. He will share angling experiences and answer questions. The
seminar. which is free to the public. IS
being sponsored by Mu~ic CarterHughes and the Bassin' Buddies.
A boat and tackle show will be held at
the same time and place.
Bassin' Buddie officers for 1984 are
Alan Sublett, president; Dean Blair,
vice-president; Tee Watkins, secretary,
and Glen Copley, treasurer.
March Of Dimes
Softball Tourney
Snow kidding! The Sixth Annual
March of Dimes Snoball Softball Tournament will be held on Friday. February
3, through Sunday, February 5, at the
Shillito and Idle Hour Park Softballs
Fields in Lexington. In the event of
unseasonably warm weather, the "rain
date" will be the following weekend.
The tournament is a double elimination tournament. First, second and third
place trophies will be awarded in men's
competition only. There will be no
women's competition. The entry fee
must be mailed in by January '1:1. Entry
forms are available by contacting the
March of Dimes, 121 Malabu Drive, Lex~ngton <606-278-0476).
The March of Dimes is also looking for
volunteer umpires. Anyone wishing to
participate as an umpire should also
contact the March of Dimes.
Betsy Layne Falls
In Tourney Finals
<Statistics by Maleta Campbell>
Hampered by injuries. the Betsy
i.ayne Bobcats fell Saturday night to
Magof(in county in the championship
game of the Paintsville Invitational
Tournament.
Missing their two injured starters,
Brett Meade and Chris Conn, the Bobcats nontheless turned in some good
performances during the tourney with
their opening game a 44-39 win over
Morgan county. Betsy Layne scorers
included Dwayne Kidd 11. Levi
Hamilton 10. Jeff Campbell 8. Jimmy
Parsons 8. Lester Newsome 5 and
Duran Hall 2.
. In semi-final play the Bobcats downed Russell 68-50. Scoring for BLHS was
as follows- Le..-i Hamilton 19, Dwayne
Kidd 14, Parsons 13. Lester Newsome
10. Duran Hall 4 and Mike Conn 2.
In the championship game. Betsy
Layne played hard throughout but lost
a heartbreaker. 52·50. For Betsy Layne
scorers were Harr.ilton 15, Parsons 11,
Kidd 8. Newsome 8. Campbell4. Duran
Outdoor Recreation
Program To Be Funded
Section One, Paae Elpt
MUZZLE LOADERS TO MEET
The next meeting of the Muzzle
loader's club will be held Jan. 30 at 7
p.m. at Kentucky Hydrocarbon above
Maytown.
For the second consecutive year, Kentucky will receive over $1.1 million for
public outdoor recreation, Richard D.
Cole of the Department of Local Government announced recently.
Funds will be administered through
the state's Land and Water Conservation
Fund housed in DLG. Kentucky's funding is allocated by the National Park
Service of the U.S. Department of the
Interior.
According to Commissioner Cole, the
Land and Water Conservation Fund has
been the primary source of funding for
outdoor recreation projects since 1965.
With the exception of a funding
moratorium in 1982, Kentucky has
received over $42 million since the 1965
funding cycle.
"The federal funds allocated, coupled
with funding from additional sources
represents a total recreation investment
of $82 million through the LWCF," Commissioner Cole said. "All of Kentucky's
120 counties have participated in this
funding program with high rates of project success."
Eligible projects for LWCF money include outdoor recreation site acquistion,
development and rehabilitation. The
NPS requires a committee of statewide
representatives of recreational interests
to review and evaluate LWCF project
applications. An open selection process
is utilized to screen projects and award
grants to municipal and county governments for outdoor recreation.
Cole said the LWCF pr.:>gram has been
responsible for widespread recreational
opportunities which might not exist
otherwise.
"The positive results anti reactions we
have experienced from past LWCF projects have proven this to be a highly
popular and successful program,'' Commissioner Cole added. "With the 1984
funding, we hope to follow this established pattern and further contribute to a
statewide network of outdoor recreational facilities that has become a source
of pride and national recognition for the
Commonwealth."
Local and county governments may
apply for program consideration
through their respective Area Development Dir;trict.
when you don't.
Need Snow Tires? We Go 'em!
Oil Filters
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CARY SACIIATINI, SAUS
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8 A.M.-6 P.M.
PHONE
886-3880
PHONE
886-3861
RALPH MAYNARD
SERVICE MANAGER
886-3880
The Northern Kentucky Easter Seal
Center at Covington provided rehabilitation services to 'r/60 children and adults
in 1983.
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"THERE IS ONE
NEAR YOU"
~AUTO
PARTS
PROFESSIONALS
..
om.ATE'f:lOOD.
It only hurts
PRf.STONSBURG STJ\ tiON
(Mun /pol Bldg l
N LakP Dt~ve 1 PrPst<;msburg K,•ntuc>y 416..'>3
WINTER-TIME SERVICE
AND PARTS SPECIAL!
Hall 2
I'm a firm believer that we can have
anything we want if we're wiling to
sacrifice and work for it; so, sportsmen,
let's get cracking. Join a Sportsmen
Club, get involved, support your r.onservation officers, and take a stand for our
fish and wildlife resources. Let it never
be said that our generation didn't leave
the yoJinger generation of sportsmen
something they can enjoy and be proud
of.
If anyone has any comments or suggestions, please feel free to write: Doug
Hensley, Box 775, Hazard, Ky. 41701.
Hearing from you will be greatly appre·ciated.
As your commissioner, I have dedicated !llyself to represent the sportsmen
in the 7th District and protect the fish
and wildlife resources of this state the
only way I know how : Hard Work.
Good Huntin' and Fishin'!
Central J( enh•cky Blood Center
"NOW IN OUR NEW LOCATION"
Rt. 23 North-Auxier Road Prestonsburg, Ky. Phone: 886-6878
~ .,.
~· Parts Ph.ls autnstor•s ...
llliiiiiiiJ
�Wednesday, January 18, 1984
The Floyd County Times
Donorama Great Success
Bv Pt\T J>llli.LIPS
The Third Annual Donorama was held
at the Central Kentucky Blood Center's
Prestonsburg Donor Center, December
20 and 22, m the effort to provide blood
for the holiday period. There were 90
donors which was up 26% over last
year's total of 67 donor·
CKBC ·wishes to thank the Floyd Count.> Times and Carla Boyd for the kick off campaign. Announcements bv Radio
'tahons WPRT, WMDJ and \VQHYWDOC were most helpful in reminding
everyone Marquees helped by bringing
more attention at Prestonsburg High
School, Jerry's Re.staurant and United
Federal S & L.
Thanks goes to the following who proYided holiday refreshments: Pic Pac,
Piggly Wiggly, Super America and IGA
Coupons were donated by Lee's Famous
Recipe, Kentucky Fried Chicken, Pizza
Hut and Dairy Cheer. Gifts were
donated for a drawing. Russell .May contnbuted two beautiful prints: "Jenny
Wiley" was won by Charlotte Harns and
''The Breaks" went to Estill Lee Carter.
B. F. easual gave a large piece of
American Tourister luggage which was
won by Kerry Sluss and the Odyssey-2
video game with three game cartridges
was won by a firstime donor, Mark
Brown. The thirteenth donor received a
Christmas stocking for breaking last
year's record 0258 pints in 1982 ), Marty Hicks enjoyed the stocking. The
thirteen-hundreth donor, Debbie Rodiam, received a Wicker Bell door decoration.
Posie Peddler, Jan's Florist, Jenny
Wiley Florist and Allen's Flower and
Gtft Shop gave donors beautiful carnations. Steve Sanders and Aubrey Onkst
received special gifts in the spirit of the
season by saying the magic words.
A most special thanks to everyone who
has helped the Prestonsburg Donor Center to grow each year and to prove the
ople here are very special.
The following people registered to
donate for the 1983 Donorama :
FOR RENT: Two-bedroom trailer
one mlltt from Martin. Couple or
couple with one child only. Must
be neat and clean. Partially
furnished.
• $250 plus utilities
• $100 deposit
PHONE 886-3920
llpd.
HELL
NO! God is not going to
punish sinners forever in
a fire! The wages of sin
Is death-Romans 6:23.
Free cassettes or written
literature-Specify which.
CHURCH OF GOD
(SEVENTH DAY)
c/o Jerry Bentley
Rt. 4, Box 737
Pikeville, Ky. 41501
12-23-Gpd .
Kelly Allen, Paula Jolly, Tara Allen,
Todd Ward, Bobby Allen, Joseph Bentley, Robert Custer, James Goble, Elma
Jessen, Ttmothy Jessen, Carol Shepherd, Betsy Lafferty, Martha Hicks.
Charlotte Harris, Anna Isaac, Connie
Stratton, Ann Slone, Anita Shelton, Della
Jervis, Auval Gunter, Alecia Ousley,
Crystal Spurlock, Jessica Holbrook,
Ricky Fuller, Emily Marsillett, Louquida • tephens, Curtis Goble, Hubert
Goble, Paul Chaffins, John Bryant, Rick
Branham, Cathy Goble, Sandra VanO\'er, Michael DeRossett, Priscilla
Stewart, Eugenia Hall, Janet Vanover,
Stephen Sanders, Alacia Setser, Lewis
Caudill, Kelly Moore, Jean Rosenberg,
John Rosenberg, Thomas Blackburn,
Michael Blackburn, William Slone, Paul
Vincent, Danny McCoy, Robert Thomas,
Michael Mays.
KHC BOARD TO :\IEET
I~ FRA:\'KFORT, .J '\_ 18
t\ special meeting of the Board of
Directors of the Kentucky Housing Corporation will be held Wednesday,
January 18, at 10 a m The meeting will
be held in the general assembly
ballroom of the new Capital Plaza Hotel
on Wilkerson Boulevard, Frankfort.
The press and public are cordially invited to attend.
Board of Directors To Meet
The board of dtrectors of the Appalachian Research and Defense Fund
of Kentucky, Inc. will hold its regular
quarterly meeting <This being its annual
meeting> on Saturday, January 21, 1984
beginning at II a .m . in room 138 of the
Law School of the University of Kentucky in Lexington . The meeting ts open
to the public.
OPEN SUNDAY
Jerry Smith, Kerry Sluss, Gerald
.Mcl\lasters, Jimmy Soard, Sharon
Tackett. Jeannie 1'\elson, Martha Bradbury, John Spradlin, Aubrey Onkst,
Glenna Bradley, Debbie Roddam, Clyde
Turner, Patsy Brown, Kathy Chaffin,
Robert Johnson, Marilyn Stevens, Raymond Hicks, Kevin Franko, Harietta
Ranier, Lee Corbett, Mark Brown,
Leonard Stephenson, Sharon Spradlin,
Robert Prater, Bill Coleman, Lloyd
Howard, Franklin Reed, Alex Lovely,
Judy Lawson, Linda Roy, Estill Carter,
Iris Calhoun, Jamce Hamilton, Robert
Carpenter, Patty Carpenter, John Bavs.
Dow Phillips. Buddy Lemaster, Mary
Hall , Steven Rice, David Tackett, Sie~
na Rtsner, Kara Alexander, Janie King,
Dwight Frasure. Wayne Law, Jean
Burke, Helen Ormerod, Derek Merion,
Douglas Woody, Gregory Hall.
_ _"-T_
_
D
_
Mining Subsidence
To Be Seminar Topic
Mimng subsidence, one of the most
controversial issues associated with
underground mming, will be the topic of
a seminar held at Jenny Wiley State
Park, February 2 The seminar is sponsored by Kentucky Senator Kenneth 0.
Gibson of the Sixth District. Senator Gibson is interested in proposing legislation
designed to protect landowners from
loss due to mining subsidence. In addition to speaking at the seminar, Gibson
will conduct a panel discussion at the
end of the seminar.
Other speakers on the seminar agenda include George Kelley, of the U.S. Office of Surface Mining, David Rosenbaum, of the Kentucky Natural Resources Cabinet, Willard Stanley, of Mines
and 1inerals, and David Short, of the
Mineral Law Center. The seminar is expected to be both interesting and
informative.
Registration will begin at 8 a.m. in the
lobby of Jenny Wiley State lodge and the
program will begin at 8:45. The registration fee is $30. Planning and arrangements for the seminar are being made
by the Kentucky Geological Survey and
the Institute for Mining and Minerals
Research ( IMMR).
To advance r egister. contact the
IMMR's O.I.S.T.L. office at (606)
252-5535, extension 400, or write OISTL
at P .0 . Box 13015, Lexington, Kentucky
40 Gallon Electric
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Natural Gas
40Gallon
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1107701
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Call 886-2403
8:00 a.m.-5:00 p.m.
886-6961 after 6:00 p.m.
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••
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~
Anno~Jncing
the Opening
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of the practice of
Dr. Virginia de Guzman
who will join
1x4
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1x4
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1x6
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© 1984 Lowe's Compames.lnc_
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New Winter Store
Hours!
Store Hours: Mon.- Fri. I to 5:30
Sat. 1:00 to 5:00, Sun. 12:00 to 5:00
General Surgeon
Ky. Highway 122 (Left Bcal'cr Road)
Martin. Ky.
·:
Liquid Paint &
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Dr. Ray de Guzman,
in the de Guzman Clinic
tasl actrn9
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IN PAINTSVILLE
Located On Old Route 23
''·'"'"
,,.._
• • t l l l Ul1 Ia '
Phone 789-3800
•
�nuary 18, 1984
S.Ctlon One, Paae Ten
The Floyd Cvunty Times
Akers Exhibits At State Capital
Two From Area Named
To State Cabinet
Two Eastern Kentucky natives among
those appointed to positions with the
Cabinet for Human Resources. They are
William D. Minix, of Frankfort, native
of Prestonsburg, and Fontaine Banks,
Jr., also of Frankfort, who is a native of
Pike county. Both will serve as deputy
secretaries of the cabinet.
Minix was deputy commissioner of the
Department for Health Services prior to
his appointment and has also served as
executive director of the cabinet's Office
of Policy and Budget, deputy commissioner of the Department for Social Insurance and chief executive assistant to
the secretary of the cabinet.
Banks is a former executive assistant
to former Gov. Bert T. Combs and Gov.
Edward T. Breathitt, and was vicepresident of the Appalachian Regional
Hospitals, lnc. and senior vice-president
of Excepticon, Inc.
WEEKEND GUESTS
Mr. and Mrs. Ed Tackett and Judge
Charles M. Tackett, of Lexington, spent
the weekend with Mr. and Mrs. Milton
Ryan, of Allen. While here, they visited
with Mrs. Virginia Tackett and Mr. and
Mrs. Thomas James Tackett and Jennifer, of Prestonsburg, and Mr. and Mrs.
Joe P . Tackett, of Larkslane.
ALL
WINTER
.MERCHANDISE
FOR SALE-1983 Patriot
Mobile Home, 14x60,
2-bedroom, nice, like new,
$12,000. Also, would be
Interested In trading toward house and Jand In
this area.
CALL 886-6342
11/.2
l
~
OFF
----·-"CHRIST:\1,\S EVE DAY," a watercolor by Gary Akers, natfve Floyd countian, is curre'ltly on exhibit at
tht' State Capitol, in KE~TUCKY REVISITED: 1983, a survey exhibition of Kentucky art.
Tht> 108 paintings in "Kentucky Re\isited" were selected from more than 1,000 entries submitted. The resulting
('Xhibit has , at·ied content and, hopefully, has succeeded in its objective as an overview of art activity in the
Commonwealth.
Gat') Akers' recent paintings may be viewed at Gary-Lynn Galleries, 8165 Mall Road, Florence, Ky.
IN MEMORIAM
IN :MEMORIAM
Written by his mother, Ida Hunter. In
memory of Richard Lee Hicks. Pictured
are Richard and his baby.
He was taken from home in 1977, he is
gone now to Heaven. I've thought of him
night and day, ever since he's been
away. He was so innocent aad young, I
miss him so much, my son.
In memory of Thermal Jackson
Pratet·, who departed this life on
January 30, 1978.
.~oftly the stars are shining,
• Upon a precious grave;
Beneath lies the one we loved.
The one we could not save.
Our heart aches with sadness,
• Our~yes shed many tears;
God !hlly knows how much,
We miss him as days go by.
Sadly missed by
FAl\'IILY
Cherry Blossom Soup, a Japanese
delicacy, is made by placing pickled
cherry blossoms in hot water.
SUNDAY WON'T DO!
God won't accept Sunday. He
said the Sabbath, not the First
Day. Jesus said It was a vain
worship to keep man's comand·
ments and not God's-Mark 7:7.
Free cassettes or written
literature-specify which.
CHURCH OF GOD
(SEVENTH DAY)
c/o Jerry Bentley
Rt. 4, Box 737
Plkevl!le, Ky. 41501
12·23-6tpd
MEMORIAL SERVICE
An impressive memorial service, in
remembrance of members who died
durmg the year 1>f 1983 was conducted
during Sunday morning services, at the
Community United Methodist Church,
under the direction of the Rev. T.L.
Biggs, pastor. As a bell tolled, a speaker
stepped forward as a representative of
the church, and placed a vase, containing a rosebud on the altar. The speakers,
and those in wh~ memories they made
the presentations, were: Jimmy Joe
DeRossett for C. Ollie Robinson;
Frances Cooley for Grace DeRossett;
Roger Spradlin for Hern Burke; Viola
Cooley DeRossett for Mary Mann; Allie
Spradlin for Ollie Hill; Hansel Cooley for
Roy Reid, and in memory of an associate member, Rebecca DeRossett for
Vera Edwards. The service was closed
with prayer by the Rev. Biggs.
Childbirth Classes
Scheduled at PCC
The Big Sandy Family and Childbirth
Education Association is sponsoring a
multi-media prenatial series for couples
who are to have a child or are considering parenthood.
The series will discuss and answer
questions on various aspects of pregnancy, parenthood, and community
resources for the new family. The series
will be held at 7 p.m., January 18,
January 24, and February 1 at the
Magoffin Complex Building A-1, Prestonsburg Community College.
For further information or to register, ·
call Ann Slone, 886-3863.
DENTAL TIPS
Dr. H.G. Salisbury
RICHMOND PLAZA,
PRESTONSBURG
PHONE 886·2676
THE NEED FOR ORTHODONTICS
Q. When is orthodontic work necessary?
A. The two chief physical reasons for orthodontics are the
disharmony among individual teeth (overcrowding) and
the inability of the upper and lower jaws to meet (occlude) properly.
This takes in three major conditions. In the case of
OVERCROWDING, malposed, tilted and rotated teeth interfere with proper biting and chewing. Upper teeth can
no longer mesh with lower teeth as they should, and are
difficult to clean, thus causing more cavities. BUCKED
TEETH, the most common problem, is characterized by
a prominent upper jaw, or teeth that jut too far out o~er
lower teeth. With a PROTRUSIVE JAW, the lower Jaw
extends further forward than the upper jaw so that the
lower teeth are in front of the upper. All three of these
conditions can make eating and speaking difficult.
Regular visits to your dentist can help spot problems
which need further Investigation.
Greyhound Must
Continue Routes
Greyhound Lines will have to continue
bus service on U.S. 27 between Lexington and Covington and on U.S. 460
between Mt. Sterling and Paintsville,
but will be allowed to drop bus service
on two other routes.
John A. Stephenson, deputy secretary
and commissioner of vehicle regulation,
issued the final order this week on
Greyhound's application to abandon bus
service on four routes in Kentucky.
The order approves Greyhound's application to abandon service between
Hopkinsville and Guthrie on U.S. 41 and
between Rush and Morehead on U.S. 60.
It was Greyhound's second application to discontinue service on U.S. 460
and U.S. 27. The first application was
denied in March 1983.
"The testimony presented at the
public hearing last fall indicated considerable legislative and public concern
over possible cancellation of the U.S. 27
and U.S. 460 routes," Stephenson said.
"There is significant use of these
routes and no reasonable alternative
pUblic transportation I believe these
two routes must be maintained to ensure
adequate public transportation for the
people who depend on it," he said.
Transportation Secretary Dr. Floyd
G. Poore said Greyhound can apply to
the Interstate Commerce Commission to
abandon the routes.
"I have directed Deputy Secretary
Stephenson to testify on the need for continuing bus service on these routes, if
necessary, at any ICC hearings," Poore
said.
In the application, Greyhound proposed to continue service at Covington and
Lexington, using the interstate. Service
would have been discontinued 2long U.S.
2:7 at Newport, Fort Thomas, Falmouth,
Cynthiana and Paris.
The proposal to stop service between
Mt. Sterling and Paintsville would have
left 12 eastern Kentucky communities
without service. Mt. Sterling and Paintsville would have continued to be served
by other routes.
The twelve communities that would
have lost service are Camargo, Jeffersonville, Frenchburg, Wellington, Ezel,
Grassy Creek, West Liberty, Bloomington, Salyersville, Falcon, Oil Springs
and Staffordsville.
CARD OF THANKS
The family of Mrs. Delsie Mae Scalf
wishes to thank all those who sent
flowers or expressed kindness during
their bereavement. A special thanks to
the Boldman Free Will Baptist Church
ministers for their words of solace.
THE FAMILY
NOTICE OF
INTENTION TO MINE
Pursuant to Existing Permit
Nu ber 436-0128
In accordance with the provisions of
KRS 350, notice is hereby given that Cardo Coal Company, 60 Hamill Road, Huntington, West Virginia 25701, intends to
transfer its permit to Kenerco Corporation, 5480 Swanton Drive, Lexington,
Kentucky 40511.
The existing operation is approximately 0.6 miles southwest from U.S. 23
junction with Stratton Branch Road ~nd
located 0.6 miles southwest of Lev1sa
Fork of Big Sandy River. The latitude
is 37' 34' 50". The longitude is 82' 40' 28".
The surface area is owned by Cecil B.
Hall, John M. Stumbo and Ray
Campbell
The existing operation is located on
the Harold U.S.G.S. 71 2 minute quadrangle map. The operation will use th~ ~on
tour strip and auger methods of muung.
The application has been filed for
public inspection at the De~artment for
Surface Mining Reclamation and Enforcement's Prestonsburg Regional Office, 431 South "Lake Drive, Prestonsburg, Kentucky 41653. Written comments, objections; or requests for a permit conference must be filed with the
Director of the Division of Permits, 6th
Floor, Capital Plaza Tower, Frankfort,
Kentucky 40601.
All comments, objections, or requests
for a permit conference must be received within fifteen <15J days of today's
date.
lt.
Reporting
Tip Income
If you work in a bar or restaurant, your responsibilities a~
an employee for reporting tips
have not changed. You must
report all tips to your
employer.
The change in the law may
require your employer to re-·
port a minimum of 8°/o of your
food and beverage sales as
tip income.
For further information ask
the IRS for free Publication
531, "Reporting Income From
Tips.·"
A public service message from
the Internal Revenue Service.
�Wednesday, January 18, 1984
The Floyd County Times
FIR T CHILD BOR •
Ti ·lOthy and Jennifer C. Martin are
announcing the birth of their first child
a so~, Sunday, January 8, at Centrai
Bapt1st Hosp1tal in Lexington. He has
been named Timothy Ryan Martin. His
maternal grandmother is Mrs. Mildred
Kendrick, of Prestonsburg, and his
ternal grandparents are Ezra and
Doris Martin, of Allen.
AARP Opposes Adoption
Utilities Tax I
Jack Freed, president of the Jenny
Wiley Chapter AA.R.P. encourages all
senior citizens to attend the public
meeting at the Floyd County Board of
Education to oppose the proposed adoption of a 3 per cent utility tax. The
meeting will be held Thursday, January
19 at 6 p.m.
VISIT IN CINCINNATI
Mrs. Gorman Collins, Sr., of Prestonsburg, and her sister, Mrs. Fannie Merritt, of Louisa, visited with their brother,
Don Jordan, in Cincinnati, last weekend.
They were accompanied by Mrs. Rose
Collins, who was the guest of her
brother, Adam Martin, at Dry Ridge.
IWANIANNES TO MEET
Weather permitting, the Prestonsburg
Kiwaniannes will hold their next monthly luncheon-meeting, Thursday, January 'a, at 12:30at May Lodge. The club's
president, Mrs. Garnett Fairchild, urges
all members to be present.
RETURN FROM NEW YORK
Mr. and Mrs. Joe D. Weddington and
their son, Joe David Weddington II
have returned to their home here f~o~
New York City, where they spe~t the
holidays with their daughler, and son-inlaw, Mr. and Mrs. Andrew Tucker.
RETURN FROM FLORIDA
Following their return from Florida
last Sunday, Mr. and Mrs. George
Laven, of Allen, called on her sister
Mrs. Bill Williams, and Mr. Williams, at
their home at Cliff.
ELLIOTT
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Pikeville 432·0033
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Model Search
New York Model Interviews
0
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Do you want to be a Cover Girl with one of New
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u
e
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For personal interviews and information
call
VOGUE
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LEXINGTON
269-8407
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treatments. Other programs offered Limit one per
person.
t \\~iJ~,ht lo-.... 'arir\ "Aith tht indi,iduaJ.
Hwy.23
Paintsville
789-7441
Coupon expires 1-31-84
DOCIA B. WOODS, SOCIETY EDITOR
ADAH CHAPTER, O.E.S., MEETS
Monday mght, January 9, the Deputy
G:rand Matron, Wanda Wright, of Jenkms, and the Deputy Grand Patron,
Arius Holbrook, of Whitesburg, both of
District 5, paid their official visits to
Adah Chapter 24, Order of the Eastern
Star, here. Following the meeting, refreshments were served. Wanda Elste
is the Worthy Matron, and George Elste
is the Worthy Patron of the local lodge.
Regular meetings of this organization
are on the second and fourth Monday
nights of each month at 7 o'clock.
HONORED ON BIRTHDAY
Friends and members of the family of
Mrs. Dania Bingham paid tribute to her
with the celebration of her 87th birthday,
at her home last weekend. Saturday,
January 7, Mrs. Bingham's daughter,
Mrs. Willia Mae Branham, presented
her with a decorated birthday cake.
There to celebrate the occasion on that
day were, the honoree, Mrs. Bingham,
her daughter, Mrs. Branham, Mr. and
M~s. Don Branham and family, and
Miss Mary Morrison.
Sunday, Mrs. Willia Mae Branham,
and another of Mrs. Bingham's daughters, Mrs. Anna Jean Howell, surprised
their mother with a birthday dinner.
Sharing this occasion were the guest of
honor, Mrs. Bingham, Mrs. Willia Mae
Branham, Mr. and Mrs. Estill Howell,
Mr. and Mrs. Barry Howell and
daughters, Misty and Angela, Judy and
Heath Endicott, Mr. and Mrs. J.W.
Wills, Mrs. Lula Wallen, and Misses
Mary, Lois, Martha, and Tressie
Morrison.
Following the dinner, refreshments
were served, a period of reminiscing
was enjoyed, and Mrs. Bingham was
present.e~ many gifts. Her daughter,
Mrs. W1lha Mae Branham, and a family friend, Mrs. Lula Wallen, remained
for an overnight visit with Mrs. Bingham.
ATTEND UK GAME
Mr. and Mrs. Gorman Collins, Sr., attended a basketball game at Rupp
Arena, Lexington, last Wednesday
night. From Lexington, they went to
Louisville, where Mr. Collins conducted
business.
ANNOUNCE BIRTH
A rose on the altar of the First
Methodist Church, during services there
this past Sunday morning, announced
the birth of Corlie Michelle Frazier,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. William C.
Frazier. Other flowers there were from
the Sewing Circle of that church.
ATTEND OPEN HOUSE
Mrs. Kay Roberts was the guest here
on New Year's Day, of her mother, Mrs.
May K. Roberts, and they attended
open house at the Ranier Methodist parsonage.
MODEL SCHOOLS AGENCY
GUESTS HERE
Mrs. Robert M Sirkle <md Mrs. Ken
Morgan, of Lexington, visited with Mrs.
Rill PPttrey and Mrs. Rebecca Rasnick
here Saturday aftern:xm, January 7,
while their husbands attended a meeting
and the installation of officers at Zebulon
Lodge No. 273, where Dr SirkJe and Mr.
Morgan, who are past Grand Maslers of
the Grand Lodge of Kentucky, were the
installing officers. During the time they
were here, Mrs. Circle and Mrs. Pettrey
called on Mrs. Lucy Ransdell and Mrs.
Dally Waddles, on South Arnold Avenue.
Prater-Hubbard
To Wed Jhiday
or 3%
CALLED TO LEXINGTON
Mrs. Phyllis Ranier, Mrs. Mary
Gladys Allen, and Mrs. Jack Frost went
to Lexington, Sunday, to be with Mrs.
Glenn Spradlin and family, following the
death of Mr. Spradlin there, earlier that
day.
FOR SALE-22,000 glass lined
water tank. 600 gallon tank.
Meyers pump.
PHONE (AREA CODE 606):
928-4197 or 928·8169 ~~1-18·
Section One, P . . . Elev_.
MEETINGS CANCELLED
Among the meetings that have been
cancelled, due to inclement weather,
have been that of the John Graham
Chapter, Daughters of the American
Revolution, Tuesday aflernoon, January
10, and the Prestonsburg Day Homemakers on the same date.
RETURNS HOME
Mrs. Della Herald has returned to her
home here from Ashland, where she
spent several days as the houseguest of
her sister, Mrs. Hazel Baldridge. Mrs.
Herald was accompanied here by Mrs.
T.L. Biggs, who had been visiting with
her mother, Mrs. Beula Lawson, at
South Shore.
ATTEND FUNERAL
Mr. and Mrs. Carl Horn attended
funeral services for their aunt, Mrs. Betty Spurlock, at Gallopolis, Ohio, Saturday, January 14. They were joined there
by Mr. and Mrs. James Spurlock, of Virgie, and Mrs. H.B. Spurlock, Jr., of
Allen. While there, they spent sometime
in the home of Mr. and Mrs. H.B. Spurlock, Sr.
HERE FROM LEXINGTON
Mrs. Joyce Harris and her daughter,
Miss Becky Lou Harris, of Lexington,
were here during the weekend for a visit
with Mrs. Harris' mother, Mrs. Rebecca Rasnick, and their aunt and uncle,
Mr. and Mrs. Bill Pettrey. They all attended services at the Irene Cole
Memorial (First) Baptist Church, Sunday morning, and later that day went to
Garrett, for a visit with another family
member, Rudolph Spencer.
ATTEND HACKWORTH RITES
Relatives and friends of Mrs. Jerry
(Julia Lee Spradlin) Hackworth, who
called at the Carter Funeral Home and
att'ending funeral services for her at the
Bonanza United Baptist Church, Sunday, January 8, were Mr. and Mrs. Jobe
Ousley, Huey Spradlin, Sr., and Mrs.
Judith Ann Pickering, all of Walbridge,
Ohio; Mr. and Mrs . Jerry Lionel Hackworth and sons, of Haubstadt, Indiana;
Huey Spradlin, Jr., Newman, Georgia;
Jobie Lee Ousley, Baldwin, Georgia;
Mr. and Mrs. B.H. Colvin, Curtis, Ohio;
Mr. and Mrs. Maynard Hackworth, Ada,
Ohio; Mr. and Mrs. Charles Selvage,
Alger, Ohio; Mrs. Gene Smith, and Miss
Barbara Snipes, Homer, Michigan ; Mr.
and Mrs. Glen Hampton, Mr. and Mrs.
James Whitely, Mrs. James Spradlin,
and Miss Ruth Spradlin, all of Dayton,
Ohio; Mrs. J unie Fairchild and son Bill,
Christenburg, Ohio; Mrs. Esta Mae
Brown, and Mrs. Edith Fairchild and
daughter, Janice, Paintsville; Mr. and
Mrs. W.H. Powers, and daughter, Pat,
Lexington; Mr. and Mrs. Eugene Benge,
Somerset, and Mrs. Elsie Hackworth, of
Salyersville.
BURCHETT, BOLLING VOWS SAID
Miss Elizabeth Burchett and John
Mark Bolling, III, were united in marriage, Thursday, January 12, at the First
United Methodist Church, in Lexington,
with the church's pastor, the Rev. Mark
Gibbons, performing the marriage ceremony, in the presence of immediate
family members. Miss Burchett is the
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Hansford Burchett, of Cow Creek, and Mr. Bolling is
the son of Mrs. Abigail Grant, and the
grandson of Mrs. Myrtle Allen, both of
Prestonsburg. Mr. and Mrs. Bolling will
reside in Lexington, where both are
employed.
BIRTH ANNOUNCEMENT
Mr. and Mrs. Jerry Bellamy are an~ouncing the birth of their second child,
fu-st daughter, at the Pikeville Methodist
Hospital, Friday, January 13. The baby,
who has a brother, Kyle, has been named Bridgett Lynn. The maternal grandparents are Mr. and Mrs. William C.
Bevins; the paternal grandparents are
Mr. and Mrs. Earl Bellamy, and the
maternal great-grandmother is Mrs.
Vera Thompson, all of Meta.
OLD CHRISTMAS PARTY
Ancient carols and folk tunes were
sung and played at the Old Christmas
party, held at May Lodge, January 8, the
Sunday following the traditional Old
Christmas on January 6.
Mrs. Kathryn Frazier, director of the
Kentucky Highlands Folk Festival and
Old Christmas programs, presented
selections, first asking Mrs. Edith
James, the Founder, to tell the story of
Old Christmas.
This was followed with readings by
Mrs. Laura Weddle of, "The Cattle-Low
at Midnight," by the late Henry P. Scalf,
and "The Mountain Whipporwill," by
Stephen Vincent Benet.
Members of the Women's Chorus, who
sang "0, Little Town of Bethleham" to
a traditional melody, "The Seven Joys
of Mary," were Dorothy Wells, Elizabeth Lynn Frazier, Garnett Fairchild
Ethel Burke, Margaret Alley, Kathy
Harris, and Betty Rowland. Garnett
Fairchild then sang "What Child is
This? " to the traditional English tune,
''Green Sleeves.''
Sixth grade students of Elizabeth
Lynn Frazier danced the "Virginia
Reel," originally the Sir Roger de
Coverly.
Local musicians provided the tunes
for the square dancers, led by Georgia
Munsey, and humorous stories were told
by Tim Sizemore.
Mrs. Myrtle Allen and Mrs. Bill Pettrey registered guests.
AFTERNOON GUESTS
Mrs. Willia Mae Branham and Mrs.
Frank Branham were the afternoon
guests, Tuesday, of one of their close
friends, Mrs. Lula Wallen, at her home
in Green Acres. They spent the afternoon sewing.
HONORED ON BIRTHDAY
Miss Melissa Haywood was honored
on her 11th birthday with a supper at the
Western Sizzlin' Steak House, with her
grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Arthur W.
Haywood, as host and hostess. Other
family members present were Miss
Haywood's parents, Mr. and Mrs. Philip
Haywood, her sister, Miss Jacquelyn
Haywood, and her aunt, Mrs. Phyllis
Ranier. Melissa was presented a decorated birthday cake, and many other
gifts by her family.
Mr. and Mrs. Oliver Prater, of Prestonsburg announce the forthcoming
marriage of their daughter, Miss Rebecca Lorraine Prater, to Mr. Timothy Edward Hubbard, son of Mr. and Mrs. John
Paul Hubbard, of Auxier, on Friday,
January 20, at 6 p.m. at the Chestnut
Grove United Baptist Church, located on
the Mountain Parkway.
The gracious custom of an open
ceremony will be observed. Friends and
relatives are encouraged to attend.
SPEND MONTH IN FLORIDA
Mr. and Mrs. George Laven, of Allen,
have returned to their home following a
month's visit with their daughter and
son-in-law, Captain and Mrs. Steve
Hampton, and children, Stephen, and
Stephanie Ann, at Orlando, Florida.
While there, they visited with Floyd
county friends, in Okeechobee, Ft.
Myers and Bonita Springs, Florida, and
spent some time at Ft. Myers Beach,
Sanibelle Island, and other points of interest. Miss Stephanie Ann Hampton
celebrated her 20th birthday during her
grandparents visit.
FIUPATRICK
FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH
-
· West Prestonsburg, Ky.
Across From Clark School
Sunday School. . .. .. .. 10:00 atm.
Morning Worship . . ... . . . 11 a.m.
Sun. Evening Worship .. 6:00p.m.
(except when school is outl 7.00 p.m.
Wed. Bible Study .... ... 7:00p.m:
Youth Church for ages 5-10
during Sunday Morning Worship
•NURSERY PROVIDED•
REV. JOHN WOODS, Pastor
ALL
WINTER .MERCHANDISE
Y2
VISIT IN PAINTSVILLE
Mrs. Jane Bond, her son Aaron and
daughter, Hollie, were in Paintsville,
last weekend shopping and visiting with
friends.
OUR APOLOGIES
The name of Mrs. Elizabeth Ramey
was unintentionally omitted from the list
of persons who attended the Prestonsburg Woman's Club, at the Emma Wells
May Cultural Center, Thursday evening,
January 5. Mrs. Ramey is the club's
president.
OFF
PHONE 886-1791
COURT STREET PRESTONSBURG
FALL AND WINTER
MERCHANDISE
.
'
~\.\. s~\.ts
c~s"~
t'O
~~~~"~s
PRICE
STORE-SHOE STORE-DENIMLAND
OPEN FRIDAY NIGHTS UNTIL 7 P.M. - PRESTONSBURG
.....
�Wedne.cllay, January 18, 1984
The Floyd County Times
PRICES GOOD THRU TUES., JANUARY 24, 1984.
WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO UMIT QUANTITIES AND TO CORRECT PRINTING ERRORS.
Section One, Paae Twelve
OIIIREAI SAVIIIIS ALL IllS WEEK AT PIC·PACI
WHOLE
SEMI·
eles
HALF
I.29LB.
LB.
'259
U.S.D.A. CHOICE BONELESS
WHOLE
Cube Steak ......
16 oz. FISCHER MELLWOOD
sI ·
Sliced Bacon ......
12 OZ. FISCHER
gge
Wieners ................... .
ork
•
LB.
$•
U.S.D.A. CHOICE BONELESS ROLLED
ti:r!: . . ... ... . . 6
25 OZ. INDIAN SUMMER
9~
OlD
99
!1!?
Rump Roast .... .............. ........LB. .a.
t;.S.D.A. CHOICE BONELESS
8229
Sirloin Tip Steak ............. l.B.
.
79e
U.S.D.A. CHOICE TENDERIZED
8199 m~H
Sliced
Beef
Liver
..
.
.......
:
....
1.8.
Round Steak . .. . .. .. ... l.B.
'139
FRESH LEAN
$ ... fJ9~ 14 OZ. KINGSFORD
Ground Chuck... ..... .. ....... .. . .a. · Meat Patties .... . ............... .
16 OZ. FISCHER (EXCEPT BEEF)
8169
F~y~E;TLeg Quarters La.S9e
Sliced Bologna.. .. .. ...........
FROZEN
8J79
~-~~~~~~~~IZZARDS OR LIVERS La.S9e
Ocean Perch Fillets ....... LB.
FIRM CALIFORNIA
l~~r::f. · · ··· 59~
HEAD
SWEET JUICY CALIFORNIA
Navel
Oranges.
5
69~
MILD FLAVORED YELLOW
l,!l:;nl!~.~-- · ···· . 99-c
D'Anjou 59~ Pears ....
LB.
F:bBEL-49oz.
Detergent...........
8J69
WASHINGTON STATE
mESH CRISP
p;;~\t5Jgus 9~Cauli·
Apples/
Flower
2/7940
8940
Pole Beans ..... ... La.
8J79
3 /81
Kiwi Fruit. .. .. .. .. . . 1 SUPER SELECT SALAD
Cucumbers .....
TASTY JUICY
HEAD
ISTOREWIDE SAYINGS I
v:;A1i.~~~D-~~ -~~~~ -~~~~~~ . . 2/89~:
F~~~ti~~~~-~ A-~~-~-~~~~..
8J29
sge
Apple Juice ................ ........... ..
.. . .. .. .. ..
.. ...
BIG QUART BOTTLE INDIAN SUMMER
3 OZ. BEEF,MUSHROOM OR CHICKEN
26 OZ. PET ASSORTED
Fruit
Cobblers ....~:~~ ....
8
J
CHERRY
69
Biscuit Mix....
.. . .. ........ ..
1
., .
10 Lb. Cat Chow .................. ..
14 OZ.· 5• OFF LABEL!
Ajax Cleanser.... ....... ......
14 OZ. • 75' OFF ,J.ABELI
Dynamo Liquid.. .. ................. ..
C
14 OZ. KRAFT DELUXE
I
8119
•90 CT. NEWBORN•60 CT. EX·ABSORBANT ,
•48 CT. SUPER PLUS OR MAX. ABSORBANT
32 OZ. PILLSBURY HUNGRY JACK COMPLETE
8119
28 OZ.· 25' OFF LABELl
SHOP & SAVEl
Macaroni & Cheese Dinner
Pancake Mix ......................... ..
8599
2/7 ge_
Orange Kooler Bars . Pk~~- 99
24 OZ. HYDE PARK WAFFEL OR
3/89e
75• OFF LABEL! PURINA
Hash Browns
6 OZ. JENO'S COMB .•PEPPERONI OR SAUSAGE
Pizza Roll .. . ................. .
[
4 , 89e
i\:i;I~B~n ........................... 8 2 19
5.5 MARTHA WHITE POUCH
12 OZ. ORE IDA SHOESTRINGS OR SHREDDED
ESKIMO
Ramen Pride Noodles .
. . . 99e
Pancake Syrup
20 OZ. FAMILY FA.VORITE!
8J79
Oreo Cookies .......................... .
'2"
,
....
8
~
Pampers... ................... ,.
FOUR BAR PACK ( BUY THREE ·GET ONE FREE! )
8J79
Irish Spring Soap ..................... .
Ajax Liquid c:eaner ............. ..
'179
TUESDAY IS DOUBLE STAMP DAY
PRESTONSBURG & MARTIN STORES ONLY
PRICES PIC-PAC
12 OZ. KRAFT
Velveeta Singles ................... ..
12 OZ. SEALTEST SMALL OR LARGE CURD
Cottage Cheese ....................... ..
8169
e
79
s~~~Cream .......................... :....... 59~
�MANY
MODELS!
Cavalier Type 10 Coupe
USIC-CARTER-HUGHES invites you in for a test drive today!
2-doors, 4-doors, wagons, ~
:
* FREE Rust-Proofing on any new Chevy or Buick
Purchased between Jan. 11 and Jan. 31st!
WE HAVE JUST RECEIVED A
LARGE SHIPMENT OF CAVALIERS,
AND MORE ARE ARRIVING!
IT'S A. sl79 95 VALUE!
WE MUST
MAKE
ROOM!
-
-
SEE ONE OF THESE SALESMEN:
ED MUSIC, ESTILL LEE CARTER
PAUL HUGHES, NELSON BALDRIDGE~ .
EDDIE MEADE, BOBBY BURCHETT '
CARL CASTLE, ROGER~ROS~ETT ~ :
DAVE ESTEPP-'- TOM_ROSE , -··
PLEASE NOTE
Rural Med Scholarship
Applications Being Taken
Because of the increasing number of
pictures of pageant winners, runners·
up, and participants submitted for
publication, The Times will no longer
accept lor publication pictures of
e~ents more than one month past.
Subscription
Rates· P.er Yea.r
tn FIO)!d'County, $&.oo
Elsewfiere In Kentucky, $10
Outside Kentuc.k y, $12.50
Pl.ase note. expiration date
opposite yOur name on wrap·
per. or on your copy_of The
Times. Because of Increased
mallln& cost$, 110tlces ~f
subscription eJYi~ratlon ~are
no
lorfaer
ritalled
to
subscribers.
Subscriptions may be mailed to:
The Floyd County Times
Box 391 .._._.
Prestonsbura, Ky. 41653
'·.
The RKMSF is accepting applications
from Kentucky medical students, who
have been accepted at University of
Kentucky or University of Louisville
Medical SchooL The f\llld provides a
$4,000 loan per year to a recipient, who
is willing to practice in Rural Kentucky
for one year for each loan received.
Special forgiveness of loans is available
to those who practice in Kentucky's 85
critical counties.
The fund is the oldest and most successful in the nation. In its 38 years, the
Rural Kentucky Medical Scholarship
Fund has loaned more than $2.3 million
and has placed 450 physicians in Rural
Kentucky. Sixty percent of the recipients
are still practicing in rural or critical
areas of the State, and another 16% are
still practicing in metropolitan areas.
Anyone interested in applying for a
scholarship should contact the RKMSF
office at KMA Headquarters, 3532
Ephraim McDowell Drive, Louisville,
' Ky. ·40205, or call502-459·9790. Deadline
for applications is April 15, 1984.
''I take the same care with
animals that
Block takes
with taxes."
ALLEN, KY.
874-2290
UfA.~M.~ P.M~,
PRICES IN EFFECT
WED., JAN~ 18
THRU TUES., JAN. 24
• QUANTITY RIGHTS
RESERVED
• NOT RESPONSIBLE
PRINTER'S
Bradley Darrell Daugherty, son of Mr.
and Mrs. Darrell Daugherty, celebrated
his first birthday December 23, at his
home at Grethel.
Those attending the celebration were:
Fran Daugherty, Brent Newsome, and
Dustin Rogers, all of Grethel; Jenna
Hamilton, of Teaberry ; Beverly and
Michael Gross of Harold; and Candi and
Matthew Branham of Ligon.
Bradley's maternal grandparents are
Julinia and Eugene Hamilton of Teaberry. His paternal grandparents are
the late Mary Helen Daugherty of
Grethel and Donald Daugherty of Craynor.
CUT
GROUN
PORK
CHOPS ..
BEEF...... .
~l!~.j; ~
•
"l know I'm in good hands when Block prepares my tax
return. My preparer goes to school every year to get special
training. And she does taxes hundred of times. Training
and experience- that's what makes you good at your job.
I'll care for the animals and let Block take care of my
taxes."
People who know their business go to
H&RBLOC~
-z
SB Richmond Plaza
Main Street
Prestonsburg
Martin
28!1·9879
888-3885
Open 9 AM-9 PM Weekdays, 9-5 Sat.
•
Consult your Yellow Pages for the office nearest you.
MasterCard and Visa accepted at most area locations
LB.
29
LB.
Coal Prep Workshop
Set at Pike College
The 18th in a series of coal preparation workshops at Pikeville CollegE} _will
be held Saturday, January 21 in the ~r
mington Science Center. Registration
with coffee and donuts starts at 8 a .m .,
and the workshop will begin at 8: 25.
The program will feature "Lubrication and Lubricants at Preparation
Plants". Speakers include James Ellington and Charles Croley of Chevron
~mpaey .
The workshop will provide current mformation for plant operators, foremen,
and others who have an interest or
responsibilities in coal preparation. The
Central Appalachian Coal PreparatiOn
Society and Pikeville College Coal
Center sponsor these programs.
For additional information contact
Ben Ward or Don Hall, Pikeville ~liege,
<606> 432-9362; Cliff Hagy, Beth Elkhorn
Corporation, (606) 832-6222; Dan Juett,
National Mines, (606) 447-2042; or Gary
Spears, McCoy Elkhorn. (6061 835-2022.
29
FISCHER'S SLICED
PLATTER
BACON.........
$119 PR·.NGLES $1 0 9
LB.
POTATO CHIPS ......
• SEE OUR FULL PAGE AD ELSEWHER~ IN THIS PAPEII •
�Wednotlday, January 18, 1984
Kenis Tackett
Kenis Tackett, 53, of Grethel, died last
Thursday at the Mountain Manor Nursing Home in Pikeville following a long
Illness.
Born September 19, 1930, he was a son
of John Tackett, of Grethel, and the late
Margaret Hamilton Tackett. He was a
self-employed carpenter.
In addition to his father, he is survived by his wife, Mrs. Sarah Hall Tackett;
two sons, Rex and Terry Edward Tackett, at home; one daughter, Emma Lou
Tackett, of Grethel; five brothers,
Charlie and Willie Tackett, both of
Grethel, Bert T. and Andy Tackett, both
of Albion, Mich., and Emmitt Tackett,
of Ivel; two sisters, Mrs. Nan Newsman,
of Grethel, and Mrs. Pearl Hunt, of
Marion, 0., and one grandchild.
Funeral services were conducted Sunday at the Pilgrim Home Church at
Grethel by Regular Baptist ministers,
and burial was made there in the
Newman cemetery under direction of
the Hall Funeral Home.
Clabe Bingham
Clabe Bingham, 90, of Prestonsburg,
died Monday at the St. Clair Medical
Center in Morehead, following a short
illness.
For more than 50 years a member of
the First United Methodist Church, Mr.
Bingham was a past chairman of its
Board of Stewards and at his death was
an honorary member of the board. He
was a former Prestonsburg city councilman and was chiefly responsible for
organizmg the garbage collection
system, here. He had worked as a miner
and for many years owned and operated
a service station in Prestonsburg.
Born December 2, 1893, he was a son
of the late Jeff and Darcus Stephens
Bingham and was married to Maggie
Wells Bingham, who preceded him in
death in 1979.
He is survived by one daughter, Mrs.
Oval Hall, of Morehead; one granddaughter and three great-grandsons.
Funeral services will be conducted at
2 p.m. today <Wednesday) at the First
United Methodist Church, here, by the
pastor, Dr. Ted Nicholas, and the Rev.
Glen Courts. Burial will be made in the
Richmond Memorial cemetery under
direction of the Carter Funeral Home.
James Gibson
James Gibson, 77, of Abbott Road,
died Thursday at his residence following an extended illness.
A retired miner, he was a son of the
late Jim Bob and Rebecca Wright Gibson and was born January 18, 1906. He
was twice married, first to Elsie Poe
Gibson, who preceded him in death, and
later to Ann Allen, who survives.
In addition to his wife, he is survived
by four sons, Darvin Gibson, of Cliffside,
Prestonsburg, John Henry Gibson, of
Redondo Beach, Calif., Bill Gibson, of
Central Lake, Mich., and Michael Gibson, of North Webster, Ind.; two stepsons, Donald J. Hall, of Prestonsburg,
and Ronald T. Hall, of Pierceton, Ind. ;
three daughters, Mary Ellen Owens, of
Finton, Mich., Carlos Harley, of
Hawaiian Garden, Calif., and Rhoda
Wright, of North Webster, Ind. ; a
brother, Dick Gibson, of Sidney, Ind.;
two sisters, Maxie Tackett, of Melvin,
and Roxie Barnett, of Carrie, Oh. ; 32
grandchildren, and 13 great-grandchildren.
Funeral services were conducted
Monday at 2 p.m. at the Floyd Funeral
Home Chapel with the Rev. L.P. Tussey
officiating. Burial was made in the Jack
Arnett cemetery on Middle Creek.
Mrs. Sadie P. Compton
Mrs. Sadie P. Compton, 65, of Salyersville, formerly of this county, died
Thursday at the Highlands Regional
Medical Center following a long illness.
Born July 9, 1918 in St. Paul Minn., she
was a daughter of the late Abe and
Geneva West Compton and was a member of the Missionary Baptist Church of
Allen.
She is survived by her husband, Alvis
CAbb) Compton; three sons, Richard
Compton, of ClevEland, 0., Alvis Compton, Jr., of Salyersville, and Hershell
Ray Compton, of Temple, Texas; two
daughters, Mrs. Leona Nelson, of Brunswick, 0., and Mrs. Rita Faye Mesker,
of Salyersville; one brother, Johnny
Compton, of Paintsville; a sister, Mrs.
Sophia Damron, of Swandale, Va., and
eight grandchildren.
Funeral services were conducted at 11
a.m., Sunday, in the chapel of the Hall
Funeral Home with Willie Rice, the officiating minister. Burial was made in
the Gunnels cemetery at Banner.
Mrs. Delsie Mae Scalf
Mrs. Delsie Mae Scalf, 69, of Mooresburg, Tenn., formerly of Harold, died
January 5 at the Morristown-Hamblin
Hospital.
Born February 28, 1914, she was a
daughter of the late Newberry and Francis White. A retired Logan county, West
Virginia school teacher, she was a
member of the Boldman Free Will Baptist Church at Harold.
Survivors include her husband,
William Wallace Scalf; three daughters,
Linda Schaut, of Milwaukee, Wisconsin,
Nancy Coates, of Charlotte, North Caro'lina, and Sally Semonse, of Miami, Fla.;
a son William Ronald Scalf, of New
Braunfels, Tex.; three brothers, William
White, of Mooresburg, Tenn., Rev.
Woodrow White, of Denton, Oh., and
Perry White, Jr., of Amherstdale, W.
Va., four sisters, Mrs. Ruth Tackett, of
Southgate, Mich., Myrtle Adkins, and
Hazel Griffith, both of Mooresburg, Eva
Solomon, of Taylor, Mich.; and seven
grandchildren.
Funeral services were conducted at
the Boldman Free Will Baptist Church
at Harold with the Rev. Arnold E. Jarrell officiating. Burial was made in the
Scalf cemetery at Stanville under direction of the Hall Funeral Home.
.The Floyd County Tlmea
Obituaries
Glenn C. Spradlin
Glenn C. Spradlin, 73, founder of the
First Guaranty Bank at Martin, died
Friday in Lexington following a short illness.
He was appointed chief state bank examiner for Northern Kentucky the same
year he founded the First Guaranty
Bank, of which he was a retired president. He also served as a special state
commissioner for banking and security
in the 1930s and was executive vice
president of the First National Bank,
here, from 1938 to 1948.
A native of PaintsviJle, Mr. Spradlin
was also a former chairman of the board
of the Hazard Gas Company. He had lived in Lexington for the past five years
where he was a member of the Park
United Methodist Church.
Surviving him are his wife, Mrs. Dora
W. Spradlin; two daughters, Mrs. Toby
S. Bowldy, of Denver, Colo., and Mrs.
Peggy S. Vital, of Coral Gables, Fla.;
one brother, Charles Spradlin, of
Thealka, and two grandchildren.
Funeral services were conducted at 10
a.m., Monday, at the W.R. Milward
Mortuary in Lexington.
Tommy J. Hall
Tommy J. HaU, 76, of Bonanza, died
Tuesday at the Highlands Regional
Medical Center following an extended
illness.
Born September 9, 1907, he was a son
of the late Thomas and Victoria Parrott
Hall. He was a former school teacher
and was employed by the Spurlock Food
Service.
He is survived by his wife, Mrs. Alta
Frazier Hall; three sons, Uoyd G. Hall,
of Prestonsburg, William W. Hall, of
Paintsville, and Tommy Roger Hall, of
Ada, Ohio; five daughters, Betty Brown,
and Barbara Montgomery, both of Ada,
Oh., Janet Kay Hall and Donna Farrington, both of Lima, Oh., and Phyllis
Ann Hall, of Bonanza; nine grandchildren, and one great-grandchild.
Funeral services will be conducted
Friday at 2 p.m. at the Bonanza Free
Will Baptist Church with the Rev. Bill
Campbell and James Dickerson officiating. Burial will be made in the
Stanley cemetery on the Left Fork of Abbott Creek.
Friends may call after 4 p.m. today
(Wednesday) at the Carter Funeral
Home.
William Earl Lyons
William Earl Lyon&, 68, of Garrett,
died Monday at his home following a
long illness.
A son of the late Hiram and Plura
Griffey Lyons, he was born January 10,
1916 in Carter county. He was a retired
miner, and a member of the U.M.W.A.
Local No. 8810, at Garrett.
Survivors include his wife, Mrs. Uoyle
Christine Sloan Lyons; four sons, James
Lyons, of Manito, Illinois, Richard,
Freddy, and Howard Lyons, all of Garrett; four daughters, Dottie L. French,
of Osage Beach, Miss., Norma F. Kinnie, of Williamsburg, Va., Carolyn S.
Moore, of Manito, Ill., and Elizabeth
Gay Howard, of Garrett; three brothers,
James, Graydon, and Hannie Lyons, all
of Brenton, West Virginia; a sister,
Sarah Jane Hall, also of Brenton; 16
grandchildren, and two great-grandchildren.
Funeral services will be conducted at
1 p.m. today (Wednesday) at the Hall
Funeral Home Chapel with Graydon
Lyons officiating. Burial will be made in
the family cemetery at Garrett.
Melvin M. Moore
Melvin M. Moore, 67, of Melvin, died
Saturday at the McDowell Appalachian
Regional Hospital following a long illness.
Born February 17, 1916 in Garrett, he
was a son of the late Marshall and Lucy
McCury Moore. A retired miner, he
served with the United States Army during World War II. He was a member of
the Burton Pentecostal Church of God
for four years. He was twice married,
first to Mrs. Lora Johnson, who preceded him in death and later to Mrs. Valetta Hayes Moore, of Lexington, who survives.
In addition to his wife, he is survived
by two sons, Harold Moore, of Melvin,
and Carrol Moore, of Hi Hat; one
brother, Ernest Moore, of Melvin; a
sister, Mrs. Artie Cooper, of Galena,
Ohio, and four grandchildren.
Funeral services were conducted
Tuesday at 11 a.m. at the Burton
Pentecostal Church of God at Bypro
with the Revs. Speed Hall, Louie Ferrari, and Curt Johnson officiating.
Burial was made in the Newman cemetery at Hi Hat under direction of the Hall
Funeral Home.
Virgil Porter
You Are Invited
Virgil Porter, 69, of Allen, died Tuesday, January 10, at the Riverview
Manor Ntirsing Home, here, following a
prolonged illness.
Born May 28, 1914 in Allen, he was a
son of the late Elige and Lucy Crisp
Porter. He was a former deputy sheriff
and had served in the Army during
World War II. He was a member of the
Disabled American Veterans.
He is survived by three daughters,
Mrs. Bonnie Everett, of Sessner, Fla.,
Mrs. Beulah Hammonds, of Old Fort, 0.,
and Mrs. Margaret Albright, of Lindsey,
0.; two sisters, Mrs. Eunice Carroll, of
Deland, Fla., and Mrs. Martha Preston,
of Paintsville.
Funeral services were conducted at 10
a.m., Friday, in the chapel of the Hall
Funeral Home by the Revs. Earl Waugh
and Kenneth LeMaster. Burial was
made in the Riley Hall cemetery at
Allen.
T<1 the
North Lake Drive
Church School 10:00 a.m.
Morning Worship 11:.15 a.m:
'tO
,~·
c.t -
710 Burke Ave.,
Prestonlburc, Ky.
SUNDAY SCHOOL
FIRST ASSEMBLY
Oi GOD
West PmtDMbllfl, Ky.
WADE MARTIN HUGHES
Pastor
Sunday School. .... . ... 9:45a.m.
Mor1ling Worship .... . ... 11 a.m.
Evening Worship ... .. . .. .. 7 p.m.
Wedn~sday Prayer Study~ .7 p.m.
Auxier Freewill
Baptist Church
Sunday School ... 10:00 a.m.
Morning Worship .... 11 a.m.
Evening Worship .. 6:00p.m.
Prayer Meeting
·Thursday ....... 6:30p.m.
Pastor, Elder Douglas Burkett
Asst. Pastor Clyde Bowling
12-14-tf.
"The Church Where Exciting
Things Are Happening"
Pastor
REV. TIMOTHY D. JESSEN.
Pastor
Highland Avenue
Freewill Baptist
Church
Sunday School ......... . . . .. 10 a.m.
Morning Worship . . . ... . . .. : 11 a.m.
Evening Worsbip ... .. ..... . . . 7 p.m.
Wednesday Worship . ... . ..... 7 p.m.
.
~
Taylor L. B1ggs, Pastor
Phone: 886-8087
SUNDAY
Sunday School . . . . ... . . . 10 a.m.
Worship Service ...... . .. 11 a.m.
Evening Service ..... . .... 6 p.m.
WEDNESDAY
Prayer Meeting . . . . . . .. 7 p.m.
CLIFFORD H. AUSTIN, Pastor
---
ZION
DELIVERANCE
TAIEINACLE
FIRST
UNITED
METHODIST
CHURCH
80 So.Arnold Ave., Prestonsburg
Dr. Ted Nicholas, Minister
Sunday School ... . .. .... 9:45
Morning Worship .. .... 11:00
Junior and Senior UMYF2:30
Rhythmic Choir . .. .. .. . . 4: 30
Wesley Bell Choir ... .. .. 5:15
Evening Service . . ... . .. 7:00
WAYLAND, KENTUCKY
Sunday School 11 a.m.
Evening Worship 7 p.m.
Wednesday Prayer Service 7 p.m.
Saturday Evening Worship 7 p.m.
Ada Mosley, Pastor
Everyone Welcome.
A CHRISTIAN WELCOME
AWAITS YOU.
All The Earth Shall Worship Thee. 12. 14-tf.
SUN., WDOC AM-11:00
'~E~ISCO!)AL
..
McDow~
'Ky.
SWJd~hool. ........ 9:45a.m
Moming WorShip ........ 11 a.m.
Evening Worship . ...... . .. 6 p.m.
Wednesday
)>rayer Meeting ........... 7 p.m.
H. Bailey Sadler, Pastdr:.
·
1-ii-t •
VisitOrs- ExP,ected
COME
. WORSHIP
The First Ch rch of ·Go
lliftnitJ Dr., Prestlldlrl. Ky.
w'Ttt us
.
J<E~IN COLLINS, Pastor ·
'SUNDAY:
StWdaY School .. . . . .. .. 9:45p.m.
Morning Worship .. .. . 10:45 a.m.
Evening Service ... .. .. 6:00p.m.
AT
~,
"CHURCH
ffl.~~
CEI'!¥OP4tl
..
.
PR$_pNs&U~~· I<_ENTUCKY 4111S~
SURDA.U
, 9:45u.~
SeMel IIIII liWt elas
TUESDAY:
Prayer Encounter . .. .. .7:00a.m.
WEDNESDAY:
Prayer Service ......... 7:00p.m.
WDOC·AM
Ii 1.••-Jtly_~~ri"
•
'.
2:00p.m. Sundays
EVERYONE .WELCOME
~
WAlLAND
·uNITED
CATHOLIC CHURCHES
Of Floy~ County
MITHODIST
cHURCII
$.;.u~lcclz
Jemima A. Shumate
Mrs. Jemima A. Shumate, ffl, of
Bypro, died last Friday at the King's
Daughters' Hospital in Ashland follow.
ing a long illness.
A daughter of the late John and Mint
Salisbury Allen, she was born January
1, 18!17 and was preceded in death by her
husband, Van Shumate, in 1970. She was
a member of the Eastern Star.
She is survived by two daughters,
Mrs. Wilam Davis, of Frankfort and
Mrs. Georgia Smith, of Bypro; two
brothers, John and Cliff Allen, both of
Prestonsburg; four grandchildren, and
one great-grandchild.
Funeral services were conducted at 11
a.m., Monday, at the Hall Funeral Home
chapel with the Rev. John Adams officiating. Burial was made in the John
Allen cemetery at Sugar Loaf.
CHURCH
9:30A.M.
10:45 A.M.
Berniece Crum
. ":t"'"
""~.,._G,
WORSHIP SERVICE
FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH
Berniece Crum, 47, of Dana, died
Saturday at the Riverview Manor Nursing Home, here.
She was born January 24, 1935 at
Dana, and was a daughter of the late
James and Arlena Akers Newsome.
Survivors include her husband, Jacob
Crum; two sons, Joey Dean Mullins, and
James Lionel Crum, both of Dana; a
daughter, Beverly Lee Bradley, of Prestonsburg; a brother, Edward Newsome,
of Vermillion, Ohio; two sisters, Geneva
Boyd, of Dana, and Anna Mae Crum, of
Martin. and two grandchildren.
The Rev. Bobby Joe Spencer officiated at funeral services conducted Tuesday at 10 a.m. at the Little Salem
Regular Baptist Church at Dana. Burial
was made in the family cemetery at
Dana under direction of the Hall Funeral
Home.
CIMMUNlTY
UNITED
METHODIST
First Presbyterian Church.
Lottie Johnson
Funeral services for Mrs. Lottie
Johnson, 91, of Hi Hat, will be conducted
at 10 a.m. today (Wednesday) at the Old
Beaver Regular Baptist Church at Minnie. Mrs. Johnson died Sunday at the
McDowell Appalachian Regional Hospital following a long illness.
She was born October 8, 1892 in Mousie
and was a daughter of the late Charlie
and Polly Ann Farley Keens. She was
preceded in death by her husband, Will
Johnson, in 1964, and was a member of
the Old Beaver Regular Baptist Church
for five years.
She is survived by a brother, Elbert
Keens, of Dema.
Burial will be made in the Rene Hall
cemetery at Kite under direction of the
Hall Funeral Home.
Bible Chu'Lck
R.R. #5
Presto~.burg,
Kentucky 4.1653
Spurloci Fork of Middle Creek
SERVICES
Sunday SchooL ...... .. .. . .. . . . . lO:oq a.m.
(Classes for all ages)
•
Sunday Mofning Worship Setvice .u:.ooa.m.
Sunday EvaiingService ... .. . ... . .7:00p.m.
Wedneaday-Prayer and Bible Study7:00JII'.m.
Welcome You
.St. Theodore, Prestonsburg
A church with a message
for-chil'dren of all
7 p.m., Sat; 11 a .m. Sun:
St. Juliana, Martin
5 p.m. Sat.; 9 a.m~un .
RADIO PRQGRAMS
ag~s.
Bunruiy School. ... . .... 9:45a.m.
Morning Worship ........ 11 a.m.
, (Nursery Provided)
Come and gr..ow with us t
Sun.-WMDJ Martin
11 :05 a.m.
· Sun.-WDOC-FM ,restoosbwll 11:00 a.m.
!Wed.-WDOC Prestonsburg ...... 10:55 a.m.
l'rl.-WRLVSalyerville
. ,.7:50am
.WEYMAN McGUIRE, Pas~r
Pastor: Father Ralph Belting
358-4419.
285-3254
!EVERYONE"JS ALWAYS WELCOME!
PHILIPPIANS 2:16
,
''BOLDING FORTH THE WORD OF
MAYTOWN
UNITED
METHODIST
CHURCH
LIFE"."
Dan Heintzelman-Pastor
Box 850, Marlin, Ky. 41649
Parsonage Phone-285-3444
"A Christ Centered Church
Built On Love"
·ITO BE ILikE} THE' JEifll.
·~
ACTS 2:1-41
S.4q-AI c~
~
~~
PRlSIONSBURG.
CHURCH OF ·CHRIS;T
SOOTH LAKE DRIVE
LORD'S DAY
'BI.a.£ CLASS ....................... 10:00 A.M.
WORSHIP ....................•.... 10:45 A.M.
EVENING WORSHIP ............•. 6 P.M. STD. TIME
7 P.M. D.S.T. TIME
WEDNESDAY
BIBLE STUDY ........ ~ ................. 7 P.M.
RADIO BROADCAST
.
WPRT MONDAY thru FRIDAY 9:30 A.M.
WMDJ SUNDAY 9 A.M.
.
"CoN Let Us Reason Together'' Isaiah 1:18
Evangelist BeMie Blanken'ship 886-3379, 886-6223.
The growing church for
the growing Christian.
PROCLAIMING
NEW TESTAMENT
CHRISTIANITY
t
·
No Book but the Bible.
No Creed but Christ.
No Name but Christian.
FIRST CHRISTIAN CHURCH
Morning Worship .. .... 9:30a.m.
.Sunday School. .... . .11:00 a.m.
Youth Group .
. 5:00p.m.
Evening Worship . . .... 6:30p.m.
Come and grow with us!
Weyman McGuire, Pastor
358-4419
429 N. Arnold Ave.
Prestonsburg
Sunday School ........... 10 a .m.
Morning Worship . . . . . . . 11 a .m .
Evening Worship . .. . .. . . .6 p .m.
Wed. Bible Study ... . ... .. 7 p.m .
Dial-a-Prayer-a86-8551
Walt Staude, l;'r~acher-a86-8773
'----------------------1-·-4-·tf~
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. . .
FIRST ASSEMBLY OF GOD
Lorie Vannucci, Pastor
Phone 285-3051
Martin, Ky.
Sunday School.. . . .. .. .10 a.m.
Children's Church .......... 11 a.m.
Morning Worship .......... 11 a.m .
Youth Worship
.6p.m.
Evangelistic Service
. 7 p.m.
Wednesday, 7 p.m.
Family Night
LOOKING FOI 'SOMETHING DIFFERENt?_
Attend Services At The
FIRST CHURCH OF GOD
Otto Martin
Otto Martin, 71, of Wayland, died
Wednesday, January 11, at the
McDowell Appalachian Regional Hospital following a long illness.
Born July 20, 1912, he was a son of
Mrs. Mary Webb Martin, of Ocala, Fla.,
and the late Mont Martin. He was a mine
electrician.
In addition to his mother, he is survived by his wife, Mrs. Elizabeth Robertson Martin; two sons, James E. Martin,
of Wayland, and Mack Webb Martin, of
Martin; two sisters, Mrs. Vivian Berkley, and Mrs. Nadine Fultz, both of
Ocala, Florida, and four grandchildren.
Funeral services were conducted last
Friday at the Wayland United Methodist
Church by the Revs. Weyman McGuire
and Mabry Holbrook, and burial was
made in the Mont Martin cemetery at
Wayland under direction of the Hindman Funeral Home.
Section
(LiUle Paint) 1h mile off Route 1428
Between Prestonsburg & East Point, Where
4
'THE DIFFERENCE IS WORTH THE DISTANCE"
SUNDAY SCHOOL . .. . . . 10:00 a.m.
MORNING WORSHIP .. . 10:45 a.m.
YOUTH SERVICE ... . ... 6:00p.m.
EVENING WORSHIP .... 6:30p.m.
BIBLE STUDY <WED.> .. 7:00p.m.
<NURSERY PROVIDED)
Bible Study
9:45 a.m.
Morning Worship . . 11 a.m.
Evening Worship . 5:30 p.m.
Mid-Week Pr.ayer Se1Yice7 p.m.
RADIO BROADCAST
WQHY-FM 95.5
MON.-FRI., 8-8:15 A.M.
ROY L. TINCHER, Pastor
I
FIRST AVENUE, DOWNTOWN PRESTONSBURG
NURSERY PROYIDm AIID PUNTY OF PUKING
. STEVE HOPKINS, PASTOR. MINISTER OF MUSIC, GUS KALOS.
Morning
•
ser>lce broadcast
live. II: 15, WQH\' F'l 95.5
�WedneeciiiY, January 18, 1984
The Floyd County nmes
Section Two, Paae Three
PORK
•
$
.CHOPS ..
OPEN 8ro 10
PH: 478-5275
HARQ~~'
EVERY DAY
.. MARTHA WHITE
S-LB. BAG .
DIET PEPSI, PEPSI,
,MTN. DEW OR
PEPSI FREt..................
$~-
FRESH PORK
SHOULDER PICNIC ROAST ................ ~
2/$1
BOX
I
~~
PORK NECK BONES ......................... La.
·lJ.S.D.A. CHOICE
CHU.~K
2189 ·ONIONS ....... ~~· .
$119 CALIFORNIA
PINEAPPLE JUICE ...............~Nz.
_· NAVEL ORANGES · _
FRENCH STYLE OR CUT
C
WISK DETER~ENT ................. .
4/$1_ .:
FiUStfPEARS 10JS
PIUSBURY BIG COUNTRY
IDAHO
1
· DEL MONTE GREEN BEAN$ ~::·
DEL MONTE
.
so~rn~
KAL-KAN DOG FOOD ........... ~~:·
-
3J$l
.
$289
64-0Z. BTL
.
STEAK ............................... LB.
U.D.l
CHOICE
$14 9
$149
LB.
FRESH
GROUND BEEF
c
3/$1
$179
BUTTERMILK BISCUITS ..... 1~1
1~':·
POTATOES
2/$1 09 ,
HOT DOG BUNS .............
$18
9
FA-ItiC SOFTENER ............ ~~..
.
ICIA HAMBURGER OR
39c
CHUCK ROAST
69 :
YELLOW
C
.BADcoNENDS &PIECES ..................3-I.B.$149
.iPPLEs . . . . ~:67cc
:~ .
HI-DRI
HOMEMADE
$279
89C
98
.
., COUNTRY STYLE SAUSAGE .............. LB.
2/$1
.
.JUMBO PAPER TOWELS- ..... ~~~~l
KY.
LETTUCE·
6 5 --
2-LB.
HICK-SLICED BACON .................. PKG.
FRESH HEAD
.
~ Frou·R. 99 c
8-16-0Z. BTLS.
~ORMEL
LB.
S.PAK
FINAL TOUCH
vELvEErA
· ~HEESE SLICES ................. ~~0:.
149
..
a-oz. BOX
CHICKEN/TURKEY/BEEF
J.~N~~s
$
................3/$1
Five Years Old
MAYTOWN NEWS
.
377-.
.
GIVE SOMEON-= A-l.IFT
S!=ND A
BOUQUET OF BALLOONS.
, ,At..L OCCASIONS - DELIVER~Il~
.
-11~
Subscription
Rates Per Year
In Floyd County, $8.00
El.ewhere In .Kentucky, $10
~utslde Kentuc"y, $12.50
•
Please note expiration date
oppoalte your name on wrap·
per or on yo.,r co,Y of The
Times. BecauM of lncr.....t
malllna cost•, notices of
subscription 'uplratlon are
no
lonaer
mailed
to
subscribers.
S.ncriptions "'1'1 be mailed to:
The Floyd County Times
Box391
Prestonsbura, Ky. 41653
~~~--.-----~
(Last week's correspondence)
Mr. and Mrs. James Melvin Allen and
children, of Freeport, Ohio, spent the
New Year's holiday with her parents,
Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Spencer. They also
visited his aunt, Lexie Allen, at Eastern
and his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Woodrow
Allen, at Willard.
Mrs. Tamyra Hensley has been a patient at Our Lady of the Way Hospital.
Ralph 0 . Spencer was in Parkersburg,
W. Va., on business, two days last week.
Mrs. Ruth Martin was a patient at Our
Lady of the Way Hospital, a few days
last week, for treatment.
Sharon Webb, of Lexington, visited
relatives here, Saturday.
New Year's dinner guests of Mr. and
Mrs. Ralph Spencer we1·e Mr. and Mrs.
James Melvin Allen and children, of
Freeport, Ohio, Gary Baile:>, of Allen,
Mrs. Nancy Bailey, of Langley, Mr. and
Mrs. James Spencer and boys, of Martin, and Mr. and Mrs. Ralph 0. Spencer
and children, of Eastern.
Mr. snd Mrs. Johnny Peters spent the
weekend in Huntington. They were Sunday dinner guests of Mr. and Mrs.
Norvel Fetty.
James E. Allen and grandsons, Barron and Jon, attended the Tractor-Truck
Pull in Huntington, Sunday.
Mrs. Doris Robinson is recuperating
at home after spending several weeks at
St. Joseph's Hospital in Lexington. She
is much improve<:~.
B.&M.
SATELLITE
New Location
Bryson Medical Clinic
Don V. Bryson, M.D.
1160 Madison Avenue
Paintsville, Ky. 41240
Effective Jan. 16, 1984
Mark Eugene McKinney, celebrated
his fifth birthday, November 9. He is the
son of Phyllis McKinney, of Martin and
the late Eugene McKinney and the
grandson of John Hunter, of Printer, and
the late Virgie Hall Hunter, and Lillie
Yates McKinney, of Printer, and the late
Harvey McKinney.
Community Service
Classes at PCC
Hamilton's Discount Furniture Phone: 377-2897, Price, Ky.
Among the classes offered at Prestonsburg Community College through its
Community Services Program will be
jazz, tap, and ballet classes beginning
this week. Ballet classes are on Monday
at 4 and 5 p.m.; tap and jazz on Thursday at.7: 15 and 8:15p.m., with tap also
at 10 and 11 a.m., Saturdays.
Gymnastics classes begin tomorrow
<Thursday) at 4 and 5 p.m. at Archer
'Park for advanced students. Tyke
classes will be at 9 p.m., Saturday;
beginning classes at 10 a.m. and intermediate classes at 11 a.m.
Behind Kentucky Fried Chicken
Form.erlyOwned by Dr. J.p. Parikh
CARD OF THANKS
Home phone: 587-2816 or 587-2775. Beaver. Ky.
WILL NOT BE UNDERSOLD ON ANY
SATELLITE SYSTEM.
• All Major brands available ·
• 80-day tree service
• 3-year warranty on mounts
Banlc Financing Available
. • PRICES EFFECTIVE THRU JAN. 22•
• NOT RESPONSIBlE FOR PRINTER'S ERRORS
• WE HAVE FEED FOR LIVESTOCK.
• WE WELCOME FEDERAL FOOD STAMPS.
It
The family of Pearl Martin would like
to take this opportunity to thank everyone for their help in the loss of our loved one: those who sent food and flowers
or just spoke comforting words A
special thanks to the Boldman Freewill
Baptist Church for the food and all of the
love they have shown and to the Hall
Funeral Home for being so kind.
THE FAMILY
It.
No appoint~nent necessary
Phone 789-3797
.
�Wedneaday, January 18, 1984
Homecoming Queen
Greta Ann Sexton, daughter . of
Wendell and Betty Sexton, of Garrett,
was crowned Homecoming Queen at
Garrett Grade School.
She is the granddaughtel' of Amos
Slone, of St. Marys, Ohio, and Lula Sexton, of Garrett.
Miss Sexton is an honor student, captain of the Devilettes basketball team,
and an eighth grade cheerleader.
Disabled Vets
Urged to Join
Disabled veterans can play a part in
shaping the laws which determine their
benefits, said Everett Williams, Jr.,
commander D.A.V. Chapter 128, at Wayland. Williams urged disabled veterans
to join the D.A. V. A representative of the
organization may be reached at 358-3075.
PART I
INVITATION FOR BIDS
Church Housing Association of Prestonsburg, Inc., will receive bids for the
complete construction of the project entitled Highland Heights Roof Repairs,
Prestonsburg, Floyd County, Kentucky,
including complete removal and
replacement of roofing and roof
sheathing on ten (10) buildings until2:00
P .M. E .S.T. (Eastern Standard Time)
on the 31st day of January, 1984, at the
"Housing Office'', Green Acres Housing
Project, US 23 North, Prestonsburg,
Kentucky, at which time and place all
bids shall be publically opened and read
aloud.
Proposed forms of contract
documents, including specifications, are
on file at the Green Acres Housing Office, and at the office of Ross AsSociated
Architects, 206 West Main Street, Lexington, Kentucky 40507.
For the public use of material men
and subcontractors, specifications will
be on file at the following offices:
F .W. Dodge Corporation, 160 Moore
Drive, Lexington, Kentucky 40504; F .W.
Dodge Corporation, 3715 Bardstown
Road, Louisville, Kentucky 40218; F .W.
Dodge Corporation, 105 East 4th St.,
Suite 1200, Cincinnati, Ohio 45202 ;
Builder's Exchange, P .O. Box 5398,
Louisville, Kentucky 40205.
Copies of documents may be obtained by depositing $25.00 with Ross
Associated Architects for each set of
documents so obtained. Such deposits
will be refunded to each person who
returns the specifications, and other
documents in good conditions within 10
days after the bid opening.
Please include a separate check for
Five Dollars ($5.00) to cover postage
and handling for those contractors requesting that their plans be mailed. If
a separate check is not sent, documents
will not be mailed. Incorrect or combined checks will be returned to Contractor unprocessed.
A certified check or bank draft,
payable to Church Housing Association
of Prestonsburg, Inc., U.S. Goverrunent
Bonds, or a satisfactory bid bond executed by the bidder and acceptable
sureties in an amount equal to five percent of the bid shall be submitted with
each bid. The successful bidder will be
required to furnish and pay for satisfactory performance and payment bond or
bonds.
Church Housing Association of Prestonsburg, Inc., reserves the right toreject any or all bids or to waive a ny informalities in the bidding.
No bid shall be withdrawn for a period
of thirty (30) days subsequent to the
opening of bids without the consent of
the Owner.
CHURCH HOUSING ASSOCIATION OF
PRESTONSBURG, INC.
By Julia M. May
Title Managing Agent
The Floyd County Times
Indian Ocean Atoll
Is Scientists Dream
Fairchild's New
Eastern Eguipment •
a nd Distribution
Center Is Centrally
Located To S-e rve
You BeHer
By THOMAS HARNEY
we'd better not slip because the rock is
Smithsonian News Service
razor-sharp."
The two chartered sailboats carrying
Aldabra hosts a diverse array of
the Smithsonian expedition had been at plants, most from Africa and
sea in the Western Indian Ocean for four Madagascar originally. The Smithsodays when the scientists spotted their nian's Dr. F . Raymond Fosberg made
destination. Peering through field one of the first major modern surveys
glasses, they could almost feel the of Aldabra's vegetation in the 1960s and
energy of the sea crashing against the '70s, cataloging more than 175 species of
forbidding coastline of the tropical plants, six times as many as on an orisland-Aldabra.
dinary atoll. Twenty species are found
Aldabra. The very name sounds ex- nowhere else.
otic, conjuring up a setting from The
The scientists also explored the atoll's
Arabian Nights. Indeed, its name is shallow lagoon by boat, tricky business
believed to be derived from the Arabic because of the tides. Twice a day, water
words meaning "the green." Aldabra is levels rapidly fallS feet, and a boat can
an island that many scientists dream of easily be left high and dry for hours in
studying. It is one of the last unspoiled the lagoon if one is not cautious.
natural sanctuaries on our planet-an
By scuba diving in the channels
Fairchild International has
ideal location for scientific research on separating the islands, where the tide
recently
purchased Eastern
evolutionary processes.
goes in and out at rates of up to 12 knots,
Machine,
a
division of Elmac CorActually, Aldabra is not a single the scientists found rich growths of sea
island, but rather four coral-based grass, coral and other marine pla nts and
poration in Whitesburg, KY,
islands arranged in an elongated ring animals. "While underwater," Robert
located at the Pine Mountain
enclosing a lagoon peppered with still Sims says, "we could see large schools
Junction.
The name of this new
more islands. This geological formation of reef fish, including large sharks, passis called an "atoll." Aldabra's ing through the channels with the outgofacility will be the Fairchild
140-square-mile lagoon-dwarfing the ing tide and then returning with the inEastern Equipment and Distribuislands' collective 60 square miles-is coming tide."
tion Center. The facility is
the world's largest atoll lagoon.
The mangrove forests fringing the
In this setting are the only surviving lagoon make Aidabra one of the world's
situated on several acres of land
colonies of the Indian Ocean giant tor- great sea birds islands. Nesting in these
and offers the complete line of
toise and the last surviving colony of trees are the largest populations of
new Fairchild products and prodflighUess birds of the Western Indian frigate birds in the Western Indian
uct servicing, including Fairchild
Ocean, as well as large numbers of uni- Ocean, as well as huge numbers of redque plant and animal species.
footed boobies .
replacement parts, component re That Aldabra is so rich and unspoiled
Thousands of other birds-including
builds, and a wide inventory of
owes much to geography. Located in the red-tailed and white-tailed tropic birds,
used and rebuilt mining equipsouthernmost Seychelles Islands, 400 noddies, Audubon's shearwaters and
ment
for your inspection. This
miles east of Africa, the remote atoll lies terns-can be observed nesting on the
off the world's major shipping lanes in many islands in the lagoon. They feed
facility is geared to giving the
a region lashed for much of the year by in the shallow waters of the reef flats or
fastest service and Fairchild's
fierce winds and rough seas. There is no within the lagoon itself, along with other
usual high quality to the coal
landing strip for airplanes ; to reach the wading birds- herons, egrets, sacred
atoll, one must charter an ocean-going ibis and flamingos.
operators in the eastern coal
vessel or wait for a ship that delivers
Bohmhauer, Carpenter, Thomas and
"Our new Equipment and Distribution Center in
fields.
supplies several times a year from Sweeney, accompanied by two SeychelWhitesbur~.
increases
our
ability_
to_
serve
you
For the past eighteen years,
Mahe, the main island of the Seychelles, lois guides, crossed the lagoon to South
faster
.
..
,
Myrleen
and
Jack
Fa1rch1ld
.
Fairchild
has been dedicated to
650 miles away .
Island on the atoll's eastern shore, a
On Aprill, 1983, after months of plan- four-hour boat trip. From there, they
serving the needs of the coal industry, and the new Eastern Equipment and
ning, the Smithsonian team reached _made their way across a long stretch of
Distribution Center is continued evidence of this commitment.
Aldabra. From the deck of one of the rough terrain to a field camp at Cinq
Stop by the Fairchild Eastern Equipment and Distribution Center - you will be
boats, Dr. Brian Kensley, a zoologist and Cases on the coast. They had come to
glad you did.
leader of the Smithsonian expedition, this part of the atoll to collect specimens
could see the ranch-style buildings of the from the coastal reef flats and the area's
spartan Aldabra Research Laboratory brackish-water ponds ; while there, they
and a wide beach, the only low point had the opportunity to see one of the
along Aldabra's rugged, steep coast atoll's biggest concentrations of torwhere a small craft can make a relative- toises.
ly safe and easy landing.
Aldabra is the last outpost of the InThe scientists had made the difficult dian Ocean giant tortoise. Today, more
voyage to begin a five-year investigation than 150,000 of these huge animals live
of the makeup and evolutionary history on Aldabra, giving the atoll its "Lost
of the atoll's reef and lagoon. " When World" atmosphere. Despite their great
Fairchild East ern Equipment and Distribution Center • P.O. Box 969 • Whitesburg, KY 4 1858 • 1606 ) 633· 2223
we're finished," Kensley says, "we will
(Continued on Following Page)
have a much more complete knowledge
.I
r
of its complex marine communities and
a broader understanding of how coral
reefs function in general."
'
Coral reefs, he points out, are important ecological systems in many parts
of the world. Not only are they builders
and protectors of land, but they also support an abundance of a nimals, major
sources of food in the tropics.
'
'
.
Accompanying Kensley on the expedition were biologists Dr. Kristian
Buffalo Creek acreage-approximately one acre of bottom land is includWE HAVE HOMES-BOTH BRICK AND FRAME-THAT WILL
Fauchald, Michael Carpenter, Diane
QUALIFY FOR THE NEW FLOYD-JOHNSON COUNTY BOND
ed in this twelve-acre tract near Pike Co. line. Located on blacktop road
Bohmhauer, Michael Sweeney and
MONEY. WE ALSO HAVE LO~WOO~ED, SECLUDED AND
and priced to sell.
Robert Sims from the Smithsonian NaCLOSE TO TOWN-AND WE WILL HELP YOU WITH
'On Daniels Creek we have a modular on 260 front feet, wedge shaped to
PRELIMINARY PLANNING. CALL FOF FURTHER INFORMAtional Museum of Natural History; Dr.
the top of the hill. E xtra insulation and double-pane windows and a fireTION.
Mark Hay from the University of North
place in the family room make this three-bedroom, two-bath home with
Carolina Institute of Marine Sciences ;
A-frame for rent or lease purchase. Calll'o r details.
beamed cathedral ceiling in living and dining room a real energy saver. ·
James Thomas from Newfound Harbor
Special Gener al Electric kitchen with side-by-side refrigerator, selfAlmost new brick ranch with carport on a country size lot close to four
Laboratory, Big Pine Key, Fla., and Dr.
clean range, pot scrubber dishwasher, compactor and disposal, is open
lane 80. There is a large living room with picture window. kitchenPatricia Hutchings from the Australian
to panelled fa mily room . Central heat and air, deck area, utility
family area with utility room, three bedrooms, one and one half baths.
National Museum, Sydney.
building tn stay.
low gas rates and city water is available. This home has been well cared
Aidabra is managed and controlled by
for and FLOYD COUNTY BOND MONEY financing is available.
the Seychelles Island Foundation, an inModified A-fra me with wrap-around deck : lots of windows and light. 2
dependent international trust formed for
Two-story home in Martin on big creekbank lot- room for garden. Livbeautiful stone fireplaces, one is two-story height. Foyer, living-diningthe purpose of conserving the atoll in
ing room with fireplace, dining room, den, eat-in kitchen, utility room,
kitchen (great room ) area, three bedrooms, plus lower level rec room
perpetuity. The foundation maintains
a nd unfinished basement (utility, storage. workshop area) . Central
three bedrooms. 2 1 ~ baths. Partial basement. Forced a ir furnace, conboats, a network of field camps and a
crete block double garage. downtown location. Great family home.
heat and air. Good buy with Floyd County Bond money financin g
research station for 15 scientists on Ile
a
vaila ble. Adjoining lot could be added.
Small home in private location to rent in Prestonsburg.
Picard, one of the atoll's major islands.
Close to Prestonsburg we have a 14 x 70 Windsor mobile on a very
The only perma nent residents of the
Three-bedroom older home at an affordable price in Paintsviile. Livin g
private lot with garden a rea and plenty of parking. Living room with
atoll are the station's ma nager and 10 to
room. family room . kitchen dining combined, newer roof, ne w fur na ct>
skylights, wood-burning stove, dining room with built-in buffet, equip12 Seychellois worke rs ·and their
last year. Three-room apartment in back. Priced to sell at $45,000.
ped kitchen with appliances; also, washer-dryer to stay. Two bedrooms
families .
Small fram e three-bedroom starter or retirement home in a rea l counand an extra unfinished add~n. carport and a storage building make
Using the lie Pica rd station as a base
try settin g. Present owners ha ve given this four year old home excellent
this a v ery good buy at $20,000.
during their 19-day sojourn, the
care. thermopane windows. fully insulated. bac k pa tio. Possible
members of the expedition set out to exFarmers Home Administration fina ncing. Priced w1der $40,000.00.
C~rming three-bedroom, two-story borne with front porch, two bath ~.
plore the atoll's remarkable habitats. All
kitchen with appliances and a fireplace in the living room . Remodeled,_
of Aldabra's la nd surface was formed
Owner transferred . Bruncy-built ranch home on Abbott Creek with
with new carpe tin~ and wallpaper, washer and dryer and window a ir-·
from an ancient coral reef, about 125,000
oversize lot and special decorating. Entry foyer. long living-dinin g
c onditioner to stay . Outs ide storage building with utilities.
years old; now raised 10 feet or more
room with sliders to patio and above-ground pool. equipped kitchen with
Prestonsburg city water and gas. Located just below Sugarloaf on a
above the present sea level by geological
GE appliances. an abundance of cabinets and counter spacE- a nd an eat·
tree-shaded lot.
processes. As a result, Aldabra has a
in area. F amily room panelled. with woodburning firepla ce. three
larger la nd area and a more varied landbedrooms. two full bath s. a nd an attached two-car garage. StoragE>
Commercial Prestonsburg lot con taming appntximately one level acre
scape than an ordinary sea-level atoll.
building to slay. Lovely area of well-kept homes. Old R 7/ II% bond
a
t intersection of Porter and University Drive. Adjoining Highla nd'
But the rought and deeply eroded dead
money assumable loan available.
Plaza Shopping Center. E xceUent location in a growing and busy area.
coral terrain ma kes moving about very
difficult. Another obstacle is the P emWe again have Kentucky Housing money available for new homes in
Two lots on May's Branch in Village Estates. City utilities ; {)Ur contracphis, a dense, wiry shrubbery that grows
Jenkins. Old-time interest rates for a few lucky buyers. Call for details.
tor. your plans.
'
in thickets 8 feet high, covering large
areas of the isla nd's interior.
Nt>w brick hom ~> ready for occupancy in a lovely area just outsidE>
High, dry building ground within walking distance to hospi~l . CouW be
"We first found out how rugged the gotwo home sites or profeuional or business office. 192' front :.:150' deep.
Prestonsburg. Front porch, living room with picture window and fireing is," Michael Carpenter recalls,
City water available.
place wall, dining room , eat-in kitchen with GE appliances. sliders to
"when we hiked back into lie P ica rd's
patio, master bedroom suite, two other bedrooms, two ceramic tile
interior to investigate aquatic life in the
Rarely a vailable-wooded, secluded lots witb acreage ; also lou witU..
baths, utility area and two-car garage. Central heat and air, fully indeep sinkholes that pit the a toll. As soon
acreage. May Branch, Prestonsburg location.
s
ulated
for
energy
efficiency
.
The
fireplace
has
blowers
and
the
roof
is
as we got off the well-worn paths, we had
pitched steep with pull-down stairway for extra overhead storage. City
Brick home-three bedrooms, two baths, tull basement. l!;qlllpped kit.:
to pick our way ver y slowly. We knew
water. cable TV. Value priced. F loyd County Bond Mont>y or let us ht>lp
chen. nice carpeting. Deck with built-in seating, central heat and •Jr
with financing.
Two-car ga rage. Professionally landscaped lot is lOO'x200'. Terrific
space for the money.
·
Thelma- Assumable loan with the lowest closing costs in town! En ergy
We will help you sell what yotl have to seil-and try to find what yo.
efficient brick ranch with attached garage, all freshly painted, on a
wa nt to buy. Apprai~s and counseling. You may be seUing too low a114
good level lot. Foyer, living room, large kitchen-dining-famil y room
buying too high.
with abundance of cabinets and counter space and range and dishOFFICE PHON£: 8~138
washer to stay. Master bedroom suite plus two other bedrooms, two
We Invite You To Call Us.
utility rooms. all drapes to stay. Great neighborhood for children in a
Office Hours: 9 a.m.-3:30 p.m. or By Appointment
quiet residential a rea but off the busy main road . See if this won 't fit
PHYLUS RATUFF LENOX, Real Estate Broker
your budgf'l. Valu t> prict>d a t $59. 500. Call for dt>tail s.
.
F()R SALE
RATLIFF ··& LENOX REAL ESTATE
ALL WINTER MERCHANDISE
NOW
Sec:tlon Two, Pqe Four
1/2
OFF
On{' of the largest and most bea utifully built and dt>corat.{'d homes it has
been our plt>asurt> to offer this year . Built of white s tone (brick> from
North Carol in a. with privacy ( 10 acres ), yet within thrt>{' milt's of
Prestonsburg. Approximately :~200-sq . ft. of living space. plus ovf'rsi7t'
gara ge of 750-sq. ft. and tOO' patio in rear givt> gr.-at spread-out room fo r
famil.v or parties. Space for pool if desir{'d . Old bond H 7/HO(, partia l
assuma ble mortgage availa ble. Shown' by a ppointment.
Phone 886-8689 after 7 p.m.
WAYNE W. RATLIFF, JR., Salesman, Phone: Home 874-2720 after 6 p.m.
JOYCE LYNN BLACKBURN, Sales Representati ve, Day 1-478-9450
ALTA JEAN GIBSON, Sales Representative, Phone 285-3797
VIRGIL 0. TURNER, Sales Represenutive, Phone 432-3367 after 4 p.m.
GUS KALOS, Sales Representative, Phone 1-789-1707 after 6
UNDA LENOX, Sales Representative, Phone 886-3689
JEWEL REED, Sales Representative, Phone 297-6424
CAROL McCARTY, Sales Represenutive, Phone 297·3168
�The
CARD OF THANKS
The family of John B. Newsome, of
Grethel, wishes to express our love and
gratitude to everyone who helped in anyway duriug the loss of our loved one.
Thanks to all who sent the beautiful
flo~ers, all th~> food and . support, by
Jbe•r presence and consoling words of
. mfort.
Thanks to the Zion Church of Old
Regular Baptist to the ministers, and to
the Hall F:uneral Home for their fine service.
God bless you all,
• THE FAMILY
(Continued from Preceding Pagel
size- the largest stands 2 feet high, 4 feet
long and 3 feet wide-they are harmless.
In the Cinq Cases region, they browse
like herds of cattle, keeping patches of
grass clipped as closely as a tennis
court.
"During the daytime, while we were
working," Carpenter says, "they slept
under trees to escape the heat. But in the
morning and early evening, they
wandered around our camp. Only a
fence in front of the camp kept them
from lumbering in and knocking things
over."
On their return to lie Picard, the
biologists stopped for a few hours on
Middle Island to collect invertebrates
from the reef flats and from under the
eroded, undercut coastal cliffs. While
ashore, they encountered another of
Aldabra 's unique rare and endangered
animals, the white-throated rail, the last
surviving flightless bird of the Western
Indian Ocean. An estimated 5,000 of
these birds live on Middle Island.
Most of the reef research during the
three weeks was carried out on the shore
of the lie Picard research station. On the
lie Picard flats , Kensley, Fauchald and
Hutchings collected small crustaceans
and worms. "One of our great interests," Fauchald explains, "is collecting the tiny reef-building plants and
animals that make up the largest base
of the atoll's food chain." Expedition
members also moved progressively out
from the shallows into deep water
habitats, using scuba gear down to 160
feet, collecting sea grasses, sponges,
corals and other marine animals that inhabit Aldabra's spectacular reef.
This study marks the first time that
the Smithsonian has undertaken a comprehensive, systematic study of the
atoll, although other Institution researchers have studied Aida bra in the past.
In 1892, Dr. W.L. Abbott, a naturalist
associated with the Smithsonian, explored a number of the islands of the
Western Indian Ocean and sent back to
the Institution a large and important collection of flora and fauna . Of all the
islands on which he landed, Aldabra excited him the most. Kensley, who will
again lead this year's expedition, understands why.
" Before I left for Aldabra," he recalls,
" I talked with scientists who told me
that Aldabra was the most scientifically interesting place they had ever been
in their lives. Now I find I feel the same
way. I didn't want to leave."
lt.
Master
Dr. Robert Marshall
OF
John W. Hall Lodge
No. 950,
Martin, Ky.
Announces
the following to be ra ised to the
sublime degree of
MASTER MASON
James G. Ratliff, Robert K. Scott, Ricky L Robin·
son, Denzil R. Hall, and Robert A. Damron.
on
January 28, 1984
The lodge will open at 6 p.m . A pot
luck dinner will be served. John W.
Hall Lodge members are asked to
bring a dish of food.
To keep costume jewelry from tarnish·
ing, store blackboard chalk with it in
your jewelry box.
All Brothers Invited
GENUINE
SUEDE
FLEECE
LINED
90
Reg.16.95
and11 .95
BOYS 8Y2·3. Brown
Leather-look,
w1pe-clean vinyl
Hours:
Shoe Show ~~~:~~~:za,
Prestonsburg
County Times
First Runnerup
Indian Ocean Atoll...
CARD OF THA~KS
The family of Audra Boyd wishes to
J.l!ank all of those who were so kind and
.nsiderate during our time of grief. We
want to thank those who sent flowers
and gifts of love. We especially want to
thank the nurses and staff of the Highlands Regional Medical Center and the
ministers and members of the Little
Salem Regular Baptist Church for a
wonderful service and to the Hall
Funeral Home for being so kind. All
your kindnesses were greatly appreciated.
HERMAN AND THELMA CONN
Flo~d
Susan Evans Conley, 17-month-old
daughter of Jimmy and Clarissa Conley,
of Estill, was named first runnerup in
the Wee Miss Mistletoe pageant held at
Martin. She was also the winner of
Christmas costume wear and winner in
photogenic. She was sponsored by Ocassions Unlimited of Martin and the Wayland Fountain.
Susan was named winner in the Jenny Wiley Toyota Baby girl pageant
which was held earlier at Prestonsburg.
Forest Service Asks
Public's Comments
The U.S. Department of Agriculture's
Forest Service is inviting public comments for use in determining what
shares of the nation's timber, range, outdoor reereation, wildlife, wilderness,
water, and other renewable resource
outputs the agency should help produce
during the next 50 years.
Forest Service Chief R. Max Peterson
said public comments on the draft environmental impact statement for the
1985-2030 Resources Planning Act Program issued on January 10, 1984, will be
used to update the program which helps
to guide Forest Service activities. Those
activities include cooperative assistance
programs with states and private landowners, forest and range research, and
management of the 191 million acre National Forest System.
This is the third such program
prepared by the Forest Service to fulfill
requirements of the Forest and
Rangeland Renewable Resources Planning Act of 1974 <RPAl , Peterson said.
The first RPA program was developed
in 1975, and it was updated in 1980.
RPA requires the Forest Service to
identify the role it should play in providing renewable resources to meet
future needs of the nation. The program,
which guides Forest Service activities,
is based on an assessment of future demand for and supplies of those
resources. A 1984 supplement to the
assessment prepared in 1979 indicates
that demand for most products will continue to rise rapidly. Supplies will increase also but at a slower rate leading
to a widening gap between supply and
demand unless steps are taken now to
prevent it, Peterson said.
The draft program statement includes
nine alternatives for Forest Service activities. The alternatives range from one
substantially below the current level and
mix of activities to several which are
substantially higher for some or all
resources. Peterson said the Forest &lrvice has not selected a preferred
alternative.
Comments on the draft environmental impact statement document are due
April 9, 1984.
Comments from reviewers should be
sent to the Regional Forester, U.S.
Forest Service, 1720 Peachtree Road,
Atlanta, GA 30367. Copies of the document can be requested from the
Regional Forester.
Section Two, P . . . Five
FIRST 1\-lETHOOIST
WOMEN MEET
The Women of the First United
Methodist Church, Prestonsburg, met
Monday evening, January 9, in the
church parlor with chairman, Rose
Glenn, opening the meeting with prayer,
a poem and the " Purpose". The ladies
voted to make donations to the "Loaves
and Fishes Food Pantry" and to assist
in paying for the window coverings for
the new Methodist Parsonage.
Following the business session,
refreshments were served to Mary Sue
Moore, Judy Kittle, Roslyn Burchett,
Elizabeth Ramey, Eleanor Horn, Stella
Spurlock, Virginia Shivel, Margaret
Alley, Mildred Branham, Ann Alley,
Jane Wallace, Anna Mae Mellon, Rose
Glenn, Maureen Mayo, Geneva Carter,
Roberta Davidson, Elsie Stephens, Linda Stephens, Mabel Jean Lemaster,
Pearl Nicholas, Clara Bradbury and
Hope Whitten.
Put a layer of gravel on the top of win
dow boxes to prevent rain from spatter
ing dirt on windows.
For a new decor, enamel shabby waste·
baskets and paste on calendar pictures.
Shellac over the pictures
Singing Convention
at Auxier Freewill Baptist Church
STRAND U
Starts Fri., Jan. 20
.. 'D.C. CAB' is 'ANIMAL HOUSE' on wheels I"
Hollywood Reponer
"I had the best time of my life... lots of kneeslapping, laughing and yelling I"
lbr~
New
6:00 p.m.
Then they met
Albert Hockenberry.
a small-town boy
with a big dream .. .
that, despite these
imposstble odds,
they could make it.
Andnow, no one not even the sleazy
commissioner nor
the crooked competition better stand in their way.
CORN FORK SINGERS
Refreshments served afterwards In Fellowship Hall
Everyone Welcome
PRESTONSBURG COMMUNITY COLLEGE
University of Kentucky
COMMUNITY SERVICES/CONTINUING EDUCATION
Spring 1984
TO REGISTER : Mail in fee payment with pre-registration form to James W. Ratcliff, Coordinator, Community
Services/ Continuing Education, Prestonsburg Community College, Prestonsburg, Ky. 41653. Make checks payable
to PCC. For more information, phone 886-3863, ext. 215.
BUSINESS & INDUSTRIAL TECHNOLOGIES
GRAPHIC DESIGN & LAYOUT-Gwen Heffner, March 5-April 9, Mon., 6:30-8:30 PM, M103, $20.
ELEMENTARY HEATING & AIR CONDITIONING-Larry Short, Feb. 2-Apr. 5, Thurs., 6:30-8:30 PM, J159, $35.
FINANCIAL PLANNING-Homer Forster, Feb. 1-Apr. 4, Wed., 6:3o-8:30 PM, PW, $30/person, $45/married couple.
ADVANCEDFINANCIALPLANNING&MONEYMANAGEMENT-HomerForster,Apr.ll-May2, Wed., 6:00-9:00
PM, P207, $20/person, $30/married couple.
ALL YOU WANTED TO KNOW ABOUT HOUSE PLANTS- David Gillespie, Feb. 9, 16, 23, Thurs., ~ PM, Jll9, $15.
REFRESHER SHORTHAND-Mazola Salmons, Mar. 29-Apr. 26, Thurs., 5--7 PM, P203, $20.
INTRODUCTION TO MICRO-COMPUTERS-Ken Robinson, SEC. A: Feb. 6-Apr. 23, Mon., 7-9 PM; SEC. B: Feb.
7-Apr. 24, Tues., 7-9 PM, Jll9-CEU 2.4, $52.
INTRODUCTION TO GRAPHICS ON THE TRS-80--Teresa Rice, Apr. 7, Sat., 9 AM-3 PM, J151, $30.
ASSERTIVENESS TRAINING-Rose Price, Feb. 7-Mar. 13, Tues., 6:30-7:30 PM, M103, CEU 0.6, $10.
DRIVER EDUCATION FOR ADULTS-Sharon Brosmer, Feb. 28-Mar. '1:1, Tues. , 5:30PM, J1'l:/C, $120.
TAX ASSISTANCE-Ron Chaffins, Feb. 4-Apr. 14, Sat., 10 AM-12 NOON, P203, FREE.
FAMILY HEALTH & CHILDBIRTH EDUCATION
HEALTH SEMINARS-Coord. by Dr. Sundarum, Feb. 7, 14, 21, 28, Mar. 6, 13, 20, '1:1, Apr. 3, Tues., 7-8 PM, Pike
Auditorium. $5.00.
PREP~RED CHILDBIRTH-Ann Slone, Jean Rosenberg, Vikki McGuire, 6 wk. classes from Jan.-Aug., 7-9 PM,
PCC, call 886-3863, ext. 213, $30.
WELL BABY CARE-Ann Slone, Jan . 25, Feb. 29, Mar. 29, Apr. 25, May 30, July 25, Wed. 7 PM, Catholic Church,
FREE.
PRENATAL EDUCATION-Kendrick & Neeley, Jan.-Mar., Wed. 7-9 PM, MC AI, $3/class, $9/ series.
BREAST FEEDING SUPPORT GROUP-Contact Pat Hites, 886-8786.
RECREATION & PHYSICAL FITNESS
HATHA YOGA-Clay Goebeler, Feb. 1-Mar. 21, Wed., 6:30-8:00, MllO, $20.
BEGINNING GYMNASTICS-Robin Carlson, SEC. A: Jan. 14-Feb. 18; SEC. B: Mar. 3-Apr. 7, SEC. C: Apr. 21-May
26, Sat., 10-11 AM, Archer Park, $40.
INTERMEDIATE GYMNASTICS-Robin Carlson, SEC. A: Jan. 14-Feb. 18; SEC. B: Mar. 3-Apr. 7, SEC. C: Apr.
21-May 26, Sat., 11 AM-12 NOON, Archer Park, $40.
ADVANCED GYMNASTICS-Robin Carlson, Jan . 12-Feb. 16, Thurs., 4:00-5 :30, Archer Park, $40.
RACQUETBALL-Greg Slone, Mar. 22-Apr. 26, Thurs., 5:30-6:30 PM, Archer Park, $24.
JOGGING-Mar. 20-Apr. 24, Tues., 5:30-6:30 PM, MHO, $15.
BEGINNING TENNIS, Larry Nichols, Mar. 26-Apr. 30, Mon., SEC. I: 10-11 AM ; SEC. II: 11-12 Noon, Archer Park,
$24.
HUMANITIES
U.S. RELATIONS WITH LATIN AMERICA-Dr. TomMatijasic, Feb. 29&Mar. 7, Wed ., 7-8:30PM, P102, FREE.
CALLIGRAPHY-Shelby Barrentine, Feb. 1-Mar. 14, Wed. , 6:30-9:00 PM, J159, $25.
THEATER & DANCE
CHILDREN'S THEATER- Cynthia Manuel, Feb. 1-Apr. 18, We., 5:00-6:45 PM, MC-B, $20.
SQUARE DANCE-Georgia Muncy, Feb. 2-Mar. 8, Tues., 6:30-8:30 PM, MllO, $14/person; $20/couple.
TAP-Dorothy Howard, Jan. 12-May 31, 7:15-8:15 PM, MCB, $18/month.
BALLET-Robin Carlson, Jan. 9-May 8, Mon., 4-5 PM 10 & under ; 5-6 PM, 10-adult, MCB, $18/ month.
JAZZ-Dorothy Howard, Jan. 12-May 31, 8:15-9:15 PM, Thurs., MCB, $18/ month.
MUSIC
BANJO- Sharon Blankenship, Feb. 1-Apr. 4, Wed. Beginners 5-7 PM, Advanced 7-8 PM, J155, $50.
BAND INSTRUMENT LESSONS-Gus Kalos, Jan. 9-Apr. 9, Mon., 6:30PM, J155, $120.
VOICE- Gus Kalos, Jan. 9-Apr. 9, Mon., 6:30PM, J155, $120.
COMMUNITY CHORUS-Gus Kalos, Jan . 9-Apr. 9, Mon., 7 PM, J155, FREE.
QUILTING & PATCHWORK-Shannon Gibson, Feb. 6-Mar. 12, Mon., 6:30-8:30 PM, P216, $25.
BEGINNING SPINNING & WORKING WITH WOOL-E. Roze Allen, Feb. 7-Mar. 13, Thurs., 6-8 PM, MCC, $25.
NEEDLEPOINT-Ann Charles, Feb. 2-Mar. 22, Thurs., 6:30-8:00 PM, P216, $20.
KNITIING/ CROCHETING-Judith Carr, Feb. 6-Mar. 12, Mon., 6:30-8:30 PM, P106, $25.
ADVANCED KNITIING & CROCHETING-Judith Carr, Feb. 5--Mar. 12, Mon., 6:30-8:30 PM, P106, $25.
SPECIALTY SEWING CRAFTS-Helen Wells, Jan. 30-Mar. 5, Mon., 6:30-8 :30 PM, MCC, $25.
BEGINNING SEWING- Shelba Phillips, Feb. 2-Mar. 8, Thurs., 6-8 PM, MCC, $24.
DRESSMAKING-Helen Burchett, Mar. 14-Apr. 18, Wed., 6:30-8 :00 PM, MCC, $25.
DRAPERY CONSTRUCTION-Helen Burchett, Feb. 1-Mar. 7, Wed. 6:30-8:00 PM, MCC, $25.
FOODS & BEVERAGES INTERNATIONAL-Randall Hayden, Feb. 21 ; Mar. 20 ; Apr. 17 ; May 15, Tues. , 7 PM,
P216, $30.
CAKE DECORATING- Shelba Phillips, Mar. 15-Apr. 19, Thurs., 5-8 PM, P216, $25.
CANDY MAKING- Linda Little, April 9, Mon., 6-8 PM, P216, $15.
ARTS & CRAFTS
STAINED GLASS-Bobby Price, Feb. 1-Mar. 7, Wed., 6-8 PM, P216, $25.
BEGINNING PHOTOGRAPHY-David Gardner, Feb. 1-Mar. 21 , Wed., 7-9 PM, Pll5, $36.
ADVANCED PHOTOGRAPHY-David Gardner, March 28-May 1, Wed., 7-9 PM, P115, $30.
BEGINNING CERAMICS-Gwen Heffner, Feb. 7-Mar. '1:1, Thurs., 12:30-2 :30 PM & 6-8:30 PM, MCA, $36.
ADVANCED CERAMICS- Gwen Heffner, Jan. 31-Mar. 20, Tues., 6-8:30 PM, MCA , $36.
POTIERS GUILD- Gwen Heffner, Feb. 7-Mar. '1:1, Tues., 5-8 :30 PM, MC-A2, Semi-Annual Fee-$30.
ART GUILD- Tom Whitaker, January 12, Thurs., 7 PM, Pl06, Annual Fee-$15.
TBA
WATER SAMPLE COLLECTIONS FOR KPDES
COMPUTER PROGRAMMING
INTRODUCTION FOR USING THE COMPUTER PROGRAM :
VisiCalC (t.m.l
SOFTWARE PACKAGES FOR SMALL BUSINESSES
SERIES OF SEMINARS FOR SMALL BUSINESSES
LIFE SAVING/ WATER SAFETY INSTRUCTION
DAY CAMP
MODELING COURSE
COMPUTER CAMP
ACT/ SAT TEST & TAKING SKILLS
BUSINESS OFFICE EQUIPMENT, SHOW, & SEMINARS
DOG OBEDIENCE CLASS
SCUBA DIVING
NAME _ __
-----------------------------------------
PHONE(~-----------
AODRESS
Street or Box l'>o
ver 3:20
.·
AND OTHERS
PRE-REGISTRATION FORM
Showtlmes 7:1!5-9:30-Sunday Matinee Open 1:00 Start 1:30
..
FEATURING:
Oa,ly News
Their cars were broken.
Their company was
almost out of business.
And even the drivers
were wrecks.
.·
Saturday, January 21, 1984
COOKING & TEXTILES
STRAND I
HELD OVER
.,
C1ly
INSTRUCTOR _ _ _ _ _ _ _ COURSE
State
- - - - - COURSE FEE
·.
�edne.ctay, January 18, 1984
'
The Floyd County nmes
(Reproduced below is page 3 of the 21st issue of The Floyd County Times
published Nov. 4, 1927)
.
.·
PAGE
FLOYD COUNTY TIMES
THR!@ ~
•
I Burke, Shirlene Branham, Hazel Bran-
REPORT OF THE
ham, Lucille Goble, Dixie Ramey and
Bernard Tackett.
Grade Three-Joe Jarrell, Teacher.
Allee Allen, Dewey Allen, James Dotson, Marvin George, Emma Leona
Pharis, Dorothy Vivian Lockwood, Junior Tackett and Anna Belle Woods.
Grade Four-Stella Fitzpatrick, teacher
Emma Alice Collins, Eva Allen, Hazel
rcontinuPd from page 1)
Irene Hill, and Luke Prater.
Grade Five-Victoria M. Spradlin.
Gr~(e Five-Victoria Spradlin, Teacher
Teacher.
Jeff Bingham, Willie Mae Burke,
Alma
Collins, Ethel Mae Horn and
Ethel Mae Burke, Aaron Clifton, Alma
Collins, Marion Stanley Collins, Robe!'t Lewr's Harkey Mayo.
Holc:>mb, Ethel Mae Horn, Lewis Har- Grade Six-Eulah Hunley, Teacher.
Geraldine Allen, Glenn Allen, Frank
key Mayo, Jean Morrison, Eulah Mae
Crabtree,
Fanny Ramey, and Chloe
Nunnpry, Francis Patton, Lavonne PatSaunders.
ton, Jack Salisbury, Troy Shepherd,
Dorothy Spurlock, Arthur Thompson, Grades Six and Seven-J. S. Dingus,
Teacher.
and Jimmie George Littleton.
Willlam Dingus, Arthur Hale, HarriGrade Four-stella Fitzpatrick, teacher son Hale, Williamson Herald. CatherHarold Daniels, Billy Morell, Arthur ine Ellis, Mintie Nunnery, Della R.
John Archer, Jr., Woodrow Stephens, Blackburn, Ruth Oppenheimer, Angie
Jessie Louis Coyer, Jennye Elizabeth B. Alley, Malta Wells and Mabel Hall.
Penick, Hazel Irene Hill, Vivian Rose, Grade Seven-Minnie Grace Harris,
Sallie Marshall, Ethel Carter Powers,
Teacher.
Emma Allee Collins, Dorsie Ellen
Myrtle Branham, Ora Edith Crabtree,
Layne, Mary Ruth Hopson, Ruby Op- Sarah Vata George, Naomi Goble, Cappenheimer, Alo~w Hopson and Leslie itola Hamilton. Eulah Oppenheimer,
Wallen.
Vivian Reatherford.
qrade Three-Joe Jarrell, Teacher.
Grade Eight-D. 0. Harmon, Teacher
T. C. Archer, Dorothy Alice Burchett,
Pansy Bingham, Kathryn Stumbo,
Euit!ne Baldridge, Opal May Banks, Dora Goble, David D. May, Tom HereMary· Ffancis Barnett, Ray Craft, fo1<1, Ruth Crabtree, Oval Bingham,
James Goble, Ethel Hughes, James Leva Spurlock, Edgar Bingham, WoodWesle:? Howard, Ella Harmon, Dorothy row Calhoun, Ralph Archer and Berta
Vl.tan Lockwood, Marguerite May, Johnson.
Junior Tackett and Anna Bel!e Woods. High School-H. D. Allison, Principal.
Grade Two-Parmy Coll1ns, Teacher.
Sophomores-Jean Blackburn, MuI»cct :M. Allen, Junior Ball, Mae Bow- riel Hopson, Beecher Scutcnfteld.
'img, Dorotha Btanham, Raymond
Freshmen-Jack Allen, Pauline ArchOriftith, LucUle Goble, Rufus Hamil- er, Estill Burchett, Henry Howard, Wilton, Dtc_:k E. Mayo, Dorothy Penick, liam Hammond, Olga Mae Jarrell,
Bernard Tackett and Edna Mae Vance. Josephine Mellon, Delmas Saunders,
.Or&dea One and Two--Ora Colista j Alma Nicholls, Josephine Pitts.
!
·
Spradlin, Teacher.
We wm be glad to see you at the
Gladys Adams, Marie Blackburn, ' school any time. Come and see your
.Basten Bloomer, Lauton Clark, Paul- teachers and your boys and girls.
1
~ ;Oo~. Boward BUl, Harold HoiYours for the schools,
1
Mb,. Alice
Mabel Howarri, John Hen- '
T. J. C.URREY,
'
I
,r, Meiitm, B~d Ray Os~rn and .
Superintendent. 1
~rd Williamson. .
'
I
O~e One-Anna :WUer, Teacher.
I
: ~ Smith; Bal'bara Rutler, Ruby
t'faJ ,.Baab, ~ Hubbard, Vlr!Ueaet, JNia M.e Goble, Herbert
~ VitaU G~tb. Harold LockLangley, Ky., Nov. 2 (Spl.)-A pie
'Wo.Oct, Junior Keck, Dfck)Jickerson, and supper was held at the school building
O.eilton Lee. ·
Friday night to raise funds for the supw:ilrt-Pra:sTONSBURG:
port of the basketball teams. Despite
'·
Five and Six-Ralph Spradlin, an Inferior lighting system. the receipts
G~
were beyond expectations; $114.00 was
r.
contributed by the citizens, which will
·.·.~11:) Susie Allen, Henry Whittaker, enable the boys and girls to buy more
~ Merritt, Anna Belle Green, Mae eqtiipment. Several of the pies went at ,
0~~~ <Plve> Vlrgima Hall, Agnes a very high price. The highest went
~ Minel'va Stephens, Thelma for $10.50 to Oliver Reynolds and was 1
.~~·~~cGuire, Glenice Blackburn, baked by Mrs. H. N. Cooley and Mrs.
~ lfale, Emma Young, Mar- Philip Hagans for Beryl Turner. Edd
Jiuetite- ¥fttt1tt, Apna Belle Hyden, Ed- Moore won out over his big brother,
.,_ Jle:ald, SUsie Hurd.
' Jones, by a nickel and bought Christie
· ~Blackburn, No. 1 grade, 95 Allen's pie for $7.05. The contest for
~ eent..
the most beautiful girl was a close race
~ Three and Four-Pearl Laferty, between Misses -virginia Hemingway
· ~er.
and Mabel Cooley. Miss Hemingway 1
··(Tbree) Harry Boling, Ruby Camp- finally won out over her pretty student
~U, Delphia Shepherd, Anna Lee Mag- and received the large cake baked by
Dr4, · Tela McGuire; <Four) Pearl Miss Shirley Allen.
f'tny; •
Wallen, Desma Maggard,
An order was sent out next day for
Dflt&' Shepherd.
suits for the boys' basketball team and
·oracles One and Two-Hope Hereford, three new balls.
VOTE FOR
HENRY D.
PRESTONSBURG
CITY SCHOOLS
..
Section Two, Paae Six
FITZPATRICK
FUNDS RAISED FOR
MAYTOWN SCHOOL
I
pasa
I
FOR STATE
't'e&cber.
. ·. {Qne)
Ruth George, Chester Young,
"J'oDi Born, Basil McGuire, ~raine OsbOrn,
Tom Blackburn, Lilly Blackburn.
(TWo) Tboma.s Jerry and Chester Hale.
. QeraldlDe Allen Is reported with an
-~ trrade of 97 per cent, the hlghea~ in all the school. Who will lead the
~-fiX weeks?
ParentS, read this with care, see If
)'OUr child's name is there. If not, WHY
:~ ()be and
'I'Wo-Hope Hereford,
.
~r.
. _ Paul Burke, Charles Burke and Tom
~·
"Gt'ades Three
and Four-Pearl Laferty, Teachet:.
<Three> Delphia Shepherd, and
~) ~ Wallace and Dora Shep-
i&efd .-.
Qrades Five and Stx~Ralph Spradlin,
.
Teacher.
;.· WUUe Lee Bowling, Min~rva Steph-
ens, V1rlr1D1• ·Hall, Emma Young, GlenIce Blackburn, Agnes Harris, Ella McGuire.
Grade One-Anna Mtller, Teacher.
Ruby Gay Banks, Mildred Ruth Minix, Eulah Mae Goble, Herbert Patton,
and Harold Lockwood.
Grades One 'and Tw<>-Ora Colisa
8p'adl1n. Teacher.
Gladys Adams, Marie Blackburn,
Haskell Bloom, Helen Marie Burchett,
I,auton Clarke, Howard Hill, Robeina
Littleton, Lexford Williamson.
Grade Tw(}-Fanny Collins, Teacher.
*Dick Mayo Allen, Southa Branham,
Dick.Ervin Mayo, Willard Smit~~
FIRST CLASS
Watch and
Clock Repairing
DANIEL & KERR
~. Jtentuc*J
ELECTION NOVEMBER 8,
l9Zl~·
HONOR STUDENTS NAMED
Mrs. Edgar May, teacher of the
fourth and fifth grades, reports the following as having attained honor during
the first month for high grade:
Fourth year, all "A" list-Emma Risner, Ben Baker, Jr.; Ed Sutton, Jr.,
Naomi Allen, Charles Stapleton, Inez
-Political Adv.
Allen, Carl Lamar COmbs.
Fifth year, all "A" list-Harriet Allen, Stanton Allen. Hildred Baldridge,
Leah Dy1e, Edna Allen, John Marshall,
I
fifteen-minute scenes: the first a mock Jones, of Ft. Valley, Ga., in serving a
Harmon Tussey, T. A. Combs.
chapel meeting of the teachers, and the delicious salad course and ice tea .
1
ENJOY PICNIC
last a fRculty meeting, supposed to be
-1. Lifts.
Rosa Helen, five-montha-'Oid · acllft~
The Maytown Business College en- secret. Those participating were:
XMAS BAZAAR PLANS
2. Italy.
ter of Mr. and Mrs. J. D . ~. ~
joyed a pleasant afternoon Thursday . Rudolph Hayes as Professor BoughThe christmas sale given annually
3. Georges Clemenceau.
Monday morning after a Ungertnc ·tB.i
when tney journeyed to a nearby hill ton, RaY Stephens as H. N. Cooley, Ray for a number of years by the Maytown
4. Capstan.
ness, and was bUried Tueaday ~
for a picnic. About twenty-five at- Allen as Professor Wells, Judson Hayes Improvement Club is expected to be a
5. Buddhism.
in the Mayo cemete:-y.
.
·
tended the gathering and all were stu- as Jones Moore, Theckley Osborne as tremendous success this year, because
6. Thirty years.
Funeral services were condWitell •t
dents of the Business College here. Miss Miss cooper, Avanell Cooley as Miss more elaborate plans and extensive
7. Lou Gehrig of the New York . the Freewlll Baptist · Church b7 DL
Mamie Cooper, teacher, was hostess Callihan, Edna Halbert as Mrs. May, preparations are being made. than ever Yankees.
j John Barbour, of the PreabJterlan
and several of the other teachers were Bola Turner as Miss Hemingway, and before.
8. Russia.
Church, assisted by Revs. P. R. MeM.·
1
present.
Ellen Hayes as Miss Cunningham.
saturday, December 3. has been set
9. England.
, lister, George Rose and Malcolm Jl,ubfor the date, 10 a. ·m. the opening hour,
10. Caesar.
1 bard. Funeral and burial were UDder
ATTEND SPEAKING
KENTUCKIANS LOSE
for the convenience of many who arI the directilm of E. P. Arnold and Com·
Dr. J. H. Allen, Prof. Boughton, S. B.
The Kentuckian basketball team met rive by train.
Mr. and Mrs. E. H. Sowards, of Pike- pany.
May, Townsel Combs, W. A. Stewart, the Columbian team in a game Friday
Arrangements have been completed ville, spent the week-end here, guests
~
Professor Wells, H. F. May, Jones A. afternoon and came out on the short 'for apron, fancy work, novelty, toy,
of Mrs. Sowards' parents, Mr. and Mrs.
M. V. Allen, of Martin, wa.s a vialtor
Moore and Ray Stephens attended the end of a 20 to 16 score. It was a hard- food and candy booths.
Jo M . Davidson.
here Tuesday morning.
.
public speaking at Prestonsburg Friday
fought game in which our boys fought
and all came home in cars, with the
SOCIAL ITE:\IS
gamely to force the game into "extra
exception of H. F. May.
Miss
Juliettt
Callihan had as guests
innings," so to speak.
this week-end her mother, Mrs. CaliBASKETBALL G,\:\IE POSTPO:SED
h:..n, and sister, Mrs. Lake, both of RusThe Kentuckian program 'committee
The b:lsketball game between Maysell, Ky.
consisting
of
Ray
Allen,
Ray
Stephens,
town :>.nd Betsy Layne was called off
On Wednesday afternoon of last
because of an event of major impor- Rhudolph Hayes, Avanell Cooley, week, the followiJlg enjovcd a picnic on
tance in the school worl~. The game Theckley Os'>orne, and Bola Turner, the hillside : Mr. nnd i\1rs. B. W. Bawill be played et Maytown Saturday. \>'ill meet at the home of Mr. and Mrs. ker and Ben, Jr . Mr and :\.Irs. N C.
While Mr. Wells was in P:·estonsburg E. R. May Tuesday evenir.g to arrange Boughton and Newell, Jr., Mr. rnd
he scheduled a game with the high ::t series of prog-rams.
Mrs. T. J. Webb and Eugene. Mesdames
school learn to be played here the last
J. :,L Jones and Edgar May: Misse3
\\'0:\I.'\N'S
CLl'B
sattll'dav befol e Tl~antsgiving. The
Anna Cunningham and Georgia Salison Friday nftt'rnoon last. the Womgi: 1 tea;ns \\'Ill c.l~o p!a)·. I\!L We!Is
b:tr~:. GC'or gr. Ralpl;. Cl;J udc a nd Har;:1; ·:; Club met with :VIr3. :-;-. C. Bul<ghton
pro1~1ised ::\.1r AJlis: :1 n retw n game.
\l-!1os~ nc\;· hon~c \Yas \·ery attractJYC. riett Allen.
:\!r. ar.d ::\~:·.,, ArnoldI Cassiciy
nm;· Ml'
Oca!=':et.
home
~E
KE'
.•
-T('('L"I
'"'.·
·~"'('IETY
Living
and dining rooms were dccm·a- cupy
.L.L
_:::Tl~
"" ~.~ ~v
the home recent Y vaca t e db~·
"
·
The Kentuck!an Society gave a thir- ted with autumn leaves, gorgeous in and Mrs. William Ward.
neSS \uhl*Ch CaterS tO YOUI• trade
giving
ty-minute program Friday afternoon their many ~olors. Banks of nasturA number of visitors were with us in
·v
before the student body and faculty. It tiums were placed to good effect, and sunday School Sunday, but several
was in the form of a burlesque of the a few suggestions of approaching Hal- were absent whom we hope to have
serVICe.
-
l~th
SENATORIAL DISTRICT
FLOYD
PIKE
KNOTt.
Answers to Questions
I
I
·
Walters'
Bakery
t,n
busi-
to PI·esto11!=:.bUI'g-A
by
' faculty and the students seemed to en- lowe'en were final t.ouches.
I joy the mtmlcry of dress and actions of , After the busmess session, the hostess 1
, ~...·-· · • • • • • • • • • • • • 1the faculty. The play consisted of two was assisted by her mother, Mrs. J. M.
next Sunday.
I!.------------------------------""'
I
�_W_ed
__ne_M~a~y,~J~a~nu~a~~~1=8,~1~9~8~4------------------2Th~e~F~I~~d~C~ou~n~~~n~me~•----------------------~Se~cU~on~T~w~o~,~Paa~e~Se~v~en~
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .~. .- .. . . .._.__..
R. D. MARSHALL, D.M.O.
Income Tax by
takes pleasure in ANNOUNCING that
Dan Tax.
MELVIN K. STEWART, D.M.D.
will be ASSOCIATED with hi m in the
PRACTICE of DENTISTRY including
ORTHODONTICS (BRACES)
·The People's Choice
WITH 20 OFFICES throughout the tri-state area,
DanTax is becoming a force to be reckoned with.
With highly trained tax preparers and fees that
start at $7.50 for both a Federal and State return,
more and more people are choosing DanTax as
the firm to assist them in filing their Income Tax
Returns. Thousands of taxpayers in Kentucky,
West Virginia and Ohio have enjoyed the pleasant, professional atmosphere of a DanTax office.
Do yourself a favor. This year give DanTax a try.
DanTax
Coal Run Village
Pikeville, Ky.
DanTax
112 West Court St.
Prestonsburg, Ky.
437-4131
886-9952
-
PHONE: 874-9134
DR. STEWART
Monday only
Hours by Appt.
I · ·2t.
p
Feed Grain Program
Signup Begins Jan. 16
ALL INGREDIENTS MADE FRESH DAILY
WE USE FRESH PIZZA DOUGH • Not Frozen • Not Pre-Bfked • No Substitut~
9AM-1AM TUES-SAT
lOAM-lAM SUNDAY-CLOSED MONDAY
10" • 12" • 14"- 17" SIZES
DEtiCIOUS GONDOLA& STEAK
SANDWICHES
YOU RING ...WE IRING
FOR PROMPT CARRY OUT CALL
886-8118
OR
886-81·1 9
HOBERT'S
PIZZAR.I A
LANCER KY ·
It's All Here
Stephen Hall and Sean Little, members of Wheelwright Cub Scout Pack 880,
Den 1, presented a Christmas card to a patient at the McDowell Appalachian
Regional Hospital during the holidays. They and other pack members sang
carols for the patients and staff at the hospital. Also taking part were Cub
Scouts Ray Johnson, David Hughes, Kevin Johnson, Lafie Crum, Michael
Damron, Ryan Johnson, parents and den mothers, Mrs. Janet Hughes and
Mrs. Marlene Little.
HOM~MADE PIZZA- SPAGHETTI- SUBMARINE SANDWICHES
CRISP FLAVORFUL PIZZAS
CUSTOM MADE IN
~~~
Hl·l2t.
Wil§ZJal
OPEN
DR. MARSHALL
Tues. thru Sat.
Hours by Appt.
I
January 16 to February 24 will be the
signup period for eligible persons to apply to participate in the 1984 Feed Grain
Program. Eligible persons are those
who have a 1984 corn base on their farms
<notices of bases were mailed eligible
farmers on November 30, 1983.)
For 1984, there will be no Payment-inKind Program. Farmers who sign up
will plant no more than 90% of their corn
bases and will devote to Acreage Conservation Reserve an acreage equal to
11.11% of his planted acres. Acreage
Conservation Reserve (ACR) is the new
term for what used to be called setaside.
Benefits of the Program include
eligibility for loans, the farmer-owned
reserve, and target prices, along with
deficiency payments. In 1984, a special
emphasis is being put on retiring severely eroding land from production by an
additional incentive, the ACP/ACR
Special Project where ASCS will share
at 90% the cost of establishing permanent vegetative cover on the required
. set-aside.
Those who plan to apply or need further information should contact the local
ASCS office.
NOW
Third Birthday
* Tanning Salon
* Aerobics
10 a.m.-2 p.m.
5 p.m.-7 p.m.
* Equipment for
all parts of
the body
* Free Nursery
Mon.-Wed.-Frl.
9:30-11
* Danskin Leotards and Tights
Jason Brent Roberts celebrated his
third birthday December 9 at his home
at Meta. He had a Clown cake and ice
cream and received gifts from many
members of his family. He is the son of
Greg and Bernadette Roberts and the
grandson of Mr. and Mrs. Guy Roberts,
of Harold, Burl Whitt, of Prestonsburg,
and Mrs. O'Delia Whitt, of Louisville. He
is the great-grandson of Kate Whitt, of
Sugar Loaf.
1984 ESCORTS
FROM
S 888
GOOD
SELECTION!
1984 RANGER 4x4
lf2 PRICE
For the shape of tomorrow,
Start !oday.
.PHONE 874-2800
~~~~~~~~~
CUSTOM VANS
S:YoE
S250
FROM
1982 Buick Regal-Copper, 2-door, loaded. Big,
big savings.
1982 Ford Mustang-Brown with tan Interior
loaded-even a sunroof and only 12,000 miles.
1981 Honda Civic-Blue front wheel drive. Super
savings. Only '3795.
1978 Ford Granada-4-door, light blue. Only
WITH T-TOP
LOADED
FROM
1984 COUGAR XR7
CASH
DISCOUNTS
up to
4
$
DR.1984 HONDA ACCORD
CASH
DISCOUNTS
up to
•
0
00
'2795.
1979 Dodge Omni-Biue, very, very nice front
wheel drive car. Only '3395.
1979 Buick Electra Llmlted-4-door. Gold-not a
nicer one around.
RECENT TRADE-INS
1983 Mazda RX-7-SIIver. Loaded. Rare, rare car.
· Don't let this one get by.
1980 Buick Skylark-4-door, 4 cylinder, front
wheel drive. Pretty car.
1983 Chevy C-10-4 wheel drive, blue. Low, low
mileage. Why buy a new one.
1982 Jeep CJ-5 Laredo-Black. Loaded. If you
like Jeeps you'll love this beauty. ·
1981 Ford F-100-Biue, small V-8, only 33,000
miles. Pick-ups like this are hard to find.
1974 Ford Van-Green. Looks and runs good.
You'll not find a better place to spend '1850 •
g
�~W-_n~~y,~Jan~ua~~18~,1~9M~-----------------T_he_Fio~ydC_ou~nty_
TI~_s_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _~
__
uon_
Tw~o,~
P
~Ipt
P ICES
IN Ef ECT
WE IES Y
FISCHER'S
JAN. 18
THI S NDAY
JAN. 22
.BONELESS FESTIVAL
*****************
_. ! 4 LOCATIONS! ·:
* • PIKEVILLE • ZEBULON
! BEnY LAY E • ELKHORN CITY !
! OPEN 7 DAYS A ·wEEK · ~
ie
• WE RESERVE THE RIGHT.
TO LIMIT QUANTITIES
• WE ARE NOT RESPONSIBll
FOR PRINTER'S ERRORS
*
8 A.M. TO JJ P.M.
·•
*****************~
. ., PEPSI, PEPSI,
MTII. MW OR PEPSI FlEE
l~i~ $1~9
DEPOSIT
WE GLADLY
ACCEPT U.S.D.A.
FOOD STAMPS •
$
I
FISCHER'S
MELLWOOD
59
BACON.... . ~K~:
c·.
BOLOGNA ................. $89
39
SAUSAGE ................ $ 1
79
2
SAUSAGE ................
$
39
SAUSAGE PATTIES. .
1
2 89c
SAUSAGE GRAVY . - ~:- I
99
iEEF FOR STEW $1
$119
GROUND BEEF,......
,
VALLEYDAL£ REG.
MARTHA WHITE
CORN MUFFIN MIX
1-LB.PKG.
$1
4
TENNESSEE PRIDE
5%-0Z.
BOXES
.
1-LB.ROLL
TENNESSEE PRIDE
LOG CABIN
. SELF-RISING MEAL
5-LB.
BAG
sgc
2-LB.ROLL
.
TENNESSEE PRIDE
12·0Z.PKG.
MARTHA WHITE
. TENNESSEE PRIDE
SELF-RISING FLOUR
sgc
5-LB.
BAG
.La.
$1 99 TOWNHOusE$119
FAiR10CNY
SOFTENER ...
.CRACKERS ..
$349 OREO
iNSTANT
COFFEE... ......
LB.
$149
COOKIES ..... .
HEiNz
$119 ·CHKEAEsE
$19 9
CATSUP........
SINGLES ...... .
COTTAGE $119 . BALLARD $
CHEESE ........
CHUNKLAZ£R
iCB:.[_
lO.OZ.
_ .....
HEINZ 57
$399
$1 59
PARKAY
MARGARINE .
lZ-OZ. BTL.
SAUCE ..........
WISK ..... ·.·.
OiYboL
$169
DETERGENT.
CASRESs
DizSH
JOY
$1 4 9
2/$1
SOAP........ .. .
$1 4 9 COLDFtD
LIQUID ..........
Polaroid
1.19
age
SJ$1 i&~:~-~~. . . 9 c
DOG FOOD....
0
BISCUITS•:""
EXTRA LEAN
$29 9
TABLETS ..... .
5i~70FILM .. $7 .4
ARMOUR
LUNCHEON MEAT ·
2-LB.
CAN
$2 39
•
:A
WNCHEON
~~OUR
MEAT
�•
Wednetlday, Janu.ry 18, 1984
The F1
-----:...;..__---=--~--------~~oyd~Co~unty~TI~m••~------~-
Starts Wed.
• January 18
thru Sat.
January 21
Section Three,
P•••On•
4
a I marked do n mer handise
25% bonus discount applies to red
lined or tagged items which have
been reduced for clearance. Does not
apply to regularly priced merchandise.
H ndreds of fantastic buys
f
r m these departments .. ·.
•Childrens •Womens •Mens
•Toys •Shoes •Li gerie •Accessories
• Housewares Sporting goods
• Home f rnishings
exa
p e sa ings to you:
with extra
25%off
original
•
prtce
red
ticket
•
prtce
your final price
13.49
No Lay-aways
All Sales Final
• WEDDINGTON PLAZA·PIKEVILLE • DOWNTOWN-PIKEVILLE
• SOUTHSIDE MALL-SO. WILLIAMSON
�NOTICE-NOW HIRING
Taking applications for full
and part-time employment.
For appointment call:
TRAILER FOR RENT: 14x70,
• beautiful, Auxier Heights, $250.
886-9914.
1tpd.
HOUSE FOR RENT: Three bedrooms, _INTERIOR AND EXTERIOR Porter
Paint. 1,000 colors to choose from. BEN
1-1/2 baths, family room. large living
FRANKLIN STORE, phone 886-2169,
room with dining area, washer-dryer
5-16-tf.
hookup, central heat and air. Located 6 Prestonsburg.
miles from Prestonsburg in nice neighborhood, on Mountain Parkway. No TREATED utility poles, 18ft. 20ft. and
25ft. lengthS. Also fence posts at GOBLE
pets. References required. $375 per
LUMBER CO., phone 874-9281. 4-11-tf.
month plus security deposit. 874-2821.
ltpd.
GRAVEL FOR SALE: $8.75 per ton,
plus delivery charge. Call886-3425, JIM
LOST DOG: White Spitz, answers to
cox.
6-23-tf.
name "Monserratt". Reward. Call
886-9914.
1tpd.
LIGHT FIXTURES: lh price at GOBLE
TOP DOLLAR paid for used washers,
LUMBER COMPANY, phone 874-9281.
dryers, gas and electric ranges, work4-11-tf.
ing or non-working condition. We pay
more. Phone 358-9617 or 358-4009.
WATCH REPAIR: If you want the best
1-18-12tpd.
job, bring watch repairs and jewelry
HOUSE FOR SALE: 3-bedroom, living repairs
to
WRIGHT
BROS.
room, dining room, kitchen, utility,
JEWELERS.
11-12-tf.
bathroom, with full-size basement.
Located in Maytown, near school and PERMA-SHIELD Anderson windows.
between two churches. Reasonable All styles, 20 percent off regular price
price. 358-4419, 285-3225, Weyman
at GOBLE LUMBER CO., phone
McGuire.
1-18-3t.
874-9281.
4-11-tf.
BOAT FOR SALE: Runs great. Shown
by appointment only. Looks great, runs
great. 886-9914.
ltpd.
KRUGER RANDS GOLD COINS for
sale: Over 1 weight oz., $450 each.
886-9914.
ltpd.
FOR RE!'-4 C ~'I'Q..i@ilers, 2-bedroom
• and 3-bedroom, $175 and $200 monthly.
Located in Pike county. Free gas and
water. Call874-2893.
ltpd.
BUCYRU8-ERIE 22-B CRANE: Good
construction crane or dredging or logltpd.
ging, etc. 886-6036after5p.m.
: RESTAURANT EQUIPMENT: Dish·
• washer, grill, plates, trays, salt and
pepper shakers, bun warmer, popcorn
; popper, etc. 886-2385.
ltpd.
. FOR SALE: 7-paece living room set. If
in~ call886-1841.
Itpd.
LADIES: Unlimited earning potential.
Become an Undercoverwear Agent.
Sell lingerie at home parties. Have a
party and see what it is like.
Guaranteed fun, no obligation. Call
Sandi at 886-2420 or 26!)..3654. 1-18-3tpd.
FOR SALE OR RENT: New home
· loc:uted 4 miles from Prestonsburg,
. Bays Brand Approx. 3 acres, good
• garcitm. can 88&-8931.
1tp<1.
; lil~U 'OOYOTA CELICA GT: Still under
:warranty, 39,000 miles, excellent con: dJtion, $8000 or $2000 aud take over pay• ments. Call ~5063after 5p.m. ltpd.
FOR SALE: 2-bedroom, 12x55 trailer,
underpinned, furnished, central air,
gas heat. Call between 4:30 and 7 p.m.,
886-3921, C.R. Baird.
1-18-3t.
. FOR. ~ALE: 1980 Gr~d Prix, good
coottition, $3900; 1974 El Camino, good
conditio. , $1400. 377~.
1tpd.
TRAILER FOR RENT in Allen. No
pets, no children. Prefer singles or
couples. Deposit required. Call
874-2141. After 5, call 874-2114. Alters
Trailer Court.
l-18-3t.
FOR LL YOUR INSURANCE-
.
874-2347 .
•.
.·
12·21-U.
VIDEO MACHINES
For location50/50 basis-Mrs. Pac Man,
Popeye, Gallaga, and all the
rest.
Call 808-298-7228 or
nlghts-808-298-4717.
Evans Amusement 12·14-llt
FOR SALE
1980 Executive 98 Regency
• Oldsmobile. Loaded.
Approx. 85,000 miles.
Ada Samons
1·11·2t.
INSTRUCTION
LEARN TO DRIVE
TRACTOR-TRAILER
s 5"'1'1 1u.,_ , · ·. :
~ott~~tl-
1
-
No-
NO EXPEJIIEJICE IIUQEDI Welrltn IIIEII
and 10 quO~ job
Full ex 1'8rt- Wwr*>g DOT CertltlatbOn
FOR SALE: 2-bedroom brick home at
Harold, Ky. Completely fenced lot.
Phone 478-9991 or 478-5836.
1-18-4tpd.
FOR RENT: Trailer lot, M&D Trailer
Park. Located at lower end of Auxier.
Call collect, 513-54~2793 for information, Monday thru Saturday. No Sunday business.
1-18-4t.
HOUSE FOR SALE: 4-bedrooms, 2
baths. For information, call or write
Roy Butcher, 3431 Marvel Ave., Titusville, Fla. 32796. Phone 305-268-M45.
1-18-4t.
FOR SALE: 1983 doublewide,
3-bedroom, 2 full baths, 20x20 carport,
20x20 and 8x12 decks, $23,000. 874-8942,
Jim Wipp.
1-18-4tpd.
Dozer Work
• E.,.n.nced • CoM Mlchlne
Re~sonallle lbt" • frH Esti~~~ates
•
1·
•
GERMAN SHEPHERD PUPPIES for
sale: $50 each. Garnis Martin, 358-9178.
1-18-3t.
FOR SALE: Three bedroom brick
home. Located in Auxier. Must sell,
owner relocated. For more information, call 789-6830 after 5 p.m. B.
Prater.
1-18-4t.
UNFURNISHED APARTMENTS for
rent in Prestonsburg. For more information, call 886-2094. After 5, call
886-2132.
1-18-4tpd.
$5,550
PHONE 874-2172
886-9551
3-BEDROOM HOME FOR SALE near
school in Maytown. Located on three
lots. Central heat, full basement.
Adjoining building, 16'x24' with full
basement. Good neighborhood,
beautifully landscaped. Complete
fence. In the mid-30's. Call 285-3494.
l-18-6tpd.
HOUSE _F OR SALE: Full basement,
forced aar, natural gas. Call after 4,
886-3860, Ann Slone.
!H4-tf.
FOR SALE: 1!J75'Mercedes-Benz 450-SL
excellent conditic;m. Metalic green. Ne~
top. Price $20,500. Call $86-8506.
tf.
HEY LOOK! We repair washers,
dryers, rangei, all types appliances.
Parts ordered for you. Call 358-4009 or
358-9617.
11-3-tfpd.
F_OR RENT : Rooms, weekly, monthly,
mghtly. Also waterbeds available.
886-2385, 886-9310, Sandy Valley Motel,
1-5-tf.
N. Lake Drive.
•
FOR SALE: Cabin at Cave Run Lake.
Three bedrooms, air conditioned, all
new carpet. Reasonable price. Call
784-7250 or 784-9203, J.C. SPENCER.
!).-25-tf.
DAMRON NEW & USED FURNITURE: Living room suites starting at
$159. A-1 appliances. Rt. 122, Drift, Ky.
Phone 377-2071.
!).-25-tf.
CARPENTRY WORK: Home building
and remodeling. Complete interior and
exterior. Masonry and concrete work,
all types interior and exterior painting.
Also have spray equipment to spray
barns and metal buildings. Free
estimates. Will furnish references. 15
years' experience. Call 886-8896,
anytime. Robie Johnson, Jr.
~21-tf.
FOR RENT: 4-room unfurnished apartment, $200 rent, $150 deposit. Couples only, no pets. Call Jeanette Hubbard,
886-2557.
H8-tf.
APARTMENT FOR RENT: New Allen
on 4-lane U.S. 23, midway between
Pikeville and Prestonsburg. 2-bedroom,
completely furnished, ground floor.
Fireplace, dishwasher, washer, dryer,
microwave, disposal, trash compactor,
central heat and air. All utilities paid,
including trash removal, city water and
cable TV, but not private telephone service. Singles or couples only. No
children, no pets. Available November
1. Jim Hammond, 886-2376.
10-1~tf.
FOR SALE OR TRADE: Cardox auger,
conveyor, 24-inch steel. Phone 874-9033.
11-24-tf.
ALL NEW OFFICE SPACE for lease :
1~t Badger Construction Company
Consisting of reception - library and
four (4) connecting offices, with five (5)
assigned parking spaces. Located on
Third Avenue near the Courthouse,
downtown banks, postoffice, town center
• E.,.erlenct4 • CH41 Mechine
parking lot, and the Floyd County Times
USED FURNITURE. GUARANTEED
• R11MIIIItll Rites • Fret EstiMitll
building. Ideal for physicians, attorneys,
APPLIANCES. Moore's Discount Furaccountants, realtors, and other
I
886-9551
niture. Located about 3 miles from
businesses and professions. Immediate
~::Badger Construction Company
Martin on Rt. 122. Low prices. Call
285-9354.
1-11-stpd. . tx;cupancy. Jim Hammond, 886-2376.
10-1Hf.
BOLEN'S APPLIANCE REPAIR:
PIANOS : Used medium-size upright
Repairs on washers, dryers, gas and
pianos, rebuilt and reconditioned by
lnstelltll end Hookt4-up
electric ranges, 12 years' experience.
Kentucky's only used piano dealer.
• AI Mlttrfll Fw11llhttl • Free Esth111t"
All work and parts guaranteed 60 days.
From $600 and up. Pianos tuned. Call
For fast, clean, and efficient service,
I·
886-9551
606-365-9779, Ben Auxier, Jr.
1-18-2t.
call on us, 358-9617 or 358-4009.
~~- Badger Construction Companr
1-18-12tpd.
PROFESSIONAL DOG TRAINING
and grooming. Five years' experience.
All breeds. Call for appointment,
Roof Trusses for
874-2910, Debbie Roddam.
1-18-2t.
Backhoe Work
..
NEW 3-BEDROOM HOME for sale
near Clark School in Woodland Hills
Subdivision. 1440 sq. ft. brick, 3 bedrooms, 2 full baths, living room with
fireplace, large built-in kitchen, dining
room and utility room with lots of
cabinet space. Central heat and air
conditioning, fully carpeted. Concrete
patio, beautifully landscaped. Ready
for immediate occupancy. Call
377-6405.
l-18-3tpd.
Auto, ftrt, homeownert, hospltallzoHon,
11;-e. With D-2!1" savings. can Dalby and
Anen lnturonce Agency,
CUSTOM-MADE drapes and matching
bedspreads by R.W. Norman and
McCanless. Measured to fit. BEN
FRANKLIN STORE, phone 886-2169, or
SALLY GOEBEL, phone 886-2657.
5-16-tf.
•IIMODEUNG
• PAimNG
• DITWAU
. • TIXTURING
PAPERING
E.O.E.
•DEW
• ROOfiNG
• FINCIS
· • STOIAGI ILDGS.
1 • ETC.
•-.u
fAUIIoy,_., - ·
101 AU JCIIII IIOMI
CALL 886- 1640
Spinet-Console Plano Bargain
Wonfed: Ruponslble party ro fake aver
low monthly payments on spinet plano.
Can be s..n locally. Write Credit
Manager: P.O. Box !537 Shelbyville, IN
481781-Htod.
INCOME TAX PREPARATION
sa
and up.
Clarissa Conley
358-9446
1-11·2tod
WILL DO TYPING
OR SHORTHAND.
1!5 YEARS EXPERIENCE.
CONTACT NORMA WRIGHT
AT 888·9181
OR 886-2527
12-21-St.
Remodeling, Siding, Roofing, ·
Heating & Air Conditioning, Addl·
_t!_ons. Garages & Custom Home!!
RESIDENTIA.I.
BUILDERS."
OL.LIE JONE$·
- ---
~'~.
(606> 87. 4-9314
or 874-9633 .
~
~J!Ilonshl'l, 1!1·
.v
'
ANY TYPE WILL BE MADE TO YOUR SPECIFICAnONS. FREE ESTIMATE-FREE DEUVERY
East Kentucky Roof Truss Co.
Phone 606-886-9563, Prestonsburg, Kentucky (anytime)
H.L. Stfser, President
11-
FOR PURCHASING COORDINATOR
Position available for qualified Individual with a good
background In Industrial manufacturing. Business degree prefer·
red with three to five years' experience. Experience/familiarity
with purchasing, scheduling, expediting and forecasting tor multiplant, multi-part facility, working knowledge of computerized
material control system.
Excellent salary and fringes.
Qualified applicants send resume to: Employment Manager, P.O.
Box ,A, Paintsville, Ky. 41240
Equal Opportunity Employer
1·11-2t
BEARCAT 210 XL POLICE SCANNER, $150. Kelvinator air conditioner,
10,200 BTU, $200. Both like new. Emerson stereo, $75. 285-5047, Bobby Yates.
1-18-2t.
BOB WHITE
CONSTRUCTION
Box 282, Prestonsburg, Ky.
Dozers • lackhoes
• Dump Trucks
FREE ESTIMATES
Cal_l 886-3544
HITCHCOCK
REPAIR SERVICE
24-Hour
Emergency Service
• Heating • Refrigeration
• Laundry It Cooking
Equipment
PARTS
AVAILABLE
PHONE:
886-6900
OR
886-1473
WALLEN'S TRADING POST & TIRE
SALES. Retails & wholesales: New & used tires, wheels, caps, Jugs, wheel
covers, batteries, tubes, auto parts,
stereos & boosters, tubes & much more.
We trade for t:nost anything of value
874-2289.
1-4-4tpd.
Have you up.dated your personal insurance to meet todays needs If not,
Call us, we can insure the entire family
from 0 to 80. Call Sam Wallen Insurance
Agency. I have been serving the insurance needs of Ky for over thirty
years . Phone 874-2289.
1-4-4tpd.
Call JIM GOBLE
886-6253
COME TO
CHEAP'S
In Flemlngaburg, Ky. and choose
from mora than 80 new mobile
homea that look llka and are built
llka homaa
CHEAP'S have largalna
IIIla thua:
12& UWidaa
Haute Type Canetructlan
Double Wldaa
'
• '
"
FOR RENT
OFFICE
SPACE
1·11·2tlxl.
MOBILE HOME
MOVIN~ SERVICE
•Free estimates •Insured
~ALL
Ralph O'Quinn
~
li II
• • ••a •
Ill. · I
If you buy a new home and
Don't consider Cheap's prices
and quality, you'll lose money.
Don't ba mIt led. No daalar In
Kentucky hat tha quality and
eel~etlan th•t you will lind at
CtooEAP•s.
.Phone .886-1312
NEW.
TPWNHOUSES
FOR RENT
REPO CLEANERS
Only 3 left. Latest model. New
5-year warranty.
Call 478-9407
('?Oble Townhouses. Two-bedroom,
unfurnished, total electric. $350
per month, plus deposit. Couples
preferred.
An equal opportunity employer.
11·2-U.
ENVIRONM TAL MONITORIN
SERVICE, INC.
PHONE 874-9281
11-2-U
,
MAKE MORE MONEY WORKING
OVERSEAS IN COUNTRIES UKE KUWAIT,
SAUDI ARABIA, VENEZUELA, ETC. ALSO
POSinONS ARE AVAILABLE IN NOR·
THERN REGIONS OF CANADA, ALASKA
AND THE NORTH SEA. PERMANENT/TEMPORARY WORKERS NEEDED ARE
TRADESPEOPLE. LABORERS, PROFES·
SIONALS ETC. FOR FUU INFORMATION
SEND A SELF-ADDRESSED. STAMPED
ENVELOPE TO:
Overseas, Depr. !5032,
701 Washington Streef
BUFFALO, N.Y. 1420!5
USA
SAMPUNG AND ANALYSIS OF
WATER AND WASTE WATER
• Bircteriolocic:al Aulysis of Deraestic I Well
Water Slpp&ts • C.pletiel of
II.P.D.E.S. Fonas As
ly State I El'l
• £nyirotl•eatai l111111tt Sbte~~etrts I
Asses111 eats
Mellber of UT M I ne llltitul Eninlcl•etrt
Hr.iltll Associati011. LAIDUTDIY MEETS All.
STATE OSM I EPA IECILAnOfiS.
lt.i,_,
._.,rter1,
PHONE 789-3258
u.s. 23 St., l'llllbrilo
tf.
·NELSON'S
CONSTRUCTION CO.
We do: • Dozer and Loader Work
• Sewage Systems lnlfalled • Moline
Home Moving • Furnace Repairs
REASONABLE RATES.
TROY'S
CABINET
.CENTER
Call Jed Nelson, Jr.
886-2993 or 886-8549
OUStEY
CONCRETE
US 23, lvel, Ky.
Stock or Custom-Built Cabinets
Kitchen Cabinets, Vanities
Thennador Appliances
on Display
Free Estimates
•
in Prestonsburg
358-4520
or ,358-9348
Discount Prices
Call 478-5344
1-14-tf.
NsTRUCTION
COMi(ERCIAL & R£SiolNTIAL
Bfdl.EJoors · • Sidewa•s
f'ooters • Driveways
Patios .. Basements
~~pos~~~ea Cravel ,•
•:Free Eitim3tes • .. ·
'
JAMES OUSLtY
Olan's Construction
METAL
BUILDINGS
Don't Be Satlalled With An Old
Roof lhoe bor looking lrlllar
lrld l'rent
FOR SALE : Old German fiddle, about
150 years old. Fair tone, good highs and
fair lows. Call 358-9433, David Hoover.
l-18-2t.
ELECTRICAL WORK
Troller Hook-ups, Residential WirIng, Appliance Repair. Experienced.
f 111
1m"' ~11
Allen, Ky.
H·"·
l-11·5t
Septic Tanks
Commercial lc Residential
Purposes.
Drilling
Most wells drilled In ulf I
day by Rota!} Mechlne.
.
FOR SALE
II
Kinzer Drilling Co.
874-9041
RAY HOWElL BUILDING
& HOME llf1PROYEMENTS
t
Ph.: 874-2391
Bob Thompson
Office:
439·4866
HS.2tpd.
,P~.,e ~6-8373 · ·
SCOTT
DOUBLEWIDE
$15,995.00
New 1984, 3 Bed, 2 Baftl, Gorden Tub,
Total Electric, Wood-Siding, Shingle
Roof, Cathedral Ceilings, Beams. Stove,
Refrlg.. Hou11 Doors 1: Windows,
Carper. Delivered anywhere and Hf.
You choose colors. Veferona no down
payment. Others pay $1700.00 down
and $217.00 per month. Fireplaces
available. TREEHAVEN HOMES. Office In
· Clubhouse by swimming pool. BefWMn . •
Exlf 187 and Exlf 194 off 1-84. Win· II'
chesrer, Ky. Phone (808) 744-n82.
l-4-St.
BEAUTifUL BUILDIH
Sa dy ValleJ
TWO NEW
DOUBLEWIDE
SPECIALS
...
Buildig Stone· Co.
LEXINGTON LOCATION:
New 1984, 3 Bed, 2 Bath, Solid Consrrucflon, Garden Tub, Tofal Elec:frlc,
Wood Siding, Slllngle Roof, Cathedral
Ceiling, Stove. Frosi-FrH Refrigerator•
House Doors 1: Windows. Carpet
Delivered 1: Sef-up. ONLY t18,H5.00.
see this home of !537 New Circle Rd.,
Lexington. Phone (808) 293-1809.
RICHMOND LOCATION:
New Floor Plan, 1984, !55x24, 1224-Sq.
Ft.• 3 Bed, 2 Bofh. Garden Tub, Uflllty
Room, Tofal Electric, All Walk-In
Clo~tfs. Cathedral Ceiling, Wood
Siding. Shingle Roof. lay Window In
Master Bedroom, Fireplace, f!rosf-FrH
Relrlgeraror. Stove, Deluxe Carper 1:
Pad, Side Gable, all other Deluxe Opflons. ONLY t2U9!5.00. Ste this home
af Exlf *'17 Oft 1·75, Halfway between
Lexington 1: Richmond. Phone (808)
824-0200.
10 other doublll on display, !50 new 14
wldes. 20 reposuued hom11. !50 Used homes. V.A. no down payment FHA
loans wlfh 10" down.
GREAT AMERICAN HOMES
1+51.
IUNY VUIEtiES Of IUUTIF1JL
DLDING STONE FOR THE IIOIE
vtMaiiiR"
• MAIIU LANDSCAPJ CliPS
~. LJIIESfOHt
• POITUU COifCI£1t STEPS
• VEI!MOfiT SLATE
Located On Old U.S.
In New Allen.
.
~
FREE
'SOD M lie Delivery and aat up
on foundation . Wa Trade For
Anything 01 Value
Opan Altar Ch11rch on S11nday
Far Yaur lnapectlon
CHEAP'S
Flamlngaburg, Ky.
COLLINS SECURITY SERVICE
• UCENSED • BONDED • INSURED
• 18 YEARS SECURITY EXPERIENCE •
• 24-HOUR GUARD SERVICE •
(606) 886-9867 OR 886-3665
JESSIE COLLINS, President
�Wedn.-clay, January 18, 1984
Section Three, Pqe Three
WOMAN will do your house work and
any odd jobs around the home. Call
886-3743.
1-18-2tpd.
8EU IT RIST.I
BW IT INtJIIT.'
•
Business & house all in one package in
Floyd County Grocery Store, gas station
and carry out. Complete with stock. 3
bedroom brick house and double car
garage. 606-874-2314.
1-11-2t-pd.
FOR SALE-2 homes located in Prestonsburg. 886-8076.
1-11-2t-pd.
•
Tires at prices you can afford. Computer
wheel balancing. Western wheels at sale
prices, friendly service. Where can you
find this and more? Jim's Tire Shop, of
course. 285-5058. Maytown.
1-11-3t.
Three year batteries $79.95. Computer
wheel balancing (most wheels) $3.99.
Free valves with each tire purchased.
Where? Jims Tire Shop. 285-5058. l-11-3t.
All classified ads ticheduled
for only one week, must be
,Paid In advance. All <:lassllled ads with only ~eph.,.-.e
1numbers must be paid In ad:
~a nee.
CLASSIFIED
ADVERTISING RlTES
lOc: Per word, If paid In advance
lSe Per word on eftarae~~c:c:ount
, l$2.50 minimum)
'DI<~~»Iay daaelflecl advoertlalna
$3.00 per column Inch.
~ad line,for ada: "!Y·.!"· Monda~:
FOR RF.NT : Trailer lot, M&D Trailer
Park. Located at lower end of Auxier.
Call 886-2965 for information, Monday
thru Saturday. No Suntiay business.
11-23-81.
NOW BUYING: Used washers, dryers ,
ranges . refrigerators. Working or nonworking condition. Phone 358-9617.
ll-16-12tpd ..
CHAIN LINK :FENCE: Residential.
and commercial. Prestonsburg Fencing Company. Call HENRY SETSER,
phone 88&-2<173 or 88&-1556.
4-30-tf.
RUMMAGE SALE- % mile on Spurlock
Fork of Middle Creek. Inside warm
building. Quilts, baby quilts and other
crafts, miscellaneous items. Wed. ,
Thurs ., Sat. of each week.
1-4-3t.
FOR SALE: 1974 Ford Econoline van
with 1979 IT'otor, $1800. Call 88&-3181,
Lane Dutton.
1-18-2t.
1976 CHEVROLET BLAZER: Good
condition, 4 new tires. Call after 5 p.m .•
88&6093, Eddie Shepherd.
1-18-2t.
DOGS FOR SALE: One cur male squirrel ·dog and one male registered Elk
Hound, and one female Beagle. Call
285-9~1, Bill Salisbury.
1-18-2t.
FOR SALE: Set of dishes, scuptured
Daisy by Poppy Trail. Service for 8 ( 40
pc. set) , plus 13 serving pieces. Still
open stock. Price, $350. Call 886-3181,
Lane Dutton.
1-18-2t.
FOR SALE: 1979 Monte Carlo: Excellent condition. Wine. Vinyl top.
$5200. Call285-9261.
1-18-2t.
0
•
FOR SALE-25 acres, 2 bedroom house
and 22 x 46 out building, 478-5205.
1-ll-3t-pd.
FOR LEASE-Nice clean Beauty Shop
at mouth of Cow Creek. Good opportunity for right person. Security deposit. See
Bert or Malta Porter at mouth of Cow
Creek.
1-ll-2t-pd.
FOR SALE-Honda XR 350 motorcycle.
'83 model-excellent condition. Phone
874-2259.
1-ll-3t-pd.
FARM FOR SALE-200 acres. Near
Lake Cumberland. 2-story colonial
house, 5-miles from Somerset. Call at
night 606-382-5643. Larry G. Vanhook.
1-11-4t.
FOR SALE: 600 Mack coal truck, new
X1 tires. Phone ~96, Tom Williams.
1-ll-4t.
FOR SALE: 1983 doublewide,
3-bedroom, 2 full baths, 20x20 carport,
20X20 and 8x12 decks, $24,000. 874-8941,
Jim Wipp.
1-ll-4t-pd.
THE PAPER BACK BOOK STORE, 116
Francis Court, next to the courthouse.
We exchange and sell paper back books.
We have thousands of paper back books
1~ each or 15 for $1.00. All other books
l'f2 price.
1-11-3t-pd.
FOR SALE OR RENT-1979 2 bedroom
Fairmont trailer. 2 miles up Daniels
Creek at Banner. Call 874-9572. Dallas
Justice.
l-11-6t.
SALISBURY USED FURNITURE. Two
miles up Arkansas. 285-3549. 1-ll-8t.
FOR SALE : 1/2-horsepower deep well
or shallow well pump with 30 gal.
pressure tank. Also, 200 amp. electric
box, completely wired, used less than
one month. Call anytime, 587-2576.
1tpd.
FOR RENT-Executive Apartments,
New Allen, 2-bedroom, upstairs apartment, completely furnished including
TV. Fireplace, dishwasher, central heat
and air ; all utilities paid including cable
TV. Located on 4-lane U.S. 23 midway
between Pikeville and Prestonsburg. No
pets ; no children. Jim Hammond
886-2376.
1-11-tf.
APARTMENT FOR RENT- One
bedroom, furnished kitchen. central air
and heat. All utilities furnished. Mountain Parkway, near Prestonsburg. $300
month. Cleo DeRossett, 886-6568, day, or
886-1368, night.
1-11-tf.
~~ENT-House in town partly fur-
nished. No--pets, no children, $325.00.
886-9918.
1-11-2t-pd.
FOR PHONE installation, call886-3770.
1-ll-2t-pd.
FOR RENT-Five-room, unfurnished
house, carpeted. Prefer couple only.
$250.00 monthly. Near Court House.
886-3032.
1-ll-2t-pd.
FIREWOOD FOR SALE-William Anderson, 886-6571.
1-ll-2t.
MINI-WAREHOUSE AVAILABLE .
Convenient location . Two sizes
available. Located on U.S. 23 at
Harold, Ky. Phor.e 432-8181. Mter 5:00,
phone 478-9546.
12-14-6tpd.
BOLEN'S MOVING & DELIVERY
SERVICE: We move a house full or
deliver one piece - anywhere. Phone
358-9617, 351H009.
12-14-12tpd.
OUTSIDE SALES-Prestonsburg area
wants an aggresEive sale!.' person looking for a career opportunity with an
established multi-million dollar company. Requirements are : hard working
with a good track record, and a welding
supply background would be a plus.
Please reply, Outside Sales, Box 638,
Prestonsburg, Ky. 41653.
1-11-2t.
FOR RENT-2-bedroom unfurnished
apartment on Arnold Ave. utilities paid.
Call 886-8991. Lonzo B~wling. 1-11-2t.
WILL DO BABYSITTING in my home.
From 6 a .m. to 9 p.m . weekdays.
Anytime on weekends . Call Jeri Sellors
at 886-3397.
·
l-ll-2t.
WILL DO BABYSITTING at my home
at Hi Hat. Debbie Slone, 377-6395. 1-11-21.
HOUSE FOR RENT : Two bedrooms,
bath, cabinets, W / W carpet, air, fully
furnished, gas and water paid. Good
location, near Parkway, David road.
No pets. 886-39C2 evenings, weekends.
1tpd.
IMMEDIATE EMPLOYMENT-Large
regional manufacturing co. ha s opened
an office in P-burg, I<y. We need aggressive hardworking individuals who
are interested in a career opportunity
who are interested in a career opportunity as a manufacturing ~epresentative.
Income $30,000.00 plus excellent fringe
benefits. Must have servicablf' auto. Call
Greg Kendziorski, 606-874-817-L 1-l,.l-~.
FOR SALE OR RENT: HOUSE- 3 bedroom house. RENT $225.00 plus utilities,
$100.0G security. BUY $5,000.00 plus take
over payment. Call after 4 452-4179.
.klJ.at-ptr.
FOR SALE-1975 Chrysler New Yorker,
has new transmission, $800; white gas
coqk stove ,$75. 886-6349. David Wyatt.
1-11-:lt.
FOR SALE- 1974 Cadillac Deville
Sedan. Good condition, $895. Call
789-3904. Bob Music.
1-ll-2t.
ABBOTT TV & STEREO REPAIR.
Evening T V & st e reo service.
Reasonable and reliable. Ray Greer,
after 6 p.m. 886-9619.
1-11-21.
RAISE, LEVEL OR MOVE houses or
mobile homes. Also, do block and concrete work. Hall's House Raising.
Phone 447-3242 or 447-2610.
11-9-tf.
FORSALE- 2lf.1 acres, 445ft. road front.
% mile up Mare Cr eek on left side. Call
886-3444. Bill Smith.
1-ll-2t.
FOR RENT : 4-room apartment near
and college. 81!6-3154, T.E .
ll-9-tf.
Neeley.
FOR GLASS REPLACEMENT, bring
your window frames to Sandy Valley
Hardware at Allen. We specialize in
Plexiglas, cut to size.
11-9-tf.
NOW PAYING TOP DOLLAR for
mobile home wheels and axels. Ask for
Patty Wright, 639-4772.
12-7-tf.
1982 LINCOLN: Best deal in town . This
one has it all! Call Patty Wright,
639-4772.
12·7-tf.
1984 MOBILE HOME : 2 bedroom, 12'
wide, front kitchen, double windows.
Furnished. Total electric. Only $8,995.
Call John Wright, 432-1401.
12·7-tf.
PAYMENTS LESS THAN RENT :
14-wide mobile home. Only $10.995. Call
John Wright, 432-1401.
12-7-tf.
CHANCE OF A LIFETIME MOBILE
HOME only $99.00 down and payments
as low as $124.21 per month. Two and
three bedroom total electric only at
Clayton Mobile Homes, Richmond, Ky.
606-623-9404.
1-4-3t.
SECTIONAL HOMES IN SIZES 24'x45'
and up. We also have many fine double
wides in stock V.A.-F.H.A. an<! conventjonal financing available. OnlY at
Clayton Mobile Homes, Richmond, Ky.
606-623-9404.
1-4-3t.
GOOD FIREWOOD- Hay and Hogs for
FOR SALE-1978 Toyota Corona station sale. Call after 3 o'clock. 886-2200.
l-4-3tpd.
wagon. $4,000.00. Under 45,000 original
FOR SALE- Firewood, $25 a load.
miles. Great condition. Phone 886c9172.
Barry Prater
1-11-2t. ' Phone 285-9937. George David Bush.
12-28-4t.
FOR SALE: 16'x32' abovt ground
FOR ALL YOUR INSURANCE-Auto,
swimming pool with fence and 12'x16' fire, homeowners, hospitalization, life.·
deck. Whitney piano by Kimball, bass
With 0-25% savings. Call Darby and
guitar with amp. Ca l! after 6 p.m .,
Allen Insurance Agency, 874-2347.
886-6212, Charles Rose.
12-21-4tpd.
12-28-tf.
FOR SALE: 12X60 3-bedroom trailer. GROUPS, CLUBS, CHURCHES: For a
plywood _floors. new furnace, new fund-raiser why not publish a cookwater heater. 358-9617. Mack Bolen: book? Walter's, Route 4, Waseca, MN
56093.
1-18-1t.
12-21-6t.
BOLEN'S APPLIANCE REPAffi &
FOR RENT: 3-J>edroom home, clean
PARTS : Repairs on washers, dryers,
and
carpeted. $175 month plus deposit.
gas and electric ranges. New and used
Small family only. No pets. Call
parts. We got it ar we can get it , any
587-2552.
ltpd.
make or model. For all your a ppliance
repair and parts, call us, 358-9617 or
1973 CHECKMATE 15' BOAT with 60
358-4009.
1-18-12tpd.
h .J.. Evinrude motor. Trailer, skis, life
jackets. Great price. Call S.L. Jones at
FOR SALE : T wo-story, 11-room apart886-1570.
1tpd.
ment building. $40,000. At Twin
Bridges, Martin, on 100x50 comer lot.
Call J .R. Samons, 285-3914.
12-14-tf. FOR RENT: 4-Foom furnished apart- ·
ment. Prefer nice coople. Also 1970'
FOR SALE : Stove, twin mattress, Dodge Coronet station wagon, $300.
hospital bed, color TV, mimeograph, Call358-4458.
1-18-2tpd.
<p.l'gan. 886-2367.
1tpd.
CLEAN FURNACE F'ILTERS save
energy dollars and service call costs .
Sandy Valley Hardware S&T at Allen is
your one-stop furnace filter headquarters.
11-30-tf.
~linic
•
Beauty pageant at Allen Central gym
January 22. For more information call
285-5022.
l -ll-2t-pd.
2 BEDROOM TRAILER FOR RENT:
Rice Branch at Banner, $230. Lilly Com1-U -2t.
pton. No pets. 874-2633.
FREE PUPPIES: To a good home. Call
after 5:00p.m 886-9583. La rry Prater.
1-11-21.
TRAILER FOR RENT on old 23 between Allen and Prestonsburg, quiet
neighborhood, gar den space. Chuck
1-ll-2t.
Akers, 874-:0069.
AKC reg. Pomeranian pup for sale. Call
886-66JO or 886-3184 Teresa Prater.
1-ll-2t
TWO TRAILERS FOR RENT in Allen.
One furnished. Call after 5, 285-9971.
Harold Hall.
1-11-21.
CARPENTRY WORK : Any kind, painting. Also will tear down houses or
buildings , will haul trash away.
Reasonable rates . Call Dewey Howell,
phone 377·6045.
l-ll-2t-pd.
FOR SALE: Reconditioned washers,
dryers, gas and electric ranges, furniture, new and used parts for all
makes and models. Refrigeration
parts ordered for you. All guarai:tteed
60 days. For cheap appliances and
parts, plus a good guarantee, call us,
358-9617 or 358-4009.
1-18-12tpd.
HOUSEa.EANING WANTED: Twenty yean;' experience. Have references
and my own transportation. Phone
285-!ll\83.
ltpd.
FOR RENT : House on Jack's Creek.
Call452-2363.
1tpd.
1976 JEEP WAGONEER with new
engine, not over 10,000 miles on it, has
hydraulic snow blade, $2400. Call
285-5063 after 5 p.m.
1tpd.
FOR RENT: One 2-bedroom mobile
home with washer and dryer. Also, one
3-bedroom mobile home. Call Ted
ltpd.
Nelson, 886-2993.
FOR SALE- 1978 Mercury. One owner.
Loaded. $2500.00. 1980 Olds Cutlass,
$4000.00; 1979 Fiat, $3200.00. If interested, call 874-9191 after 6:30p.m .
1-ll-2t-pd.
FOR LEASE- Building suitable for 2 of·
fice spaces and 1 reception room or
smaU warehouse. Owner will fix inside
structure for either. Located at intersection of U.S. 23 anft80andKy. 3. Centrally
located to serve Pikeville, Prestonsburg
and Beaver Creek area. Call Curtis Hatfield, 874-9939.
1-11-2t-pd.
FOR RENT- Two bedroom trailer
across from Floyd Funeral Home. Married couples only. Will accept children.
Call Curtis Hatfield, 874-9939. 1-11-2t-pd.
FOR SALE- 14 x 70 Mobile home. Call
886-9065.
1·11-2t-pd.
HOUSE OR TRAILER FOR RENT at
lvel. No children, no pets. References
required . Call 478-5970, 478-9221 nr
478-9600.
1-11-2t-pd.
THREE LOTS FOR SALE at Lakeview
Village. Lots on point overlooking
Dewey Lake. Reduced price to $19,800.
for al13. Call 432-1863 after 5. 1-ll-2t-pd.
FOR SALE : 1977 Pontiac Phoenix.
Looks good, runs good. One owner.
$3,000 firm. Call 452-2270. Damon
DeRossett.
1-11-2t-pd.
ACREAGE WANTED: Couple wants to
buy 3 to 10 acres for home and garden.
Call B . Green at 478-2768. 1-ll-2t-pd.
FOR RENT- Approx. 1,200 square feet
of office space in downtown Prestonsburg. Call886-9444, Monday-Friday, for
details.
1-ll-2t-pd.
TRAILER FOR SALE OR RENT-Call
285-3419 after 5 p.m.
1-11-2t-pd.
REWARD FOR INFORMATION on
missing ca t Adult male with long white
hair and blue eyes. Information con1-ll-2tpd.
fidential. Call 874·9135.
BUSINESS OPPORTUNITY: $50,000
to $80,000 per year. National company
based in Lexington looking for
qualified full or part-time distributors
in four-county area. If you are bored
with your job, tired of working for the
other person, call collect, 606-231-7886.
Investment covered by inventory .
1-18-2t.
CLASSIFIED ADVERTISERS
PLEASE NOTE!
Classified ads will no longer be accepted after
12 noon, Mondays. For the coming week, these ads
are also accepted on Thursday, Fridays, and
Saturdays.
We trust this will not unduly Inconvenience you,
and we will greatly appreciate your cooperation.
BEAUTIFUL HOME FOR SALE
251 Trimble Branch Rd., Prestonsburg, Just 3 blocks
from downtown in a terrific, secluded neigborhood
with good neighbors, turn-around driveway, tasteful:
ly landscaped yard, uniquely styled freshly painted
total redwood exterior, new windows and gutters
striking beveled glass double doors, best of fixtures:
n~w carpets and floor coverings, new drapes and curtams, new wall coverings, totally modern and in new
condition. 3 bedrooms, 2 full baths, formal living room
a~d foyer. C?mpletely equipped kitchen, family room
With stone fireplace. over-sized one car garage. 16'x32'
sun deck. Lots of storage and half basement. PRICED ro
SELL!
!=or more Information, call 886-3880 or 888-1416.
l -18-4t.
2-BEDROOM HOUSE FOR RENT,
Gr~thel area. 478-2644, 432-1283, Dewayne Hall.
l-18-2t .
FREE PUPPIES: Huskie mix, black
and white. F:-ee to good home. 886-9003,
Ned Pillersdorf.
1-18-2t.
1982 HARLEY DAVIDSON 1,000 Sportster for sale or trade of equal value.
478-2644, Dewayne Hall.
1-18-2t.
FOR SALE: 12x65, 1979 mobile home.
All electric, air conditioned, set up,
underpinned, furnished, $6300. 886-6!185
anytime.
1-18-2tpd.
7-ROOM HOUSE FOR SALE in
Grethel. Also 12 acres land at Craynor
with 300x150 level with footer and
pump house. DriJled well and ready to
build. 432-1283, 478-2644, Dewayne Hall.
l-18-2t .
QUALITY PLUMBING: Frozen or
busted pipes, non-insulated pipes,
alterations, etc. Contact Jim after 3:30
p.m. weekdays, anytime weekends,
886-1570. One Year Guarantee.
1-18-2tpd.
FOR SALE : Trailer and lot at Stanville, Ky., near Betsy Layne School,
out of flood zone. Call 478-9382 .
l-18-2tpd.
FOR SALE: Realistic PA system,
mikes, speakers and stands included.
Almost new, $900. Call377-6785 after 3
p.m.
1-18-2tpd.
NOW OPEN: Joseph's Garage and
Service Station. At West Prestonsburg
in front of Hurshel Owens Trailer
Parle No job too big or too small.
SpP.Cial this week- Oil change and
filter and lube, $16.95. Disc. brakes and
on most cars, $18.95. Tune up most
cars, $18.95. Let us fix yoor car while
you are at work. Pick up and delivery
service. Call at 886-9851. Open 8 a.m. to
9 p.m., 6 days a week. Sunday-11 a .m .
to 5 p.m. Owner- Lightning Joseph.
l-18-2tpd.
EFFICIENCY APARTMENT FOR
RENT: Suitable for working lady or
gentleman. Sleeping room in private
home . Siamese kittens for sale.
88~9636.
1-18-2tpd.
DAN'S APPLIANCE REPAIR: We
repair washers, dryers and stoves. We
will make service calls. All work and
parts guaranteed. 358-9892 anytime.
1-18-2tpd.
FOR RENT: 2-bedroom unfurnished
apartmeot. Located at Town Branch.
All electric, city water, TV cable.
Phone884Hi366.
1-18-2tpd.
WANTED: Plumbing jobs of any kind.
We fix broken water lines, wrap lines,
set water beater pumps, etc. For free
estimate, phone 886-95'71 anytime. 10
percent discount for senior citizens. All
work backed by a guarantee. Call us
first or we both lose.
1-18-2tpd.
When buying on credit, be sure to obtain
a written report of annual interest
charges figured at an annual percentage
rate.
xam nat on tables,
lights, x-ray equipment,
transport Incubator, fetal
monitor, depllator, or tables
and
other
equipment.
8 -2
ck .
FOR SALE:
• D8H 1973 CATERPILLER DOZER
TRANSMISSION, $8,000, A-1
SHAPE.
• NEW 24-INCH TRACKS FOR D8H,
$6,000.
• 150 KW CATERPILLAR GENERA·
TOR, 3 PH AC POWER, $5,000.
•1974 INTERNATIONAL TRACTOR
TANDEM WITH !STH WHEEL.
NEW 11x24 TIRES, $8,000.
• 50 HP 3 PH AC MOTOR, $1,500.
• 1978 60-TON GOOSE NECK LOW
BOY, LIKE NEW. NEW RUBBER,
$20,000.
PHONE:587·2787
NIGHT PHONE:
587-2954 OR 478-5755
DAY
l -ll-2tpd
W~'re · glad
yoU asked!
John C. Hall
Founder
Hall Funeral Home
IS ATUDinOIAL SERVICE IUD£0?
•r
It 15-if we 1re te retain the diJIIIty ud pride as set •Y
n1tMaal c:Urlcter.
It WIS Glellstone, the Mecl Eftlfsh sttte . . ., wH ,.t It 10 well whea he Slid:
"Show 1M tile 1111nner in wlich 1 nation 1tr COIIIIIIIMity ares for its tltad •II 1 wll
IIIUS~We with •lth-.tic.l nKtiiiSS the tender s,.,lthies If its JH!lle, their
respect for the IIW of tile lind, 11111 thlir loyalty to hlp lde1ls."
Whole utlons •e Nddened ud 10 Into 111ournl111 wtlen their lellll.-s die. Recently,
the United States 111011med ono of Its fnorites set11tors, Minnesota's Hubert H.
Humphrey-whose tnulti0111l ind full-senlce 'fuMn~l- of 111tioal sipiflc::ance.
On M-orill D1y .nd Vet••• D1y Mil to rellll• tribute to 111tionll lndors who
h1w died, we fly ow Americ::an flies 1t hllf-staff. We o!Nm these tr.dltions with
Plbiulic: •d reiiJiaus c:erea~onles. They, lt'e, in llffec:t, n.tiOIIII f••ll
ceremonies, Indicates Dr. Arthur Freese ("Help for year lrief' 1977). He feels
these 111tlo1111 ritulls periedlellly help our c:ountry dtel wltlt delth, and we III'MWe will b! &11d to •scuss tlis In detail with you.
HALL FUNE.RAL H·o lf·
.... . . . ".,......,. 122. . .....
.PIIeles 285-1211 01 215-9212
Where Your Money Buys Moret
*
-JANUARY SPECIALS -
'9,99500
New 14' Wide, 3 Bedrooms. $11,99 5 00
Doublewide. $21,995°0
Repo's $99°0 Down - Take Over
New 14' Wide, 2 Bedrooms ..•
Payments.
VA - FHA - County Bond Financing
�Wednellday, January 18, 1984
The Floyd County nmes
Honored on 50th Anniversary
Elmer and Letha Williams, of McGuffey, 0 ., formerly of the Middle Creek
Road, had planned a quiet day at home on their 50th wedding anniversary,
but it didn't turn out that way. Their three children surprised them with a
large gathering of friends and family at their home on Friday evening,
December 30.
They received many gifts and cards and had a large wedding cake decorated
in gold and white.
Mr. and Mrs. Williams were married December 30, 1933 at Bonanza, and
their first home was on State Road Fork of Middle Creek. They moved to
McGuffey, 0 . in 1937 but say they still get lonely for the hills of Kentucky.
Their children are Estill Lee Williams, of Ada, 0., Mrs. Wayne Prater, of Lima,
0., and Mrs. Bill Brummett, of Alger, Ohio. They have 11 grandchildren and
seven great-grandchildren.
Mr. Williams is the son of the late Harrison and Izania Richardson Williams,
and Mrs. Williams is the daughter of the late G.W. <Wash) and Rachel Music
Holbrook.
PLEASE NOTE
&ec.use of the increnilll number of
pictures of pag•nt winners, runnersup, and participants submitted for
pwlication, The Times will no longer
accept for publication pictures of
events more than one month past.
Subscription
Rates. J?er Year
In Floyd County, $8.00
Elsewhere.ln'Kantucky, $10
Outside Ken~~~ky, $12.50
Please note. explr•tlon d_a~
wrapper er on yoar copy of The
Times. Because of Increased
malllha costs, notices of
sub~riptlon . ex~ratlon are
no
lonaef ' mailed
to
subscribers.
S•bscripti0115 meJ be m~iled to:
The Floyd County Times
Box391
~tonsbura, Ky. 41653
~poslte your name on
FIRST AID FACTS
(Courtesy of Highlands Regional
Medical Center, Our Lady of the Way
Hospital, and the Emergency Physicians of Medical Associates.
CLOSED WOUND
A closed wound, or internal injury,
should always be examined by a physician. Highlands Regional Medical
Center and Our Lady of the Way Hospital emergency departments are staffed
by a physician twenty-four hours a day
to treat just such emergency illnesses
and injuries.
Suspect internal wounds if the patient
has fallen or receive a severe body blow.
U any of the following appear after the
victim has been in an accident, medical
attention must be sought immediately:
pain and tenderness at the site of the injury, vomit that resembles coffee
grounds, cqughed up blood that is bright
red, pale, cold skin, rapid pulse and
breathing, dizziness, swelling, restlessness and thirst.
There is little that can be done until
medical assistance is reached. Keep the
victim lying down and quiet. Do not give
him anything to eat or drink, including
water. The victim should be kept
reassured as much as possible.
WE .ARE RELOCATING
to 11 Depot Rd., Paintsville, Ky. 41240
Lose Weight To Look and Feel Good!
J. P. PARIKH, M.D.
WEIGHT LOSS PROGRAM INFORMATION
(1) As everybody has different reasons for gaining weight, we
wortl on an individual basis. For this reason there are no fixed
rules to follow. We do use the following:
A. Ortho Molecular Nutrition. B. Exercises.
D. Supportive Psychotherapy.
C. Behavior Modification.
Section Three, Pace Four
Coal Bills Introduced
In General Assembly
As state legislators convened the 1984
session of the General Assembly last
Tuesday, two bills of importance to coal
field residents were among the first t ·'
be introduced.
House Bill 32 would change the
abusive interpretations currently allow~ by the so-called "broad form,
rruneral deeds. Sponsored by Rep. Greg
Stum~o. <?-Prestonsburg) the proposed le~Isla!Ion would give surface owners
tpe r~g~tt of consent befote certain types
of mmmg took place on their land.
Broad form deeds were generally
signed around the turn of the century
when surface mining was not in common
use. Thus, it is claimed, landowners did
not intend to convey the right to destroy
the surface. However, state courts have
given mineral owners the right to surface mine, even though this was not part
of the original deed.
Stumbo's bill would change this, making it necessary for surface owners to
give their consent before surface mining could occur.
A proposal to remove the property tax
exemption from unmined coal property
h~s been. introduced ,by Reps. Clayton
Little (Pike county) and William Donnermeyer <Bellevue). House Bill92 calls
for th~ taxing of mineral property at the
same rate and by the same methods as
all other real property. Protections from
the tax are included for small Ian-
downers and farmers who are not mining their coal.
According to the Legislative Research
Commission, an unmined minerals tax
would raise millions of dollars irl
revenues currently being lost, with
about two-thirds of this going directly to
school districts and local governments
in coal counties.
House Bill92 has been assigned to the
House Appropriations and Revenue
Committee, which is expected to hold a
public hearing on the issue within two
weeks. The broad form deed bill has
been assigned to the House Judicial-Civil
Committee.
CARD OF THANKS
The family of Grover Shepherd wishes
to express their appreciation and thanks
to all who sent food and flowers during
this time of sorrow. Thanks to the ministers for their cpmforting words and to
the Hall Funeral Home for being so kind.
THE F AMIL'.(
--------
lt.
STEEL BUILDING FACTORY SALE
30 X 50 X 12 $4,071
40 X 50 X 15 $5,586
50 X 75 X 15 $9,679
Bailey
Mayo Offers Evening
Upgrading Classes
Mayo State Vocational-Technical
School will be offering the following
evening up-grading classes:
Auto Body Repair, Auto Mechanics
(tune-up), Business (typing, shorthand,
etc.), Data Processing, Basic Electroni~s, Electricity (house wiring),
Welding.
The organizational meeting for these
classes will be held at 6 p.m.r.Tanuary
24. The classes will meet -twice each
week, no classes on Frj,day. The nights
each class will meet?.vil be determined
at the organizatipnal meeting, and each
class will be 60 clock hours in length.
For further information call 789-5321
or apply in person at Mayo SVTS
admissions.
ELECTROLYSIS
Permanent Hair Removal
~ertlfled by
State License.
*FREE
CONSULTATION
EYEBROWS
UNDERARMS
NO. LAKE DR., PRESTOM'SBUitG
Thurs. It Fri.• 10 a.m. to 4:30 p.m.
Saturday by appointment
24 HRS. PHONE
SERVICE
886-8924
ARE YOU READY???
For the January Telephone Change!
Contact the Communications Personnel
a1
ELLIOTT CONTRACTING. INCORPORATED
.SYSTEMS DIVISION
Telephone and Intercommunications Systems
Modular Jack Installation
Residential Wiring·Single Line Telephones
Commercial Multiline Telephone Systems
lnstallation·Sales-Full Service and Repair
Sales Manager Gene D. Justice
Prestonsburg 886-2781
Pikeville 432-0033
1-800-421-1083 '
Larger Sizes Available
1-800·241-8339
ARGO STEEL BUILDINGS
----
---
A better approach to certificate of
deposit investment accounts!
FLEXIBILITY:
You choose the length of time to invest your
money. Long or short term: the choice is yours.
0 PPO RTU N lTV:
~¥~----:.= -=-;~
== ~~~
allovts you to invest with just
$500. You can however, earn higher interest
rates by investing larger sums.
ACCESSIBILITY:
Your invested funds are as near as a First
Commonwealth office. After your investment
has matured, you are free to use your money as
needed or to reinvest: absolutely free of account
servicing fees.
SECURITY:
Your invested funds are insured to $100,000 by
the Federal Deposit Insurance Co.rporation: an
agency of the federal government.
E. Medication (depending on oar judgement and your choice.)
(2) For your first office visit we obtain your complete history on
weight, culture, family personality st111cture.
(3) During your second office visit, the following procedures are
For more information on
~~----:.=-=.;-;_ =~ ===== I ca II 886-2324, ask for
customer services. Substantial penalty for early withdrawal.
performed:
A. Complete physical examination.
B. Complete blood tests (to insure no disorders of the liver
kidney, thyroid, diabetes, etc.).
C. Cardiogram and chest x-ray.
After completion of the above test, each patient is given an individualized diet and instructions to follow.
(4) After your second visit you are ready to start your diet We
will then check you after one week and once or twice a week
thereafter, depending upon your individual requirements.
(5) You don't need any will power on our program.
(6) On this program most patients don't feel weak, dizzy, tired,
starved or sick in any way.
·
(71 When you are losing weight we try to make you realize how
you gained the weight and last but most important: TEACH
YOU TO KEEP YOUR WEIGHT WHERE YOU WANT!!!!!
For Further Information and Appointments
Call (6061 789-5407 or 789-5415
Office Hours: Monday-Friday; Mornlngs-8:30·2:30 AHernoons-3:30-7:30
• OUR NEW LOCATION IS 11 DEPOT ROAD, THE OLD
SHREE Jl MEDICAL CENTER IN PAINTSVILLE, KY.
1-18·21
"Just Think What We Can Do Together!"
First
·
Commonwealt
Ban
Member FDIC
Martin • Betsy Layne • Two Locations In Prestonsburg
�Wednesday, January 18, 1984
J.1,irst Birthday
Lists 1983 Deaths
Kimberly Denese Shepherd, daughter
of Alrita anJ Jerry Shepherd, of David,
celebrated her first birthday, Wednesday, Dec. 28, with a small party of family members at home. She received
many nice gifts, and enjoyed opening the
packages. Kimb.erly is the granddaughter of Eunice and Adrian Shepherd, of Prestonsburg, anti Curtis and
Veda Tackett, of McDowell.
• ot On Committee
Contrary to a report published in last
week's Times, Laura Feamster is not a
member oi the task force appointed by
Superintendent E.P. Grigsby, Jr. to
study ways of financing Floyd schools.
WILL BE GIVEN FOR THE RETURN OF MY
DOG. HAS BEEN MISSING SINCE DEC. 31.
LAST SEEN AT DAN·DEE'S SUPERMARKET, STANVILLE. HE'S A BLOND
PEEK-A-POO, NAME "FLUFFY". ANYON!:
KNOWING WHERE THIS DOG IS PLEASE
CALL 478-!5266. HE IS THE FAMILY PET.
OWNERS ARE ROBERT 8t HAZEL HUNTER,
STANVILLE, KY.
COLLINS FURNITURE
. AND
AP.PLIAN·c·~:·s
~
. Cow Creek
.t
. · 20% OFF SALE
The Floyd County Times
'
ON
'APPLIANCES THIS WEEK!
. .
.
• FULL-SIZE CANOPY BED. $50, ·
.• T~BLE; 4 CHAIRS • .$60. .
• BEDS-ASSORTED PRICES. .
• COMPJ.ETE CRIB BED SET•.$40.
· • TWIN·SiiE MATTRESS SETS, $40.
• QUEEN-SIZE MATTRESS SETS;. $75
. • FULl-SIZE SUS, $40.
.
) .-'qHESTS, $30.!0 ~4~· ..~ "DREs: ·. ·
SERS, $50 TO $75: MANY MORE
·m~:MS TO CHOOSE FROM. OPEN
9 ,TO 5. PHON.E ~74-2058. llprl
Forty-seven years ago Russell Buck
Layne, of Prestonsburg, assumed the
role of necrologist for The Times and
every year since has kept a record of
Prestonsburg residents who died during
the preceding 12 months. His list of those
who died during 1983 follows:
Bennie Branham, 58, Jan. 22; Elbert
Griffith, 78, Jan. 22; Lucy Brown Marsillett, 59, Jan. 23; Jeff Burchett, 73, .Jan.
23; Dennis Brown, 50, Jan. 25; Dolly
George Mckertzi.e, 78, Jan. 28; Elzie Collins, 54, Jan. 28; Mary Craft George, 77,
Jan. 29; Darwin Layne, 71, Jan. 31; Jimmy H. Hatcher, 62, Feb. 2; Thomas
Westley Vaughan, 74, Feb. 3; William
Lee Roberts, 78, Feb. 7; George Tivis
Goble, 76, Feb. 11; Mae Beam, 86, Feb.
12; Ollie Robinson, 54, Feb. 22; Rebecca Harris Dingus, 90, Feb. 23; William
Grover Holbrook, 33, Feb. 25; Charlie V.
Patton, 68, March 1; Willey G. Whittaker, 78, March 2; Roger Lee Muncy,
31, March 5; Ora Curnutte, Jr., 53,
March 5; A.B. Banner Meade, 88, March
7; Freddie Ray Powers, 50, March 8;
Dewey Sammons, 80, March 9; Warnie
Jack Collins, Jr., 49, March 11; Jason
Nathaniel Howard, 81, March 11; Ora
Curnutte, 53, March 12; Marie Burchett
Morrison, 79, March 17; Bess Salisbury
May, 79, March 17; Henry J. Hackworth,
77, March 18; Moss Dempsey, 77, April
1; Frank Hopkins Layne, 75, April 4 ·
Elizabeth (Bess) Leete, 88, AprilS; Mrs'.
A!lila Loucille Montgomery, 62, April6;
Billy Ramey, 33, April7; Annie (Walk)
Elliott Stumbo, 98, April 9; Grace
Derossett, 6, April13; Feddie F. Layne,
~, April15; Josie Adams Spart, 71, April
28; Albert Ward, 70,,April29; Hern D.
Burke, 69, April 29; Albert Ward, 70,
Apnl 29; Marietta (Mary) Mann, 77,
April 29! Virginia Hall, 56, April 30;
Jerry Aloert Lafferty, 54, May 6; Mrs.
Charlene Craft, 70, May 8; Mrs. Janie
E. Harris, 78, May 12; Lewis Mayo
Stamper, 48, May 14; Mrs. Ola Mcintosh
Anderson, 73, May 'l:l; Bill Slone, 75,
June 1; Edgar (Mutt) ~aid, 66, June
2; Mrs. Virginia Skeens, 60, June ;
Robert Homer Hackworth, 53, June 4;
Mrs. Blanche Hensley Brown, !Yl, June
4; Mrs. Cynthia Stephens Fizpatrick, 89,
June 12; Blaine Smith, 92, June 19; Mrs.
Johnnie Calhoun Wallen, 60, June 22;
John Dee Ward, 87, June 'l:l.
Banner Lewis, 55, July 1; Curtis
Johnson, 74, July 9; Crit Lee Crisp, 74,
July 15; Minnie Craft Minix, Tl, July 21;
Arthur Shepherd, 45, July 23; Henry
Slone, 54, Aug. 6; William C. Lafferty,
41, Aug. 11; James. Russell Miller, 52,
Aug. 12; Hager·Fx-azier, 73, Aug. 12;
Newt Green, 91, Aug. 22; Mrs. Eva
Perry, 85, Sept. 1; Estil W. Wakeland,
70, Sept. 3; Roy B. Reid, 59, Sept. 7;
Francis Brown Compton, 69, Sept. 10;
Roland Scalf, 61, Sept. 17; Carl Douglas
Horn, 32, Sept. 17; Mrs. Elizabeth W.
(Peggy) Spurlock, Sept. 20; Katherine
Leake Stephens, 83, Sept. 26; Mrs. Ella
Tankersly, 87, Oct. 7; Mrs. Certrude lllingworth, 85, Oct. 3; Mrs. Ida Hughes,
86, Oct. 3; Earl David Derossett, 31, Oct.
5; Paul Burke, 63, Oct. 17; Mrs. Daisy
Marie Layne, 81, Oct. 18; Killy
Shepherd, 69, Nov. 1; Mary Belle Clifton, 78, Nov. 7; Thomas J. Leake, 78,
Nov. 9; Walter (Buck) Spears, 39;Nov.
15; Curtis Stephens, 75, Nov. 21; Mrs.
Laura Prater, 85, Nov. 22; Vertner
Francis Clark, 83, Nov. 22; Joseph Hunt
Wallens, 76, Nov. 23; Sylvia Grace
Thompson McGuire, 55, Nov. 30; Edgar
Preston Stephens, Dec. 7.
Makes Presentation
Section Three, Pace
The family of Victoria Mulk<.>y would
like to take this opportunity to thank
everyone for their help upon the loss of
our loved one: those who sent food and
flowers, prepared the grave or just
spoke words of comfort. We deeply·appreciate you all. A special thanks to the
ministers of the United Baptist Church
and the Hall Funeral Home for being so
kind.
THE FAMILY
A breastfeeding support group for new
and expectant mothers will be held
Tuesday, January 31, at 10:30 a.m. at the
home of Pat Hites in Prestonsburg.
There ate no fees, no rules-just good
companionship, advice, and encouragement from other mothers who have
breastfed or are breastfeeding their
babies.
For more information, contact Pat
Hites at 886-8786.
I leases o~ negotiating new leases for the purposes of mineral
~
explorot1on, development and extraction. Serious inquiries
please.
t
I
Contact Company Representative At:
(606) 478-2577 or (606) 478-5700
•
HI-lit.
PRODUCE
DEL MOlliE IIPE
~aananas
-
11 OZ. DUMCA• HIMES
Bathroom Tissue
HALF IAL. JUI HYDE PAll
aka Mixes ~..range Juice
79c
PEPSI, DIET PEPSI, PEPSI FREE,
DIET PEPSI FREE, MTN. DEW
$179
c
30 OZ. BANQUET 8 -PIECE
GENERAL MILLS
Fried ·
Wheatles
39
Chicken . ..
Cereal ...
12 OZ. REG. OR
-~~0~~~
sa
.
KRAFT
~e\:a:.~· sa•
8139
2A OZ.COZY KITCHEN READY·TO·SERVE
Assorted Cakes
30 OZ. ORE IDA REGULAR ;)R W /ONION~
,dtl;venng
affordable dentist~y. ll"lC
DETERMINE THE AMOUNT OF SERVICE.
PERSDNAL AnENTION; OLD FASHIONED COURTESY AND CONCERN
ARE ASSUR£D IN THE omCE OF A DAD MEMBER DENnST.
6. HIQit STANDARDS.
DENTURES PER UPPER OR L O W E R - - - - CHARACTERIZED
DENTURES ....... .
$169
69c
49 OZ••
DENTURE REPAIRS: RELINES ALSO AVAILABLE
ALLEN DENTAL CENTER
PHONE 606/874-2020 ALLEN, KY.
DR. W. FU D.M.D:
CriSPY crowns
'lfi9C
Frull Yoaurt .. . . . . . . .
I
oz. lACON & TOMATO OR lAC. ITRMilK
Krall orasslna.. . . .
• oz. LIGHT 'N LIVELy
soc Off LAIELI
89C
. ..
DEL MOIITE Ill. 01 LRE SLKID
JUMIO IOU COROIIO
OIYdOI
per Towels
$169
69c
BIG QUART I 30' OFF LABEL I
DR. R.I. GOODMAN D.M.D.
1
1 Local. mining company is interested in acquiring exist.ing coal 1
~
...__.FLAYOR·PERFECT MEATS
99c
OUR PLEDGE:
1. AFFORDABLE PRICES.
2. ONE-DAY SERVICE ON DENTURE REPAIRS AND RELINES.
3. AVAILABILITY: FILLINGS, EXTRACnONS.
4. NO· SURPRISES; TRUTMENT AND COST AR£ DISCUSSED FIRST. YOU
$129
TOP DOLLARS PAID f()R YOUR COAL LEASE
Shop Bestway For
Low, Low ·Prices I
.Chill w/Beans
STANDARD
DENTURES ....
- ·-- -~
FL=f:RJDA
15 OZ. PAIAMOU.I
5.
~
Breastfeeding Support
Meeting is Slated
Pizza
RELY ON THE
PROFESSIONAL DENTIST
MEMBERS OF
- .. --
You can always count on Jerry's for
value Like our Husky Breakfast ...
2 large eggs, cooked to order, 3 sizzling
bacon slices. 2 pancakes, syrup and
chilled juice-all at a great price Come
in and see for yourself how at Jerry's,
value is one more way .
12 oz. 1011110'5
smile
can be
affordable.''
·.::..
Mountain Manor Nursing Home of
Prestonsburg recently received a stereo
system donated by the Radio Shack here
in Prestonsburg. Pictured above is
Ronald Frasure, Jr., presenting the
stereo to Goldie Rorrer, administrator
of Mountain Manor.
The staff wishes to express their
thanks for this very special donation.
16-0z.
Rttllmlllles
''A
•
...-,
......
lt.
Lodge Members Invited
The Wheelwright Lodge F & AM No.
889 will be having Third Degree work,
Saturday, Jan. 28, at 7 p.m. All members
are invited to attend.
--
-
CARD OF THANKS
Five
2199
Peaches
c
TtOf'ICANA
69
8
·
.81
2189C
if.lld 1 cr·aockirs.
PiiariiDklns.. . . . . . 73c iisiinillnner ......lp
LUCK'S
Pinto Beans ........ .~~=~·
Orange Juice
28 ~~-~~iiiiilii·. oum
SAL£ I'IIICES Ill Emc;r 1111-22, WilL£ QUANTinES LAST.
f'UY 0111 QUAUTY STAR CAID lAME FOR UTitA QUAUTY STAMPS.
�u ry 18, 1984
The Floyd Cnunty Times
~~
ter Sworn 1n
td LeMaster, D-Paintsville,
first floor speech during the
ope n
t"'>Sion of the 1984 General
Assem t} LeMaster, who was elected
t th .1th District seat in November,
rose (I ntroducE members of his family who ttPnded his swearing-in ceremony o. Jan 3 The Legislature will
mel" un April '4
Ne T tie Law Leaves
Room For Improvement
Dr.
hn Stephenson, deputy
t ry fc. •h department of vehicle
regulat on satd he ts working on ways
to im ro e Kentucky's vehicle titling
and re i tra'JOn system.
Steph nson said he is looking at the
state' r p,u'.,bons and laws and will
propo ,E a.l''> of making the system
ea< 1 r for h tates automobile owners
and de.: 1
The
lit e law as implemented last
S l mbt' Under the system, vehicles
are
e
m the county of residence:
V£
ties are issued from F rankfort.
0
an 3, anotht>r law wt>nt into effect
that re u r vehtcle owners to pay the
r
rt)
on their cars at the time
y an regi tered. The property tax is
l'Oll ted bv the county clerks for the
R v u U.tbmet.
e implementation of these two
aJ r ct. nges in a short_period of time,
we have eKperieaeetfsome problems,"
• t n: on !laid. "And there is understa d b1 c fuswn on the part of the
publk.
"Mo t of tl:te problems will disappear
as everyone becomes more familiar
\lth the sy.,tcm," he said.
"We. have contact people working with
•he county clerks and vehicle dealers to
• >I problems as soon as they occur, ' '
id.
e dPpartment of rnformation sysl 1. , whtc·h manages the computer system, hlls twenty teams working the
eounty clerks offices on technical problem·
be workmg with Revenue
G rv Gillis to improve our
curr t methods for registering cars
and colledirig the tax on vehicles,''
Stephe on said
~ccr
I and State
*Ve *****
*
non Slone
C II 886-6060
l ·ll·tf
Section T111we,
Low Sodium Diet for Health
Salt is second only to sugar as an additive in the American diet. As a consequence, medical scientists find, we ingest 10 to 20 times the sodium our bodies
need or can eliminate.
A number of recent studies have indicated that over·consumption of
sodium is linked to hypertension (high
blood pressure) which is, in turn, cited
as a major cause of heart and kidney
disease, stroke and death.
Behavioural scientists tell us that our
early vegetarian ancestors ate very little salt, probably less than 500 mg. a
day. Even today, it is agreed, that
physiologially we need less than 1,000
mg. (1 gram) of salt in our daily diet. In
spite of that we are eating, on average,
25,000 mg. to 35,000 mg. Because early
man used little salt our bodies hoard
sodium and excrete potassium. This
creates the problems with our bodies.
It is generally agreed that desire for
salt is acquired and can be controlled
with very little difficulty. Many baby
food manufacturers have eliminated
~.u in their products without a discernable change in the eating habits of infants . In fact newborn babies express a
distaste for salt.
In spite of this many baby foods are
loaded with sodium. The average baby
gets about 25,000 mg. per day.
The diet of babies and young children
contains so much salt that they become
"hooked" and demand ever increasing
amounts. The cravings are evidenced by
the teen-agers preference for salty
snack foods, potato chips and fast foods.
The introduction of excessive amounts
of highly-salted foods into the diet of our
young has resulted in a population which
averages two to four teaspoons (2,000
mg. per teaspoon) of salt per day in its
diet. Although the body needs only a
fraction of that amount. The result is 50
million persons in the United States suffering from high blood pressure.
A nutrition task force of the non-profit
Consumer Education Research Center
has studied this situation and compiled
a book to help break the salt habit. It
lists the salt content of over 800 foods,
liquors and medicines. The book, Salt
And Your Health, is available for $4 plus
$1 for mailing from CERC, P.O. Box
336S, South Orange, N.J. 1111119.
Even pets are given diets extemely
high in salt content. The makers say that
this is necessary to encourage the
animals to eat the products. However,
meat-eating wild animals eat no salt except that found in the other animals they
eat. Thus we subject the pets we love to
the same diseases that we cause in
ourselves.
According to Robert L. Berko, Executive Director of the Center, there are
many ways to season foods without salt.
For instance, he says, the flavor of
asparagus can be enhanced by using
garlic, lemon juice, vinegar or onion.
For beef,
Berko suggests using bay
leaf, dry mustard powder, green peppers, marjoran, fresh mushrooms,
nutmeg, onion, pepper, sage or thyme.
The book lists alternate seasonings for
meats, fish, poultry, vegetables and
soups.
The consumer leader cautions against
the excessive use of salt substitutes
since they use potassium in place of
sodium and can result ' in problems
associated with too much potassium.
"For those who require more specific
ways to avoid sodium, we have included low-salt recipes and sources where
other recipes can be found." says Mr.
Berko.
Mr. Berko reminds us, "Most adults
need less than 1,000 mg. of sodium per
day for their physiological well-being.''
"We must be vigilant and know the
sOdium content of the foods we eat and
it essential to our health that we develop
a plan to reduce our salt intake," he
stresses.
The Center's study suggests that we
immediately cut down to half the salt we
normally use in our cooking and reduce
gradually from there. Don't add salt
before tasting foods. Replace foods high
in salt with those low in salt content. Try
to prepare as much of the food you eat
as possible. Manufacturers use three
times as much sodium in cooking as the
home cook.
.l
w ·wicke
mber
Add More Value To Your Home Now With
Wickes Low Prices! Prices Good Thru January 21. 1984
NOT TOO LATE
~TO INSULATE!
Fiberglass Insulation
6-1/4" R-19* Unlaced
• Great for re-insulating attics and
floors
• Easy to install- simply place over
existing insulation
Wickes
Mr:
He tell us, " We think we can tell what
foods are salty. And many times we are
right. Obviously sauerkraut, pickles,
potato chips and herring are salty. But
did you know that 2 slices of Pepperidge
Farm White Bread (234 mg.> contains
more sodium than a one ounce bag of
Lay's Patato Chips; that 112 cup of cottage cheese contains as much sodium as
32 potato chips or that 112 cup of Jello
Chocolate Instant Pudding and Pie Filling ( 4()4 mg.) gives you more sodium
than three slices of Oscar Meyer SugarCured Bacon (302 mg.)?
"Did you know that dehydrated
chicken or beef noodle sooup contains
1200 mg. of sodium and Parmesian
cheese (grated), 528 mg. per serving.
Regular whole milk contains 195 mg. per
eight ounce glass while instant whole
milk delivers 470 mg. A modest serving
of canned shrimp brings you a giant
1,955 mg.; chili con carne with beans
(canned) 1,194 mg. per cup; stuffing mix
1,131 mg. and Kentucky Fried Chicken
(3 pc.), a whopping 2,285 mg. of
sodium."
•
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greater the insulating power;
• for R·\'a'"e Fact Sneet
Low
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Sq. Ft.
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Metal Shelf Brackets
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1~··~~·" 48~
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• Mill certified CD plywood
• Exterior glue• Ideal for many projects
~
6
8'x10"
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Cellulose Installation
• Covers 25 square feet at
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3
I
79
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'Thehigherthe
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power: ask for
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I
I Front
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• Replaces plywood in almost all
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• Woodgrain reproduction on
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Water Saver Toilet
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• Includes cord, plug and
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installation
• Efficient flushing action
• Economical water saver design
• Seat sold separately
• Made of gleaming white china
• Efficient wh irlpool flush ing
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• Reduces heat loss
• Saves energy
• Protects against freezing
89~
6' Tube
1/2"
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For 3/4" Copper Pipe ...
109
33'x22'Stainless
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• Durable stainless steel won't
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99
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RALPH'S
Tl E SERVICE
U.S. 23 o., Prestonsburg • 886·8806
• Computer Wheel Balancing
• New Tires (Steel
Paa• Six
a Glass Belted a Polyester)
a
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• Recaps-Regular
4-Wheel Drive 10 & 11x15
• New Batterles-36 mo. $39.95 Installed
plus exchange
• Rebuilt Batterles-90-day warranty $25.00
plus exchange
• Shocks-Lifetime warranty $19.95 each Installed
6' Patio Storm Doors
• Stops heat loss and elimmates
frost build- up
• Installs over exts!tng patio door
99!~
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301298
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• Adheres to both wet and dry
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�WeclnMday, January 18, 1984
~AT
The Floyd County nmea
Section Three, Pace Seven
THESE
·FlVE COMBINED FOOD MARKETS
:~RICE_$
EFFECTI.YE JAN.
18 TiiRU J~N_.
WE- . RESERVE THE RIGHT TO- LIMIT
QUANTITIES. ·
..
.
- .. ... ~~~~_
.
. -
~ ..
MAXWELL HOUSE
INSTANT COFFEE
14-0Z.$5 59
$16
9
CLEANSER
DENTURE
40-ct.
WITH 25c COUPON · •
..
, Tablets
�Wednesday, January 18, 1984
t.:NITED STATJ<:S OF AMERICA FE
NOTICE OF
DERAL ENI<~RG
Rfo'Gt'LATORY
l
f ppl c~tion
l'O 11\'1 'I '
INTE. 'TIO"J TO M~N:E
Flied'" ith th <.omrt 1 1 n Dccemoet
Pursuant to Application
23, 1983l. Take nohce thnt the followina
• 'umber 43r..5175
hydroclectnc application has be<>n filed
lr nccordance with the provisions of
with t~e Federa~ Energy Regulatory
KRS 350.055, notirP i~ hereby given that
Commi~SIOn and IS available for public
Prater Creek Mining Co.. Iik . P 0.
1~spechon · a. Type of Application: Pre11m mary Permit; b. Project No.
Drawer A, Harold, Ky. 41653, has filed
7845-ooo; c. Date Filed: November 14,
an application for a permit for an under·
1983; ~- Applicant: HydroEngineering
ground mining operation. The proposed
Associates; e. Name of Project: Fishoperation will affect a surface disturbtrap; f. Location: Levisa Fork of the Big
ance of 4.65 acres and will underlie an
Sandy River, Pike County, Kentucky. g
additional 4.94 acres located 3 miles
Filed Pursuant to: Federal Power Act.
16 U.S.C. §§791 <al- 825 {r). h. Contact southeast of Banner in Floyd county.
Person: E.D. Tice, P.E., P 0 Box 24,
The proposed operation is approxiPauline, South Carolina 29374 i. Commately 3 miles southeast from State
ment Date: Feb. 24, 1984. j. DPscription ·Route 80's junction with Prater Creek
of Project: The proposed project would
Rd. and located 0.10 miles south of Hall
utilize the existing U.S. Army Corps of
Branch of Prater Creek. The latitude is
Engineers Fishtrap Dam and Reservoir
37" 35' 03". The longitude is 82" 41 • 11 "
and would consist of a powerhouse with
The proposed operation is located on
one or more turbine-generator units having a total rated capacity of 1,080 kW and
the Harold U.S.G.S. 71 -z minute quadrana 1'2·mile-long transmission line. The
gle map. The surface area to be disproject would be capable of generating
turbed is owned by Ballard and Rolla
up to 5,440,000 kWh annually. k. Purpose
May Hall, Ellis Hall. The operation will
~f Project: Energy produced at the prounderlie land owned by Ellis Hall, HazJect would be sold to Kentucky Power
zie Boyd, J.J. Boyd.
Company. I. This notice also consists of
The application has been filed for
the following standard paragraphs: AS,
public inspection at the Department for
A7, A9, B, C and D2. m. Proposed Scope
and Cost of Studies under Permit: A Surface Mining Reclamation and Enpreliminary if issued, does not authorize
forcement's Prestonsburg Regional Ofconstruction. A permit, if is5ued, gives
fice, Prestonsburg, Kentucky 41653.
the permittee, during the term of the
Written comments, objections, or repermit, the right of priority of applicaquests for a permit conference must be
tion for license. The Applicant seeks is·
filed with the Director of the Division of
suance of a preliminary ~rmit for a
Permits, 6th Floor, Capital Plaza
period of 18 months. The work to be per·
formed under this preliminary permit Tower, Frankfort, Kentucky 40601.
would consist of gathering necessary
l-4-3t.
data, completing surveys and environmental studies, obtaining
NOTICE OF
necessary Federal, State and local permits including coordination. with the
INTENTION TO MINE
Corps of Engineers, and preparing
In accordance with the provisions of
necessary documentation for the ComKRS 350.055, notice is hereby given that:
mission's licensing requirements. AppliWolverine Mining Corporation, Route 3,
cant estimates that the cost of work to
be performed under the permit would
Box 738, Salyersville, Ky. 41465, intends
not exceed $20,000. AS. Preliminary Perto file an application for the surface
mits: Existing Dam or Natural Water
disturbance mining of approximately
Feature Project-Anyone desiring to file
198.0 acres located northwest of David
a competing application for preliminary
permit for a proposed project at an ex- in Floyd & Magoffin county. The proposisting dam or natural water feature pro- ed operation is approximately 41r2 miles
ject, must submit the competing ap- southeast of State Route 1734's junction
plication to the Commission on or before with State Route 7, and located south of
30 days after the specified comment date
Rough & Tough Branch of Middle Creek.
for the particular application <see 18 LatituJe 37" 37' 10", longitude 82• 54' 44".
CFR 4.30 to 4.33 0982). A notice of intent The surface of the area to be mined is
to file a competing application for
preliminary permit will not be accepted owned by: Jim Prater, heirs; Herbert
for filing. A competing prelimina11: per- Prater, Roger Shepherd, Edward
mit application must conform w1th 18 Music, etal~ Hames Degarmond, AmanCFR 4.33(a) and <d>. A7. Preliminary Wl Moore, Wolverine Mining CorporaPermit-Except as provided in the tion, Amos Miller, heirs; Minerva
following paragraph, any qualified Miller. The application will be filed at
license, conduit exemption, or small
hydroelectric exemption applicant the Bureau for Surface Mining Redesiring to file a competing arplication clamation and Enforcement, Pres tonsmust submit to the CommiSSion, on or .burg Area Office, 503 South Lake Drive,
before the specified comment date for Prestonsburg, Kentucky 41653.
the particular application, either a comPersons wishing to file written objecpeting license, conduit exemption, or tions and/or request a formal adminismall hydroelectric exemption applica- strative hearing in regard to the above
tion or a notice of intent to file such an
application. Submission of a timely described surface mine should notify the
notice of intent to file a license, condwt Department for Natural Resources and
exemption, or small hydroelectric ex- Environmental Protection within 30
emption application allows an interested ·days.i>{ the date of the notice. A copy of
person to file the competing ap(!lication the n~spaper clipping must be attachno later than 120 days after the specified ed to the written objection. The objeccomment date for the particular ap- tion or reques~ for a hearing will referplication. In addition, any qualified
license or conduit exem{ltion applicant ence application Number 077-0031. Such
desiring to file a competmg application objection or request must be in accordance with KRS 224.081 {2), and must be
may file the subject application until:
forwarded to the Director of Permits,
<1>a preliminary permit with which the
subject license or conduit exemption ap- Bureau of Surface Mining Reclamation
plication would compete is issued, or (2)
and Enforcement, Capital Plaza Tower,
the earliest specified comment date for Frankfort, Kentucky 40601.
any license, conduit exemption, or small
2. Notice is hereby provided pursuant
hydroelectric exemption application
30 CFR 715.13 (d) 00) and KRS 350
to
with which the subject license or conduit
that the proposed post mining land use
exemption application would compete;
whici'ever occurs first. A competing does constitute a change from the prelicense application must conform with milring land use. Public comment regar18 CFR 4.33(a) and (d). A9. Notice of ding a proposed chznge in land use may
Intent-A notice of intent must specify be submitted to the address listed above.
the exact name, business address, and
This is the final advertisement of this
telephone number of the prospective applicant, include an unequivocal state- application; all comments, objections,
ment of intent to submit, if such an ap- or requests for a permit conference
plication may be filed, either {1) a must be received within thirty {30) days
preliminary permit application or (2) a of today's date
lt.
licens~ small hydroelectric exemption,
or conduit exemption application, and be
served on the applicants named in this
NOTICE OF
public notice. B. Comments, Protests, or
INTENTION TO MINE
Motions to Intervene-Anyone may submit comments, a protest, op-a motion to
Pursuant to Application
intervene in accordance· with the reNumber 436-0099
quirements of the Rules of Practice and
(
1
>
In
accordance
with the provisions
...ocedure, 18 C.F.R. §§385.210, .211, .214.
n determining the appropriate action to of KRS 350.055, notice is hereby given
r.ake, the Commission will consider all that Buck Coal Company, Inc., Branprotests or other comments filed, but on- ham Village, Star Route 2, Prestonsly those who file a motion to intervene burg, Ky. 41653, has filed an application
in accordance with the Commission's for a permit for a surface coal mining
Rules may become a party to the pro- and reclamation operation of approxceeding. Any comments, protests, or
motions to intervene must be received imately 67.0 acres located 3.29 miles
on or before the specified comment date south of Langley, Kentucky in Floyd
for the particular application. C. Filing county.
(2) The proposed operation is approxand Service of Responsive Documents-Any filings must bear in all imately 2.6 miles east from KY 777's
capital letters the title "COMMENTS", junction with KY 80 and located 0.11
"NOTICE OF INTENT TO FILE COM- miles west of Turkey Creek. The latitude
PETING APPLICATION", as applic- is 37• 29' 58". The longitude is 82° 47' 05".
able, and the Project Number of the particular application to which the filing is The surface area is owned by Elkhorn
in response. Any :>f the above named Coal Corporation.
<3> The proposed operation is located
documents must be filed by providing
the original and the number of copies re- on the Wayland U.S.G.S. 71;2 minute
quired by the Commission's regulations quadrangle map. The operation will use
to: Kenneth F .. Plumb, Secretary, Fede- the contour, auger and area methods of
ral Energy Regulatory Commission, 825
mining. The operation will affect an
North Capitol Street, N.E, Washington,
D.C. 20426. An additional copy must be area within 100 feet of public road KY
sent to: FredE Springer, Deput~ Direc- 777. The operation will not involve
tor, Project Mana~ement, Division of relocation of the public road.
Hydropower Licensmg, Federal Energy
(4) The application has been filed for
Regulatory Commis!:ion, Room 208 RB public inspection at the Department for
at the above address. A copy of any Surface Mining Reclamation and Ennotice of intent, competing application
or motion to intervene must also be serv· forcement's Prestonsburg Regional Ofed upon each representative of the Ap- fice, at 431 South Lake Drive, Prestonsplicant specified in tl>e particular ap· burg, Ky. 41653. Written comments, obplication. D2. Agency Comments- jections, or requests for a permit conFederal. State, and local agencies are ference must be filed with the Director
invited to file comments on the describ- of the Division o~ Permits, 6th Floor,
ed application. <A copy of the applica- Capital Plaza Tower, Frankfort, Kention may be obtained by agencies directtucky 40601.
l-ll-3t.
ly from the Applicant.l If an agency
does not file comments within the time
NOTICE OF HEARING
specified for filing comments, it will be
presumed to have no comments. One
Notice is hereby given that a hearing
copy of an agency's comments must also will be held on the 19th day of January,
be sent to the Applicant's represen- 1984 at the hour of 6:00p.m. in the Board
tatives Kenneth F. Plumb, Secretary
1-4-4t. Room of the Floyd County Board of
Education building at Prestonsburg,
Kentucky. The purpose of this hearing
is to discuss a 3% Utility Tax proposed
by the Floyd County Board of Education. Interested parties are asked to
attend.
PETE GRIGSBY, JR., 1
Superintendent
U.S. Grant's real name
Floyd County Schools l-ll-2t.
was Hiram Ulysses Grant.
The
Flo~d
County Times
FLOYD CIRCUIT COURT
82-CI-797
L'nitt'd I' ederal Sa,·ings and Loan Ass~
ciatio'l ................................ Plaintiff.
VS: NOTICE OF SALE
David Bruce Spradlin, Nancy Spradlin,
F.S., Vanhoose Company, Inc., Floyd
County, Kentucky, and City of Prestonsburg .............................. Defendants.
AND
Clay Ingels Company, Lloyd Crum,
d/b/a Lloyd's Hardware, John Goble,
d/b/a Goble Lumber Company, Wells
Ready Mix Company ...... Intervening
Plaintiffs
VS:
~?avid Bruce Spr~dlin a~d Nancy Spradhn .................................. Defendants
AND
Brock McVey Electric Supply Company
.. . ..... ... .... .. .. .. . Intervening Defendant
VS:
Brunchy Enterprises, Inc. Third Party
Defendant
By virtue of a judgment and order of
sale of the Floyd Circuit Court rendered
at the January 6 term, 1984, in the above
styled cause I shall proceed to offer for
sale at the Courthouse door in Prestonsburg, Kentucky, to the highest and best
bidder, at public auction, on the 26 day
of January, 1984, at 10:00 o'clock a.m.,
same being a day of the regular term of
the Floyd Circuit Court, for cash or upon
a credit of thirty (30) days, the following described property, to-wit:
That certain tract or parcel of land, !ying and being in the City of Prestonsburg, Floyd County, Kentucky, and being the same land conveyed David
Bruce Spradlin and Nancy Spradlin by
deed of July 18, 1980 from Harry Hale
Ranier and Juda Ranie~. as recorded in
Deed Book 249, page 338, F'lOyd County
Clerk's Office, and described more particularly as follows:
Beginning at a point on the back or
north side of the sidewalk on the north
side of Goble Street, said point being the
southwest corner of the adjacent Paul
Combs lot and also being 98 feet from the
west edge of the west sidewaLl{ of Second
Strt>et; thence with Combs southwest
line {a fence), N 35 W a distance of 56.0
feet to a corner tree in Rosenberg's
southeast line; thence with Rosenberg's
line <a fence), S 55 W a distance of 30 feet
to a post; thence with Rosenberg's
southwest line, (a fence), N 35 W a
distance of 98 feet to a corner; thence S
56-20 W a distance of 350 feet to the low
water mark of Levisa Fork; thence with
said low water mark S 35 W a distance
of 179.2 feet to a corner; thence N 55 E
a distance of 147 feet to a point in the
west R/W line of First Street; thence
with said west R/W N 35 W a distance
of 15 feet to a point; thence with the back
<north) side of the north sidewalk of Goble Street, N 55 E a distance of 233 feet
to the point of beginning. Said tract containing LS acres, more or less.
The amount of money to be raised by
this sale shall be in the principal sum of
$469,700:00 with interest thereon @
131,2% ANNUALLY {$168.75 per diem)
from the 31st day of October, 1983 until
satisfied and the costs ot tms acuon, mcluding costs of advertising of this sale
and the fees and commissions for conducting this sale.
For the purchase price the purchaser
must execute bond with approved surety or sureties, bearing legal interest
from the day of sale until paid and having the force the effect of a judgment
with a lien retained upon said pro;:>erty
as a further security. Bidders will be
prepared to comply with these terms.
Given under my hand, this 6th day of
January, 1984.
MARSHALL DAVIDSON,
Master Commissioner
1-11-3t.
NOTICE OF
INTENTION TO MINE
Pursuant to Application
No. 836-0008
{1) In accordance with the provisions
of KRS 350.055, notice is hereby given
that Triple Elkhorn Mining Company,
Inc., P.O. Box 140, I vel, Kentucky 41642,
has filed an application for a permit for
a surface coal mining and reclamation
operation of approximately 43.99 ac,·es
located one mile southeast of Allen, Kentucky in Floyd county.
{2) The proposed operation is approximately 1114 miles southeast of Star
Route 80's junction with US 25, and
located 12 mile south of the Levisa Fork.
The latitude is 37• 35' 38", longitude is 82"
42' 51". Surface area is owned by Herman and Berniece Porter, Bill and Belle
Jones; Palmer Crisp Estate, Katherine
Stratton; Adams Real Estate Limited
Partnership; El DuPont DeNemours;
Inc., George and Jean Rice; Olga and
Howard Allen; Robert Jones heirs and
Cecil Webb:
(3) The proposed operation is located
on the Harold U.S.G.S. 71 2 minute quadrangle map. The operation will use the
mountaintop removal method of mining.
(4) The application also includes a
proposed land use change from undeveloped w /trees premining land use to a
undeveloped w/various grasses post
mining land use.
{5) The application has been filed for
public inspection at the Department for
Surface Mining Reclamation and Enforcement, Prestonsburg Regional Office, South Lake Drive, Prestonsburg,
Ky. 41653. Written comments, objections, or requests for a permit conference must be filed with the Director
of the Division of Permits, 6th Floor,
Capital Plaza Tower, Frankfort, Ky.
41601.
1-11-3t.
SPECIAL BOARD MEETING
A Special Board Meeting of the Floyd
County Board of Education is called for
January 19, 1984 at 7:00 p.m. in the
Board Room of the Administration
building at Prestonsburg, Kentucky.
PETE GRIGSBY, JR.,
Superintendent,
Floyd County Schools 1· 11 ·2t.
Section Three, P . .e EIKht
NOTICE TO CUSTOMERS
OF 8 & H GAS COMPANY
B & H Gas Company will file an applicatiOn for a purchased gas adjust
ment with the Public Service Commission to reflect the increased cost of gas
that the company must pay for gas it
buys from Bradley and Son Oil and Gas
Company. The supplier will increase its
price on January 1, 1984.
The company seeks to increase its gas
rates by 20¢ per Mcf, effective January
1, 1984. If approved by the Public Service
Commission, the gas rates will be as
follows:
RATES: Monthly
First 2 Mcf. $5.4807 <Minimum Bill)
Next 8 Mcf. .. ......... 2.5183 Per Mcf.
Next 20 Mcf. ...........2.1965 Per Mcf.
Over 30 Mcf ............2.0033 Per Mcf
These proposed rates will noi be effective until an order is issued by the Public
Service Commission. If you have objections you may contact the Public Service
Commission, P.O. Box 615,730 Schenkel
Lane, F'rankfort, Kentucky 40602.
B & H GAS COMPANY
P.O. Box 427
Stanville, Kentucky 41659
1-11-21.
NOTICE OF PUBLIC SALE
A public sale will be held by Ashland
Finance Compary on the 30th day of
January, 1984 at 1032 Greenup Avenue,
Ashland, Kentucky 41101. Time of sale
11:00 a.m. Sale is for the purpose of
disposing of:
{1) Galis 300 Roof Bolter, 250DC,
Serial Number 3056911; 0) Joy 12RB
Cutting Machine, 250DC, Serial Number
15960 belonging to Lonnie Lewis, Dana
R. Reinhardt, and John L. Elder, partners, d/b/a Double L Coal Company, to
satisfy or reduce Security Agreements
and Notes.
Ashland Finance Company reserves
the right to bid.
Terms: Sale will be for cash. The
parcels will be offered separately and
then as a unit <group) with sale to the
highest and best bidder. Equipment will
be sold as is/where is. Sold unc!Pr KR~
355.9-504.
ASHLAND FINANCE COMPANY
By: Richard L. Couchot
Executive Vice President
1-11-31.
NOTICE OF
INTENTION TO MINE
Pursuant to Application
Number 836-0080
In accordance with the provisions of
KRS 350.055, notice is hereby given that
Raschella Coal Company, Rt. 4, Box
962-Y, Pikeville, Ky. 41501, has filed an
application for a permit for a surface
coal mining and reclamation operation
of approximately 70.00 acres located 4.1
miles south of Grethel, in Floyd county.
The proposed operation is approximately 1/8 miles east from State Route
979 junction with Akers Branch Road
and located 1h miles west of Branham
Creek. The latitude is 37" 'l:l' 41". The
longitude is 83" 31' 21". The surface area
is owned by Goldie Clark, Russell Clark,
Akers heirs and B. & M. Coal Company.
The proposed operation is located on
the McDowell U.S.G.S. 7112 minute quadrangle map. The operation will use the
mountain top removal method of
mining.
The application has been filed for
public inspection at the Department for
Surface Mining Reclamation and Enforcement's Prestonsburg Regional Office, at 431 South Lake Drive, Prestonsburg, Ky. 41653. Written comments, objections, or requests for a permit conference must be filed with the Director
of the Division of Permits, 6th Floor,
Capital Plaza Tower, Frankfort, Kentucky 40601.
1-ll-3t.
POSITION AVAILABLE
The Sandy Valley Senior Citizens, Inc.
is now taking applications for homemaker/home health aide to service the
Prestonsburg area. Duties include
assisting homebound elderly with household activities, personal care and respite
care. Requirements are daily access to
automobile, valid driver's license, and
able to pass physical exam. Prefer experience in elderly care or as nurse's
aide. Wage $3.35 an hour plus travel.
Applications may be picked up at the
Sandy Valley Senior Citizens office, 2nd
Floor Municipal Building, Prestonsburg
from 8-4, M-F. Deadline January 20,
1984.
Equal Opportunity Employer
l-ll-3t.
POSITION AVAILABLE
The Sandy Valley Senior Citizens, Inc.
is now taking applications for one fulltime RN and one part-time RN to service the five county Big Sandy area
Prevent-A-Care program. Responsibilities include supervision of nurse's aides
in the five county area and case
management of clients. Must be licens·
ed RN with administrative experience,
preferably two years. Salary negotiable.
Applications may be picked up at the
Sandy Valley Senior Citizens office, 2nd
Floor Municipal Building, Prestonsburg
from 8-4, M-F. Please submit application and resume by January 20, 1984.
Equal Opportunity Employer
l-ll-3t.
NOTICE OF SALE
Circuit Court Clerk Frank DeRossett
will offer for sale at 9 a.m. on Thursday,
January 26, 1984, in the Circuit Court
Clerk's Office: One Smith and Wesson
38 Special Colt revolver, serial no.
C-395668. The gun was confiscated by
court order from Johnny McKinney on
his conviction of being a convicted felon
in possession of a handgun.
1-ll-3t.
NOTICE OF PUBLIC AUCTION
The E.l.stern Kenturk) Cor:centrated
Emplo)'mcnt Program, Inc., P.O. Box
1035, Hazard, Kentucky 41701, Phone:
(606) 436-5751, will conduct a Public Auc·
tion at Wheelwright, Kentucky at 10:30
am., January 22, 1984 Among the items
to be auctioned are typewriters,
calculators and office furniture Cfile
cabinets, desks, chairs, etc.> and some
older carpentry toois.
Items to be auctioned may be viewed
between the hours of 7: 30 a.m . until 4:00
p.m., Monday through Friday. Conditions of the auction are cash or certified
check to be paid in full at the time of
sale. Location of auction: old Island
Creek Maintenance Shop. Take Ky. 122
to Wheelwr-ight Jet. {306> then follow
auction signs.
l-ll-2t .
NCTICE OF PUBLIC SALE
Under the terms of an installment contract dated 12-13-82, signed by Palmer
J. and Betty Lou Crider. the undersigned
will' on January 26, 1984, at 11:00 a.m.
sell at public auction to the highest bidder for cash a 1978 Mack Tractor, Model
Number R686ST, Serial Number 18941,
and a 1978 Summit Trailer, Model
Number AD30, Serial Number
1118772702, in front of Eastern Ky.
Mack's "Sales Office" Allen, Ky., to
satisfy the unpaid balance in the said
vehicle. The vehicle may be inspected
prior to sale at the above mentioned
premises. The undersigned reserves the
right to bid.
THE FIRST COMMONWEALTH BANK
COLLECTION DEPARTMENT
PRESTONSBURG, KY.
1-11-31.
NOTICE OF
INTENTION TO MINE
CnMMONWEALTH OF KENTUCKY
DEPARTMEJ\T OF BANKING
A!"'iD SE(t.:RITIES
SOTICE '
Notice is hereby given that the
Department of Banking and Securities
has received an application from Kentucky Finance, Inc., for the establish- •
ment of an industrial loan certificate at
6 East Court Street, Prestonsburg,
Floyd county, Kentucky. KRS Chapter
291 directs the commissioner of the
department to investigate the application and base his decision to approve or
deny the application upon the following
criteria:
1. The moral character and financial
responsibility of the incorporations and
principals of the applicant, its officers
and directors must command the confidence of the community and warrant
the belief that the industrial loan
business will be operated honestly, fairly, and efficiently:
2. The convenience and advantage of
the community will be promoted by approval of the application;
3. There is a reasonable probability of
the success and usefulness of the industrial loan company and by approving the industrial loan application, no undue injury will be brought upon any existing, proper-ly conducted industrial
:oan certificate holder; and
4. The statutory requirements pertaining to the application and all applicable
fees have been met.
Anyone desiring t<i comment on these
critelia shall submit written comments
within twenty (20) days of the publication of this notice to the Commissioner
of Banking and Securities, Department
of Banking and Securides, 911 Leawood
Drive, Frankfort, Kentucky, 40601.
Anyone desiring to preseut evidence at
a public hearing shan direct a written
rrequest for hearing to the commissioner within twenty (20) days of receipt
of this notice.
lt.
Pursuant to Application
Number 836-0070
In accordance with the provisions of
KRS 350.055, notice is hereby given that
Rock Ridge Resources, P.O. Box 140,
Pine Top, Kentucky 41843, has filed an
application for a permit for an underground and surface mining operation.
The proposed operation will affect a surface disturbance of 16.11 acres and will
underlie an additional 10.28 acres
located 1.5 miles southwest of Grethel in
Floyd county.
The proposed operation is approximately 0.62 miles northwest from KY
680's junction with KY 979 and locatPd
0.5 miles north of Hamilton Branch. The
latitude is 37° 28' OO"N. The longitude is
82° 40' OO"W.
The proposed operation is located on
the McDowell U.S.G.S. 7 1k minute quadrangle map. The operation will use the
contour and auger method of mining.
The surface area to be disturbed is owned by Dennis Jones, Emmet Lawson,
Silas Akers and The Elkhorn Coal Corporation. The operation will underlie
land owned by Silas Akers, and Dennis
Jones.
The application has been filed for
public inspection at the Department for
Surface Mining Reclamation and Enforcement's Prestonsburg Regional Office, 401 South Lake Drive, Prestonsburg, Kentucky 41653. Written comments, objection'>, or requests for a permit conference must be filed with the
Director of the Division of Permit!;, 5th
Floor, Capital Plaza Tower, Frankfort,
1-18-3t.
Kentucky 40601.
AN ORDINANCE OF THE CITY
COUNCIL OF THE CITY OF PRESTONSBURG ESTABLISHING A
REGULAR MEETING TIME OF THE
CITY COUNCIL.
WHEREAS: A newly elected council
has been sworn and seated in the City of
,
Prestonsburg; and,
WHEREAS: A meeting time must be
established according to law; and,
WHEREAS: The City Council is
desirous of informing the public and the
press of their Regular Meeting time;
NOW,
THEREFORE BE IT ORDAINED BY
THE CITY COUNCIL OF THE CJTY OF
PRESTONSBURG AS FOLLOWS:
SECTION 1: The regular meeting
time of the City Council of the City of
Prestonsburg shall be the second (2nd)
and fourth (4th) Monday of every month
at the hour of 7:00p.m. The meeting will
be held in the Council Room of the
Municipal Building located on North
Lake Drive.
SECTION 2: Any ordinance or parts
of ordinance in conflict herein are
hereby expressly repealed to the extent
of such conflict.
HAROLD W. COOLEY
Mayor
ATI'EST:
Sue Webb
City Clerk
l -18-2t.
NOTICE OF
INTENTION TO MINE
NOTICE OF
INTENT TO MINE
Pursuant to Application
Number 836-5033
(1) In accordance with the provisions
of KRS 350.055, notice is hereby given
that Amber Coal Co., Inc., Box 6367,
Beauty, Kentucky, 41203, has filed an application for a permit for an
underground mining operation. The proposed operation will affect a surface ·
disturbance of 2.69 acres and will
underlie an additional 40.87 acres
located 1.0 mile northeast of Risner in
Floyd county.
(2) The proposed operation is approximately 0.2 miles east from Johnson
Fork Road's junction with KY 1210 and
is located on Johnson Fork of Caney
Creek. The latitude is 37" 36' OS"N. The
longitude is 82" 50' 24"W.
(3) The proposed operation is located
on the Martin U.S.G.S. 71k minute quadrangle map. The surface area to be
disturbed is owned by Manis Ousley and
Austin Johnson. The operation will
underlie land owned by Otis Ousley,
Manis Ousley, Callie Skeans, Verlin
Johnson and Austin Johnson. The operation will affect an area within 100 feet of
public road Johnson Fork Road. The
operation will not involve relocation of
Johnson Fork Road.
(4) The application has been filed for
public inspection at the Department for
Surface Mining Reclamation and Enforcement's Prestonsburg Regional Office, 503 South Lake Drive, Prestonsburg, Kentucky 41653. Written comments, objections, or requests for a permit conference must be filed with the
Director of the Division of Permits, 6th
Floor, Capital Plaza Tower, Frankfort,
l-18-3t.
Kentucky 40601.
INVITATION TO BID
The U.S. Postal Service is nccepting
bids for the sale of a mobile home trailer
located at the site of the old post office
in Stanville, Ky. 41659, from January 11,
1984 until close of business on January
20, 1984. Sealed bids must be mailed to
the following address: Official Bid, C/0
Postmaster, Stanville, Ky. 41659-9998.
Sealed bids will be opened January 23,
1984 at Stanvile, Ky. Payment must be
in full by January 25, 1984 by cashiers
check, money order or certified check
It.
only.
"I believe in the discipline of silence and
could talk for hours about it."
George Bernard Shaw
ORDINANCE NO. 1-84
Pursuant To Two-Acre Or-Less
App. No. 836-0084
1. In accordance with the provision of
KRS 350.055, notice is hereby given that
D.F.D. Co. Inc., Box 133, Hippo, Ky.
41637, has filed an application for a permit for a surface coal mining and
reclamation operation of approximately 2.00 acres located 2 miles southeast
of Langley in Floyd county.
2. The proposed operation is approximately 2 miles southeast from Ky. 80
junction with Ky. 777 and located
miles. The longitude is 37" 29' 56". The
longitude is 82" 46' 46". The surface area
is owned by Tommy Martin.
3. The proposed operation is located on
the Wayland U.S.G.S. 7h minute quadrangle map. The operation will use the
contour method of mining.
4. The application has been filed for
public inspection at the Department for
Surface Mining Reclamation and Enforcement's Prestonsburg Regional Office, Prestonsburg, Ky. Written comments, objections, or requests for a permit conference must be filed with the
Regional Administrator of the Prestonsburg Regional Office, Prestonsburg, Ky.
5. This is the final advertisement of
this application; all comments, objections, or requests for a permit conference must be received within thirty
(30) days of today's date.
lt.
PUBLIC NOTICE
Pursuant to 405 KAR 8:010, Section
16{4) (b), the following is a summary of
permitting decisions made by the
Department for Surface Mining
Reclamation and Enforcement, Division
of Permits with respect to applications
to conduct surface coal mining and
reclamation operations in Floyd county.
C & B Coal Company Inc., 836-5009,
Denied, 840109; Sun Coal Company Inc.,
436-5109, Denied, 840109; L & H Hall Coal
Company, 836-5012, Issued, 840104.
1-18-lt.
Plastic vegetable bags
rna ke good shoe bags
when you're packing.
�TV
Wedne.day,
January 18,
1~
Tueeclay,
January 24, 1984
·SCH~DULE
ed~~sday]
1/18/84
MORNING
9!00
tD MOVIE: 'Without
Reservations' A couple of marines out for
fun and romance encounter a lady novelist
on a Hollywood-bound
train. Claudette Colbert, John Wayne, Don
DeFore . 1946.
AFTERNOON
. ------~~~~~~----1 :00
. 4:00
6:00
Gi
MOVIE:
'The
McConnell Story' The
life story of one of the
most famous test pilots, who died during a
test flight of the Sabrejet F-86. Alan Ladd,
June Allyson, James
Whitmore. 1955.
ID (J) ABC Afterschool Special 'Between Two Loves.' A
girl competes against
her boyfriend for a college scholarship. (R)
(60 min .) [Closed Captioned)
EVENING
0 Cil 0 (]) 1D (!)
CiD (I) News
Gi Uttle House on the
Prairie
fB ill MacNeil/lehrer
Newshour
0) <ID 3-2-1. Contact
6:30 0
Cil liB Cil NBC
News
0 (]) CBS News
ID (!) ABC News
0)
(fi)
Business
Report
7:00 0 Cil PM Magazine
0
(]) Wheel of
Fortune
ID (J) People's Court
Gi Carol Burnett
fB
(I)
Kentucky
General Assembly
0) (fi) MacNeil/lehrer
Newshour
liB (1) Switch
7:30 0 Cil Tic Tac Dough
0 (]) Family Feud
1D (!) Jeffersons
Gi Hogan's Heroes
8:00 0
Cil tfj Cil Real
People
0 (]) Domestic Ufe
Martin's attempt to lie
his way out of a dinner
engagement proves futile.
ID (!) Fall Guy Colt
goes into action when a
city official trias to extort $40,000 from
Colt's friend. (60 min.)
MOVIE:
'Centennial' Part 9 Ninth of
12 parts. The Wendell's fleece the Reverend Holly out of his
home and then take on
l¥!d buyer Sorenson.
Brian Keith, Anthony
Zerbe, Lois Nettleton.
m
m
m·m
<ID
Smithsonian
World
'Time and Light.' Host
McCullough
David
looks at both the first
and the very latest in
light gatherers. (60
min .)
8:30 0 (]) Empire While·
Cromwell flirts with acquiring a new company, Ben is the only
executive who wants
to call in the police after
commits
Martinson
murder.
9:00 0 Cil • Cil Facts of
Ufe
0
(()
MOVIE:
'Carbon Copy' A white
executive's life takes
an unexpected turn
when his unknown
black son shows up.
ID (!) Dynasty Alexis
helps Dex clinch an oil
deal and Peter makes a
surprise
announcement. (60 min.) [Closed
Captioned]
fB (I) d) <ID Style
Wars The secret world
of New York ' s youthful
graffiti writers is examined. (60 min.) [Closed
Captioned]
9:30 0 Cil Ci& Cil Night
Court
10:00 -0
Cil liB (I) St.
Elsewhere A snow
storm creates problems for everyone at
St. Eligius and a bored
youngster playing around with the hospital's computer records
leads to tragedy. (60
min.)
G (J) Arthur Hailey's
Hotel
I& TBS
Evening
News
fB
(I)
Business
Report
ti)
<ID Kanawha
County On the Une
l<f:-!0 f:B 00 Tony Brown's
Journal
11:oo
liB Cil News
Gt All In the Family
fil) (ll) Dr. Who
11:30 0 Cil @fj (I) Tonight
Show
0 (() Police Story
'Sniper.'
Detectives
Calabrese and Jameson hunt a psychotic
who killed several people in a random sniping
at rush hour traffic. (R)
(60 min.)
1D (!) Nightline
Gt Catlins
<ID latenight
America
12:00
MOVIE: 'Guyana
Tragedy - The Story of
Jim Jones' Part 1 This
drama tells of Jim
Jones' life from his
o rn o (() m rn
m
m
&I Cil
Appalachian
Encounters
7:30 0 Cil Tic Tac Dough
0 (]) Family Feud
1D (J) Jeffersons
Hogan's Heroes
f!D (l)lorne Greene's
Wilderness
8:00 0 CilliB (I) Gimme a Break Nell, the Chief
and the girls recall the
first t1me they met.
0 (])Magnum P.l. A
robbery and an attempted murder plunge
Magnum 1nto a mystery
at a charity gala. (60
min.)
1D (J) Automan
Gi MOVIE: 'Centennial' Part 1 0 Tenth
of 12 parts. The widow
Charlotte falls in love
with Jim Lloyd, but en
route to marriage, Jim
rekindles an earlier
romance with Clemma
Zendt. Lynn Redgrave,
Alex Karras, William
Atherton
fB
(I)
People's
Business
0) (fi) Pro Football:
Once a Small Town
Sport
8:30 0 Cil (!D Cil Family
Ties
9:00 0 Cil f!D Cil Cheers
Sam and Diane try to
find a way to get away
from the Coach after he
starts following them
around like a magnet.
0 (]) Simon & Simon
1D (!) Masquerade
Lavender and his team
plant Casey as an inmate in a prison to rescue an NIA agent. (60
min .)
fB (I) Scholastic
Challenge
0) (fi) Mystery! 'Reilly·
Ace of Spies.'
9:30 0 Cil (!D Cil Buffalo
Bill
1 0:00 0
Cil liB (I) Hill
Street Blues Paranoia
creeps in on the officers at Hill Street as a
cop killer claims more
victims and LaRue and
Washington delve deeper into the police corruption ring. (60 min .)
0 (]) Knots landing
1D (!) 20120
TBS
Evening
News
fB
(I)
Business
Report
10:30 fB
(I)
To
Be
Announced
0) (ll) Trail North
11:00 0 Cil 0 (]) 1D (!)
(!D Cil News
Woman Watch
fB
(I)
To
Be
Announced
0) (fi) Dr. Who
11:30 0 Cil (!D (I) Tonight
Show
0 (]) Trapper John.
M.D.
1D (!) Viewpoint
Catlins
(ll)
latenight
America
12:00
MOVIE: 'Guyana
Tragedy - The Story of
Jim Jones' Part 2
12:30 0 (l)Late Night with
David letterman
0
(()
MOVIE:
'Human Feelings'
1 :00 ID (!) CNN Headline
News
1 :30 Gl (J) 3ionic Woman
2:00 Gt
MOVIE:
'Caxambu' After a gang
steals 2,000 carats of
raw diamonds, their
plane crashes in the
Amazon jungle. John
Ireland, Carol Ohmart,
Keith Larsen. 1968.
3:45 Gt Rat Patrol
4:15
Candid Camera
4:45 Gi World/large
m
AIRWOLF
Ernest Borgnine (1.) and
Alex Cord star in a special
two-hour preview of "Airwolf,"
a new CBS series about a
powerful helicopter, airing
SUNDAY, JAN. 22. The series
will run on Saturdays.
CHECK LISTINGS FOR EXACT TIME
@198-4 Compulog
childhood in Indiana
through his early ministry, marked by controversy because of his
strong stand for social
justice and the tragic
effects of his power.
Powers Boothe, Ned
Beatty, Rosalind Cash.
1980.
12:30 0 (l)late Night with
David letterman
0 (I) MOVIE: 'Belle
Starr' Belle Starr, the
outlaw, tries to make a
home to raise her two
sons w1th her Indian
husband.
Elizabeth
Montgomery,
Cliff
Potts, Michael Cavanaugh. 1980.
ID (!) CNN Headline
News
1 :00 1D (!) Bionic Woman
2:00 tD MOVIE: 'Caprice'
A woman in the cosmetics business becomes an industrial spy .
4:00
4:30
searchi~g for the narcotics ring that had her
father killed . Doris Day,
Richard Harris, Ray
Walston. 1967 .
tD Rat Patrol
Candid Camera
m
q.:~grsc:tav»
involved with a social
worker at the local settlement house. Glenn
Ford, Evelyn Keyes,
John Ireland. 1949.
EVENING
6:00
m Uttle House on the
Prairie
fB (I) MacNeil/lehrer
1/19/84
MORNING
9:00
1:00
6:30
tD MOVIE: 'Breaking
Up' A woman fights to
discover her identity
when her marriage of
sixteen years comes to
an unexpected end. Lee
Remick, Granville Van
Dusen, Vicki Dawson .
1978.
AFTERNOON
0 Cil 0 (() ID (!)
6i (I) News
7:00
tD MOVIE: 'Mr. Soft
Touch' A gambler gets
Newshour
0) <ID 3-2-1. Contact
0 Cil NBC News
0 (()CBS News
1D (!) ABC News
0)
(fi)
Business
Report
0 Cil PM Magazine
0
(]) Wheel of
Fortune
ID (!)People's Court
Carol Burnett
fB
(I)
Kentucky
General Assembly
0) (ll) MacNeil/lehrer
Newshour
m
--Movie Week-SUNDAY
m
(ABC) SUNDAY NIGHT MOVIE
"DIAMONDS ARE FOREVER" (1971) Sean Connery, Lana
Wood. James Bond pursues an arch-villain who plans to conquer
the world us1ng a space satellite armed with a laser beam .
(NBC) SUNDAY NIGHT MOVIE
"THE KID WITH THE 200 1.0." (1983) Gary Coleman. Robert
Guillaume A 13-year-old gen1us goes to college and has problems cop1ng w1th the campus soc•al life and tries to 1mpress a
professor. who seems determmed to take no speCial notice of the
p1nt-S1Zed prod1gy.
m
MONDAY
(ABC) MONDAY NIGHT MOVIE
"JEALOUSY" ( 1983) Ang1e D1ck1nson. Paul M1chael Glaser,
A1chard Mulligan
m
m
(CBS) MONDAY NIGHT MOVIE
"THE FOUR SEASONS" ( 1981) Alan Aida. Carol Burnell. San·dy Dennis. Lou Cariou, A1ta Moreno. Jack Weston. Bess
Armstrong. The fnendsh1ps among three couples are stra1ned and
reforged.
(NBC) MONDAY NIGHT MOVIE
"THE OUTLAW JOSEY WALES" (1980) Clint Eastwood Ch1ef
Dan George. Sondra Locke A farmer 1n post-Civil War M1ssoun
sets out to avenge the deaths of h1s w1fe and son after outlaws
ravage the1r homestead.
m
Kris Krislofferson and Mario Thomas star in "The Lost
Honor of Kathryn Beck." a TV movie about a woman
caught up in a ternlying campaign by the pollee and the
media as they search for her lover. It a1rs Tuesday. Jan .
24 on "The CBS Tuesday Night Movies."
TUESDAY
WEDNESDAY
(CBS) TUESDAY NIGHT MOVIE
"THE LOST HONOR OF KATHRYN BECK" (1983) Mario
Thomas. Kns Kristofferson. A woman becomes caught up 1n a
relentless and ternfy1ng campa1gn by the police and the press as
they attempt to locate and arrest the man w1th whom she has
fallen 1n love
(CBS) WEDNESDAY NIGHT MOVIE
.-
SATURDAY
(CBS) SATURDAY NIGHT MOVIE
m
�•
GB
1/20/84
MORNING
9:00
1 :00
6:oo
&
MOVIE: 'Rancho
Notorious'
A
cafe
songstress runs a safe
haven for outlaws until
a man arrives looking
for the villain who killed
his fiancee. Marlene
Deitrich, Mel Ferrer, Arthur Kennedy. 1952.
AFTERNOON
SUPER BOWL XVIII
Pat Sumrnerall heads the
CBS sportscasting team for
Super Bowl XVIII, :>iring
SUNDAY, JAN. 22 from Tampa Stadium in Tampa, Fla.
CHECK LISTINGS FOR EXACT TIME
&
MOVIE: 'Rage' A
physician at an isolated
construction -::amp in
M~:~xico is bitten by a rabid dog. Glenn Ford,
Stella Stevens. 1966.
EVENING
@)1984 Compulog
u m o rn m rn
CiD Cl) News
& Little House on the
News
Prair~ ,
6:30
7:00
fB 00 MacNeil/Lehrer
fB
News hour
0) <ID 3-2-1, Contact
U (I) Cifj Cl) NBC
News
0 (]) CBS News
U) (!) ABC News
0)
<ID Business
Report
U (I) PM Magazine
0
(]) Wheel of
Fortune
U) C!l Letthe Children
Live
Carol Burnett
fB 00 Enterprise 'Hard
News.' The clash of
Ted Turner's Cable
News Network vs.
ABC's Satellite News
Channel is examined.
[Closed Captioned]
0) <ID MacNeil/Lehrer
Newshour
Cifj Cil Goins Brothers
0 (I) T.ic Tac Dough
0 (]) Family Feud
& Hogan's Heroes
~ 00 Comment on
Kentucky
CD Cil This Week in
Country Music
0 (I) CiD Cil Legmen
(PREMIERE) Jack and
David repossess a foreign sportscar, unaware that hidden in the
car is a suitcase key
worth millions of dollars to the underworld.
(60 min.)
0
(]) Dukes of
Hazzard Mistaken for
armored car thieves,
Luke and Bo discove1
that their only witness
has been declared legally dead. (60 min.)
& NCAA Basketball:
Vanderbilt at Kentucky
G
m
7:30
8:00
m
rn
m
<ID
Washington
Week/
Review
8:30 fB (]) 0) ® Wall
Street Week Louis Ru- keyser analyzes the
'80s with a weekly review of economic and ..
investment matters.
9:00 D (I) CiD (V Master
(PREMIERE)
0 ill Dallas J.R.attempts to blackmail edgar Randolph and Miss
Ellie breaks off her engagement with Clayton. (60 min.)
fB
00 Kentucky .
General Assembly
0) <ID Session '84
9:30 0) <ID Enterprise 'Hard
News.· The clash of
Ted Turner's Cable
News Network vs.
ABC's Satellite New~.
Channel is examined.
[Closed Captioned)
10:00 U (I) CiD Cl) New
Show
Tonight's
guests are Gilda Radner
and Kevin Kline. (60
min.)
0 (]) Falcon Crest
lfj
TBS
Evening
(l)
Report
Business
® Austin City
Limits 'Ray Charles
and Lee Greenwood.'
Ray Charles performs
some of his blend of
blues, country and soul
and Lee Greenwood
performs his special
brand of music. (60
min.)
10:30 fB ill International
Edition Journalist Ford
Rowan hosts this look
at important trends and
news events as they
are reported by foreign
journalists.
11:oo
Ne'Ns
& All In the Family
fB
(l)
To
Be ·
Announced
G CID Dr. Who
11 :30 U (I) CiD (I) Tonight
Show
.
0 (]) MOVIE: 'The :
Driver' A professional!
get-away driver is the
target of an obsessed
policeman.
Ryan
O'Neal. Bruce Dern.
1978.
Catlins
G G1l MOVIE: To Be
Announced
12:00 U) C!l News
& Night Tracks
12:30 D (I) CiD (I) Friday
Night Videos
U) C!l Nightline
1 :30 U) (!) CNN Headline
News
2:00 U (I) News
Ul C!l Pentecost
Today
2:30 U) (!) Bionic Woman
u m o rn m m
m
·C(~tur~~v».
1/21/84
MORNING
5:00
5:30
6:00
6:15
6:30
7:00
7:30
&
Night
Tracks
Cont'd
U) @'Rev. Pete Rowe
U
(I)
Saturday
Report
U) (!) Farm Digest
&
TBS
Morning
News
(!)Forum 19
0 (])T.V. Classroom
U) (!)Town Crier
U
(I)
Joy
of
Gardening
0
(])
Captain
Kangaroo
U) (!) CNN Headline
News
& Between the Lines
0) <ID Nature of
Things
CiD
(I)
Amazing
Spiderman/lncredible
Hulk
U (I) Bugs Bunny &
Friends
U) (!) ABC Weekend
Special 'Cougar!' Conclusion. After having
swept
their
house
away in a flood. a boy
_m
and his little sister are
CiD Cil That Nashville
confronted by a moun- ·
Music
tain lion and a pair of 12:30 U (I) Thundarr
kidnappers.
[Closed ·
U)
C!l American
Captioned)
Bandstand
G Romper Room ancf
fB Cil Here's to Your
Friends
Health
s:oo
0) ® Wall Street
Flintstone Funnies
Week Louis Rukeyser
0 ({) Biskitts
analyzes the '80s with
U) C!l Best of Scooby
a weekly review of
Doo
economic and invest& Starcade
me-:1t matters.
G <ID Two Ronnies
CiD Cl) Kentucky
8:3o
Shirt
Afield
Tales
1 :00 U (1) NCAA Basket0
(]) Saturday
ball: Ohio at Bowling
Supercade
Green
U) C!l Monchhichis/
0 (]) New Fat Albert
Little Rascals/Richie
Show
Rich
fB 00 Here's to Your
&
MOVIE:
'Ride
Health
Beyond Vengeance'
0) <ID Family Portrait
Returning to his wife after 11 years, a buffalo
hunter is attacked,
robbed and branded.
Chuck Connors, Michael Rennie. 1966.
G ® Bless Me
Father
9:00 U (I) CiD Cl) Smurfs
@!t G1l To the Manor
Born
By Ethlie Ann Vare
9:30 0 (]) Dungeons and
Dragons
U) C!l Pac-Man/Rubik
Cube Hour
6) G1l Dave Allen at
Large
10:00 0 (]) Plasticman
Michael Jackson wil!
@!t ® Dad's Army
, reunite with his brothers for a
1 0:30 U (I) fiB Cl) Alvin &
major tour in 1984, to be sponthe Chipmunks
by Pepsi Cola. The price
0 (]) Charlie Brown · sored
tag for Pepsi linking its name
& Snoopy
· with Jackson's is estimated to
(!)Littles
be $10 million.
&
MOVIE:
'The
Next month, Duran Duran
Chase' A convict eswill be embarking on its first
capes and heads for his
United States tour since attainTexas home where his
ing superstar status. Expect to
wife is having an affair
see their pretty faces adorning
with a wealthy man's
many magazine covers.
son. Marion Brando,
Jane Fonda, Angie
Yoko Ono and the three surDickinson, Robert Redviving Beatles have been meetford. 1966
ing to discuss the dissolution of
fB (l) Social ProbApple Records, which released
lems/Ciassrm.
the Beatles' last albums. The
@!t G1l House For All
company could be worth as
Seasons
much as a billion dollars.
11 :00 U (I) Cifj Cl) Mr. T
Def Leppard, still smarting
0 Cil Benjl/Zax/Alien
from lead singer Joe Elliot's
Prince
anti-Latino remark at a
U) (!) Puppy/Scooby
concert. donated $15.000 to
Doo Show
Hispanic charity groups and
fB (]) Presenter
have publicly apologized for
G G1l All New This
the gaffe.
Old House
English
Beat
The
11 :30 U
(I)
Amazing
announced to the world that
Spiderman/lncredible
they were looking for a new
Hulk
0 (I) Bugs Bunny/
lead singer, and have so far
Road Runner
received more than 300 audlfB
~usiness
lion tapes 1n the mail. They
Management
haven't found anyone yet, so
G ® Woodwright's
there's still 11me to send your
Shop
cassette.
CiD Cl) Fishing Fever
AFTERNOON
u
m m m
u mmm
NCAA Basketball:
Villanova
at
Notre Dame
1:30 0 Cl) Children's Film
Festival
U) C!l Shopsmith
&
MOVIE:
'Will
Penny' An aging cowboy falls in love with a
woman who helps him
after he is attacked and .
left for dead by outlaws. Charlton Heston,
Joan Hackett, Donald
Pleasance. 1968.
fB 00 Focus on
Society
2:00 0 ill Let's Go To The
Races
U) C!l Sarajevo '84
fB 00 Focus on
Society
@!t ffi) Making It
Count
ill Fishing w/
2:30 0
Roland Martin
fB 00 American Gov't
Survey
G <ID Making It
Count
3:00 U (I) NCAA Basketball: Georgetown vs: ' 4:30 fB 00 GED Series
(I)
All
Star,
5:00 0
St. John's
Wrestling
0 (]) CBS Sports
U) ill Wide World of
Saturday Today's proSports
gram features boxing,
Fishin' w/Orlando
the
Kauai
Classic .
Wilson
Triathlon and a World
fB 00 Firing Line
Cup Ski Report. (3 hrs.)
0) ® Masterpiece
NCAA
Theatre 'The Citadel.·
Basketball: Alabama
Andrew's dedication to
at LSU
practicing
medicine
fB Cil American Gov't
with integrity is reSurvey
vived. (60 min.) [Closed
G G1l Vietndm: A .
Captioneo]
Television History
CiD (I) Greatest Sports
3:30 @) 00 Another Page
Legends
4:00 & World Champion5:30 & Motorweek lllusship Quarter Horse
trtrted
Show
fiB Cl) America's Top
fB (]) GED Series
Ten
8!t ® All Creatures
Great and Small
EVENING
m
m rn m m
6:00
ROCK ON
6:30
UPDATE
7:00
12:00 U) (!)America's Top
Ten
fB
(l)
Business
Management
&t ® Washington
Week/Review
WHO'S WHO
The Motels' Martha Davis
. cut short the bilnd's recent
0
(])News
Championship Wrestling
fB Cil Matinee at the
Bijou
G
<ID Undersea
World of Jacques
Cousteau
fiB (I) At The Movies
D (I) CiD (I) NBC
News
0 (])Concern
U) (!) Dance Fever
U (I) Emergency:
Special Report
0 Cil Hee Haw
Solid Gold
@!t G1l Dr. Who Movie
Cifj Cl) Jamboree
& NBA Basketball:
Atlanta at New York
fB (]) Sneak Previews Co-hosts Neal
Gabler and
Jeffrey
Lyons take a lool( at
what's happening at
the movies.
U (I) fiD Cl) Diff' rent
Strokes Mr. Drummond finds himself attracted to an aerobics
instructor that his company is trying to make a
star out of. (Closed
Captioned)
0 (]) Whiz Kids
18 (!) T. J.-*iooker
fB Cil Nature 'lnPraise
of God.' Some of the
first naturalists to study
animal behavior are examined. (R) (60 min.)
[Closed Captioned)
U (I) CiD Cl) Silver
Spoons When Ricky invites Dexter along on a
camping trip, one misafter
another
take
keeps Dexter from enjoying the outdoor life.
G ® Hitch Hiken
Guide/Galaxy
U (I) Cl) We Got It
Made
0
(1)
MOVIE:
'Making
love'
A
young woman must
face the knowledge
that her husband is in
love with another man. ·
Kate Jackson, Harry
Hamlin, Michael Ontkean. 1981 .
(I)
m World
m rn
7:30
m
rn
U
Michael Jackson
tour because · of what the
rec·ord company called
"exhaustion." Miss Davis told
reporters, however, that she
had to undergo surgery to
remove a cancerous growth.
The sultry vocalist is OK now.
Unlikely duet of the year:
Willie Nelson and Julio Iglesias are getting together for a
Columbia recording.
_ Wendy 0 . Williams, laugh- .
mg stock of the Plasmatic&, is
making a solo LP produced by
Gene Simmons of Kiss.
Our quote of the week
comes from Martin · Fry. lead
singer of ABC. Asked what he
would do to improve the state
of popular music. he replied:
" I'd buy a big boat, and I'd fill
it with people like REO ·
Speedwagon. Styx, Asia, Yes
and Foreigner. And I'd row it
. out into thP. middle of the
Pacific and detonate it from a
distance. That'd be a good .
start. "
Journey's Steve Perry turns
31 on J<ln. 22
@19a.! Compulog
8:00
8:30
9:00
e
�((§n~i"
1/22/84
MORNING
. RADAR RETURNS
Former 4077th member
Radar
O'Reilly
(Gary
Burghoff) shows up at the .
Potters' house on his wedding
day on "AfterMASH," airing
MONDAY, JAN. 23 on CBS.
CHECK LISTINGS FOR EXACT TIME
REMINGTON STEELE
5:00 Gl (]) Rev. Pete Rowe
6:00 Gl(])Omni
6:15
6:30
7:00
@1984 Compulog
Laura (Stephanie Zimbalist) and Remington (Pierce
Brosnan) go to Mexico to
investigate a diamond-smuggling operation in "Steele
Away with Me," a special twohour rebroadcast episode of
NBC's "Remington Steele,"
airing TUESDAY, JAN. 24.
&News
1D Week/Review
Cil TV Chapel
0 (j) Better Way
Gl (]) What Does tile
Bible Say?
ID TBS Morning
News
Cil Music and the
Spoken Word
0 (]) Jerry Falwell
G) (]) Roger Sparks
Religion
1D World Tomorrow
0) ® MOVIE: 'Dr.
Kildare's Crisis'
CiB (1) Time for
a
a
CHECK LISTINGS FO,R EXACT TIME
@)1984 Compulog
~efreshing
7:30
Gl C!l Love Boat Two
sisters meet for the
f1rst time in 40 years, a
childless couple who
want to have a child
wind up in separate cabins and Isaac shows ·
favor to a pretty student in his bartending
class. (60 min.)
· 119 (I) Basketball
0) (fi) World War I
9:30
Cil CiB (I) Mama's
Family Mama and Naomi wind up in court
suing each other.
0) ® Bear Next Door~
9:45 ID Unknown War.
10:00
Cil CiB (I) Yellow:
Rose After helping an ·
elderly bank robber escape
from
prison,
Chance avoids trouble
when a warden agrees
to make no charges
provided the old fellow
comes back within 24
hours. (60 min.)
Gl C!l Fantasy Island
0) (ID Peter Batty
Special
10:45 ID
TBS
Evening
News
11 :00
Cil 0 (l) News
Gl (!) ABC News
119 ill Austin City
Umits
0) (fi) MOVIE: 'The
Lady Vanishes' Hitchcock's
spy
classic
about a mysterious disappearance aboard a
fast-moving
Balkanbound train. Michael
Redgrave, Paul Lukas,
Margaret Lockwood.
1938.
CiB (I) Music Magazine
11:15 Gl (!) News
ID Open the Gates/
Troy
11 :30
Cil CiB Cil Saturday
Night Uve
0 (l) MOVIE: 'The
Day the Fish Came'
Out' A Greek island becomes a mod tourist
resort while two pilots
hunt for a lost atomic
bomb dropped by their
plane. Tom Courtenay,
Candice Bergen, Sam
Wanamaker. 1967.
Gl (!) Music Magazine
11 :45
Night Tracks
12:00 Gl (!) Black Music
Magazi11e
12:30 Gl (!) Ufestyles of the
Rich and Famous
1 :00
Cil
MOVIE:
'College Swing' Gracie attempts to get:
through grade school
after 20 years. Martha.
Raye, Betty Grable,
Jackie Coogan, Bob
Hope, Burns and Allen.
1938
2:00 a(!) Rockford Files
8
Night
Tracks
a
a
a
a
a
a
Cont'd
a
Cil Fountain of Ufe
Gl (!) James Robison
ID It Is Written
8:00
Cil Hour of Power
0
(]) Day of
Discovery
G (!) Jerry Falwell
1D Cartoon Carnival
fB ([) Sesame Street
[Closed Captioned)
CiB
Cil
Gateway
Gospel
8:30
Cil Expect a
Miracle
fil (]) Christ for the
World
1D Starcade
0) (fi) Wild America
CiB (I) Biblical Viewpoint
a
a
'9:00
a
Cil Rex Humbard
0 (]) Sunday Morn-
ing
Gl
(!)
Kenneth
Copeland
ID leave It to Beaver
fB ([) Sesame Street
[Closed Captioned)
0)
(fi)
National
Geographic Special
·Among the Wild Chimpanzees.·
Cil Sunday School
9:30
Cil
Kenneth
Copeland
1D Andy Griffith
(ifj (I) Rev. A.A. West
10:00 G)(!) Rev. R.A. West
m
a
Greatest 60 minutes
Or just one big hype?
a
a
m
(SP9RTS PR~BE) -.
GREA.T STUFF CBS
calls the Super Bowl the
"greatest 60 minutes in
sports." It has to be the
most greatly hyped 60 minutes in sports.
At least the network
doesn't call the day "Super
Sunday'' anymore. Maybe
now they will call it "Great
Sunday'' instead.
When that network televises today's Super Bowl
XVIII from Tampa Stadium
in Tampa, Fla., at 4:30p.m.
(ET) the game will be preceded by two hours of
more greatness, ''The
Super Bowl Today." It will
feature Jimmy the Greek,
- Phyllis George and other
football greats, including
newscaster
Charles
Osgood.
There is something great
about the prices it is getting
for
commercials.
Advertisers paid $450,000
per 30-second spot - and
that was the bargain rate
for early buyers. Latecomers were charged an
extra $30,000 for their halfminute messages.
ABC, who will televise
the big show next year. is
reported to have already
sold six spots at half a million dollars each for Super
Bowl XIX.
Why so much? In addition to the 100 million
- viewers in the United States
exposed to the Super Bowl
_game, which in its 17-year
history has seldom proven
to be
great game, it will
be seen by potential buyers
in Canada, Mexico, Austra-
Tonight's
orogram
looks at nat lists' efforts over the centuries
to learn the language of
animals. (R) (60 min .)
8:30 0 Cil 60 Minutes
9:00
Cil CiB (I) Knight
Rider KITT is nearly
destroyed when it confronts a tractor-trailer
that has been assembled from the same
unique ingredients by
the ex-wife of the
Knig 1t Industries' founder. (R) (2 hrs.)
G)
(!)
MOVIE:
'Diamonds Are Forever' .!ames Bond pursues an arch villain who
plans to conquer the
world using a space satellite armed with a
laser beam. Sean Connery, Jill St. John, Lana
Wood . 1971.
ID Week In Review
&Good News
f8 (]) Mr. Rogers'
Neighborhood
&) ® Nova 'The Case
of ESP.'
CiB (I) Big Creek
Baptist
10:30
Cil Dr. D. James
Kennedy
0 (]) Ernest Angley
Gl (!) Jimmy Swaggart
ID MOVIE: 'Spartacus'
f8
® Electric
Company
11 :00 f8 (I) Sesame Street
[Closed Captioned)
0)
®
MOVIE:
'Whistling Hills'
(ij (l) NCAA Basketball: UCLA at Louisville
11:30
Cil Meet the Press
0 (j) Viewpoint
G)(!) World Tomorrow
AFTERNOON
a
a
12:00
a
Cil NCAA Basket-
ball: UCLA at louisville
0 (]) Shopsmith
Gl (!)This Week with
David Brinkley
~
(J)
Working
Women
0) ® Sesame Street
[Closed Captioned)
12:30 0 (]) NCAA Basketball:
Houston
at
Kentucky
f8 (]) Comment on
Kentucky
1 :00 Gl (!) Biblical Viewpoint
f8 (]) Capitol ConJohn Madden
nection
(fi) Victory Garden
CiB (I) SportsWorld
lia, Italy, Japan, the United
1 :30 Gl (!) Virgil Wacks
Kingdom, Ireland and
Presents
Korea, not to forget the
f8 ([) Business of
many American military
Management
bases around the world.
0)
®
Working
Women
CBS is also making a
2:00
Cil SportsWorld
great effort to make sure
18 (!) NCAA Basketthe game is the best teleball:
Auburn
at
vised event thus far. Pat
Georgia
Summerall, who has had
f8 ([) Businesa of
broadcast assignments on
Management
0) (fi) MOVIE: 'Judge
16 of the 17 Super Bowls,
Hardy's
Children'
will do the play by play,
2:30 0 (l) Super Bowl
and the analysis will be pro~
Today
vided by the Emmy AwardID MOVIE: 'With Six
winning John Madden,
You Get Egg Roll' A
complete with his electric
widow with three sons
and a widower with
chalkboard.
one daughter decide to
The game will be cov- _
get married. Doris Day,
ered by 20 cameras, 14 ·
Brian Keith, Pat Carroll.
videotape machines. 100
1968.
microphones, 100 monitors f8 (l) Focus on
and 20 miles of cable will
Society
be used. The equipment
(ifj
Cil To
Be
Announced
was transported to Tampa
3:00 fB ([) Focus on
in 22 vehicles. including
Society
control trucks, office trail3:30
Cil That Nashville
ers and maintenance vehiMusic
cles.
t8 (l) Master and His
Are they covering the ·
Message
0)
(fi)
Barbara's
Olympics or just another · ·
Horses & Ponies
"great" football game?
m
a
a
a
Cil Music City
News Top Country
Hits Special
Gl (!) Voting for
Democracy Barry Serafin addresses the
problem of - declining
voter participation in
national elections.
f8 (l) Master and His
Message
0) (fi) Inside Story
'Whose News Is It?'
4:30 0 (l) Super Bowl
XVIII: Washington vs.
Los Angeles Raiders
Coverage of the NFL
Championship Game is
presented
from
Tampa, FL. (4 hrs.)
ID MOVIE: 'Trouble
River' A boy and his
rocking-chair -bound
grandmother, living in
the Pacific Northwest,
escape
danger
by
fleeing down a river on
a raft . Michael LeClair,
Nora Danney.
f8 (]) Social Problems/Ciassrm.
0) (fi) New Tech
Times
5:00 Gl (!) Sarajevo '84
f8 (I) All New This
Old House
0) (fi) Two Ronnies
;5:30 I& Jacques Cousteau
f8 (]) Woodwright's
Shop
0) ®To the Manor
Born
EVENING
4:00
6:00
6:30
7:00
7:30
8:00
a
Cil (6 (I) News
Gl (!) Star Search
f8 (I) Motorweek
0) (fi) Dad's Army
Cil (ifj (I) NBC
News
0 Nice People
f8 (l) Great ChefS/
San Francisco
0) ® Fawlty Towers
Cil (ij Cil MOVIE: ·
'The Kid Witn The
200 I.Q.' A 13-yearold genius goes to college and has problems
coping with the campus social life. Gary
Coleman, Dean Butler,
Harriet Nelson. 1982.
Gl (!)Ripley's Believe
It or Not!
ID Best of World
Championship Wrestling
fB (l) Nature 'Search
for the Mind.' Tonight's
program explores the
efforts of naturalists
who delve into the
mysteries of the animal
mind. (A) (60 min.)
0) ® Tony Brown's
Journal
CID Lawmakers
Gl (!) Hardcastle &
McCormick
America's Music
Tracks
tB ([) Raphael
0) (fi) Nature 'The Discovery of Animal Behavior.' Fifth of 6 parts.
a
a
m
a
rn
m
®
Masterpiece Theatre
'The Citadel.' Andrew
becomes the subject of
an official inquiry for
assisting at an operation not regarded quali·
tied by the British
physicians. (60 min.)
[Closed Captioned)
9:30 0 Cil Airwolf When a
futuristic anack helicopter is stolen by its
creator, a government
agency called The Firm
sends for Stringfellow
Hawke to retrieve it. (2
hrs.)
1 0:00 ID
TBS
Evening
News
f8 (l) Northwest
Autumn
0) illl Poldark
10:30 ID Sports Page
f8 (]) New Tech
Times
11 :00
Cil CiB (I) News
ID Jerry Falwell
0) ® Not the Nine
O'Clock News
11:30
(1)
MOVIE:
'Broken Arrow' One
man's courage helps
bring peace between
the Apaches and the
Arizona settlers in the
1870's. James Stewart, Jeff Chandler,
Debra Paget. 1950.
0 (j) News
Gl (!) ABC N~tws
OJ ® Monty Python
Flying Circus
CiB (I) MOVIE: 'Kent
State' This film looks
at the events of May,
1970, when a student
protest against President Nixon 's decision
to send troops into
Cambodia led to the
deaths of four students . Charley Land,
Jane
Fleiss,
Jeff
McCracken. 1981 .
11 :45 Gl (!) Forum 19
12:00 0 (j) This Week in
Country Music
G) . (!)
Pentecost
Today
ID People Who Fish
0) ® Dave Allen at
large
12:30 0 Cil Face the Nation
Gl (!) Jim Bakker
1 :00 0 (])MOVIE: 'Only a
Scream
Away'
A
bride· s marriage is
strangely haunted by a
series of mysterious incidents. Gary Collins .~
Hayley Mills, David
Warbeck . 1973.
1D MOVIE: 'Gold
Diggers of 1937' A
group of insur·ance
salesmen
back
a
Broadway show . Dick
Powell, Gloria Stuart,
Adolphe
Menjou.
1936.
1 :30 G) (!) Star Search
3;15 ID MOVIE: 'Dames' A
millionaire with a complex about morals, a
chorus girl and a Broadway show. Joan Blondell, Dick Powell, Hugh
Hert?ert. 1934.
a
a
'
�18 Munsters
flJ ® Sesame
MORNING
5:00
5:30
6:00
lfj Varied Programs
&l(!)Rev.PeteRowe
0 Cil NBC News at
Sunrise
0 (])
Jimmy
Swaggart
lfj
TBS
Morning
News
6:15 @it ill) Varied Programs
6:30 0 (]) News
0 (]) CBS Early
Morning News
&l
(!)
Assembly
Echoes
6:45 &l (!)ABC News This
Morning
@it ®Weather
7:00 0 Cil liD (JJ Today
0 Cl) CBS Morning
News
&l (!) Good Morning
America
lfj SuperStation Funtime
@it ®
Varied Programs
7:30 lfj I Dream of Jeannie
8:00 lfj Bewitched
flJ Cil Weather
@it ® Sesame Street
8:1 5 fB (]) Instructional:
Programs
8:30 lfj I Love Lucy
9:00 0
(]) Braun and
Company
0 Cl) Andy Griffith
&l (!) Jim Bakker
CD Movie
@it ®
Instructional
Programs
liD (JJ 700 Club
9:30 0 (]) Here's Lucy
1 0:00 0 Cil liD (JJ Facts of
Life
0 Cl) New $25.000
Pyramid
&l (!) 700 Club
10:30 0
(]) Sale of the
Century
0 (]) Press Your
Luck
liD
(JJ
Morning
Stretch
11 :00 0 (]) liD (JJ Wheel of
Fortune
0 Cl) Price Is Right
&l (!)Benson
CD Catlins
11 :30 0 (]) liD (JJ Dream
House
Loving
CD Texas
4:30
5:00
m rn
m rn
AFTERNOON
12:00
0 (]) Hot Potato
0 ® liD (JJ News
&l (!) Family Feud
lfj Perry Mason
12:30 0 (]) News
0 (]) Young and thE
Restless
&l (!)Ryan's Hope
liD (JJ Search For
Tomorrow
1 :00 0 (]) Days of Our
Lives
&l (!) All My Children
CD Movie
liD (JJ Sale of the
Century
1 :30 0 Cl) As the World
Turns
ED CV Days of Our
Lives
2:00 0 (]) Another World
&l (!) One Life to Live
@it® 3-2-1, Contact
2:30 0 Cl) Capitol
@it ®
Instructional
Programs
liD (JJ Another World
3:00 0 (]) Match Game/
Hollywood
Squares
Hour
0 Cl) Guiding Light
&l
(!)
General
Hospital
G SuperStation Funtime
@it ®
Varied Programs
3:30 G Flintstones
flJ
(])
Electric
Company
Cifj (JJ Match Game/
Hollywood
Squares
Hour
4:00 II f1) Mr. Cartoon
·0 (J) Hour Magazine
&l (!) Rockford Files
5:30
Street
[Closed Captioned]
@it (ill Untamed World
lfj Brady Bunch
@it (ill Mr. Rogers'
Neighborhood
liD (JJ Hot Potato
0 (]) B.J ./Lobo Show
0 Cl) Hawaii Five-0
&l (!) Superfriends
G Leave It to Beaver
flJ (]) Mr. Rogers'
Neighborhood
@it tiD Sesame Street
(Giosed Captioned]
liD (JJ PTL Club
&l (!)Tic Tac Dough
G Beverly Hillbillies
flJ (]) 3-2-1, Contact
«monday))
1/23/84
MORNING
7:30
9:00
@it tiD Sesame Street
(Closed Captioned]
G MOVIE: 'Lust For
Gold'
A
woman
schemes to kill her husband in an effort to win
the riches of the famous Lost Dutchman
gold mine. Ida Lupino.
Glenn Ford, Gig Young.
1949.
AFTERNOON
1 :00
G
MOVIE: 'Boots
Malone' A young boy,
after leaving home,
meets a man who
trains him to be a
jockey. William Holden,
Johnny Stewart, Stanley Clements. 1952.
EVENING
6:oo o rn o
(J)
m rn
liD (JJ News
G Little House on the
Prairie
flJ Cil MacNeil/Lehrer
News hour
@it® 3-2-1. Contact
6:30 0
(]) liD (JJ NBC
News
0 Cl) CBS News
&l (!)ABC News
@it
CID
Business
Report
7:00 0 (]) PM Magazine
0
Cil Wheel of
Fortune
&l (!)People's Court
G Carol Burnett
fB
® Kentucky
General Assembly
@it CID MacNeil/Lehrer
Newsho1,1r
liD (JJ How the West
Was Won
7:30 0 (])Tic Tac Dough
0 Cl) Family Feud
(!) Jeffersons
G Hogan's Heroes
8:00 0
(]) liD (JJ TV's
Bloopers,
Commercials & Pratical Jokes
Dick Clark and Ed
McMahon host this
look at scenes never intended for viewing by
an audience. (60 min.)
0 Cil AfterMASH On
his wedding day, Radar
O'Reilly
suddenly
shows up at Col. Potter's house.
&l (!) NCAA Basketball:
Alabama
at
Mississippi
G MOVIE: 'Cen·
tennial' Part 11 Eleventh of 12 parts.
Charlotte Lloyd takes
up the cause of mistreated Mexican residents. Lynn Redgrave,
Alex Karras, William
Atherton.
fB (]) @it tiD Frontline
'We Are Driven.' The
darker side of Japanese. labor relations
is examined. (60 min.)
[Closed Captioned)
8:30 0
Cil
Newhart
George Utley decides
to become a volunteer
fireman.
9:00 0 (]) liB (JJ MOVIE:
'Th! Outlaw Josey
m
Nales'
An
exConfederate
soldier
seeks vengeance when
his family and home are
destroyed. Clint East-'
wood,
Chief
Dan .
George, Sondra Locke.
1976.
0 Cl) MOVIE: 'The
Four Seasons' The
change of seasons
marks the changing relationships of three
married couples. Alan
Aida, Carol Burnett,
Len Cariou. 1981.
flJ Cil @it tiD Great '
Performances 'Edith
Wharton: The House of
Mirth.' Geraldine Chaplin stars as Lily Bart in
this story about the life
of New York City's social aristocracy during
the early 1900s.
10:00 &l (!)That's Incredible!
G
TBS
Evening
News
10:30 fB
Cil Business
Report
@it® Ellis Island Tonight's program looks
at the images of 16 million people who arrived
at Ellis Island, hoping to
be allowed entry into
the U.S. (R)
11
News
G All In the Family
@it CID Dr. Who
11 :30 0 (]) News
0 (]) Hart to Hart
Jonathan and Jennifer
become involved in a ·
mystery after the bodyguard of a government
witness is killed. (R) (60
min.)
&l (!) Nightline
G Catlins
CID Latenight·
America
liD (I) NCAA Basketball: Western Indiana
vs. Eastern Indiana
12:00 0 (])Tonight Show
G Portrait of America: Indiana
12:30 0 Cil Columbo 'Short
Fuse.' Columbo investigates the death of a
corporate executive in
which the company attorney is the main suspect. (R) (90 min.)
G) (!) CNN Headline
News
1 :00 0 (]) Late Night with
David Letterman
G MOVIE: 'Those
Redheads From Seattle' During the Gold
Rush, a woman and her
four daughters travel to
Alaska, only to find her
newspaper-owner husband
murdered.
Rhonda Fleming, Gene
Barry, ,A.gnes Moorehead. 1953.
1 :30 &l (!) Bionic Woman
3:00 G
MOVIE:
'That
Hamilton
Woman'
Portrayed is the tragic
love story of Lord Hora- ·
tio Nelson and Lady
Emma Hamilton. Laurence Olivier, Viven
Leigh. 1941.
:oo o rn m
rn m oo
m
r~.::;=ctav»-1/24/84
MORNING
9:00
1 :00
;------------~,-------~--~
DOMESTIC LIFE
Martin Mull and Judith-Marie Bergan star as Martin and
Candy Crane, a couple worried about making a loan
payment, on the CBS comedy
"Domestic Life," airing
WEDNESDAY, JAN. 25.
CHECK LISTINGS FOR EXACT TIME
@)1984 Compulog
6:oo o rn o rn m rn
:oo o rn o rn m rn
Cifj (l) News
G
Little House on the
Prairie
fB Cil MacNeil/Lehrer
Newshour
@it® 3-2-1, Contact
6:30 0 (]) liD (l) NBC
News
0 Cil CBS News
&l (!)ABC News
@)
CID Business
Report
7:00 0 (]) PM Magazine
0
Cl) Wheel of
Fortune
&l (!)People's Court
G Carol Burnett
fB
Cil Kentucky
General Assembly
@it ® MacNeil/Lehrer
Newshour
liD (JJ At The Movies
7:30 0 (])Tic Tac Dough
0 Cl) Family Feud
(!) Jeffersons
G Hogan's Heroes
fB Cil Play Bridge
liD (l) Headwaters
8:00 0 (]) liD (JJ A Team
The A Team uses aversion of 'the Trojan
Horse' when it battles a
gang that has taken
over a monastery. (R)
(60 min.)
0 Cl) Mississippi
&l
(!)
Foulups,
Bleeps/Blunders
G MOVIE: 'Centennial' Part 12 Conclusion. Historian Lew
Vernor joins forces
with a magazine writer
to do a story about the
when a late-night i.ritruder turns out to be a
burglar.
1 0:00 &l (]) Hart to Hart
(]) Business
fB Cil@) tiD Nova 'An- 1 0:30 fB
Report
atomy of a Volcano.'
@8 ® Firing Line
The eruption of Mt. St.
Helens and its after11
liD (JJ News
math are explored. (R)
G
TBS
&tening ;
(60 min.) [Closed CapNews
tioned)
.11:30 0 (]) liD (I) Tonight
&l (!) Happy Days
Show
0 Cl) Magnum P.l.
Remington
Steele
Magnum comes to the
Laura is pursued by a
aid of a former Russian
U.S. Customs agent
pilot who has decided
who believes she's part
to defect. (R) (60 min.)
of a smuggling ring and
&l (]) Nightline
a Mexican police cap®
Latenight
tain believes RemingAmerica
ton is a fugitive. (R) (2
12:00 G Catlins
.
hrs.)
0 (]) MOVIE: 'Lost 12:30 0 (]) Late Night with
David Letterman
Honor of Kathryn
0 Cil McCloud 'Mur- ·
Beck' A woman be- ·
der Arena.· McCloud
comes caught up in a
investigates the death
relentless and terrifying
of a rodeo star while ·
campaign by the police
trying to find a psyand press to locate the
chotic killer. (R) (90
man with wtlom she
min.)
has fallen in love. Mario
&l (!) CNN Headline
Thomas, Kris KristofNews
ferson,
George
G
MOVIE:
'The
Dzundza. 1984.
Silent Partner' A bank
&l
(!)
Three's
teller cashes in on a
Company
bank robbery in profB Cil @it (ill American
Playhouse
'Pudd'ngress. Elliott Gould,
Christopher Plummer.
head Wilson.' Ken Ho1979.
ward stars in this
1 :00 &l (]) Bionic Woman
speciaf presentation of
Mark Twain's work on
2:45 G
MOVIE: 'Devil
Dogs of the Air' A .
pre-Civil War racial prejudice in America. (90
wise-guy flyer, ready to
steal his officer's girl, .
min.) (Closed
Caplearns the meaning of
tioned]
discipline during a test
&l (!) Oh Madeline
Madeline's effort to
flight. Mes Cagney, Pat
O'Brien, Margaret Lindorotect Robert from his
say. 1935.
girlfriend's
ex4:45 G Search for the Nile
boyfriend
backfires
town of Centennial.
David Janssen, Robert
Vaughn, Andy Griffith.
tion. Glenn Ford, Gloria
Grahame,
Jocelyn
Brando. 1953.
EVENING
8:30
9:oo
o
rn
& MOVIE: 'The Big
Heat' An angry cop is
out to smash a mobster
and break his hold on a
corrupt city adminis~ra-
m
m
m
9:30
Sports Calendar
SUNDAY
(NBC) GOLF
(CBS) NCAA BASKETBALL
Live coverage of the semi-final round of the lsuzuAndy Williams San Diego Open from Torrey Pines
Country Course in La Jolla. Ca .. with Vin Scully and
Lee Trevino as coverage hosts .
University of Houston Cougars vs University of Ken. tucky Wildcats, with Gary Bender and Billy Packer
providing commentary, live, from Rupp Arena,
Lexington, Kentucky.
(CBS) SUPER BOWL XVIII
G
MOVIE:
'The
Stranger' The professor of a small college
fears that his Nazi background may be uncovered when a government agent arrives.
Orson Welles, Loretta
Young, Edward G. Robinson. 1946.
AFTERNOON
m
(NBC) COLLEGE BASKETBALL
UCLA at Louisville.
(NBC) SPORTSWORLD
Highlights: boxing - WBA junior welterweight
championship scheduled 15-round bout featuring
Johnny Bumphus vs. Loranzo Garcia from Atlantic
City, N.J.
SATURDAY
(NBC) COLLEGE BASKETBALL
(ABC) WIDE WORLD OF SPORTS
(ABC) PRO BOWLERS TOUR
$125,000 Quaker State Open, Forum Bowling
Lanes, Grand Prairie, Texas.
(ABC) GOLF
PGA Senior Championships, PGA National Golf
Club, Palm Beach Gardens, Fla.
(ABC)SPORTSBEAT
(CBS) NCAA BASKETBALL DOUBLEHEADER
Game 1: St. John's University Redman vs. Syracuse
University Orangemen, live, from Manley Fieldhouse, Syracuse, N.Y.; or University of Georgia Bulldogs vs. University of Kentucky Wildcats, live, from
Rupp Arena, Lexington. Ky. Game 2: DePaul University Blue Demons vs. UCLA Bruins, live from
Pauley Pavilion, Los Angeles: Calif.
�The Floyd County T1m-
JOE D.
---------•
WEDDINGTON
R~AL lo;&TATE
.~
874-9633
CARD Ot' THANKS
The family of Paul Harris wishes to
express their appreciation and thanks to
all who sent food and flowers during this
time of need. Thanks to the ministers
and all the neighbors thaL helped us
through this trying time. Also, the Hall
Funeral Home for its kind and courteous
service.
THE HARRIS FAMILY
lt.
newspaper
advertising done
effectively! and in·
expensively! We'll
help you do the entire
job from theme to copy
to artwork ... for the cost
of the ad space alone!
Interested? Call Ken Peters at
886-8506 and he'll call on you!
The Floyd County Times
* Extension Service Notes *
4-H CLUB NEWS
Clark Elementary 6th Grade-President, Bill Tom Compton; vice president,
·Christopher L. Slone; secretary, Melissa
M. Turner; reporter, Johnnie Ray GoFor ·1-H
ble; song leaders, Thomas Shepherd,
CLARK AND OSBORNE
Estill Collins, Jr. Willis Hal Rice, and
4-H CLUBS ORGANIZED
Nineteen 4-H Clubs were organized Robert T. Smith; leader, Shelby
Draughn.
recently in the Clark and Osborne EleClark Elementary 6th Grade-Presimentary Schools.
dent,
Aqdrea Dale; vice president,
Ten clubs were organized in the Clark
School and nine in the Osborne Elemen- Brian Meadows; secretary, Amy Hicks;
tary School. This concludes 4-H organi- reporter, Tammi Collins; song leaders,
Angie Greene, Stephen Newsome and
zation for the 1984 year.
Michael
Layne; leader, Dianna HunOfficers and leaders of these clubs are
sucker.
as follows:
Clark Elementary 7th Grade-PresiClark Elementary 4th Grade-President, Thomas Nairn; vice president,
dent, David Pigman; vice president,
Laura Miller; secretary, Barclay Todd Justice; secretary, Christina
Perry; reporter, Clyde Lewis; song Allen; reporter, Stepharue Reynolds;
leaders, Stacia Howard, Mary Pigman, song leaders, Ida Huddleston, Sean
Shepherd, Paul Thompson and Connie .
Michael Clark and Tara Rose; leaders,
Spencer; leader, Mrs. Glennora MontMrs. Voila May and Sally Osborne.
gomery.
Clark Elementary 5th Grade-PresiClark Elementary 7th Grade-President, Randi Polk; vice president, John
dent,
Beth Hamm; vice president, 8\.&n
Mark; secretary, Edwinna Hale; reporter, Doug Seat; song leaders, Stephanie Carter; secretary, Robin Taylor; reporter, Krista! Warrix; song leaders,
Rice, James Risner and Jeff Hamilton;
Woody
Poe, Lisa Hale and Jonathan Gogame leaders; Melissa Compton, Jearue
ble;
game
leaders, Greg Horton, Dallas
Hughes, David Howell and Robert
Polk and Scott Bentley; CoordinatorTussey ; leader, Mrs. Alberta Slone ..
Clark Elementary 5th Grade-Presi- Director, Sherry Flannery; leader, Mrs.
Pat Dye.
dent, Brett Meadows; vice president,
Clark Elementary 8th Grade-PresiBelinda Collins; secretary, Amy
Osborne; reporter, Jennifer R. Shep-' dent, Julie Newberry; vice president,
Shawn Blackburn; secretary, Shelly
herd; song leaders, Krista! Vaughan,
Neil Slone and Kimberly Poe; game Hale; reporter, Lewis Hicks; song
leaders, Jonathan Leslie, Cordell Grif- leaders, Becky Clark, Sbawna Shepherd
and Ronnie Baldridge; game leaders,
fith, Malesa Blair and Sherry Holbrook;
Becky Clark, Shawna Shepherd and
leader, Mrs. Debbie Hicks.
Clark 6th Grade-President, Christy Ronnie Baldridge; leader, Mrs. Judy
Carter.
Walker; vice president, Rachelle
Clark Elementary 8th Grade-PresiRisner; secretary, Todd Goodman;
dent,
Meri Click; vice president, Tania
reporter, Billie Sue Dotson; song
leaders, Tommy Poe, Linden Lantz and Shepherd; secretary, Kay Skeens;
reporter, Steven Stanley; leader, Earl
Jeff Samons; game leaders, Jerry
D. Ousley.
Slone, Larry Ousley and Jeff Bailey;
Osborne Elementary 3rd & 4th (Group
leader, Edith Jones.
E) President, Kerby Smith; vice president Richard Hall; secretary, Angela
Slon~; song leaders, Ray Dorion, Tivis
Howell and Chris Howell; game leaders,
Kelly Lackey, Shannon Johnson and
Michelle Keene; leader, Ruth Jones.
Osborne Elementary 4th & 6th
Grades-President, Becky Allen; vice
president, Chris Mullins; secretary,
Evan Hall; song leaders, Carrie Smith
and David Hughes; game leaders, Dennis Crager and Steven Jacobson; leader,
Mrs. Evia F. Curry.
Osborne Elementary 5th & 6th
Grades-President, John Ferrari; vice
president, Shawn Johnson; Secretary,
Johnny Floyd; song leaders, Rodney
Hall, Paul Hill, Naomi Hall and Denny
Justice; leader, Mrs. Zelma Johnson.
Osborne Elementary 5th & 6th
Grades-President, Tonya Johnson;
vice president, Marsha Hall; secretary,
Michelle Ray; reporter, Virgil Shelton;
song leaders, Billie See, Mike Justice
and Katrina Taylor; leader, Buford
Huff.
Osborne Elementary 6th GradePresident, Bobby Hood; vice president,
Randy Boyd; secretary, Haley Caudill,
reporters, Leslie Counts and Tara Hutton; song leaders, Kisha Cotton, Greg
Johnson, Kevin Isaac and Millis Hall;
game leaders, Anglea Cavins, Angie
Hall and Kevin Berger; leader, Ralph
Little.
Osborne Elementary 7th GradePresident, Chris Bates; vice president,
Brian Boyd; secretary, Victor Cotton;
reporter, Tommy Mays; song leaders,
John McCoy, Shawn McKenzie; game
leaders, Talitha Hutton and Jelena
Brank; leader, Mrs. Jan Akers.
Osborne Elementary 7th GradePresident, Lisa Anderson; vice president, Todd Jackson; secretary, Penny
Triplett; reporter, Benjy McKay; song
leaders, Tyra Newman, Shawanna Hutton and Katonia Brank; leader, Roger
Johnson.
Osborne Elementary 8th GradePresident, Steve Cole; vice president,
Victor Harper; secretary, Sheree Scott;
reporter, Bobby Hall; leader, Thomas
Gibson.
Osborne Elementary 8th GradePresident, Billie Johnson; vice president, Peggy Johnson; secretary, Tonya
Burke and Randy Conley; reporter,
Tephanie Green; song leaders, Kathy
Price, Shane Cook and Michelle Hall;
leader, Kenneth Eads.
By .JACK M. FRIAR
Co. Ext. Agent
SAVINGS
FROM YOUR SUNDRY STORE!
Re.a •no ')110....
l.tOt'ld••~I<Ons
CARD OF THANKS
The family of Hannah Stewart would
like to thank all of those who expressed
their sympathy to us, for the food,
flowers and comforting words. Each expression of sympathy was appreciated.
An extra special thanks to the Rev.
Don Fraley, Jr., mem~ of the Church
of God of Prophecy, and the staff of the
Hall Funeral Home for their kind and ef. ficient service.
THE FAMILY
lt.
----------------~
VALUABLE SUNDRY COUPON
I
OUR SALE PRICE 10.99 MFR'S REBATE 3.00
lfTll
Jll
nun
MTH
COUI'OII
UMIT I WlftS I-2U4
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C ----------------~I
EMPLOYMENT
OPPORTUNITY
I
VALUABLE SUNDRY COUPON
COUISELOR BATH SCALES
IUIO
Tilt FleJIII c..ty llealtll .,.,.,......
hn • YKMCJfW Cllrtl T,!lt I • .._..
al.. ullry Is $3.41 ,... ....... A,.._
t ...a we ,,..,.... It Ute ReJIII C...ty
H-"11 De,.-.....t.
11111....-. fw tills ,..,.... n:
GnMI..tl• , _ 111P ICIIMII......
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werll wlllcll lila ..... Ia tiM Jllwfw. _.. ef • ..,...., 4lfllclllt clertul
11141 tnl•l Htill, ... •• .... . . . .
c....._tlel ef l"'t.te4 tnt.IIIIM ••ptri•ce.
~tlllll -st 1M receiYM ., . .
Mwlt Syst. . Office, ...... fw llllltll
C•••••t
fer II••••
R....-cea, Z75 bat . . StrMt,
Frlllkftrt, K•blc:IIJ 40121, • w
lltfw• IIII..Pt F._., 1, 1114.
AN EQUAL OfPOitTUIITY E..._OYU
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OR WHILE SUPPLIES LAST!
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We reserve
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and-correct
printing errors.
FEHIAL
STAMPS
WELCOME
Prices in effect Wed., Jan. 18 thru Sun., Jan. 22.
~s:,.~,~AN
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2/89c ~~iNC:R'S
89 c
c
$ 129
CHEESE BALLS......
:~;,~OTTL£
CATSUP...............
:::;
99
$159
2/89c
3/79c
BATH TISSUE.......
BiLLARD
BISCUITS
.
PEACHES .....
~~rc~:p
· ~:~~~K
BATH TISSUE ....... .
10.5-0Z. CAN
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IGA .
2/99c
-DAIRY-
TOMATO SOUP ..
1-LB.BOX
CRACKERS .......... .
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SJ 09 i~M 79c .=101L s109
CHEESE ....
2/$109
2/$1
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69
PAPER TOWELS ..
99
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GATORADE .....·..... .
PEELED TOMATOES ..
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FRYER DRUMSTICKS ........ .. ....... 9~.
FRYER THIGHS .... ........................ 69~.
PORK STEAKS .. ..... .. ................... $1 4!.
GROUND BEEF ............o~-:"re........... 9 e
FROZEN FOODS
FRESH
GROUND
CHUCK
1 79
LB.
10-li.BAG
IDAHO
POTATOES
1/2 GALLON- ALL VARIEnES
48 COUNT
FLORIDA
$199
.PINK GRAPEFRUIT
4/$1
3-U.IAG
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APPLES ......
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12.0Z.
$129
12·0Z. PKG.
89
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99
c
3·1..1. WINESAP
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RED
APPLES ......
~-:.::D£UCIOUS
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99 c
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IGA
ICE CREAM
IGA WIENERS .........
C
FISCHER'S BOLOGNA .$1 59
RANDOM WEIGHT
$1 9
PLAMRBACON . ....
$109
Lb.
FELD'5-P'UR£
PORK SAUSAGE . . . . . .
99c
lb.
APPitOX. S.U. ltOLL ..$4.95
30-0Z. SIZE
ORE IDA SJ29
CRISPERS.
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HILLSHIR£ FAitM
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LEG QUARTERS . . . . . . .
59 C
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SMOKE SAUSAGE ....
32.0Z. JAR
$1ll
CLAUSEN PICKLES . . .
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$1 59
�
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Floyd County Times 1984
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Floyd County Times January 18, 1984
-
http://history.fclib.org/files/original/41/3331/01-25-1984.pdf
e64912f23e3b7de9bd5866726f28a7d8
PDF Text
Text
•
<!tnu ty Q!imrs
Speaking of
and for
~ loyd County
A
PRESTONSBURG,
Read Each Week by More Than 12,500 Families.
USPS-2027-0000
Volume LVII
No.4
25~
WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 25, 1984
Board Votes To Levy
3o/o Utilities Tax
Solid Waste
May Legally
Void Lease
RECENT SNOWS may have played havoc with everything from roads to water lines, but they
also provided pictur-esque views all over the county. This two-story home near Weeksbury with
a wash strung on the line created a pleasant old-fashioned winter scene.
•Solid Waste Loan
Problem for Court
As Revenue Sharing
.funds Short; Bank
Loan Payment Near
It was not a good time to ask the fiscal
court for money, Bob McAninch, chairman of the county's solid waste board,
told directors last week.
The board had earlier authorized
McAninch to ask the fiscal court to cosign a note for $40,000 which it hoped to
-Parrow from the ·Bank Josephine. But
• he county may already be in trouble
over a loan it took out on"the_garbage
agency's behalf last October. '
That was when the solid waste chairman, pleading for help to meet a bond
payment, persuaded the court to borrow
$52,500 from the Bank Josephine for four
months. By the time it came due, most
magistrates figured, the county would
have received its quarterly check for
$107,000 in federal revenue-sharing
monies and the loan could be retired
6 romptly. Only Magistrate Kenneth
-R_oberts opposed the loan.
A revenue-sharing check was
delivered Jan. 9-for $46,550, more than
$60,000 short of what was expected.
Another payment is not expected until
April. The bank note signed last October
falls due next month.
Judge-Executive John M. Stumbo said
this week that the cut in the county's
revenue-sharing check is apparently an
rror and that, at his request, U.S. Conressman Carl D. Perkins and state
Local Finance Officer Robert L. Purdom are investigating the matter, ·
There is no question but that the bank
will get its money, he insisted.
It was Purdom's office that prepared
this year's county budget, including the
$400,000 revenue-sharing budget, when
county finances were still under strict
state surveillance. Over half the
revenue-sharing budget- some $210,000
- was earmarked this year for the coun's shaky solid waste system. Other
<See Story No.8, Page 4l
Jaycee Women Set
Meet, Thurs. Night
The Prestonsburg Area
Jaycees Women's Club will meet
Thursday, January 26 at 6:30
p.m. at the Kentucky Power
building here. Refreshments will
be served.
Anyone . interested in joining
the organization may attend the
meeting or contact the president,
Margaret Hunt.
Floyd Group
Joins Rally
At Capitol
Activists from this county are expected to join a rally at the state Capitol
building in Frankfort tomorrow (Thursday) in support of two bills with potentially far-reaching impact on east
Kentucky.
One is the so-called "broadform deed"
bill introduced by Prestonsburg Rep.
Greg Stumbo. Under the law proposed
in House Bill 32, it would be assumed
that the parties to any deed by whicll.a.
property owner sold the und~;:Jyingcoal
intended that the coal-would be mined
only by methods co~monly in use at the
time. It would mean stripmining on
those tracts could not be done without
'
the surface owner's consent.
The bill has been assigned to the
House Judiciary-Civil Committee, of
which Stumbo is a member, and is
scheduled for consideration by that
panel this (Wednesday) afternoon.
Another bill, H.B. 92, would levy a tax
on unmined minerals equal to the existmg tax on real property. Co-sponsored
by Pike county Rep. Clayton Little, it
(See Story No. 9, Page 4)
There may be legal grounds for cancelling one of two costly contracts involving the county's solid waste agency,
County Attorney Arnold Turner, Jr. told
members of the agency board last week.
But the board should consider alternatives before seeking to void the deal,
he said.
Some board members had asked the
attorney to see if there was any avenue
of escape from contracts by which Floyd
County Solid Waste, Inc. leases a
building at the county landfill and gets
its monthly bills prepared.
Turner said the four-year contract
with Computer and Utility Serviceswhich provides computerized billing ser(See Story No. 2, Page 4)
l
Attorney Greg Stumbo filed the motion for a restraining order in circuit
court last Tuesday on behalf of the Pres~nsburg Inn and H.D. Fitzpatrick, Jr.,
Wsted as owners of property in the annexed area, and East Kentucky Explosives, which leases a tract there.
Plaintiffs argued that the annexation
ordinance was void by reason of the fact
that annexation was voted down in the
November election, where it appeared
on the ballot in the West Prestonsburg
precinct. Thirty votes were cast there in
opposition to annexation; none was
a ecorded in favor.
• The city council, arguing that the
·ballots were not cast by qualified voters,
proceeded with the annexation and took
steps to collect taxes on the newly-
incorporated property. The area annexed contained no resident voters, City
Manager David Evans insists.
In an affidavit filed with the court,
William L. James, general manager of
East Kentucky Explosives, said he was
notified by Evans on Dec. 19 that the
firm was required to obtain a city
business license and was subject to a 11/z
percent payroll tax and that property
taxes were accumulating on all annexed properties.
In his ruling Monday, Judge Conley
held that, since the city neglected to
challenge it within 30 days, the
November ballot was binding. Evans
said that, in failing to protest the ballot,
the council acted on the advice of former
City Attorney Paul P. Burchett, who
argued that the burden of challenge
rested with the aggrieved property
owners.
City Attorney Larry Brown told the city council Monday that he would see
what legal remedies might yet be available to the city. Failing a remedy, Evans
said, the new council might choose to
begin anew the whole annexatwn
process.
SUITS FILED
Stuart Howard vs. Jesse Branch Coal
Co.: Prestonsburg Inn et a! vs. City of
Prestonsburg; Mattie Music vs. Bill
Tom Shepherd; Charles Hicks vs.
Peggy Lee Hicks ; Lexington Mack Inc.
vs. John T. Foley et al: Harmon Leedy.
next friend of Mary and Anna Leedy
vs. Kimberly S. Burkett et al; Pamela
Gaye Ward vs. Michael Ward: Hobert
Spurlock vs. Dale McKinney : East
Kentucky Explosives vs. L. T. Ruth
Coal Co.: Martha Lafferty vs. ~ne
Lafferty: Margaret Bailey vs. Alec
Grey Bailey ; Citizens Bank of
Pikeville vs. Watts Mobile Homes:
Mary Katherine Music vs. Thomas Leo
Music; Henry Prater vs. In coal, Inc.
Special Fund, et al : Alma Jean Mcintyre vs. James Edward Mcintyre.
<See Story No. 1, Page 4)
STAY ON, STRANGERS
The grosbeaks accepted my invitation. Showed up last Wednesday morning-the same day the item welcoming
Vtem appeared in the paper. Welcome
again- light and set a spell!
Ignorance is often described as
abysmal, and if that is the correct adjective, I wonder when any of the recognized authorities on sports ever leave the
abyss.
I refer in particular to that host of
experts- coaches, commentators, oddsmakers, etcetera- who jammed the
newspapers, television and radio in their
promotion of the Super Bowl.
This, they almost to a man predicted,
would be the most violent, the most sensational, positively the greatest, the
super-game of Super Bowl history. And
most of them agreed that when the clock
ran down on that field of carnage the
wirinah would be the Washington Redskins.
Well, nobody was dismembered during that Donnybrook. I don't recall one
penalty being called on either team for
clipping or facemasking. And a team of
sure-losers, the Los Angeles Raiders,
ran off with the game.
The only dwellers in more abysmal ignorance than the experts are those who
trusted them enough to lay some cold
cash in betting they were right.
The name of Banner Collins may
mean nothing to most of you who read
this, but he died recently, and I am
tempted to note here that he was the last
of my boyhood playmates.
It is not maudlin sentimentality, I
hope, for me to recall here the long ago
and far away; the games- some of our
own invention- that we played; how we
roamed the woods, explored the fields
<See Story No. 3, Page 4)'
(Photo by Betty Hyden )
MOBILE HOME on State Road Fork of Middle Creek in
which 53-year-old Ottis Hackworth died Friday morning.
(See story, elsewhere this issue.)
Acting on a recomm~ndation of Superintendent E .P. Grigsby, Jr., the Floyd
Board of Education last Thursday voted
to levy a three percent tax on gross
receipts of utility companies operating
here.
Because of the tax, Floyd countians
could see new schools "become a reality before our very eyes" in the next four
to six years, Grigsby said. Without it,
drastic cuts in teachers and programs
would be inevitable, he said.
The board's decision followed an hourlong public hearing, during which supporters and opponents of the tax made
their points calmly before a mostly
undemonstrative audience of around 70
persons. The 6 p.m. meeting was in
marked contrast to a daytime hearing
held on an identical measure in 1979,
when busloads of senior citizens packed the meeting room in vigorous opposition to the tax.
Garrett Elementary School Principal
Ralph O'Quinn, chairman of a task force
appointed by Grigsby to study ways of
financing the Floyd school district, noted
that only four percent of the Floyd
school budget is raised from local taxes,
compared to a statewide average of 20
percent.
School districts with little financial
support generally do poorly on standardized tests, he added.
Several older residents, who said they
favored an increase in funding for
schools, challenged the board to find a
method other than a tax on utilities. Adequate heat and use of a telephone are
matters of survival for many old people,
said Delmas Saunders, representing the
Jenny Wiley Chapter of the American
Association of Retired Persons. "I would
not want it thought that I don't want to
pay my share," Saunders said, "but
surely there is some way other than a
tax that puts so much of a burden on
those least able to pay."
<See Story No.7, Page 4)
Even Library May Ask City Slashes
Tax on Liquor
Tighter Loan Policy
"No mor{! Mr. Nice Guy" might soon
become the policy of the Floyd County
Library- surely one of the nation's most
lenient lending institutions-unless borrowers shape up.
County Librarian Carolyn Hay Traum
said she may ask the library board at its
next meeting for authority to "tag" the
library cards of readers who don't
return books. A tag would mean you
wouldn't get to borrow any more books
until you returned the ones you already
have.
"It's sad that we're having to do this,"
Judge Conley Begins 21st Year
Katy Friend Annexation
Is Ruled Void by Conley
An area on Katy Friend that the outgog city council annexed to Prestonsburg
in one of its last official acts in
December htay not be reckoned as part
of the city, Circuit Judge Hollie Conley
ruled Monday. At the request of several
property owners, Conley issued an order
restraining the city from levying any
taxes on tracts or businesses there.
-
Decision Follows
Hour-Long Meet;
May Go To Vote
Prestonsburg's surv1vmg alcoholic
beverage dealers got a break Monday,
said Mrs. Traum, who has been on the when the city council slashed the sales
job just three months. But she insists it tax on alcoholic beverages from five to
is the only way to safeguard library ser- two percent.
vices.
The council decision came after CounAlready, the Floyd library's im- cilman Frank A. Adams, himself a
pressive Kentucky collection is on a non- former liquor store owner here, argued
circulating basis. If you want to read a ' that retaining the five percent tax would
book by or about Jesse Stuart, for exam- continue to drive liquor retailers out of
ple, you can do so at the library but you town.
can't check it out. "Cost of replacing
Councilman Paul H. Thompson,
those books just became prohibitive," whose aunt, Mrs. T.J. Gull~y, owns a
the librarian explained.
city liquor store, said Prestonsburg
Now she is being forced to choose bet- retailers cannot compete successfully
ween buying reference books and best- with dealers in the county, where no
selling novels, Mrs. Traum says. She sales tax is levied. Two liquor storeswill buy the reference texts that students B and H Liquors, owned by Darvin Burneed to do term papers and bestseller af- chett and Virgil Hall, and South Lake
ficionados will be disappointed. But Drive Liquors, owned by Mike Fitzthere is a limited amount of money to. patrick- moved out of town last year
buy books- the state will contribute after about six months' operation here.
Still operating here are two beer
about $8000 worth this year and the local
outletsSave Mart and Jim's Carrylibrarian has about $4000 to spend- and
any book which has to be replaced out- and two liquor stores- Beverage
because it is gathering dust in some- Mart, owned by J .R. McClung, and Mrs.
body's home means a new book is not Gulley's Jenny Wiley Village Liquor!l,
which was incorporated into the city this
purchased.
Adult borrowers, especially readers of month by annexation. The alcoholic
(Sf'e Story No. 6. Page 4)
<See Story No. 5, Page 4)
School Missed, Pipes Frozen,
Among Area Weather Problems
Hollie Martin Conley recently administered the oath of office to his father,
,judge Hollie Conley. Circuit Judge Conley, beginning his 21st year, has served longer than any active circuit judge in Kentucky
Anyone who has walked from the
front door to the mailbox or checked
the old RC Cola thermometer over the
past few weeks realizes that no matter
the hue of the wooly worm's coat or the
thickness of corn shucks in the fall , this
has been a rough winter.
That point became even clearer this
week as some extent of the weatherrelated problems came to light.
As parents are keenly aware, school
children in Floyd county have missed
several days as a result of the snow and
ice of the past few weeks. A total of 16
school days have been cancelled, according to Phillip Dingus, head of the
Floyd Board of Education 's attendance
department, with 14 of those days being missed consecutively since school
was dismissed early, January 10. Add
another day to that total since classes
were dismissed today <Wednesday> .
Dingus said some of the days have
been used for teacher in-service sessions.
Horror stories of burst pipes abound
this winter: as well as reports of shocking heating bills and the plight faced by
municipal utilities personnel is probably typified in the experience of the
Prestonsburg City utilities Commission.
According to Bill H. Howard, utilities
superintendent here, the extensive
Prestonsburg system has experienced
about'12 major line breaks, "and that's
the most I can remember in about 21
years with the city," Howard commented. He explained that such breaks
result from the temperature of the
water and contraction of ~he pipes. In
addition, the city has had tO cope with a
number of water meters which froze up
and burst, generally, Howard said.
because lids to meter housings were
left off by residents .
" Believe it or not," he added, "we've
had a few meters actually burn up
when homeowners attempted to thaw
<See Story No.4, Page 4)
�The Floyd County Times
Wednesday, January 25, 1984
Section One, Paae Two
Letters to the Editor
Named Award Winner
The views expressed here are those of the writers, and not
those of this newspaper. No unsigned contributions
will be published.
nece~<sarily
Miss Connie Lewis, student at Betsy
Layne High School, was named a National Award Wmner in leadership by
the United States Achievement
Academy. She was nominated for this
award by her counselor, Melvin Cooke.
Miss Lewis, daughter of Eugene Lewis
and the late Elsie Lewis, is the granddaughter of Rudolph and Recca Lewis,
of Banner, and the late Lace and Gracie
Hunt.
New Reservation System
Installed At Parks ·
Governor Martha Layne Collins and
Parks Commissioner Fran Curci announced recently the opening of a new
centralized reservation system for alliS
state resort parks in Kentucky.
The new computerized system, centrally located in Frankfort, provides one
toll-free number 11-800-255-Park) to
make reservations at any of the 15 resort
parks in the state. The new computenzed system makes it possible to have instant access to information about accomodations available at any park for
any date within a 12-month advance
registration period. The new system
eliminates the old reservation system
which was done manually at each park's
front desk.
The new toll-free number is open between the hours of 8 a.m. and 4:30p.m.,
EST, Monday through Friday.
Master
Dr. Robert Marshall
OF
John W. Hall Lodge
No. 950,
Martin, Ky.
Announces
the following to be raised to the
sublime degree of
MASTER MASON
James G. RaUiff, Robert K. Scott, Ritky L Robin·
son, Denzil R. Han, and Robert A. Damron.
on
January 28, 1984
The lodge will open at 6 p.m. A pot
luck dinner will be served. John W.
Hall Lodge members are asked to
bring a dish of food.
All Brothers Invited
Plow Side Streets
Commends Teenager
Annually, about this time of year, the
same discussion piece arises: why do
the schools here have to be closed so
many days in winter? Visitors and newcomers from farther north find it incredible that school would be closed for
two weeks at a time, when they come
from far more wintry climates where
schools are hardly ever closed for more
than one or two days all winter.
The answers from area folks are predictable. The terrain here is hilly, the
hollows are hard if not impossible to
clear of snow and ice. There is fear, and
legitimately so, of a bus accident
because of one that scarred the community a generation ago. It is best to
wait until the "side" roads are thawed
and passable.
All those reasons may be valid, but not
enough is done, I contend, to make roads
passable, not only for school buses, but
for all kinds of travel. Let me cite a case
in point. The Simpson's Branch Road, in
Drift, is the route that must be traveled
to two churches (one of them our Presbyterian congregation) and the Drift
School. It has a Kentucky route number,
ll01, though it is not a high priority route
in the county such as 23, 80, and the
Mountain Parkway. But why has it
never been plowed, after these more
traveled routes are done? Instead it is
left, like many other roads, to turn into
a sheet of ice, endangering all those who
travel on it.
It is well known that sidewalks that
are not shoveled and roads not plowed
become worse with use. In Lexington,
people are fined if their sidewalks are
not shoveled, given a reasonable amount
of time after the snowfall ceases.
Many times teenagers are criticized
but rarely complimented for their actions. However, one Prestonsburg teenager should be commended for his courage and brave efforts in assisting an injured woman whose car crashed on a
very icy Abbott Road on Januarv ld,
1984.
This teenager, Jeff Cochran, was the
first to arrive at the accident. He aided
the lady by keeping tier calm and comfortable, and by keeping her awake until the ambulance arrived as she tried to
drift into unconsciousness. He also
released the blaring car horn which
stuck when the automobile crashed into a tree.
I am also proud of my husband John,
Mrs. Cochran, and others who also stopped to assist, but as a frightened
onlooker, I am especially proud of Jeff
who displayed the level-headedness of
an adult.
BETTY KELLEY
Abbott Road
Prestonsburg, Ky. 41653
Wesay, "Nothingcanbedone; that's
just the way it is here." We could demand as citizens that our government
provide the services we expect of
them-to clear all roads that can be
cleared as soon as possible. We could expect people to shovel their sidewalks
before they turn into treacherous ice,
dangerous for school children as well as
people of all ages.
In short, we can do better, and we
could do more to get our children back
into school sooner. To say "wait till it
melts" shows indifference and apathy
about our problems. People elsewhere
have learned to cope with their winters,
and we can cope better with ours. We
can demand better care of the roads,
and see that we get it. If we do not,
"that's just the way it is in Kentucky"
will become another weak excuse for inaction and doing nothing to change the
direction of our lives.
In this case, wisdom tells us we need
the courage to change "the way it is"
and improve our lives.
(REV.) TIMOTHY JESSEN,
Prestonsburg
Miss McNally Named
To UK Who's Who
Forty-two University of Kentucky
students selected by the dean's office
will join students from more than 1,500
colleges and universities in 1984's
"Who's Who Among Students in American Universities and Colleges."
Students are selected for Who's Who
based on academic achievement, service to the community, leadership in extracurricular activities and the student's
potential for continued success in the
future.
UK students chosen for Who's Who,
published annually since 1934, includes
Charla McNally, a senior majoring in
early childhood development. She is the
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. C.J. McNally, of Prestonsburg.
H114ky BreDMtut.Onty s2.79
You can always count on Jerry's for
value. Like our Husky Breakfast ...
2 large eggs, cooked to order. 3 sizzling
bacon slices, 2 pancakes, syrup and
chilled JUice-all at a great price. Come
in and see for yourself how at Jerry's,
value is one more way ...
Prior Air Force
Members Needed
The Air Force is lookinjt'for prior service Air Force mem~s who served in
the Electronics an8 Aircraft Maintenance career fi~. Those individuals
cannot have rrtore than a 5-year break
in active se~ice and must have been
honorably discharged. Each person
must have also been fully qualified in
their AFSC and be able to reenter at the
5 skill level.
Those who qualify can contact Master
Sergeant Jim Brooks in Ashland, by
calling 324-4244, collect.
Fl:f:RIDA
l-ll-8t.
THE BEST OF THE ROCRIES.
-# •
Coors starts oat clean and fresh.
And then It stays that way.
Uke every other beer in the world,
·~.
Coors starts with water.
But that's where the similarity '" · ·
ends.
You see, we start with pure
Rocky Mountain spring water.
That's because we make our
beer in one place and one place
only: Golden, Colorado. And its
perfect brewing water is why we
started there in the first place.
In the second place, we use
a brewing process that's unique to the
industry. We start with only natural ingredients- absolutely no additives or
preservatives-and then we brew Coors
more slowly and age it longer than most beers.
Then, we package Coors cold. Other beers
are subjected to extreme heat (up to 140°) after
being put in cans or bottles. Coors doesn't do that,
simply because the less you heat beer,
the better it tastes.
Plea For Road Work
We would like to express our feelings
to the Floyd County Road Dept. We live
at Endicott, near the Pike county line.
We cannot get anything done to our
roads until election time. At that time
the roads are worked about two weeks
before the election every four years. We
have children that can't go to school. If
only they would salt and scrape our road
about where the State Highways Dept.
leaves off, the children could go to
school.
We can read in the paper about where
our magistrate has salted the level roads
and put saw dust on them. We have a little hill road and they never come around
to see if we need anything. We have called about this matter and no one seemed to care. There are a lot of sick people where we live and in times like this
we couldn't get them out.
CHARLOTTE GEORGE
RUSSELL HACKWORTH
One of our secret ingredients has 18
wheels and weighs 32,000 pounds.
''I know computers inside
and out ... like Block
knows taxes.''
When Coors and Coors Ught are finally
through aging, they have a wonderfully cold,
clean, brewery-fresh taste. The last thing in
the world we'd want to do is put that nice,
cold beer on a big, hot truck like
other brewers do. So we don't.
We use refrigerated
trucks. And they take our
beer-nice and coldup to 2,000 miles
(give
or take
a detour)
to our
·~ff~rii;i~~~~
••
;.t
·~:~,,
.,f·)''%,;if8:;$'
;;!;:.
cit~~~~':'iJ!~~~::'~":'~;o
Don't worry. It doesn't. Our distributors use refrigerated
warehouses for our beer. (It's more expensive, but we know they like
that brewery-fresh taste as much as we do.)
Next, our distributors take that nice, cold Coors and put it in their OVJ.!l
refrigerated trucks and take it to where you can fmally buy some.
Does Coors have to be refrigerated?
No. But every now and then, the folks who sell Coors
to you will have more on hand than they can keep on ice.
· So, you might see Coors out in one of those big displays
~-1~~~~~
at your store.
If you do, don't be concerned. Even though we go
through all the expense and trouble to keep Coors
and Coors Ught fresh from the Rockies to you,
our beer is no more affected by heat than any
other beer.
To kind of sum it up, we refrigerate
our beer because we want to, not
because we have to.
Now on tap.
Soon in your store.
We're getting Cool?
and Coors Ugbt out to
you as fast as we c:aa.
Clances ue, you might
ftnd it ftrst on tap at your
favorite tawm. Cleek
around. It's worth lt.
And when you do ftnd lt,
1 ~g;i."-.'1.:!;.
gift It a chance. The real
.._,,.,..,.,, '""··· : beauty of Coors Is how It keeps
that brewery-fresh taste beer
after beer. hour after hour.
'l1ulnb forreacfiD&aU this, and
there's just one more thlng: ~oyl
®
The Best of the Roddes Is yours!
@ 1984AdolphCoorsComp ny G lden Colorado80401
-
H&R BLOCit
88 Richmond Plaza
Main Street
Presronsburg
888•3885
Martin
285·9879
Open 9 AM·9 PM Weekdays, 9-5 Sat.
Consult your Yellow Pages for the off1ce nearest you.
MasterCard and Visa accepted at most area locations
. ..·,
·,
...
. .
•·.
.. .:. ... ·:· .
: .;~·: . . . .
'
- r
. ·.. ...
•
•
�•
The Floyd County Times
New Lab School To Open
At Alice Lloyd College
rationale for the new
school, Dr. DaVi'Sstated the following
objectives: to carry out the purposes of
the Caney Creek Community Center,
parent organization of Alice Lloyd College; to prcmote an awareness of the importance of pre-collegiate education; to
provide the leadership for a renewed
emphasis on academic quality; to offer
a unique educational opportunity for
deserving
mountain
students,
regardless of their ability to pay; to
enhance the total educational program
of Alice Lloyd College, especially its
teacher education program, and to
disseminate the knowledge gained from
the operation of the June Buchanan
School.
The June Buchanan School, it was
said, will be in a position of offering an
academic program emphasizing excellence through a curriculum built upon
recommendations of the National Commission on Excellence in Education.
Students of the school will be exposed
to a unique educational environment of
ready access to college facilities, such
as the library, the computer center, and
the gymnasium. Students will also attend cultural activities sponsored by the
college. Emphasis wi!l be focused on
new and innovative programs of cooperative instruction between the lab
school and the college faculty, staff and
students.
The school intends to share knowledge
gained from its operation, and its officials will encourage the reporting of its
progress through workshops and
seminars for teachers and administrators.
"One need only pick up the newspaper
or listen to a news report to realize that
now is the time to take action,'' said Dr.
Davis. "Parents want quality education
for their children-a return to the basics.
We are not attempting to compete with
the public schools in Kentucky, but
rather we are assuming a leadership
role in focusing attention on improvement of pre-collegiate instruction, particularly for students of Eastern Kentucky."
Announcement of this venture in secondary education was made by Dr.
Jerry C. Davis, President of Alice Lloyd
College, at a press conference at the
June Buchanan Alumni Center on the
college campus. Other participants were
Dr. Wallace Campbell, dean of the college, and Jeemes L. Akers, who will
direct the June Buchanan School.
Persons wishing additional information concerning the school should call
(606) 368-2101, extension 231.
CALL 886-2111
River Planes Beauty Salon
LOCATED AT THE LOWER END OF AUXIER, KY
PHONE 886-9815
OPEN MON. THRU FRI.-9 a.m.-5 p.m.
saturdays and other days by appointment
FOR MEN AND WOMEN
owner and Operator
LINDA JEFFERSON
Dr. Virginia de Guzman
has joined
Dr. Ray de Guzman,
General Surgeon,
who is affiliated with the
McDowell Appalachian Regional Hospital,
in the de Guzman Clinic,
Ky. Highway 122 (Left Beaver Road)
Martin, Kentucky
Dr. Virginia de Guzman-Clinic Days;
Tuesdays & Thursdays, 8 a.m. to 5 p.m.
CARD OF THANKS
The family of Virgie Tackett Hamilton
would like to take this opportunity to
thank everyone who helped in any way
during the illness and upon the passing
of our Mother and Grandmother.
Thanks to all who sent food, flowers,
gifts of love, and those who helped with
the digging of the grave, and those who
visited with us or spoke words of comfort in our time of sorrow. Our many
thanks to the Regular Baptist ministers
and The Little Rosa Church, and the
staff of the Hall Funeral Home for its efficient service. We especially want to
thank the Left Beaver F.escue Squad,
The McDowell Appalachian Hospital
and the McDowell Home Health Services for all of their services through the
years of Mom's illness.
Children and Grandchildren
FOR INFORMATION LEADING TO
RETURN OF SMALL REDDISH MIXED
BREED DOG, PART SETTER, WEARING
GREEN NYLON COLLAR WITH GREEN
TAGS.
ANSWERS TO THE NAME "RED."
LOST IN IVEL VICINITY ABOUT A WEEK
AGO. CALL 285-5020,
OR 478-9450 AFTER 5:00.
... are having about $100,000 clearance sale on all winter
merchandise. Must clear stor! before inventory January 31!
All merchandise 1 /2 to 60% off
MEN'S
LEE JEANS
s179a
1 RACK
ALL
SPORT COATS
LADIES' COATS
MEN'S
DRESS SHIRTS
60%
OFF
MEN'S
ALL
ALL
BASS WEEJUNS
AND TASSEL
LADIES' LINGERIE
LADIES' JEANS
REG. '67 NOW
$49.95
FARAH JEANS
Y2
LEVI, CHIC, LEE
OFF
(NIKE, CONVERSE, PROSPECS, KEDS,
KANGAROOS, PONY, AND NCAA)
ON SALE FOR THE FAMILY
ON SALE
LADIES'
PANAMA JACK
DRESSES
T-SHIRTS
Y3 OFF $1298 60%
ALL TENNIS SHOES
NEW ARRIVALS AT
OUR LADY OF THE WAY
A daughter, Tiffany Shea, born
December 30 to Ricky and Sherri Robinson, of Pippa Passes; a son, Shun
Robert, born January 3 to Robert and
Krista Stewart, of Honaker; a daughter,
Marsha Ann, born January 3 to
Christine Mullins, of Topmost ; a son,
Nelson, Jr., born January 6 to Nelson
and Betty Cook, of Hi Hat; a son,
Jeremy Steven, born January 7 to Victor, Jr., and Kimberly Tackett, of Halo ;
a son, Jonathan Clark, born December
23 to Clark and Debbie Johnson, of
Dema; a daughter, Rosanna , born
January 9 to Ricky and Rosa Belle Mit·
chell, of Hi Hat; a son, Ed Steven, born
January 10 to Ed and Angela Reynolds,
of Beaver.
.fa~ty.
Descn:biag~be
A $300 reward will be paid for Information leading
to the arrest and conviction of the person or persons
who have stolen tools, torches, and other property from
Dick's Sign Company, 448 South Lake Drive,
Prestonsburg, on the weekend of January 21·22. All
calls confidential. Ask for Dick or Chuck.
s ooo
IN MEMORIAM
Dr. Jerry C. Davis, president of Alice
Lloyd College, last week announced
plans to open a new lab school next fall
at Pippa Passes. Named "The June
Buchanan School,'' it will serve as a
laboratory school for Alice Lloyd College. It will be located in the center of
the campus and a renovation project has
been approved by the college's trustees
to prepare the Commodore Slone
Building for use as the school's primary
$300 REWARD
t•
Section One, Paa:e Three
OFF
~998
SEE OUR NEW PROSPEC
TENNIS SHOES FOR THE
FAMILY. GUARANTEED FROM THE
FACTORY FOR 4 MONTHS OR 100
COURT HOURS OF USE.
ALLERGY
·CHiLDREN & ADULTS
S.K. JAIN, M.D.
Professional Building
Pikeville, Ky.
• HEADACHES • DIZZINESS
• ASTHMA • SINUS
• COLITIS
For appointment:
606-432-383 7
·Discover Your Na(ura/Beauty!
Trust in the Lord and cast aside your
gloom and dark despair. For He will
help to ease the pain that in your heart
you bear.
Little Chuckie! It has been two years,
Jan. 25, since God called you home, but
oh! How we still miss you! It still seems
like a bad dream that you are gone, but
we praise the Lord that you are with
Him! Now, you are able to do all the
things you never could down here. You
can talk and your body is perfect! But,
oh how we miss those sweet little arms
around our necks and those ever-ready
kisses. You never got mad at us, never
held a grudge when we got mad. You
just loved.
God loaned you to us for almost 19
years, and one day soon we will see you
again!
In Loving Memory,
Mom, Dad, Sissy
Gerl-y & Jerry's Shoes, located .1/2 mile
north of Prestonsburg, K.r. on lf.S. 28.
welcomes you to dis£'tH't•r .rour natural
beauty through color.
·
Introducing color c·o nsultant Pat Emmett
· of Le-xington, Ky.
• First ·20 appointments FREE.
Call tud;lyj .886-.'39.'32 for your (ree clppoint-.!
ment as . all 'seats will be resen:ed.
il
• ·.4ppointment:date$ .are Junuar.r 26 <lnd
27. .
.
.
..
New Office Space-First Floor
lt.
Childbirth Class Scheduled
A prepared childbirth class, sponsored
by The Big Sandy Family and Childbirth
Education Association, is scheduled to
meet Thursday evenings, January 26
through March 1. These classes are for
prospective parents with March due
dates. The class will meet from 7 to 9
p.m. on the Prestonsburg Community
College campus, in the Magoffin Complex Building A-1. The purpose of the
course is to train husbands and wives in
techniques of prepared childbirth.
For more information or to register,
contact Ann Slone at 886-3863.
Correction Listed
In Buck Layne's report of the 1983
deaths published in last week's edition
of the Times, Jason Nathaniel Howard's
age was listed as 81. Jason died March
11 at the age of three.
3,000 Square Feet. Will Lease All Or Part
Prestonsburg, Kentucky
Offices Arranged To Suit The Tenant
Call: 886-2391
�Wednesday, January 25, 1984
The Floyd County Times
Published Every Wednesday by
Prestonsburg Publishing Company
NORMAN ALL~N
Subscription Rates Per Year:
In Floyd County, $8.00
Elsewhere in Kentucky. $10.00
Outside Kentucky. $12.50
--- 1 --(Continued from Page One>
MARRIAGE LICENSES
;. Clarence Bentley, 38, and Kathleen
Reynolds, 30, both of Teaberry;
Michael Glenn Collins, 18, and Bema
Dean Jervis, 31, both of Wayland:
Timothy E. Hubbard, 20. of Auxier.
and Rebecca L. Prater, 17. of Prestonsburg; Gary Lewis Burchett. 25, of
Prestonsburg, and Kitty Lynn
Shepherd, 21, of David; Delmer Gene
Meade, 39, and Cynthia Almero
Diangkinay. 30, of West Prestonsburg.
--- 3 ---
<Continued from Page One>
and little steams about us, shared the
sheer fun of being alive-and, sometimes, those occasions when it was not
all fun.
There was the time when the teacher
of our one-room, up-hollow school rather
painfully chastised Banner for an untoward accident. We had discovered that
you could stick a sharpened stick into
the "eye" of a buckeye and with a
sweep, hurl the buckeye for fascinating
distances. But on this occasion, something went wrong. When my friend
swept the stick back to make the long
cast forward, the buckeye flew off and
smacked against the school building
behind us. For a long time I nursed a
grudge against the teacher who would
not accept our explanation.
Then came the occasion when we went
swimming for the first time in water
that was, as we said, "over our heads,"
and I floundered my way across the
deep hole till I tired. I went down twice
and was threatening to end up a resident
of Davy Jones' locker when my friend
snatched me by the hair of my head as
a brand from the burning and snaked me
to shallower water.
At this stage of the game, it strikes me
that the sharing of the more trying experiences welds a stronger bond than all
the fun-times.
He wasn't my only boyhood friend. I
had several of them, and I prize the
recollection of each. But Banner was the
last. And his passing somehow makes
more distant, yet more important, those
barefoot, mostly carefree, days that
blessed us.
How deep was last week's snow? Ever
hear the expression, "shoe-mouth
deep"? I've never been sure about the
matter, but assume this meant to the top
of the shoe. If that is the measurement
that applies, it leaves one wondering if
the shoe was a boot or a slipper.
And while we're about it-when have
you heard s ....~.-.lOdy say, "pline blank,"
as, for example, "He's a pline blank
liar"? Don't know what "pline blank"
means? Try "pointblank."
--- 7 ---
<Continued from Page One l
"I'm for improving the schools," said
Mrs. Otelia Smiley, who noted that her
16 children had graduated from Floyd
schools. "But let's not sock it to the
senior citizens and <families with) low
incomes. They're already scared."
A relatively small sacrifice was being
asked in return for a great good, argued
McDowell Principal Gary Frazier.
"We're talking about 12 Pepsis or less
than a carton of cigarettes a month to
make a difference in quality education,"
he said. "Ten thousand children are being shortchanged. And Jean Rosenberg
pointed out that residents in most surrounding counties have found a way to
pay a utilities tax.
_
Everett Akers sparked the hearing's
only demonstration with his argument
that the Board of Education is wasting
money and that education could be improved here without additional expense.
"You take care of your waste and then
you can get your taxes, 11 he told the
board, the audience applauding. Akers
also chided the board for seeking a
utilities tax when it had been reluctant
to endorse a proposed tax on unmined
minerals.
Karen Marcum read a statement prepared by the Floyd Citizens Education
Council in support of the utilities tax.
Elbert Pratt, unemployed father of four,
said he supported it. But Jim Donahoe
thought it "should be marked off right
quick."
That could be done by referendum if
a petition is filed with the Board of Election Commissioners to have it placed on
the ballot. The petition, which must be
filed within 30 days of the tax's passage,
would need to bear a number of signatures equal to 15 percent of those in this
county who voted in the last presidential
election. In the 1980 election, 15,385
Floyd citizens cast a vote for president.
Fifteen percent is 2308.
Jack Freed, president pf the AARP's
Jenny Wiley Chapter, was reported this
week as saying he did not expect the
group to challenge the tax. But Akers
said he knew of "10 petitions going
around" to get the tax issue put to a
general vote.
II
A shower of needles was the result of a
cyclone striking a factory that made
knitting needles.
~ditor
Entered as second class matter June 18,
~927, at the postoffice at Prestonsburg,
Kentucky, under the act of March 3, 1879.
--- 2 ---
<Continued from Page One>
vices at a cost of $3300 a month-does
not appear voidable. The company is
owned by Stephen R. Allen whose father,
John Allen, is a member of the solid
waste agency board. ·
A 15-year, $1980-a-month lease on a
five-acre tract and building at Garth
may be vulnerable to legal challenge but
the board should consider what other
building might be available before it
repudiates the existing lease, Turner
said. The solid waste agency leases the
property from Industrial Rentals, Inc.
a firm owned by John Allen and Adrian
Lafferty.
Turner said Industrial Rentals' claim
on the property was questionable
because he had found no record that its
transfer to that firm from the Floyd
Board of Education was ever authorized by the state Superintendent of Public
Instruction or the Attorney-General, as
required by law.
Even if the lease were voided, Floyd
County Solid Waste would still~ in need
of a building and would probably still be
liable for about $14,000 owing to Industrial Rentals in back rent, the county attorney said.
A proposal to save $500 a month in rent
by moving the solid waste agency offices
to the courthouse annex from its present
location on South Lake Drive has been
stalled for want of a place to locate the
local CAP office, which shares the agency's existing office space, the board was
told. Floyd County Solid Waste rents its
office space from the adjacent Kentucky
Motel.
A move by Ed Caudill and otis Johnson to fire agency director David Cooley
failed for lack of support by other board
members. The two accused Cooley of
having an overbearing attitude toward
employees and of "not doing his job."
But John Allen and Ned Bush voted
against firing him.
State police confiscated his personal
files as part of their investigation of
county finances, said Board Chairman
Bob McAninch, who added, "As far as
I know, there is nothing improper (in the
files)."
State environmental inspectors,
citing leachate drainage from the county
landfill, extended the permit there by
only one year instead of five, McAninch
told the board. He will have samples of
ooze analyzed to determine whether it
is leachate or mine runoff, McAninch
said.
---- 5 ---
<Continued from Page One>
beverage sales tax last year netted
$35,702 in city revenue.
In case of fire, out-of-town residents
need not call the city fire department,
the council decided. Councilman Bill
Ray Collins said that, since Prestonsburg residents pay for them, the city's
emergency services should be available
for use in the city. Fire Chief Tom Blackburn said city fire trucks made six outof-town runs last year.
The new policy replaces one which
gave the fire chief discretion in making
out-of-town runs. It prohibits such runs
even to Highlands Hospital, May Lodge
and the National Guard Armory. "We
can't afford to take the chance that a fire
will break out downtown <while city firefighters are out of town) and the city will
be unprotected," Collins explained.
Voting for the ban, besides Collins,
were council members Paul H. Thompson, George C. Brown, Frank Adams
and Eunice Shepherd. Opposed were
William 0. Goebel, III and Robert W.
Ranier.
Noting that "it has been many years
since we've had any cooperation of this
sort," Mayor Harold Cooley thanked
Judge-Executive John M. Stumbo for
the use of a county grader to help clear
Prestonsburg streets of snow this
winter. The mayor also praised workers
in the city streets department. In the
past, city crews have had to clear the
streets using only an endloader and
dump truck.
In a "state of the city" address, the
mayor said Prestonsburg is solvent but
that cuts in federal funds and in some
local taxes mean the city will need to
budget prudently. The cut in the alcoholic beverage tax and the anticipated
relocation of part of Brown Foodservice,
Inc. will mean a loss of tax revenue, he
noted.
Brown Foodservice, one of the city's
largest firms, plans to move the bulk of
its operation to Louisa. The 43-year-old
company, which employs 65 workers,
pays $10,000 a year in city occupational
taxes and owners of trucks servicing the
plant each pay $150 a year for unloading
licenses.
Hall Is Promoted
To First Sergeant
Bill J. Hall, son of Mr. and Mrs. Bill
Hall, Sr., of Harold, was recently promoted to First Sergeant in the U.S. Army after graduating from the First
Sergeant Academy at Ft. Bliss, Texas.
A 15-year Army veteran, he resides
with his wife, Alma, at Ft. Carson, Colorado, where he is First Sergeant of B
Battery, 29th Field Artillery .
Our·Yesterdays
(Items taken from The Floyd County
Times, 10, 20, 30, 40 and 50 years ago.)
Ten Years Ago
<January 2:J. 1974 )
Flood insurance will be required by July 1 of next year in this and all
other political subdivisions of the United States if home-builders are to
get federally insured loans for building in flood-prone areas ...With
damage resulting from flood-waters Jan. 10 and 11 estimated at $411.500.
the Floyd fiscal court decided Monday to seek state or federal help, or
both, rebuilding roads and bridges .. .Paul B. Francis has ended 50 years
in business here with the sale of the Paul Francis Co .. Inc. to Mr. and Mrs .
Adrian Ratliff. of Endicott .. .This week a year ago the weather was
unseasonably mild with forsythia and crocuses blooming in some spots
and at least one report of a "tarpon" attempting to cross the road .. .Bom :
to Mr. and Mrs. Carl Robinson. of Langley. a son. Jan. 12: to Mr. and Mrs .
Frank Little, of Melvin. a son, Jan. 13: to Mr. and Mrs. Charles C.
Johnson, of Risner, a daughter, Jan. 11 : to Mr . and Mrs. Larry Senters. of
Prestonsburg, a daughter, Angela Dawn, Dec. 17...There died: Roy Dean
Ray, 17, of the Mud Creek section, Saturday night after being stabbed at a
gathering at Beaver; Mrs. Mary Poor Bodor, 93, of Martin, Sunday here :
Mrs. Mary Stumbo Martin, 63, formerly of the Left Beaver section . last
Tuesday at the Mayo Clinic, Minnesota; Leo Hunt, 61, Friday at his home
at Endicott: William Ira Hager, 81. of Weeksbury. Thursday at
McDowell: Bennie Helton, 72. native of West Prestonsburg, Dec. 25 a t
Warsaw, Ind.: Mrs. Elizabeth D. Scott, ll4, last Wednesday at her home at
Harold: Walker Endicott. 62. of Johns Creek, Saturday at Marti n: Shirley
Morrison, 60, Thursday at his home at Cliff: Mrs. Mallie Hunter. 114.
formerly of Garrett, Friday in Ohio; Ray Tibbs. 75. formerly of Auxier.
last Thursday in Cleveland, 0.; Mrs. Myrtie Wilburn. 83, Sunday at her
home near Harold; Mrs. Mary J. Prater, 77, of Hueysville. Monday here.
Twenty Years Ago
(January 2:1. 1964)
President Johnson included in the trimmed-down budget which he sent
to the Congress Tuesday a total of $18.4 million for flood control reservoirs which are designed to protect the Big Sandy valley ... An additional
$1 million has been made available to Eastern Kentucky by the Department of Agriculture under the winter relief program. Governor Edward
T. Breathitt announced Friday ... Ezra James and Grady Skeens.
employees of the Kentucky-West Virginia Gas Company were badly burned Friday evening on Cow Creek when a meter house fire was ignited accidentally ... New rules to preserve order and dignity in the courtroom
have been invoked by Circuit Judge Hollie Conley, and the system apparently is working ... Two Floyd county stream snagging and clearing
projects have been approved by the U.S. Corps of Engineers for completion at a cost of $73,000, Congressman Carl D. Perkins said last
week ... There died: Mrs. Lucy Hopson, 82, of Auxier. Saturday in Dayton .
0.: Wiley Nelson. 51, Friday at his home at David; Mrs. Polly Johnson.
88, Floyd native. Saturday in Pike county: Mrs. Rosanna Thompson. 56.
of Melvin. Tuesday; Mrs. Laura Cooper, 84. of Emma. Tuesday at
Louisa; I. N. Hall. 85. of Banner. Tuesday at Wayland.
Thirty Years Ago
<January 2H, 1954)
The old First National Bank building is being remodeled to accomodate
most city offices and also to serve as a possible community meeting
place .. .Borda Martin, of Garrett, was killed, and his driving companion.
Melvin Hayes, of Lackey, was seriously injured Sunday afternoon when
their auto collided with another car on Jones Fork .. .Dewey Reservoir
atracted 437,000 visitors last year. the U. S. Corps of Engineers
reports ... Carl H. Corgin resigned his post as member of the City Council
here, Monday ...B. F. Reed, of Drift, has been elected president of
Lonesome Pine Council, Boy Scouts of America .. .The Martin Kiwanis
Club was organized Wednesday ... Bom: to Mr. and Mrs. W. T. <Tommy >
Blackburn, formerly of Prestonsburg, a daughter, Marsha, January 1 at
Columbus, 0. : to Mr. and Mrs. W. L. Martin, formerly of Prestonsburg, a
son, Bill David, January 18 at Elkins, W. Va . ; to Mr. and Mrs . Curtis
Senters, a son, Larry Dwayne, January 13 at Lackey ...There died : Mrs.
Ellen Triplett. 54, Floyd native, Saturday at Willard. 0 .: Andrew Shortridge, 59, Wednesday at his home here; Clifford Messer. 40. formerly of
Handshoe, Friday at Lima. 0.; Mrs. D'lll'cus s. Haywood, 73, of Dock.
Wednesday at the Prestonsburg hospital; Henry E. Akers, 63, Monday a t
Drift; Ralph Farris, 64, of Van Lear, Monday of an injury suffered at an
Abbott Creek mine; Henry H. Flannery, 56, formerly of Martin, January .
7 at Dearborn, Mich.; Mrs. Nora K. Robinson, Auxier native, Saturday at
St. Louis, Mo.; John L. Harrington, 73, last Thursday at Paintsville.
Forty Years Ago
<January 27, 1944)
Three Floyd soldiers have been decorated for heroism- Cpl. William H.
Hopper. of Lackey, awarded the Silver Star for his action as a ta~k gunner in Italy; Pfc. Willis Sexton, of Hueysville, and Pfc. Earl Hamilton, of
Bypro, the Soldier's Medal to each for rescue work. following plane
crashes ... Mrs. Lottie Reynolds McGuire. Floyd teachmg veteran of 26
years. was killed Saturday rooming at Dwale when hit by a train ... Bodies
of six former residents of the Quicksand section were taken through
Prestonsburg Sunday for burial in the family cemetery. all victims of a
fire when destroyed a home at ~pencerville, 0., Friday night .. They were
Mrs. Sadie Handshoe, 32, her children, Ruby Murle. 7. Palestme. 6, Paul
Glenn, 3 and infant Charles Donald. and her sister. Miss Cletha Messer.
19... The Lackey Theatre and five other buildings burned. Thursday of last
week ...A rifle bullet claimed the life Monday of Miss Lucy Carroll. 17. of
Blue Moon ... Word has been received that Ashland P. Stephens. formerly
of Hueysville, died January 4 of wounds received in the battle for New
Britain, and that Harry Porter, formerly of Allen. is missing in the
Pacific theatre of war ... Dr . and Mrs. M. M. Collins observed their 25th
wedding anniversary January 15 at their ~ckey h?me ... There died:
William C. Howes, 70, of Betsy Layne, at Dnft : Beatnce Jean Hull. 6. of
Drift at a Martin hospital of bums sustained last Friday ; William
Ram~y. 84, Friday at Dwale: Rush Hunt. 59. of Minnie. last Thursday at a
Martin hospital : Mrs. Rhoda Osborne. 74. of Northern. Tuesday at a Martin hospital.
Fifty Years Ago
<January 26, 1!1:1-tl
An attempt to kindle a fire with gasoline resulted in the deat~ Monday
at a Martin hospital of Odie, 13-year-old daughter of Tom Jarvis. of Buffalo. Three other children of the family-Columbus. 21. Hazel. 1?. and
Henry, 11. were bumed .. . Mrs. Cora Hamilton, of Grethel. was senously
burned Saturday when her dress caught fire from an open grate ... Goble
street here. newly paved. is now open to traffic ...Mass graduation for all
Floyd county high school seniors has been suggested by County
Superintendent John Stephens and City Superintenden t Ishmael
Triplett .. .Floyd Tackett. about 35, was shot and killed Sunday at Betsy
Layne ...Talk of a retail sales tax is being heard at Frankfort.. .Contract
on the Paintsville-Inez road has been awarded the Womack-Ra~burn
Company, of jGrayson. on its $51,139 bid for grade and gravel surfacmg of
10 miles of the route ... The Prestonsburg debate team composed of Na~cy
Stapleton. Elsie Stephens and Ted Green def~ated . the Ashland high
school team Friday night... W. J. Turner. of Dnft . this -:veek purchas~d
the F. P. Howard building on Court street... There died : Mrs. Ell]a
Watkins. 45. native of this county. last Thursday at Pauley. Pike rounty :
Anthony Roberts. 24. Sunday at Harold.
BIRTH ANNOUNCEMENT
Mr. and Mrs. Doug Bailey, of Langley,
are announcing the birth of their first
child, a daughter, Sunday, January 8, at
Highlands Regional Medical Center. She
);las been named Kendra Marie Bailey.
!he maternal grandparents are Mr. and
Mrs. Oakie Shepherd, of.L~ngley, and
the paternal grandparents are Mr. and
Mrs. Arnold Bailey, of Hueysville. The
maternal great-grandmother is Mrs .
Thelma Ousley, of Prestonsburg, · and
the paternal great-grandmother is Mrs.
Area Bailey, of Martin.
CARD OF THANKS
We would like to thank Hall Funeral
Home, Rev. Crisp, Rev. Johnson, frie~ds
and relatives for all the beautiful
flowers; the church for bringing in food;
to the funeral home, also thanks to
Sizzlin Steak at Pikeville, the family of
Pearl Martin, were there for lunch after
the burial. They placed tables together
to accommodate us all. Thanks to
Russel Clark and Arietta Hall for staying at the hospital until some of the fami
ty arrived. God bless all.
THE FAMILY
Section One, Pa&e Four
--- 4 --!Continued from Page One >
water lines by building fires around the
meter." Such extreme strategies don't
work, Howard stressed, and he added
that a new meter will cost utilities
subscribers $35.00.
As if city utilities employees didn't
already have their hands full, many
calls are received, " at all hours," according to Howard, from residents who
have experienced broken pipes and
want the city to come and shut off their
water service. "It's not our responsibility to do this," explained Howard,
"but we try to accomodate people the
best we can anyway."
Howard says the office phone is also
kept busy from homeowners calling to
see how much their gas bill is, before
statements are sent out. "We've had
some houses with gas bills of $4-,$500."
he pointed out.
Howard said December's bitter cold,
with 10 below zero temperatures and
wind chill down to minus 40 was
rougher in terms of water problems
than the more recent "cold snap"
which saw comparable sub-zero
temperatures although without much
in the way of wind.
Referring to
the
warmer
temperatures shaping up this week,
Howard said he expected a lot of problems in the next few days since
broken water lines will start to thaw
and the bitter truth would be revealed
to homeowners in the sound of spraying water.
At the state highway garage at Allen,
a spokesman said that although
workmen had stayed " pretty busy"
this winter responding to calls both
from state police and the two night
watchmen which monitor weather and
snow conditions in the county, salt supplies were holding out well and state
highways in the county were "99 percent clear" as of Tuesday. Extensive
damage to roads from alternate freezing and thawing and the deteriorating
effects of repeated salt applications
· were not noticeable, it was said,
although most such damage generally
shows up in the spring.
Luckily, "no real problems" in
terms of chimney and other residential
fires have occurred during the cold
weather, at least in the Prestonsburg
area , according to City Fire Chief Tom
Blackburn. He credits this to an apparent improvement in maintenance
and cleaning of flues and chimneys.
Stories of cold weather-related
deaths and injury which have been
reported from some other areas of the
state have been absent in the county.
Prestonsburg veterinarian Dr.
Rudolph Ousley said livestock seems to
have fared well during the bitter cold
although he did report scattered cases
of frostbite to pets. He stre:;~ the importance of adequate bedding, protection from wind and proper feeding and
watering of all types of animals during
cold weather.
Another distinctly cold weather
phenomenon which really is no problem, except for those who might miss
out on a gallon of milk or ~me other
"necessity," is the pre-snow grocery
rush. Like many stores, the Piggly
Wiggly here is normally descended
upon by hordes of customers bent on
stocking up and "going to the house"
before the bad weather sets in.
Manager Ned Cochran said last Tuesday, with winter storm warnings
crackling everywhere on radios, was
no exception.
" On that day we had at least as much
business as we do on a normal
Friday," he commented. Lines were
backed up for hours, he reported, and
the most sought after items as far as he
could tell was milk and bread. " Milk
and bread are generally the only things
we run out of during this kind of rush,"
he said, and the store tries to order extra supplies when talk is of bad
weather although trucks don't always
arrive on time.
--- 6 ---
<Continued from Page One)
the best-sellers, are the worst offenders,
'the librarian says. "I can't understand
when people won't return them on time.
It's a real injustice when they know people are waiting, " she said.
Library staffers are again sending out
letters and making phone calls to borrowers with overdue books. B·Jt it is
costly sending out regular overdue
notices and the response to them is not
encouraging.
Boxes of cards, representing books as
long as five years overdue, litter the
librarian's office. The library's own
tolerance is partly to blame, Mrs.
Traum recognizes, and the fact that
there had been no librarian for about a
year before she was hired in October did
not help matters.
But with the board's backing when it
next meets on Feb. 2, things could
change. Most users will gladly trade a
little tolerance, Mrs. Traum figures , for
the sake of finding on the shelves the
books they are looking for.
Pike Co. Judge Is
Special Judge Here
For the first time in two weeks, a
judge presided in Floyd district court
Monday, Pike District Judge Richard L.
Elswick acting as special judge in place
of Floyd District Judge Harold Stumbo,
who is on leave.
Sentenced, following guilty pleas,
were Herbert Lee Terry, of Wheelwright, and John M. Dotson, of Prestonsburg . Terry, accused of possessing
marijuana, received 30-day jail sentence, with work release approved. Dotson, convicted of two counts of speeding,
was ordered to pay $63.50 on one and
$67.50 on the other, in fines and court
costs.
•
--- 8 ---
<Continued from Page One >
budget items include $55,500 for road
materials and supplies, $49,000 for a
park at Auxier, $25,000 for election expenses, $14,000 for magistrates' expenses, and $12,000 for senior citizens' .
centers.
Prestonsburg City Manager David
Evans said the city has also been hit by
sharp cuts in revenue-sharing funds, but
that the cuts were anticipated.
On the basis of previous years, Prestonsburg stood to receive a total of
$107,364 this year. A $4500 payment was
received last July but scheduled
payments in October and January were
never received, he said. The reduction
resulted from a smaller Congressional
appropriation and was not unexpected,
Evans said. " If you followed the mood
of Congress, you could see it coming, "
he said.
--- 9 ---
<Continued from Page One)
was assigned to the House Appropriations and Revenue Committee, where it
is scheduled for consideration Feb. 6.
Both bills have been heavily promoted
by the Kentucky Fair Tax Coalition
<KFTC), which is sponsoring Thursday's demonstration.
Stumbo's current broadform-deed bill
will be his third attempt to limit mining
of coal severed under a broadform deed
to the methods in use when the deed was
signed. A similar measure was passed
by the House in 1980 but failed in the
Senate. In 1982 it again passed in the
House but died in committee during the
final days of the legislative session.
The KFTC, a citizens' group, last
week released a study which says that
the coal industry would not be hurt by
the unmined minerals tax being considered by the legislature. The study is
calculated to counter the coal industry's
claim that the tax would be ruinous.
According to Tom Del Savio, who examined the impact of the proposed tax
on 16 mineral-holding companies, " th
decrease in corporate net income would
be minor and the effect on the corporate
level would be negligible." For 14 of the
companies, "the change in corporate net
income ... would be only one or two cents
per share," he said.
Although the tax would be on unmined reserves, some of the cost would be
borne by the coal operator, Del Savio
acknowledged. But the effect on the coal
operator's profits would be minimal, he
said. A company like MAPCO, which
produced over seven million tons of coa
in 1982, would see a drop in profits from
$6.24 to $6.20 a ton, he said.
The bill includes provisions designed
to protect small landowners a nd
farmers .
Vow Better System
For Heat Applicants
The long line of people who waited in
frigid temperatures to apply for home
heating aid last week has state officials
searching out a different method of
distributing heat funds next winter.
" We will simply have to developa new
system before next winter to ensure our
clients don't have to stand out in the cold
to get the money they need to stay
warm," said Socia l Insurance Commissioner Jack Waddell.
In two days last week, 1002 F loyd
families applied for help in meeting the'
winter heating bills. Under the Home
Energy Assistance Program administered by the state Human Resources
Cabinet, $17 million was available this
winter to assist families facing heating
fuel and utility cutoffs because of unpaid
bills .
In an earlier phase of the program,
designed for households with elderly or
disabled members, 422 Floyd families
applied for assistance on Dec. 5 and 6
Across the state, 104,411 households
applied for help in the program's two
phases. State officials acknowledged
that the need for aid outstripped the
available resources.
Night Manager Charged
In Restaurant Robbery
A 21-year-old West Liberty man, who
reported a robbery at a city restaur ant
late Friday night, was himself cha rge
with the crime.
Police said Cavin R. Hutchinson, night
manager at Lee's Famous Recipe on
North Lake Drive, reported that, shortly a fter the restaurant closed F riday
night, he was robbed of the night's takings at gunpoint. The robber was a large
man clad in a black ski suit with an
orange stripe, police were told.
Officers Greg Hall and Larry Woods,
who responded to the call around 11: 1.
p.m. , said they found Hutchinson tied t
a chair and with a bruise on his forehead. Hutchinson said he had been robbed and bound and had telephoned police
by dialing with his tongue.
A search of the area revealed no signs
of a robber's having entered or left the
building, although fresh snow lay on the
ground, police said. But a search of Hutchinson's car turned up two money bags
containing $1580 under the front seat.
The restaurant worker was charged
with theft by unlawful taking and knov.
ingly receiving stolen property. J im
Sparks, restaurant operator, asked
police officers this week to drop the
charges , however.
To Be Interviewed
By TV Host, Palance
Mrs . Sadie Hatfield Click, of Emma,
descendant of " Devil" Anse Hatfield,
will be interviewed by Jack Palance,
the television series, " Believe It or Not.
Mrs. Click was the subject of an article
in The Times some weeks ago.
�•
Wednesday, January 25, 1984
Section One, Pase Five
The Floyd County Times
.~~------------------------~~~~~----------------~
FEDERAL
. FOOD
STAMPS
WELCOME
39
LB.
4-ROLL-ASSORTED COLORS
CHARM IN
BATH TISSUE
.-1!~~~----.-iii.!~~~~~~
11......
99 cLI~IT
CHOICE BONELESS
.
•
$15 9· .
, CHUCK STEAK ... . .. .. ..
Lb.
99
C
ALL MEAT WIENERS ...
12-0Z. PKG.-FISCHER'S
9· 9-- c
~~::KE SYRUP.... ......
c
16-0Z.
.
9
9
·::~:~~S .. ..
20-0Z. ORE-IDA
MORTON HOUSE
EF STEW
FISCHER'S
·
CHUNK BOLOGNA. .. . ..
$1 09
Lb.
$119
FRESH
PORK STEAK.. .. ... .. . ..
Lb•.
$1 09
BOSTON BUn
PORK ROAST. . ... .. . .. ..
Lb.
99c
aosroN Bun .. .. .. ... .
'WHOLE PORK
c
Lb.
$12 9
COUNTRY STYLE
PORK RIBS .. ... .. .. ... ..
Lb.
$249
BEEF
CUBED STEAK .. . .. .. .. .
Lb.
$399 .
NEW YORK
·STRIP STEAK .. ... .. . .. .
$159
FRESH
COZMPlETECK
lb.
GROUND CHUCK . .. . .. .
99c
$1 0
$7
lb.
o·...
NCAKE MIX .. .. ..
-WHOLE FRYER
8 GLERAONUN.D BEEF
8
- . . ...,.,~~---~~------ LEG QUARTERS....
.
·
FRESH
$680.. FRESH PORK
$480
WESSON OIL
FRYER THIGHS ... ..
·NECK BONES ...... .
8
$1 !"2
=
fSj
SO EXTIIA
FREE QUALITY STAMPS
WITH CO_UPON AND P~RCHASE_ OF
.
2 PAKS CASEY'S HAMBURGER
OR HOT DOG BUNS
•
<
VAUD THRU 1-29-84
-~~-~~-~-~--~~-
~~~lli\coN ... .. . .. .... ...
.
Sll 80
SO EXTRA
SOEXTRA
~
QUALITY STAMPS
WITH COUPON AND PURCHASE OF
FREE QUALITY STAMPS
WITH-COUPON AND PURCHASE OF
3-LB. BAG
YELLOW ONIONS
HALF·GAL(ON-BREYER'S
ICE CREAM
~-
· VALID THRU 1-29-84
----· ----~---------~~
----~-EX11ilr
FREE QUALITY STAMPS
WITH COUPON AN-D PURCHASE OF
ZESTA SALTINES
FREE QUALITY STAMPS
WITH COUPON AND
$40 OR MORE PURCHASE.
~~----J!~J~l~~~--~----
-------~~~~!~~---~-~~
16:-oz. BOX
.
WHITE
POTATOES
$~~~;·
Bag
FRESH
. HEAD
. LETTUCE
219
$1 ~L~
FLORIDA ORANGE
C~LIFORNIA
CARROTS
~,
tk~:2/89c
.
....
---- ---------·------------____ _
-------------------200 EXTRA
. VALID THRU 1-29-84
U.S. NO. 1 :
SATURDAY IS
DOUIL£ COUPON
DAY!!
RECEIVE DOUBLE VALUE
ON ALL MANUFACTURER'S "~~
COUPONS
VALUES UP TO
�I
• I
Wednesday, January 25, 1984
OrTSTANDING YOUNG WOMAN
Tonda Hall McCoy, of Wheelwright,
has been named one of the Outstanding
Young Women of America for 1983 in
recognition of ability, accomplishments,
and service to her community.
She is a graduate of Alice Lloyd College, teaches fifth grade at McDowell
Elementary, and is enrolled in the
graduate program of Morehead State
University. She is a member of the local
gospel group, "The Ambassadors."
She is the daughter of Helen Hall, of
Hi Hat, and is married to Gary McCoy.
She has two children, Shane and
Meshana.
EMPLOYMENT
OPPORTUNITY
The Fle,.t C.nty Heeltll O.,.tment
hes • YKencJ f• Clerk Twist II. Bell..,
nl111 ulery Is $3.41 per heur. Appllce·
tleas •e niiiM»Ie et the Flo,.t CountJ
HNith Depart.ent.
Rll!luirH!ents f• this position •e:
GriMiuetlon frone hl&h schoel lndudln1
or sup,C1111ented IIJ a course In typln1
and one JNr of ex,erience In clericel
werk which ... bHn In the perfor·
mence of 111oderete1J difficult clerical
and t,Cn1 duties, or an equiYIIent
cOIIIblnation of related trelnin1 and exp.t..ce.
Appllcetions must be receiYed bJ the
M•lt 5Jsttlll Office, a...au for Health
SerYices, Ca blnet for Hu111an
Reso~rces, 275 East Main Street,
Frankfort, KentudiJ 40621, on or
befwe l'llidnl&ht FebruM'J 1, 1984.
AN EQUAL OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYER
1-11-3! .
The Floyd County nmes
Section One, Page Six
Kermit To Head Wildlife Week
Kermit the Frog, one of Jim Henson's
internationally acclaimed Muppets and
the host of TV's award-winning "The
Muppert Show," is honorary chairman
of the 1984 National Wildlife Week.
The 46th annual Wildlife Week, sponsored by the National Wildlife Federation, will be observed March 18 to 24. Its
conservation theme, "Water- We Can't
Live Without It," will be promoted
throughout the year.
More than 20 million students, teachers and conservationists will participate
in the Wildlife Week observance, helping promote the importance of clean,
lifegiving water and the necessity of conserving critical water resources.
"Kermit is the perfect chairman for
the 1984 water conservation theme,"
said NWF Executive Vice President Jay
D. Hair. "Kermit is immensely popular
with millions of people of all ages- and
besides, who knows more about the importance of clean water than a frog?''
Kermit will speak on behalf of the National Wildlife Federation in the NWF's
1984 broadcast public service announcements that promote the conservation of
the nation's dwindling supplies of
useable water.
Appearing in the public service announcements with fellow Muppert Fozzie Bear, Kermit says, "Water is
something we have to conserve and keep
clean." The broadcast announcements
are being distributed nationally to 600
television and 1,500 radio stations.
As part of his duties as chairman, Kermit will also be the featured speaker at
the NWF's annual Conservation Awards
banquet on March 17 in Atlanta,
Georgia, in conjunction with the Federation's annual meeting.
NWF is the nation's largest conservation organization with 4.1 million members and supporters, including members
in 49 state affiliates.
The water conservation theme for 1984
was chosen, according to Hair, to make
Americans aware of the critical importance of life-sustaining water.
"More than any other resource, water
is basic to survival,'' Hair said. ''Water
sustains all life forms and is the key
ingredient to healthy ecosystems. Moreover, water is essential in every industrial process- in cooling machinery,
in assimilating wastes, in transporting
products, and in materials composition.
"Unfortunately," Hair continued,
" useable water supplies are dwindling
because of contamination, mismanagement and waste. We hope that during the
course of the year we can impress
Americans that water protection and
conservation are priority issues. "
Kermit was created in 1955 by Jim
Henson, then an art student at the
University of Maryland who was offered
a late-night show on WRC-TV in Washington, D.C. The show, "Sam and
Friends," featured a troupe of puppets
dubbed "The Muppets" by Henson and
Jane Nebel, now his wife.
"The Muppet Show" premiered on
television in 1976 and was named
"Special Attraction of the Year" by the
American Guild of Variety Artists. Kermit and the .Muppets have also starred
in two movies, "The Muppet Movie,"
and "The Great Muppet Caper," and
will star in another to be released this
summer, "The Muppets Take Manhattan."
There~-- a lool< to ihe South, this salscm,
and it:, not t 'ITJ pretty.
Forests bume.d out by Wildfire,be.catLSc
someone u us alrclcss.
Seek oLlt'icc from your forestry agent
before burning trash or cl.clms.
You can help make the difference. ®~
A Puhl~r S,•n·icc nfTh" Ncw,rorx·r & The Adn·rt''"'~ G•uncil
Pre-Columbian Indians believed that earthquakes were
caused by the creator shaking
the earth to see if his handiwork was still around. The
Indians would shout "Here
I am," to reassure him.
WILDFIRE. INDIFFERENCE MAKES IT SPREAD.
IT'S A RECORD!
NOBODY LEASED MORE CARS & TRUCKS
• AlsoBank Financing
has never
been better!
• Lowest rates
in years!
• We now have a
48-month plan!
Lower payments!
OVER
200
200
200 ~~
OMt\lS
But Billy Maynard,
Eastern Ky.'s "Leasing
Champion," won't be
satisfied till it's
broken! 1984 promises
to be even better!
t/ Why? Jenny Wiley
has 4 lease plans.
v' A new unlimited
miles warranty
v Lower rates
NOBODY HAS A VAN LIKE TOYOTA!
• ICEMAKER OPTIONAL • AVAILABLE
WITH DUAL AIR & HEAT.
5
250 ';!~~
WINTERTIME
ASE SPECIALSI
48-MO.
HELP US
REACH
OUR GOAL!
THIS MONTH'S LEASE
SPECIAL ON PICKUPS IS
ALMOST OVER I HURRY HURRYI
I
* s25650 DOWN
CAMRYTHE FAMILY CAR.
PACIOUS, LUXURIOUS,
FOR NEAR s10,000.
ON 2-WHEEL DRIVES
BECAUSE JENNY WILEY MAKES
THE FIRST PAYMENT!
THEY'RE VANTASTIC!
SPACE-AGE DESIGN
AND PERFORMANCE
LE OR
DELUXE.
$133
PERMO:'
48-MO.
STANDARD BED,
4-SPEED
• BASED ON 15,000 MILES PER YEAR.
You llake Us Famous!
4-WHEEL
DRIVE
BASIC
PICKUP
lOS North Lake Drive, Near the U.S. 23 Intersection
PHONE 886-1396 PRESTONSBURG
WEDNESDAY -SPECIAL
Try Our Famous
3 Piece Dinner!
OR CHECK OUT THE
SUPER LUXURY
5
189
CRESSIDAI
PER MO. 4fJ-MO.
*WE NOW HAVE 1
*
SUPRA SPORT
3 pieces of golden brown Famous Recipe
Fried Chicken, mashed potatoes and gravy,
creamy cole slaw and one fresh, hot biscuit.
WITH
!5-SPEED, SUNROOF, AM-FM
STEREO WI CASSETTE If
EQUALIZER, POWER PKG...
s14900P~~o.
$7000°
ON .LEASE
"i'\10 COUPON NEEDED"
0
STD. BED-NO EXTRAS
EXTENDED SERVICE PLAN APPROX.
EXTRA PER MONTH.
* ALL NEW XTRA CAB!<
you
~SKED fOR \lyQU GOl
\l\
•10 Pieces of delicious
Famous Recipe Fried
Chicken
•2 Salads of your
choice
[51
-
REG. $9.55
VALUE
* ANY DAY *
-- -
EFFECTIVE
ANY DAY
* ANY DAY *
DRIVE.
TERCEL WAGONS-
... AIR COND., SPORT SEATS, ETC.
Regular or Mild Spicy
2-WHEEL OR
UNDER •11,000. LEASE
FOR APPROX. •329•• PER MO.
FRONT WH.·D. OR
4-WH.·D.
AUTO. OR
TERCEL
WAGONS!
* APPROX.
WE ALSO HAVE
40 USED
•
CARS & TRUCKS!
I
* BEST SERVICE IN THE EASTI
..
CALL EASTERN KENTUCKY'S
"BARGAIN CHAMPION"
PHONE 886-3880
PARTS & SERVICE
(LEASING CHAMPION)
Phone:
886-3861
SEE
U.S. 23 NO., PRESTONSBURG
DALLAS,
BILLY
OR GARY.
•
�The Floyd County Times
Section One, Page Seven
FRES
GROUND BE
WHOLE, FRYING
CHICKEN LEGS
OPEN 8To 10
EVERY DAY
$
CHEESE, PEPPERONI, OR SAUSAGE
ARMOUR
PLAIN
1s-oz.69c
CHILl
Can
JENO'S PIZZA . .. . .. .. .. . .... .. ... .
FLAVORICH
ALUMINUM FOIL ................
NICE, FRESH
25-Ft.
Rou
LETTUCE
IGA 30-GAL
IGA
3
MAYONNAISE···············.···
·
SKIM MILK ..................... G~::n
59C
C
TRASH CAN LINERS ........... 1o.cr. 99
IGA
La.69c
PH: 478-5275
HAROLD, KY.
Each
99c
RED
IGA
TRAIL BLAZER
FANCY
25-Lb
LB.
$1
09
PORK SPARE RIBS...............
PORK CHOPS ........................ $10!
$19
8
BEEF BARBEQUE ............. :.....
89
PORK SAUSAGE......................
LB.
FIRST CUT
3-lb
DELICIOUS FOR SANDWICHES
LB•.
0
C
FRESH HOMEMADE COUNTRY STYLE
0
C.
HAM HOCKS ............................. 59~
59C
3/$
DELICIOUS
APPLES
..........
aag·
CUT GREEN BEANS ......... ~s~;-~z.
1
1
29 CARROTS ................ ~:·4/$1
SNO-KREEM SHOIJTENING .. ~~:· $2
SJ$1
$399
SELECT CUCUMBERS ......... .
CHUNK DOG FOOD ............. ~g
NEW CROP
$17
9
SELF-RISING FLOUR ...........
SLAB BACON
$12
9' MAINE POTATOES
CHEESE SINGLES ............... ,.;.:_·
2
c
~~~$2.69
69 C
FABRIC SOFTENER ............. :0~t.
I
98
FARMER'S STYLE
2HEAos89C
t~z.$1 2 9
.19 FRESH SLICED
1 SALT BACON oR SMOKED JOWL.........
LB.
·
IGA
10-lb.
Bag
IGA AMERICAN
12 O
IGA SHEETS
DERIND SMOKED
BY
THE
PIECE
2
CHEER
49 0
LAUNDRY DETERGENT ........ a~xz.
$199
98
_,..
LB.
FREE DELIVERY WITH MINIMUM $20 PURCHASE
.
WITHIN 3 MILE RADIUS.
·IGA
MARGARINE
c
Qtrs.
1-Lb. Pkg.
CARD OF THANKS
The family of John Woodrow Scalf
would like to thank- everyone for their
kindness in our time of sorrow. Thanks
to those who sent food, flowers or for just
being with us, to the nurses at McDowell
Appalachian Regional Hospital for their
kindness during John's illness. A special
thanks to the men who prepared the
grave, pastors John Adams and Keith
Krumm, the Jack's Creek singers, Judy
awson, and Hall Funeral Home for
eir kind and efficient service.
THE SCALF FAMILY,
BESSIE AND CHILDREN lt.
INCOME TAX
PREPARATION
,~ ~·
Federal and State
********
Vernon Slone ·
Call 886-6060
or
886-9007
~,
~ .,
•
•
•
•
2/89
'NOV A' Explores China's
Overpopulation Problem
Two-thirds of China's 1.2 billion
citizens are under the age of 24. If the
present birth rate continues unabated,
there will be an extra 200 million Chinese
greeting the 21st century. "NOVA" examines Peking's radical move to prevent overpopulation on "China's Only
Child," premiering Tuesday, February
14, at 8 p.m. on KET.
In 1980 Peking, in an attempt to prevent the imminent catastrophe, made a
request for couples to limit their offspring to one child as part of na tiona! policy.
In factory villages this policy has been
enforced zealously by "Granny police,"
who guard their communes against fertile couples by distributing contraceptives and providing escort to gynecological exams. Couples contracting with
the state to produce only one child enjoy liberal benefits. Couples who "fail"
receive little sympathy or support.
Western observers perceive this fouryear-old policy as harsh and authoritative. But party officials stress China has
no alternativ~ since two- or three-child
families woUid push the Republic over
the poverty line into starvation.
"NOVA: China's Only Child" is produced by WGBH/Boston.
1·11-tf
Pharmacy·.
Footnotes
By HAROLD COOLEY
When taking an antihistamine to relieve allergy symptoms, weight gain is certainly not the expected side effect. However some medications cause just that. Drugs
can bring about weight gain by causing water retention,
increased appetite or thirst, cravings for sweets or a slowing down of the body's metabolism. The gain can range
from a pound or two in just a few days to 20 pounds or
more over several weeks or months. This can be
dangerous, particularly for patients with heart and
kidney disease. Report any unusual weight gain to your
doctor when taJting any medication. Fortunately this type
of weight gain is usually reversible when the drug is
discontinued.
If you have any questions about how or when to take
the medication your physician prescribes we would like
to remind you that we are always available to answer
them. COOLEY APOTHECARY is very proud to be able
to provide families in this area with all their pharmaceutical needs. You'll find us located in No. 2 Town
Center Bldg., 886-8106 and open Mon.-Fri., 9-5:30, Sat., 9-5.
Master Charge and Visa.
HANDY HINT:
Antidepressants sometimes tend to lead to weight gain.
Gas Company's
Sale Confirmed
(From The Paintsville Herald)
Johnson County Gas Company, whose
operations have been much in the news
for the past year, is being sold to Lexington coal broker Jack Daniel.
The sale of the county utility is subject
to approval by the state Public Service
Commission and management will apparently remain with present owner
Danny Preston in the interim.
Daniel, in Paintsville recently for a
brief hearing involving Johnson County
Gas and its supplier, Columbia Gas, was
the victim of a mail bomb delivered to
his home in Lexington in September,
1982. He lost both legs in the explosion.
Daniel was also a key figure in a federal
investigation into corruption in the
coalfields in the late seventies, serving
as an informant in an investigation called the Leviticus Project.
A spokesperson for Johnson County
Gas, Betty Preston, said Daniel "just
called one day," starting the talks that
led to the scheduled sale. She declined
to discuss price, referring that question
to Daniel.
Officials at Daniel's Lexington office
confirmed the transaction but could offer no specifics. Daniel was out of town
and unavailable for comment.
The proposed sale of the local utility
raises questions concerning litigation
pending between Johnson County Gas
and Columbia Gas, a major supplier of
fuel to the company. Columbia claims
Johnson County owes in excess of
$200,000 in past billings.
Larry Stanley, executive director with
the state Public Service Commission, indicated this week that Columbia no
longer supplies gas to the company.
Stanley said the local utility was now being serviced by Atlantic Gas Transmission Company, adding that a hearing
had been set for January 26 in Frankfort
for Johnson County Gas to "show cause
why they should not permanently lower
rates." Stanley said Atlantic was supplying gas at a lower rate than Columbia,
prompting the hearing on possible rate
reductions. Stanley added that no date
had been set for the PSC to review the
sale of Johnson County Gas to Daniel
Suits and countersuits between Columbia and Johnson County Gas remain
in court and apparently will not be
resolved by the sale of the utility.
CARD OF THANKS
The family of James Gibson would
like to thank all the friends and
neighbors who were so kind and
thoughtful, for all the food, flowers and
support during our time of need. We
would especially thank Dr. Charles
Arnett, the Floyd Funeral Home and the
Rev. L P Tussey for his kind and comforting words. May God bless you all.
ANN GIBSON AND I<,AMIL Y
PRICES EFFECTIVE THRU JAN. 29
NOT RESPONSIBLE FOR PRINTER'S ERRORS
WE HAVE FEED FOR LIVESTOCK.
WE WELCOME FEDERAL FOOD STAMPS.
Fairchild's New
Eastern Eguipment
and Distribution
Center Is Centrally
Located To Serve
You BeHer
Fairchild International has
recently purchased Eastern
Machine, a division of Elmac Corporation in Whitesburg, KY,
located at the Pine Mountain
Junction. The name of this new
facility will be the Fairchild
Eastern Equipment and Distribution Center. The facility is
situated on several acres of land
and offers the complete line of
new Fairchild products and product servicing, including Fairchild
replacement parts , component rebuilds , and a wide inventory of
used and rebuilt mining equipment for your inspection. This
facil ity is gea~ed to giving the
fastest service and Fairchild's
usual high quality to the coal
operators in the eastern coal
"Our new Equipment and Distribution Center in
fields.
Whitesburg increases our ability to serve you
For the past eighteen years,
faster· · .," Myrleen and Jack Fairchild.
Fairchild has been dedicated to
serving the needs of the coal industry, and the new Eastern Equipment and
Distribution Center is continued evidence of this commitment.
Stop by the Fairchild Eastern Equipment and Distribution Center
you will be
glad you did.
Fat rchtld Eastern Equipmen t and D i str~but t on Center • P 0 . Box 969 • W t11tesburg , K Y 41 8 58 • 16061 633 22 23
�Wednesday, lanuary 25, 1984
The Floyd County Times
Section One, Pa&e El&ht
Class Enjoys 'Old Christmas'
PUBLIC NOTICE
1 he Town of Wayland, complymg With
r ule., and regulations of Revenue Sharing J<~unds, does not discriminate against
the physically handicapped.
PAT MURPHY,
Mayor
1-25-2t.
FOR SALE
Baby cradle, mattress and
bumper pads-$70; Baby
swing-$1 0; Carrier-$15;
Walker-54.
B74-97B5
HELL
NOI God Is not going to
punish sinners forever In
a fire! The wages of sin
is death-Romans 6:23.
PUBLIC NOTICE
Thornsberry's Carry Out, doing
business at 114 Main St., Wheelwright,
Ky. 41669, by Glen Thornsberry, Box 74,
Bypro, Ky. 41612, hereby declares his intention to apply for a license as a retail
beer dealer under the state Jaw. lt-pd.
Free cassetres or wrlnen
literature-Specify which.
CHURCH Of. GOD
(SEVENTH DAY)
c/o J6rry Bentley
Rt. 4, Box 737
Pikeville, Ky. 41501
NOTICE TO PUBLIC
Upon and after publication of this
notice, I will no longer be responsible for
any debts incurred by anyone other than
myself.
MARVIN DINGUS
Martin, Ky. Box 36
1-25-ltpd.
12-2s.otpd
NOTICE
The commissiOners of the Beaver
Elkhorn Water District will hold their
regular monthly meeting Wednesday,
January 25, 1984 at 6:30 p.m. at the
water office at Estill.
,1 AMES A. SCOTT
Chairman
---------_ __
a.
GOSPEL SINGING
BRANDY KEG
FREE WILL BAPTIST CHURCH
7 p.m., Saturday, Jan. 28
Everyone Welcome
Pastor, Bro. Birkey Lewis
<Photo by Wende !Juchanan)
Mrs. Terry Buchanan's first grade class at Prestonsburg grade school concluded their study of Christmas customs around the world with a class
Christmas party, Jan. 6. The custom of Old Christmas was revived for the
afternoon as the children sang songs, played games and exchanged their
presents.
Cold Snap Takes Humdrum
Out of Everyday Routine
Record-breaking temperatures which
dipped below zero and even during the
day remained in single digit figures, last
week played havoc with what is usually
viewed as the humdrum routine of
everyday life.
For instance, getting to work was a
major test flunked by many, what with
icy roads just one of the difficulties.
Some were stopped at the gate by car
batteries either dead or giving their last
gasp. Others caromed from curb to curb
until they came to rest somewhat close
to a parking position, got out and walked or slipped and slid to work.
Plumbers have done a landoffice
business, with frozen and burst pipes a
not unusual condition for householders,
MAYTOWN NEWS
GOSPEL SING
AT THE
SALISBURY METHODIST CHURCH
Saturday, Jan. 28
7:00P.M.
Featuring .THE STACY FAMILY and
BORN AGAIN
-EVERYONE WELCOME-
TOP DOLLARS PAID FOR YOUR COAL LEASE
local mini ng company is mte rested in acquiring existing coal
lea ses o r n egotiat ing new leases for the purposes of mineral
explo r a tion, devel opme nt and ext r action . Serious inquiries
plea se.
Contact Company Representative At:
(606) 478-2577 or (606) 478-5700
Mrs. Haley Webb celebrated her 95th
birthday on January 6 at her home.
Family members celebrating with her
were Mrs. Kim King, Mrs. Glenna Clark
and Mr. and Mrs. James Webb, of
Harold, Robert Webb and daughter,
Casey, Delphos, Ohio, Mrs. Rudolph
Akers and Larry, of Martin, Mrs. Emma Turner and Zeda T11rner, of
Wayland, Mr. and Mrs. Arnold Webb,
Hindman, .Mrs. Beatrice Chaffins, Paula
Webb, Shawn and Jotm and Mrs . Barbara Salisbury, all of Langley. Mrs.
Webb received several gifts.
First Sgt. and Mrs. Robert Robinson
and family, who have just returned from
Germany, have been the guests of Mrs.
Robinson's parents, Mr. and Mrs. Buel
Spears. After concluding their visit here,
they went on to Ft. Bliss, Tex., where he
will be stationed.
Tamyra Hensley, who suffered a heart
attack recently is now out of inte:1Sive
care and is much improved.
Sympathy to the family of John N.
Patton who passed away last week
following a long illness. The Pattons, of
Martin, were formerly residents of
Maytown.
NOW FEATURING
BOTH RAINBO
AND HEINER'S
BAKERY PRODUCTS
STROH'S &
STROH'S LIGHT
24-12-0z~
JO-BO DOG FOOD
c
77 5
CASE
WHIL£ SO CASES LAST-
GOEBEL BEER
24-12-0z.
Cans
$595
4-Roll
Pkg.
CASE
STOKELY'S
TOMATO CATSUP
2 99
14-0z.
Bottles
c
KRAFT SALAD DRESSING
FOUR FLAVORS
Reg. $1.15
WHILE THEY LAST
some of whom have been without water.
One woman, faced with no water in her
neighborhood, hied herself to the home
of a somewhat astounded city official,
informed him she hoped he had plenty
of water, and proceeded to take a muchneeded bath. Such are the burdens of
civic responsibility.
A number of family pets have suffered
the traumatic experience of being
cooped up in the unaccustomed luxury
of a warm house. Animal lovers and
even those not so fond of our furry
friends, felt a pang for old Bowser, fleas
and all, when faced with seeing him
frozen stiff in mid-bark.
Bird seed has been a big seller along
with electric blankets, long-johns, and
snow tires.
But, on the brighter side, school was
out (and still was Tuesday) and there
has been a population explosion of
snowmen, built amid a welter of snowballs. No doubt these youngsters will
bore their offspring with oft-repeated
tales of the winter of '84.
"Why, the lake froze clear across, you
could walk on the Big Sandy River and
school was out for a week or more."
Class of '67 Plans Reunion
Those planning to attend the class reunion for the Martin High School
graduating class of 1967, contact Karen
Turner, P.O. Box 47, Minnie, Ky. 41651
immediately. Plans must be made per
attending number. A small fee will be
charged.
For the hearing impairea, the IRS provide, special help to taxpayers who have
access to TV/telephone-TTY equipment.
Interested taxpayers should contact
their local social service agencies to find
out where this equipment is located in .
their area .
The special number for residents in
Kentucky is 1-800-428-4732. By calling
these toll-free numbers, hearing impaired persons can get answers to their
tax questions.
This service is available from 8 a .m.
to 6:30p.m. EST. The special telephone
number listed above can only be used in
connection with TV/ telephone-TTY
equipment.
. SANDY VALLEY
MONUMENT
& BUILDING STONE CO., Inc.
874-2273 • ALLEN, KY.
"THE AREA'S OLDEST ESTABUSHED
MONUMENT RRM."
BEST QUAUTY MEMORIALS
QUICK. EFFICIENT SERVICE
AND INSTALLAnON
SEE OUR LA:lGE o:SPLAY OF
COLORED & GRAY GRANITES
LOCATED ON OLD U.S. 23
IN NEW ALLEN
3-tf.
.... ..
..
~
CARTER FUNERAL HO E
47 SOUTH LAKE DRIVE • PRESTONSBURG
Phone 88·6·2774
$2 9995
• TWO PIECE LIVING ROOM SUITE
WAS $79915 . • • • BARGAIN . . ..
• THREE PIECE LIVING ROOM SUITE $
WAS $12B915 • • • • BARGAIN ....
• 5X8 SHAG RUGS (3 COLORS)
WAS $35 ... ... BARGAIN .. _ .. .
$
1988
$750
88
. $49
59995
• KROHLER RECLINER (2 ONLY)
s377
WAS $399 ...... BARGAIN ..... .
5
• SOFA ONLY (NO CHAIR) . . BARGAIN .. 99
• HIGH BACK RECLINER
$
GREEN FLORAL . . . . . BARGAIN . . . . . 133
• BRASS MAGAZINE RACKS . . . SALE . . .
• FIVE PIECE DINETTE
$
WAS $499 . ..... BARGAIN ... . . .
•
•
•
•
187
• CORNER HUTCH
$
WAS $34915 • • . • • • BARGAIN . . . . . .
• SOLID PINE BEDROOM sum:
s
WAS $899 . .. . . . BARGAIN .. . .. .
155
444
95
5
• THREE DRAWER CHEST,. BARGAIN . . 29
• TWIN BEDDING .. .. . BARGAIN . . ... s55
• ODD LIVING ROOM TABLES . LOW
PRE-SEASON SALE ON
USED FARM MACHINERY
•
•
s59995
• MAGIC CHEF RANGE
s33995
WAS $499 . .. .. BARGAIN .....
• 20-LB. ELECTRIC DRYER
$29995
WAS $409
BARGAIN .. . .
• PHILCO HOME ENTERTAINMENT CENTER $89995
WAS $1395 . . . BARGAIN . .. (25")
•
• •• •
~~~~D~!~~~T~~=~~N:;;9~J:::~AIN 228
5
• THROW RUGS
(LIMIT 2 PER CUSTOMER) . BARGAIN . each
s350
.
CHECK OUR PRICES ON ...
•
• AMANA REFRIGERATOR-FREEZER
WAS $799 .. BARGAIN .. r.e-cu. FT.)
AS
• BARGAINS ON ALL USED MERCHANDISE
sea
• QUEEN-SIZE MATTRESS
WAS $199 .... . .. BARGAIN . . .. . . .
•
*
A fire, which Friday morning
destroyed a mobile home on state road
fork off the Mountain Parkway, claimed the life of 53-year-old Ottis
Hackworth.
Floyd County Coroner Roger Nelson
said the fire, which may have begun
from a faulty electric heater, broke out
around 7:45 a.m. and it is believed
smoke inhalation resulted in
Hackworth's death , although an autopsy was scheduled to be performed at
Pikeville.
Hackworth lived alone in the mobile
home .
An employee of a Middle Creek
grocery and car sales and a member of
the Civil Air Patrol. Hackworth was
borP December 26, 1929 in Floyd county, a son of Millie Williams Hackworth.
of Brainard and the late Harris
Hackworth.
Survivors include three sisters, Mrs.
Eunice Prater, of Brainard, Mrs.
Callie Steele, Homer, Mich., and Mrs.
Eva line Prater, of Albion, Mich .. and a
brother, Delbert Hackworth, of Albion.
Funeral rites were conducted Monday at 11 a .m. at the Chestnut Grove
United Baptist Church with Elders
Wallace Calhoun, Delmon Stanley and
Lemuel Williams officiating. Burial
was made in the R. D Prater
Cemetery at Brainard under direction
of the Carter Funeral Home.
l!tS Offers Service
For Hard of Headng
We have experienced the same problems as so many of you during this freezing
weather-OUR PIPES BUSTED ALSO-All damaged merchandise must be sold-most merchandise only slightly damaged. Sofas-chalrs-marrresses-chest-dressers-refrlgeratorsfreezers·TV's·siereos-plus many odds and ends. All specially marked furniture sold as Is.
15
'
Hackworth Victim
Of Trailer Blaze
200 FORD GAS TRACTOR
8N FORD TRACTOR
601 FORD TRACTOR
4000 FORD TRACTOR WITH FORD
LOADER
35 FERGUSON TRACTOR
MITSUBISHI15 h.p. 4-WHEEL DRIVE
DIESEL
MITSUBISHI 16% h.p. 4-WHEEL DRIVE
DIESEL
454 INTERNATIONAL TRACTOR
• FERGUSON GAS TRACTOR
$
SOLD AS IS . . . . . . . . . • . . . . . . .
• FARMAL SUPER A
$
WITH PLOWS-RUNS . ......... .
5
• FARMAL 230 WITH CULTIVATORS
• FARMAL 330
$
WITH LOADER . . . . . . . . . . . . .
450
595
1800
2200
PLUS- LARGE SELECTION Of USED MANURE
SPREADERS-PLOWS-DISKS-CORN PLANTERS-RID·
lNG MOWERS
• FREE GIFTS FOR THE LADIES WITH EVERY MACHINERY PURCHASE
. FINANCING
. AVAILABLE
OPEN SUNDAYS 1-5 P. M.
�Wednesday, January 25, 1984
The Floyd County Times
Despite Court Order ...
Child Support Said
Hard To Collect
Earlene Newsome is divorced, the
working mother of a 2112-year-old, and
determined.
Getting her ex-husband to pay courtordered child support, she says, has
been an endless battle. It has been
humiliating, costly, time-consuming,
emotionally draining and- worst of
all-largely fruitless.
She knows why many women in her
position simply give up, exhausted, cowed by the inevitable. But this 23-year-old
West Prestonsburg mother says she
won't give up. She will try to persuade
others not to give up. She is about to
organize.
There is already a Baltimore-based
organization in place-called the
Organization for the Enforcement of
Child Support <OECS)-to assist parents
·n her position and Mrs. Newsome aims
o start a chapter here. The group win
. try to put teeth into a legal system
which, even when it makes the best of
a bad situation-dividing marital property, providing for maintenance, setting out visitation rights, and fixing child
support-often appears unable to make
the arrangements stick.
When it comes to collecting courtordered child support payments, Mrs.
Newsome said in an interview this week,
·he has found Floyd domestic relations
courts either unwilling or unable to enforce their own orders.
She and her husband were divorced
two years ago after a two-year marriage. He was ordered to pay $175 a
month to support their infant so~. He is
NOTICE OF
INTENTION TO MINE
Pursuant to Application
Number 836-0025
In accordance with the provisions of
KRS 350.055, notice is hereby given that
Brashae Coal Co., Inc., P.O. Box 628,
Hindman, Ky. 41653, has filed an application for a permit for a surface coal
mining and reclamation operation of approximately 391.34 acres located 1.0
miles southeast of Risner, in Floyd
county.
The proposed operation is approximately 0.57 miles northeast from
olfpen Branch's junction with KY 1210
and located 0.2 miles east of Wolfpen
Branch. The latitude is -n• 34' 22"N. The
longitude is 83" 48' 25"W. The surface
area is owned by Solomon Caudill,
Ronald and Betty Chaffin, John Click,
Narcie Click, Whits Click, Ellen Cooper,
Bill, Carl, and Lois Dudley, Herschel
Flanery, Virgil Flanery, Vernon Flannery, Frazier Catalog Agency, Ernest
Gibson, Clyde Hale, David Hale, Joe
ughes, McArthur Jacobs, John Justice,
andy and Polly Justice, Laura and Bill
Kilburn, Albert Marshall, Mullins heirs,
Bessie Ousley, Wade Ousley, R.E. Pitts,
Frank Skeans, Johnny Skeans, Mae
Skeans, Myrtle Skeans, S.C. Stevens,
Glen and Bessie Wards.
The proposed operation is located on
the Martin U.S.G.S. 7112 minute quadrangle map. The operation will use the contour, area, combination method of mining. The application also includes a proosed land use change from the
restland pre-mining land use to a
pasttlreland post-mining land use.
The application has been filed for
public inspection at the Department for
Surface Mining Reclamation and Enforcement's Prestonsburg Regional Office, 503 South Lake Drive, Prestonsburg, Ky. 41653. Written comments, objections, or requests for a permit conference must be filed with the Director
of the Division of Permits, 6th Floor,
a pital Plaza Tower, Frankfort, Kentucky 40601.
1-25-3t.
NOTICE OF
PERMIT CONFERENCE
Pursuant to Application
Number 636·5017
In accordance with the provisions of
405 KAR 8:010 Section 11, notice is hereby given that a permit conference is
scheduled for February 7, 1984 at 2:00
.m. o'clQCk at the Prestonsburg Deartment for Surface Mining Reclamation and Enforcement Office, 503 South
Lake Drive, Prestonsburg, Ky. 41653,
concerning the above application filed
by Lambert Coal and Coke, Ligon, Ky.
41646. The appiication is for a permit for
a surface coal mining and reclamation
operation approximately 1;2 miles northeast of Ligon in Floyd county.
The proposed operation is approximately 4.55 miles east from Highway
junction with Highway 979 and
ocated 0 miles east of Big Mud Creek.
The latitude is 37° 22' 58". The longitude
is 82" 40' 08". The surface area is owned
by Carl Mitchell. The operation will
underlie land owned by Mid States
Homes, Pauline Hamilton, Harve Johnson, T. Slone, Edith Henson, Edward
Reynolds, Cline Mitchell, C. C. Hamilton,
Isaac Little, Efford Henson, Buck
Hamilton, Carl Mitchell, Earl Brown,
Anthony Cerulla, Russell Walker, Chris
amilton. The proposed operation is
ated on the McDowell U.S.G.S. 7112
minute quadrangle map. The operation
will us~ the underground method of
mining.
The application has been filed for
public inspection at the Department for
Surface Mining Reclamation and Enforcement's Prestonsburg Regional office, 503 South Lake Drive, Prestonsburg, Ky. 41653. Any person whose interests are or may be adversely affected
the issuance of the proposed permit
ay present information relevant to the
permit, in oral or written form, at the
time of the conference
It.
$3500 behind on his payments, she told
Floyd Domestic Relations Commissioner Marshall Davidson last month,
and has made no payment at all in the
past three months.
Credit manager at a local bank,
Earlene Newsome is not destitute. 'But,
without regular support for her son, she
says she is hard put to make payments
on her house, car and furniture. The fact
that she is working rather than drawing
a welfare check should strengthen
rather than lessen her claim to help
from the courts, she says.
But the reality, she insists, is that
fathers who have been ordered to pay
child support "learn all too quickly and
too easily that non-payment is likely to
be ignored" by the courts.
There is a lot of truth in that, agrees
Assistant County Attorney Janet L.
Stumbo, who handles those child support
cases for which the county attorney's office is responsible-of which there are
likely to be as many as 200 on file at any
time.
It is not that there are not laws on the
books. There are even some reasonably
effective enforcement incentives. But
there is not always the will to enforce
and, even where there is, the attorney
says, it can prove a monumentally
frustrating task.
One fairly effective program is mandated by a 1950 law known as the
Uniform Reciprocal Enforcement of
Support Act CURESA). Under it, if a
mother sues for child support from a
father who has moved to another state,
the case is referred to the local prosecutor in the county where the absent
parent lives.
Another program, affecting mothers
who are receiving Aid to Families with
Dependent Children <AFDC), requires
their cooperation in efforts to track down
and sue absent fathers for child support.
Theoretically, a non-paying father can
go to jail or have his income tax refund,
paycheck or unemployment benefits intercepted. But critics of the system say
that, as in drunk driving cases, the
tougher the penalty, the less likely a
judge is to impose it.
That is why custodial parents need to
organize, Mrs. Newsome believes-to
create a climate in which the courts will
be emboldened to enforce the law.
"For too long, women have felt they
could only sit down and do nothing. We
have assumed that this is just the way
it is," she said this week. "But there is
something we can do. Things are being
done in other places. It's time we did
something here."
(Persons interested in forming a local
chapter of OECS should write Earlene
Newsome, Route 1, Box 9A, West Prestonsburg, Ky., 41653 or call886-8909 and
leave a message.)
REBEKAH LODGE MEETS
Members of Miriam Rebekah Lodge
No. 31 met in regular session Tuesday
evening, January 17, with the Noble
Grand, Kelly Sue Moore, presiding.
Members who were sick were recorded, and cards to be sent to them were
signed. Other routine business was
conducted.
The Educational Foundation Loan
Fund was discussed. Since this is considered one of the most important projects of the order, the members voted
unanimously to support it with a
monetary contribution.
Mrs. Mary Zemo was elected to serve
as Degree Captain for the new year.
Elected to serve on the Finance committee were Sue Moore, Rebecca Bingham,
Jean Hickman, and Paulena Owens.
Mrs. Virginia Goble was named as
chairman of the Membership and Com~
munications committees.
Miss Moore, the new Noble Grand,
named the following committees to
serve during her term of office:
Decorating: Rebecca Bingham, Mary
Zemo, Mabel Jean LeMaster, Jean
Hickman, and Otelia Smiley; Telephone: Virginia Goble, Myrtle Allen,
Theckley Short, Nell Howard, Norma
Stepp, Hope Whitten, and Ethel Hall;
Program: Mabel Jean LeMaster,
Virginia Goble, and Sue Moore; Resolutions: Hope Whitten, Mabel Jean
LeMaster, and Sue Moore; Visiting:
Norma Stepp; Hope Whitten, Nola
Stepp, Leven Burchett, Alka Burchett,
and John Burchett; Gifts: Mabel Jean
LeMaster, Hope Whitten, and Rebecca
Bingham; Publicity: Venelia Rinehart,
Docia Woods, and Mabel Jean LeMaster; Greeters: Sue Moore, Jean
Hickman, Myrtle Allen, Virginia Goble,
and Effie Hopkins; Refreshments:
Paulena Owens, Nancy Duff, Violetta
Wright, Sally Goble, Hope Whitten, Sue
Moore, and Myrtle Jo Potter; Scrapbook: Venelia Rinehart; and Flowers:
Jean Hickman, Theckley Short, and
Venelia Rinehart.
Members present for this meeting
were Kelly Sue Moore, Nancy Duff,
Mabel Jean LeMaster, Venelia Rinehart, Sue Moore, Paulena Owens,
Rebecca Bingham, Jean Hickman, and
Lorena Wallen.
The next regular meeting will be held
Tuesday evening, February 7, at 7
o'clock, at the I.O.O.F. Hall.
HOBBY DISPLAY
AT LIBRARY, HERE
January is hobby month and the Floyd
County Library is celebrating with a potpourri hobby display. The display, along
with books on hobbies, should appeal to
both youngsters and adults. Please come
by and share your hobby with the library
staff.
Section One, Paae Nine
Auto Dealer Charged
In Spat With Chief
Prestonsburg auto dealer Ken Isaacs
was arrested Friday on a charge of
disorderly conduct, following an altercation with Fire Chief Tom Blackburn.
Blackburn, who made the arrest in his
capacity as a Floyd deputy sheriff, said
he had repeatedly asked Isaacs to
remove a vehicle that was allegedly
blocking a fire hydrant at Isaacs' lot on
South Lake Drive. The auto dealer refused, Blackburn said.
When he attempted to have the vehicle, a new pickup, towed away, the fire
chief said Isaacs "became abusive,
used foul language and stuck his finger
in my face."
After Isaacs' arrest, an employee
moved the pickup to another section of
the lot.
CARD OF THANKS
The family of Pearl Martin would like
to take this opportunity to thank everyone who were so kind and considerate
during our time of grief. We thank her ·
pastor, Belmont Johnson, of the Boldman Church, and Don Crisp, of the
Grethel Baptist Church, who conducted
the services and whose comforting
words were a great help. A special
thanks to those who sent food and •
flowers and the Boldman Church members for providing food for the family, .
and to the Hall Funeral Home for its ·
kind and efficient service.
THE MARTIN FAMILY AND
CLARK FAMILY
lt.
•
FOR SALE-22,000 glass lined
water tank. 600 gallon tank.
I·
Meyers pump.
Public Hearing Set
On Multi-Banking
PHONE (AREA CODE 606):
t -lR·
928-4197 or 928-8169 4\pd.
The much disputed multi-bank legislation will be discussed in a public hearing scheduled by the House Banking and
Insurance Committee, for Wednesday,
Jan. 25, at 9 a.m. in the chambers of the
House of Representatives in the State
Capitol, Frankfort.
The controversial legislation would
allow banks to establish branches or
purchase banks outside their home
counties.
Rep. Jerry Lundergan, D-Lexington,
and Rep. Hoover Dawahare, D-Whitesburg, members of the panel will preside
over the hearing. Each side offering
testifying on the issue will be given one
hour. From 11 a.m. until12 noon, legislators will be questioning those who
testified.
For additional information on the
hearing contact Gregory Freedman
with the Legislative Research Commission, at (502) 564-8100.
ATTEND HALL RITES
Members of the family of the late
Tommy J. Hall who called at the Carter
Funeral Home and attended services for
him at the Bonanza Freewill Baptist
Church, last Friday, were Mrs. Tommy
J . Hall and Miss Phyllis Hall, of Bonanza; Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd Hall, Lloyd
Keith Hall, and Debra Hall, Scott and
Chris Hall, Mr. and Mrs. Charles (Nig)
Hall, and Mr. and Mrs. Joe D. Weddington, and Joe David Weddington, II,
all of Prestonsburg; Mr. and Mrs. Clyde
Brown, Mr. and Mrs. Forrest Montgomery, Mr. and Mrs. Tom Hall, Mr.
and Mrs. Steve Montgomery, Keith
Montgomery, and Jodi Farrington, all
of Ada, Ohio; Mr. and Mrs. Bill Hall, and
Michael Cooley, Paintsville; Kay Hall
and Donna Farrington, Lima, Ohio;
Mrs. Viola Stanley, Indianapolis, Indiana, and Mr. and Mrs. Clyde Stanley,
of Louisville. Among the friends from a
distance who were here were Aileen
Selvage and Debra Lowery, Alger, Ohio,
and Willis Brown, of Bellefontaine, Ohio.
~J
JOE D.
PONIES, shaggy in their winter coats, huddle together within
a little circle cleared of snow.
WEDDINGTC)N
=----------874-9633
ftEAL ESTATE
GOOD, CLEAN
USED MOBILE HOMES
..],
- . .
8X40 two bedroom with bunk
beds furnished
$1800
• 10x50 with slide out
in living room
$3800
• 12x60 with fireplace,
two bedroom
$5200
Price includes delivery
Don's Used Mobile Homes
Weat Preaton1burg 888-9883
. . t.
1 25
Bailey
ELECTROLYSIS
Permanent Hair Removal
Certified by
State License.
* FREE
CONSULTATION
LEGS
NO. LAKE DR .• PRESTONSBURG
(Photo by Ken Peters)
Thurs. l Fri., 10 a.m. to 4:30 p.m.
After 4:30 l Sat. by appointment
THEY MUST HAVE cleared at least a half-acre of snow to
form this colossus but Chester Newsome, Mark Hicks, Mike
McCoy, Glen Hurst and Kevin and Keith Moore still had
energy to pose for a picture with their creation.
24 HRS. PHONE
SERVICE
886-8924
II
Thanks Auxier
Volunteer Firefighters
The staff of M.C.C.C.'s Greenhouse
Training Project would like to express
thanks to members of the Auxier
Volunteer Fire Department who
responded to last week's fire emergency at the project complex on the Auxier
road. The efforts of the firefighters,
who stayed through the early morning
hours, prevented the spread of L))e
blaze to nearby structures and has
thereby allowed the continuation of the
work or' the project and its trainees.
LADIES'
FLEECE ROBES
Health Council
To Meet Jan. 25
The Council for Health Services is
scheduled to meet Wednesday, Jan. 25,
in the board room of the Health Services
building, 275 E. Main, Frankfort.
The council advises the secretary of
the Cabinet for Human Resources on
health-related issues such as preventive
health, consumer protection, community services for persons with mental illness or mental retardation, alcohol and
drug abuse, and local health services.
Members are appointed to the council by
the governor.
AND
Mrs. Jemima A. Shumate, of Bypro,
died Friday, January 13, at King's
Daughters' Hospital in Frankfort, not
Ashland as reported in last week's
Times.
· MEN'S
HEAVY JACKETS
* * *I Outlet
*****
* * Loco
*
rapid advancement. paid vacation.
Management training tor those who
qualify.
tor Interview, Friday only.
40%
OFF
33¥3% to
50% OFF
Correction
Opportunity for
WINTER SPORTSWEAR
SPORTSWEAR
A meeting of the Prestonsburg Area
Jaycees has been set for tonight
<Wednesday> at 7 p.m. at the Kentucky
f>ower building here.
Full-time work In several different
positions made available by expanslon. No experience necessary.
WOOL
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
JACKETS
33¥3% OFF
LADIES'
VELOUR
JOGGING SUITS
40%
ARTEMUS KNIT
DRESSES
WOOL SPORT COATS
SHIRTS
33Y3%oFF
OFF
OFF
MEN'S
LADIES'
AND JUNIORS
AND
40%
AND
OFF
LADIES'
Jaycees Set Meeting
*
for
*
* Group Company of
*
Scotf-Fetzer
* Manufacturing
Corp.
*
needs
*
* Men & Women
*
*
*
*
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* $1,200 MONTHLY
*
*
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* Call (606) 478-2883
*
*********
CHILDREN'S
BLAZERS
WARM SLEEPWEAR
50%
LADIES'
50%
$
4'$
.~ ll(.·'QU.Jm'tjl$ ": BRING THIS COUPON AND SAVE EVEN MORE
"·:, suuar~~~
sAvE AN EXTRA ssoo WHEN YOUR PURCHASE TOTALS 525
.,
'PIJolt' SAil
·:
:$ SAVE AN EXTRA 510 WHEN YOUR PURCHASE TOTALS 550
$
SAVE AN EXTRA 520
$$$
100
WHEN YOUR PURCHASE TOTALS 5
OFF
�'I
Wednesday, Jar~uary 25, 1984
The Floyd County Times
Junior Woman's Club
To Meet Here, Fri.
Jenny Wiley AARP
Dinner Meeting
Mr. Sidney Fraley, of Winchester, the
Assistant State Director of the American
Association of Retired Persons (AARP)
will be the guest speaker at the dinner
meeting of Jenny Wiley Chapter, AARP,
to be held at Western Sizzlin Steak
House, Friday evening at 6 o'clock. All
{nembers are urged to be present and
guests are welcome. Dinner will be from
the menu.
UNITES WITH CHURCH
: Welcomed into the fellowship of the
irene Cole Memorial (First) Baptist
Church, during services there Sunday
1norning, was Mrs . Kara Hall, of Allen.
The regular monthly meeting of the
Prestonsburg Junior Woman's Club will
be held January 26, at 7 p.m. at the
Floyd County Library. Contact Lynn
Brown in case of bad weather.
BIBLE STUDY
Beginning this evening, January 25, at
7:30, Bible study, which has been
delayed due to inclement weather, will
be held at the Irene Cole Memorial
(First) Baptist Church. The Rev. Steve
Hopkins, pastor, and Mrs. Hopkins, will
conduct this study. A welcome is extended to attend.
FEDERATED STORE
MARTIN, KY.
BIG WINTER
CLEARANCE SALE
• All WINTER DRESSES .. . . ....... 60% OFF
• All LADIES' COATS .... 50% Be 60% OFF
• PANAMA JACK
sgua
HOODED SHIRTS FOR LADIES .. .. .... .
• CONNIE AND BASS
WINTER SHOES AND BOOTS ..... V2 PRICE
• RACKS OF LADIES
SPORTSWEAR .. .. V2 PRICE
• MEN'S SUITS
s g 98
-- - - VALUES TO $140 . .. . . 6
~·:-"~,...~"'
• All
MEN'S SPORTCOATS . s59 98
• LADIES'
LEE JEANS ..... . . . 51798
• LADIES' LEVI, LEE,
ON
CHIC AND CALVIN KLEIN SALE
• ONE RACK
s Q
~~~ MEN'S SWEATERS ..... 1
• MEN'S AND BOYS'
JACKETS . ..... . . V2 PRICE
.FEDERATED BARGAIN STORE
MARTIN, KY..
.·
ALL FURNITURE
DRASTICALLY REDUCED
... 70% OFF
• ONE BEDROOM SUITE$399
REG. $600 . ...
• ONE DISHWASHER $369
REG. $590 ... .
• ALL MATTRESSES
%
AND BOX SPRINGS PRICE
REG. $125 . SALE $62.50
• ONE FREEZER
REG. $580 .
• ONE RECLINER
REG. $125 . ...
• ALL
LAMPS
5
• ONE LIVING ROOM SUITE
REG. $850 ... .
369
$598 •
ONE DINETTE SET
REG. $400 . . .
•~E~~~~g~~?. ~~-~:~. :~·~
$7995
$19995
$169
nociA B. WOOQS_, $0CIETY EDITOR
COLLECT CLOTHING
Women of the First Baptist Church
are collecting clothing and shoes for
student: of the Clear Creek Baptist
School. Persons wishing to donate these
items should bring them to the church
annex this month and during February.
WOMANS CLUB TO MEET
Mrs. Elizabeth Ramey, president of
the Prestonsburg Woman's Club, announces that the next meeting of this
organization will be Thursday evening,
February 2, at 7:30 at the Emma Wells
May Cultural Center. The program
leader will be Mrs. Gorman Collins, Sr.,
and Mrs. Nancy Howard, who will speak
on "Women and Banking." The devotional leader will be Mrs. Clyde Burchett. Hostesses will be Mesdames
Garland Godsey, Ora Bussey, James D.
Adams, Paul Combs, and Richard Martin. Mrs. Ramey asks that members of
the Executive Board meet at this same
eveing at 7 p.m.
ADAH CHAPTER, O.E.S.
MEETING DATES
Adah Chapter 24, Order of the Eastern
Star, meets on the second and fourth
Mondays of each month at 7 p.m. at the
Lodge hall. All members are urged to be
present at these meetings.
VISITING IN GEORGIA
Mrs. Raymond Bradbury is visiting
with her daughter, Mrs. Kevin Heflin,
Mr. Heflin, and their new daughter,
Rebecca Lynn Heflin, in Stone Mountain, Georgia.
CORRECTION
Mrs. Kay Roberts Baird, of Pikeville,
was here on New Year's Day, for a visit
with her r.nother, Mrs. May K. Roberts .
They attended the openhouse at the
Ranier-Methodist Parsonage, on Maple
Avenue, that day.
ATTEND SPURLOCK CHURCH
Mrs. Otelia Smiley accompanied Mr.
and Mrs. Victor Hickr.nan to services at
the Spurlock Bible Church, on the Middle Creek Road, this past Sunday. This
non-denominational church is pastored
by the Rev. Dan Heintzelman, of Martin.
HERE FROM MOREHEAD
Dr. Randall Wells, of Morehead,
visited with his mother, Mrs. Marsha
Wells, at her home here, last Tuesday.
Dr. Wells, who is a member of the faculty at Morehead State University was
here due to the death of a relative, Clabe
Bingham.
GUEST IN LEXINGTON
Mrs. Rose Collins spent a few days
last week as guest of her son and
daughter-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Steve
Collins, in Lexington.
FINAL DAYS!
FALL AND WINTER MERCHANDISE
~ll s~l£5
c~s\'\~
ttO
~'f~V4~'fS
PRICE
STORE-SHOE STORE-DENIMLAND
OPEN FRIDAY NIGHTS UNTIL 7 P.M. - PRESTONSBURG
CONDITION SATISFACTORY
The condition of Mrs. W.E. Hunt, who
underwent surgery at the University of
Kentucky Medical Center recently, and
is presently receiving treatment there,
is satisfactory.
A.A.R.P. DIRECTORS MEET
Directors of the American Association
of Retired Persons (A.A.R.P.J ~r.et at
the Municipal Building, Jan. 13. In the
absence of the president, Jack Freed,
the vice president, James Goble, presided.
A letter, which Mr. Freed had written
to Governor Martha Layne Collins, on
behalf of the senior citizens concerning
a proposed raise in Blue Cross and Blue
Shield premimums, was read. The possibility of a 3% utility tax, as outlined by
the Floyd County Board of Education,
was discussed, and the group went on
record as opposed to this tax. It was
agreed for the president to write a letter to Pete Grigsby, Superintendent, and
members of the board, asking that property, rather than utilities be taxed.
It was announced that volunteer
drivers are needed to take members for
visits to patients at local nursing homes.
Monroe Wicker, formerly of Floyd
county, now of Morehead, is to be guestspeaker when the chapter QlePts Feb. 24,
and Sidney Fraley, of Winchester, assistant Director of tt~ Kentucky A.A.R.P.,
is to be the speaker at the dinner to be
held at the Western Steak House here,
at 6 p.m. Jan. 27.
Due to the resignation of Mrs. Fannie
Runnels, a chairperson for the
Nominating committee is being sought.
HONORED ON 90TH BIRTHDAY
Perry Greene, Sr., was honored on his
90th birthday, when Mrs. Greene and
members of their family entertained
with a dinner for him at the Greene
hor.ne, VVednesday,Januaryll. Thereto
share this occasion with them were
PetTY Greene, Jr., Dayton, Ohio; A.L.
Greene, New Carlisle, Ohio, and Mr. and
Mrs. K.D. Maggard, and Mr. and Mrs.
Mark Boatwr-ight, all of Prestonsburg.
Mr. Greene received telephone calls
from a daughte;:-, Mrs. Dorothy Kinder,
of West Alexandra , Ohio; a son and
daughter-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Henry C.
Greene, and their granddaughters, Mrs.
John Joiner, and Mrs. Kenneth Woodcom, all of West Palm Beach, Florida,
and cards and letters fror.n other family mer.nbers and friends. The dinner was
prepared by Mrs. Perry Greene, Sr. and
Mrs. K.D. Maggard, and decorated
birthday cakes were made for the
honoree by them and by Mrs . Clifford
Austin. Dinner was served to those in attendance, and also to a neighbor, Miss
Betty Hale. Gifts were received from
Mr. Greene's family, and from a family friend, Mrs. Mary Shepherd.
Mrs. Garnett Fairchild, president of
the Prestonsburg Kiwaniannes, reminds
members that the next regular monthly
luncheon-meeting will be held at May
Lodge tomorrow (Thursday) at 12:30,
and she urges all members to attend.
Mrs. Berna Dean Jervis became the
bride of Micheal Glenn Collins in a
ceremony performed at 10:30 a.m.
Wednesday, January 18, at the home of
the Rev. Leven Burchett of Abbott.
The bride is the daughter of Mrs.
Audrey Burchett and step-daughtP-r of
Samuel Burchett, of Prestonsburg.
Mr. Collins is the son of Aileen Cordial
and stepson of Eison Cordial, of Wayland. They will reside at Wayland.
RETURNS TO MED SCHOOL
Ronda! E. Goble returned to 'Huntington, W. Va. after spending the
Christmas and New Year's holitlays
here with his parents, Mr. and Mrs.
Donald H. Goble, of the Auxier road. Mr.
Goble is a medical student at Marshall
School of Medicine.
LIST INCOMPLETE
The list of persons in last week's paper
who called at the Carter Funeral Hor.ne,
and attended services for Mrs. Jerry
Hackworth at the Bonanza United Baptist Church, was only those from a distance. A large number of other relatives
and friends also were there during that
time.
CIRCLE MEETING DATE
The Methodist Sewing Circle meets
each Thursday, beginning at 9 p.m .,
when the weather permits, for the purpose of making quilts and clothing for
the sick and needy. All women of the
church are urged to-bring a snack and
come and help. (Coffee is furnished by
the church).
PALLBEARERS LISTED
Pal!bearers at the funeral of Tommy
J. Hall at the Bonanza Freewill Baptist
Church, January 20, were Keith and
Steve Montgomery, Chris and Dickie
Hall, Bill Blanton, Joe York, and Gregg
Prater.
'
BIRTH ANNOUNCEMENT
Mr. and Mrs. Kevin Heflin, of Stone
Mountain, Georgia, are announcing the
birth of a daughter, January 15, at the
Shallowford Community Hospital in
Atlanta . The baby has been named
Rebecca Lynn Heflin. The maternal
grandparents are Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Bradbury, of Prestor.sburg, and
the paternal grandparents are Mr. and
Mrs. Bill Heflin, of Atlanta. The maternal great-grandparents are Mr. and
Mrs. Earl Blackburn and Arthur Bradbury, and the l<tte Mrs. Bradbury, all of
Prestonsburg.
PAY RESPECTS
Among the relatives and friends of
Clabe Bingham who called at the Carter
Funeral Home and attended funeral services for him at the First United Methodist Church, last week, were Dr. and
Mrs. Palmer L. Hall, the Reverend and
Mrs. Glen Courts, Mr. and Mrs. Charles
Chumley, Dean Buford Crager, and Dr.
Randall Wells, all of Morehead ; Mr. arid
Mrs. ScottLapishaRd~ons , Chris, Ryan,
and McGee, of Versailles ~'Mr. and Mrs.
Tom Bingham, of Ashland; Dr. John C.
Wells, of Frankfort; Dr. James E. Wells,
and Charles Wells, both of Lawrenceburg; Ronald Wells, of Georgetown, and
Mr. and Mrs. Adrian Hall, and Mrs.
Hall's mother, Mrs. Pack, of Minnie.
BIRTHDAY DINNER
Winston Ford, Jr. , was honored Saturday evening, January 14, when Mrs.
Ford entertained with a birthday dinner
for him at their home on Arnold Avenue.
Family members sharing in this occasion were the guest of honor, Winston
Ford, Jr .. Mrs. Ford, Mrs. Vera Ford,
Mr. and :\frs. Jerry Fannin, and their
daughter, Jenna, and Kelli and Winn
Ford. Following the dinner, the birthday
cake and other refreshments were served, and Mr. Ford was present~d gifts.
IN LEXINGTON
Mrs. Eva Collins and Mrs. Betty
Moore were in Lexington, this past
Friday.
c &. c\.s1~•1
\)ft\OWe do~O·
• ALL TYPES FUiliiiTUIE
• TRUCKS, CAllS, IDA TS
• CHURCH PEWS, ETC.
Loctlled approx. 2 mil•• on Cow CINt
Call u• now, 814·9111
1-
PHS Class of '74 Reunion
We are organizing a class reunion of 1974
Prestonsburg High School graduates.
• Anyone Interested, please call Teresa
Pelphrey Gibson, 886-6795 or Sue George
Justice, 874-2748.
1-25-2t.
VISIT IN PIKEVILLE
Mesdames Virginia Shive!, Josephine
Fields, Anna May Mellon, and Mary Jo
LaPointe called on Mr. and Mrs. Sam
Hatcher and their new daughter,
Samantha Sue Hatcher, at their home
last Sunday afternoon.
FLOWERS PLACED
Flowers were on the altar during services at the First United Methodist
Church, Sunday r.norning, for Miss Julie
Newberry, for her birthday, from her
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Claude Martin
Newberry, and her brother, Martin
David Newberry. Rosebuds were placed there for Rebecca Lynn Heflin, baby
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Kevin Heflin,
and for Samantha Sue Hatcher, baby
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Sam D.
Hatcher.
•
Section One, Pase Ten
Jervis-Collins
BIRTH ANNOUNCEMENT
Mr. and Mrs. Samuel Davidson Hatcher are announcing the birth of their
first child, a daughter, Samantha Sue
Hatcher, at the Pikeville Methodist
Hospital, January 17. The maternal
grandparents are Mr. and Mrs . Virgil
Webb, of Piso, Kentucky, and her paternal grandparents are Mrs. Reca Hatcher and the late Samuel K. Hatcher, of
Prestonsburg.
f
Model Search
New York Model Interviews
0
Wilhelmina Models Inc., New York City
Do you want to be a Cover Girl with one of New
York's largest model agencies? Wilhelmina Model
Agency of New York will be interviewing
at
g
u
VOGUE STUDIO
Feb. 4-12-noon to 5 p.m.
Feb. 5-2001 V.I.P. Club, on Teen Night
• For more informat ion or interview
Call VOGUE OF LEXINGTON (Only}
t
•
�County Tim", 1.....-y 25, 1 . . .
Section One,
Enlists In Army
EAP Funds Exhausted
As 104,000 Seek Aid
•
The Kentucky Cabinet for Human
Resources received more than 104,000
applications
from
low-income
households during the two phases of the
1983-84 Home Energy Assistance Program, or HEAP. It took just four days
for the process to consume the $17
million available for aid this fiscal year.
Human Resources Secretary AI
Austin says final reports on the regular
HEAP phase indicate 35,803 applications
were received Dec. 5-6 from low-income
households with elderly or disabled
family members. Preliminary figures
for the crisis phase of HEAP-with
payments made to low-income
households facing heating fuel or utility cutoffs because of high, unpaid
bills- show receipt of 68,600 applications
for assistance on Monday and Tuesday
of this week.
Applications during the Jan. 16-17
crisis segment of HEAP ranged from a
• high of 6,621 in Jefferson County to a low
of 65 in Lyon County. Several eastern
Kentucky coalfield counties also
reported high numbers of crisis applications, including Letcher ( 1,832), Clay
(1,664) and Pike (1,618) . Floyd county
had 1,002 crisis applications.
" In both the regular and the crisis
phases of HEAP this year, the applications exhausted the available federal
dollars in just 48 hours," said Austin.
e "We believe several factors led to the
heavy turnout. First, people understand
that even with $17 million available, the
need will exceed the supply. Those who
participated in HEAP in past years
understand that when the money is
gone, we cannot accept additional applications. Also, Kentucky experienced
a colder early winter this year, prompting higher heating bills. It was
especially cold when we opened the
crisis phase this week. Also, households
esiding in subsidized housing were included on the eligibility list for the first
time, adding 3,433 new applicants."
Social Insurance Commissioner Jack
Waddell said the December regular
HEAP segment worked well for applicants with elderly or disabled people
in the household, but he quickly noted
that his department is already
evaluating the problems in the crisis
segment.
" The process went smoothly in
..December. I believe we will probably
• continue next year, if the federal government funds HEAP, to provide an early
application period for funds earmarked
strictly for eligible elderly or disabled
clients," said Waddell. "However, we
were simply overwhelmed by the turnout the first day of the crisis segment.
Even though we immediately altered
the application process to reduce the
long lines in the snow and cold, we must
look for another way to avoid this type
of situation in future years."
WaddeD said he is currently gathering
information to"develop an application
process that would remain open and
equitable to all eligible clients but would
also spread out the period for receipt of
applications over several days.
"We will still be faced with the
ultimate problem: once the money is
gone, it's gone," he said. "We're going
to take a look at what the federal government will aUow and what other states
have tried successfully. However, until
there is a dramatic turnaround in the nation's economy, people are going to need
this assistance. We will simply have to
develop a new system before next winter
to ensure our clients don't have to stand
out in the cold to get the money they
need to stay warm."
Most applicants should know within
the next two weeks if they were determined to be eligible and will be receiving the two-party checks in the mails.
NOTE: The following chart provides
a county-by-county breakdown of HEAP
applications received during the regular
segment in December and the justcompleted crisis segment.
c-ty.
........
Criab
,,...
Reylll
......
bolt
........
"""
422
463
613
496
414
I ,002
140
1,112
1,005
1,370
1,424
1,203
1,715
1,501
1,714
STRAND
HELD OVER
Starts Fri., Jan. 27
There's IIICft to do In ~than ski.
"'D.C. CAB' is 'ANIMAL HOUSE' oo wt&llsl"
Hollywood Reponer
"I had the best time of my life...lots of kneeslapping, laughing and yelling!"·
-
'*>rk Oally Nowo •
Their cars were broken.
Their company was
almost out of business.
And even the drivers
were wrecks.
Then they met
Albert Hockenberry,
a small-town boy
with a big dream ...
that, despi te these
impossible odds,
they could make it.
Willie M. Rainey, of Goble-Roberts
Addition, has enlisted in the United
States Army, and will leave January 24,
for Fort Leonardwood, Missouri.
He is the son of Mrs. Loretta Rainey
Stephens, of Goble-Roberts .
And now. no onenot even the sleazy
commissioner nor
the crooked competitionbetter stand in their way.
Mullins Is Named
Outstanding Soldier
Sgt. William L. Mullins, son of Carl
and Patsy S. Mullins, of Ligon, has been
named outstanding solider of the month
for the 1st Battalion in New Ulm, West
Germany.,
The soldier was picked from a select
group of peers who were judged on military bearing and knowledge, profes·
sional skill and exemplary behavior.
Mullins is a missile crew member with
the 56th Field Artillery Brigade. His
wife, Betty, is the daughter of Johnnie
and Ruth Rackey, of Hi Hat.
The sergeant received an associate
degree in 1980 from Pikeville College.
Showtimes 7:15-9:30-Sunday Matinee Open 1:00 Start 1:30 Ov~r 3:20
.
4
..
Floyd County Students
Win Alice Lloyd Honors
Nineteen Floyd county students have
'been named to the Dean's Lists for
cademic achievement during the fall
semester at Alice Lloyd College.
Named to the Dean's Distinguished
Honors List for earning a grade point
average between 3.50 and 4.00 (based on
a 4.00 system) were: Jennifer Salisbury,
daughter of Raymond and Norma Salisbury, of Minnie; Mary Dye, daughter of
Woodrow and Rebecca Dye, of
McDowell; Patricia Ann Martin, daughter of Phillip and Helen Martin, of
Hueysville; Brenda Hamilton, wife of
11.:;-_nny Hamilton, of Prestonsburg; Connie Stumbo, daughter of Efferd and Betty Tackett, of Drift; Rena Holbrook,
daughter of Elford and Mary Holbrook,
of Bevinsville; Anthony Stumbo, son of
Clark and Carolyn Stumbo, of McDowell; Wanda Johnson, wife of Joe
Johnson, of Hi Hat; Martha Hurley, wife
of Carl Hurley, of Minnie; Gwendolyn
Hamilton, wife of Ricky Hamilton, of
McDowell.
Named to the Dean's List for earning
& grade point average between 3.00 and
3.49 were: Doris Huff Miller, wife of
Willis Miller, of Minnie; Tammy Maggard, daughter of Sammy and Lynda
Maggard,, of Drift; ponna Turner,
daughter of John Reeves and Margie
Turner, of Melvin; Jennifer Newsome,
daughter of Denver and Peggy Newsome, of Teaberry; Mark Newsome, son
of Shirley and Mabel Newsome, of
Beaver; Lori Newsome, daughter of
Ray and Jay Newsome, of Teaberry;
..Sharon Justice, wife of Johnny E.
WI'Justice, of Wayland; Elmer Hamilton,
son of Ella Hamilton, of Teaberry;
Marlene Little, wife of Ballard Little, of
Bevinsville.
These four items on sale through February 29th
reg. 1.69
Mountain Mist
quilt batting
all sizes in
poly or cotton
Sunday
Monday
5
.
new spnng
fabrics including
45" poly/cotton
broadcloth
41" unbleached
muslin
fabrics including
45" f.f. prints and
cotton percale
60"f.f.solids
Tuesday
3.99 yd .
reg. 7.99
Saturday
1
2
3
4
99¢ yd.
59¢ each
reg. Vl9 and more
reg. 1.19
selected group
of fabrics
Jumbo spools
of Dual Duty
white thread
50%
off
original prices
10
9
11'1
all month long:
Plea.e note. explr-'on date
your name on wrap·
per or on your copy of The
Tlmea. Bocause of lncr..-.d
malllha coat•, notice• of
aubscrlptlon .expiration are
no
lonaet'
mailed
to.
aubacrlben.
Subscriptiefts ntay bt mallelll to:
The Floyd County Times
Box391
Prestonabura, Ky. 41653
~poalte
"
regular priced
sewing and
quilting notions
11
all craft,
needlework and
knitting
instruction books
select group
of trims
18
4.99 ea.
$1 off
reg. 10.99
Fiskar
dressmaker
shears
with purchase of $10 or mor:e
when you bring in a quilt to show
Limit $1.00 per visit; fabric dept. only.
3tor99¢
reg .. 50 to .90 each
all new
carded buttons
1.59
30% off
All candlewicking
99¢ yd.
16 oz. Fiberloft
poly stuffing
supplies, kits,
pillow forms
and trim
41" unbleached
cotton muslin
reg. 2.69
Limit 12 per customer
29
27
9for99¢
reg. 20C: each
Coats & Clark
embroidery
floss
25 .
23
21
20
In Floyd County, $8.00
Elsewhere In'Kentucky, $10
Outside Ken~u~ky, $12.50
30% off
50%
off 50% off
suggested price
original prices
16
Manager's
Surprise
Sale
Come in and see
what it is!
·.
·.
Friday
CARD OF THANKS
save
Butterick
See & Sew
patterns
Thursday
entire selection
apparel ribbons
90" sheeting
white poly/
cotton
reg. 1.39-1.59
Wednesday
8
7
6
reg. 1.99 yd.
.
new spnng
Daily specials on quilting,
sewing and craft supplies.
Clip this ad and save!
The family of John N. Patton wishes
to thank all the friends and neighbors for
their kindness and consideration during
our time of grief. We want to thank those
ho sent food and flowers. We especially
ant to thank Our Lady of the Way
Hospital and staff.
All of your kindnesses were deeply
appreciated.
Subscription
Rates. J?er Year
99¢
20%off 1.29 yd. 1.69 yd.
reg. 1.69
Limit 20 yda. ptlf
c:uetomer, please
Take advantage of these special
savings* throughout the month and.
create beautiful quilts anCI craftwork.
•Intermediate markdowns have been taken.
~ ~ Use Watson's conventent lay- away
~ ~ plus 2 great ways to charge
.·
..
�Wednesday, January 25, 1984
The Floyd County Times
Section One, Paae
WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO liMIT QUANTITIES &. TO CORRECT ANY PltlNfiNG £RHO~
•
F~ESH
LEAN
d
s
o;;;g~ GI\L. JUG
Juice .
.
1
00
3LBS. OR
MORE
U .S.D.A. INSPECTED
Mixed
Fryer Parts . .
LB.
BOSTON BUTT STYLE
&:!.~t
49
HYDE PARK
I iced
aeon
... . .... . .. 8J19
~~:!:r~ gge
LB
12 OZ. PACKAGE
PORK
Neck Bones... .. .. .... ......
LB.
HOLLY FARMS GRADE 'A' FRESH FRYER
59
e
Drumsticks.
LB_SJ19
U.S.D.A. CHOICE BONELESS
8
LB.
Rib Eye Steak
LEAN TENDER
4
29
.......... LB_82C9
StewingB
~- 2oz.gge
PKG.
FRESH
Pork Steak
. . . L8_8J39
16 OZ. HYDE PARK
.... SJ C9
Sliced Bologna.
FROZEN RANDOM WEIGHT (5LB. BOX-'2.89)
Whiting Fish. .
.__
HILLSHIRE FARMS SMOKED OR
Polish Sausage. . ....
Ll).59e
LB. 8 l.,
DELMONTE
'~:,~Is ..
3
JUMBO ROLL
/'
TENDER NUTRITIOUS
Fresh
Broccoli
...........
e
G
FLORIDA INDIAN RIVER
Gra
P •
Fruit
HYDE PARK 46 OZ.
ToBiato
Jaic~·-·······- - -- - -· -
3/ 2
6
Singles. ...... .....
reen
Pe gers
3
e
s 1 00
15 .:; OZ. HOMESTYLE-PLAIN, MEAT OR MUSHROOM
Ragu Spaghetti Sauce. . .....
7 OZ. HYDE PARK ELBOW MACARONI OR
Thin Spaghetti. ....
HYDE
10 CT. HOMESTYLE OR BUTTERMILK
Texas Style Biscuits.
.
Sealtest Sour Cream
8 OZ. ASSORTED
Breyer's Fruit Yogurt
5 OZ. BANQUET ASSORTED
Cookin' Bags
24 OZ. READY-TO-SERVE
8209
Cozy Kitchen Cakes
4.5 OZ. GREEN GIANT WHOLE OR
SJOO
Sliced Mushrooms
Black Pepper
. .2/8 1
o~;.~g~z. FROZEN
s
Juice. . .
BIG QUART BOTTLE-RED GOLD
S ... 00
Tomato Catsup... ........... .&
CAMPBELL'S ·~b~flft~~! VALUES!
10.75 OZ. CAMPBELL'S HOMESTYLE
Chicken Noodle Soup
sge
49e
1
00
Sunlight Dish Liquid
8J59
157 OZ. • 75' OFF lABEL
'569
4' OFF lABEL· WHITE OR PINK BATH SIZE
2/89t;
Dove Bar Soap ..
Oxydol Detergent
49 OZ. • 50' OFF lABEL
6.4 OZ. REGUlAR, GEL OR MINT
Crest Toothpaste.
24 OZ. BTL • FOR FRESH BREATH
Scope Mouthwash .
69t;
8J79
8}49
82C9
10.75 OZ. CAMPBELL'S HOMESTYLE
Beef Noodle Soup .. .
8 OZ. DOLE {IN SYRUP OR JUICE ) CRUSHED OR
19 OZ. CAMPBELL'S CHUNKY
.. .... . ..... ... .... .. .. ....
.
All Detergent
11 OZ. CAMPBELL'S NEW ENGLAND
.
FRESH FLORIDA
Avocados ...... .. ........ EA.
CRISP GARDEN
Fresh Turnips ....... .. LB.
320Z.
JUST-RITE
ALSO.
CHUNK _ .... . .
~
1 Lb. Bag Carrots .... ..
4/8 1
... 2/'
2/8 11
3/$ J. Chunky Clam Chowder
Hot Dog Sauce ....... .. ... ..
gge
2/'
1
d
p•
l
•
Chicken Soup. .. ... .. ... ... .. ..
Sltee tneapp e
T~c;;hGIAD HAN~~E-Tl~
~ 100 M~~tE~ts:~;~ .......................... . 8 2C9
2 OZ. HYDE PARK
91/1.
49e
cRisP cALIFoRNIA
8100
3/'1
2/8 1
2/6 1
5/8 2
80Z.
BUNCH
STUFFING SIZE
5/99
K~;;tCI\N OR PIMENTO
sge
•
-USIIYCOIIPOII
6~ OZ. STAR-KIST CHUNK LIGHT
T una ......... ......... . 3/sz
W._IT H THIS COUPON AND '10.00 ORMOJiE ADDN. ORDER,
VA 10 AT PIC-PAC THRU SAT. JANUARY 28. 1984.
•
�Section Two, Page One
MANY
MODELSI
Cavalier Type 10 Coupe
MUSIC-CARTER-HUGHES invites you in for a test drive today!
2-doors, 4-doors, wagons, ·~
* FREE Rust-Proofing on
~
:
ny new Chevy or Buick
Purchased between Jan. 11 and Jan. 31st!
IT'S A sl79 95 VALUE!
'
WE HAVE JUST RECEIVED A
LARGE SHIPMENT OF CAVALIERS,
AND MORE ARE ARRIVING!
BACK PORCH
Restaurant
Fine Food
Betsy Layne, Ky. 41605
''A
smile
can be
affordable.''
RELY ON THE
PROFESSIONAL DENTIST
MEMBERS OF
WPRT Radio of Prestonsburg is procepted
the position of station manager.
udtoannouncethatKeithChafinhasacChafin, 25, is a 1976 graduate of Mullins
High School. He began working parttime at WPKE in Pikeville when he was
only 13 years old and worked there six
years. He was a DJ at Mother's Helper
c:ltlivenng affordable dentiStry. nc
OUR PLEDGE:
1. AFFORDABLE PRICES.
2. OftE-DAY SERVICE ON DENTURE REPAIRS AND RELINES.
3. AVAILABILITY: FILLINGS, EXTRACTIONS.
4. NO SURPRISES; TREATMENT AND COST ARE DISCUSSED RRST. YOU
DETERMINE THE AMOUNT OF SERVICE.
5. PERSONAL AmNTION; OLD FASHIONED COURTESY AND CONCERN
ARE ASSURED IN THE omCE OF A DAD MEMBER DENTIST.
6. HIGH STANDARDS.
·DENTURES PER UPPER OR L O W E R - - - - - ,
STAHDARD
DENIURES ....
$129
CHARACTERIZED
DENTURES ....... .
discotheque, for two years and then re<now Graham
a Pikeville
joined
the staff ofStation>.
WPKE/WDHR.
Most
recently he was employed by WNVL
Radio, which serves the NicholasvilleLexington market.
"WPRT will offer listeners quality
entertainment on both AM and FM
bands. The emphasis will be on up-to-the
second information," said Chafin. "The
FM station is now on 24 hours a day with
live DJs, giving us immediate news up-
da~~~~~ai~il~~··:on of Dave and Ada
Chafin, formerly of Floyd county, who
now live in Lexington. .
~
ALLEN DENTAL CENTER
PHONE 606/874-2020 ALLEN, KY.
~
m
=1
GIVE SOMEONE A -LIFT
SEND A BOUQUET
..
-
--
COUNTRY snLE$129
PORK R~BS...
LB.
1F2-~0ZS.PCKGH. ER'S
WIENERS
··· ···
1~-LBA.AKRRARFT~~\INE
99
....__ _ _ _ _ _ _
· ---·--t
-
99 c
69c
TEXAS STYLE
8ISCU ITS
END CUT $1 0 9 1 - - - - · - ·.._.- ·------1
2
9
·PORK ROAST
LB.
PEANUT
2-LB. BUCKET CAPTAIN K i D D $ 2
cur
END
PORK CHOPS
79c
COOKIES ..
.ow.KEALCaEMIEs
LB.
OF BALLOONS'
At..L OCCASIONS -DELIVERED
DR. W. FU D.M.D.
---'
2
$169
DENTURE REPAIRS: REUNES ALSO AVAILABLE
DR. R.I. GOODMAN D.M.D.
SIRLOIN . $279
TIP STEAK...
LB.
SIRLOIN $
49
Tl p ROAST
LB.
BONELES..S$
-1
• SEE OUR FUU. PAGE AD ELSEWHERE IN,THIS PAPER •
�The Floyd County Times
FLOYD COUNTY
HEALTH NEWS
USAA WINNER
.. ~ abou~ your
$ocial Security
KNOW WHEN TO CONTACT
SOCIAL SECURITY
It is important for people in the Big
The United States Achievement
Academy announced today that David
Wayne Newman has been named a 1984
United States National Award winner in
both mathematics and science.
David Wayne Newman, who attends
McDowell School was nominated for this
National Award by Freda Burke, math
teacher, and Mrs. Joan Caldwell,
science teacher at the school.
Newman will appear in the United
States Achievement Academy Official
Yearbok, published nat10nally.
Newman is the son of Ruby Kaye Potter Newman, of McDowell and Clyde
Bud Newman, of Hi Hat. His grandparents are l'vlrs. Sarah Potter and the
late Clarence Potter, of McDowell, and
Mrs. Mam1e Newman and the late
Wayne l Newman, of Hi Hat.
litterested? C.H len Peters ot
816·1506 ond ht'll coli on fOUl
The Floyd County nmes
Sandy Area to know when to contact a
Social Security Office, Jim Kelly, Social
Security District Director for the Big
Sandy Area, said recently.
A person should contact Social
Security:
Before getting his or her first job,
because a Social Security number is
needed to get proper Social Security
credit for earnings. This should be done
at least two weeks before the number
will be needed.
After a death in the family, to see if
survivor benefits can be paid.
When someone in the family is disabl-
Pickering Named
WDOC-AM Manager
WDOC President and General
Manager Gormon Collins has announced the addition of Kurt Pickering to the
station's staff. Pickering, who moved
here from Frankfort to accept the position, will be WDOC-AM's station
manager.
Pickering's name is already wellknown to area listeners from his
previous position as Capitol Bureau
Chief of Kentucky Network News. In
that post, the Ohio native covered state
government since July 1982. WDOC and
sister station WQHY ("Q95"> are among
the network's 80 affiliates across
Kentucky.
Pickering is a 1982 honors graduate of
Morehead State University where he
majored in both Radio-Television and
Journalism. He moved to Kentucky in
l!Y79 after serving four years in the U.S.
Air Force as a Broadcast Specialist.
In his lO.year radio career, Pickerill&
has been a newscaster, disc jockey,
sports announcer, and talk show host.
"When I've jocked, I've jocked country, "Pickering said. "I wouldn't have
it any other way. I love the same kind
of country people here in the Big Sandy
Area do, a kind that isn't heard on many
major market stations any more. To
have a chance to manage a station true
country fans will enjoy is an opportunity I plan to make the most of."
Pickering, 'J:7, was raised in the small
Northwest Ohio town of Wapakoneta. He
is married to the former Jan Stuckman,
of Duluth, Minn. They have a son, J .J .
JOE D. WEDDINGTON
REAL ESTATE
Prestonsburg 874-9633 Pikeville 432-4721
REALTOR
RESIDENnAL:
AllEN-A hlndymen's spedel offered et price yeu we~~'t •lit te ,... .,. Twe
lledreolfts, 1•1• kitchen with cellinets, pa hut. H•M flu !Mill rlhetll • "
floed plain doellllllll UYiac eree. A urpln et 522,500. OWIItr wll,._ce .. LAID
CONTRACT.
NEW Al1EII-Ov• 2,000-sq. ft. of llvlnl 11*1 1ft tills ~. llllrtc* -... C..
crete drive 111d patle, lillck yerd fenced IlL Cellve~~t..tly lecat..t te aclleol, c:IMrchea •d shopplac.
·
UTTU: MUD CREEK-WI• 24*1a. MIH on I _ , . - . • leu. CHy w.t• . .
ps, onelafle llklc. now llelnJIIIItill • cany...t atere. C. fer-. ...,._til&
TRAM-10 ea-es IIIOI'e or leu with thrH extsthll ....... Uta ef ,... fir _ .
dnelopnlent If deslrecl. Only ffYI .tllltea fN• U.S. 23.
PRESTONSIURG-S,.dells, 2-tt*IIL, I ~.ttatll, t ........... IICIIIII Ia 1 -st
desirable nei~. ldell f• ' " ' " wltllllttle U.. t.r ....... ......, .....
bawnilll flrepbce, centrelllrlheat, we.._ •411 dry• ....._., ..,...... IIIIIIWI•
.... ,. d-cotltrel.
SAUSBURY-flve (5) treda of lllld on Left ..., . Ck. C• 1M ..W Ia ..,.-.to
treds or 11 1 while. One tred Ia IOOIIM with 1 I,OCICH4. fl " - _. 1 dlrep
bide. Califf Interested In Ill or 1 part.
ALLEN AREA- Spld"s, 3....-IIL, helle locltod n... tile AIIH 1o1t - . • .,
apedll features tncllldtnc ftreplece, dlulc kltc:llon, dlsllwealltr, IINII50xJOO.ft.
lot.
VACATION PROPDTY In Myrtle Beech, S.C. 35..ft. ,_.• ...ay tit-till trill• ..
Oceen Lilies Perk. Screetlell-ln perch end elr-cOIIIIItt..lq. Eltlly relltM wiMa Ht
In 1111 by owner. Only $14,000.
IOHNSOfC C0.- 70-ec:re f•• just %-111111 frff MW lhrJ. 410, ltllw1111 Sll,.nvl•
entl Paintsville, 10 ec:rea llettHIIIIId with okler houlo IINI '-"'· Al..,..rel rtpts
lndudttl. kllll for sub-dtvlcltnc.
WAYUND-3-bdrnl. holne on Front Street. lledlexterior. MMirately ,nclll.
LITTLE PAin-BreetNftl 1'00111 end •or• cen be y...a 111 this ~.• 2-ttetll,
brick home altuetttl on 10 ec:r11 111/l. Cell elllut tho MAllY etllor ..........
BETSY LAYNE- Neet 2·bdrm. homlln Plke-Fioyll holow. llllllc:oll to $34,000.
•EZ-3-betlroam home on 2 ea-es.rrwl. Priced In Ml..20't. SPlCIAL FINANCING
AVAILABL£.
Section Two, P . . . Two
ed, to find out if disability benefits can
be paid.
At retirement age-at 65 for full rate
cash benefits, or as early as 62 for reduced benefits. Sign up for Medicare two or
three months before 65, even if there are
no retirement plans.
Any time there is a question about
Social Security.
When a penon calls a Social Security
office, people there can tell how much
work credit is needed to be insured for
benefits; who can get benefits; how to
replace a lost Social Security or
Medicare card; how to get a free statement of the earnings recorded to a person's Social Security record; what
documents a person needs when applying for benefits.
For more information about Social
Security, get in touch with the Big Sandy Area Social Security office, located
on U.S. 23 between Prestonsburg and
Paintsville. 'l1le telephone number is
listed in your local telephone directory
under U.S. Government.
By JANE BOND
Health Educator
Glaucoma is a leading cause of blindness in adults in the United States. One
of every seven blind persons is a victim
of glaucoma. Chronic glaucoma is the
most common type of glaucoma, and it
occurs most often in persons over age 40.
There are few symptoms which occur
with this disease, which is why it is important for persons over age 40 to be
checked regularly for the disease.
Blindness from glaucoma can be prevented if treatment is begun in the early stages of the disease. The Floyd County Health Department is having a
glaucoma screening clinic on Friday
January Zl. This clinic is a free service
of the Health Department and is open to
persons of all ages, but those age 40 and
over are especially urged to be checked for the disease.
Correction- Miss Susan Evans Conley, first runnerup in the Wee Miss Mistletoe
pageant, was erroneously listed as the
winner in the Jenny Wiley Toyota baby
pageant. She was, instead, the winner of
the Jenny Wiley Festival baby pageant.
DUFF'S VARIETY SALES
Tired of slnlng day·after day at a flea
market with the same thing-with very little or no profit?
MAKE 1984 WORTH YOUR TIME
AND HAVE FUN DOING ITI
I can set you In on-new or used-most any Item
of value. A different load each time. You set up.
Tips on how, where, when, and what to sell with
guaranteed sales and profit on every load.
Need ten to twenty men or women, 18 or over,
own car or truck, $500 or more to start.
WRITE: BOX 143, HIPPO, KY. 41837 ·
Or give me a call at 358-9830
30 years experience In flea market and auctions.
Wholesale to dealers only.
~------------------------------~·
r · nowe
e
n •
n 1n
By opening (with just $25) an hidividual
Retirement Account now, you can get a
jump on the rush to find deductions at tax
time.
All contributions up to $2,000 per worker are
tax-deductible; the interest is tax-deferred.
Don't wait-don't worry. Ask for more
information on Individual Retirement
Accounts from First Commonwealth.
ACR£AG£ AND COMMERCIAL
MARnll AREA- 35 ecru, 33 hilly woolllllnd entl 2 ec:rea of level llltt- 111111,
lecated 3 Miles west of Mlrttn.
Substantial interest penalty required for early withdrawal.
PRESTONSBURG- A lood «»IMI•dll lot frolltlnl on U.S. 23 • • HIPIIIIft
Hospital.
MARTIN-If y• ere Interested 111 1 tllriYinae.1111eu, let n Ill• Y• •• ti till
11101t deslnble prepertles In lbrtln. Tine 131 "'' uc:ceslflll .........
ep•etlftl It JII'IMIIt with .... for 1111 oth•. AIM, I . , . . . . , 2·Wra. .,L
•,ataln. c.tl for apedftc details.
IRAMDYKEG ESTAT£5- t.Je reatrictttl reatdontlll ........., • • Jo•yWUr
Stata Pert end just Mlnlltea from U.S. 23 end Hwy. 10. Slt,OOO 1111 1111·
AUXIER- Conveniently loc:etttl reslllentlel ltkll- lot $12,000.
MAGOFFIN C0.-4i0 ea-es on the St.ort Fort CIL of ln111 Flt'tiiiMIIIIjolllilll Mt.
Portwey neer Selyeravllt.
PRATER CRUK-4 111'11 re.Wtnflllltlllklitll lots-4nt with llltllttl•tar wei.
r-FOR RENT
.
BETSY LAYNE-2..drm. "-tin 1 nice net......MII.
AUDI-2-tt*m. h1111o with fal lletet~tent. Within wllldq •~t~nco ef adleol.
PRESTONSBURG- NEW TOWNHOUSE. 2 bdrm., I 'h Iiiith.
JOE D. WEDDIHTON, lrektr 174-1133 or 432-4721
DOIOTHY HAIIIS, Breker-SIIn 174-9633 er 174-2050
DOUG HICKS, Selea 47a.2Sit-mPHEN I. AUEII, Illes Ul 11410
SUZANIE REYNOLDS, Selea 874-t361-t1ANDAU STlWAIT, Sllea 13f.ft50
{{!t;
•
Bank
Member FDIC
Martin • Betsy Layne • Two locations In Prestonsburg
.
��Wednesday, January 25, 1984
HRMC Blood Bank Accredited
OPEN SUNDAY
•
SALE- SALE- SALE -SALE- SALE- SALE
Displays, Dented, Damaged, Discounted
No Rain Checks
Limited Quantities
Weiser
3
/4"X60'
Roll
Electrical
Tape
Dead Bolt Entrance Or
Interior Door Locks ·
Passage ••••• $499 Reg. $8.49
Bedroom ••• $599 Reg.$10.49
Bathroom •• $6.99Reg.$10.99
Dead Bolt. $13.99 Reg.$21.99
49~
Valerie Barnett, medical technologist at Highlands Regional Medical Center,
displays the hospital's accreditation certificate from the American Association of Blood Banks.
Highlands Regional Medical Center has been accredited by the American
Association of Blood Banks (AABB>, according to Clarence C. Traum,
administrator.
Accreditation follows an on-site inspection by representatives of the Association and certifies that the level of medical, technical and administrative performance within the facility meets AABB standards.
The AABB's inspection and accreditation procedures are voluntary. "It is
not legally necessary for a blood bank or transfusion service to be accredited,
but Highlands Regional sought accreditation because it represents a level of
professional and medical expertise that meets and exceeds government regulations," Traum explained.
Founded in 1947, the AABB is the only national organization in the United
States devoted exclusively to blood banking and blood transfusion services.
other programs and services offered by the AABB include a mechanism for
allowing donors to replace blood for friends or relatives living anywhere in
the country; a rare donor file; frozen blood depots; continuing education programs, reference laboratories for information exchange and consultation; a
voluntary hepatitis detection/testing program; public professional information services and professional publications.
Pikeville Academy
Is Seeking Alumni
Did you attend the Pikeville College
Academy? Contact me as soon as possible for grand reunion of all classes. Pat
Keene, 114 Walnut Drive, Pikeville, Ky.,
41501, phone 432-1845.
.::;;...--7
~
DIAmoNDr-'
~
.:..,w..
WAI.L
~
-~
lAIIt
Replacement
Light Globes
Carpet
Remnants ·
8" Table Saw
~
Ceiling Medallion
~
$499
'$599
Each
$115
Gal.
sq. yd.
To Chair Bike-a-Thon
At Garrett and Langley
The Central Regional Office of St.
Jude Children's Research Hospital an·
nounced today that Mrs. Patricia Rister
will chair the St. Jude Children's
Research Hospital Bike-a-Thon in Garrett, and Mr. and Mrs. Winston Ford will
GENERAL NOTICE OF
head the Bike-a-thon in Langley.
INTENTION TO MINE
St. Jude Children's Research Hospital
was founded by entertainer Danny
Pursuant to Application
Thomas. The institution opened its doors
Number 836-0086
In accordance with the provisions of to the public in 1962 to combat
KRS 350.055, notice is hereby given that:
catastrophic diseases which afflict our
Lucky Collett, Route 2, Box 60, Garrett, children. St. Jude Hospital is nonKy. 41630, has filed an application for a sectarian, non-discriminatory, and propermit for a surface coal mining and vides medical care to over 4,200 patients.
At. St. Jude, scientists and physicians
rec~mation operation of approximately 2.00 acres located 2 miles southwest are working side by side seeking not only
of Martin, in Floyd county. The propos- a better means of treatment, but also the
ed operation is approximately 1 mile causes, cures and prevention of these
north from State Route 1210 junction terrible killers.
All findings and information gained at
with State Route 80 and located 0.2 miles
northeast of Muddy Branch. Latitude 37° the hospital are shared freely with doc34' 10'', longitude82• 46' 35''. The propos- tors and hospitals all over the world.
ed operation is located on the Martin Thanks to St. Jude's, children who have
U.S.G.S. 7lf.! minute quadrangle map.
leukemia, Hodgkin's disease, sickle cell
The operation' wiil affect an area anemia, and other child killing diseases
within 100 feet of public road Muddy now have a better chance to live.
The Bike-a-Thon program is dedicated
Branch County Road. The operation will
not involve relocation of the public road. ' to Terry. Terry was diagnosed with
The surface area is owned by: Ralph leukemia in March of 1978, and began
treatment at St. Jude Children's
Moore.
A brief description of the kind of min- Research Hospital. Today, she is well
ing activity proposed is: contour mining and off all medication. Terry is a living
example of the progress and success of
& auger mining.
The application has been filed at the the research, patient care, and educaBureau of Surface Mining Reclamation tional programs of this internationally
and Enforcement for public inspection recognized hospital.
The funds raised in the Bike-a-Thons
at Prestonsburg Regional Office, 431
South Lake Drive, Prestonsburg, Ken- this spring will help assure the continuation of the life giving work at the
tucky 41653.
Written comments, objections, and/or hospital.
The concern which Mrs. Rister and
requests for a permit conference must
be filed with the Director of the Division Mr. and Mrs. Ford have for the work beof Permits, Bureau of Surface Mining ing done at St. Jude is greatly apReclamation and Enforcement, Capital preciated. The children hope that the
Plaza Tower, Frankfort, Kentucky citizens of Garrett and Langley will
wholeheartedly support the upcoming
40601. Within 30 days of the final weekly advertisement. The written comment, Bike-a-Thon.
objection, or request for a conference
must reference the above permit ap- To speed up cream whipping, chill the
plication number.
lt.
cream, the bowl and the beater.
Paint
Roller
Refill
Turpentine
Thinner
Linseed Oil
,,~eo.
m
-.
~r~r~~~;:~~~ .... ~ 3 50°
Compact Phone
With Wall Mount
'.
0
Armstrong Place & Press No Wax 12" x12"
Installs over range or surface units to save
valuable counter space. Has built-in exhaust
hood & work light. #51758
Floor Tile
49~
Harvest Gold
Commode
$4900
0
Damaged
Vanity
Faucet
Extra
Tub Enclosure
5' Tempered Glass
$2900
\[: -=J~I
$100° 0
WORK GLOVES
Mirrored
Blfold Door
20"
160Z. HAMMER
$4900
HACKSAW
ELMER'S GLUE qt
Log Splitter
Kit
7'1/4" SAW BLADE
Bug Killer
$4900
$1900
TAPE RULES'
PLIERS
Fiberglass Tub
S'Gold
$9900
Fireplace
Insert
Your Choice
$399
s3oooo
'
Roof
Cement
$299
Round 19" Porcelan
Lavatory
White , BlueorGold
s3ooo
gal.
Fireplace
Popcorn
Poppers·
9 Different Styles Of
Light Fixtures
No. 39115
$3.99
Panasonic
Component
Stereo
Your Choice
$10
RCA 25"
Color TV
0
$450°
•2oooo
New Winter Store
Hours!
Store Hours! Mon.- Fri. 8 to 5:30
Sat. 8:00 to 5:00, Sun. 12:00 to 5:00
IN PAINTSVILLE
Located On Old Route23
I!.!II!Q
"',,.a,
.........., sa..,"
&
ea.
Phone 789-3800
=·
�ednesda)l, January 25, 1984
The Floyd County Times
Meade Attends Meet
Held In Louisville
Kenneth Meade, of the Farm and
Home Store, has just returned from a
tw<Hlay Southern States January Dealer
Merchandising Conference held at the
Louisville Inn in Louisville, Jan. 16 and
Dead Battery? Here's How
To Jump Start-Safely
17.
The session, one of six such confer·
ces held throughout the cooperative's
five-state operating territory, was held
for training and informing Southern
States retail personnel about products
and service programs so they could give
maximum service to local farmers this
spring.
There were also special in-depth
schools held during the session devoted
to feed, farm supplies, retail operations
d crop production including fertilizer,
1emicals and seed.
The sessions were conducted by the
cooperative's commodity specialists,
supplier representatives and extension
agronomists.
lt.
Kentucky Transportation Secretary, Dr. Floyd Poore, left, gets ready for
the next spell of freezing weather. He's playing a sticker on his car whi~h tells
how to jump-start a battery safely. Helping him is State Representative Ed
Holloway, President of the National Society to Prevent Blind~ess-Kentucky .
Fifteen hundred stickers were presented to the TransportatiOn Department
by Ashland Oil, Inc., and the Society.
Jumping a dead battery can save the positive ( +) pole of the dead battery.
day for many a motorist. But, just one Then clamp the other end of the same
spark can set off an eye-threatening ex- cable to the positive pole of the good
plosion, according to the National Socie- battery.
ty to Prevent Blindness-Kentucky. FlyAt the booster battery, connect theseing battery "shrapnel" and battery acid, cond cable to the negative ( -) pole.
contacting the eyes, can cause severe Then clamp the other end of that cable
eye damage and vision impairment.
to the stalled car's engine block on the
The Society. recommends the follow- side away from the battery.
ing procedures for jumping a battery
Start the car with the good battery and
safely:
then the disabled car.
BEFORE ATTACHING THE CABLES
Remove the cables, first from the
Put out all cigarettes and flames. A engine block and the booster car's
spark can ignite hydrogen gas produc- negative terminal and then from the
ed by battery fluids.
positive poles.
Make sure the cars don't touch each
For maximum eye safety, the Socieother. Set parking brakes and automatic
shifts of both cars to Park (manual ty advises everyone working with car
transmissions to Neutral) , and turn the batteries or standing nearby to wear
protective goggles to keep battery
ignition off.
Take off the battery caps , if fragments and chemicals out of the
removable, and add water if it is need- eyes. Should an accident occur and bated. Check for ice in the battery fluid . tery acid get into the eyes, immediateNever jump-start a frozen battery! ly flush them with water continuously
Replace the caps and cover with a damp ' for 15 minutes. Then see a doctor.
cloth.
The Society offers a 4" by 8" yellow
Do not jump-start unless both bat- vinyl sticker, adhesive backed, listing
teries are negatively grounded and the the step-by-step instructions for jumpsame voltage. American cars have ing dead batteries. The stick~r can be afeither 12-volt or 6-volt batteries. Check fixed to any clean, dry surface under the
owner's manual. (Owners of foreign hood or kept inside the car's glove comcars should check their operating partment. To obtain a sticker, send 25¢
manuals for emergency starting and a self-addressed, stamped, envelope
directions. )
to : NSPB-Kentucky, 727 Starks
ATTACHING THE CABLES
Building, Louisville, Ky. 40202. Bulk
Clamp one jumper cable to the orders are available for $10 per 100.
Of course, you can deposit
s2,000 into your I.R.A.
But you don't have to!!
COME STOCK-UP ON GREAT
HYDE PARK VALUES All THIS WEEKI
PRICES GOOD THRU SUNDAY, JAN. 29, WHILE QUANTITIES LAST.
FISCHER'S
Wieners
120z.ggc
PKG.
U.S.D.A. CHOICE ROLLED
steak
$179u.s.D.A.
CHOICE
~:~lt . ...
LB. 5 2 1 ~
U.S.D.A. BONELESS
2
FIELD'S FRESH
Ham
Sausage .. LB.
$179
FIELD'S 16-0Z.
Sirloin Tip S 29
Roast ..... LB.
l~:~ . ..$159
U.S.D.A. CHOICE
FIELD'S 16-0Z.
.Cube
contribute to your I.R.A. weekly, monthly, or any
other schedule you desire. Importantly, you get
all the tax advantages of the lump sum deposit.
I.R.A. reduces income taxes
Simply add up your t.R.A. contributions for that
tax year and deduct that total from your gross
income.
You still have time to reduce your taxes
for 1983. ~
u
· AND EASTERN KENTUCKY TOO!
.
Steak...... LB.
S239 Sliced
Bologna .....
Prestonsburg • Garrett • Harold • Allen • Wheelwright
Member F.D.I.C.
HYDE PARK LIGHT
-Chunk Tuna
HYDE PARK 16 OZ.
Vegetables
~~
cA•
12 OZ. HYDE PARK FROZEN
46 OZ. HYDE PARK
HYDE PARK ASST. 2 LITER
sort Drinks
69c
S149
HYDE PARK
Peanut Butte
S11~11Z.
JAR
iEIIAoleoliimatoes2/99c
lo~~a=~~~99c
7
9
c
Pineapple . . ....~...........
::.0
HYDE PARK 20 OZ.
s
1
09
Collae creamer....... __ _
14YDE PAIK 16 OZ. NON DAllY
ca111orn1a
Red Grapes.
WASH. STATE SWEET JUICY
[iiiiiilrr oataraants 139
69 ~Y20Z. ~3 I$1~-~
===
Tomato
c
~~r::.~ .a9c Juice . 69
HYDE PARK MARGARINE
caullllower
D'AnJou Pears .
.
THE BANK ·:BJ: JOSEPHINE
* Play our Quality Star Card Game for extra Quality Stamps!
Hyde Park Sale!
CALIF. SNOW WHITE
Paae Five
I.R.A. made easy
... .-" um lllll11U a_.,,..... _lllllll,.. n... c.m.a--.
LB.
·rwo,
Design an I.R.A. you can afford. we have the affordable plan. Because w~ understand how hard
s2,000 is to come by-especially all at once.
NOTICE OF
INTENTION TO MINE
Pursuant to Two-Acre-or-Less
Application Number 036-0090
(1) In accordance with the provisions
of KRS 350.055, notice is hereby given
that Seven-to-Eleven Coal Co. Langley,
Ky. 41654, has filed a renewal application for a permit for a surface coal mining and reclamation operation of approximately 2.0 acres located 1.1 mile
east of Alvin, Ky. in Floyd county.
(2) The proposed operation is approximately 1.1 miles east from State Route
1428's junction with State Route 19 and
cated 0.1 miles north of Cow Creek.
e latitude is 37• 38' 10", longitude 82°
40' 33". The surface area is owned by
Ronald Frasure.
(3) The proposed operation is located
on the Lancer U.S.G.S. 7.5' quadrangle
map. The operation will use the contour
mining method.
.
(4) Notice is hereby provided pursuant to KRS 350 that the proposed
postmining land use of residential contitutes a change from the forest preining land use.
(5) Pursuant to 405 KAR 1:050, the
D.N.R.E.P. may conduct a hearing to
review the above-referenced application
to conduct mining operations within 100'
of public highway 174.
(6) The application has been filed for
public inspection at the Department for
Surface Mining Reclamation and En·
forcement's Prestonsburg Regional office, 503 South Lake Dr., Prestonsburg,
Ky. 41653. Written comments, objec'ons, or requests for a permit conrenee must be filed with the Regional
Administrator of the Prestonsburg
Regional Office, 503 South Lake Dr.,
Prestonsburg, Ky. 41653. This is the final
advertisement of this application ; all
comments, objections, or requests for a
permit conference must be received
within thirty (30) days of today's date.
Sec:tlon
HYDE PARK GALLON
MERIT 16 OZ.
Saltine
crackers
Bleach
c
69c
59
HYDE PARK
~Bath
Tissue
~489c
L-::-- ROLL
PKG.
s
13
9
•1
Cheese Spread.........
WEbiplpoedwTOPPIDD . . .99C
souu2/79c
rota toes . . . . 89c Potato ChiPS .................69 c
iiliiiSi
HYDE PARK 8 OZ. FROZEN BROCCOLI
iiRiesCAULIFLOWER
'Ill 09
~
HYDE PARK I OZ. CHEDDAR OR MOZZ.
iiEuAsliro·oRm
I
HYDE PARK I OZ. ASSORTED
inEsialnOf
�January 25, 1984
Dr. Joe Taylor Hyden
Obituaries
Well-known dentist and former coaeh
at Prestonsburg High School, Dr. Joe
Taylor Hyden, 67, died last Friday at
Mrs. Cona Baldridge
his home in Martin following a long illMrs.
Cona Baldridge, 77, of
ness.
Lucasville, 0., native of this county, died
A graduate of Prestonsburg High
Monday, January 2, at the Pleasant Hill
School and of Caney Junior College, Dr.
Convalescent Center in Piketon.
Hyden was recipient of the Caney CotShe was a daughter of the late Sher·
tage Scholarship, an award given honor
man
and Martha Music May and was a
students to continue studies at the
member of the Lucasville Missionary
University of Kentucky, where he was
Baptist Church.
graduated as a pre-med student in 1939.
Survivors include her husband, Elza
He then returned to Prestonsburg High
Baldridge; three sons, Herbert BaldSchool where he was a teacher and
ridge, of Hope Mills, N.C., Thomas Baldhighly successful coach until1942 when
ridge, of Columbus, 0., and Aaron Dean
he joined the U.S. Marine Corps, serving in the Pacific Theatre as a Major un- 'Baldridge, of Lucasville, 0.; six daughters, Mrs. Gladys Spradlin and Mrs.
till946. He later coached for one year at
Phyllis Sizemore, both of Lucasville,
Huntington High School in 0.-egon where
Nancy Andrews, of New Boston, 0.,
he was then made principal. Later, be
Mrs. Ruby Todd, of Lucasville, Mrs. Edbecame superintendent of schools in
na Cornett, of West Alexander, 0., and
Baker county, Oregon, during which
Mrs. Mildred Adkins, of McDermott, 0.;
time his schools led that state in average
two brothers, John and Dewey May,
daily attendance. He entered the Univerboth of Melbourne, Fla.; five sisters,
sity of Louisville School of Dentistry in
Mrs. Ella Prater, Mrs. Viola Derossett,
1950 and was graduated in 1954.
Mrs. Oma Hughes and Mrs. Malta
Dr. Hyden took an active part in
Porter, all of Prestonsburg, and Mrs.
politics and with Judge Hollie Conley,
Alta Kennedy, of Wheelersburg, 0.; 51
managed the campaign of Bert T.
Combs for governor. He served on the grandchildren, and 35 great-grandBoard of Trustees of Caney Junior Col- children.
Funeral services were conducted
lege, was a member of the Board of
Thursday, January 5, at the McKinley
Regents of Morehead State University,
and had served on the Board.of Direc- Funeral Home by Elder Francis Green,
tors of Prestonsburg Community Col- and burial was made in Mershon Cemelege. He was a member of the American tery at Upper Pond Creek in Ohio.
Dental Association and Kentucky Mountain Dental Association, and was also a
Charlie Flanery
member of the John W. Hall Masonic
Charlie
Flanery, 77, of Wheelwright,
Lodge No. 950, F&AM.
last
Thursday
at the McDowell Apdied
He was born May 20, 1916 on Abbott
palachian
Regional
Hospital following a
Creek and was a son of the Ia te Joe Kenlong
illness.
dall and Nora E. Allen Hyden.
Born February 5, 1907 in Pike county,
Surviving him are his wife, Mrs. Dixie Ratliff Hyden; three sons, Dr. Alan he was a son of the late Creed and Vicie
Joe Hyden, of Prestonsburg, Joe Taylor Younce Flanery. He was a retired
Hyden, II, of Martin, and Dr. Robert D. miner, member of the United Mine
Marshall, of Allen; two daughters, Mrs. Workers of America at Ligon and was
· Debra Hyden Burke, of Prestonsburg, also a member of the First Baptist
and Mrs. Terri Hyden Allen, of Allen; Church at Wheelwright.
Survivors include his wife, Mrs. Victwo brothers, Allen Lee Hyden, of
toria
Little Flanery; three sons, James
Culloden, W.Va., and John R. Hyden, of
Monroe Flanery,.-of Ligon, Bobby Joe
Prestonsburg; three sisters, Mrs.
Lucille Davis, Mrs. Gertrude Branham, · Flanery, of Hi Hat, and Delbert McArand Mrs. Mary Margaret Clark, all of thur Fj.anery, in California; three
daughters, Mrs. Helen Marie Newsome,
Prestonsburg, and 10 grandchildren.
Masonic services were held Saturday of Teaberry, Mrs. Wanda Lee Ray, of
Wheelwright, and Mrs. Vonda Lou Newevening, and funeral services were consome, of Beaver; one sister, Mrs. Lula
ducted at 2 p.m., Sunday, at the Floyd
Funeral Home chapel by the Rev. Tay- Newsome, of Pikeville; four half-sisters,
lor Biggs. Burial was made in Davidson Dora and Dinah Akers, both of Dorton,
Jane F. Estep, of Ashtabula, 0., and LizMemorial Gardens at Ivel.
Pallbearers were Johnny Burke, Jr., zie Poteel, in North Carolina; 25 grandchildren and seven great-grandchildren.
Steve Allen, Ed Clark, Jr., Rick Davis,
Funeral services were conducted at 10
• Willard Lafferty, Tim Martin, Mark
a.m., Sunday, at the Little Nancy Regu·::. Tackett, and Ronnie Caudill.
lar Baptist Church at Hi Hat by Regular Baptist ministers, and burial was
made in the Vance cemetery at Beaver
Steve Hamilton
under direction of the Hall Funeral
Steve Hamilton, trl, of Stanville, died Home.
Saturday at the Pikeville Methodist Hospital following a long illness.
Reves V. Hall
He was born January 14, 1897 in Pike
county and was a son of the late Nelve
Reves V. Hall, 80, of Columbus, Inand Renee Holt Hamilton. A retired diana, formerly of Floyd county, died
miner, he was a member of the Little December 17 at Battholomew County
Rachael Regular Baptist Church at Gal- Hospital in Columbus following an exveston for 30 years.
tended illness.
He is survived by his wife, Mrs. AnBorn July 13, 1903, he was a son of the
nie Hamiltion; two sons, Clarence late Robert Hatler and Francis Martin
Hamilton, of Betsy Layne, and Eyvind Hall, and was a retired farmer. Before
Hamilton, of Teaberry; four daughters, ~ moving to Indiana, he had lived at
Pearlie Hamilton, of Betsy Layne, Roxie Eastern and was employed by the Ken·
Novak, of Baltimore, Maryland, Geneva
tucky W. Va. Gas Company.
Flora, of Albion, Mich. and Nannie
He is survived by his wife, Mrs. Lou
Eller, of West Grove, Pennsylvania;
Osborne ltall; five sons, Wendell, Vic·
three brothers, Andy Hamilton, of Tea- tor, Bob and Ned Hall, all of Ft. Wayne,
berry, Duran Hamilton, of Penny, Ky.,
1nd., and Gary Hall, of Columbus, Ind.;
and Allard Hamilton, of Stanville; two one daughter, Mrs. Lois Hall Martin,
sisters, Rosie Belcher, of Teaberry, and also of Columbus; two sisters, Mrs.
Betty Hall, of Pikeville; 44 grand- Margie Osborne, of Printer, and Mrs.
children, 61 great-grandchildren, and
Nellie Hurst, of Lima, 0.; three
one great-great-grandchild.
brothers, Hollie Hall, of Paintsville,
Funeral services were conducted
Homer and Earl Hall, in Ohio; 18 grandyesterday (Tuesday) at 11 a.m. at the
children and 18 great-grandchildren.
Little Rachael Regular Baptist Church
Funeral services were conducted by
with Regular Baptist ministers of- the Rev. Schoenherr, and burial was
ficiating. Burial was made in Davidson
made in the Haverstock cemetery at
Memorial Gardens at I vel under direc- zanesville, Indiana.
tion of the Hall Funeral Home.
Pallbearers were grandsons and
grand-sons-in-law, Kent Hall, Rick Hall,
Mark Hall, Terry Liechty, Troy Ballman, and Gene Blahey.
SUNDAY WON'T DOl
God won't accept Sunday. He
sold the Sabbath, not the First
Day. Jesus sold It was a vain
worship to keep man's comandments and not God's-Mark 7:7.
Fru cassettes or written
literature-specify which.
CHURCH OF GOD
(SEVENTH DAY)
c/o Jerry Bentley
Rt. 4, Box 737
Pikeville, Ky. 41501
12_28~tpd.
MARTIN BRANCH
FREE WILL BAPTIST
CHURCH
ESTILL, KY.
GOSPEL SINGING
SAT., JAN. 28
7:00 P.M.
BLANTON FAMILY
OF SHELBY, OHIO
TRUE BELIEVERS
PRESTONSBURG
EVERYONE WELCOME
Pastor, Clinton Jones
Section Two, Paae Six
The
James Caldwell
James Allen Caldwell, 63, of Wyandotte, Mich., formerly of Betsy Layne,
died Thursday at the Riverside Osteopathic Hospital in Trenton, Mich. after a
short illness.
Born November 25, 1920 in Betsy
Layne, he was a son of the late John and
Dixie Loar Caldwell. He was a steelworker employed with the McLought
Steel Company and was a member of the
Steelworker's Union.
He is survived by a son, Ralph Caldwell, of Wyandotte; three daughters,
Bertina Winchek, also of Wyandotte,
Brenda LaDuke and Donna Jolly, both
of Spring Hill, Tenn. j a brother, Charles
Caldwell, of Dearborn, Mich.; two
sisters, Elsie Mae Layne, of Betsy
Layne, and Belva Loray Garrett, of Columbia, Pa., and nine grandchildren.
Rev. Cohen Campbell officiated at
funeral services conducted at 10 a.m.
Momiay at the Hall Funeral Home
chapel. Burial was made in the Loar
cemetery at Betsy Layne.
PALLBEARERS LISTED
Pallbearers at rites for Clabe
Bingham, Wednesday, January 18, were
Larry Estill Howell, Barry Keith
Howell, Freddy Bingham, Jefferson
Bingham, Joe Bingham, Tommy Bingham, Jeff Bingham, Buford Crager,
Bobby Crager, Bill, Woodie, Paul, Estill,
Roscoe, Tommy, Donald, and Garry
Branham, Larry, Jeffory, Charley,
Lloyd, James Earl, Ronald, and Jim
Doug Wells. Honorary pallbearers
were: Ollie Lewis, Carl Osborne, Ernest
Osborne, Robert Wallace, Marvin Alley,
Woodrow Greenwade, Everett Patton,
Print Ball, L.J. Music, Lennie Moore,
Woodrow Allen, Bill Wills, Estill Howell,
Kenneth Allen, Shag Branham, Perry
Greene, Ray Fannin, and Carl Bingham.
John N. Patton
You Are Invited
John N. Patton, 78, of Martin, died
January 18 at Our Lady of the Way Hospital following an extended illness.
A son of the late Eland Varie Frasure
Patton, he was born January 14, 1906 at
Langley, and was a retired miner.
Survivors include his wife, Mrs.
Lucinda Ratliff Patton; three sons, Gene
Patton, of Eastern, Buck Patton, of Martin, and Temp Patton, of New Washington, Oh.; four daughters, Betty Moore,
of Harrod, Oh., Louise Gunnells, of
Rochester, Ind., Etta Elliott, of Tippecanoe, Ind., and Pauline Resch, of Kenton, Oh.; a sister, Vina Hatfield, of Prestonsburg; 20 grandchildren, and 11
great-grandchildren.
Funeral services were conducted
Saturday at 11 a.m. at the Merion
Funeral Home chapel with Regular Baptist ministers officiating. Burial was
made in the Allen cemetery at Maytown.
Pallbearers were Don Elliott, Don
Elliott, Jr., Keith Goble, Burnis Goble,
James Gunnels, and Doug Moore.
First Presbyterian Church
North Lake Drive
FIRST ASSEMBLY
OF GOD
West PrestonsbiiiJ, Ky.
WADE MARTIN HUGHES
Pastor
Sunday School
9:45a.m.
Morning Worship
.11 a.m.
Evening Worship.
. 7p.m.
Wednesday Prayer Study 7 p.m.
Auxier Freewill
Baptist Church
Sunday School ... 10:00 a.m.
Morning Worship .... 11 a.m.
Evening Worship .. 6:00p.m.
Prayer Meeting
Thursday ....... 6:30p.m.
Pastor, Elder Douglas Burkett
Asst. Pastor Clyde Bowling
12·14-tf.
Soathem
B1ptist
•'
t
Pastor
"The Church Where Exciting
Things Are Happening"
Highland Avenue
Freewill Baptist
Church
Sunday School . . . . .. 10 a .m.
Morning Worship . . . . 11 a.m.
7 p.m.
Evening Worship .
Wednesday Worship
. . 7 p.m.
Taylor L. Biggs, Pastor
Phone: 1!8&-80!17
SUNDAY
Sunday School ........... 10 a.m.
Worship Service ... .... .. 11 a.m.
Evening Service ...... . . . .6 p.m.
WEDNESDAY
Prayer Meeting .......... 7 p.m.
CLIFFORD H. AUSTIN, Pastor
ZION
DELIVERANCE
TABERNACLE
~- .,.;..,.--
FIRST
UNITED
METHODIST
CHURCH
So. Arnold Ave., Prestonsburg
Dr. Ted Nicholas, Mffilster
Sunday School .......... 9:45
Morning Worship ...... 11:00
Junior and Senior UMYF2: 30
Rhythmic Choir ......... 4:30
Wesley Bell Choir . ..... . 5:15
Evening Service . . . ..... 7:00
WAYLAND, KENTUCKY
Sunday Schoolll a.m.
Evening Worship 7 p.m.
Wednesday Prayer Service 7 p.m.
Saturday Evening Worship 7 p .m .
Ada Mosley, Pastor
Everyone Welcome.
A CHRISTIAN WELCOME
AWAITS YOU.
All Tile Enth Shall Worship Thee. 12. 14-tf.
EPISCOPAL
·.
FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH
McDowell, Ky.
Sunday School .
9:45a.m.
Morning Worship .
11 a.m .
Evening Worship ..
6p.m.
Wednesday
Prayer Meeting .
. .7 p.m .
H. Bailey Sadler. Pastor
Visitors Expected
7-21-tf.
J
\V
CHURCH
COME
WORSHIP
WITH US
AT
The First Church of God
University Dr., Prestoasburg, Ky.
KEVIN COLLINS. Pastor
SUNDAY:
Sunday School. . .... ... 9:45p.m .
Morning Worship . ... 10:45 a.m.
Evening Service.
6:00p.m.
TUESDAY:
Prayer Encounter . . 7:00a.m.
WEDNESDAY:
Prayer Service . .. . ... . .7:00p.m.
fii.J~ .~
CEPIS<'OPALl
PRESTONSBURG.KENTUCKYtl~3
SUNDAYS
9:45 UI.-CIIIrch
School -' Billie Class
11 Ul.-lloly tom.Mnion
WDOC·AM
2:00 p.m. Sundays
EVERYONE WELCOME
~tu~loch Bible_Cltu"ck
R.R. #5
Prestonsburg, Kentucky 41653
Spurlock Fork of Middle Creek
Sunday School ................. 10:00 a .m .
!Classes for all ages >
Sunday Morning Worship Service .! ! :00 a .m.
Sunday Evening Service ......... .. 7: 00p.m.
Wednesday-Prayer and Bible Sludy7 :00 p .m.
West Pre\tonsburg, Ky.
Across From Clark School
Sunday School . .
10:00 a.m.
Morning Worship
.. . 11 a.m.
Sun. Evening Worship . 6:00p.m.
cexcept when school is oou 7:00 p .m.
Wed . Bible Study .
. 7:00p.m.
Youth Church for ages 5-10
during Sunday Morning Worship
•NURSERY PROVIDED•
REV. JOHN WOODS, Pastor .
WAYLAND
·UNITED
METHODIST
CHURCH
CATHOLIC CHURCHES
Of Floyd County
Welcome You
St. Theodore. Prestonsburg
7 p.m., Sat: 11 a.m. Sun .
St. Juliana, Martin
5 p.m. Sat.: 9 a.m . Sun.
RADIO PROGRAMS
A church with a message
for children of all ages.
Sunday School.
. 9:45a.m.
Morning Worship
. 11 a .m.
(Nursery Provided>
Come and grow with us !
Sun - WMDJ Martin
11 :n; a .m .
Sun.- WDOC-FM Prestonsburg 11 :00 a.m .
Wed.-WDOC Prestonsburg .
.10:55 a .m.
Fri.- WRLV Salyersville
7:50a .m .
Pastor: Father Ralph Beiting
WEYMAN McGUIRE. Pastor
285-3254
:15!1-44 19
!EVERYONE IS ALWAYS WELCOME!
PHILIPPIANS 2:16
"HOLDING FORTH THE WORD OF
UFE.. :•
Dan Heintzelman-Pastor
Box !!50. Martin. Ky. 41649
Parsonage Phone-2!15-:1444
"A Christ Centered Church
Built On Love"
10-211-tf.
_ :n\'l TO BE LiKE J11fE''i!"IJI,
_r,~
Prestonsbur&, Ky.
SUN., WDOC AM-11:00
I 1}
I
FITZPATRICK
FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH
1~
710 Blllt.e Ave.,
SUNDAY SCHOOL
10:45 A.M.
SERVICES
.. ,
9:30A.M.
REV. TIMOTHY D. JESSEN
Pastor
Tiffany Renee Miller
Tiffany Renee Miller, stillborn
daughter of Glynnis Marie Cline Miller
and Joe Raymond Miller, Jr., of Prestonsburg, died Monday at the Highlands
Regional Medical Center.
In addition to her parents, she is survived by her paternal grandparents,
J.R. and Ruth Miller, of Prestonsburg,
and her maternal grandparents, Marvin
Cline, of Albion, Mich., and Verta
Tackett, of Carrie, Ohio.
Funeral services were conducted
Wednesday at 11 a.m. at the Spurlock
Bible Church with the Rev. Dan Heintzelman officiating. Burial was made in
the J .R. Miller cemetery at Spurlock
under direction of the Floyd Funeral
Home.
WORSHIP SERVICE
Church School 10:00 a.m.
Moming Worship 11:15 a.m.
Mrs. Coon McCoy
Mrs. ·Coon Pauline Ratliff McCoy,
widow of Pete McCoy, one of the country's most-decorated soldiers during
World I, died Saturday at her home at
McCombs. She was 89 years old.
A former resident of this county, she
was born February 13, 1894, the
daughter of the late James H. and
Margaret Clay Ratliff. She was a
member of the Regular Baptist Church.
She is survived by one son, Clinton
McCoy, and two daughters, Mrs. Bertha
Blackburn and Miss Margaret McCoy,
all of McCombs; a brother, John
Graham Ratliff, of Stanville; a sister,
Mrs. Joetta Smith, of Pikeville; and
three grandchildren.
Funeral services were conducted at 11
a.m., Tuesday, at theJ.W. Call Funeral
Home in Pikeville by Regular Baptist
ministers and burial was made in the
Ratliff family cemetery at McCombs.
COMMUNITY
UNITED
METHODIST
CHURCH
To the
ACT$ 2:14t
_ . '"'·
s.tq..,~
PRES1DNSBURQ
~
CHURCH OF ·~HRIST.
SOUTH LAKE
D~IVE
LORD'S DAY
'B. CLASS •••••••••••••••••••••• 10:00 A.M.
WORSHIP ••.•.. ·• . . . . • . . • • • •.. . • . • .. 10:45 · A.·M~
EVENING WORSHIP:· ............ 6 P.M. STD. TIME•
7 P.M. D.S.T. TIME
WEDNESDAY
BIBLE STUDY ..•.••.. •., •.•.•••........• 7 P.M.
RADIO BROADCASi
WPRT.
MONDAY thru FRIDAY 9:30A.M.
.
'
WMDI SUNDAY 9- A.M.~
''Come Let U$ jteason_Tosether'' luilb l:l:•lo
Ev1nlelist leMie •nkenship 886-3379, 886-6223.
MAYTOWN
UNITED
METHODIST
CHURCH
PROCLAIMING
NEW TESTAMENT
CHRISTIANITY
The growing church for
the growing Christian.
Morning Worship ..... 9:30a.m.
Sunday School . .. ... . 11:00 a.m.
Youth Group .. . ..... . .. 5:00p.m.
Evening Worship .. . ..- .6 :30p.m.
•
•
[1]
No Book but the Bible.
No Creed but Christ.
No Name but Christian.
FIRST CHRISTIAN CHURCH
429 No. Arnold Ave.
Prestonsburg
Sunday School ..
Morning Worship
Evening Worship .
Wed. Bible Study ..
Come and grow with us!
Weyman McGuire, Pastor
358-4419
10 a.m .
11 a.m.
.6p.m
. .7p.m.
Walt Staude, Preacher
886-8773
~. . . . . .a.. . . . . . . . . ._._.i-~-t_,r ~: .. . . . . . . . . . . .~------~•
to--~.-t_,r
.
FIRST .ASSEMBLY OF Goo·
Lorie Vannucci, Pastor
Phone 285-3051
Martin, Ky.
Stmday Scltool. . ............ 10 a.m.
Children's Church ........ . . . 11 a .m .
Morning Worship ........ . .. 11 a .m .
Youth Worship ....... . ...... .6'p.m.
Evangelistic Service .. . . . .. .. 7 p.m.
Wednesday, 7 p.m ..... Family Night
LOOKING FOI'SOM£THINC DIFFERENT?
Attend SerVices At The
FIRST CHURCH ·oF GOD
(LiUle Paint) lh mile off Rout~ 1428
Between Prestonsburg & East Point, Where
''liE_DIFFERENCE IS WORTH THE DISTAICE"
SUNDAY SCHOOL ...... 10:00 a.m.
MORNING WORSHIP .. . 10:45 a.m.
YOUTH SERVICE ....... 6:00p.m.
EVENING WORSHIP .... 6:30p.m.
BIBLE STUDY <WED.) . . 7:00p.m.
<NURSERY PROVIDED)
Bible Study . . . . 9:45 a.m.
Morning Worship ... 11 a.m.
Even1ng Worship . 5:30 p.m.
Mid-Week Prayer Service7 p.m.
RADIO BROADCAST
WQHY-FM 95.5
MON.-FRI., 8-8:15 A.M.
ROY L. TINCHER, Pastor
FIRST AVENUE, DOWNTOWN PRESTONSBURG
· NURSERY PROYIDm AJID PLENTY Of PARKING
STEVE HOPKINS, PASTOR. MINISTER OFMUSIC, GUS KALOS.
Morning
s~r.lce
broadus!
Jive, 11 : 15, WQHY Fl\1 95.5
�County Times
The
Two Floyd Teams
Fall To Eagles
<Photo by Laura Cooleyl
KELLY CECIL shoots from outside for the Prestonsburg
Blackcats during last Tuesday's game against Johnson Central. The Eagles won the contest, 73-66. No. 3 for PHS is Todd
Nairn.
<Photo by Laura Cooley)
PRESTONSBURG'S Tony Whitaker drives down the floor in
the Blackcats' meeting with regional rival Johnson Central,
last Tuesday. The 'Cats lost the game in the final period of
play, 73-66.
DR. VIRGINIA A. de GUZMAN
FAMILY PRACTICE AND OB
PAINTSVILLE CLINIC BUILDING
111 MAIN STREET
PAINTSVILLE, KENTUCKY 41240
NO APPOINTMENT NECESSARY
Area Code 606/789-6489
Monday-Wednesday-Friday
8:00 A.M.-4:00 P.M.
Saturday
8:30 A.M.-12:00 Noon
Where Your Money Buys More I
1·25-31.
*
-JANUARY SPECIALS -
$9 1 995°0
New 14' Wide. 3 Bedrooms. $11,995°0
0
New 24'x48' Doublewide. $21,99 5°
Repo's $99°0 Down - Take Over
New 14' Wide. 2 Bedrooms ...
Payments.
VA- FHA- County Bond Financing
874-903311B 478-959
Floyd county's two most powe1!-ol
teams, the Prestonsburg Blackcats
and Betsy Layne's Bobcats, fell to the
Johnson Central Eagles in games last
week.
Facing the Eagles last Tuesday
night, Prestonsburg lost, 73-66 after
leading four points at halftime. In the
second half Johnson Central quickly
narrowed the gap and the game ran
neck-in-neck through the second
period. With four of Prestonsburg's
starting five fouling out and a number
of missed shots, the Eagles were quick
to take advantage winning the game in
the last five minutes of play.
Playing on home court Saturday,
Coach Junior Newsome's Bobcats
were also surprised by the Eagles and
fell by the heartbreaking score of 7o-69.
Scorers for Betsy Layne included Levi
Hamilton 24, Jeff Campbell 17, Lester
Newsome 10, Dwayne Kidd 8, Jimmy
Parsons and Duran Hall 4 points each,
and Brett Meade 2.
The Bobcats played earlier in the
. week against Wheelwright, defeating
the Trojans 72-38. Scorers for the Bobcats in that game were Jimmy Parsons
13, Jeff Campbell13, Levi Hamilton 10,
Lester Newsome 9, Dwayne Kidd 8,
Davy Mitchell 7, Duran Hall 6, Chad
Collins and Barry Boyd, 2 each.
Scorers for the Trojans included
David Hall16, Tim Cole 11, James Hall
3, Tim Hughes, Tony Hunter and
Charlie Martin, 2 each.
Prestonsburg's next action will be
this Friday against the Allen Central
Rebels, a team which earlier beat the
Blackcats. On January 31 the
Blackcats will face Betsy Layne.
Section Two, Paae Seven
Wells Among Who's
Who From Centre
WEIGHT
WATCHERS'
Jack Carter Wells, a junior at Centre
College, has been selected as an
outstanding campus leader, and will be
listed in the current edition of "Who's
Who Among Students in American
Universities and Colleges."
Wells, the son of Dorothy Wells, 67 N.
Arnold Ave., Prestonsburg, is among 22
Centre College students listed in the 1984
edition of "Who's Who."
Wells is majoring in physics. He is active in football at Centre and is also a
member of the Delta Kappa Epsilon fraternity. He has been named to the
Dean's List four times.
The Centre students named in the
directory were first nominated by a
campus nominating committee. They
were selected for the directory based on
their academic achievement, service to
the community, leadership in extracurricular activities and potential for continued success.
More than 1,500 institutions of higher
education nominate students for the
directory, which has been published annually since 1934.
The most successful weight loss program in th£ wor!d.
Would Like To Open A Weight Watchers Class
In
Maytown, Kentucky
If you are interested in starting a class in Maytown, a preregistration will be held on:
DATE: Tuesday, January 31-6:00 PM
LOCATION: Maytown Elementary School
The cost: $20 the first week, then $7 weekly thereafter.
No contracts to sign.
Join us for a "Quick Start" to a
Beautiful Finish
'WEIGHT WATCHERs· AND. ARE AEOiSTERED TRAOE.,.RKS OF W£iOKT WATCHERS
WTERNATtONAl. INC , UANHASSET, N.V •WEIGHT WATCHERS IHTERNATIOHAL, 1te4
LUMBER & HOME CENTER
,4~LOWEST PBICES
Our 375 Store Buying Power enables us to sell at one low
price to everyone. You benefit with the highest qua.llty
products at the ~lowest prices.
OPEN
84Hours
a Week.
Reward Offered
As Eagle Shot
In Magoffin
Mvauc White
2'x4' Lav-In
FREE!
Stock Butcher Block
Pattern Postformed
COUNTERTOP
An immature bald eagle was shot Friday, January 13, in Magoffin county and
a reward will be offered for information
leading to the arrest and conviction of
the party or parties responsible for the
fatal shooting, according to law enforcement officials of the Kentucky Department of Fish and Wildlife Resources.
The eagle was found injured alongside
U.S. Highway 460 about 3% miles west
of Salyersville near Pleasant Hill. The
animal had been shot with a shotgun and
suffered, among other wounds, a broken
leg. Department of Fish and Wildlife
personnel turned the wounded bird over
to the Louisville zoo for treatment but
the animal died two days later.
Federal law provides for a reward
totalling up to half of the fines levied in
the case. The maximum fine for killing
an eagle is $5,000. Private conservation
organizations also usually offer rewards
in eagle-killing cases. Anyone with
knowledge of this incident is encouraged to contact the Louisville office of the
U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service (502
582-5989) or their local conservation
officer.
With the purchase ot
stock kitchen cabinets.
Minimum 8' ot base
cabinets.
-
•
CBUNG ...... -.....
84~ach
NO DEAlfRS PlEASE
LIMIT 100 PCS. PER CUSTOMER
Nvlon
lWE£0 CARPET ;oS'
~
~
With Cuahlon Back
OUR REG. $4.99 ln.ft.
End caps and
mitres additional.
2'f:'Yd.
NO DEAlfRS PlEAS£
OUR R£8.14.98 aq.rd.
2"x4" Pre-Cut
Premium
Pre-Finished
PANEUNG
STUDS
Sandy Elm
YOUR CHOICE
or
nR4
Light Hickory _ ;J7heet . . . . . . .
25,000 Ky. Hunters
Apply For Bernheim
Forest Deer Hunt
Frankfort,
Ky.,
Jan.
17Approximately 25,000 hopeful hunters
applied for a chance to hunt deer on
Bernheim Forest Refuge and landowners on the area open to deer hunting
in Nelson and Bullitt,counties are indicating that they cannot grant anyone
else permission to hunt, according to the
Department of Fish and Wildlife
Resources.
A total of 11,304letters of application
for the Bernheim hunt were received
before the Jan. 13 deadline. Up to five
individuals could apply together and
each letter is averaging around two
names, according to John Phillips, the
department's deer specialist.
Only 1200 of these applicants will be
allowed to participate in the four-day
hunt, scheduled for Feb. 3-6 on the Bernheim Refuge. These hunters are being
selected by a random drawing from
among all the applicants, Phillips said.
All those who applied will be notified
whether or not they have been selected
to hunt, according to Phillips. Successful
applicants will be notified first, followed by those whose names were not
drawn.
"Because of the large number of applications, it's possible that we won't get
all of those who were not chosen notified
by the end of the month," Phillips said,
adding that those whose names were
drawn will receive notice by Jan. 23.
Property owners in the land around
Bernheim Forest also report that interest in the hunt is running high and
that they have already granted permission to all the hunters the area ·will
accomodate.
A force of conservation officers will be
patroling Bernheim Forest and the surrounding lands during the hunt, and an
officer should be able to respond to a
property owner's complaint within 15
minutes, Toon added.
All hunters are required to have 1983
deer tags in addition to 1984 hunting
licenses. These tags will be available at
the Bullitt County Fairgrounds the day
before and during the hunt, from the
Bullitt and Nelson County courthouses
during regular hours, from the Key
Beverage Depot, Bardstown, and from
four locations in Jefferson County: the
Fish and Wildlife office at Bowman
. Field off Taylorsville Road and the county clerk's offices in the Old Courthouse
Building in downtown Louisville, the
Southwest Government Center at 7219
Dixie Highway and the South Central
Government Center, 7201 Outer Loop.
Joe Hardy
President
These Incredible Prices Good Thru SUn., Feb. 5.
129
each
l/2.x4'x8' COX
PLYWOOD
SHEATHING
714
sheet
A/sddin.
~~~KEROSENE
7.800 BTU
Tropic
HEATERS
5484
9884
1~
Reg. 64.84
11.300 BTU
Temp-Rite 1o_Reg. 112.84
10,500BTU
With Fan _Reg. 159.84
nr.;rru101 -"'""
each
52" Flush Mount
HI-UNE
CBUNG FAN
~eac·h
139.841
~h
Pour-In/Blow-In
Cellulose
INSULATION
&~n
\ p\ece _____.-:\
&4
2 1'\•~· - -
A84
A-Values vary The higher the A-Value. the greater the
msulaling power A-Value fact sheets on file
lit eacn
~\rma\e \ p\e~e
1'184
:Jeacn
A84
rrt Ro\ar~
2~-t eacn
oesk pMne-- ~ A84
~\\1\ \\o\der---
\l1 Rotar~
.i71 eacn
~a\\ pMn& - rrt \ p\ece
\
eacn
U\\rl P\\0118 - -
884
0
WILLIAMSON, W.VA.
0
PAINTSVILLE, KY.
U.S. 52 and Chattaroy Rd.
(304) 235-3884
Rt. 23 South at Hagerhill Exit
i606) 789-8084
Wltkdaya 7:00 a.m. ta 8:00 p.m.
Slturdaya 8.-GO 1.11. to li:OO p.m.
lundaya 8:00 a.m. to 6:00 p.m.
W1 rmrv• thl right 11 limit quantltl11.
each
each
R-19 6" Super Thick
Fiberglass
&4
8484
A
II
INSULATION
3~b. bag
Approximately A-24 at
61/4" thick
�25 1984
County Times
The
•
Section Two, Paae Elaht
Shop Piggly WiggJy this Week for ••••
Y Wl99Y
MILLIONS
OF
$$
CASH PRIZES
$$
1•
Scratch one box only!
If a prtze appears you
win it!
•••at these Convenient Locations:
Quantity Rights Reserved
North Lake Drive
U.S.D.A. Choice Whole
S18!
Stewing
Hens
wewelcome
FOOD STAMP
SHOPPERS
•
$
Slice; Fresh Pork
lb.
lb.
Brown berry
Stuffing
2fS1 09
Herb or Cornbread, 3 oz. pkg.
Piggly Wiggly Crinkle Cut
8~
~--------------------~~
Castleberry
Beef
Stew
89(:
24 oz. can
Piggly ~ggly Orange
J DICe
. •
~ggly
J atce ..
Piggly
9
9-
64 oz. c:ta.
Pineapple
-
ge
Purina
75~
46 oz. c:aa
Flavorich Swiss Style
Margarine
1 lb . pkg.
y ogart .
59(:
8 oz. c:tn.
Piggly Wiggly Buttermilk Texas
Biscuits
3fS 1
6 oz., 5 count tube
s;sl
Flavorich
Sour
Creams
2f99~
oz. eta•
Dinners
Chicken, Salisbury, Turkey,
Chop Beef, 11 oz. pkg.
Off
Stokely Small Whole
Cat
Chow
Potatoes
1hz.ean
JJSJ
Nestle Hot
Cocoa Mix
SJ29
12 envelope pkg.
(:
(:
~:.&499
1 lb. box
quet
Piggly
bag
Crackers
Ice
Cream .. ~sal.& 1 49
9~
.....i
~RAt 1 !!lpkg
Sunshine Krispy
Flavorich
Instant
~~ffee6269
Cheese
lb.
(:
Taster's Choice
Kraft
Single Sliced American
Semi-Boneless Boston Butt
With No Beans, Chili With Beans,
Hot Chili
10.5 oz. can
7.25 oz. box
4fSJ
Pick-0Chick ..... 99~
Pork
Roast . . . . . 8119
Chili
Dinners
16 oz.
39
lb.
Sandwich
Tomatoes
Potatoes21b.pkg.
$
U.S . Grade A Piggly Wiggly
Steaks . . . . 1
89~
Ltver . . . . . .
lb.
39~
8
59~
Pork Shoulder
Roast . . . . . 199
$249
Steaks . . . .
Golden Best
Details at any participating
~ggly Wiggly store!
U.S. Grade A Frozen Tip Top
Round Tips
U.S .D.A. Choice Round Tip
Save all Match
Numbers. Check tile
store poster each visit.
Match any number and
win tile prize indicated!
Prestonsburg, Ky.
SALE DATES:
Prices good January 22
tbra January 28, 1984.
s
J98
Purex
72 oz. box
Heavy Duty
Detergent
Fleecy White
Liquid69~
Bleach
...1 gallon jug
Florida Pink or White
Grapefruit 4 9~
_B roccoli . 7 9~
0 ranges41b.b•s$179·
Avocados .. 3 / 6 1
Eggplant .. 39.b.
California Fresh Green
bunch
California Navel
Stokely Shredded
Kraut
1.7 oz. can
JSJ.
Firelogs
Tasty
6 lb. pkg.
$159
Washington State Extra Fancy Red
or
APPles .... 59~
Nutritious
~
---!
-·
�r_W:ed::ne~~~a~y=·:J:a:nu:a:~::2:5:·:1:9:8:4::::::::::::::::::::::::::;;;-----------------T~he~~~o~~~C~o~u~n~~~T~Im~e~s~----------------------~----------------------- ~..ction Three, Page One
Security
Fire
Telephone
Intercom
OLM Alumni Group
ELLIOTT
Meets at Pikeville
Contracting, Inc.
Systems Division
(ELECTRONIC)
Full Line Hardwlre Commurtlcatlons
20 Years Experience
Free Estimates
Residential-Commercial-Industrial Sales It Service
Sales Manager Gene D. Justice
Prestonsburg 886-2781
Pikeville 432-0033
1-800-422-1083
CCTV
MBR. NFPA-Kentucky Cert. Fire Alarm Ins .
ITT Telcom. Trained Su ervlsor
l·l8·2t.
WE ARE RELOCATING
to 11 Depot Rd., Paintsville, Ky. 41240
Lose Weight To Look an
ee Good!
J. P. PARIKH, M.D.
WEIGHT LOSS PROGRAM INFORMATION
(1) As everybody has different reasons for gaining weight, we
wortl on an individual basis. For this reason there are no fixed
rules to follow. We do use the following:
A. Ortho Molecular Nutrition. B. Exercises.
C. Behavior Modification.
D. Supportive Psychotherapy.
E. Medication (depending on oar judgement and your choice.)
(2) For your first office visit we obtain your completfl history on
weight, culture, family personllity st111cture.
(3) During your second office visit, the following procedures are
performed:
A. Complete physical examination.
B. Complete blood tests (to insure no disorders of the liver
kidney, thyroid, diabetes, etc.).
C. Cardiogram and chest x-ray.
After completion of the above test, each patient is given an individualized diet and instructions to follow.
(4) After your second visit you are ready to start your diet We
will then check you after one week and once or twice a week
thereafter, depending upon your individual requirements.
(5) You don't need any will power on
o~r
program.
(6) On this program most patients don't feel weak, dizzy, tirnd,
starved or sick in any way.
(7) When you are losing weight we try
to make you realize how
you gained the weight and last but most important: TtACH
YOU TO KEEP YOUR WEIGHT WHERE YOU WANT!!!!!
For Further lnfonnation and Appointments
Call (606) 789-5407 or 789-5415
Office Hours: Monday-Friday; Mornlngs-8:30-2:30 Afternoons-3:30-7:30
• OUR NEW LOCATION IS 11 DEPOT ROAD, THE OLD
SHREE Jl MEDICAL CENTER IN PAINTSVILLE, KY.
Former students and teachers of Our
Lady of the Mountains, Paintsville,
didn't just socialize at their first official
alumni gathering. Coupled with the
reminiscing and celebration of their reunion were the formation of an alumni
organization and election of its first
officers.
Father Frank Osburg, pastor of St.
Michael's, Paintsville, gave the
welcome. Randy Burchett, president of
the school's board, presented the day's
activities and plans for the school's
future. He also held nominations for
president of the alumni organization.
Dr. Tom Burchett, of Winchester, was
elected president and conducted the remaining nominations and elections.
Other officers elected were George Archer, vice president, Pat Sturgill,
secretary, and Margy Kinner,
treasurer.
Named to the alumni steering committee were Father Frank Osburg, Mike
Donahoe, Mary Jo Blackburn, Sister
Alma Marie Kraemer, C.D.P., and Bill
Gordon Francis.
Former and current faculty members
were then introduced. AJnong the
former faculty were Divine Providence
Sister Mary Dempsey who had helped
rea.dy the building during one of her
hohdays before it opened in 1945 Sister
Augustina Siebenack, who w~s the
school's cook for 17 years, and Divine
Providence Sister Ruth Nadicksbend
who taught in the '60's and could yet
identify many of the students in the slide
presen~tion shown at the gathering.
The shde show brought to mind many
former students whom organizers of the
event were unable to contact or locate.
A tour followed the slide show. Alumni not only viewed the classrooms and
renovations on the first and second
floors, but were treated to a look at the
third floor also. The third floor had
always been "off limits" during the
alumni's student days because it was the
sisters' living quarters.
.Present plans call for renovations that
will make the third floor into an assembly hall and library that can also be used for Mass and other liturgical celebrations. Summer renovations converted
the second floor chapel into two classrooms.
A reception clo.Sed the day's activities
for all but the newly elected officers and
steering committee. In their first
meeting, the alumni leaders decided to
concentrate on updating their alumni list
and organization's structure.
While the alwnni do not expect to take
on fund-raising projects til later, they
are supporting the school board's current project. Local artist, -Tom
· Whitaker, has been commissioned to do
a watercolor of the school. Five hundred
prints will be issued. The first hundred
will be numbered and signed and priced at $35. The remainder will sell for $20.
To get on the alumni list or to order
a print, please contact Pat Sturgill at
886-8716 or Our Lady of the Mountains
School, 789-3661.
Prices effective thru Sunday, January 29, 1984
We reserve the right to limit quantities & correct printing errors.
age
BACON ..69c
.
PICNICS.
SAVORY
BREAKFAST
FRESH
SHOULDER
~~::
1-ll. RDLLIGA
99c ROAST$249 CUBED $249
SIRLOIN TIP
BREAKFAST
SAUSAGE ..
STEAK..
89
c
$16
PICNICS
CHUCK
SMOKED SHOULDER
LB.
49 c FRESHSAUSAGE
HOMEMADEggc
$269
STEAK..
4
9
C
89
$13
9
LIVER.....
LIVER.....
MEATS
SIRLOIN TIP
OR PIG FEET..
LB.
FRESH PORK
LB.
PRODUCE
LETTUCE
RED
GENERAL
UneServfces
RESIDENCE
(502)562-1011"
Billing questions
745·50 rr•
(502I56'H400"
I 800822-2000
I 800822-8000
I 800251-6122
1800251-6122
MultHine
1800235·5273
1800235-5273
Repair(otSouth CentraiBeil equpment obtained afrer 1/1/841
1800255-8353"" 1800272-2355
Repair of line
IGA POTATO
CHIPS . . . . . . . .
BUSINESS
745·5042"
NewSouth Central Beil Phones & Other Equipment
Single-line
1 800 544-5000
TOO or Teletype c:ustomers
I 800251·5325
Equipment ootarned before 1/1/84-Speaking
I 800 233-1222
Equipment obtaired before 1/l/84-TDD
1800833-3232
I BOO 24 7·7000
Coping with change.
By keepir~g these phone numbers handy,
you should have little or no difficulty in
obtaining the telephone services you need. We're
doing everything we can to make things as
easy as possible during this period of change.
And nothing will affect the high quality
CA.LL ON US.
of service you've come to expect from us.
Ifyou have questions or want more information, return the coupon below. Or call on us
at the Bell Answer Center, 1 800 555-5000,
toll free, 9 a.m. till9 p.m. EST. Monday through
Friday.
We're still your phone company.
Sendto· BeiiAns\l\lerCenter.P.O.Box34040,LourSVJIIe,KY40232
Information please! I'd like to know more about changes in my telephone service.
Na~
~ress
$649
GET 5-LBS. FRfE!
29-0Z. JAR
APPLE BUTTER...
1-LB. BOX
IGA SALTINE
$1 19
CRACKERS .....
sgc·
2/89
c
PEAs ....... .
16-0Z. CAN
_z,p
PARKAY
IGA AMERICAN
MARGARINE
SINGLES
1-LB.
PKG.
I
I
I
I
I
@ South Central Bell
1
L.:==~--------_:=r:~Y--_j
City.
stare
3-LB.
CAN
DAIRY
~-------------------~
1
COFFEE
I 800242·2121
• lr the number flstea is our:su1e your lOcal calling area, please dial ·· t ;·then the number Long d1s1ance numbers are toll free.
•• During 30 dayS follOWing purchase. For remainder of warranty period, conaact the manufacturer.
•
cASE
16-0Z. CAN
- I BOO 526·2000
I
I
I
I
I
6/$1
5399
MAXWELL HOUSE
99C
RED GOLD 2/99C
TOMATOES.
FRUIT COCKTAIL ..
PBX & daaa repaor
•
OR
5-LB.
BAG
16-0Z. CAN
WHOLE KERNEL
Ifyou hillllo questions about Bell equipment that was In use bdcre 1984, USI! thesl! numbl!rs:
I BOO 555-81 I I
ggc
I
$1
KRAUT ......... .3
3/$
19
IGA CORN ...
PEARscoR
69c
1800631-331 1
BerlSouth Stock lnfonnatlon
12-0Z. CANS
CORN MEAL
16-0Z. CAN
IGA SHREDDED
Disabled Customers
Speaking customers
69c
79c
TWIN-PAK BAG
Order or change
SELF-RISING FLOUR
MARTHA WHITt
TOMATO JUICE
~AO,:·
89C
IGA SOFT
DRINKS
MARTHA WHITt
RED GOLD
4
SALAD TOMATOES
GROCERY
LIMIT 3
3/$1
~::
QUART
SIZE
5-LB.
BAG
LB.
CARROTS
5/$1
89C
3/$1
NUMBER TO CALL
TYPE OF SERVICE NEED
69c
88-CT.
SIZE
7-0Z. BOX
Now, when you need help with your phone
or phone service, you should use these phone
numbers, which may be different from some
you've used in the past.
EMPEROR
RED GRAPES
YELLOW ONIONS
BAG
1-LB.
PKG.
.
DELICIOUS APPLES
5/$1
3-LB.
IGA LUNCH
YELLOW
DELICIOUS APPLES
.88-CT.
SIZE
LB.
LB.
MACARONI&
CHEESE DINNER
Use these phone numbers.
C
SLICED BEEF
LB.
Where do I find the
phone services I need?
But South Central Bell is still your phone
company. As part of a holding company called
BeiiSouth, we'll continue to provide dependable
service. For your home. And for your business.
While there are many changes taking place,
there will be little immediate effect on your basic
LB.
~:~~HB=~~
KRAFT
local home or office phone service. ln fact, you
can choose to keep your servicejust as it is. Ifyou
decide to make changes in your service, however,
you'll notice some differences.
u.
FRESH GROUND
Part of a series of messages from South Central BeU.
On January 1, 1984, South Central Bell and
other local Bell telephone companies were
separated from AT&T.
LB.
59C
12-0Z.
PKG.
$129
BUTTERMILK BISCUITS ....... Sf$1
FROZEN
16-0Z. CAN IGA
FROZEN ORANGE JUICE .....
$
09
�Section Three, Paae Two
Wednesday, .lanuary 25, 1984
NOTICE-NOW HIRING
Taking applications for full
and parr-time employment.
For appointment call:
TOP DOLLAR paid for used washers,
dryers, gas and electric ranges, working or non-working condition. We pay
more. Phone 358-9617 or 358-4009.
H8-12tpd.
1976 CHEVROLET BLAZER: Good
condition, 4 new tires. Call after 5 p.m.,
88&-6093, Eddie Shepherd.
1-18-2t.
RAISE, LEVEL, OR MOVE houses or
mobile homes. Also, do block and concrete work. Hall's House Raising. Phone
477-3242 or 447-2610.
11-9-tf.
INTERIOR AND EXTERIOR Porter
Paint. 1,000 colors to choose from. BEN
FRANKLIN STORE, phone 886-2169,
Prestonsburg.
5-16-tf.
FOR RENT: 4-room apartment near
clinic and college. 886-3154, T.E. Neeley.
ll-9-tf.
TREATED utility poles, 18ft. 20ft. and
25ft. lengths. Also fence posts at GOBLE
LUMBER CO., phone 874-9281. 4-11-tf.
DOGS FOR SALE: One cur male squirrel dog and one male registered Elk
Hound, and one female Beagle. Call
28$-9001, Bill Salisbury.
1-18-2t.
FOR GLASS REPLACEMENT, bring
your window frames to Sandy Valley
Hardware at Allen. We specialize in
Plexiglas, cut to size.
ll-9-tf.
GRAVEL FOR SALE: $8.75 per ton,
plus delivery charge. Call886-3425, JIM
cox.
6-23-tf.
HOUSE FOR SALE: Four bedrooms.
large kitchen, living, bath. entrance
hall. enclosed porch. laundry, storage.
Serious inquiries. $32,500. Cal1 358-4906.
ltpd.
NOW PAYING TOP DOLLAR for
mobile home wheels and axels. Ask for
Patty Wright, 639-4772.
12-7-tf.
1982 LINCOLN: Best deal in town. This
· one has it all! Call Patty Wright,
12-7-tf.
·RESTAURANT EQUIPMENT: Dish· 639-4772.
washer. grill. plates. trays. salt and
pepper shakers. bun wanner. popcorn 1984 MOBILE HOME: 2 bedroom, 12'
ltpd. wide, front kitchen, double windows.
popper. etc. 886-2385.
Furnished. Total electric. Only $8,995.
Call
John Wright, 432·1401.
12-7-tf.
FOR SALE: Stove. twin mattress.
hospital bed. color TV. mimeograph.
organ. 88&-2367.
ltpd.
PAYMENTS LESS THAN RENT:
14-wide mobile home. Only $10,995. Call
John Wright, 432-1401.
12-7-tf.
CHAIN LINK FENCE: Residential and
commercial. Prestonsburg Fencing
Company. Call HENRY SETSER, phone
886-2073 or 886-1556.
4-3o-tf.
FOR ALL YOUR INSURANCE-Auto,
fire, homeowners, hospitalization, life.
With o-25% savings. Call Darby and
Allen Insurance Agency, 874-2347.
12-28-tf.
FOR ALL YOUR INSURANCEuta. lire. homeowners. hospitalization.
r . With o-25% savings. Coli Darby and
Alle111:.1surance Agency,
FOR SALE: 1979 Monte Carlo: Excellent condition. Wine. Vinyl top.
$5200. Call28~9261.
l-18-2t.
I
I
I
FREE
iCH APSi
: MOBILE HOUSING, INC. :
I
FLEMINGSBURG, KY.
I
I
(606) 845·2261
I
·------------·
BUSINESS OPPORTUNITY: $50,000
to $80,000 per year. National company
based in Lexington looking for
qualified full or part-time distributors
in four-county area. If you are bored
with your job, tired of working for the
other person, call collect, 606-231-7886.
Investment covered by inventory
l-18-2t.
251 Trimble Branch Rd., Prestonsburg, just 3 blocks
from downtown In a terrific, secluded neigborhood,
with good neighbors, turn-around driveway, tastefully landscaped yard, uniquely styled freshlY painted
total redwood exterior, new windows and gutters,
striking beveled glass double doors, best of fixtures,
new carpets and floor coverings, new drapes and curtains, new wall coverings, totally modern and in new
condition. 3 bedrooms, 2 full baths, formal living room
and foyer. completely equipped kitchen, family room
with stone fireplace. over-sized one car garage. 16'x32'
sundeck. Lots of storage and half basement. PRICED TO
For more Information. call 886-3680 or 886-1416.
1-18-41.
NEW 198414' WIDE
3 Bedrooms
'12,995°0
Low Down Payment
Check This Monthly Payment At
Call Larry Keene
437-4078
ANY TYPE WILL BE MADE jo YOUR SPECIFICAnONS. FREE ESTIMATE-FREE DEUVERY
East Kentucky Roof Truss Co.
Phone 606·886-9563, Prestonsburg, Kentucky (anytime)
H.L. Setser. President
~**********************************~·
i
*
*:
:
Going Out Of Business Sale
1984 Mobile Home
3 Bedrooms, l
1
/2
Baths S
10 99 5°0
1
Payment less Than Rent
Call:
John Wright or Ollie Watts
432-1401
:
*~
~
*
*:
:
'***********************************~
·I h II
ALL NEW OFFICE SPACE for lease:
Consisting of reception - library and
four (4) connecting offices, with five (5)
assigned parking spaces. Located on
Third Avenue near the Courthouse,
downtown banks, postoffice, town center
parking lot, and the Floyd County Times
building. Ideal for physicians, attorneys,
accountants, realtors, and other
businesses and professions. Immediate
occupancy. Jim Hammond, 886-2376.
10-19-tf.
BEARCAT 210 XL POLICE SCANNER, $150. Kelvinator air conditioner,
10,200 BTU, $200. Both like new. Emerson stereo, $75. 285-5047, Bobby Yates.
1-18-2t.
FOR SALE: Old German fiddle, about
150 years old. Fair tone, good highs and
fair lows. Call 358-9433, David Hoover.
l-18-2t .
WALLEN'S TRADING POST & TIRE
SALES. Retails & wholesales : New & used tires, wheels, caps, lugs, wheel
covers, batteries, tubes, auto parts,
stereos & boosters, tubes & much more.
We trade for most anything of value
874-2289.
l-4-4tpd .
Have you up~dated your personal insurance to meet todays need · If not,
Call us, we can insure the entire family
from 0 to 80. Call Sam Wallen Insurance
Agency. I have been serving the insurance needs of Ky. for over thirty
years. Phone 874-2289.
1-4-4tpd.
in Prestonsburg
.Phone 886-1312
REPO CLEANERS
1T. ·. :
"otl~~'-'-~
s s~1'1 u , ·
and up.
Clarissa Conley
Only 3 left. Latest model. New
5-year warranty.
l
Call 478-9407
NO EXPERIENCE NEEDED! We oroon IIEH
and WOIIE.H No need 10 qurt P<tlllenl jOb
Full 0< "-1-11""'
DOT Cert~oc.
Piacemenl
lr""""''
l -11·2\pd.
An equal opportunity employer.
11-2-tf.
WILL DO TYPING
OR SHORTHAND.
ENVIRONMENTAL MONITORIN
SERVICE, INC.
15 YEARS EXPERIENCE.
SAMPUNG AND ANALYSIS OF
WATER AND WASTE WATER
CONTACT NORMA WRIGHT
AT 886-9181
OR 886·2527
12-21-st.
MAKE MORE MONEY WORKING
OVERSEAS IN COUNTRIES UKE KUWAIT.
SAUDI ARABIA, VENEZUELA. ETC. ALSO
POSITIONS ARE AVAILABLE IN NOR·
THERN REGIONS OF CANADA. ALASKA
AND THE NORTH SEA. PERMANENTITEM·
PORARY WORKERS NEEDED ARE
TRADESPEOPLE, LABORERS, PROFES·
SIONALS ETC. FOR FULL INFORMATION
SEND A SELF-ADDRESSED, STAMPED
ENVELOPE TO:
Overseas. Dept. !5032,
701 Washington Street
BUFFALO, N.Y. 1420!5
USA
1-11-51..
Remodeling, Siding, Roofing,
Heating & Air Conditioning, Addl·
tions, Garages & Custom Homes
RESIDENTIAL.
BUILDERS
()LLIE JONES.
(606) 874-9314
or 874-9633
TROY'S
CABINET
CENTER
BOB WHITE
CONSTRUCTION
Box 282, Prestonsburg, Ky.
Dozers • Backhoes
• Dump Trucks
Call 886-3544
Stock or Custom-Built Cabinets
Kitchen Cabinets, Vanities
Thermador Appliances
on Display
Free Estimates
886-9551
Discount Prices
Call 478-5344
~~- Badger Construction Company
~ssociation.
LABORATORY MEETS W
PHONE 789-3258
tr.
U.S. 23 So., Palotswille
NELSON'S
CONSTRUCTION CO.
886·2993 or 886-8549
US 23, lvel, Ky.
• Experienc~ • Good Machine
• Ruse111ble Rates • Free Estimates
Healt•
STATE OSM l EP. REGULAnOIIS.
Call Ted Nelson. Jr.
FREE ESTIMATES
Dozer Work
• Bacteriological Analysis of Do•estic l Well
Witer Supplies • £ontplelio1 tf Qurterly
II .P.D.E.S. F01111s b Re~~uired By State I EPA
• Enriron•ental lrapact Sbtea~ents I
AssesSilents
Member of •sr 1111 I The ~tional EnYin111111etl
We do: • Dozer OJ!d Loader Work
• Sewage Systems Installed • Mobile
Home Moving 6: Furnace Repolra
REASONABLE RATES.
Prestonsbur&, ~y.
1-
FOR RENT
OFFICE
SPACE
INSTRUCTION
LEARN TO DRIVE
TRACTOR-TRAILER
$8
1-14-tf.
OUSLEY
C()NCRETE
CDNSTRUCTION
COM'MERCIAL & RESIDENTIAL
Bldg. Floors • Sidewalks
footers _• Driveways
Patios .. Basements
E~pos~ Pea
Gravel
• ·Free Estimates •
JAMES OUSLtY
FOR RENT: 4-room unfurnished apartment, $200 rent, $150 deposit. Couples only, no pets. Call Jeanette Hubbard,
886-2557.
5-18-tf.
FOR RENT: 4-room furnished apartment. Prefer nice couple. Also 1970
Dodge Coronet station wagon, $300.
Call358-4458.
l-18-2tpd.
Roof Trusses for
Commercial & Residential
Purposes.
:
:*
CARPENTRY WORK: Home building
and remodeling. Complete interior and
exterior. Masonry and concrete work,
all types interior and exterior painting.
Also have spray equipment to spray
barns and metal buildings. free
estimates. Will furnish references. 15
years' experience. Call 886-8896,
anytime. Robie Johnson, Jr. 9-21-tf.
PIANOS: Used medium-size upright
pianos, rebuilt and reconditioned by
Kentucky's only used piano dealer.
From $600 and up. Pianos tuned. Call
606-365-9779, Ben Auxier, Jr.
1-18-2t.
'19967
or 358-9348
Ralph O'Quinn
DAMRON NEW & USED FURNITURE: Living room suites starting at
$159. A-1 appliances. Rt. 122, Drift, Ky.
Phone 377-2071.
5-25,tf.
FOR SALE OR TRADE: Cardox auger,
conveyor, 24-inch steel. Phone 874-9033.
11-24-tf.
SELL!
CALL 358-4520
FOR SALE: Cabin at Cave Run Lake.
Three bedrooms, air conditioned, all
new carpet. Reasonable price. Call
784-7250 or 784-9203, J.C. SPENCER.
5-25-tf.
APARTMENT FOR RENT: New Allen
on 4-lane U.S. 23, midway between
Pikeville and Prestonsburg. 2-bedroom,
completely furnished, ground floor.
Fireplace, dishwasher, washer, dryer,
microwave, disposal, trash compactor,
central heat and air. All utilities paid,
including trash removal, city water and
cable TV, but not private telephone service. Singles or couples only. No
children, no pets. Available November
1. Jim Hammond, 886-2376.
1o-19-tf.
BEAUTIFUL HOME FOR SALE
Wonted: Responsible party to take over
low monthly payments on spinet plano.
Can be seen locally. Write Credit
Manager: P.O. Box 537 Shelbyville, IN
461761-4-4\pd.
•Free estimates •Insured
FOR SALE: 1!r75 Mercedes-Benz 450-SL,
excellent condition. Metalic green. New
tf.
top. Price $20,500. Call 686-8506.
Open after church on Sunday for :
I your inspection. Weekdays 8-6. 1
CHEAPS
consider
prices and :
quality, you'll lose money.
1
I
300 mile delivery I
MOBILE HOME
MOVING SERVICE
HOUSE FOR SALE: Full basement,
forced air, natural gas. Call after 4,
886-3860, Ann Slone.
9-14-tf.
and set up on foundation. ~
Payments to suit your needs. I
I
Spinet-Console Plano Bargain
358-9446
IMMEDIATE EMPLOYMENT: Large
regional manufacturing co. has opened
an office in Prestonsburg, Ky. We need
aggressive hardworkjng individuals
who are interested in a career opportunity as a manufacturing representative. Income $30,000 plus excellent fringe benefits. Must have serviceable
auto. Call Greg Kendziorski.
606-874-8171.
l-2~lt .
:
CALL 478-2882
1-25 tf
CUSTOM-MADE drapes and matching
bedspreads by R.W. Norman and
McCanless. Measured to fit'. BEN
FRANKLIN STORE, phone 886-2169, or
SALLY GOEBEL, phone 886-2657.
5-lll-tf.
Come See Compare! If you buy
1 a new mobile home and don't I
I
sgg & UP
CALL 886-1640
INCOME TAX PREPARATION
FOR RENT: Rooms, weekly, monthly,
nightly. Also waterbeds available.
886-2385, 886-9310, Sandy Valley Motel,
N. Lake Drive.
1-5-tf.
IPhona 874-22581
KIRBY SWEEPERS
DECKS
ROOfiNG
FENCES
STORAGE BLDGS.
ETC.
PERMA-SHIELD Anderson windows.
All styles, 20 percent off regular price
at GOBLE LUMBER CO., phone
874-9281.
4-11-tf.
CLEAN FURNACE FILTERS save
energy dollars and service call costs.
Sandy Valley Hardware S&T at Allen is
your one-stop furnace filter headquarters.
ll-3o-tf.
I
•
•
•
•
•
Drilling Co.
Allen, Ky.
1·4-11.
FOR SALE
WATCH REPAIR: If you want the best
job, bring watch repairs and jewelry
repairs
to
WRIGHT
BROS.
JEWELERS.
11-12-tf.
I
I
I
r
5-25-tf.
LIGHT FIXTURES: 1 z price at GOBLE
LUMBER COMPANY, phone 874-9281.
4-11-tf.
HEY LOOK! We repair washers,
dryers, rangeS, all types appliances.
Parts ordered for you. Call 358-4009 or
358-9617.
11-3-tfpd.
12-21 tf.
REMODELING
PAINTING
DRYWALL
TEXTURING
\fAlL PAPERING
'01 All YOIII HOMI IMI'IIOVfMflfJ lllfOS,
FOR SALE : Two-story, ll-room apartment building, $40,000. At Twin Bridges,
Martin, on 100x50 corner lot. Call J .R.
Samons, 285-3914.
12-14-tf.
.874-2347.
E.O.E.
& HOME flt'PROVEMENTS
•
•
•
•
•
Most wells drilled in half a
day by Rotary Machine.
~inzer
874-9041
RAY HOWELL BUILDING
Water Well
Drilling
Backhoe Work
Olan's .Construction
• Experienced • Good Machine
• Ruse111ble Rates • Free Estimates
1-
METAL
BUILDINGS.
886-9551
!:~ Badger Construction Company
Septic Tanks
Installed end Hooked-up
• All Material Fwnished • Free Esti1111tes
1-
886-9551
!:~Badger Construction Company
Ph.: 874-2391
Bob Thompson
HITCHCOCK
REPAIR SERVICE
Office:
1-18-2\pd.
24-Hour
Emergency Service
TWO NEW
DOUBLEWIDE
SPECIALS
• Heating • Refrigeration
• Laundry & Cooking
Equipment
PARTS
AVAILABLE
PHONE:
OR
886-1473
VIDEO MACHINES
.
-----1\voN~----
1-4·51.
Call: 886-2082
874-2246 or 285-3928
A\l()fl
z: __
L-----":. ____
RICHMOND LOCATION:
New Floor Pion, 19M, !5!5x24, 1224-Sq.
Ft.. 3 Bed. 2 l!lath, Garden Tub. Utility
Room, Total Electric, All Walk-In
Closets, Cathedral Ceiling. Wood
Siding, Shingle Roof, Boy Window In
Master Bedroom, Fireplace, Frost-Fret
Refrigerator, Stove, Deluxe Carpet I
Pad, Side Gable. all other Deluxe Options. ONLY $21.99!5.00. See this home
of Exit ll97 Oft 1-75, Halfway between
Lexington I Richmond. Phone (606)
624·0200.
GREAT AMERICAN HOMES
Specialized sales
training helps you
develop professional
business skills.
$15,995.00
New 1984. 3 Bed. 2 Both. Garden Tub,
Total Electric, Wood-Siding. Shingle
Roof. Cathedral Ceilings, Beams. Stove.
Refrlg.. Hou11 Doors a: Wlndowt,
Carpet, Delivered anywhere and set.
You choose colors. Veterans no down
payment. Others pay $1700.00 down
and $217.00 per month. Fireplaces
available. TREEHAVEN HOMES. Office In
Clubhouse by swimming pool. Between
Exit ll87 and Exit ll94 off 1·64. Winchester. Ky. Phone (608) 744-n82.
1-4-5\.
....
10 other doubles on display, 50 new 14
wldes. 20 reposse11ed homes. 50 Used homes. V.A. no down payment. FHA
loans with 10% down.
NOTA
HOBBY.
A CAREER!
SCOTT
DOUBLEWIDE
BEAUTIFUL BUtLDING
LEXINGTON LOCATION:
New 1984. 3 Bed, 2 l!lath. Solid Con·
structlon, Garden Tub, Total Electric,
Wood Siding. Shingle Roof. Cathedral
Ceiling. Stove. Frost-Free Refrigerator,
House Doors I Windows, Carpet.
Delivered I Set-up. ONLY $16,995.00.
See this home at !537 New Circle Rd••
Lexington. Phone (606) 293·1809.
886-6900
For location50/50 basis-Mrs. Pac Man.
Popeye. Gallaga. and all the
rest.
Call 606-298-7226 or
nlghts-606-298·4717.
Evans Amusement 12_14_81 .
439-4866
"" ~6-8373
.Phone
Buildigg S~one Co.
(Inc.)
MANY YARIETt£5 OF BEAUTIFUL
BIILDINC STONE FOR THE HOlE
q)MHfONt YENE£RING
• MnBL£ LANDSCAP£ CHIPS
• PORTABLE CONCRETE SliPS
• VERMONT SLATE
Located On Old u:s. ·:c~..,
In New Allen
COLLINS SECURITY SERVICE
• LICENSED • BONDED • INSURED
• 18 YEARS SECURITY EXPERIENCE •
• 24-HOUR GUARD SERVICE •
(606) 886-9867 OR 886-3665
_!-~2~1
.IESSIE COLLINS, President
1-11-tf
•
�Wednesday, January 25, 1984
Th• Floyd County Times
FOR RENT · 2-bedroom trailer. one
mile from Martin. $250 month . $100
deposit. 886-3920
1-25-2tpd.
SEll. IT RWT.I
BW IT 11/tJIIT.I
FOR RENT-Execut1ve Apartments,
lliJ}.ew Allen, 2-bedroom, upstairs apart• ent, completely furnished including
TV. Fireplace, dishwasher, central heat
and air: all utilities paid including cable
TV. Located on 4•lane U.S. 23 midway
between Pikeville and Prestonsburg. No
pets; no children. Jim Hammond
886-2376.
1-11-tf.
APARTMENT FOR RENT -OM
bedroom, furnished kitchen, central air
and heat. All utilities furnished. Mounin Parkway, near Prestonsburg. $300
month. Cleo DeRossett, 886~168. day, or
886-13('8, night.
1-11-tf.
MINI-WAREHOUSE AVAILABLE.
Convenient location. Two sizes
available. Located on U.S. 23 at
Harold, Ky Phone 432-8181. After 5:00.
phone 478-9546.
12-14-6tpd.
BOLEN'S MOVING & DELIVERY
AERVICE: We move a house full or
..reliver one piece- anywhere. Phone
358-9617.358-4009.
12-14-12tpd.
All classified ads scheduled
for only one week, must be
paid In advance. All classl·
lied ads with only telephone
numbers must be paid In ad·
vance.
CLASSIFIED
ADVERTISING RATES
10c Per word, If paid In advance
15c Per word on cha,.e ~~ecount
($2.50 minimum)
Dl..,lay claaslfled ad.,.rtlaln&
$3.00 per c:olumn lnc:h.
Delldllne for ada: 4 p.m. Monday,
Tires at prices you can aff:>rd. Computer
wheel balancing. Westefn wheels at sale
prices, friendly service. Where can you
find this and more? Jim's Tire Shop, of
course. 285-5058. Maytown.
1-ll-3t.
FOR SALE: Reconditioned washer::.,
dryers, gas and electric ranges, furniture, new and used parts for all
makes and models. Refrigeration
parts ordered for you. All guaranteed
60 days. For cheap appliances and
parts, plus a good guarantee, call us,
358-9617 or 358-4009.
1-18-12tpd.
2-BEDROOM HOUSE FOR RENT.
Grethel area. 478-2644, 432-1283, Dewayne Hall.
1-18-2t.
FREE PUPPIES: Huskie mix, black
and white. Free to good home. 886-9063,
Ned Pillersdorf.
1-18-2t.
1982 HARLEY DAVIDSON 1.000 Sportster for sale or trade of equal value.
478-2644, Dewayne Hall.
1-18-2t.
FOR SALE: 12x65, 1979 mobile home.
All electric, air conditioned, set up,
underpinned, furnished, $6300. 886-5985
anytime.
1-18-2tpd.
NOW BUYING: Used washers, dryers.
ranges, refrigerators. Working or nonworking condition. Phone 358-9617.
ll-16-12tpd.
Three year batteries $79.95. Computer
wheel balancing (most wheels ) $3 99.
Free valves with each tire purchased.
Where? Jims Tire Shop. 285-5058. 1-11-3t.
7-ROOM HOUSE FOR SALE in
Grethel. Also 12 acres land at Craynor
with 300x150 level with footer and
pump house. Drilled well and ready to
build. 432-1283, 478-2644, Dewayne Hall.
1-18-2t.
SELLING AT WINTER PRICE: 1981
Honda Silver Wing GL-500. Fully dressed, AM-FM cassette, cruise, 2 helmets,
d detachable trunks and rear seat.
ust see! $1995. Call. Jim Clarke,
478-2614.
1-25-4t.
FOR SALE-25 acres, 2 bedroom house
and 22 x 46 out building, 478-5205.
1-11-3t-pd.
FOR SALE: 1974 Ford Econoline van
with 1979 motor, $1800. Call 886-3181,
Lane Dutton.
1-18-2t.
FOR SALE: una Cherokee 4x4, 36 000
miles, $35\10. Call after 4. · 478-9912,
Larry Kimbler.
1-25-4t.
DESPERATE?? Looking for a
specialist who is trained and equipped
to repair your wrecked Toyota, Datun, Volkswagen, or other foreign or
itized bodied car? Call Custom
Coach Building for an appointment at
874-2802.
1-25-4t.
CARP:CNTRY-CONCRETE WORK :
Sidewalks, patios, driveways, etc. Also
Coronado stove. Seven years' experience. Free estimates. Laryl Branham , 452-2403 or 452-2368.
1-25-4tpd.
HAULING/MOVING: Commercial or
residential, local or long distance. Big
foot enclosed trailer. Low, low rates.
rices negotiable. Phone 789-4545.
1-25-4tpd.
FOR RENT: Two bedroom trailer,
$300 monthly, partially furnished,
carpeted, air conditioner, washer and
dryer and garden space available.
Phone 874-9802.
1-25-4tpd.
JAP AI\"ESE SWORDS WANTED: Pay; g $300 minimum ea. Write Winter,
4 Patton, Springfield, Dl. 62702. (217)
544-7611, 523-8729.
1-25-4tpd.
SALES AGENT WANTED: Nationally
known calendar manufacturer and
specialty advertising company offers
an opportunity for an industrious selfstarter for full or part-time work. We
need a sales oriented person to present
our exclusive calendars, business gifts "
and extensive advertising specialty
assortment to firms within the
siness community. The Thos. D.
1 urphy Co. IS a pioneer in the advertising field since 1888, so you know we're
here to stay. If you can organize your
own time and determine your own success, write: Pat Murphy, The Thos. D.
Murphy Co., P .O. Bo}{ 382, Red Oak,
Iowa 51566, or call 712~23-2591, Ext. 51.
1-25-4t.
FOR RENT: Furnished trailer. near
a llege. Also, one bedroom efficiency
""WPartment with fireplace and furnished kitchen . Security deposit and lease
required. No pets please. Carlos E .
1-25-tf.
Neeley, 886-8565.
FOR SALE: Set of dishes, scuptured
Daisy by Poppy Trail. Service for 8 (40
pc. set>, plus 13 serving pieces. StiU
open stock. Price, ~50. Call 886-3181,
Lane Dutton.
1-18-2t.
HOUSE FOR SALE: 3-bedroom,living
m, dining room, kitchen, utility,
throom, with fuU-size basement.
Located in Maytown, near school and
between two churches. Reasonable
price. 358-4419, 285-3225, Weyman
McGuire.
1-18-3t.
LADIES: Unlimited earning potential.
Become an Undercoverwear Agent.
Sell lingerie at home parties. Have a
party and see what it is like.
jluaranteed fun, no obligation. Call
• ndi at 886-2420 or 265-3654. 1-18-3tpd.
FOR SALE: 2-bedroom, 12x55 trailer,
underpinned, furnished, central air,
gas heat. Call between 4:30 and 7 p.m.,
886-3921, C.R. Baird.
1-18-3t.
TRAILER FOR RENT in Allen. No
pets, no children. Prefer singles or
couples. Deposit required. Call
874-2141. After 5, call 874-2114. Akers
Trailer Court.
l-18-3t.
•
EW 3-BEDROOM HOME for sale
near Clark School in Woodland Hills
Subdivision. 1440 sq. ft. brick, 3 bedrooms, 2 full baths, living room with
fireplace, large built-in kitchen, dining
room and utility room with lots of
cabinet space. Central heat and air
conditioning, fully carpeted. Concrete
patio, beautifully landscaped Ready
for immediate occupancy Call
, 7-6405.
1-18-3tpd.
GERMAN SHEPHERD PUPPIES for
sale: $50 each. Garnis Martin, 358-9178.
1-l8-3t.
Section Three, Pase Three
CLASSIFIED ADVERTISERS
PLEASE NOTE!
Classified ads will no longer be accepted after
12 noon, Mondays. For the coming week, these ads
are also accepted on Thursday, Fridays, and
Saturdays.
We trust this wm not unduly Inconvenience you,
and we will greatly appreciate your cooperation.
FOR SALE-Honda XR 350 motorcycle.
'83 model-excellent condition. Phone
874-2259.
. 1-11-3t-pd.
FARM FOR SALE- 200 acres. Near
Lake Cumberland. 2-story coloma)
house, 5-miles from Somerset. Call at
night 606-382-5643. Larry G. Vanhook.
l-ll-4t.
FOR SALE : 600 Mack coal truck, new
X1 tires. Phone 285-!1496, Tom Williams.
1-ll-1t.
FOR SALE : 12x60 3-bedroom trailer.
plywood floors. new furnace . new
water heater. 358-9617. Mack Bolen.
12-21-6t.
WOMAN will do your house work and
any odd jobs around the home. Call
886-3743
1-18-2tpd.
FOR SALE: Trailer and lot at Stanville, Ky. , near Betsy Layne School,
out of flood wne. Call 478-9382 .
1-18-2tpd.
FOR SALE : 1983 doublewide ,
3-bedroom, 2 full baths, 20x20 carport,
20x20 and 8x12 decks, $24,000. 874-8941,
Jim Wipp.
1-ll-4t-pd.
FOR SALE: Realistic PA system,
mikes, speakers and stands included.
Almost new, $900. Call 3'7H785 after 3
1-18-2tpd.
p.m.
THEPAPERBACKBOOKSTORE,116
Francis Court, next to the courthous~.
We exchange and sell paper back books.
We have thousands of paper back books
10¢ each or 15 for $1.00. All other books
1.2 price.
l-11-3t-pd.
NOW OPEN: Joseph's Garage and
Service Station. At West Prestonsburg
in front of Hurshel Owens Trailer
Park. No job too big 01 too small.
Special this week- Oi1 change and
filter and lube, $16.95. Disc. brakes and
on most cars, $18.95. Tune up most
cars, $18.95. Let us fix your car while
you are at work. Pick up and delivery
service. Call at 886-9851. Open 8 a.m . to
9p.m ., 6 days a week. Sunday-11 a.m.
to 5 p.m. Owner- Lightning Joseph.
1-18-2t:pd.
FOR SALE OR RENT-1979 2 bedroom
Fairmont trailer. 2 miles up Iianiels
Creek at Banner. Call 874-9572. Dallas
Justice.
1-ll~t
SALISBURY USED FURNITURE. Two
miles up Arkansas. 285-3549. 1-11-St.
BOLEN'S APPLIANCE REPAffi &
PARTS : Repairs on washers, dryers,
gas and electric ranges. New and used
parts. We got it or we can get it, any
make or model. For all your appliance
repair and parts, call us, 358-9617 or
358-4009.
1-18-12tpd.
FOR SALE: Three bedroorr. brick
home. Located in Auxier. Must sell,
owner relocated. For more infonnalion, call 789-6830 after 5 p.m. B.
Prater.
1-18-4t.
UNFURNISHED APARTMENTS for
rent in Prestonsburg. For more information, call 886-2094. After 5, call
886-2132.
l-18-4tpd.
EFFICIENCY APARTMENT FOR
RENT: Suitable for working lady or
gentleman. Sleeping room in private
home. Siamese kittens for sale.
886-9636.
1-18-2tpd.
DAN'S APPLIANCE REPAIR: We
repair washers, dryers and stoves. We
will make service calls. All work and
parts guaranteed. 358-9892 anytime.
1-18-2tpd.
FOR RENT: 2-bedroom unfurnished
apartment. Located at Town Branch.
All electric, city water, TV cable.
Phone ~366.
1-18-2tpd.
FOR SALE : 2-bedroom brick home at
Harold, Ky. Completely fenced lot.
Phone 478-9991 or 478-5836.
1-18-4tpd.
WANTED: Plumbing jobs of any kind.
We fix broken water lines, wrap lines,
set water heater pumps, etc. For free
estimate, phone 886-95'77 anytime. 10
percent discount for senior citizens. All
work backed by a guarantee. Call us
first or we both lose.
1-18-2tpd.
FOR RENT: Trailer lot, M&D Trailer
Park. Located at lower end of Auxier.
Call collect, 513-54"-2793 for information, Monday thru Saturday. No Sunday business.
H8-4t.
FOR RENT : One bedroom furnished
trailer One or two people only. No
children, no pets. Call 886-2145 .
1-25-2tpd.
HOUSE FOR SALE: 4-bedrooms, 2
baths. For information, call or write
Roy Butcher, 3431 Marvel Ave., Titusville, Fla. 32796. Phone 305-268-0445.
1·18-4t.
FOR SALE: 1983 doublewide,
3-bedroom, 2 full baths, 20x20 carport,
20X20 and 8X12 decks, $23,000. 874-8942,
Jim Wipp.
1-18-1tpd.
3-BEDROOM HOME FOR SALE near
school ;., Maytown. Located on three
lots. Central heat, full basement.
Adjoining building, 16'x24' with full
basement.· Good neighborhood,
beautifully landscaped. Complete
fence. In the mid-30's. Call 285-3494.
l-18~tpd.
USED FURNITURE. GUARANTEED
APPLIANCES. Moore's Discount Furniture. Located about 3 miles from
Martin on Rt. 122. Low prices. Call
285-9354.
1·11-stpd.
BOLEN'S APPLIANCE REPAIR :
Repairs on washers, dryers, gas and
electric ranges, 12 years' experience
All work and parts guaranteed 60 days.
For fast, clean, and efficient service,
call on us, 358-9617 or 358-4009.
l-18-12tpd.
FOR RENT: 2-bedroom furnished
apartment, $300 per month. $100
deposit. 836-6030, Linda Vanover .
1-25-2t.
BUSINESS FOR SALE: Grocery store .
gas station and -carry-out. Three bedroom brick home. Ph . 606-874-2314.
1-25-2tpd.
CRAFT SKILLS: Sewing skill, woodcraft, artistic talent. Opportunity for
you to market your products and/or
teach youth and others in your community. Share in tomorrow. Write
Christian Project, P .O. Box 1119, Martin, KY. 41649.
1-25-2t.
FOR SALE: Two coolers, one upright
with glass double doors : one chest
type. Call 886-6030. Linda Vanover
1-25-2t
FOR RENT : Trailer lot. M&D Trailer
Park. Located at lower end of Auxier.
Call 886-2965 for informahon, Monday
thru Saturday. No Sunday business.
1-25-31.
MACK HARVEY'S GARAGE located
one mile up Buck's Branch off new Ky.
80 at Martm . All types mechanic work
Free estimates. Ca 11 285-3928. 1-25-41.
WILL BABYSIT in my hom~. one to
three years ol". I have references. you
have references. 886-9918.
1-25-2tpd.
FOR SALE: 12x60 2-bedroom mobile
home. Central air conditioning. blocks.
underpmning, steps. electric service.
Good condition. $6000. Phone 874-2879
1-25-2tpd.
FOR LEASE : Building suitable for 2
office spaces and one reception room
or small warehouse. Owner will fix inside structure for either. Located at intersection of U.S. 23 and 80 and Ky . 3.
Centrally located to serve Pikeville,
Prestonsburg and Beaver Creek area.
Call Curtis Hatfield, 874-9939. 1·25-2tpd.
FOR SALE : 1983 Patriot mobile home.
t4x60, 2-bedroom . Nice, like new.
$12,000. Also, would be interested in
trading toward house and land in this
area . Call886-6342.
1-25-2tpd.
FOR SALE : Two bedroom mcbile
home. Air cond.iti::ming, underpinning,
blocks. electric service and steps.
Good condition. $3500. Phone 874-2879.
1-25-2tpd.
FOR SALE : 1974 Corvette. Red.
automatic, power steering, A/ C, new
engine. Excellent condition . Call
886-3451 after 6 o'clock .
1-25-2tpd.
LOST : White garbage bag full of
clothes. Put into wrong white Eagle
jeep outside Unemployment Office
January 16. Finder please call 285-3939
or 285-9055.
1-25-2tpd.
INCOME TAX PREPARATION, Bookkeeping. Call886~51.
1-25-2tpd.
FOR SALE: 3-bedroom home with 2
full-siLe baths and extra large lot. Call
886-3394.
1-25-2tpd.
FOR SALE · 100 acres land. Old Addis
property on Doty Creek, McDowell .
Land is at head of hollow, lots of
timber, great for hunting . Must sell.
First $9800 gets it. 703-425-1249.
1-25-2tpd.
FOR RENT : On Arnold Avenue. Basement efficiency with outside entrance.
Utilities paid Furnished, including
TV Suitable for one person . No pets,
please. $225 per month, $100 seruritv
deposit. Call 886-9937. Davi~ .
1-25-2t.
FOR SALE : 600 R model Mack tractor
with 26-ft. aluminum dump trailer.
$15,000 or best offer. Call Fred or Cliff
Branham at 874-9911.
1-25-2t.
Keep America Strong"Weld It"
QUALITY SERVICE WORK : Frozen
or busted pipes. non-msulated pipes.
Contact .hm an ytime. Phone 886-1570.
Oge year guarantee
1tpd.
FOR IMMEDIATE SALE : 198214'x58'
2-bedroom mobile home. Owner transferred and selling for pay-<>ff of $9Z76
Call478-9798 or 478-9337.
ltpd.
FOR SALE : FIREWOOD. 886-9460.
ltpd.
BOAT FOR SALE : Runs great. Shown
by appointment only Looks great. runs
great. 886-9914.
ttpd.
FOR RENT : One 2-bedroom mobile
home. Also one 3-bedroom mobile
home . Unfurnished except for
refrigerator and stove. Call Ted
Nelson, 886-2993.
1tpd.
WANT TO BUY used t railer. 2 or 3 bedrooms , furnished or unfurnished,
already set up. Call886-1752.
ltpd .
PUPPIES TO GIVE AWAY: Irish Setter cross with Labrador. Good family
pet, six weeks old. Call285-9569. · ltpd.
FOR SALE : Singer sewing machine,
Touch & Sew model , Zig-Zag, $50. Call
886-8764.
ltpd
NEED CASH? We buy estate gold and
silver. Pay top prices. Call for appoin tment. Also make small loans to $2000.
Call the Money Store. 886-9914.
ltpd .
TEXAS OIL COMPANY needs mature
person for short tnps surrounding
Floyd County. Contact customers. We
train . Write T.L. Dickerson, Pres.,
Southwestern Petroleum, Box 789, Ft.
Worth, Tx. 76101.
1-25-lt.
FOR SALE : Safes, vaults and money
safes. All in good condition. Call
452-4113after5p.m .
ltpd.
2-BEDROOM TRAILER FOR RENT :
Behind C&M Carpet Co . on Route 1428.
1tpd
Call 874-2421.
T R A I L ER FOR RENT : 14x70 .
beautiful, Auxier Heights, $250.
886-9914.
ltpd .
UNITED SERVICE CO.
CEIUIFIED WELDERS
24 HOUR SERVICE
Portable Welding
874-8166
285-9550
I 25 4tpJ
IMMEDIATE
EMPLOYMENT
Large regional manufacturing company
has opened an office In Prutonsburg,
Ky. We need aggressin hard working
Individuals who ore Interested In a
career opportunity as a manufacturing
representative. Income $30,000.00
plus excellent fringe beneftts. Must have
nrvlceable auto.
Call: Greg Kem1zlorskl
808-874-8171
l 25 21.
NEW
TOWNHOUSES
FOR RENT
Goble Townhouses. Two-bedroom,
unfurnished, total electric. SJSO per
month, plus deposit. Couples only.
PHONE 874-9281
lil..
874-2318 after 5.
30
40
50
X
X
X
50
50
75
X
X
X
12 $4,071
15 $5,586
15 $9,679
APPLIANCE REPAIR
We repair all brandswashers, dryers and stoves.
• Guaranteed parts and work.
• Same day service.
• Discount to dealers.
• Fast dependable service.
CALL 3!58·9892 ANYTIME
1·25-lt
DAVE SHEPHERD'S
BOOKKEEPING AND
TAX SERVICE
•
•
•
•
corporate and Individual
Federal and State Tax Returns
Financial statements
Quarterly Returns
Larger SIZes Ava•lable
1-800-241-8339
ARCO STEEL BUILDINGS
Good Service-Reasonable Rates
After !5:00 886·3889
HOUSE FOR RENT : Five rooms and
bath in Garrett. Call358-4154, J.D. Pritchard.
1-25-2t.
EMPLOYMENT: Jenkins Community
Hospital now accepting applications
for R .N., O.R. technicians, part-time
CRNA, and a medical records ART or
RRA consultant. Send resume to
Jenkins Community Hospital, P.O.
Drawer 472, Jenkins, Ky., 41537, Attn :
Director of Human Resources. E .O.E .
1·25-2t.
f'OR SALE : 1974 Ford F250 pickup,
automatic 360 engine, doesn't rattle or
smoke. $700 firm . Ken McAskill,
358-9133.
1-25-2t.
FOR RENT: Two mobile homes with
two bedrooms, fully furnished, 4/ 10of a
m i le from Ky. 80 . Telephone
606-886-9121 during the hours of 8:30
a .m . thru 5::ll p.m. Go0<1 neighborhood, blacktop road. T&R Rentals,
P .O. Box 191, Prestonsburg, Ky 41653
l-2~2t .
NEW FURNITURE FOR SALE: Call
874-9329.
1-25-2tpd.
AVON IS LOOKING FOR three ladies
who are willing to work 40 hours per
week and earn $500 every two weeks.
Must be 18 years of age and drive. Call
285-3928, 10a.m . to6p.m .
1-25-2t.
WANT TO SWAP 1974 Ford F250 pickup, automatic 360 for smaller half-ton
pickup. Ken McAskill. 358-9133. 1-25-2t.
FOR SALE : 14x70 mobile hom·e . Call
886-9065, Carlene Muncey.
1-25-2t.
FOR SALE: Puppies, ARC-Registered
Shih-Tzu. Phone 606-789-8584, Kay
Blair.
1-25-2t .
NEEDED: Handyman. Should have
some experience in plumbing and electrical work. On part-time basis. Send
application to Plantation Motel, Box
389, Prestonsburg. Ky. 41653.
1-25-2t.
MECHANIC F::>R OUTBOARD motor
and small engine repair (full or parttime ). If you have knowledge, skill or
mechanical aptitude, please write
Christian Project, P .O. Box 1119, Martin, KY. 4"1649.
1-2~2t .
PROFESSIONAL DOG TRAINING
and grooming Fifteen years' experience. All breeds. Call for appointment, 874-2910, Debbie Roddam .
1-18-2t .
FOR SALE · 1975 Ford 250 Econoline
van Asking $2100. Phone 886-9220, H.
1-2~2t .
Cooley, Jr.
CHRISTIAN SERVICE OPPORTUNITY : Fulltime or part-time assignm ents in several programs and projects in local area and Appalachian
region . Avenues for Christian service
as living-working volunteer. Nondenominational. Service to people .
Housing. food and stipend possible.
Write : Christian Project. P .O. Box
1119. Martin. KY. 41649 .
1·25-2f
~
DAN'S
FOR RENT· 1981. 14x70. 2-bedroom
mobile home with fireplace. Located
near Allen. Phone 26C·1438 or 874-9550
after6p.m .
ltpd.
STEEL BUI LDI NG FACTORY SALE
.;.
We're glad
you asked!
John C. Hall
Founder
Hall Funeral Home
WHAT EFFECT DOES PRE-PLANNING HAVE ON SURVIVORS?
Generally, there ue strong benefits to your sunivors!
Consider the impact of pre-pl111ning on your survivors: will they understand you
want your cnrn wishes carried out and not theirs? That you may wish to economize
in your choice of service, casket, etc., instead of putting the choice in their hands
when they are under great stress and shock?
Will they understand that you want a certain specific order of ~nice? A partie••
portion of srripture read? Your fnorite music? Your designation of minister? And,
of course, that you insist on paying for it yourself, sp•ing them the emotional and
financial burdens?
Many of those for whom we hne pre-planned funerals have solved these diffieutt
considerations. They have involved their families in the decision-1111king process.
You, too, may wish to invite members of your immeciate family to discuss preplanning with you and with one of your professional funeral counselors.
Once having made your funeral arrangements, your sense of ~curit y and a1>
compli.shment may be comforting and valuable to you and your loved ones.
HALL FUNERAL HOME
llur JMCtio• of Kr. 10 aM Kr. 122, llartil
~
es 285-9261 OR 285-9262
�Wednesday, January 25, 1984
UNITED STATES OF AMERICA FEDERAL ENERGY REGULATORY
C9MMISSION. Notice of Application
F1Ied with the Commission, <December
23, 1983 l. Take notice that the following
hydroelectric application has been filed
with the Federal Energy Regulatory
Commission and is available for public
mspection: a. Type of Application: Preliminary Permit; b. Project No
7845-000; c. Date Filed: November 14,
1983; d. Applicant: HydroEngineering
Associates: e. Name of Project: Fishtrap; f. Location: Levisa Fork of the Big
Sandy River. Pike County, Kentucky. g.
Filed Pursuant to: Federal Power Act,
16 U.S.C. §§791 <al- 825 <rl. h. Contact
Person: E.D. Tice, P.E., P.O. Box 24,
Pauline, South Carolina 29374. i. Comment Date: Feb. 24, 1984. j. Description
of Project: The proposed project would
utilize the existing U.S. Army Corps of
Engineers Fishtrap Dam and Reservoir
and would consist of a powerhouse with
one or more turbine-generator units having a total rated capacity of 1,080 kW and
a 1 z-mile-long transmission line. The
project would be capable of generating
to 5,440,000 kWh annually. k. Purpose
o Project: Energy produced at the project would be sold to Kentucky Power
Company. !. This notice also consists of
the following standard paragraphs: AS,
A7, A9, B, C and D2. m. Proposed Scope
and Cost of Studies under Permit: A
preliminary if issued, does not authorize
construction. A permit, if issued, gives
the permittee, during the term of the
permit, the right of priority of application for license. The Applicant seeks issuance of a preliminary permit for a
period of 18 months. The work to be performed under this preliminary permit
would consist of gathering necessary
data, completing surveys and environmental studies, obtaining
necessary Federal, State and local permits including coordination with the
Corps of Engineers, and preparing
necessary documentation for the Commission's licensing requirements. Applicant estimates that the cost of work to
be performed under the permit would
not exceed $20,000. AS. Preliminary Permits : Existing Dam or Natural Water
Feature Project-Anyone desiring to file
a competing application for preliminary
permit for a proposed project at an existing dam or natural water feature project, must submit the competing application to the Commission on or before
30 days after the specified comment date
for the particular application <see 18
CFR 4.30 to 4.33 (1982). A notice of intent
to file a competing application for
preliminary permit will not be accepted
for filing . A competing preliminary permit application must conform wtth 18
CFR 4.33(a) and (d). A7. Preliminary
Permit-Except as provided in the
following paragraph, any qualified
license, conduit exemption, or small
hydroelectric exemption applicant
desiring to file a competing aJ?plication
must submit to the Commtsston, on or
before the specified comment date for
the particular application, either a competing license, conduit exemption, or
small hydroelectrir. exemption application or a notice of intent to file such an
application. Submission of a timely
notice of intent to file a license, condUlt
exemption, or small hydroelectric exemption application allows an interested
person to file the competing application
no later than 120 days after the specified
comment date for the particular application. In addition, any qualified
license or conduit exemption appli£ant
desiring to file a competing apphcation
may file the subject application ur.til :
<1) a preliminary permit with which ·he
subject license or conduit exemption< pplication would compete is issued, or l2)
the earliest specified comment date f,,r
any license, conduit exemption, or small
hydroelectric exemption application
with which the subject license or conduit
exemption application would compete;
whi.chever occurs first. A competing
license application must conform with
18 CFR 4.33(a) and <d>. A9. Notice of
Intent-A notice of intent must specify
the exact name, business address, and
telephone number of the prospective applicant, include an unequivocal statement of intent to submit, if such an application may be filed, either ( 1) a
preliminary permit application or (2) a
license, small hydroelectric exemption,
or conduit exemption application, and be
served on the applicants named in this
public notice. B. Comments, Protests, or
Motions to Intervene-Anyone may submit comments, a protest, 01ra motion to
intervene in accordance with the requirements of the Rules of Practice and
Procedure, 18C.F.R. §§385.210, .211, .214.
In determining the approP.riate action to
take, the Commission wtll consider all
protests or other comments filed, but only those who file a motion to intervene
in accordance with the Commission's
Rules may become a party to the proceeding. Any comments, protests, or
motions to intervene must be received
on or before the specified comment date
for the particular application. C. Filing
and Service of Responsive Documents-Any filings must bear in all
capital letters the title "COMMENTS",
"NOTICE OF INTENT TO FILE COMPETING APPLICATION", as applicable, and the Project Number of the particular application to which the filing is
in response. Any of the above named
documents must be filed by providing
the original and the number of copies required by the Commission's regulations
to: Kenneth F. Plumb, Secretary, Federal Energy Regulatory Commission, 825
North Capitol Street, N.E., Washington,
D.C. 20426. An additional copy must be
sent to: Fred E . Springer, Deput:y Director, Project Management, Divtsion of
Hydropower Licensing, Federal Energy
Regulatory Commission, Room 208 RB
at the above address. A copy of any
notice of intent, competing application
or motion to intervene must also be served upon each representative of the Applicant specified in the particular application. D2. Agency CommentsFederal, State, and local agencies are
invited to file comments on the described application. <A copy of the application may be obtained by agencies directly from the Applicant.) If an agency
does not file comments within the time
specified for filing comments, it will be
presumed to have no comments. One
copy of an agency's comments must also
be sent to the Applicant's representatives. Kenneth F Plumb, Secretary.
1-4-4t.
ul
Vanilla is actually the
d ri d fru it o f an orchid.
The Floyd County Times
NOTICE OF
INTENTION TO MINE
Pursuant to Application
Number 436-0099
<1) In accordance with the provisions
of KRS 350.055, notice is hereby given
that Buck Coal Company, Inc., Branham Village, Star Route 2, Prestonsburg, Ky. 41653, has filed an application
for a permit for a surface coal mining
and reclamation operation of approximately 67.0 acres located 3.29 miles
south of Langley, Kentucky in Floyd
county.
<2) The proposed operation is approximately 2.6 miles east from KY 777's
junction with KY 80 and located 0.11
mues west of Turkey Creek. The latitude
is n• 29' 58". The longitude is 82° 47' 05".
The s'lrface area is owned by Elkhorn
Coal Corporation.
{3) The proposed operation is located
on the Wayland U.S.G.S. 11 2 minute
quadrangle map. The operation will use
the contour, auger and area methods of
mining. The operation will affect an
area within 100 feet of public road KY
n7. The operation will not involve
relocation of the public road.
(4) The application has been filed for
public inspection at the Department for
Surface Mining Reclamation and Enforcement's Prestonsburg Regional Office, at 431 South Lake Drive, Prestonsburg, Ky. 41653. Written comments, objections, or requests for a permit conference must be filed with the Director
of the Division of Permits, 6th Floor,
Capital Plaza Tower, Frankfort, Ken1-11-3t.
tucky 40601.
NOTICE OF
INTENTION TO MINE
Pursuant to Application
No. 836-0008
( 1) In accordance with the provisions
of KRS 350.055, notice is hereby given
that Triple Elkhorn Mining Company,
Inc., P.O. Box 140, Ivel, Kentucky 41642,
has filed an application for a permit for
a surface coal mining and reclamation
operation of approximately 43.99 acres
located one mile southeast of Allen, Kentucky in Floyd county.
(2) The ptoposed operation is approximately 1V4 miles southeast of Star
Route SO's junction with US 25, and
located If.! mile south of the Levisa Fork.
The latitude is :rl' 35' 38", longitude is 82°
42' 51". Surface area is owned by Herman and Berniece Porter, Bill and Belle
Jones; Palmer Crisp Estate, Katherine
Stratton; Adams Real Estate Limited
Partnership; El DuPont DeNemours;
Inc., George and Jean Rice; Olga and
Howard Allen; Robert Jones heirs and
Cecil Webb:
(3) The proposed operation is located
on the Harold U.S.G.S. 71 2 minute quadrangle map. The operation will use the
mountaintop removal method of mining.
(4) The application also includes a
proposed land use change from undeveloped w /trees premining land use to a
undeveloped w/various grasses post
mining land use.
(5) The application has been filed for
public inspection at the Department for
Surface Mining Reclamation and Enforcement, Prestonsburg Regional Office, South Lake Drive, Prestonsburg,
Ky. 41653. Written comments, objections, or requests for a permit conference must be filed with the Director
of the Division of Permits, 6th Floor,
Capital Plaza Tower, Frankfort, Ky.
41601.
1-11-3t.
POSITION AVAILABLE
The Sandy Valley Senior Citizens, Inc.
is now taking applications for one fulltime RN and one part-time RN to service the five county Big Sandy area
Prevent-A-Care program. Responsibilities include supervision of nurse's aides
in the five county area and case
management of clients. Must be licensed RN with administrative experience,
preferably two years. Salary negotiable.
Applications may be picked up at the
Sandy Valley Senior Citizens office, 2nd
Floor Municipal Building, Prestonsburg
from 8-4, M-F. Please submit application and resume by January 20, 1984.
Equal Opportunity Employer
1-11-3t.
NOTICE OF
INTENTION TO MINE
Pursuant to Application
Number 436-5175
Iri a~cordance with the provisions of
KRS 350.055, notice is hereby given that
Prater Creek Mining Co., lite:, P.O.
Drawer A, Harold, Ky. 41653, has filed
an application for a permit for an underground mining operation. The proposed
operation will affect a surface disturbance of 4.65 acres and will underlie an
additional 4.94 acres located 3 miles
southeast of Banner in Floyd county.
The proposed operation is approximately 3 miles southeast from State
Route SO's junction with Prater Creek
Rd. and located 0.10 miles south of Hall
Branch of Prater Creek. The latitude is
37° 35' 03". The longitude is 82° 41' 11".
The proposed operation is located on
the Harold U.S.G.S. 711! minute quadrangle map. The surface area to be disturbed is owned by Ballard and Rolla
May Hall, Ellis Hall. The operation will
underlie land owned by Ellis Hall, Hazzie Boyd, J .J. Boyd.
The application has been filed for
public inspection at the Department for
Surface Mining Reclamation and Enforcement's Prestonsburg Regional Office, Prestonsburg, Kentucky 41653.
Written comments, objections, or re.quests for a per_mit conferenc~ ~~st be
filed with the Dtrector of the DtvtslOn of
Permits, 6th Floor, Capital Plaza
Tower, Frankfort, Kentucky 40601.
This is the final advertisement of this
application; all comments, objections,
or requests for a permit conference
must be received within thirty (30) days
lt.
of today's date
FLOYD CIRCUIT COURT
82-CI-797
United Federal Savings and Loan Association ................................ Plaintiff.
VS: NOTICE OF SALE
David Bruce Spradlin, Nancy Spradlin,
F.S., Vanhoose Company, Inc., Floyd
County, Kentucky, and City of Prestonsburg .............................. Defendants.
AND
Clay Ingels Company, Lloyd Crum,
d/b/a Lloyd's Hardware, John Goble,
d/b/a Goble Lumber Company, Wells
Ready Mix Company ...... Intervening
Plaintiffs
VS:
David Bruce Spr:u!lin and Nancy Spradlin ................................... Defendants
AND
Brock McVey Electric Supply Company
...................... Intervening Defendant
VS:
Brunchy Enterprises, Inc. Third Party
Defendant
By virtue of a judgment and order of
sale of the Floyd Circuit Court rendered
at the January 6 term, 1984, in the above
styled cause I shall proceed to offer for
sale at the Courthouse door in Prestonsburg, Kentucky, to the highest and best
bidder, at public auction, on the 26 day
of January, 1984, at 10:00 o'clock a.m.,
same being a day of the regular term of
the Floyd Circuit Court, for cash or upon
a credit of thirty (30) days, the following described property, to-wit :
That certain tract or parcel of land, lying and being in the City of Prestonsburg, Floyd County, Kentucky, and being the same land conveyed David
Bruce Spradlin and Nancy Spradlin by '
deed of July 18, 1980 from Harry Hale
Ranier and Jud~ RanieJ;". as recorded in
Deed Book 249, page 333, 1'10yd County
Clerk's Office, and described more particularly as follows:
Beginning at a point on the back or
north side of the sidewalk on the north
side of Goble Street, said point being the
southwest corner of the adjacent Paul
Combs lot and also being 98 feet from the
west edge of the west sidewalk of Second
Street; thence with Combs southwest
line (a fence), N 35 W a distance of 56.0
feet to a corner tree in Rosenberg's
southeast line; thence with Rosenberg's
line <a fence), S 55 W a distance of 30 feet
to a post; thence with Rosenberg's
southwest line, (a fence), N 35 W a
distance of 98 feet to a corner; thence S
56-20 W a distance of 350 feet to the low
water mark of Levisa Fork; thence with
said low water mark S 35 W a distance
of 179.2 feet to a corner; thence N 55 E
a distance of 147 feet to a point in the
west R/W line of First Street; thence
with said west R/W N 35 W a distance
of 15 feet to a point; thence with the back
<north) side of the north sidewalk of Goble Street, N 55 E a distance of 233 feet
to the point of beginning. Said tract containing 1.5 acres, more or less.
The amount of money to be raised by
this sale shall be in the principal sum of
$469,700.00 with interest thereon @
13 1h% ANNUALLY ($168.75 per diem)
from the 31st day of October, 1983 until
satisfied and the costs ot tn1s actwn, mcluding costs of advertising of this sale
and the fees and commissions for conducting this sale.
For the purchase price the purchaser
must execute bond with approved surety or sureties, bearing legal interest
from the day of sale until paid and having the force the effect of a judgment
with a lien retained upon said property
as a further security. Bidders will be
prepared to comply with these terms.
Given under my hand, this 6th day of
January, 1984.
MARSHALL DAVIDSON,
Master Commissioner
1-11-3!.
POSITION AVAILABLE
The Sandy Valley Senior Citizens, Inc.
is now taking applications for homemaker/home health aide to service the
Prestonsburg area. Duties include
assisting homebound elderly with household activities, personal care and respite
care. Requirements are daily access to
automobile, valid driver's license, and
able to pass physical exam. Prefer experience in elderly care or as nurse's
aide. Wage $3.35 an hour plus travel.
Applications may be picked up at the
Sandy Valley Senior Citizens office, 2nd
Floor Municipal Building, Prestonsburg
from 8-4, M-F. Deadline January 20,
1984.
Equal Opportunity Employer
1-ll-3t.
PUBLIC NOTICE
An application for a place of entertainment license has been filed by Archer D.
Boyd, Jeff Mullins, of P.O. Box, General
Delivery, Betsy Layne, Kentucky, Stanville, Kentucky. The nature of business
will be a restaurant only.
The County Attorney's Office is required to file a written report to the
County Judge Executive's office reflecting if the person applying is ''not of good
moral character or who will not, in the
judgment of the Court, (County Judge
Executive) obey the laws of the state in
the carrying on of the business".
Any interested citizen having information relative to said applicant's lack of
"good moral character" or willingness
to obey the Jaws of the state in the carrying on of the business is requested to
file the same in writing, witb the County Attorney's office. Said written information shall be signed, dated, and
reflect the current address of said
citizen, and must be delivered to the
County Attorney's office no later than
the 26th day of January, 1984.
ARNOLD TURNER, JR.
Floyd 'County Attorney
1-18-2t.
Shakespeare's Globe Theatre
in London got its name
from a sign that hung
outside showing Atlas
supporting the world.
NOTICE OF
INTENTION TO MINE
Pursuant to Application
Number 836-5033
( 1) In accordance with the provisions
of KRS 350.055, notice is hereby given
that Amber Coal Co., Inc., Box 6367,
Beauty, Kentucky, 41203, has filed an application for a permit for an
underground mining operation. The proposed operation will affect a surface
disturbance of 2.69 acres and will
underlie an additional 40.87 acres
located 1.0 mile northeast of Risner in
Floyd county.
(2) The proposed operation is approximately 0.2 miles east from Johnson
Fork Road's junction with KY 1210 and
is located on Johnson Fork of Caney
Creek. The latitude is 37• 36' OS"N. The
longitude is 82° 50' 24"W.
(3) The proposed operation is located
on the Martin U.S.G.S. 71f.! minute quadrangle map. The surface area to be
disturbed is owned by Manis Ousley and
Austin Johnson. The operation will
underlie land owned by Otis Ousley,
Manis Ousley; Callie Skeans, Verlin
Johnson and Austin Johnson. The operation will affect an area within 100 feet of
public road Johnson Fork Road. The
operation will not involve relocation of
Johnson Fork Road.
(4) The application has been filed for
public inspection at the Department for
Surface Mining Reclamation and Enforcement's Prestonsburg Regional Office, 503 South Lake Drive, Prestonsburg, Kentucky 41653. Written comments, objections, or requests for a permit conference must be filed with the
Director of the Division of Permits, 6th
Floor, Capital Plaza Tower, Frankfort,
Kentucky 40601.
1-18-3t.
NOTICE OF
INTENTION TO MINE
Pursuant to Application
Number 836-0070
In accordance with the provisions of
KRS 350.055, notice is hereby given that
Rock Ridge Resources, P.O. Box 140,
Pine Top, Kentucky 41843, has filed an
application for a permit for an underground and surface mining operation.
The proposed operation will affect a surface disturbance of 16.11 acres and will
underlie an additional 10.28 acres
located 1.5 miles southwest of Grethel in
Floyd county.
The proposed operation is approximately 0.62 miles northwest from KY
680's junction with KY 979 and located
0.5 miles north of Hamilton Branch. The
latitude is n• 28' OO"N. The longitude is
82° 40' OO"W.
The proposed operation is located on
the McDowell U.S. G.S. 71f.! minute quadrangle map. The operation will use the
contour and auger method of mining.
The surface area to be disturbed is owned by Dennis Jones, Emmet Lawson,
Silas Akers and The Elkhorn Coal Corporation. The operation will underlie
land owned by Silas Akers, and Dennis
Jones.
The application has been filed for
public inspection at the Department for
Surface Mining Reclamation and Enforcement's Prestonsburg Regional Office, 401 South Lake Drive, Prestonsburg, Kentucky 41653. Written comments, objections, or requests for a permit conference must be filed with the
Director of the Division of Permits, 6th
Floor, Capital Plaza Tower, Frankfort,
Kentucky 40601.
1-18-3t.
NOTICE OF
JNTENTION TO MINE
Pursuant to Application
Number 836-0080
In accordance with the provisions of
KRS 350.055, notice is hereby given that
Raschella Coal Company, Rt. 4, Box
962-Y, Pikeville, Ky. 41501, has filed an
application for a permit for a surface
coal mining and reclamation operation
of approximately 70.00 acres located 4.1
miles south of Grethel, in Floyd county.
The proposed operation is approximately 1/8 miles east from State Route
979 junction with Akers Branch Road
and located If.! miles west of Branham
Creek. The latitude is n• 'J:l' 41". The
longitude is 83' 31' 21". The surface area
is owned by Goldie Clark, Russell Clark,
Akers heirs and B. & M. Coal Company.
The proposed operation is located on
the McDowell U.S.G.S. 7 1h minute quadrangle map. The operation will use the
mountain top removal method of
mining.
The application has been filed for
public inspection at the Department for
Surface Mining Reclamation and Enforcement's Prestonsburg Regional Office, at 431 South Lake Drive, Prestonsburg, Ky. 41653. Written comments, objections, or requests for a permit conference must be filed with the Director
of the Division of Permits, 6th Floor,
Capital Plaza Tower, Frankfort, Kentucky 40601.
1-ll-3t.
NOTICE OF PUBLIC SALE
Under the terms of an installment contract dated 12-13-82, signed by Palmer
J. and Betty Lou Crider, the undersigned
will on January 26, 1984, at 11:00 a.m.
sell at public auction to the highest bidder for cash a 1978 Mack Tractor, Model
Number R686ST, Serial Number 18941,
and a 1978 Summit Trailer, Model
Number AD30, Serial Number
1118772702, in front of Eastern Ky.
Mack's "Sales Office" Allen, Ky., to
satisfy the unpaid balance in the said
vehicle. The vehicle may be inspected
prior to sale at the above mentioned
premises. The undersigned reserves the
right to bid.
THE FIRST COMMONWEALTH BANK
COLLECTION DEPARTMENT
PRESTONSBURG, KY.
1-11-3!.
A hippopotamus has a skin an inch and
a half thick-too thick for most bullets
to penetrate
Section Three, Paae Four
PART I
INVITATION FOR BIDS
ORDINANCE NO. 1-84
AN ORDINANCE OF THE CITY
COUNCIL OF THE CITY OF PRES:
TONSBURG ESTABLISHING A
REGULAR MEETING TIME OF THE
CITY COUNCIL.
WHEREAS: A newly elected council
has been sworn and seated in the City of •
Prestonsburg; and,
WHEREAS: A meeting time must be
established according to law; and,
WHEREAS : The City Council is
desirous of informing the public and the
press of their Regular Meeting time ;
NOW,
THEREFORE BE IT ORDAINED BY
THE CITY COUNCIL OF THE CITY OF
PRESTONSBURG AS FOLLOWS :
SECTION 1: The regular meeting
time of the City Council of the City of
Prestonsburg shall be the second (2nd)
and fourth (4th) Monday of every month
at the hour of 7:00p.m. The meeting will
be held in the Council Room of the
Municipal Building located on North
Lake Drive.
SECTION 2: Any ordinance or parts
of ordinance in conflict herein are
hereby expressly repealed to the extent
of such conflict.
HAROLD W. COOLEY
Mayor
ATTEST :
Sue Webb
City Clerk
1-18-2t.
Church Housing Association of Prestonsburg, Inc., will receive bids for the
complete construction of the project entitled Highland Heights Roof Repairs,
Prestonsburg, Floyd County, Kentucky,
including complete removal and
replacement of roofing and roof
sheathing on ten (10) buildings until2:00
P .M. E.S.T. <Eastern Standard Time)
on the 31st day of January, 1984, at the
"Housing Office", Green Acres Housing
Project, US 23 North, Prestonsburg,
Kentucky, at which time and place all
bids shall be publically opened and read
aloud.
Proposed forms of contract
documents, including specifications, are
on file at the Green Acres Housing Office, and at the office of Ross Associated
Architects, 206 West Main Street, Lexington, Kentucky 40507.
For the public use of material men
and subcontractors, specifications will
be on file at the following offices:
F.W. Dodge Corporation, 160 Moore
Drive, Lexington, Kentucky 40504; F .W.
Dodge Corporatton, :r715 Bardstown
Road, Louisville, Kentucky 40218; F .W.
Dodge Corporation, 105 East 4th St.,
Suite 1200, Cincinnati, Ohio 45202;
Builder's Exchange, P.O. Box 5398,
Louisville, Kentucky 40205.
Copies of documents may be obtained by depositing $25.00 with Ross
Associated Architects for each set of
documents so obtained. Such deposits
NOTICE OF
will be refunded to each person who
INTENTION
TO MINE
returns the specifications, and other
Pursuant
to
Application
documents in good conditions within 10
Number 836-0080
days after the bid opening.
In accordance with the provisions of
Please include a separate check for
Five Dollars ($5.00) to cover postage KRS 350.055, notice is hereby given that
and handling for those contractors re- Raschella Coal Company, Rt. 4, Box
questing that their plans be mailed. If 962-Y, Pikeville, Ky. 41501, has filed an
a separate check is not sent, documents application for a permit for a surface
will not be mailed. Incorrect or combin- coal mining and reclamation operation
ed checks will be returned to Contrac- of approximately 64.88 acres located 4.1
miles south of Grethel, in Floyd county.
tor unprocessed.
The proposed operation is approxA certified check or bank draft,
payable to Church Housing Association imately 1/8 miles east from State Route
of Prestonsburg, Inc., U.S. Government 979 junction with Akers Branch Road,
Bonds, or a satisfactory bid bond ex- and located 112 miles west of Branham
ecuted by the bidder and acceptable Creek. The latitude is 37° 27' 41". The
sureties in an amount equal to five per- longitude is 83' 31' 21". The surface area
cent of the bid shall be submitted with is owned by Russell Clark, Akers heirs,
each bid. The successful bidder will be B. & M. Coal Company, Cline Mitchell,
required to furnish and pay for satisfac- Foster Mitchell and Henry Martin.
The proposed operation is located on
tory performance and payment bond or
the McDowell U.S.G.S. 71/z minute quadbonds.
Church Housing Association of Pres- rangle map. The operation will use the
tonsburg, Inc., reserves the right to re- mountain top removal method of
ject any or all bids or to waive any in- mining.
The application has been filed for
formalities in the bidding.
No bid shall be withdrawn for a period public inspection at the Department for
of thirty (30) days subsequent to the Surface Mining Reclamation and Enopening of bids without the consent of . forcement's Prestonsburg Regional Office, at 431 South Lake Drive, Prestonsthe Owner.
CHURCH HOUSING ASSOCIATION OF burg, Ky. 41653. Written comments, objections, or requests for a permit conPRESTONSBURG, INC.
ference must be filed with the Director
By Julia M. May
of the Division of Permits, 6th Floor,
Title Managing Agent
Capital Plaza Tower, Frankfort, Kentucky 40601.
1-25-3t.
NOTICE OF PUBLIC SALE
A public sale will be held by Ashland
Finance Company on the 30th day of
January, 1984 at 1032 Greenup Avenue,
Ashland, Kentucky 41101. Time of sale
11:00 a.m. Sale is for the purpose of
disposing of:
(1 ) Galis 300 Roof Bolter, 250DC,
Serial Number 3056911; (1) Joy 121m
Cutting Machine, 250DC, Serial Number
15960 belonging to Lonnie Lewis, Dana
R. Reinhardt, and John L. Elder, partners, d/b/a Double L Coal Company, to
satisfy or reduce Security Agreements
and Notes.
Ashland Finance Company reserves
the right to bid.
Terms: Sale will be for cash. The
parcels will be offered separately and
then as a unit <group) with sale to the
highest and best bidder. Equipment will
be sold as is/ where-is. Sold unr!Pr KR~
355.9-504.
ASHLAND FINANCE COMPANY
By: Richard L. Couchot
Executive Vice President
1-11-3t.
NOTICE OF
INTENTION TO MINE
Pursuant to Application
Number: 860-5023
In accordance with the provisions of
KRS 350.055, notice is hereby given that
National Mines Corporation, Box 12022,
101 East Vine Street, Lexington, Kentucky 40579, has filed an application for
a permit for an underground mining
operation. The proposed operation will
affect a surface disturbance of 3.13 acres
and will underlie an additional 135.49
acres located 2.7 miles southwest of Garrett in Knott county.
The proposed operation is approximately 2.0 miles southwest from Route
s5o junction with Route 7 and located 0.7
miles southeast of Jones Fork. The latitude is 37' 26' 37". The longitude is 82'
50' 05".
The proposed operation is located on
the Wayland U.S.G.S. 71h minute quadrangle map. The surface area to be
disturbed is owned by Glen Click. The
operation will underlie land owned by
Glen Click, Mont Conley, Gordon
Howard, Arnold Fitch, National Mines
Corporation, Charles and Juanita
Thornsburg, James and Francis Allen.
This application also includes a proposed land use change from the forest land
. pre-mining land use to· a pasture land
post-mining land use. The operation will
affect an area within 100 feet of public
road Triplett Branch. The operation will
not involve relocation of the public road.
'fhe application has been filed for pub. lie inspection at the Department for Surface Mining Reclamation and Enforcement, Jackson Regional Office, Howell
Heights Building, Route 2, Box 500,
Jackson, Kentucky 41339. Written comments, objections, or requests for a permit conference must be filed with the
Director of the Division of Permits, 6th
Floor, Capital Plaza Tower, Frankfort,
Kentucky 40601 .
1-18-3t.
NOTICE OF
INTENTION TO MINE
Pursuant to Application
Number 836-5031
(1) In accordance with the provisions
of KRS 350.055, notice is hereby given
that Apollo Coal Co., Inc., P .O. Box 9,
Wayland, Ky. 41666, has filed an application for a permit for an underground and
eontour/ auger method mining operation. The proposed operation will affect
a surface disturbance of 10.51 acres and
will underlie an additional 36.57 acres
located .45 miles southwest of Demain
Floyd county.
(2) The proposed operation is approximately .2 miles south from Bradley
Branch Road's junction with KY 7 and
located on Bradley Branch. The latitude
is 37' 24' 57" N. The longitude is 82° 48'
40" W.
(3) The proposed operation is located
on the Wayland U.S.G.S. 71 2 mjnute
quadrangle map. The surface area to be
disturbed is owned by Gliden and Rosa
Bradley and Lena Bradley Hopkins . A
brief description of the kind of m ining
activity proposed is: underground and
contour/auger method of mining.
( 4) The application has been filed for
public inspection at the Department for
Surface Mining Reclamation and Enforcement's Prestonsburg Regional Office, 503 South Lake Drive, Prestonsburg, Ky. 41653. Written comments, objections, or requests for a permit conference must be filed with the Director
of the Division of Permits, 6th Floor,
Capital Plaza Tower, Frankfort, Ken1-25-3t.
tucky 40601 .
NOTICE OF SALE
Circuit Court Clerk Frank DeRossett
will offer for sale at 9 a.m. on Thursday,
January 26, 1984, in the Circuit Court
Clerk's Office: One Smith and Wesson
38 Special Colt revolver, serial no.
C-395668. The gun was confiscated b
court order from Johnny McKinney on
his conviction of being a convicted felon
in possession of a handgun.
1-ll-3t.
Subscription
Rates ·P.er Yea,r
In Flo~Cou'nty, $8.00
Elsewhere In Kentucky, $JO
Outalde Kentucky, $12.50
Please note. expiration date
oppoalte your name on wrapper, or on your copy of The
Times. Because of Increased
malllna costs, notices cit
subscription e~ratlon are
no
lorfaer
mailed
to
subscribers.
Subscriptions may bt maded to:
The Floyd County Times
Box 391
Prestonsbura, Ky. 41653
jt
•
�•
Wednesday, January 25, 1984
SATELLITE TELEVISION
•
SALE
Section Three, Pace Five
-
PRICl~ liOOD 1.... U 1-30-84
OR WHILE ~UPPLIES LAST
NEWS
SPORTS
MOVIES
RELIGION
• Bank
Financing
Available
JANUARY JAMBOREE
OF SAVINGS!
USTOM ANTENNA
MARTIN, KY. • 285-3984
(Across the creek from Garth Vocational School
BIG 64 OZ.
1-4-lf
FABRIC SOFTENER
ONLY.!
SUDAFED
S.A.
UP TO 12 HOUR RELIEF!
newspaper
advertising done
effectively! and inexpensively! We'll
help you do the entire
job from 'theme to copy
to artwork ... for the cost
of the ad space alone!
State To Award Loans
For Math, Science Study
In an effort to ·attract and retain
qualified teachers to the field of science
and mathematics, the Kentucky Depart·
ment of Education will be awarding
loans to those qualified students for the
1984 swnmer term. The criteria includes
certified teachers who are interested in
achieving certification in science and
mathematics. Students will be evaluated
according to GPA, letters of recommendation, and GRE scores.
All those interested should contact Dr.
Lois Esham, chairman of the science
and mathematics department at Pikeville College, or the Office of Financial
Aid at Pikeville College.
Interested? Call Ken Peters at
886-8506 and he'll call on you!
The Floyd County Times
CONSOLIDATED REPORT OF CONDITION
(Including Domestic Subsidiaries)
LEGAL TITLE OF BANK
THE FIRST GUARANTY BANK
CITY
COUNTY
MARTIN
STATE BANK NO.
STATE
FLOYD
ZIP CODE
KENTUCKY
FEDERAL RESERVE DISTRICT NO.
41649
CLOSE OF BUSINESS DATE
~~~~7~3_-_7~9~4----------~-4~----------------~~D~e~c~e=m~ber 30, 1983
ASSETS
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
Cash and due from depository institutions
U.S. Treasury securities .
. . . . . .
Obligations of other U.S. Government agencies and corporations .
Obligations of States and political subdivisions in the United States
All other securities
Federal funds sold and securities purchased under agreements to resell
a. Loans, Total (excluding unearned income) .
b. Less: allowance for possible loan losses
c. Loans, Net .
8. Lease financing receivables .
9. Bank premises, furniture and fixtures, and other assets representing bank premises
10. Real estate owned othar than bank premises .
11 . a. Intangible assets
11 . b. All other assets
(sum of items 1 thru 11
12. TOTAL
LIABILITIES
13. Demand deposits of individuals, partnerships, and corporations
14. Time and savings deposits ot individuals, partnerships, and corporations)
15. Deposits of United States Government .
16. Deposits of States and political subdivisions in the United States .
17. All other deposits .
18. Certified and officers' checks
19. Total Deposits (sum of items 13 thru 18)
a. Total demand deposits •
b. Total time and savings deposits
20. Federal funds purchased and securities sold under agreements to repurchase
21. Interest-bearing demand notes (note balances) issued to the U.S Treasury and
other liabilities for borrowed money
22. Mortgage indebtedness and liability for capitalized leases
'
23. All other liabilities .
24. TOTAL LIABILITIES (excluding subordinated notes and debentures) (sum of items 19 thru 23)
25. Subordinated notes and debentures
EQUITY CAPITAL
26. Preferred stock
27. Common Stock
28. Surplus .
29. Undivided profits and reserve for contingencies and other capital reserves
30. TOTAL EQUITY CAPITAL (sum of items 26 thru 29)
31 . TOTAL LIABILITIES AND EQUITY CAP.:._IT:.:.A.:.:L:..!:::::..:.:~O:.:.f..:.it:.:::e.:.:.m:.:::s_.:2:;:4.!..!::25:::.....:::.a:..:.:nd:::.....:::.::.t.....:__;__..:.._...:......_:___:____:_:__;__~
MEMORANDA
1. Amounts outstanding as of report date
a. Standby letters of credit, total
b. Time certificates of deposit in denominations of $100,000 or more
c . Other time deposits in amounts of $100.000 or more .
2. Average for 30 calendar days (or calendar month) ending with report date
its (corresponds to item 19 above)
a. Total
•
606- 285-9281
Wanda Hayes , Asst. Vice Pres.
10 CAPSULES
ONLY!
ALTHOUGH THESE THREE Lancer youngsters had to use
just about every flake of snow in their yard they managed to
come up with a pretty fair snowman which they capped with
a UK Wildcat toboggan. Pictured with their six-foot creation,
from left, are Jason Vanderpool, Kris Colvin and Kevin Colvin. The cocker spaniel is named Sandy.
1 - 12-84
We, the undersigned d.rectors, attest the correctness of this Report of
Condition (including the supporting schedules) and declare that it has
been examined by us and to the best of our knowledge and belief has been
Stnu oj .. ,
h·orn to and s11bscri t'd hefo_, me this . 1.7.t h
and I huehy certify that! am llfJI an officer or dirutor nf hr.<
My commiwon expir~s .. 8-. 2.4
.
.. . ...., 19 .
2.45 SUG. RETAIL
Changes In Tax Law
May Affect Filers
Of IRS Form 1040
Taxpayers using the form 1040 to file
their federal income tax retwn this year
should be aware of some new tax law
changes, according to the Internal
Revenue Service.
U you use a Form 1040 to itemize
deductions on schedule A, you should be
aware that the deduction for medical
and dental expenses has changed.
Beginning in 1983, you can deduct only
medical and dental expenses that are
more than five percent of your adjusted
gross income. In addition, the total
amount of health insurance premiums
,paid in 1983 is now subject to the five percent limit. No longer can you take a
separate deduction of up to $150 for
health insurance premium payments.
Another change on the scheuule A concerns the deduction for casualty and
theft losses. Beginning in 1983, you can
claim a deduction for nonbusiness
casualty and theft losses only if the total
of the losses is more than 10 percent of
ybur adjusted gross income. In addition,
each separate nonbusiness casualty or
theft loss must be reduced by $100.
One point of confusion for some taxpayers completing the form 1040 involves the reporting of a refund of state
and/or local income taxes for the
previous year. If you received a refund
of state and/or local income taxes in
1983, you should receive a form 1099-G,
"Statement For Recipients Of Certain
Government Payments," showing the
amount of the refund. All or part of this
amount may have to be included in income for 1983 if deductions were itemized on schedule A in 1982.
This year two-earner married couples
who file a joint tax return may be able
to deduct 10 percent of the qualified
earned income of the Jesser earning
spouse. The maximum deduction for
1983 is $3,000. Last year it was five percent of the qualified earned income of
the lesser earning spouse with a maximum deduction of $1,500. Attach
schedule W <Form 1040) to claim this
deduction.
Another schedule which you you might
need to use is schedule G <Form 1040).
You could use this schedule to "income
average" if there has been a large increase in your income this year.
Generally, you must have provided at
least one-half of your own support each
year from 1979-1982. Schedule G (Form
1040) gives you all the details.
If you filed A form 1040 last year, you
should have received one in the mail this
year. Additional forms and schedules
are available at local IRS offices and at
many banks and post offices. Copies of
reproducible tax forms and schedules,
as well as a reference set of IRS's free
publications on 61 different tax topics,
are available at many iocallibraries.
Volunteers Needed For
Local Me.dic Alert Week
Medic Alert Foundation is seeking
volunteers to help conduct a local,
community-wide Medic Alert Week effort. Set for Aprill-7, the week's effort
is designed to call attention to the lifeprotecting value of emergency medical
identification.
According to Medic Alert, more than
40 million Amt!ricans have one or more
hidden medical conditions such as
diabetes, a heart condition, allergy to
medication or epilepsy
Medic Alert, the best recognized
system of emergency medical identification in the world current!)' serves
1 2 million members in the United
States. Medic Alert is a nonprofit,
charitable Foundation dedicated to providing a life-protecting system of
emergency medical identification for
people with hidden medical conditions.
6.4 oz.
REGULAR, MINT
OR GEL
.
OILY!
129
2.69 SUG. RETAil
'"HUMIDIFIER
'"'ORTHERN
1 GALLON CAPACiTY
. OIILY!
1O!u~~E
Relief Of Smtdly Throat l Dry Slia
24 oz.
LISTER IIE
ONLY!
4.66 SUG. RETAIL
o nonsense®
Comfort stride®
..
_A_
pantyhose
204
OftLY!
lltlll Clliii'OII Oil PAtWl!
Speeill Pri«
2.79
Lm Instant Coup __ .:!..5
Y011
Row
PUlEX DRY BLEACH 40ot
PALMfi.IVE 32ot
COAST BATH SOAP 5ot
BRILLO PADS BONUS u·.
NOXZEMA SHAVE CREAM llf.G.IIOl
GOOD •ws me&NIIS
. 2.04
11t
SM£1 OlllY! 1"
SAftlOIII.T! II'
SMil!OIII.Y! 11•
SMIOIIUt
U7WIItOilY!
U~WIIlOIIU!
1ll
141
..
11
DIAl AITI-PERSPIRAIIT sot
ue•lll Olltl'! 2
11
JUST WIIOERFUL UIR SPlAY 101. 17tUU.a.Y! 1
.
FROST &TIP KIT
11
SUAVE BABY SIIAifOO IUl.
uo
OlltY! 1
VASELI IJTEISIVE CARE IUL ~ VAWl OIILY! 211
IDJHMIII OIIU!
nt.U(
g.nPs 110 COUll
SCOPE
Ptl.
ASH "oz.
O.l TAIPIIS ,.
UUIILil Olllfl
lu
lJUM.U! OlllY!
217
UUMIJUIIU!
Cllllltt
GLASS PLUS 3l Gl. WISPMYU
OUIUI.CIIUl
UUAIUIIUI
zu
2tt
141
�The Floyd County Times
Wednesday, January 25, 1984
~)......
.
,-, -
N
-
,
., .
-
•
+:>f"'. ~
~lUtES EFFECTIVE THROUGH
JANUARY 29, 1984
·
Section Three , Pa&e Six
•.•
·
0:::~·~···.
»
.f
; ~~·~._;~~·,~Fast~ ~a•• ~service ·',_
r.
'~--~
8 ~ ~'
.;.,.
'·
the wav·f9.your ~·~-* '_,.
. ·.·~';. :-'
v:·;:;
~.
GRAP
c
LB.
3-LB. BAG
88 COUNT
RED OR GOLDEN
DELICIOUS
NIONS
c
$
PICNIC
·SHOULDER
c
5·7 LB.
AVERAGE
LB.
U.S.D.A. CHOICE
ELLOW --
APPLES
1
FRESH
EMPEROR
LETTUCE
=<1
SIRLOIN TIP
ROAST
$
49
LB.
l·LB. PKG.
QUART SIZE
SAVORY
BACON
SALAD
TOMATOES
c
SHEDD SPREAD
FAMILY CROCK
3-lB.$1
59
12.0Z.
IGA
AMERICAN
SINGLES ·
�The Floyd County Times
Wednesday, January 25, 1984
BOSTON BUTT
PORK
TEAK
$
39
WEDNESDAY-
Chicken and dumplings, meat loaf, hot dogs, cubed
steak and gravy, fried chicken, green beans, greens,
brown beans, corn, peas, mashed potatoes, peach cobbler, corn. bread, rolls.
THURSDAY-
Beef stew, fried chicken, lasagna, liver and onions, hot
dogs, green beans, scalloped potatoes, corn, peas,
sauerkraut and wieners, mustard greens, brown beans,
corn bread, rolls, cherry cobbler.
FRIDAY-
Turkey and dressing, meat loaf, fried chicken, salisbury
steak and gravy, fish and hush puppy, green beans, corn,
peas, mashed potatoes, mustard greens, brown beans,
hot dogs, corn bread and rolls.
U.S.D.A. CHOICE
BEEF
CUBE STEAK
•$
49
LB.
FRESH NECK BONES ... ................................... 49~.
FRESH PORK LIVER ....................................49~.
~ESH PIGS FEET ....................................... 49~.
FRESH HAM HOCKS ...... _......... _.. .. .. . .. .. 89~.
BOSTON BUTT PORK ROAST. ... ............ $1.19 LB.
BONELESS PORK STEAKS .................... S1.49 LB.
TENDERIZED PORK CUTLETS .. .............s1.69Ls.
ESH HOMEMADE SAUSAGE ...............·........ 99~.
FRESH SLICED BEEF LIVER ...................... ..... 89~.
U.S.D.A. CHOICE SIRLOIN TIP STEAK .. s2.69LB.
1-LB. ROLL IGA PORK SAUSAGE _..... ........ 99c
SMOKED PICNIC HAMS ................................. 89~.
.WILSON CORN KING WIENERS ..........12.oz.PKG.89c
$1 19
ODY CORN DOGS ...................... s.cr. PKG. •
Section Three, Pace Seven
SATURDAYSUNDAYMONDAYTUESDAY-
Fried chicken, spaghetti, stuffed cabbage rolls, pork
barbecue, mustard greens, brown beans, corn, green
beans, oven brown potatoes.
Steak and gravy, meat loaf, fried chicken, mashed
potatoes, green beans, corn, dinner rolls.
Pork chop and dressing, steak and gravy, stuffed green
pepper, fried chicken, macaroni and cheese, corn, peas,
green beans, mashed potatoes, mustard greens, corn
bread, rolls, peach cobbler.
Home made chili, fried chicken, baked chicken breast,
sauerkraut and kielbasa, pork chops, green beans, corn
on the cob, peas, mashed potatoes, mustard greens,
brown beans, hot dogs, corn bread, rolls, cherry cobbler.
.
BARBECUE CHICKENS . . . . . . . . .
Complete your
China Set today!
$159
Hearths ide Stoneware
LB.
NO LIMIT ON
ANv oF THEM
49c
1-LB. PKC.ICA BOLOGNA ......... ... ....5 1.39
sAuCERs, cuPS, PLAtts, sALAD DisHEs
1
U.S.D.A.CHOICESIRLOINTI~ ..... s~ ~~s1.99 - .~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~co~m~pl~et~ed~p~~~ce~sS~3~.9~9~~~~~~AL~L~~~~
�The Floyd County Times
Wednesday, January 25, 1984
,.KlVILU• Mo .·lat. O:Jo-t; lUI\. 12•6
'AINTfVILU: Mon.•lat. ..9; lun. 12·6
lOUTH IIDI MALL: Mon.·lat. lo-t; lun. 12·6
between stores.
-~
........
~
.....
@
THRUS. THRU SAT. SALE
....,,,.....,. ~~
r
:t'el NICifte.
..
~
lA~
~
OFFICIAL
-~
LYMPIC
SPONSOR
The Saving Placee
•
Section Three, Paae IEiaht
SPONSOR
•
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
limit 3 Pkgs.
~-.
CREW SOCKS
6 r? .,. .,,. ...
<
~
I
I
I
I
I
.
•
Limit 3 Pkgs.
I
I Our 6.17 - WITH COUPON
I
I
I
I
Limit 3 Pkgs.
Our 3.27 - WITH COUPON
14 97~~ee 2
•
Pkg.
I 6 Prs. Crew Socks
I Cotton/nylon, cushion
I foot. Fit men's 10-13.
I
I
1
I
I
II 3 • ss~~ee
44~~ee
•
Pkg.
3 Prs. Men's Tubes
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Wed...m.y,
January 25, 1984Tueeday,
January 31, 1984
«wednesday))
1/25/84
MORNING
9:00
0) MOVIE: 'Widow' A
woman
with
two
young children tries to
pull herself together
and make a new life
after the death of her
husband.
Michael
Learned,
Bradford
Dillman, Farley Granger. 1976.
AFTERNOON
1:00 0) MOVIE: 'Target
Zero' A lieutenant attempts to lead his men
during the Korean
War. Richard Conte,
Peggie Castle, Chuck
Connors. 1955.
5:00 0
(1) CBS School·
break Special 'Dead
Wrong-The
John
Evans Story.' Based
on a true story, today's
program looks at the
criminal
career of
John Evans Ill who,
before
being
executed, left a message
to dissuade young
people from picking a
life of crime. (60 min.)
EVENING
6:00
OillO®Q)@
C!D 00 News
0) Little House on the
Prairie
EB MacNeil/Lehrer
Newshour
Q) [j) 3-2·1, Contact
0
ill C!D 00 NBC
News
0 (1) CBS News
II)@ ABC News
Q) (ll) Business Report
0 ill PM Magazine
0
(1) Wheel
of
Fortune
II)@ People's Court
0) Carol Burnett
f:B ®
Kentucky
General Assembly
Q) [j) MacNeil/Lehrer
Newshour
C!D 00 Switch
0 ill Tic Tac Dough
0 (1) Family Feud
II) @ Jeffersons
CD Hogan's Heroes
0
ill C!D 00 Real
People
0 (1) Domestic Life
Martin and Candy become panicky when
their home loan payment comes due and
they don't have enough money to meet it.
II) @ Fall Guy Colt
and Howie go to Argentina to rescue a
friend
accused
to
stealing a fortune in
thoroughbred
horse
embryos. (60 min.)
0) NBA Basketball:
Milwaukee at Atlanta
f:B (]) Q) (ll) Walk
Through 1 the
20th
Century
with
Bill
Moyers 'TR and His
Theodore
Times.'
Roosevelt is the topic
of discussion when
Bill
Moyers meets
biographer
David
McCullough. (60 min.)
O® Empire To atone
for committing murder, Martinson gives
awi!Y his possessions.
0 rn C!D 00 President
Reagan's State of the
Union Address Should
the Address end prematurely, then regular
programming will resume at its normally
scheduled times.
0
(1)
President
Reagan's State of the
rn
6:30
7:00
7:30
8:00
8:30
9:00
TV
SCHEDULE
Union Address Should
the Address end prematurely, then regular
programming will resume at its normally
scheduled times.
II)
@
President
Reagan's State of the
Union Address Should
the Address end prematurely, then Arthur
Hailey's Hotel/or regular
programming
will resumed at its normally
scheduled
times.
EB (]) Ql @ Sailor's
Return A British sea
captain and his African wife face prejudice and hostility when
the sailor returns to
his home village. (90
min.) [Closed Captioned]
10:15 O)TBS Evening News
10:30 EB ® Business Report
Q) (ll) View From the
Standpipe 'John Falter's World.' Artist
John Falter is profiled.
(R)
11:00 OillO®Q)@
C!D 00 News
Q) [j) MacNeil/Lehrer
Newshour (State of
the Union· Report)
11:30 0 ill C!D 00 Tonight
Show
0
® Police Story
'The Execution.' Lt.
Bennett assembles a
'hit' team of 40 men in
an effort to change the
manner of investigat·
ing homicides. (R) (60
min.)
II) @ Nightline
0) Catlins
12:00 0) MOVIE: 'Cisco
Pike'
A
narcotics
agent blackmails a
washed-up rock star
into selling $ 10,000
worth of marijuana.
Gene Hackman, Kris
Kristofferson, Karen
Black. 1972.
Q) (ll) State/Union:
Dem. Response
12:30 0 (I) Late Night with
David Letterman
0 (I) MOVIE: 'Magni·
ficent Magical Magnet of Santa Mesa'
When a young scientist develops a solution to many energy
problems, his employers de9ide to get rid of
AMAZONS
Madeline Stowe and Jack
Scalia become captured by a
group of extraordinary women
in
"Amazons,"
airing
SUNDAY, JAN. 29 on "The
ABC Sunday Night Movie."
CHECK LISTINGS FOR EXACT TIME
@)J984 Compulog
him. Michael Burns,
Susan
Blanchard,
Harry_Morgan. 1977.
II) (!) CNN Headline
News
1:00 II)@ Bionic Woman
2:00 0) MOVIE: 'Fancy
Pants' Bob, a gentleman's
gentleman,
brings culture to Big
Squaw. Bob Hope, Lucille Ball, Bruce Cabot. 1950.
4:00 0) Search for the Nile
«thursday))
1/26/84
MORNING
9:00
0) MOVIE: 'An Act of
Murder'
A
judge
who's wife faces a
painful 'death from a
brain tumor is faced
with a decision involving
mercy
killing.
Fredric March, Florence Eldridge, Edmond O'Brien, Geraldine Brooks. 1948
AFTERNOON
1:00 0) MOVIE: 'Footsteps
in the Fog' A servant
girl, knowing her employer poisoned his
wife, becomes his
housekeeper by using
blackmail. Jean Simmons, Stewart Granger,
Belinda
Lee.
1955.
EVENING
6:00
omommoo
C!D 00 News
0) Little House on the
Prairie
f:B (]) MacNeil/Lehrer
Newshour
Q) [j) 3·2·1, Contact
6:30 Dill NBC News
0 (1) CBS News
Q)@ABC News
@) (ll) Business Report
7:00 0 ill PM Magazine
0
(I) Wheel
of
Fortune
li)@ People's Court
0) Carol Burnett
f:B (])
Kentucky
General Assembly
@) (ll) MacNeil/Lehrer
Newshour
C!D 00 Appalachian
Encounters
7:30 0 (I) Tic Tac Dough
0 ® Family Feud
II) @ Jeffarsons
0) Hogan's Heroes
C!D 00 Lorna Greene's
Wilderness
8:00 0 (I) C!D 00 Gimme a
Break Nell reminisces
with the girls about
how she met their
zany mother.
0 ® Magnum P.l.
II) @ Automan Walter and Automan go
against a computer expert who is using his
savvy to disrupt the city's automated systems. (60 min.)
0) MOVIE: 'Alvarez
Kelly' A renegade adventurer is kidnapped
by
a
Confederate
guerilla. William Holden, Richard Widmark, Patrick O'Neal.
1966.
f:B (]) People's Business
Q) (ll) Sneak Previews
8:30 0 ill C!D 00 Family
Ties
Q)@ Good Neighbors
9:00 0 (I) C!D 00 Cheers
Cliff tries to find a way
to reestablish his manhood after he backs
down from a thug's
challenge in the bar.
0
® Mickey Spillane's Mike Hammer
Mike Hammer uses his
expertise to clear his
pal of false charges. (2
hrs.)
II) @
Masquerade
Lavender and his team
attempt to save some
American
hostages
who are being held by
terrorists. (60 min.)
f:B (]) Scholastic
Challenge
--Movie Week-SUNDAY
(ABC) SUNDAY NIGHT MOVIE
.
"AMAZONS" (1983) Madeline Stowe. Jack Scalia. A secret
group of murderous women will stop at nothing to establish a
world dominated by females.
Q)@ Mystery! 'Reilly:
Ace of Spies.' After
being instructed to
help the Japanese
Navy, Reilly obtains
information that leads
to the sinking of an entire Russian Squadron. (60 min.) [Closed
Captioned]
9:30 0 @ C!D 00 Buffalo
Bill Jo-Jo reveals that
she is pregnant.
f:B (]) Inside the
White House Four veteran White House
correspondents, who
will follow the election
campaign,
discuss
preparations for the
primaries and outline
the key areas to
watch.
10:00 0 ill C!D 00 Hill Street
Blues
II)@ 20/20
f:B(]) Business Report
Q)
(ll)
Kanawha
County On the Line
10:30 0) TBS Evening News
f:B (]) Inside Story
'Whose News Is It?'
Today's program examines the effects and
consequences of restricting press access
to news.
11:000ill0@1i)@
C!DOO News
f:B (])
To
Be
Announced
Q)@Dr.Who
11:30 0 ill C!D 00 Tonight
Show
0 (1) Trapper John,
M.D. Jackpot convinces Trapper, Gonzo
and his o·~her chums to
buy an interest in a
young amateur boxer.
li) @ Nightline
CD Catlins
@)
@
Latenight
America
12:00 0)
MOVIE:
'The Happening'
Four
young people stage a
mock kidnapping of a
wealthy man. Anthony
Quinn, Faye Dunaway,
George
Maharis.
1967.
12:30 0 ill Late Night with
David Letterman
0 @ MOVIE: 'More
Than Friends' A young
couple can't decide
whether to be friends
or lovers. Rob Reiner,
Penny Marshall. 1978
li) @ CNN Headline
News
1:00 li)@ Bionic Woman
2:15 0) MOVIE: 'Elizabeth
the Queen' The Queen
battles with her lover
for power in England.
Errol
Bette
Davis,
Flynn, Olivia De Havilland. 1939.
4:15 0) Search for the Nile
((friday»
(NBC) SUNDAY NIGHT MOVIE
1/27/84
MONDAY
(ABC) MONDAY NIGHT MOVIE
MORNING
.
9:00
.
"WHEN SHE SAYS NO" (1983) Kathleen Outnlan. Rtp Torn.
Dav 1d Huffman. A female college teacher. away from home
attendtng a convention. accuses three fellow teachers ot raptng
her
TUESDAY
(CBS) TUESDAY NIGHT MOVIE
"THE MASTER OF BALLANTRAE" ( 1983) Sir John Gielgud.
Richard Thomas. Michael York.
WEDNESDAY
(CBS) WEDNESDAY NIGHT MOVIE
.
"THE FINAL CONFLICT" ( 1981) Sam Neill, Rossano Brazzt.
Damien. a youngster in the previous films of the "Omen" tnlogy.
is now an adult, eager to corrupt the world and domtnate the
souls of all.
Fellow college teachers Jeffrey DeMunn and Katherine
Quinlan share a laugh while attending a conventton. But
the laughter fades when DeMunn and two other male
teachers are charged with rape. The drama takes place
on "When She Says No," airing Monday, Jan. 30 on
"The ABC Monday Night Movie."
0) MOVIE: 'Rosie' A
wealthy widow goes
from one madcap adventure to another until her daughters have
her declared mentally
incompetent. Rosalind
Russell Sandra Dee,
Brian Aherne. 1967.
AFTERNOON
1:00 0) MOVIE: 'Against a
Crooked Sky' A man
desperately attempts
to rescue his sister
who was abducted by
the Apaches. Richard
Boone, Stewart PeterBland.
son, Jewel
�3:30 EB ([) New Shapes In
Education
EVENING
6:oo omooom®
€D (])News
C6 Little House on the
Prairie
COLLEGE HOOPS
EB m MacNeil/Lehrer
6:30
7:00
7:30
8:00
Newshour
@B GJl 3-2-1, Contact
0 (]) €D ® NBC
News
000 CBS News
Q)@ ABC News
@B (jJ) Business Report
0 (]) PM Magazine
0
(§)
Wheel of
Fortune
Q)@ People's Court
C6 Carol Burnett
EB ® Enterprise 'Life
After Death .' Tonight's
program
examines
how cremation can be
to
the
marketed
general public and
how this venture could
change the 'American
way of death.' [Closed
Captioned]
@B (jJ) MacNeil/Lehrer
Newshour
€D ® Goins Brothers
0 (])Tic Tac Dough
0 (§) Family Feud
Q) @ Jeffersons
C6 Hogan's Heroes
EB ® Comment on
Kentucky
€D ® This Week in
Country Music
0 (]) €D ® Legmen
0 00 Dukes of
Hazzard
Q)@ Benson Bens:Jn
is accused of being
spy when some r~
cords reveal that 'Benson Dubois' was killed
in the Korean War.
[Closed Captioned]
C6 NCAA Basketball:
LSU at Auburn
m
®
m
GJJ
Washington
Week/
Review
8:30 Q)@ Webster Webster struggles alone
when he attempts to
control
his
bedwetting problem .
EB ® @B GJl Wall
Street Week
9:00 0 (]) €D ill Master
The Master and his apprentice run afoul of
an Oriental godfather.
(60 min .)
000 Dallas Miss Ellie
tells Clayton the real
reaso'l why she want~
to call off their marnage and Cliff plans a
rendezvous with Marilee Stone. (60 min .)
Q) @ Blue Thunder
EB ®
Kentucky
General Assembly
@B @ Session '84
9:30 @B @ Enterprise ' Life
After Death .'
I
CHECK LISTINGS FOR EXACT TIME
@198-4 Compulog
To
Be
Announced
@B (jJ) Dr. Who
11:30 0 (]) €D ® Tonight
Show
0
@
MOVIE:
'Ruckus' The arrival of
a shell-shocked Vietnam veteran soon ruffles the calm of an
Alabama town . Dirk
Benedict, Linda Blair,
Ben Johnson.
&)@ Nightline
C6 Catlins
@B @ MOVIE: 'My
Little Chickadee'
12:00 C6 Night Tracks
12:30 0
€D ® Friday
Night Videos
Ci) ® CNN Headline
News
1 :00 Q) @
Pentecost
Today
1:30 Q) @ Bionic Woman
2:00 0 (]) News
m
«saturday))
1/28/84
MORNING
5:00
5:30
6:00
6:15
6:30
7:00
1o:ooo m m m TV
Comedy's
Funniest
Moments
0 00 Burnett 'Discovers' Domingo Carol
Burnett and Placido
Domingo star in this
series of musical numbers,
comedy
sketches and dance
numbers. (60 min.)
Q) @ Matt Houston
C6 TBS Evening News
f.B ill Business Report
@B (jJ) Austin City
Limits
'Jerry
Lee
Lewis and the Memphis Beats.' Jerry Lee
Lewis presents his
pianoraucous,
banging style in this
special performance.
(60 min.)
10:30 EB ® International
Edition Ford Rowan
hosts this look at important trends and
news events in the
U.S. as they are reported by foreign journalists.
11:00 0 (]) 0 @ Q) (!)
€Dei) News
CD AU Jo .the FamUy •
Matt Doherty of North Carolina leads the Tar Heels
against the LSU Tigers in a
college basketball c:nsh,
which NBC airs SUNDAY,
JAN. 29 from Chapel Hill, N.C.
7:30
8:00
8:30
9:00
9:30
C6
Q) (!) Pac-Man/Rubik
Cube Hour
@B @ Dave Allen at
LarQ!
10:00 0 (I) Plasticman
@B (jJ) Dad's Army
10:30 0 (]) €D ® Alvin &
the Chipmunks
0 (]) Charlie Brown
& Snoopy
Q) (!) Littles
C6 MOVIE: 'Dead Heat
on a Merry-Go-Round'
EB ® Social Problems/Ciassrm.
@B (jJ) House For All
Seasons
11:00 0 (]) €D ® Mr. T
0® Benji/Zax/Aiien
Prince
Ci) @ Puppy/Scooby
Doo Show
EB (]) Bits and Bytes
@B (jJ) All New This
Old House
11:30 0
Amazing
Spiderman/lncredible
Hulk
0 (§) Bugs Bunny/
Road Runner
EB ill
Business
Management
@B (jJ) Woodwright's
Sho.e_
€D W Fishing Fever
AFTERNOON
m
Night
Tracks
Cont'd
Q)@ Rev. Pete Rowe
0 (])Saturday Report 12:00 Ci) (!) America's Top
Ten
Q) @ Farm Digest
EB ®
Business
C6 TBS Morning News
&)@Forum 19
M11na_g_ement
@B (fD Washington
(!)®T.V. Classroom
Week/Review
Q)@ Town Crier
0
Joy
of
€D ® That Nashville
Gardening
Music
(!) (]) Captain Kanga12:30 0 Cil Thundarr
roo
Q)
@
American
Q) (!) CNN Headline
Bandstand
News
EB (]) Here's to Your
C6 Between the Lines
Health
@B @
Market to
@B (jJ) Wall Street
Market
Week
€D ®
Amazing
€D ®Kentucky Afield
Spiderman/lncredible
12:45 C6
MOVIE:
'The
Hulk
Fighting Kentuckian'
0 Cil Bugs Bunny &
A man fights two criFriends
minals who are trying
Q) @ ABC Weekend
to stop him from
Special 'The Contest
marrying a French
Kid Strikes Again.'
general's
daughtar.
C6 Romper Room and
John Wayne. Vera
Friends
Ralston. John
Ho@B @ Great Chefs/
ward. 1949.
San Francisco
1:00 0 (]) (l6 ill NCAA
OCil«l&(}) Flintstone
Basketball: Maryland
Funnies
at Notre Dame
(!) (]) Biskitts
0 (]) Let's Go To The
Ci) @ Monchhichis/
Races
Little Rascals/Richie
EB (I) Here's to Your
Rich
Health
C6 Starcade
@B (j]) Family Portrait
@B (jJ) Two Ronnies
1:30 (!) (]) Fishing w/
Shirt
Roland Martin
Tales
Q) @ Love Connec(!)
@
Saturday
tion
Supercede
EB (I) Focus on
C6 MOVIE: 'The
Society
Shepherd of the Hills'
@1} (jJ) Family Portrait
@1} (jJ) Fawlty Towers
2:00 (!) ® NCAA Basket0 (]) (l6 (I) Smurfs
ball: Teams to be
Cil (!) New Scooby/
Announced
Q) (!) PGA Seniors
Scra_epy Doo
@B (1j) To the Manor
Championships
Born
EB ([) Focus on
(!) (]) Dungeons and
Society
Dra_gOfiS
• • •••••• @B (fl) Ma.king !t count ••
m
o m m m
2:30 EB ill American Gov't
3:00
Survey
@B (jJ) Making_ It Count
0 (]) €D (2..) NCAA
Basketball: Oklahoma
at Memphis State
Q)@ Star Search
C6 MOVIE: 'Man
Without a Star' A
ranch foreman helps
the lady owner fight a
neighboring rancher
in a barbed wire war.
Kirk Douglas, Jeanne
Crain, Claire Trevor.
Q) (!) NCAA Basketball: Tennessee at
Vanderbilt
EB (I) GED Series
@B (jJ) All Creatures
Grftat and Small
4:30 EB (]) GED Series
5:00 0 (]) €D (]) lsuzuAndy Williams San
Diego Open Coverage
of the semifinal round
is presented from the
Torrey Pines Country
Club, La Jolla, CA. (60
min.)
C6 Fishin' w/Orlando
Wilson
EB ill Firing Line
@B @
Masterpiece
Theatre 'The Citadel.'
Andrew becomes the
subject of an official
inquiry for assisting at
an operation not regarded qualified by
the British physicians.
(60 min.) [Closed Captioned]
5:30 CD Motorweek Illustrated
EVENING
6:00 0 Cil 0 (]) News
6:30
1955.
EB ® American Gov't
Survf!Y_
@B (1j) Vietnam: A
Television History
3:30 EB ® Another Page
4:00 0 ® NCAA Basketball: DePaul at UCLA
7:00
7:30
Q) (!) Sportsbeat
t6 World Chaml)ionship Wrestling
EB ill Matinee at the
BiJOU
@B
GJl
Undersea
World of Jacques
Cousteau
€D (I) At The Movies
0 (]) «l& (I) NBC
News
0 (§) Concern
Q) @ Dance Fever
0 Cil Dance Fever
000 Hee Haw
Q)@ Solid Gold
@B (jJ) Dr. Who Movie
(I) Jamboree
Om Courace
m
r
Soap Beat
Brian Matthews finds
happiness on 'Y&R'
By Connie Passalacqua
EB (I) Sneak Previews
8:00 0 Cil (l6 ® Diff'rent
Strokes First of 2
parts. Arnold and Kimberly
learn
about
hitchhiking the hard
way when they are
picked up by an evil
stranger.
(!) (]) Whiz Kids
G) (!) T. J. Hooker
Stacy disappears after
going un:lercover to
get some information
regarding some killings and robberies.
(60 min.) [Closed Captioned]
C6
MOVIE:
'Cat
Ballou'
A
schoolteacher teams up with
a cattle rustler and his
drunken uncle to rob a
train. Jane Fonda, Lea
Marvin. Michael Cal• lan. 1965.
EB
Nature 'Search
for the Mind.' Tonight's program explores the efforts of
naturalists who delve
into the mysteries of
the animal mind. (R)
(60 min.) [Closed Captioned]
8:30 0 (]) €D (}) Silver
m
~ons
W (jJ) Hitch Hikers
"Soap opera acting is
the best experience any
actor could ask for." says
Brian Matthews, who plays
the suave Eric Garnson on
"The Young and the
Restless. " "Day in and day
out you learn the invaluable
task of working with cameras. It's like getting patd to
learn.''
Enc is a young cosmetics
executive in love with his
company's president, Ashley Abbott (Eileen Davidson) . The situation is
fraught with complications.
When Eric arrived in Genoa
City, he had no idea Ashley
was the daughter of Dina
Mergeron (Marla Adams).
his much older former
lover, who subsequently
arrived in town.
"I know the ·older
woman-younger man' affair
is in right now. I'm loving
every minute of it," he
says, of the current love triangle on "Y & A."
While Matthews is currently happy with his
career, only two years ago
he was all but defeated.
With only regional theater
and the lead in a low-budget horror movie, "The
Burning" to his credit, he
was cast as the lead tn
"~?PPe~f!el~.: ·. !! ~
mi}-.•
1?
Guide/Galaxy
9:00 0 Cil (l6 ® MOVIE:
Brian Matthews
lion Broadway musical. The
show closed after onty 13
performances. Matthews
dejectedly left New York for
Hollywood.
"There were almost no
roles around," he recalls.
"What few roles existed
were wrong for me. I wanted to yell 'I was David
Copperfield on Broadway!
What's wrong with this
business?' "
Matthews appeared 111 a
few commercials and went
for scores of auditions. He
took a diversion for a year
by working as an aide for
his girlfriend s father, former California Congressman Robert Dornan. But he
resumed his actirtg career
and eventually was
offered the "Y & A" role ..
.. - ~Q'~-~ ---
'World War Ill' Part 1
When a grain embargo leads to riots in
the U.S.S.R., the Russians take actions
against the United
States that leads to
the possibility of a
third work1 war. Rock
Hudson. David Soul.
Cathy Lee Crosby.
0 ® Airwolt (PRE·
MIERE)
Q) @ Love Boat
EB
All Creatures
Great and Small
OJ (jJ) World War I
9:30 OJ (jJ) Bear Next Door
10:00 (!) 00 Mickey Spil·
lane's Mike Hammer
(PREMIERE)
Hammer's concern for an
elderly couple's welfare pits him agamst a
police operation tracking a network of international terrorists. (60
min.)
Cil (!) Fantasy Island
A woman looks for
::omfort when the man
of her dreams turns
her down and a mechanic wants to date a
perfect '1 0." (60 min.)
[Closed Captioned]
CD TBS Evening News
f:B(l) Mysteryi'Reilly:
Ace ·of Spies.' Reilly
escapes
from
the
Frontier Police while
Mrs. Thomas is caught
in a situation that
scandalizes the British
. nation .•••••
m
�and You
Christ for the
World
m Starcade
@) [i) Wild America
@6 00 Biblical Viewpoint
9:00 U Cl) Rex Humbard
0 (]) Sunday Morning
G) @ Kenneth Copeland
m Leave It to Beaver
fa (]) Sesam& Street
(Closed Captioned]
0) [i) Smithsonian
World
'Time
and
Light.' Host David
McCullough looks at
both the first and the
very latest in light
~therers. (60 min.)
t:D 00 Sunday School
9:30 U Cl) Kenneth Copeland
m Andy Griffith
@6 Cl) Rev. R.A. West
10:00 G)@ Rev. R.A. West
m Good News
fa (]) Mr. Rogers'
NeiQ!!borhood
0) (ll) Nova 'Anatomy
of a Volcano.' The
eruption of Mt. St. Helens and its aftermath
are explored. {R) {60
min.) [Closed Cap-
ing the death of a
Congressman, a doctor discovers a secret
of
organization
women who possess a
power that controls
their enemies. Tamara
Dobson, Jack Scalia,
Stella Stevens. 1984.
m Week In Review
0 (])
/
David Hasselhoff ("Knight
Rider'') and actress-sportscaster Jayne Kennedy host
" The Most Beautiful Girl in !he
World,'' an NBC speclal to air
live from Hawaii on MONDAY,
JAN. 30. Twenty-one contestants, representing 21 regions
of the world, will compete for
the title.
CHECK LISTINGS FOR EXACT TIME
@)1984 Compulog
0) (ill NCAA BasketMarshall
vs.
ball:
Western Carolina
11:00 U ® 0 (I) News
G)@ ABC News
m Unknown War
fa (]) Austin City
Limits
@6 (I) Music Magazine
11:15 G)@ News
11 :30 U Cl) {!B 00 Saturday
Night Live
0 (I) MOVIE: 'Zorba,
The Greek' A Britic;h
writer and a Greek opportunist on Crete
take lodging with an
aging courtesan . Anthony Quinn, Alan
Bates, Irene Papas.
1964.
G) @ Music Magazine
12:00 G) @ Black Music
·
Magazine
m Night Tracks
12:30 G) @ Rockford Files
1:00 U ® MOVIE: 'Paris
Honeymoon' A millionaire cowboy in
Paris helps his f iancBe
get a divorce from a
French
nobleman.
Bing
Crosy,
Akim
Tamiroff,
Franciska
Goal. 1939
2:00 m
Night
Tracks
Cont'd
«sunday))
1/29/84
MORNING
5:00
·6:00
G)@ Rev. Pete Rowe
G)@ Omni
mNews
6:15 m Week/Review
6:30 U Cl) TV Chapel
0 (I) Better Way
ii) (!) What Does the
Bible Say?
m TBS Morning News
7:00 U Cl) Music and the
~ken Word
Ill (I) Jerry Falwell
G) @ Roger Sparks
Religion
m World Tomorrow
0) (fl) MOVIE: 'Dr.
Kildare Goes Home'
Young Dr. Kildare realizes his dream of becoming Dr. Gillespie's
assistant. Lew Ayres,
I ;,..~::
Barrymore,
Gene Lockhart. 1940
@6 Cl)
Time
for
Refreshing
7:30 U Cl) Fountain of Life
G)@ James Robison
m It Is Written
8:00 U (I) Hour of Power
0
(]) Day of
Discovery
G)@ Jerry Falwell
m Cartoon Carnival
fa (]) Sesame Street
[Closed Captioned]
@6
Cl)
Gateway
Gospel
8:30 U (]) Oral Roberta
~ned]
Cl) Big Creek
Baptist
10:30 U Cl) Dr. D. James
Kennedy
0 (]) Ernest Angley
G) @ Jimmy Swagowr
&rtMOVIE: 'Battle Cry'
MAST~RFUL
Finola Hughes, Michael
York {rear), Richard Thomas
and John Gielgud (center)
star in the ' 'Hallmark Hall of
Fame" presentation of "The
Master of Ballantrae, " airing
TUESDAY, JAN. 31 on CBS.
m
9:30
@)1984 Compulog
fa ® Electric Com-
ball: Ark.ansas vs.
Villanova
&)@Telethon
fa
®
Working
Women
0) [i) Sesame Street
[Closed Captioned]
@6 Cl)
Old Time
pany
11 :00 fa (]) Sesame Street
[Closed Captioned]
0) (fl) MOVIE: 'Trailing Danger'
@6 Cl) Leonard Repass
11:30 U
Cl) Bill Dance
l)utdoors
0 (I) Viewpoint
G) @ World Tomorrow
@6 (I) Rev. R.A. West
AFTERNOON
12:00 U Cl) At Issue
0 (I) NCAA Basket-
Superstars return for
12th year of competition
Born
@6 Cl) Wild Kingdom
EVENING
6:00
Gos~l
12:30 U Cil Meet.the Press
fa CI:l Comment on
Kentucky_
1:00 U Cl) t:D (I) NCAA
Basketball: LSU at
North Carolina
fa ® Capitol Connection
0) (fl) Victory Garden
1:30 fa ® Business of
Management
0)
@
Working
Women
1:45 m MOVIE: 'The Pride
of Jesse Hallam'
2:00 0 (I) NBA All-Star
Game Coverage of the
34th annual All-Star
Game is presented
from the McNichols
Sports Arena, Denver,
CO. {2 hrs., 30 min .)
G)® Superstars Coverage of this tournament is presented
from Key Biscayne,
FL. {2 hrs.)
fa ® Business of
6:30
7:00
Man~ement
2:30
Reggie Jackson
row, thereby guranteeing
new competitors every
year.
For men, the events- are
tennis, bowling, rowing,
swimming, weightlifting ,
100-yard dash, half-mile
run, obstacle course, bicycle race and closest-to-thepin golf competition.
Women's events include
tennis, bowling, r_owing,
swimming, basketball
shoot, 60-yard dash, quarter-mile run, bicycle race,
obstacle course and a closest-to-the-pin competition.
Quick quiz: Who won last
year's "Superstars" titles?
You don't know?
San Francisco '49er wide
receiver Renaldo Nehemiah, who caught few passes
in the NFL this season, was
quick to grab the $15,000
men's first prize. On the
distaff side, the winner was
basketball player Ann
Meyers, who won tl"ree
titles in the last three years..
@)compulog
3:00
3:30
3:454:00
4:30
5:00
5:30
0) (ll) MOVIE: 'Out
West With the Hardys'
fa ([) Focus on
Society
@6
(])
To
Be
Announced
U
(1)
All
Star
Wrestling
fa ([) Focus on
Society
@6 ® SEC Basketball:
Mississippi at Florida
fa(]) Maki'lg It Count
0)
@
Barbara's
Horses & Ponies
m MOVIE: 'For the
Love of Benji'
U Cl) Shopsmith
Market
G) @ Wide World of
Sports: The Pro Bowl
fa(]) Making It Count
0) [i) Inside Story 'Superbowl/
Superstakes.' The big
buildup to one of
America's most lucrative television moments is examined.
U
Cl)
lsuzu-Andy
Williams San Diego
Open
0 (]) CBS Sports
Sunday
fa (]) Social Problems/Ciassrm.
0) @
New Tech
Times
fa (]) All New This
Old House
0) (fl) Two Ronnies
@6 (]) Fishing Championships
m Jacques Coustei!,U
fa Cil Woodwright's
Shop
Q) {!])To the Manor
7:30
8:00
9:00
0 (])
fa Cil
News
Motorweek
0) (fl) Dad's Army
@6 (]) Bill Francis
Gardening
U Cl) News
0 (I) CBS News
m Nice People
fa (]) Great Chefs/
San Francisco
0) @ Fawlty Towers
@6 00 NBC News
Cl) @6
lacoccaAn American Profile
0 (]) 60 Min.Jtes
G)@ Ripley's Believe
It or Notl Tonight's
program features the
true story of the Hatfield
and
McCoys
feud, music created by
Brain Waves and the
last World War II soldiers on Guam. {60
min.)
m
Best of World
Championship WrestlinQ_
fa (]] Nature .A Question
of
Learning.'
Tonight's program investigates how animals learn.
W @ Tony Brown's
Journal
W @ Lawmakers
U Cl) @6 (I) Knight
Rider Michael tries to
find out who is burglarizing businesses
in a small resort town .
(60 min .)
II GD Four Seasons
{PREMIERE) The Zimmers begins to have
some second thoughts
on their decision to go
to the West Coast. {60
min .)
G) @ Hardcastle &
McCormick Hardcastle and McCormick
match wits with a thief
who survived a sentence imposed by the
judge to organize a
crime school. {60 min.)
m America's Music
Tracks
fa ([) Pallisers
0) [i) Nature 'Living
Together.' Tonight's
program explores the
relationships between
the behavior of animals and the kinds of
communities in which
they live. {R) (60 min.)
[Closed Captioned]
U Cl) @6 00 MOVIE:
'World War II~' Part 2
0
®
Jeffersons
Louise and Helen's
fascination with their
self-defense instructor
taunts George and
Tom into a scheme of
rekindling their wives'
respect for their manliness.
G)(]) MOVIE: 'Ama·
zona' While investigat-
u
m
rn
m
@
Masterpiece Theatre
'The Irish A.M.' After
becoming a Resident
Magistrate in Ireland,
Major Sinclair Yeates
begcins to suspect that
he doesn't belong in
ilis new country.
CHECK LISTINGS FOR EXACT TIME
(SP9RTS PR~~ID
MORE SUPERS If the Rose
Bowl game is the "granddaddy of all bowl games,"
as NBC reminds us every
New Year's Day, ABC's
"The Men's Superstars"
has to be the granddaddy
of TV junk sports. It's also
the father of that great
prime-time athletic event,
"Battle of the Network
Stars.''
This weekend , "ihe
Men's Superstars" starts
its 12th year in its Sunday
afternoon slot. Next weekend the show's spinoff,
"The
Women ' s
Superstars," begins its
season.
Once again the show's
host will be AI Michaels,
with help from ABC commentators Reggie Jackson
and Anne Simon.
This year's competitors
include boxers Marvin
Hagler and Ray "Boom
Boom" Mancini; Baltimore
Orioles' pitchers Tippy
Martinez and Storm Davis,
and pole vault champion
Billy Olson.
Women on the starting
line include tennis' Martina
Navratilova; basketball's
Nancy Lieberman; highjump star Louise Ritter and
pro skier T oril Forland.
As in past years, athletes
participating in the men's
and women's events may
not compete in their specialty. Each entrant must
choose seven of the 10
events in which he will
competete. And athletes
are not permitted to enter
more than three years in a
TALE
0 (I) Alice Carrie de-
cides to become a
better mother to Mel
by confessing various
white lies she told him
in his childhood .
10:00 0 (I) Trapper John,
M.D. Gonzo becomes
involved with the underworld
when
a
grateful mobster dies
and makes him his
heir. {60 min.)
m Sports Page
fa(]) Creating Altern.
Futures
0)@ Poldark
10:30 m Oral Robarts
fa ® International
Edition
Journalist
Ford Rowan hosts this
look
at
important
trends and news events as they are reported
by foreign
journalists.
11 :oo
®
News
&)@ABC News
m Jerry Falwell
0) [i) Not the Nine
O'Clock News
1 1:1 5 G) @ Forum 1 9
11:30 U (1) MOVIE: 'Let's
Make Love' A billionaire; about to be satirized in a musical
review, is not recognized by the producer
and is hired to impersonate himse 1f. Marilyn
Monroe, Tony
Randall,
Franki
Vau~an. 1960.
0 CiJ This Week in
Country Music
G)
C!J
Pentecost
u rn o
m oo
Tod~
0) (fl) Monty Python
Flying Circus
@I) (I) MOVIE: 'Jacobo
Timerrnan:
Prisoner
Without a Name, Cell
Without a Number' An
influential and outspoken Argentine newspaperman
is
denounced and imprisoned by the Argentina government. Roy
Scheider, Liv Ullmann,
Sam Robards. 1983.
12:00 0 ® Face the Nation
G)@ Jim Bakker
m
People
Who
Fish ... America
0) @ Dave Allen at
Large
12:30 0 ®MOVIE: 'Death
Policy' On vacation in
England, an American
woman marries a suspicious
man
and
winds up fearing for
her life. Barbara Feldon. Robert Powell.
Jessie Evans. 1972
1:00 G) @ Star Search
m MOVIE: 'Death Of
A Scoundrel' A penniless European comes
to the U. S. and cons
himself into possession of a fortune.
George Sanders. Zsa
Zsa
Gabor, Victor
Jory. 1956.
3:30 m
MOVIE:
'Gold
Digg9rs of 1935' An
ambitious
mother
takes her daughter to
a summer hotel in the
hopes of capturing an
older man. Dick Powell,
Gloria
Stuart,
Adolphe
Menjou
�(@&ytirne))
MORNING
C6 Varied
Programs
Ill@ Rev. Pete Rowe
0 Cil NBC News at
Sunrise
(i) (I)
@ Jimmy
Swaggart
C6 TBS Morning News
6 :15 @) Gil Varied Pro!l!_ams
6:30 UCIJ News
(i) (]) CBS Early
Morning News
II)
@
Assembly
Echoes
6:45 II)@ ABC News This
Morning
@)@Weather
7:00 0 CIJ liB (}) Today
(i) (I) CBS Morning
News
II) @ Good Morning
America
C6 SuperStation Funtime
@) Gil Varied Pro!l!_ams
7:30 W I Dream of Jeannie
8:00 C6 Bewitched
fB (I) Weather
Ol @ Sesame Street
B:15 fB @
Instructional
Programs
B:30 C6 I Love Lucy
9:00 8
Cil Braun and
Com_pany
(i) C1J Andy Griffith
II) @ Jim Bakker
C6 Movie
Ol @ Instructional
Pr<lg!ams
liBCV 700 Club
9:30 (i) (I) Here's Lucy
10:00 8 Cil liB (}) Facts of
Life
(i) ® New $25,000
5:00
5:30
6:00
m
(I) liB (]) Wheel of
Fortune
(i) ® Price Is Right
II)@ Benson
C6 Catlins
11 :30 8 (I) liB (}) Dream
House
II)@ Loving
C6 Texas
11 :0
W@ 700 Club
8 (I) Sale of the
Century
(i) (I) Press Your Luck
liB
(})
Morning
Stretch
(
4:30
12:00
5:00
12:30
1 :00
1:30
2:00
2:30
3:00
3:30
4:00
~@(f]WJ@
rtWUYVf!l W
liB C2J Hot Potato
8 (I) B.J./Lobo Show
(i) Cl) Hawaii Five-0
II) @ Superfriends
5:30
Leave It to Beaver
fB @
Mr. Rogers'
Neighborhood
@) @ Sesame Street
[Closed Captioned]
liB (]) PTL Club
II) @ Tic Tac Dough
C6 Beverly Hillbillies
fB @ 3-2-1, Contact
Five artists, five producers,
five studios, 40 musicians and
two years later. the " AII-Ameri·
can Cowboys" LP has finally
been released. Performers on
the LP include Moe Bandy,
David Allan Coe, Merle
Haggard, Willie Nelson and
Jeannie Seely
Haggard wrote the title song
and " (Not Till I Was) Old
Enough to Fight" for the
album. Other impressive com·
positions include Willie
Joe Stampley
Nelson's "What Can You Do to
Me Now" and "Yesterday's
Wine": Jeann1e Seely's " When
Will I See You Again" : and
Paul Davis' rodeo-rider saga,
" ~ide 'Em Cowboy," sung by
David Allan Coe.
Mickey Gilley and Charly
McClain who had a hit with
the1r first duet single, " Paradise Tonight," are preparing to
go into the studio for a duet
album.
Both artists have released
new solo albums. Gilley's LP is
" You've Really Got a Hold on
Me," while Miss McClain's is
" The Woman in Me."
@11184 Compulog
Michael McGuire (stand·
ing) and Richard Masur plot
their revenge against their vir·
tuous colleague, Ben Christian, on "Emp~re,'' a1nng
WEDNESDAY, FEB. 1 on
CBS.
CHECK LISTINGS FOR EXACT TIME
«monday))
@1984 Compulog
1/30/84
MORNiNG
7:30
9:00
@){IT) Sesame Street
[Closed Captioned]
C6 MOVIE: 'Lorna
Doone' Oppressed English farmers organize
and
attack
the
Doones, a ruthless
outlaw family. Barbara Hale, Richard
Greene,
William
Bishop. 1951 .
AFTERNOON
1:00
C6
MOVIE:
'Miss
Sedie Thompson' A
marine, a minister,
and a woman with a
sordid past, all clash
while on a Pacific island. Jose Ferrer, Rita
Hayworth, Aldo Ray.
1954.
EVENING
6:oo
e me
CI:J m ®
lifi(}) News
C6 Little House on the
Prairie
fB Cil MacNeil/Lehrer
Newshour
@) {ll) 3-2·1, Contact
6:30 8 (I) liB (}) NBC
News
(i) Cl) CBS News
li)@ABC News
@)(j]) Business Report
7:00 8 (I) PM Magazine
(i) Cl) Wheel
of
Fortune
Cl)@ People's Court
C6 Carol Burnett
fB ® Presentel
@)@ MacNeil/Lehrer
Newshour
liB (]) How the West
Was Won
7:30 8 (I) Tic Tac Dough
(i) Cl) Family Feud
@ Jefferson&
C6 Hoi!!n's Heroes
fB
W
University
Journal
8:00 8 Cil TV's Bloopers &
Practical Jokes Dick
Clark and Ed McMahon host this look at
scenes never intended
for viewing by an audience. (60 min .)
(i) Cl) Scarecrow and
Mrs. Kinjl_
II)@ W (]) NCAA
Basketball: Tennessee
vs Kentucky
C6 MOVIE: 'Duel' A
highway motorist becomes engaged in a
game of death with a
truck driver. Dennis
Weaver. 1971 .
fB@@) {IT) Frontline
'Abortion
Clinic .'
Some women
and
men discuss the difficult
decision
of
whether or not to end
a pregnancy. (R) (60
min.) [Closed Captioned]
9:00 8 (I) Most Beautiful
Girl in the World David
Hasselhoff and Jayne
Kennedy host this contest in which 21 contestants
from
21
different regions of
the world compete for
the title of 'The Most
Beautiful Girl in the
World.' (2 hrs.)
m
If such titles as "Double
Shot (of My Baby's Love) ,"a
huge hit for the Swingin'
Medallions 1n 1966; "Poor
Side of Town," a smash for
Johnny Rivers in 1966,
· Brown-eyed Girl" by Van
Morrison: and Paul Anka's
"Put Your Head on My Shaul·
der" bring back memories.
then give a listen to Joe
Stampley's new LP. "Memory
Lane."
These songs, as well as new
tunes with the feel of the
1960s. have been packaged in
Stampley's latest vinyl effort.
"We produced the songs to
sound like they were being
played by a band rather than a
studio group. But it is definitely
an '80s production. The piano
may be bang1ng away like the
1960s recordings. but the
drums are out front like the
records of today." says
Stampley.
EMPIRE STRIKES
C6
8
0
(I) Hot Potato
(I) liB (]) News
II)@ Family Feud
C6 Perry Mason
8 (I) News
(i) (I) Young and the
Restless
II)@ Ryan's Hope
liB (]) Search For
Tomorrow
8 (I) Days of Our
Lives
II)@ All My Children
C6 Movie
liB (2) Sale of the
Century
(i) (]) As the World
Turns
liB (]) Days of Our
Lives
8 (I) Another World
Ill@ One Life to Live
Ol @ 3-2-1, Contact
(i) Cl) Capitol
@) @
Instructional
Pr<lg!ams
liB rn Another World
8 (I) Match Game/
Hollywood
Squares
Hour
(i) Cl) Guiding Light
II) @ General Hospital
C6 SuperStation Funtime
@) Gil Varied Pro!l!_ams
W Flintstone&
fB @ Electric Company
liB (]) Match Game/
Hollywood
Squares
Hour
8 (I) Mr. Cartoon
(i) Cl) Hour Magazine
II) @ Rockford Files
C6 Munsters
fB@ Sesame Street
@) (j]) Untamed World
C6 Brady Bunch
@) (j]) Mr. Rogers'
Nei~borhood
AFTERNOON
~ramid
10:30
8
(i) Cl) AfterMASH
With Soon-Lee about
to deliver, Klinger begins gambling in an effort to raise some
extra money.
fB (I) @) {ll) Great
Performances 'Edith
Wharton: Summer.' A
woman confronts the
challenges and problems inherent in the
process of maturing
from adolescence to
adulthood.
9:30 (i) Cl) Newhart Dick is
a guest on a television
interview show and
ends up as the show's
new host.
10:00 (i) Cl) Emerald Point
N.A.S.
Cl) (!) Billy Graham
Crusade
C6 TBS Evening News
10:30 fBCI) Business Report
@) (j]) Doctorow &
American Myth Author E.L. Doctorow
and his works are examined. (R)
11 :oo
e me
CI:J m ®
lifi(l) News
C6 All
In the Family
Ol (j]) Dr. Who
11:30 8 (I) liB (1) Tonight
Show
(i) Cl) Hart to Hart
Cl) (!) Nightline
C6 Catlins
@)
(j])
Latenight
America
12:00 C6 MOVIE: 'Secret
Ways' An American
adventurer goes into
Hungary to bring out
the leader of antiCommunist forces . Richard Widmark, Sonja
Ziemann, Charles Regnier. 1961.
12:30 8 (I) Late Night with
David Letterman
(i) Cl) Columbo
II) @ CNN Headline
. News
1 :30 II) (!) Bionic Woman
2:30 C6 MOVIE: 'The Two
Mrs. Carrolls' A man 's
first wife dies suspiciously and, when he
remarries, his second
wife begins to fear for
her safety. Humphery
Bogart, Barbara Stanwyck, Alexis Smith .
1947.
4:30 C6 Americans
((tuesdaY))
1/31/84
MORNING
9:00
C6
MOVIE: "Til We
Meet Again' A girl,
with
only
a
few
months to live, and a
convicted
murderer
meet aboard ship and
fall iin love. Merle Oberon, George Brent,
Pat O'Brien. 1940.
AFTERNOON
1:00
4:00
C6
MOVIE: 'Torpedo
Bay' A British mine
sweeper and an It·
alian submarine encounter each other in
the straits of Gibraltar.
James Mason, Lilli
Palmer. 1964.
8 (I) NBC Special
Treat 'My Father the
Circus King.' Today's
program looks at the
unique
relationship
between circus superstar Gunther Gebel·
Williams and his son
Buffy. (R) (60 min.)
9:00
EVENING
6:00
U@CJCil&l@
tBCl:l News
I& Little House on the
Prairie
fB (I) MacNeil/Lehrer
Newshour
@) (fl) 3-2-1, Contact
(I) Ci& {I) NBC
6:30 8
News
(i) (I) CBS News
II) (!) ABC News
Ol (fl) Business Report
7:00 8 (I) PM Magazine
(i) Cl) Wheel
of
Fortune
II)(!) People's Court
C6 Carol Burnett
fB
(I)
Kentucky
General Assembly
Ol (j]) MacNeil/Lehrer
Newshour
liB (}) At The Movies
7:30 8 (I) Tic Tac Dough
(i) Cl) Family Feud
@ Jefferson&
m
C6
NBA Basketball:
Atlanta at Washington
fB Cil Play Bridge
liB (]) Headwaters
8 :00 8 (I) liB ill A Team
The A Team, answering the call of a black
minister, battle to stop
an illegal moonshine
operation . (60 min.)
(i) Cl) MOVIE: 'Master
of Ballantrae' When
Prince Charles returns
to Scotland to reclaim
the throne for his
father, a man is faced
with a decision on
which of his two sons
will join the rebel
cause and which will
remain loyal to King
George. Richard Thomas, Michael York,
John Gielgud. 1984.
II)
(!)
Foulups,
Bleeps/Blunders
fB (I) Ol (j]) Nove 'Antarctica: Earth's Last
Frontier.'
Tonight's
program looks at how
climatic changes in
Antarctica can affect
!he world's climate
and whether Antarctica can remain politically neutral. (60 min.)
[Closed Captioned]
8:30 Ill (!) Happy Days
Fonzie
initiates
9:30
9:45
1 o:oo
11
Chachi into the secrets of his own 'Fonzarelli power.' [Closed
Captioned]
8 (I) CB (}) Riptide
Cody, Nick and Boz try
to find a missing couple in Mexico. (60
min.)
&) (!) Three's Company Rumors fly around the apartment
when Jack checks
into the hospital for
the removal of a tattoo.
[Closed
Captioned]
fB (I) 81) (fl) American
Playhouse
'True
West.' Sam Shepard's
award-winning
play
about two brothers is
presented in a special
performance. (2 hrs.)
[Closed Captioned]
Cl) (!) Oh Madeline
C6 TBS Eveni.!!IJ News
e
m
•
(})
Remington Steele An
underworld figure kidnaps Mildred as part
of a plan to trick Laura
and Remington into
working for him. (60
min.)
II) (!) Hart to Hart A
figure skater's dreams
of Olympic gold will
be shattered unless
the Harts can mix
modern
technology
with the talents of Tai
Babilonia and Randy
Gardner. (60 min.)
[Closed Cl!_2tioned]
:oo a m e cu m ®
CBCl:l
I& All
News
In the Family
@) (j]) Dr. Who
11:30 8 (I) Ci& (1) Tonight
Show
(i) Cl) Magnum P.l.
II)(!) Nightline
C6 Catlins
Ol @
Latenight
America
12:00 C6 MOVIE: 'The Art of
Love' A painter and
his friend plan a false
suicide. James Garner, Elke Sommer,
Dick Van Dyke. 1965.
12:30 8 (I) Late Night with
David Letterman
(i) Cl) McCloud
II) (!) CNN Headline
News
1:00 II) (!) Bionic Woman
2:00 C6 MOVIE: 'Beech
Ball' A college musical
group, trying for show
business
fame,
is
threatened with repossession of its instruments. Edd Byrnes,
Chris Noel, Robert Lo~n . 1965
3:00 W
MOVIE: 'Marco
The Magnificent' The
exploits and adventures of Marco Polo
are recounted in his
travels to the Orient.
Horst Bucholtz, Elsa
Martinelli, Akim Tamiroff. 1966.
�The Floyd County Times
Wednesday, January 25, 1984
Section Three, Pase Eleven
Attend Cub Scout Leader Training ·
Income Tax by
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Q. What are "immediate" dentures? What are their
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A. Immediate dentures do just what the term implies:
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Success in adapting to these dentures depends a great
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-Photo by J. Parker Locke
Cub Scout Leader Basic Training was conducted this fall by the Lonesome
Pine District, Boy Scouts of America, for leaders of Wheelwright's Cub Scout
Pack 880. Seated, from left, are Billie Damron, committee member ; Janel
Hughes, den leader; Marlene Little, assistant den leader; and Sonia Johnson,
committee chairman. Boys pictured are Matthew Little and Jason Johnson.
Standing, from left, are Billy Johnson, assistant Cubmaster; Kaye Johnson,
committee member; Janice Little, committee member; Darlene Collins, committee member, and Freddie Johnson, Cubmaster. Kalawese Oden and
Stephanie Jackson, not pictured, also attended the training. The Lonesome
Pine District includes Scouts in Martin, Magoffin, Johnson, Floyd. and Pike
counties. Parents who are interested in a Scouting program for their sons
should contact J. Parker Locke, district executive, in Pikeville at 432-0626.
Wll§~bJ
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Decision is Reversed
In Stearns Vs. State
Secretary Charlotte Baldwin of the
Natural Resources and Environmental
Protection Cabinet explained today's
decision released by the Kentucky
Supreme Court supporting the Wild
Rivers Act of 1972.
The ruling dealt with a suit initiated
in 1976 by the Stearns Coal and Lumber
Company (now the Stearns Company)
against the Commonwealth of Kentucky
and the Natural Resources and Environmental Protection Cabinet for
alleged losses resulting from the placement of acreage under the Wild River
Act.
The Court, in a opinion rendered by
Justice Wintersheimer, reversed the ruling and damages against the state previously awarded in the McCreary County Circuit Court.
Baldwin commented that "aside from
validating the Wild Rivers Act, the
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Court's decision saves Kentuckians
from the penalty judgement of nearly
$12 million in favor of the Stearns Coal
and Lumber Company under the lower
court's decision. Final settlement of the
dispute will very likely involve additional legal procedures that will test the Supreme Court's ruling."
Baldwin commended the Natural
Resources and Environmental Protection Cabinet's legal staff for their effectiveness in the disposition of the case.
"Working with limited resources, Art
Williams, the lead counsel, and Carl
Breeding, General Counsel, represented
the Commonwealth well and demonstrated the quality of our legal counsel.''
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1979 Buick Electra Limlted-4-door. Gold-not a
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1981 Ford F-100-Biue, small V-8, only 33,000
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1974 Ford Van-Green. Looks and runs good.
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�Wednesday, January 25, 1984 _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _...:.:=.The~Fioy!..::...::d
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Floyd County Times 1984
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Floyd County Times January 25, 1984
-
http://history.fclib.org/files/original/41/3330/02-01-1984.pdf
70ea18d4d216e72d126f0b2510b84ea7
PDF Text
Text
~lnyb
Speaking of
and for
•
Floyd County
PRESTONSBURG,
KENTUCKY 41653
Qt uuty mimes
Read Each Week by More Than 12,500 Famil.ies.
Red Cross .Here Ends
• 50 Years of Service
An institution reckoned to be at least
50 years old died last month when the
local chapter of the American Red Cross
closed its doors for the last time.
The organization, which provided
emergency and educational services,
had been in financial trouble but, for the
past few years, members were able to
rally enough public support through
media appeals and roadblocks to stave
off collapse. Now, even that fitful existence can no longer be sustained.
Larry Adams, Prestonsburg fire inspector and a volunteer Red Cross instructor, said this week that classes in
lifesaving, cardiopulmonary resuscitation and first aid will still be available.
But-short of a declared disaster, when
-
S UITS FILEU
Twin Bridge Market vs. Reid's Pharmacy; William Akers et al vs. Rennie
Hamilton et al; Beecher Hardwick vs.
Joe Ross Keathley et al; Marguarita
Griffin vs. Phillip Griffin; Diana Boyd
vs. Johnny Darvin Boyd; Shirley Collins vs. Charles Collins; Melesha
Hunter vs . James Brian Hunter; Hazel
Rorrer vs. City of Prestonsburg; John
C. Wells et al vs. Garry Turner et al;
Douglas McArthur Yates vs. Teresa
Potter Yates; GMAC vs Gregory
Conn; Robert J. Hardy vs. Ruby L.
Baldridge Hardy; Virgil Isaac vs.
Switchback Coal Co. -et al; First Commonwealth Bank vs. Roger Vance et
a!.
the national organization could still be
expected to respond-no emergency services will be offered here.
Adams cited dwindling public interest
as the reason for closing the Red Cross
office. The donations on_.which the
organization depend§ bavenot been sufficient to covet.effice expenses, the dues
the local chapter must pay the national
organization, or the salary of its single
paid staff worker, he said.
Two-and-a-half years ago, the Floyd
County Chapter was merged with other
local chapters to form the four-county
Big Sandy Area Chapter. About $6000 a
year was needed to keep the office
open-enough to meet the $300-a-month
salary paid to Charlotte Adams, the
chapter's executive director since 1979,
a nominal rent for office space in the
Prestonsburg Municipal Building, the
phone bill and national dues.
Many times that amount was returned to this area from the national Red
Cross in the form of emergency services. Purchase orders issued to victims
of single-family fires· in Floyd county,
for example, amounted to around $25,000
last year, Adams said, and a flood at
Pigeon Roost in Martin county the year
before elicited $38,000 in emergency aid.
Prompted by the Red Cross response,
Martin County fiscal court donated $500
to the local chapter in 1982; Floyd and
Magoffin fiscal courts each budgetted
$1000; Johnson county, the fourth county represented by the Big Sandy Chapter, gave nothing.
. Public support has been minimal also.
(See Story No. 1, Page 4)
Marshall, McGuffey
Bond Hearing Slated
A bail hearing has been set for next
Werlllesday, Feb. 8, five days before
their scheduled trial date, for Clyde
Douglas Marshall and Bobby Gene
McGuffey, accused of complicity in the
death last June 20 of Marshall's wife,
Glenda Sharon Marshall.
The defendants' plea for bail will be
heard by Special Judge C.R. Luker at
Barboursville. it will be the second such
hearing for Marshall, who was denied
bond by Floyd Circuit Judge Hollie Conley last August. No bond hearing has yet
been held for McGuffey, who was still
awaiting extradition from Tennessee in
August.
In a pre-trial hearing in London last
Tuesday, Judge Luker denied a motion
by Marshall that his trial be severed
from McGuffey's. Marshall's attorney,
Floyd Public Defender Ned Pillersdorf,
has argued that Commonwealth's evidence that might be admissible in the
trial of McGuffey would not be admissible in the trial of his client. Luker said
that, if such a case were to arise, he
would rule on it at that time.
Judge Explains
Demand of $100
Cash with Bond
If you have to make bond in Floyd Circuit Court, from now on you will have to
put at least $100 down in cash, according
to a rule made last week by Circuit
Judge Hollie Conley. The new rule is
designed to make it easier for the clerk
to collect court costs from defendants,
the judge explained.
Some attorneys expressed misgivings
when the rule was announced Thursday,
one claiming it would deny some defendants their right to make bail. But Conley said such fears are groundless.
"I have never known anyone who
could put up a $10,000 property bond who'
could not put up $:\00 in cash,'' the judge
said. Were such a case to arise, it could
be easily resolved, he said, adding, "No
one is going to stay in jail because he
can't come up with $100."
Persons without means, who are not
liable to pay court costs anyway, and
those released on their own recognizance will not be subject to the new fee.
For other defendants, the fee will go to
pay court costs, which typically amount ·
to about $57.50, and a 10 percent fee
payable to the state Administrative Office of the Courts. Any balance will be
returned to the person posting bond.
When defendants were allowed to put
up a property bond alone, it proved impracticable to collect court costs from
them, a deputy clerk explained.
Legislator Sets
Meeting Here Sat.
Representative Greg Stumbo will hold
a public meeting in the Floyd County
courthouse Saturday, Feb. 4, at 10 a.m.
Bills under way and issues yet to surface
in the current legislative session will be
discussed, he said.
Also denied were defense motions to
exclude testimony of Carl Harold
McFarland, who is expected to be a key
prosecution witness, and to have
McFarland examined by a psychiatrist,
Defense attorneys have questioned the
reliability of McFarland, who has a
lengthy criminal record.
The judge authorized Pillersdorf to
spend up to $1500 for psychiatric testing
of his client and ordered that copies of
the psychiatrist's report be given to the
prosecution before the trial.
Turned down were defense motions
for an exclusion of the death penalty and
for a limit on the Commonwealth's use
of peremptory challenges. (Defense attorneys commonly argue that peremptory challenges-by which a potential
juror can be rejected for any reasonallow prosecutors to exclude jurors who
might be sympathetic to the defendant.)
By agreement of court and counsel,
defense lawyers in the preSent trial will
together be allowed 10 such challenges
and Commonwealth's Attorney James
R. Allen will be allowed six.
McGuffey, who is represented by
Stanton attorneys Jeffery Darling and
James Barrett, is being held in the Bourbon county jail and Marshall in Pike
county. McFarland, who is expected to
testify for the Commonwealth in return
for a guarantee of immunity, is being
held in the Johnson county jail.
Trial is set for February 13 in Fayette
Circujt Court.
There are 151 households in the
16-square-mile area, of whom ab,out 103
are thought to be interested in signing
up for water service-too few to bear the
estimated cost of the project, according
to PSC engineer Eddie B. Smith. Rather
than trying to establish an independent
water district, these residents would be
better served if they were taken in by the
Prestonsburg Utilities' system or by the
neighboring Parkway Water Association, Smith said in a Jan. 6 report.
Initial cost of the project would likely
be around $500,000 and the system would
take ab::>ut $28,500 a year to operate, the
engineer estimated. That would mean
customers would need to pay an average
of $23 a month just to meet operating
WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 1, 1984
Coal-Mac Co-Owner
Jones Trial Witness
He has not said pubiicly that he hates
unions and his companies have no policy
of excluding the United Mine Workers'
Union, a Pike county coal operator said
yesterday (Tuesday), during the tr ia l of
a group, including some union officials
and members, ·accused of plotting to
drive him out of business.
Frank Justice, part owner of a group
of coal firms including Coal Mac Sales
-
.
Property Annexation
At Lancer Attacked
A SMALL BARN and fencing makes for a pretty scene
against a backdrop of white.
A property owner at Lancer filed suit
this week to have the Prestonsburg city
council's recent annexation of a tract
there declared invalid. The suit followed by only a few days a circuit court
order enjoining the city council from acting on its attempted annexation of a
section a t Katy Friend.
Hazel Rorrer is owner of property
leased by three Lancer businessesRobert's P izzaria, Jacobs Gulf, and the
Jenny Wiley Village complex. The tract
was annexed by a council decision which
'
took effect Jan. 1.
When the question of annexation turned up on the November ballot, six
Lancer residents voted against it and
two for it, but council members said
none of the ballots was cast by qualified
voters.
Mrs. Rorrer, arguing that more than
75 percent of the votes cast were opposed to it, said the annexation ordinance
should be held void . She is represented
in the suit by attorney Dan Rowland.
Inc. , Mac Mining Co. and Ray-Mac, was
on the witness stand in U.S. District
Court in Pikeville. It was the fourth day
of testimony in the trial of Prestonsburg
coal operator Edgar Jones and 17 others
on federal conspiracy charges .
In indictments handed down by a
federa l grand jury last June, Jones and
the others are accused of conspiring to
shut down the Ray-Mac strip mine near
East McDowell by violence and extortion. Jones is president of the JRM Coal
Company and most of the other defendants worked for companies in the East
McDowell area with which JRM had
contracts to mine coal.
As evidence of a conspiracy, the indictment listed 42 incidents which occurred between January and March, 1982,
including two occasions when shots were
fired at the Ray-Mac mine, the
dyamiting of a coal auger owned by
Ray-Mac and the burning of a tipple
leased by the firm.
In opening remarks last Wednesday,
Nashville attorney Aubrey Harwell,
representing Jones, portrayed the
violence that flared at the Ray-Mac
mine that wiJ.lter ' as a spontaneous
outgrowth of union efforts to organize
the mine. As Harwell described it, his
client, an old union man himself, simply gave moral support to a group of
miners who were anxious to organize a
large, non-union operator who had intruded six months previously into strong
union territory.
But Assistant U.S. Attorney Thomas
Self said the shooting, dynamiting and
<See Story No. 2, Page 4)
And now February. Spring is somewhere out there, coming to meet us.
ONE GROUNDHOG DAY
The date is disputed, I believe, but
many will assure you that tomorrow
(February 2) is the true Grounw.cg
Day. Wherever, whenever, the "whistle
pig," as it is sometimes irreverently
referred to, is supposed on Groundhog
Day to quit hibernation for a season,
emerge from his hole and take a gander
~t the weather. And-so it is written-if
said groundhog sees his shadow he
returns to his hole and there will be six
more weeks of "dark and stormy
weather."
We do not want to be cynical about this
weighty matter, but we would remind
one and all that the groundhog will
return to his hole, whether or not the sun
shines or if he does or does not see his
shadow. Besides, in February where
else is there to go?
Every knoll and hillock is high and
steep and a mere gully can be a
veritable canyon in the eyes of a child.
Live long enough and you'll decide the
youngsters' eyes didn't deceive them.
mE ALITE
This yarn, which has been around for
several years, represents one of the better excuses for tardiness yet known to
man. It concerns the boy who showed up
almost an hour late for school, thereby
drawing down upon his head teacher's
wrath.
"Forty-five minutes late-no excuse
(See Story No . 4, Page 4)
Middle Creek Group
Seeks Water District
A number of Middle Creek residents
are due to appear in Frankfort tomorrow (Thursday) to present their request
for a public water system to the state
Public Service Commission (PSC). But
a PSC engineer has discouraged their
plan to establish an independent water
district.
The proposed water district would
serve residents on KY 114 (the Mountain
Parkway) from Rough and Tough west
to the Floyd-Magoffin line, and on State
Road Fork, from its junction with KY
114 to the community of Bonanza.
USP$-2027-GOOO
Volume LVII
No.5
costs, and almost the entire construction
cost would have to be met by local,
state and federal grants, he said. "It is
not known at this time if such grants are
available,': the report says.
Both the Parkway Water Association,
which serves customers on Middle
Creek, west of Prestonsburg, and Prestonsburg Utilities, which already extends beyond the city into much of the
county, could serve residents in the
county's northwest corner and their per
customer operating costs would be less
than those for the projected Middle
Creek Water District, the engineer said.
Prestonsburg Utilities Superintendent
Bill H. Howard said of the petitioners
that it would be "most economic for
them to hook on to the Parkway
system." But they could also tap onto
the city system through its Middle Creek
or Abbott Creek lines, he conceded. The
fact that homes in the proposed service
area are relatively spread out means
serving them is not an attractive proposition for either of the existing
systems, he said .
Under state law, the PSC must approve any plan to establish a water
district. The law also prohibits the formation of a new district in an area that
can be more feasibly served by an existing water supplier.
(Photo by Ken Peters >
A NEW BRIDGE at Boldman is taking shape to replace the old suspension-type span that has
served both Pike and Floyd residents for years. Work on the $900,357 project, which is under
contract to Bush & Burchett Contractors, of Allen, was begun in mid-October and is expected to
be finished "around the first of July," according to Paul Gravely, district engineer for the
Jackson Department of Highways office.
A.A.R.P. Offers Tax Aid
To Those 60 and Older
A free counseling service is available
each Tuesday and Thursday from 10
a .m. to 3 p.m., starting February 7
through April 12, at the Floyd County
Library in Prestonsburg. Call 874-9921
for other possible locations.
Volunteer counselors trained by the
Internal Revenue Service, will fill out
various forms and explain special benefits for older citizens. Bring copies of
your last returns, pension statements,
interest statements and forms you have
received from the I. R.S.
As Gas Bills Mount•••
Higher Bills Mean More Flak,
No More Profit, Howard Says
"Whether your gas bill's high or low, '
I don't get paid any more," argued
Seldon Horne, his finger jabbing the air.
" Like everybody else, we're just doing
a job, trying to earn a living."
Horne is assistant superintendent a t
Prestonsburg Utilities and, like other
workers at the city 's gas, water and
Named Outstanding Young Man
Eric D. Hall (at podium ) was named Outstanding Young Man of the Year
for 198:J.-'!14 in Floyd county during the Prestonsburg Area Jaycees recen t
awards dinner. Also pictured. from left. are Norcie Burchett. Woodrow Burchett. guest speaker for the t>vening, Area Jaycees Presidt>nt John McCauley. and Rill Tuttle . of Paintsville. state Jaycees administrative \'ice- \
president.
sev,oage company, inclined to be defensive . They take a lot of flak, they say,
and ov~ issues they are powerless to
control.
Like rising gas prices. The bills Prestonsburg residents received a couple of
weeks ago reflect the latest price hike
by its supplier, Kentucky-West Virginia
Gas Co. Such increases yield notping for
the city utilities firm but a lot of irate
customers, noted Supt. Bill H. Howard.
What about the oft-heard complaint of
the householder who received a record
gas bill here even though he was wintering in Florida? That kind of thing might
be oft-heard, but it is without justifica
tion, according to Howard. " The meters
are cash regis ters," he says flatly .
" They don't lie."
In fact, ..1s gas and water meters get
old, they tend to err in favor of the consumer, he says. And Billy Robinson, who
was calibrating gas meters in the Prestonsburg utilities shop one day last
week, agrees. Although the Public Service Commission allows a two percent
error either way, the greatest error he
had seen that day was three-quarters of
one percent and most errant meters
"run slow"-that is, record less gas than
the customer is actually using-Robinson said.
If they wanted to get picky about it,
the utility company could install
" temperature compensated" meters,
" which would pay for themselves in a
(See Story No. 3, Page 4)
�-~ed~ay, February 1, 1984
The Floyd County Times
Honored on 50th Anniversary
House Committee Approves
New Broad Form Deed Bill
I
·.
..
Mr. and Mrs . James Cole, of Printer were honored January 14 on their 50th
wedding anniversary with a party given by their children, Mr. and Mrs. Don
Woodrum, Mr. and Mrs. Jack Cottrell, Mr. and Mrs. Cecil Cole, and Mr. and
Mrs. Charles Cole.
-FOR RENT. • 1-BEDROOM APARTMENTLOCATED ON SOUTH LAKE
DRIVE.
• OFFICE SPACE-LOCATED
ON SOUTH LAKE DRIVE.
... CALL: 886-6056
.,
886-3442 after 5
2-l-2t.
a
rose
February 14th
is Valentine's Day.
Jenny Wiley
Florist
886-2793
2-1·2t.
ASCS Program· Signup
Periods Under Way
Applications for various federal programs administered by the Agricultural
Stabilization and Conservation Service
are now being taken at the Floyd coun.ly_,t\.SCS Office.
Signup for cost-sharing under the
Agricultural Conservation Program will
continue thru February 29. Practices
available during this period include:
permanent vegetative cover establishment; permanent vegetative cover improvement; permanent v~etative
cover on critical areas; planting trees;
improving a stand of forest trees; and
site preparation for natural regeneration. All these practices are available at
the level of 75% cost-share (this means
ASCS will share 75% of the cost of eligible materials and services) Practices
must be approved by the county committee prior to starting to be eligible.
Signup for participation in the 1984
Feed Grain Program will extend thru
February 24. Corn producers who have
a 1984 established feed grain base are
eligible to participate. Advantages of the
program are: loans and purchases,
target price protection (may include
deficiency payments) eligibility for
farmer-owned reserve.
Along with signup for feed grain,
ASCS is accepting applications for the
new ACP-ACR program, where ASCS
will pay up to 90% of the cost for
establishing permanent vegetative
cover on required set-aside for the feed
grain program. Signup for ACP-ACR
will end February 24, 1984.
For more information on these or
other ASCS programs, contact the Floyd
county ASCS office, 886-2802.
FACTS ABOUT WATER
The Earth is covered with 326 million
cubic miles of water-of which only 3
percent is fresh water.
Human bodies are about 65 percent
water.
Americans use as much as 700 billions
gallons of fresh water a day.
Each year, several billion tons of soil
are washed into our waterways, making
them unfit for use.
INDIVIDUAL
GARAGE-R·STORAGE
-STOR·IT
-LOCK-IT
-POCKET THE KEY
About 4.2 trillion gallons of rain and
snow fall on the contiguous 48 states on
a typical day.
U
10X10
10X20
10X30
20X30
(808)886-2734 or 886-2412
ClYDI I. IUIICHETT
Court St., Prntonlburg, Ky. 418!13
2-1-tf.
-
,.
1155
So. Lake Drive
A new hairstyle is exciting and good for your self-image and overall
appearance.
Here at the Hairport my main concern is finding a style best suited for
you and a style that is equally easy to maintain.
For the latest in hair cutting and permanents, call the Hairport for your
appointment today. Together we'll find the look for you in '84.
Tues. thru Sat.
OWNED AND OPERATED BY
MIKE BRANHAM
PTA Fund Raiser
For Task Force
At a press conference last week Mitch
McConnell, Chairman of the Kentucky
Task Force on Exploited and Missing
Children, helped the Kentucky Parent
Teacher Association launch a two-year
fund raising campaign.
McConnell purchased the first commemorative art print from PTA President Iris Irish. Proceeds from the print
sales will be used for a number of PTA
programs, principally to fund an educational program on exploited and missing children to be shown in school
systems throughout the commonwealth.
"The PTA has always been an impor-·
tant element in the education of our
children," McConnell said. "We are
very pleased that the 110,000 members
of this state organization have joined the
large num!>er of Kentuckians who are
now convinced that our children need
preventative programs to educate them
about the possibilities of victimization
and how to avoid potentially dangerous
situations.''
During the next 24 months the PTAs
plan to sell20,000 commemorative prints
which are reproductions of a watercolor
painting by ;rop Twenty artist John
Jones. The painting, "Yesterday's
School," is a scene of a one-room frame
schoolhouse in a picturesque autumn
setting. The original painting, valued at
$2,000, was donated to the Kentucky
PTA by Top Twenty president, John
Rogers.
This fund raising campaign officially
began in all500 PTA groups in Kentucky
today, February 1. The prints will cost
$22.50 mailed; $10 of which will be divided among the PTAs on three levels :
school. district and state.
-----------
...... $25
...... $55
...... $65
..... $100
''
Backers of a bill designed to limit the
effects of Kentucky's broad-form deeds
were cautiously optimistic after a
legislative committee gave it a
unanimous endorsement last week.
The House Judiciary-Civil Committee
approved House Bill 32 by a 13-Q margin
last Wednesday, after hearing testimony
by legislators, east Kentucky landowners and others, who were harshly
critical of the unfettered strip-mining of
land leased under the turn-of-thecentury deeds.
Coal industry representatives who
have traditionally opposed legislation of
this type did not speak at Wednesday's
hearing, a fact that angered some
legislators who accused them of "working behind the scenes" to kill the
measure.
The bill, co-sponsored by Prestonsburg Rep. Greg Stumbo, represents his
third attempt to have a law passed
limiting the scope of the broad-form
deed. It now passes to the House Rules
Committee. Similar bills were bottled up
in legislative committees in 1980 and
1982.
The effect of HB 32 would be to ban
coal operators from strip-mining land
leased under broad-form deeds, unless
•they got permission from the surface
owner. Kentucky courts have historically held that broad-form deeds give
mineral owners "dominance" over surface owners, but Stumbo said recent
court rulings in other states and earlier
rulings in Kentucky give reason to
believe that the courts would now uphold
the measure if it became law.
"Every state in the nation except Kentucky has addressed this problem and
found that the owner of the mineral
rights should not be dominant," Stumbo told the committee. And Rep. Clayton
Little, of Virgie, who is co-sponsor of the
bill, said the broad-form deed "is
basically a wound that's been eating at
the heart of the people of the mountains
since the _turn of the century.''
P'burg Resource Data
Report Now Available
MONTHLY RATES
•
•
•
•
Section One, P . .e Two
BY APPOINTMENT ONLY
NHl44
2·1·31.
The state Department of Economic
Development has published an updated
comprehensive report outlining industrial-development resource data for Prestonsburg, Commerce Secretary Carroll
Knicely has announced.
The comprehensive report includes information on population, labor, taxes,
existing industries, transportation,
utilities and industrial sites. Copies of
the report will be distributed to companies expressing an interest in locating
in the area .
The department's Division of Research and Planning publishes 130
reports and summaries covering 200
communities. Data is obtained through
on-site visits to city and county offices,
chambers of commerce, industr.ial
development groups and other community sources. The reports and summaries may be obtained by contacting
the Maps and Publications Sales Office,
133 Holmes St., Frankfort, Ky. 40601 .
A Perry county man told the House
panel of his inability to stop strip-mining
of his property by a coal company
operating under a broad-form deed.
Sidney Cornett, of Dwarf, a 23-year-old
Army veteran, said strip-mining had
ruined his land and water. Broad-form
deeds are "a form of slavery," he said.
John Rosenberg, director of the Appalachian Research and Defense Fund,
told the committee the bill would not
violate contract law, since those signing
broad-form deeds did not envisage stripmining, a mining method not in use at
that time. Rosenberg drafted a similar
bill that was passed by the Tennessee
legislature in 1977 and, four years later,
was upheld by the Tennessee Supreme
Court.
Representatives of the Kentucky
League of Women Voters, the Kentucky
Conservation Committee, and the Kentucky Fair Tax Coalition also spoke on
behalf of the bill.
Several committee members criticized coal-industry opponents of the bill for
their failure to testify, Louisville Rep.
Fred Cowan predicting that HB 32 would
be killed in the Senate "by unknown
forces that will not present their case
here today."
1966 FORD BRONCO,
4WD.
358-4389
2-1-l l.
•
This Saturday, February 4, at
Strand Theatre, Prestonsburg
K~
Ue&e!
will show at 10:00 a.m .
fREE Admission!
With 2 Labels from selected Piggly Wiggly products .
Get complete details at your nearby Piggly Wiggly!
ltimate Wave Styling Salon
1220 SO. LAKE DRIVE, PRESTONSBURG, KY.
OPEN TUES.-FRI. 9-5
SATURDAY 10-3
CALL 886-1556 FOR APPOINTMENT
WALK IN'S WELCOME
FLOYD COUNTY
HEALTH NEWS
By JANE BOND
Health Educator
A nurse from the health department
will be in Martin at the Beaver Valley
Clinic, Monday, February 6 from 10 until 2. She will offer· T.B. skin tests,
urinalyses, anemia screenings, blood
pressures, immunizations, and pap
tests. This clinic is a service of the
Health Department and the public is
welcome.
Cervical cancer kills approximately
11,000 women each year. These are
needless deaths since cervical cancer
can be one of the most curable of all
cancers if it is detected in its earliest
stages. The pap test is a simple painless
test which takes only a few moments or'
a woman's time, and it could save her
life. A pap test can determine if the
disease is present and treatment can be
started.
The Floyd County Health Department
is having a pap clinic on Wednesday,
February 8 from 8:30 until 11:30, and
from 1 until 2. This clinic is a free service of the Health Department and is
open to women of all ages, but those
women age 45 and over are especially
urged to take advantage of this service
since this is the high risk age for the
disease.
FOR SALE
It's not the bosses but the bossed who
get sick, the February Reader's Digest
points out. Studies show that "high
psychological strain" from job pressures is a factor in cardiovascular
illness.
FOR YOUR ONE STOP STYLING SALON
SPECIALIZING IN PRECISION CUTS, PERMS,
CREATIVE COLORING, BASKET WEAVING, BRAIDS
MANICURES AN
IALS
WATER PIPES FROZEN?
Rent a heafgun (900 °)
~
from
East Equip.ment
HWY. 23 SO., PRESTONSBURG
886-9131
3% Utili'y Tax?
Let the Voters Decide I
When y~u sign a petition asking tor an opportunity to vote on the 3%
utility tax, BE SURE your school district number and precinct number are
listed at the top of the petition. This will Insure that your signature will be
counted.
Below Is a legally acceptable petition form which may have as many lines
as wanted for names of signers. These petitions are available In every part
ot the county.
·-----------------------------------------------,
We, the undersigned, as registered and qualified voters in Floyd County, Kentucky, hereby
petition the Floyd County Board of Elections to place the levying of a utility tax, passed
by the Floyd County Board of Education on January 19, 1984, on the ballot for voter
approval or disapproval at the next general election.
School Board District.# .
Signature
Name (print)
Precinct:
Address
~------------------------------------------------
RE YOU ONCERNE
ABOUT THE DRUG PRO LEM IN FLOYD COUNTY
If you are parents of school age children, please plan to attend this meeting.
Guest speaker Dr. Mary· Fox
Monday Evening, Feb. 6 ~t 7:30 p.m. at the Floyd County Library
THIS MEETING IS BEING SPONSORED BY THE PRESTONSBURG.KIWANIS CLUB AND PRESTONSBURG AREA JAYCEES.
Pd. for by Prestonsburg Kiwanis Club
�•
The Royd County Times
Wednesday, February 1, 1984
NOTICE OF PUBLIC SALE
•
A public sale will be held by The Bank
Josephine on the 17th day of February,
1984 a~ The Bank Josephine's Harold
Branch. Time of sale 10:00 a.m.
Sa\~ is for the purpose of disposing of
a 1~!1 J -10 Jeep Pickup Truck bearing
Sertal No. 1JTCM26N5BT042888 and a
H(l8 Ford F-250 Ser. No. F26BNBH4092
to satisfy a Commercial Loan Agreement dated the 16th day of February,
1983.
The Bank Josephine reserves the right
to bid.
Terms of sale: CASH.
2-l-3t.
"The mind of each man is
the man himself."
Cicero
Section One, Paae Three
Attend Southern Conference
HIGHER ED COUNCIL
MEETINGS SCHEDULED
The Council on Higher Education will
meet tomorrow (Thursday) at the Capital Plaza Hotel (Assembly Room AJ,
l<,rankfort, at 10 a.m. CETJ. A tentative
agenda is attached.
The Financial Affairs Committee of
the Council on Higher Education will
meet today February 1, at the Capital
Plaza Hotel <Kentuckian I Room) ,
Frankfort, Kentucky at 4:00p.m. CET).
The Programs Committee of the
Council on Higher Education will meet
on tomorrow, February 2, at the Capital
Plaza Hotel <Assembly Room A),
Frankfort, Kentucky, at 9:00a.m. CETJ.
PREACHING AND
SINGING
AT THE
SALISBURY
METHODIST CHURCH
, SAT., FEB. 4-7 p.m.
GIVE SOMEONE A LIFT
.'> END A BO UQUET OF BALLOONS
WITH REV. ED DOOER AND
THE BLUEGRASS GOSPELAIRES
ALL OCCAS IONS- DELIVERED
EVERYONE WELCOME
Let the Voters Decide
OPAL'S BEDSPREAD OUTLET
Jet. 1091 and 7-Above Bestway Market
Topmost, Ky.
PHONE 477-2266 OPEN MON.-SAT.
2-1-21.
Seven educators from the Big Sandy Family and Childbirth Education Association attended the International Childbirth Education Association (I.C.E.A.)
Southern Conference to further the knowledge and skills needed to support
today's childbearing consumers.
Those attending the conference were, from left, front, Jean Rosenberg, Pat
Hites with daughters, Brittany and Lauren, and in back row, from left, Vikki
McGuire, Cara Hall and son, Nathan, Ann Slone, Mary Creed and children,
Denise and Benjamin. Not pictured is Debbie Luster. Jean Rosenberg, Ann
Slone and Vikki McGuire are nationally certified childbirth educators .
•
Jaycees Hold Awards Dinner
,[B
RON LAWSON, Broker
Phone 886-9100 • Pikeville 432-0194
A beautiful, remodeled, thre•bedroom home located In Auxier, Ky. Wall-to-wall·
cwpetln& with fireplace and insert to reduce heating bills. P!enty Gf space with ample backyard and new storaae bulldlna. Priced reasonably at $57,750. Shown by
appointment only.
Lonly, bridl ranch home with 2-c:ar prage. Extras are: fireplace, built-in kitchen,
larJe utiHty room and irt-ground swimming pool. Situated in &ood residential area:
NlW USI!NiS:
fJrlme Commercial Property that has a tbrivin& business operation at this time.
This commercial corner lot and all improvements are available for your consideretian. Call today for a private showin&!
Assumable 8.8% mortJa&e on house with 1248-sq. ft., with &arage and basement
underneath.
Approx. 1.25 aaes with 4-bedroom, 2%-bath house plus 2-car garage, and two
fireplaces.
A-frame atop Abbott Mtn., 4 bedrooms, 2 baths, 172G-sq. ft., indudes appliances,
and two levels with decks.
Between Paintsvill~ and Prestonsllur&, 3-year-old doubl•wide with 1'12 baths, 3
bedrooms, and lot 981150.
Ranch-style brick with 1540-sq. ft., lot 1101100, in &ood neighborhood and Buck
stove.
1951125 approx. size lot with 4-bedroom rnch with central heat and air, and
2-c:ar carport.
House located in David, qualifies for FmHA.
Ideal in-town location with 4-bedroom, 2-bath house and 17x32 worilshop building.
FOR RENT- D-ntown, 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, $350 per month. References and
deposit required.
A revitalized Prestonsburg Area
Jaycees organization and associated
Area Jaycee Women marked the
beginning of a new year recently with a
special awards dinner at May Lodge,
Jenny Wiley State Park.
Attended by representatives of the
Pikeville, Paintsville-Johnson County,
Salyersville-Magoffin County, and
Knott County Jaycees groups as well
as members of the local organization,
the night was highlighted by the naming of Assistant County Attorney Eric
David Hall as Prestonsburg Area
Jaycees Outstanding Young Man of the
Year in Floyd County for 1983-'84.
The 33-year-old Hall, of Allen, was
honored for his concern for and involvement in various community projects and organizations as well as his
affiliation with the County Attorney's
office. In addition to membership in a
number of legal fraternities and civic
clubs, Mr. Hall is involved with conservation and sportsmen's clubs, youth
activities, and works with juveniles,
problems of spouse abuse and serves
as counselor to alcohol and drug
abusers.
Having received the Outstanding
Young Man honor, Hall has been subKIWANIANNES MEET
The Prestonsburg Kiwaniannes held
their regular monthly luncheon-meeting
Thursday, January 26, at 12:30 p.m. at
May Lodge, with the president, Mrs.
. Garnett Fairchild, presiding. The Kiwanianne grace was said in unison by those
in attendance Miss A.nll'Slone of the Big
Sandy Child Seat Belt program, spoke
to the group. Miss Slone told of the
necessity of such a program, and asked
that Kiwanianne members "spread th~
word" to other local organizations. She
also asked that interested persons please
call her at the Prestonsburg Community College for further information regarding this program. It was noted that
Mrs. Pat Hites, daughter of one of the
Kiwanianne members (Mrs. Stella Lafferty) also works with this program.
The announcement was made that the
Prestonsburg Kiwaniannes recently
made a donation of $40.00 to the Loaves
and Fishes Food Pantry, sponsored by
the Local Church Women and the Prestonsburg Ministerial Association.
Mrs. Lucy Regan was appointed by
the president to serve as the organization's devotional chairman for the remainder of the year.
Attending was Miss Ann Slone, and
Mesdames Garnett Fairchild, Jane
Bond, Vera Ford, Stella Spurlock, Lucy
Regan, May K. Roberts, Myrtle Allen,
Stella Lafferty, Thelma D. Wallen, Ortha Meece, Myrtie Davis, Margaret
Alley, Virginia Shivel, Anna May
Mellon, and Docia Woods.
The next 1uncheon-meeting will be
Thursday, February 23, at 12:30, at the
same location.
mitted for possible recognition by the
state Jaycees organization as one of
the state's five outstanding young men,
an annual program of the Kentucky
Jaycees.
In recognition of the contribution of
young people to education , the area
Jaycees presented its Outstanding
Young Educator Award to Pat Vincent ,
of Prestonsburg, training manager at
the Prestonsburg Job Corps Center. A
native of McLean county , Ky., the
27-year-old Ms. Vincent came to the
center here in an administrative position from the Earle C. Clements Job
Corps Center in Greenville, Ky. in
January, 1961.
Kentucky Jaycees Administrative
Vice-President Bill Tuttle, of Paintsville,· presented Prestonsburg Jaycee
John Earl Hunt the first place award
for the Regional Speak-Up Competition, and the Region XI Outstanding
Jaycee Award went to John McCauley,
president of the Prestonsburg Area
Jaycees. Awards were also presented
to members from Jaycee organizations
of nearby counties.
President John McCauley presented
the following local awards: Speak-Up
A.ward, John Earl Hunt ; Jaycee of the
1st Quarter, Gorman Collins, Jr. ;
Jaycee of the 2nd Quarter, John Earl
Hunt; Jaycee of the 3rd Quarter, Allan
Frasure ; Springboard of the First
Quarter, Dr . Robert Herrick; Springboard of the 2nd Quarter, Allan
Frasure; Springboard of the 3rd
Quarter, Johnny Logan Griffith ;
Jaycee of the Month <Julyl- G<>rman
Collins, Jr. : <August l-Or. Robert
Herrick: <Septemberl- Jeff Wells :
<October )-John
Earl Hunt :
<November) - Allan
Frasure:
<Decemberl-Johnny Logan Griffith ;
(Januaryl- tie, John W. Mann and
Dennis Ousley: Spoke Award, John
Earl Hunt. First activity awards were
also presented during the dinner.
A special presentation of Kentucky
Colonel Commissions was made by Mr.
McCauley to Bill Tuttle, John Earl
Hunt and Johnny L. Griffith.
Kentucky Jayceettes President
Charlotte Lyons, of Hopkinsville installed the new officer and members of
the Prestonsburg Area Jaycee Women.
They include: Margaret Hunt, president ; Jane Wallace, individual
development vice-president; Kay
Hale, community development vicepresident: Leslie Fannin, management vice-president ; Kara Alexander.
secretary ; Re nita Haywood ,
treasurer : Sharon May. Susan Hale,
Ronda Raines and Laura Spurlock.
Guest speakers for the evening were
the Honorable Woodrow Burchett and
Kentucky Jaycees Community
Development Vice-President Steve
Miller, of Owenton.
When I was campaigning for Mayor of Martin, 1pro·
mtsed to oppose any tax Increase for Martin citizens.
That Is why I am opposed to the Board of Education's
passage of a three-percent utilities tax.
I am not against salary increases for teachers or
upgrading the schools. But 1am against the Board tryIng to generate money on retired people and lowIncome families.
I urge Martin residents and all Floyd citizens to petl·
tlon to have the utilities tax put on the ballot. Let the
voters decide.
RAYMOND GRIFFITH
Mayor of Martin.
H ·lt·pd
New Office Space-First Floor
3,000 Square Feet. Will Lease All Or Part
Prestonsburg, Kentucky
Offices Arranged To Suit The Tenant
Call: 886-2391
WINTER CLEARANCE SALE
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ALLIED SEW·VAC CENTER
& MERT'S GUNS & AMMO
(606) 874·9997
P .O. BOX 145 · OLD RT . N80 · A LLE N, KE NTUC KY 41601
The Louisville Easter Seal Hearing
and Speech Center served 3625 children
and adults in 1983.
Annual Valentine Special
at
Joe's Ustairs Hair Design
Perms regular s45oo
Now through February 29, s35°0
Includes cut, curl, and style
"ONLY THE BEST...
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CALL PAT OR JOE FOR APPOINTMENT- 886-9401
• Men"• Of1on® dress socks... "13 off
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Sale price• good thru Sun. MasterCard or VI. .. Open
and
Sun. 1-0pm.
�~------~-----------------------
Wedne.day,
Febnla~
1, 1984
The Floyd County Time•
Section One, Paae Four
'
Published Every Wednesday by
Our Yesterdays
Prestonsburg Publishing Company
(Items taken from The Floyd County
Times, 10, 20, 30, 40 and 50 years ago.)
Ten Years Ago
NORMAN ALLEN Editor
Subscription Rates Per Year:
In Floyd County, $8.00
Elsewhere in Kentucky, $10.00
Outside Kentucky, $12.50
--- 1 ---
Entered as second class matter June 18,
1927, at the postoffice at Prestonsburg,
Kentucky, under the act of March 3, 1879.
<Continued from Page Onel
The same year, a 12-hour "radiothon,"
which sponsors hoped would yield at
least $2,000, drew $800 in pledges, of
which $400 was actually collected. A
roadblock, for which Job Corps students
collected donations in Prestonsburg,
Lancer, Allen and Martin, netted about.
$500.
Last year, none of the fiscal courts
contributed anything to the organization, and the local chapter proved too
dispirited to approach a reluctant public
for further assistance and too disorganized to tap available government funds.
Prestonsburg City Manager David
Evans, who was a member of the board,
said directors met only twice in the past
four years . A $20,000 federal grant
available to the Red Cross for emergency services last year went begging for
want of an organization to apply for and
admmister it, he said.
Former Red Cross workers here
agreed i..hat the dea th in 1982 of Mrs.
Sallye Clarke, described by one as "the
backbone" ofthe Floyd chapter, figured
largely in the organization's collapse.
...... 3 --I Contmued from Page One l
year,' Howard said. The way it is now,
Prestonsburg Utilities buys gas at 60
degrees Fahrenheit but, when it sells the
gas to customers, the temperature
might be zero or below. Gas is denser at
colder temperatures, which means that
customers get more for their money.
Of course, it cuts the other way when
temperatures soar in summer. "But
when do people use most gas- in summer or winter?" Howard asks rhetorically.
Bills went out about 10 days late in
January because the computer program
used for billing had to be altered to
reflect Kentucky-West's 58-cent increase. The West Virginia firm handling
that took longer than anticipated, a
Prestonsburg Utilities bookkeeper
explained.
But one improvement that might save
some grief both for the utilities company
and for its customers, Howard conceded, is an indication on the bill of what
usage period the customer is being
charged for.
How many customers are aware that
the bill dated Jan. 17 was for gas consumed in November? From the number
of calls she gets, just about everyone is
aware of it, insists bookkeeper Phyllis
Spradlin.
But there is nothing on the bill that
says what period you're being billed for,
and Howard agrees it can be confusing.
After the relatively balmy week we've
just enjoyed, for example, bills due to go
out about a week from now could prove
a rude shock for householders unless
they realize they're being billed for chilly December usage.
Because of the complexities of billing,
there is no way to close the month-long
gap between usage and bill but, if he can
figtlre out a way to do it, future bills may
at least indicate the usage period,
Howard said.
__,_ 4 --<Continued from Page One)
for it ; take your choice- stay in at
recess or remain 30 minutes after
school," was the sentence.
"But, teacher," the boy protested,
"you don't understand. I couldn't help
bein' late. Let me explain."
Stony-faced, teacher told him to proceed with his story.
"Well," the youngster began, "it was
like this. You know, we rnise a lot of
chickens. Last night..:...it was about 2 this
mornin' - we heard chickens a squawkin' in the chicken house, and Pa,
he jumped out of bed and shook me
awake and said that polecat was after
our chickens again.
"Pa was awful mad, teacher. He
didn' t take time to put any clothes onjust grabbed his double-barr'! shotgun
and set sail down the lane toward the
chicken house, dressed just in his long
johns, and me and Old Lead right
behind.
"When we got there Pa cocked both
barr'ls of his old 12-gauge and swore he
would blow that murderin' polecat to
Kingdom Come. He was bent over at the
door, stooped low, lookin' for that var"
mint and had the gun ready, pointed
right inside. And just then Old Lead
comes up behind Pa and stuck his cold
nose against Pa 's back side where the
long johns didn't cover. Pa flinched and
both barr'ls of that shotgun went off. I
tell you teacher, I couldn't get here on
time- I've been pickin' chickens all
night.''
On College Honor Roll
Dr. Joe Lewis, vice-president for
academic affairs at Georgetown College, has announced the students whQ
qualify for the "B" Honor Roll for the
fall semester, 1983.
Those from Allen who have earned the
honor include: Alfred Lee Pelphrey and
Pamela Lynn Porter.
In order to be eligible for the "B"
Honor Roll, a student must earn a grade
point average of 3.25 to 3.74 during the
fall semester.
2 ---
<Continued from Page One)
arson that government witnesses would
describe during the trial represented no
union organizing effort but an attempt
by Jones to shut down a competitor he
thouglrt was trying to steal a contract
from him. JRM was under a five-year
contract to supply 360,000 k>ns of coal a
year to the South Carolina Electric and
Gas Company.
The incidents listed in the indictment
were ''Edgar Jones' way of driving the
competition out of the area," the prosecutor alleged.
Harwell said the violence escalated on
both sides-the defendants "shot at folks
and were shot at by them"-and most
of the defendants "were motivated by a
belief in the UMW," a union that had
delivered miners from long hours of
dangerous, low-paying work.
"A lot of folks were upset" when RayMac "moved into No. 5967 territory,"
said Harwell, a reference to the UMW
local at East McDowell. ''They feared ·
it might provide a toehold for the whole
area to become non-union."
When some of his contract miners
wanted time off to organize Ray-Mac,
Jones "gave them some moral support,"
Harwell said. ''But he did not set up or
create the situation. He did not spearhead or lead it," the defense lawyer
insisted.
In response to questions by Louisa attorney Eldred Adams, representing
defendant Ranny Blankenship, RayMac President Justice denied that he
had once told a newspaper reporter he
hated unions. While his companies are
non-union, there is no company policy on
union representation, he said.
Raymond "Pete" Barker, who was
foreman at the Ray-Mac mine, said a
group of 10.15 men led by Drexil Hall
turned up at the minesite on Monday,
Feb. 15, 1982 and spoke to Ray-Mac
workers about joining the union. His
men returned to work after the meeting
without presenting a petition for union
representation, Barker said. The following day, the unionists turned back coal
trucks approaching the mine, he said.
Tuesday, Feb. 16, also brought the
first reports of violence, the prosecution
charging that pickets fired on trucks as
they left the Ray-Mac mine. Jones is
alleged to have furnished the demonstrators with whiskey and to have
assured them they "would get the guns
and ammunition needed to stop RayMac from operating."
With the jury out of the courtroom,
Justice said under questioning by
defense attorney Bernard Pafunda that
Ray-Mac had purchased weapons, including semi-automatic Uzis, which
were stored in his Pikeville office. But
he denied suggestions that he had instructed Barker to issue the weapons to
company workers on Feb. 16. Barker
said Ray-Mac employees were armed
that day, but with personal, not company, weapons. U.S. District Judge G.
Wix Unthank said the question of when
or whether Justice's companies purchased weapons was irrelevant to the
issues being tried.
Apparently with a view to a likely appeal, Unthank has kept meticulous control over conduct of the trial, even
overseeing the seating of the few courtroom spectators. The case, which is being heard Mondays through Thursdays,
got under way last Wednesday after a
lengthy jury-selection process and is expected to last some weeks. Throughout,
defendants have been seated in two rows
behind the dozen attorneys who represent them, the 63-year-old Jones dressed in a conservative business suit, the
others in more casual attire.
Charges against Morris Ray Hall, 47,
of Hi Hat, one of those originally indicted, have since.been dropped.
Martin Man Is Shot
Thursday Following
Domestic Quarrel
Walter Carroll, 40, of Martin was
hospitalized Thursday night after he
was shot, reportedly by his estranged
wife, following an argument outside
Frazier's Restaurant on Main Street,
Martin.
State Trooper James Rederick, who
investigated the incident along with
Troopers Zellers and Slone and Martin
Police Chief Hershel Lester, said Ellen
Carroll, 38, apparently shot Carroll
after being beaten during the quarrel.
Both were admitted to local hospitals
and were said to be recovering .
No charges were preferred, according to Trooper Rederick.
ANNOUNCE BIRTH
Robin and Joe Crabtree, of Rogersville, Tenn. announce the birth of a son,
Christopher Neil, January 7 at
Hawkins County Memorial Hospital,
Rogersville.
Christopher is the grandson of Mr.
and Mrs. Jackie Belcher, of Stickleyville, Va., formerly of Weeksbury, and
great-grandson of Mr. and Mrs . Dempsey Belcher, of Weeksbury, and Mr.
and Mrs. Dan Cox, of Pennington Gap,
Virginia.
(January 30, 1974)
The fiscal court voted at its Monday meeting to post rewards of $1,000
each for information leading to the arrest and conviction of the killers in
three unsolved Floyd murder cases. The rewards are offered in an attempt to solve the mystery surrounding the slayings of James Chaffins on
Arkansas Creek. Deputy Sheriff Lawrence Conley at Garrett. and James
Clayton Conley, near Wayland... Fioyd county crime during the first nine
months of last year was near the rate for the corresponding period of the
preceding year, except in the category of forcible rape-and the increase
in that area of crime was 250 percent...Rep. W. J. Reynolds, House majority caucus leader, said last week-end he feels certain the General
Assembly will enact the so-called Broad Form Deed bill and that there
will be no relaxation of strip mining controls... The Prestonsburg Community College basketball squad may have experienced its finest hour
Monday night when the Highlanders defeated the University of Kentucky
junior varsity Kittens, 79-78, at Memorial Coliseum, Lexington ...There
died: Mrs. Dallas Spriggs, 78, of Lancer,last Thursday at Pikeville: Mrs.
Tessie Williams, 76, of Printer, Friday at New London, 0.: John R.
Prater, 96, of Mousie, and a native of Hippo, Saturday at a Martin
hospital; Elder John M. Jones, 71, of Bevinsville, Monday at McDowell
Appalachian Regional Hospital; Arthur Newsome, 53, of Melvin, Jan. 21
at Pikeville; Edward Martin Elliott, 80, formerly of this county, Jan. 18 in
Dallas, Texas;: Frank Marshall, 99, Prestonsburg native, Jan. 6 in
Oklahoma: James Stanley, 57, of the Abbott Road, last Wednesday here;
Allen Pete Patton, 89, of McDowell, Saturday at McDowell Appalachian
Regional Hospital; Ballard Thornsbury, 72, Monday at home at Wayland.
Twenty Years Ago
(January 30, 1964)
Mayor George P. Archer was notified Wednesday morning .by Congressman Carl Perkins that final approval of the Prestonsburg street project had been made with $814,227 being appropriated ... The work program
for unemployed fathers in seven pilot counties of Eastern Kentucky is officially slated to go into operation Saturday ...The wave of Iootings of
Floyd county business houses and firms continued this week and
threatens to be one of the worst outbreaks of its kind in months ... Mrs.
Virginia L. Wright, of West Prestonsburg, has been named leader of
District 7 in the search for the Kentucky Mother of 1964 it was announced
recently ... Dr. Marshall M. Collins, this area's oldest physician and a
pioneer coal leader, died Friday at the Beaver Valley hospital, Martin at
the age of 93...The $109,500 bid submitted by the Prestonsburg contracting
firm of Meade & Kendrick for construction of the Floyd County Library
· building on Arnold ·avenue here has been approved and work on the structure will begin soon ... Born: to Mr. and Mrs. Bob Martin, a daughter,
Ethel Michelle, at the Prestonsburg General Hospital. Born January 1,
this was the new year's first baby... There died: William Franklin
Wallace, 80-year-old Wayland resident who worked in the first mines
opened on the Big Sandy, Saturday at Wayland after a brief illness; Mrs.
Almyra Copeland, 78, of Halo, Tuesday at the home of a son; Mrs. Sally
Prater, 86, of Bypro, Sunday at the home of a daughter; Mrs. Martha
Moore, 58, Friday at McDowell Appalachian Regional Hospital ; Green
Calhoun, formerly of Prestonsburg, Friday at King's Daughters'
Hospital, Ashland.
Thirty Years Ago
(February 4, 1954)
Prestonsburg is well on the way toward raising $150,000 for the purchase of a plant site and the construction of a factory buidling, hoping to
induce new industry to locate here ... U. S. Department of Commerce officials will visit Prestonsburg and other towns of this section in a survey
next week of Eastern Kentucky's industrial facilities and development
needs... Injured early this morning (Thursday) when a Kentucky highway
department truck skidded into another truck at Emma, were Graydon
Howard, of Pyramid, Bill Stumbo and Frank Stephens, both of West
Prestonsburg. and Jimmy Goble, of Allen ... The Floyd County Board of
Education was concerned mainly at its Monday meeting with filling
vacancies created by teacher resignations ...Saturday, March 6, was
designated this week by County Judge Henry Stumbo as the date for the .
special local option election to sound the wet-and-dry sentiments of the
town of Martin ... B. F. Reed, of Drift, was sworn in as a new member of
the Morehead State College board of regents at a meeting of the group
this week ... The accounting firm of Ray Allen and Nat H. Hager was
employed by the fiscal court Monday as county auditors ... There died:
Charles E. Friend, 74, at his home in Prestonsburg, Wednesday; Rev.
James Roark, 69, formerly of Prestonsburg, Sunday, at Grayson, Ky.;
Mrs. Martha Osborne Howell, 70, of East McDowell, Saturday at the
Beaver Valley Hospital, Martin; John Sturgill, 76, at home on Triplett
Branch of John's Fork, January 31.
Forty Years Ago
<February 3, 1944)
The draft last week accepted 63 men for service from this county, again
hitting Prestonsburg's official family as Cruncilman Thomas Hereford
and City Attorney Walter Scott Harkins were accepted... Sgt. Virgil
Reynolds, crew member on a B-17 bomber, and Euian C. Mills, bomber
tail gunner, both from Wayland, are reported missing after flights over
Europe. Norman Bailey, of Handshoe, and Leo Baldridge, of this county,
are reported killed in action on the Italian front.. .Lieut. Townsel Marshall, recently reported missing after his plaqe cr~shed, is reported safe ,
at his base in India ... Irene Cole Memorial Baptist Church has purchased
from W. W. Burchett a lot on North Second street in the Garfield Addition
on which it may build a church which was destroyed by fire here two
years ago ...The Hi Hat Elkhorn Coal Company is rebuilding the tipple
destroyed by fire recently .. . Aggis Cross, 29, ex-soldier, was killed, and
Frank Adams, 16, was wounded last Thursday as the result of a dispute
between Mud Creek neighbors ... There died: Mrs. Minnie Jones. 40.last
Thursday at Estill; Mrs. Katherine Garrison, 47, Friday, at Manton:
Mrs. Carrie Dale Stiles, 22, of Weeksbury, Sunday at a Martin hospital:
Mrs. Eliza Jane Nunnery Goble, 86, Sunday at Edgar: Curtis Cook, 25, of
Halo, Saturday at Martin of tetanus following a car wreck injury: Mrs.
Mary Howell, 61, Sunday at Amba : Mrs. Mary Emma Jones Martin, 77.
Saturday near Allen; Mrs. emma Morrison Hull, 65, January 27 at Glo:
Mrs. Mousie Gearheart Howard, 73, native of Floyd. Tuesday of last week
at Sandy Hook.
Fifty Years Ago
ct ebruary 2, 1934 >
The business section of Allen was almost wiped out by fire Wednesday
at an estimated Joss of $30,000...The town of Weeksbury is buzzing
because of the operations of a "knocking spirit" at the home there of Bill
Glaspy ...The Price Construction Co., Huntington, W. Va., will begin paving the Allen-Lackey highway, May 15, the county re-employment office
here has been notified ...Leander Handshoe, 24, was killed Monday on Salt
Lick, a few miles from Bosco, by an axe blow ... A clash between striking
coal miners and sympathizers with Pike county deputy sheriffs January
29 resulted in the death of Berry Atkins. 45, the wounding of Beverly Hill .
24. and the arrest of 15 men ...Two Prestonsburg stores have moved to
new locations- Kroger's into the Morrell building on First avenue and
Paul B. Francis into the Patton building vacated by Kroger ... Married :
Miss Ona Lee Clarke. of Auxier, and Mr. Kelly Stratton. of IveL January
29 at Banner ... There died : the nine-month-old baby of Mr. and Mrs. Mont
Gibson here Monday.
DONATE BLOOD.
IT ONLY HURTS WHEN YOU 'tJoN'T.
Central Kentucky Blood Center
PRESTONSBURG STATION
(Municipal Bldg.)
N . Lake Drive / Prestonsburg. Kentucky 41653
Visit a Hospitalized Vet
DuringtheWeekof
A PlltKk Snvkf' of thla Pubhut!6Jo
••d ltw Y~tf'r•n• Ado•nno•lr•t-
F e b . 14 (f).. .
contact your Veterans Adm~nistratwn Hosp1tal
Letters to the Editor
The views expressed here are those of the writers, and not
necessarily those of this newspaper. No unsigned contributions
will be published.
A Tale of Two Taxes ...
Congrats From Ohio
We attended the public hearing of the
Floyd County Board of Education a few
days ago which aired the matter of a
proposed 3 percent tax on our utilities
bills.
Supposedly, all those persons who
chose to speak on the matter were allowed to be heard. The pros ... the cons.
The meeting was scheduled to last one
hour. At the end of that time the Board
adopted a recommendation of the superintendent that the tax be approved.
Nothing that could have been said
would have changed the outcome of the
vote. The die was cast. Neither the plea
heard on behalf of those who were elderly, the retired, nor those persons on
limited incomes had any effect on the
members of the Board. Nor were the
suggestions of an alternate tax given
consideration.
However... As they say, everything is
not all bad.
I notice in your paper last week that
Prestonsburg City Council voted to
decrease the tax on liquor by 3 percent.
Perhaps one tax will offset the other,
assuming that they wilJ pass the savings
on the liquor tax on to us, the consumer.
JAMES E. GOBLE
21 S. Central Avenue
Prestonsburg
Congratulations to Ron Marstin for a
fine column of January 11th. If we have
a future, it's in education.
Linda Sue Niece Lyon's letter to the
Editor was very interesting. She
reminds me of my own situation while
fighting overwhelming odds in trying to
get educated at the head of the Conley
Fork of Spurlock. Five miles in each
direction, do the chores and fall into bed.
There weren't any buses to catch in
those days.
You said it well, Linda, and I admire
you for saying it. But how would you feel
about accepting welfare if you were
disabled and couldn't scratch for food?
Would you still refuse welfare?
Welfare is help from other people. It
was instituted by Jesus Christ when he
appointed church elders to help widows
who couldn't help themselves. It's a sad
day indeed, if we lose our self-respect for
accepting help from others in our times
of need.
It's almost like a challenge sometimes
when people ask me why I don't move
back to Floyd County. I can't do that for
the same reason I am moving from
Akron, Ohio to Florida just as soon as we
sell our house. I am old and my ailments
are many. Cold weather is more than I
can stand.
Always, I have thought of Floyd Coun- .
tians as my family. It hurts me to see
one of them fail. That's why it angers me
to hear people talking about us. I don't
mind much for myself. I have to tell
them where I came from or they won't
kn9w. I know I am just as good as anybody, including Presidents and Kings. I
know you are 'tlm:~here's a lot of
people who don't know tnat:They say we
don't care about education or that we
don't care if our children get educated
or not. I can't accept that. I have to
speak out against it, even if I am old and
ill.
Many years ago, I did improve our image greatley. While working on the railroad in several states, I listened to this
crap about how we didn't care for education, of how we practiced incest and
many other totally unacceptable accusations directed at us. Then I became the
boss. These same people then told me
how great we were and Kentucky
became their favorite vacation land. I
think I liked them better when we were
all bad.
Despite all the bad experiences, I like
Ohio, Akron in particular. Most people
here are from W. Va. and many who
crossed an ocean to get here, so~ are
black, and some speak Spanish. They
too, are my people.
If any or all of you are ever in the area
of Sarasota, Florida, look in the phone
book and ring me up. We'll visit. Maybe
I'll pick you up- if I've learned how to
find it.
ROBIE SKEANS
1487 Hilton Drive
Akron, Ohio 44313
Metropolitan Blues
Bringing It On Home
Whitesburg music lovers are in for a
treat Saturday, February 11. Popular
Lexington band, The Metropolitan Blues
All-stars, will perform in the Appalshop
Theater at 8 p.m. This will be the band's
first performance in the area, but for
two of the All-stars, Saturday night will
be just like coming home.
Rodney Hatfield, a native of
Blackberry Creek in Pike county, will be
making his first appearance in Eastern
Kentucky. Hatfield, who is known as one
of the best harmonica players around,
left Pike county in 1965. With Lexington,
as his base, Hatfield has traveled around
the country, fronting a series of bands,
and playing with such notables as
Charlie Daniels.
Nick Stump, the lead guitarplayer,
was raised in Knott county. His music
school was the nightclubs in Perry county. "I got my degree at Russel's, and did
my graduate work at the Imperial
club", says Stump, implying he learned more than guitar playing during
those years.
In 1966, the two met and formed their
first band. It lasted less than a year and
Stump left for the Air Force. After four
years, Stump returned and formed a
band with Frank Schapp, present
rhythm guitar player for the band.
Schaap's acoustic guitar playing provides a strong base for the distinctive
sound of the band.
Bassist Stewart Miller has been seen
in Whitesburg before. During a two-year
stint with the Glenn Miller Orchestra,
Stewart played in Eastern Kentucky.·
His bass playing, combined with the
rock steady beat of drummer David
White, provides the All-Stars with the
finest rhythm section available in the
area.
Although they call themselves a blues
band, the All-Stars play a wide variety
of music. The music is unique blend of
blues, rock and roll, country, folk, and
even a little gospel thrown in for good
measure.
The Metropolitan Blues-All-stars are
coming to Whitesburg, Saturday ,
February 11, at Appalshop, and no matter what kind of music you like, there
will be something for you. As for the AllStars, they're just glad to be coming
home.
For reservations, call 606/ 633-{)108 and
ask for Jerri or Jenny.
Hummingbirds are being electrocuted
in increasing numbers by mistaking red
insulators on electric fences for flowers.
So the manufacturer of the "Red
Snap'r" insulators has taken action,
reports National Wildlife magazine. The
company has advised farmers and Jandowners to stop using its red insulators
or to paint them a color, such as black
or white, that will not attract
hummingbirds.
Protect Children
The recent NBC television movie
"Adam" about my son, who was abducted and murdered, graphically
depicted the horror which can happen to
any family in Kentucky or anywhere.
For those people who missed seeing the
movie, NBC plans to run "Adam" again
this spring. I urge everyone to watch this
important movie.
On November 10, 1983, I came to Kentucky to announce at press conferences
in Covington, Lexington and Louisville
my wholehearted and enthusiastic support of the package of recommendations
recently developed by the Kentucky
Task Force on Exploited and Missing
Children.
I ask every Kentuckian to contact his
or her State Representative and State
Senator in support of the Kentucky Task
Force proposals which would make Kentucky the unchallenged leader in this
most important field.
JOHN WALSH
Parent
Chairman, Child Tragedies Coalition
NOTICE OF MEETING
The Wayland town council will have
a closed meeting Jan . 30, at 3:30p.m .
The purpose of the meeting is to discuss the dismissal of city personnel!.
�•
The Floyd County Times
Wednesday, February 1, 1984
IN MEMORIAM
Classes Now Offered At PCC
In memory of Sara M. Vaughn, who
'ed Jan. 31, 1976.
The days pass so swifly, each year goes
a little bit faster;
Has it been eight long years Mom, since
I've heard the echo of your laughter?
They say that time heals all wounds, but
my heart, it just won't mend;
There's nothing in this world I wouldn't
give JUSt to see your face again;
For all the times you've danced for us
kids, right there on the kitchen floor;
iWhy just one glimpse would do me, I
wouldn't ask for more.
But Mom, don't you worry, cause all of
us kids are doing alright;
It's just that we miss you terribly, to our,
lives you were such a delight.
But I still have my memories Mom,
that's one thing time can't erase;
And I'll keep reliving them over and
over, until again I see your smiling face.
For all of you who still have your Mom,
have only one thing to say;
he rest of this poem is meant for you,
and what you'll remember one day.
The sorrow that you'll feel, the pain you
can't compare;
Just to know when you go home, your
Mother won't be there.
There'll be times that you'll remember
when you left her all alone;
Holidays that you let slip by, saying
"Lord, I wish that I had gone!"
It use to be so easy, just to pick up the
telephone ;
~d the first thing that she would ask
you was, "When are you kids coming
home?"
We always made excuses and thought
she'd always be there;
Did we realize how much we hurt her,
when she thought we didn't care?
So I'm sharing with you this poem and
hope that you won't wait;
Never put if off till tomorrow, because
tomorrow might be too late.
knew my Mom wouldn't mind my tellng of the love that we both shared;
For \\-ithout that reassurance, the
burden I could never have bared.
Sadly missed by her Mother, Ella B
Vaughn, her children, Billy Joe, Ella
Mae and Logan, and all her family.
Written by, Ella Mae Smith
lt.
TEXTILES
Is your home in need of something
warm & pretty? Three new classes
beginning at PCC can help you solve this
problem. A new offering for Community Services is the spinning class. Learn
to work with raw wool and produce the
softest, warmest wool items immaginable. This class is taught by Roze Allen
and starts Tuesday, February 7.
Starting Monday, Feb. 6 is knitting
and crocheting, taught by Judith Carr.
Learn to make sweaters, blankets, mittens, scarfs, and baby gifts.
A third textile class is patchwork and
quilting, taught by Shannon Gibson starting on Monday Feb. 6. If you have ever
admired beautiful quilts and other patchwork items, here is your chance to
make some for yourself. Winter blues
can be chased away easily when learning a new skill.
Assertiveness training, taught by
Rose Price, begins Tuesday at PCC. If
you have difficulty in meeting the public,
or in selling your point of view, this is
your chance to learn how to make events
go your way.
Computer classes begin Tuesday,
Feb. 7. This class, taught by Ken Robin·
son, is filling fast. Come and learn to use
that new Christmas computer.
Houseplants, taught by David Gillespie, begins Feb. 9. This fun class meets
on Thursdays. It is designed to demonstrate how to decorate with and grow
house plants for office, home, and display purposes.
The health seminar series sponsored
by the Floyd County Medical Association and PCC begins Tuesday, Feb. 7 at
7 p.m. in the Pike Auditorium. This
series has been desig.1ed by health care
professionals to give the public a chance
to learn about various medical specialities and to ask questions in an informal
way.
The first seminar will deal with sports
injury and medicine and should be of interest to coaches and parents of both Little League and school-related sports.
Presenters for this seminar are Dr. Sundaram, coordinator of the series, Dr.
Ikram and Dr. Rapu.
Section One, Pa•e Five
CARD OF THANKS
The family of Otis Hackworth wish to
thank everyone who helped in any way
during the death of our brother and son.
Thanks to the many peoplE' who sent
flowers and food . A special thanks to the
minister, E.1der Wallace Calhoun,
Delmon Stanley, Lemuel Williams and
to the Carter Funeral Home. Again ,
thanks to all who shared their sympathy
during our time of bereavement.
Blood,
it doesn't grow on trees.
Central Kentucky Blood Center
Prestonsburg Station
Municipal Bldg., N. Lake Drive
DO SOMETHING WILD!
Kentuckians can now participate in the protection and preservation of our rich natural heritq@e. On Line 21 a , you can
designate all or a portion of your Kentucky tax refund to help
wildlife .
Your tax deductible contribution w ill support non-game species
protection programs by the Department of Fish and Wildlife
Resources and the purchase and maintenance of natural areas
by the Kentucky Nature Preserves Commission . These programs
hove no other sources of funding.
A quarter has 119
grooves on its edge.
A dime has one fewer.
Wildlife needs your help - Ho amount Is too small. your contribution Is Important!
TABLE and
4-CHA\RS
IiRMIJ
PlASTIC TOP
CLOSE-OUTS
EXTENsiON TABL
FLOOR
SAMPLES
• S0Uo HAftDWooos
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36 x 48 x 66 Oval
1-18 " LEAF
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• HONEy MAPLE FlNfSH
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Lower Tuition Equals
ore College Students
A recently released research report
supports the view that low tuition at
public junior colleges, senior colleges,
and universities is essential for equal
educational opportunities in the United
States. In keeping with its commitment
to making quality higher education programs accessible to qualified students,
Western has kept its tuition considerably
below the national norms tor state uniersities.
The report, entitled "Low Tuition Fact
Book" is very supportive of Western's
policies with regard to student fees . It
cites eight reasons why low fees are
essential to the promotion of educational
opportunities in this country:
The percentage of high school graduates going on to college is generally
lower in states with high tuition;
The percentage 01 veterans using their
G.I. benefits to attend college is generally low in states with high tuition;
New data on public colleges show that
great many students at such colleges
have little or no parental help and work
their way through. Many students are
self-supporting ;
A University of Wisconsin study found
that lowering tuition increases the
number going to college;
A California study showed that lower
tuition would particularly encourage
low-income students to continue their
educations;
Department of Labor statistics show
that very few families have adequate
resources for college; and
Current federal and state student aid
programs are not adequate to meet student needs.
UNDERGOES SURGERY
Mrs. Florence Castle !son, of Benham,
Ky. is a patient at Good Samaritan
Hospital, Lexington, following major
surgery there last week. Her nieces,
. r s . Katherine Hughes, of Prestons- ·
burg, and Mrs. Billie Daniels, of Pikeville, are among those who have been
there with her since her hospitalization.
Mrs. Ison is a former Floyd county resident and has many relatives and friends
here.
'87 CAMARO CONVERTIBLE
Rebuln 327 engine. Body In excellent
condition. New tires. top, back quarter
• t panel• a much more. t5,0~ firm.
~
Serious Inquiries only- (808)784-!5<127
lt·pd.
EVERY BEDROOM IN STOCK, 3-PIECE,
4-PIECE-MAPLE-OAK-PINE-CHERRY
IF YOU NEED A BEDROOM SUITE, NOW IS THE TIME
TO BUY-OUR PRICES WILL NOT BE LOWER.
EVERy
LIVING ItO
SUITE OM
1.Sro30%0
OFFI•
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tS 15
o
f'
Of •
10
EVERY ODD
DRESSER, BED,
CHEST OR
NIGHTSTAND
15% OFF
fttEVERY SET SEALy
ATTRESS &
BOX SPRINGS
0
s/G~FF
"Eft'l ttECl\MER
~MO
sV4l'JEl ftOCtc.Eft
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150/o
Off\
PERSET
EVERY
GUN CABINEl
15°/o
OFF
ONE GROUP DELUXE
GUN CABINETS
40% OFF
LIST!
EVERy
BEDROOM
SUITE
20%
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OFFr
EVER~
DESK
15o/o Off
EVERY
WOOD
ROCKER
15% Off
*ALL COAL & WOOD HEATERS-15% OFF *ALL COAL & WOOD GUTES-20% OFF.
*ALL GAS HEATERS BY MARTIN AND COZY (:~~s"~"~r~:~L::;R~RM) -15% OFF
ARROWOOD'S ARDWARE & FURNITURE
PHONE 886-2703 •
COURT STREO •
PRESTONSBURG PHoNE 886-6116 •
SO. LAKE DRIVE
�NOTICE OF
INTENTION TO MINE
NOTICE OF
INTENTION TO MINE
Pursuant to Application
Pursuant to Application
Number 836-5033
Number 836-0080
(1) In accordance with the provisions
In accordance with the provisions of
of KRS 350.055, notice is hereby given
KRS 350.055, notice is hereby given that
that Amber Coal Co., Inc., Box 6367,
Raschella Coal Company, Rt. 4, Box
Beauty, Kentucky, 41203, has filed an ap962-Y, Pikeville, Ky. 41501, has filed an
plication for a permit for an
application for a permit for a surface
underground mining operation. The pro- coal mining and reclamation operation
jx>sed operation will affect a surfa~e ' o£ approximately 64.88 acres located 4.1
disturbance of 2.69 acres and w1ll
miles south of Grethel, in Floyd county.
underlie an additional 40.87 acres
The proposed operation is approxlocated 1.0 mile northeast of Risner in
imately 1/8 miles east from State Route
Floyd county.
979 junction with Akers Branch Road
: (2) The proposed operation is approxand located 1 2 miles west of Branham
imately 0.2 miles east from Johnson
Creek. The latitude is 37" 27' 41" . The
li'ork Road's junction with KY 1210 and
longitude is 83• 31' 21". The surface area
is located on Johnson Fork of Caney iis owned by Russell Clark, Akers heirs.
Creek. The latitude is 37° 36' 05" N. The
B. & M. Coal Company, Cline Mitchell,
longitude is 82° 50' 24" W.
Foster Mitchell and Henry Martin.
· (3) The proposed operation is located
The proposed operation is located on
on the Martin U.S.G.S. 7 1~ minute quadthe McDowell U.S.G.S. 7"h minute quadrangle map. The surface area to be
rangle map. The operation will use the
disturbed is owned by Manis Ousley and
mountain top removal method of
Austin Johnson. The operation will
mining.
underlie land owned by Otis Ousley,
The application has been filed for
Manis Ousley, Callie Skeans, Verlin
public inspection at the Department for
Johnson and Austin Johnson. The operaSurface Mining Reclamation and Ention will affect an area within 100 feet of
forcement's Prestonsburg Regional Ofpublic road Johnson Fork Road. The
fice, at 431 South Lake Drive, Prestonsoperation will not involve relocation of
burg, Ky. 41653. Written comments, ob;J ohnson Fork Road.
jections, or requests for a permit con· (4) The application has been filed for
ference must be filed with the Director
'p ublic inspection at the Department for
of the Division of Permits, 6th Floor,
Surface Mining Reclamation and EnCapital Plaza Tower, Frankfort, Kenforcement's Prestonsburg Regional Oftucky 40601 .
1-25-3t.
fice, 503 South Lake Drive, Prestons:t>urg, Kentucky 41653. Written comNOTICE OF
:ments, objections, or requests for a perINTENTION TO MINE
mit conference must be filed with the
Pirector of the Division of Permits, 6th
Pursuant to Application
;Floor , Capital Plaza Tower, Frankfort,
Number 836-5031
;Kentucky 40601.
1-18-3t.
( 1) In accordance with the provisions
of KRS 350.055, notice is hereby given
that Apollo Coal Co., Inc., P.O. Box 9,
NOTICE OF
Wayland, Ky. 41666, has filed an applicaINTENTION TO MINE
tion for a permit for an underground and
Pursuant to Application
contour/auger method mining operaNumber 836-0070
tion. The proposed operation will affect
In accordance with the provisions of a surface disturbance of 10.51 acres and
KRS 350.055, notice is hereby given that
will underlie an additional 36.57 acres
Rock Ridge Resources, P .O. Box 140,
located .45 miles southwest of Demain
Pine Top, Kentucky 41843, has filed an
Floyd county.
application for a permit for an under(2) The proposed operation is approxground and surface mining operation.
imately .2 miles south from Bradley
The proposed operation will affect a surBranch Road's junction with KY 7 and
face disturbance of 16.11 acres and will
located on Bradley Branch. The latitude
underlie an additional 10.28 acres
ii 37° 24' 57"N. The longitude is 82° 48'
located 1.5 miles southwest of Grethel in
40"W.
Floyd county.
(3) The proposed operation is located
on the Wayland U.S.G.S. 7 1h minute
1 The proposed operation is approx~mately 0.62 miles northwest from KY
quadrangle map. The surface area to be
680's junction with KY 979 and located
disturbed is owned by Gliden and Rosa
0.5 miles north of Hamilton Branch. The
Bradley and Lena Bradley Hopkins. A
latitude is 37' 28' OO" N. The longitude is
brief description of the kind of mining
82' 40' OO"W.
activity proposed is : underground and
The proposed operation is located on
contour/auger method of mining.
the McDowell U.S.G.S. 7 1h minute quad(4) The application has been filed for
rangle map. The oper ation will use the
public inspection at the Department for
'contour and auger method of mining.
Surface Mining Reclamation and EnThe surface area to be disturbed is own- 1orcement's Prestonsburg Regional Ofed by Dennis Jones, Emmet Lawson,
fice, 503 South Lake Drive, Prestons~as Akers and The Elkhorn Coal Corburg, Ky. 41653. Written comments, obporation. The operation will underlie
jections, or requests for a permit conland owned by Silas Akers, and Dennis
ference must be filed with the Director
Jones.
of the Division of Permits, 6th Floor,
• The application has been filed for
Capital Plaza Tower, Frankfort, Ken~ublic inspection at the Department for
tucky 40601.
1-25-3t.
Surface Mining Recla ma tion and Enforcement's Prestonsburg Regional Oftice, 401 South Lake Drive, PrestonsNOTICE OF
burg, Kentucky 41653. Written comINTENTION TO MINE
ments, objections, or requests for a pt!r""
Pursuant to Application
)nit conference must be filed with the
No. 836-0008
:l>irector of the Division of Permits, 6th
( 1) In accordance with the provisions
.Floor, Capital Plaza Tower, Frankfort,
of KRS 350.055, notice is hereby given
~entucky 40601.
1-18-3t.
that Triple Elkhorn Mining Company,
Inc., P.O. Box 140, I vel, Kentucky 41642,
has filed an application for a permit for
NOTICE OF
a surface coal mining and reclamation
INTENTION TO MINE
operation of approximately 43.99 acres
Pursuant to Application
located one mile southeast of Allen, KenNumber: 860-5023
tucky in Floyd county.
In accordance with the provisions of
(2) The proposed operation is approxKRS 350.055, notice is hereby given that imately 1 '14 miles southeast of Star
National Mines Corporation, Box 12022, Route 80's junction with US 25, and
•101 East Vine Street, Lexington, Ken- located 1 ~ mile south of the Levisa Fork.
. tuclcy 40579, has filed an application for The latitude is 37° 35' 38" , longitude is 82°
• a permit for an underground mining 42' 51". Surfa ce area is owned by Her~ operation. The proposed operation will
man a nd Berniece Porter, Bill and Belle
~· affect a surface disturbance of 3.13 acres
Jones ; Palmer Crisp Estate, Katherine
~· and will underlie an additional 135.49
Stratton ; Adams Real Estate Limited
!·acres located 2.7 miles southwest of Gar- P a rtne r ship; El DuPont DeNemours;
:· re tt in Knott county.
Inc., George and Jean Rice ; Olga and
; The proposed operation is approx- Howard Allen ; Robert Jones heirs and
: i~ately 2.0 miles southwest from Route Cecil Webb :
• 550 junction with Route 7 and located 0.7
<3) The proposed operation is located
: miles southeast of Jones Fork. The lati- on the Harold U.S. G .S. 71 2 minute quad~ tude is 37' 26' 37". The longitude is 82° rangle map. The operation will use the
• 50' 05"
mountaintop removal method of mining.
: The proposed operation is located on
.(4) The application also includes a
: the Wayland U.S.G .S. 7'h. minute quad- proposed land use change from undevel' rangle map. The surface area to be oped w / trees premining land use to a
• disturbed is owned by Glen Click. The undeveloped w / various grasses post
operation will underlie land owned by mining land use.
Gle n Click, Mont Conley, Gordon
(5) The application has been filed for
Howard, Arnold Fitch, National Mines public inspection at the Department for
Corporation, Charles and Juanita Surface Mining Reclamation and EnThornsburg, James and Francis Allen. forcement, Pres tonsburg Regional OfThis application also includes a propos- fice South Lake Drive , Prestonsburg,
ed land use change from the forest land Ky. ' 41653 . Written comments , objecpre-mining land use to' a pasture land tions, or requests for a permit conpost-mining land use. The operation ~II ference must be filed with the Director
affect an area within 100 feet of pubhc of the Divis ion of Permits, 6th Floor,
road Triplett Branch. The operation will Capital Plaza Tower, Frankfort, Ky.
not involve relocation of the public road. 41601.
.
The application has been filed for pubThis
is
the
final
advertisement
of
this
lic inspection at the Department for Surface Mining Recla mation a nd Enforce- a pplication ; a ll comments, objections,
ment, Jackson Regional Office, Howell or r equests for a permit conference
Heights Building, Route 2, Box 500, must be received within thirty (30) days
It.
Jackson, Kentucky 41339. Written com- of today's date.
ments, objections, or requests for a permit conference must be filed with the
Director of the Division of Permits, 6th
Floor, Capital Plaza Tower. F rankfort,
Kentucky 40601.
1-18-3t..
Section One, Paae Six
The Floyd County Times
WedneMiay, February 1, 1984
Although The Hague is the
seat of the Netherlands government, the capital is actually Amsterdam and it is here
that coronations take place.
D on ate blood .
NOTICE OF
INTENTION TO MINE
Pursuant to Application
Number 836-0080
In accordance with the provisions of
KRS 350.055, notice is hereby given that
Raschella Coal Company, Rt. 4, Box
962-Y, Pikeville, Ky. 41501, has filed an
application for a permit for a surface
coal mining and reclamation operation
of approximately 70.00 acres located 4.1
miles south of Grethel, in Floyd county.
The proposed operation is approximately 1/8 miles east from State Route
979 junction with Akers Branch Road
and located 12 miles west of Branham
Creek. The latitude is 37' 27' 41 " . The
longitude is 83' 31' 21". The surface area
is owned by Goldie Clark, Russell Clark,
Akers heirs and B. & M. Coal Company.
The proposed operation is located on
the McDowell U.S.G.S. 7112 minute quadrangle map. The operation will use the
mountain top removal method of
mining.
The application has been filed for
public inspection at the Department for
Surface Mining Reclamation and Enforcement's Prestonsburg Regional Office, at 431 South Lake Drive, Prestonsburg, Ky. 41653. Written comments, objections, or requests for a permit conference must be filed with the Director
of the Division of Permits, 6th Floor,
Capital Plaza Tower, Frankfort, Kentucky 40601.
This is the final advertisement of this
application; all comments, objections,
or requests for a permit conference
must be received within thirty (30) days
of today's date.
lt.
NOTICE OF
INTENTION TO MINE
Pursuant to Application
Number 436-0099
( 1) In accordance with the provisions
of KRS 350.055. notice is hereby given
that Buck Coal Company, Inc., Branham Village, Star Route 2, Prestonsburg, Ky. 41653, has filed an application
for a permit for a surface coal mining
and reclamation operation of approximately 67.0 acres located 3.29 miles
south of Langley, Kentucky in Floyd
county.
(2) The proposed operation is approximately 2.6 miles east from KY 777's
junction with KY 80 and located 0.11
miles west of Turkey Creek. The latitude
is 37• 29' 58''. The longitude is 82' 47' 05".
The surface area is owned by Elkhorn
Coal Corporation.
(3) The proposed operation is located
on the Wayland U.S.G.S. 71h. minute
quadrangle map. The operation will use
the contour, auger and area methods of
mining. The operation will affect an
area within 100 feet of public road KY
777. The operation will not involve
relocation of the public road.
(4) The application has been filed for
public inspection at the Department for
Surface Mining Reclamation and Enforcement 's Prestonsburg Regional Office, at 431 South Lake Drive, Prestonsburg, Ky. 41653. Written comments, objections, or requests for a permit conference must be filed with the Director
of the Division of Permits, 6th Floor,
Capital Plaza Tower, Frankfort, Kentucky 40601.
This is the final advertisement of this
application ; all comments, objections,
or requests for a permit conference
must be received within thirty (30) days
of today's date.
It.
NOTICE OF
INTENTION TO MINE
Pursuant to Application
Number 836-0025
In accordance with the provisions of
KRS 350.055, notice is hereby given that
Brashae Coal Co., Inc., P.O. Box 628,
Hindman, Ky. 41653, has filed an application for a permit for a surface coal
mining and reclamation operation of approximately 391.34 acres locatoo 1.0
miles southeast of Risner, in Floyd
county.
The proposed operation is approximately 0.57 miles northeast from
Wolfpen Bra nch's junction with KY 1210
and located 0.2 miles east of Wolfpen
Branch. The latitude is 37' 34' 22"N. The
longitude is 83° 48' 25"W. The surface
area is owned by Solomon Caudill,
Ronald and Betty Chaffin, John Click,
Narcie qick, Whits Click, Ellen Cooper,
Bill, Carl, and Lois Dudley, Herschel
Flanery, Virgil Flanery, Vernon Flannery, Frazier Catalog Agency, Ernest
Gibson, Clyde Hale, David Hale, J oe
Hughes, McArthur Jacobs, John Justice,
Sandy and Polly Justice, Laura and Bill
Kilburn, Albert Marshall, Mullins heirs,
Bessie Ousley, Wade Ousley, R.E. Pitts,
Frank Skeans, Johnny Skeans, Mae
Skeans, Myrtle Skeans, S.C. Stevens,
Glen and Bessie Wards.
The proposed operation is located on
the Martin U.S.G.S. 71h. minu~ quadrangle map. The operation will use the contour, area, combina tion method of mining . The a pplication a lso includes a proposed land use cha nge from the
forestland pre-mining land use to a
pasturela nd post-mining land use.
The application has been filed for
public inspecti~n at {he Department for
Surface Mining Reclamation and Enforcement's P restons burg Regional Office, 503 South La ke Drive , Prestonsburg, Ky. 41653. Written comments, objections, or requests for a permit conference must be filed with the Director
of the Division of P ermits, 6th Floor,
Capital Plaza Tower , Frankfort, Kentucky 40601.
1·25-3t.
It only h urts
whe n y ou d on't.
CENTRAL KENTUCKY BLOOD CENTER
PR ESTO NSBURG STATION
(Munic ipal Bldg.)
N. Lake Drive/Prestonsburg, Kentucky 41 &53
NOTICE TO PUBLIC
I am Harold Ousley, of Waverly, Ohio,
a nd I have been out of the state of Kentucky s ince 1972. I am not responsible for
any debts in Kentucky, whatsoever .
HAROLD OUSLEY
110 Colvin Roa d
Wa verly, Ohio 45690
It-pd.
NOTICE OF
INTENT TO MINE .,
Pursuant To Two-Acre-Or-Less
Appl. No. 836-0084
1. In accordance with the provision of
KRS 350.055, notice is hereby given that
D.F.D. Co. Inc., Box 133, Hippo, Ky.
41637, has filed an application for a permit for a surface coal mining and
reclamation operation of approximately 2.00 acres located 2 miles southeast
of Langley in Floyd county.
2. The proposed operation is approximately 2.00 miles southeast from Ky. so
junction with Ky. 777 and located 0.1
miles west of Turkey Creek. The latitude
is 37° 29' 53". The longitude is 82° 46' 46" .
The surface area is owned by Tommy
Martin.
3. The proposed operation is located on
the Wayland U.S.G.S. 7.5 minute quadrangle map. The operation will use the
contour method of mining.
4. The application has been filed for
public inspection at the Department for
Surface Mining Reclamation and
Enforcement's Prestonsburg Regional
Office, Prestonsburg, Ky. Written comments, objections, or requests for a permit conference must be filed with the
Regional Administrator of the Prestonsburg Regional Office, Prestonsburg, Ky.
5. This is the final advertisement of
this application ; all comments, objections, or requests for a permit conference must be received within thirty
(30) days of today's date.
lt-pd.
NOTICE OF
INTENTION TO MINE
Pursuant to Two-Acre-or-Less
Application Number 836-0083
In accordance with the provisions of
KRS 350.055, notice is hereby given that
Amos Leslie, Emma, Kentucky, has filed an application for a permit for a surface coal mining and reclamation operation of approximately 1.9 acres located
1 mile north of Dwale, in Floyd county.
The proposed operation is approximately 0.75 miles north from Dwale
Road junction with US 23 and located
1/ 10 miles west of Levisa Fork of Big
Sandy. The latitude is 37' 37' 55" . The
longitude is 82" 43' 30". The surface area
is owned by Amos Leslie.
The proposed operation is located on
the Lancer & Harold U.S.G.S. 71h minute
quadrangle map. The operation will use
the contour strip method of mining.
The application has been filed for
public inspection at the Department for
Surface Mining Reclamation and Enforcement's Prestonsburg Regional Office, 503 South Lake Drive, Prestonsburg, Kentucky 41653. Written comments, objections, or requests for a permit confereqce must be filed with the
Regional Administrator of the
Prestonsburg Regional Office, 503 South
Lake Drive, Prestonsburg, Kentucky
41653. This is the final advertisement of
the application; all comments, objections or request for a permit conference
must be received within thirty (30) days
of today's date.
lt.
PUBLIC NOTICE
Pursuant to 405 KAR 8:010, Section
16(4) (b), thefollowingisasummaryof
permitting decisions made by the Department for Surface Mining Reclamation and Enforcement, Division of Permits with respect to applications to conduct surface coal mining and reclamation operations in Floyd county.
Hop. Hollow Mining Company,
436-5156, Denied, 1/ 19/84; Kentucky Coal
Company, 636-5146, Denied, 1/ 18/ 84;
Layne Processing Incorporated,
436-5216, Denied, 1/ 19/ 84; Ligon Preparation Company, 436-5061, Denied,
1/ 19/ 84 ; Little H Coal Company Inc.,
436-5077, Denied, 1/ 19/ 84; Lone Oak Mining Company, 436-5112, Denied, 1/ 19/ 84;
Lulu Coal Company, 436-5106, Denied,
1/ 19/ 84; Switchback Coal Company,
636-5088, Denied, 1/ 19/ 84; Switchback
Coal Company, 636-5074, Denied ,
1/ 19/ 84; Wiley and Dixon Incorporated,
436-5150, Denied, 1/ 19/ 84; Coal Mac Incorporated, 836-0013, Issued, 1/ 18/ 84.
It.
PUBLIC NOTICE
The City of Prestonsburg will accept
bids until 4:00 p.m . on Thursday,
February 9, 1984 for the purchase of
regular and unleaded gasoline for city
vehicles. The city uses approximately
50 000 gallons of gasoline a year. The city'has their own tanks and the gas?line
would be delivered to the tank locations.
Mail bids top City Administrator, P .O.
Box 31, Prestonsburg, Ky. 41653. If you
have any questions, call 886-2335.
DAVID EVANS
City Administrator
2-1-2t.
PUBLIC NOTICE
REVENUE SHARING
HANDICAPPED REGULATIONS
This notice is published pursuant to
the requirements of Sectio? 51.55 of the
Revenue Sharing Regulations, as published in the Federal Register on. ~c
tober 17, 1983. Section 51.55 ~~oh1b~ts
discrimination against quahfted mdividuals because of their handicapped
status.
bl'
City of Martin advise~ the pu 1~,
employees and job apphcants th~t 1t
does not discriminate on ~he. basis of
handicapped status in adm1sS10n or ~c
cess to or treatment or employment m,
its programs and activities.
City of Martin has designated the
following City Clerk as the ~onta~t to
coordinate efforts to comply Wlth thls requirement. Inquiries should ~ dtrected
to : Johnnie B. Stephens, Ctty Clerk,
Bridge Street. Phone No., 285-3062 or
285-3184, 9 a .m . to 3 p.m . Mon ., Tue.,
Wed., Fri.
lt .
SHERIFF'S SALE
FLOYD DISTRICT COURT
ACTION NO. 83-C-180
Citizens Fidelity Bank and Trust Company ................... ..... .... ....... .Plaintiff
VS:
Robert W. Roberts Lola T. Roberts ...
Defendants
I, Henry C. Hale, Sheriff of Floyd
County Kentucky will offer for sale in
front of the Courthouse in Prestorfsburg,
Kentucky on Feb. 17th 1984 at the hour
of 10:00 o'clock A.M. to satisfy judgment
on behalf of Plaintiff entered on August
29, 1983 against the defendant Robert W.
Roberts, in the amount of $fJT7 .86 plus interest & court cost. There is a mortgage
of approximately Forty Thousand
($40,000.00) owing to the Bank Josephine
of Prestonsburg, Ky. Following described property to-wit:
A certain tract or parcel of land lying
in Floyd County , Ky . on Branham's
Creek and being part of the same land
conveyed to first parties by Kenas
Tackett and Lue Creasie Tackett, his
wife by deed bearing date Sept. 30, 1971,
which is duly recorded in Deed book 206,
page 321, Floyd County Clerk's office
containing 2 acres more or less. Bounded and described as follows: Beginning
on the right-hand side as you go up
Branham's Creek at a culvert at the
road; thence straight across the bottom
with the ditch line to the center of the
Creek; thence down the creek as it
meanders to John Martin's line, Lot No.
7; then crossing the bottom with Martin's lot No. 7, to an iron stake at the
Branham's Creek Road; thence up
Branhams Creek road to the place of
beginning.
HENRY C. HALE
Sheriff of Floyd County, Ky.
2-1-3t.
PUBLIC NOTICE
The Town of Wayland, complying with
rules and regulations of Revenue Sharing Funds, does not discriminate against
the physically handicapped.
PAT MURPHY,
Mayor
1-25-2t.
NOTICE OF
INTENTION TO MINE
Pursuant to Application
Number 836-0085
In accordance with the provision of
KRS 350.055, notice is hereby given that
Renegade Mining, Inc. 2885, Pikeville,
Ky. 41501, has filed an application for a
permit for an underground mining operation. The proposed operation will a ffect a surface disturbance of 16.37 acres
and will underlie an additional 64.85
acres located 1.50 miles southeast of
Osborn in Floyd county .
The proposed operation is approximately 1.0 miles northeast from State
Route 1426 junction with Bush Branch
and located 0.25 miles northeast of Bush
Branch. The latitude is 37' 28' 22". The
longitude is 82° 35' 41".
The proposed operation is located on
the Pikeville USGS 7'h minute quadrangle map. The surface area to be disturbed is owned by Osborn heirs. The operation will underlie land owned by Osborn
heirs, Estill Salisbury, L & J McClanahan, Ruth & Green Tackett.
The application has been filed for
public inspection at the Department for
Surface Mining Reclamation and Enforcement's Prestonsburg Regional Office, 503 South Lake Drive, Prestonsburg, Ky. 41653. Written comments, objections, or requests for a permit conference must have attached a copy of
the newspaper clipping and must be
filed with the Regional Administrator of
the Prestonsburg Regional Office, 503
South Lake Drive, Prestonsburg, Ky.
41653.
2-1-3t.
CARD OF THANKS
The family of John Lee Garrett wishes
to express their deepest appreciation to
their friends who helped during their
time of grief. Each phone call, each
visitor, each floral arrangement, and
each dish of food was greatly appreciated. A special thanks is extended to the
pastors who helped with the service, the
nursing staff at the Mountain Manor
Nursing Home, the nursing staff at the
Riverview Nursing Home, and the
Carter Funeral Home.
THE FAMILY
NOTICE OF APPOINTMENT
I, Frank Derossett, Clerk of the Floyd Circuit Court, do hereby certify that
the following persons have been appointed by the Floyd District Court and
qualify according to law, and all persons indebted to the said estate are entitled to file with the undersigned persons at the designated addresses within
6 months from date of appointment:
btat11
Fiduciary
Date Approved
AttorMy
14-P-004
John Joseph Terry
Way!Hd, Ky.
Edith Terry
Wayloncl, Ky.
1-04-14
hn Rowland
Pre11onslturg, Ky.
14-P-005
Thomos J. Leake
Eut Point, Ity.
Elsie H. LHke
East Point, Ky.
1-04-14
William F11111Cit
Pr11tolllkrg, Ky.
14-P-006
Mary Tackett
Halo, Ky.
Denver Tmett
Halo, Ky.
1-04-14
Gary E. Jollueft
Prelfnsllu,.., ly.
14-P-007
Yunie Spurlock
Printer, Ky.
Winton Spurlock
Printer, Ky.
1-05-14
Eric HoU
Prestonsburg, Ky.
14-P-001
Montana Henley
Bypre, Ky.
Wll'!lil s,.,...n
lfetlr HiU, Ky.
1-05·14
Eric Hall
Prestonsburg, Ky.
84-P-009
Ella Mae Hall
Prettontbul"', lty.
Jacklyn Scott Darling
Morehead, Ky.
1-11·84
George Wells_.
Prestonsburg, Ity.
14-P-010
Walter S. Lanr
btill, Ky.
Juanita Lazar
Martin, Ky.
1-13-14
Eric Hall
Prestonsburg, Ky.
84-P-011
Otto Martin
Wayland, lty.
Elizakth Martin
Waylancl, Ky.
1-17-84
Janet Stumbo
Prestonsburg, Ky.
84-P-012
Paul James Harris
Martin, lty.
Edna Harris
Martin, Ky.
1-17-14
Jerry Patton
Prestonsburg, Ky.
84-P-015
Hannah Stewart
Hi Hat, Ky.
Ronald G. Stewart
Hi Hat, Ky.
1-24-14
David Barber
Prestonsburg, Ky.
84-P-019
John Lee Garrt1tt
Emmo, Ky.
Grace Leslie
Emmo, lty.
1-24-84
W. W. Burchett
14-P-020
Danny Ray Reynolds
Teaberry, Ky.
Ella Ruth Hall
Beaver, Ky.
1-26-14
J.L. Griffith
Prestonsburg, Ky .
14-P-021
Madison Patrick
Hueysville, lty.
Madeline Patrick
Albion, Mich.
1-30-14
J.L. Griffith
Prestonsburg,
84-P-022
Marchells Charlet Bell
Prestonabu11, Ky.
Yvo11111 Tllerese hll
Prestonabu,.., lty.
1-30-14
~y.
Janet Stumbo
Prestonsburg, ly.
FRANK DIROSSm, Floyd Clrcvlt Clerk
By CHARLOnE WEDDINGTON, D.C.
lt.
NOTICE OF FILING SETTLEMENTS
1. Frank Derossett, Clerk of the Floyd Circuit Court, do hereby certify that
the following settlements of estates have been filed in the Floyd District
Court, and anyone desiring to take exceptions to said settlements must do
so on or before February 29, 1984 at 10:00 a.m.
Final
11 -P-223
Michael Jo Halkrt
Donnie Holkrt
Annual
77-P-007
Vine Pack
Lizzie Pack
Final
13-P-225
Roy B. Reid
Juanita Reid
13-P-006
Noa• Mitchell
Connie Mitchell
Final
13-P-003
Yera Edwards
Lloyd Edwards
Final
12-P-261
catherine H. Wiechert
Charles Wlechers
Final
12-P-020
Jim st..Je
Lowell Steele
Final
13-P-053
Roger Lee Muncy
Carlene Muncy
Final
12-P-305
Kathlean Leake Gibson
13-P-137
William F,..nklln Morell
Annual
Final
Cletit R. Gibson
&
Bristol C. Gibson
1st Hawaiian Bank
Final
13-P-009
Greenville Robert Spredlin
Margeret Spradlin
Final
81 -P-260
Boyd Thornsbury
Gordon Thomsbury
FRANK OIROSSm, Floyd Circuit Clerk
By CHARLOm WEDDINGTON, D.C.
lt.
•
�Wednesday, Febnaary 1, 1984
The Floyd County nmes
Section One, P . .• Seven
49
BEEF $
ROAS·T ... .
OPEN 8To 10·
PH: 478-5275
HAROLD, KY.
EVERY DAY
$149 $10 OR MORE
CHICKEN THIGHS .............. LB. 69c
FRESH PORK HOCKS ......... LB. 69c
IGA
79C
CATSUP ................... 32-0Z. BTL
COKE, TAll, SPRITE, 1 $299
OR DIET COKE ........... ~;~:k
PORK NECK IIONES .................... LB. 37 c
WITH
SUGAR .
PURCHASE
~
SELF-RISING FLOUR .... 10-LB. BAG
~
PAPER TOWELS ...... 1-ROLLPKG.
$179
FRESH HEAD
LETTUCE
2/89c
c
ONIONS ....... ~~ 79 .•
2/$1
iATH TISSUE ............ 4-ROLLPKG. 79c
IGA
4
ggc
IIISCIJITS........ ...... .... PAK
IGA
ggc
IIUnERMIL~ ...... ......... 1/2GAL. .
TREET ....
~
.
NOI God Is not going to
punish sinners forever In
a fire! The wages of sin
Is death-Romans 6:23.
·.
In Floyd County, $8.00
Outside Kentuc\ty, $12.50
•
PleMe .._ote expiration date
opposite your. name .o n wrap·
per or on yo~r copy of The
Times. Becau- of lncrea.ed
mallln• co•t•, notice• of
•ub.uiptlon ·taxplratlon a~
no lon•er mailed to
...a.crlbers.
Subscriptions fn~Y be m1iled to:
The Floyd County Times
Box391
Preston.tJura, Ky. 41653
In loving memory of Ishmael Hall who
departed this world on January 24th,
1983.
Taxpayer Assistance;
Questions and AnswersQ. I received an IRS bill and I'm not
sure what I should do. Who do I call?
A. You should call 584-1361 in Louisville or toll-free 1·800-424-1040 from outside the Louisville dialing area. Also,
you may visit or write your focal IRS office to inquire about any tax account
question. Such questions include those
related to tax accounts, notices, and refund inquiries.
A man of meekness, dignity and pride,
A year ago this month you died.
The Lord took you from us for his
reasons I'm sure,
But the burden of your absence is so
hard to endure.
We'll forever carry your memory within
our heart
And piece back your family that's been
t<!_rn apart.
But again to see your loving smile that
We miss so much or to hear your voice
or feel your touch.
We'll be patient and struggle on and
do the best we can do. We know you can
never come back to us, but Daddy-one
day-we'll come home to be with you.
Deeply loved and missed
By Your Family
The shoestring was invented in England in 1790.
Prior to this time, all shoes
were fastened with buckles.
.
credit, but I'm not sure how to claim it.
Can I call the IRS for help?
A. Yes. You can also use the handy
form in your tax package to order
publication 503, "Child And Disabled
Dependent Care," and form 2441. You
might also be interested in obtaining
publication 910, "Taxpayer's Guide to
IRS Information, Assistance, and Publications," which includes an explanation of IRS services, filing tips, a list of
tele-tax topics and telephone numbers,
record keeping information, how to file
an amended return, a list of all films
available free of charge, and also lists
of all available IRS publications with
many descriptions, and a handy order
blank.
Q. I heard about recorded answers for
tax questions. How do I reach these
recorded n1essages?
A. You can use your pushbutton or
rotary (dial) telephone to call the TeleTax Information Service which provides
• H114ky BreoieffUt. Onty s2. 79
.
You can always count on Jerry's for
value. Like our Husky Breakfast .. .
2 large eggs , cooked to order, 3 sizzling
bacon slices, 2 pancakes. syrup and
chilled juice-all at a great price. Come
in and see for yourself how at Jerry's,
value is one more way . ..
recorded information about a variety of
tax topics. The telephone number and a
list of taped tax topics for Tele-Tax is
available in IRS publication 910. The
Tele-Tax numbers and topics are also
available in the Tele-Tax brochure,
which can be found in n1any local
libraries, and in your tax package.
Q. Can I get personal help when I'm
filling out n1y income tax return?
A. Yes. There are several ways to
receive personal assistance. If you visit
a local IRS office, you and others completing tax returns can get group
assistance. Also, the IRS offers group
assistance for low and middle income
groups, called outreach. This service is
available in local communities during
normal working hours, after hours, or on
weekends at various community locations such as high schools, libraries, and
through civic group meetings. Or, if you
are'near a Volunteer Income Tax Assistance (VITAl site, an IRS-trained
volunteer is prepared to help taxpayers
with special needs-low income, nonenglish _speaking, elderly, or handicapped~'t.p fill out their income tax
returns. A similar program, Tax Counseling for the Elderly (TCE), is available to help persons, generally over the
age of 60, with the special tax problems
of the elderly. To learn where there's a
VITA or TCE site near you, contact your
local IRS office or .call IRS at 584-1361 in
Louisville. Outside the Louisville dialing
area you may call toll-free 1-800-424-1040.
SLICED
79~
PRICES EFFECTIVE THRU FEB. 5
NOT RESPONSIBLE FOR PRINTER'S ERRORS
WE HAVE FEED FOR LIVESTOCK.
WE WELCOME FEDERAL FOOD STAMPS.
l·ll·8t.
DENTAL TIPS
Dr. H.G. Salisbury
RICHMOND PWA,
PRESTONSBURG
PHONE 886·2676
PRENATAL EFFECTS
Q. What prenatal elements affect a baby's teeth?
A. The tooth buds of baby teeth form in utero as early as
the 6th or 8th week of pregnancy, and start to harden during the 5th month. By birth, most of these baby teeth have
.calcified and permanent teeth are already forming in the
baby's gums.
The calcium and phosphate needed to form the two sets
of teeth are obtained from the mother's bloodstream, as
are the vitamins essential for the hardening process. A
high fever or a viral infection of the mother during
pregnancy can indirectly affect the mother's
vitamin/mineral balance. Antibiotics and other drug
therapy pass through the placental barrier and also affect the developing teeth. A poor prenatal diet affects this
vitamin/mineral balance directly. Therefore, foods rich
in vitamins and minerals are essential during pregnancy. Diet guidelines should be provided by the mother-tobe's doctor and dentist.
Q. Now that it's time to file federal income tax returns, my civic group is
planning to have a meeting to discuss
general tax information. Is there
anything available to help us understand
some of the steps involved in completing
the form 1040, form 1040A, and form
l040EZ?
A. As a matter of fact, there are two
films available. One film discusses
preparation of the form 1040 and
schedule A and B. The other film follows
the preparation of the form 1040A and
form 1040EZ. These films are available,
free of charge, by contacting your local
IRS district public affairs officer at
582-5376 in Louisville or through the tollfree number 1-800-424·1040 from outside
the Louisville dialing area.
Q. I heard that I can get publications
and forms at my library. Is this true?
FL:f.=RIDA
LIVER
•
•
•
•
Q. I'm completing my federal tax
return and I want td take the child care
Elsewhere In Kentucky, $10
FRESH BEEF
.
(SEVENTH DAY)
Subscription
Rates Per Year
LB.
.
CHURCH OF GOD
12·28-«pd.
1
'-'
$
Free cassenes or wrlrten
literature-Specify which.
. . c/o Jerry Bentley
Rt. 4, Box 737
Pikeville, Ky. 41501
98
FREE DELIVERY WITH MINIMUM $20 PURCHASE
WITHIN 3 MilE RADIUS.
6-0Z. PKG.
IN MEMORIAM
HELL
$
STEWING BEEF .
RADISHES
2%
99c
EXTRA LEAN
BONELESS
jE0iATOES ... 69~
89
MILK ....................... GAL.$1
ZESTA
C
SALTI"ES .................. 1-LB. BOX 79
ARMOURCAN
IGA
97 C
IIEEF or ALL MEAT WIENERS 12.oz. f{KG.
YELLOW
IGA
7%-0Z. BoX
MACARONI &
4/$1·
CHEESE DINNER ........... .
12-0Z.
$139
IIACON ENDS & PIECES ......... 3-LB. BOX
SUCED
IoDIZED SALT ...... 26-oz.aox4/89c.
•
GiOUND BEEF .......................... LB. 97 c
FRYING
89C
CHICKEN DRUMSTICKS .............. LB.
DIET PEPSI, PEPSI, :S~~- $16 9
MTN. DEW,oRPEPSI FREE..
~~,1
5-LB. BAG IGA
•
LB.
A. Local libraries may carry a set of
IRS publications to be used as reference
material. In addition to the publications,
reproducible forms are often available,
which can be duplicated on a machine
copier. Forms are available at some
libraries.
Get you~ . .
newspaper
.ad.vertising done ·
effeCtively! and in- ·
expenslv.ely! We'll
n~tp yqv do the et"!tire
jobfrom'theme.to ·c opy
to ortwb~ ... for the cost
of the ad space alone1
Interested? Call Ken Peter$ at
886-8506 and he'll call on youl
The Floyd County Times
�...ednesday, February 1, 1984
The Floyd County Times
Section One, Paae El&ht
Banker Boosts Overseas Ties
By Employing German Student
H.D. Fitzpatrick, Jr , president of The
Bank Josephine, is doing his share to
further international relations by inviting a West German university student
to work in the bank here this summer.
The idea of inviting a University of
Frankfurt student here occurred to Fitzpatrick last summer after he visited
West Germany on a three-week journey
retracing some of the route he took with
the U.S. 26th Infantry Division in World
War II. In Frankfurt, he had dinner with
two university students who questioned
him closely about the intentions of the
U S. in placing missles in West
Germany.
"I defended the U.S. position. and they
seemed somewhat satisfied. But the
scene kept coming back, almost haunting me during the rest of the trip and
after I got home. The older Germans
seemed a lot like us. But the younger
Germans are a very concerned age
group.
"I think they dt:serve to know more
abo~t America. How we work and what
we want."
In this frame of mine, Fitzpatrick invited 011e of the students, Reinhold
Seibert, 26, to visit his home and work
at his bank during the summer vacation
"He has spent three years in a German bank, so he can understand what
goes on at ours," Fitzpatrick said.
Seibert can also visit with Fitzpatrick's
grown son and daughter who are near
Seibert's age.
Fitzpatrick said, "We haven't done a
very good job as a nation in maintaining proper relations with all age groups
around the world. We have to forge
closer ties with the younger generations,
obviously, because they'll be running
things some day.
•
EN RCVSAVINCS
:!'~'')(
S3899
Docu-Drama Explores
Industrial Slavery
The seldom-explored top1c of industrial slavery is the subject of an
unusual hour-long docu-drama, "A Bond
of Iron," encoring on KET Monday,
February 20, at 7 p.m., as part of KET's
salute to Black History Month.
Most people think of life in the
antebellum South as being like a scene
from "Gone With the Wind," complete
with white-columned mansions,
southern belles in hoop skirts and slaves
tending the cotton fields. Slavery was an
integral part of life in the old South, indeed, but it was not limited to the cottor. plantations. The South had industry,
and slave labor was used for this work
as well.
In ·A Bond of Iron," two on-camera
narrators- one white and one blackexplore two viewpoir.ts on the condition
of industrial slavery. The program was
filmed entirely on location at the site of
an actual slave-operated iron works.
Noted television and film actors Darren
McGavin and Brock Peters are thenarrators, playing themselves and serving
simply as storytellers.
The story is a true one, and the program unearths some surprising aspects
of the complex master-slave relationship which were common to both industrial and agricultural slavery. Peters
explains several subtle ways slaves had
of getting what they wanted, and
McGavin says there was often little
choice but to go along with them.
"A Bond of Iron" was produced by the
South Carolina ETV Network.
LOCATED ACROSS FROM
MARTIN GRADE SCHOOL
IN THE OLD WESTERN
AUTO BUILDING.
REASONABLE RATES
CHARLOTTE KEATHLEYn3t.
.
frozen Fruit & Vegetable
·.·~·.· · · · · CASE LOT SALE
··southern·
States .·
f-
·sugar Added
..No Sugar
IQF MNM lnc"lnduel~ Quick FrwwtAdvanced orders only- ilyment with order
NAME
ADOAESS
Silo"""
Sliced Aooles IW"
Blackberries ~·· IQF
Black Rasoberries fJM•• IQF
Cultivated Blueberries 20ff••
Wild Blueberrie& 15M..
Dark Sweet Cherries g•
Dark Sweet Cherries 51.. IQF
Red Tart Cherries 3011•
Red Tart ChMries s.•• IOF
Mixed Fruit20ff.. IQF
N.W. Fruit Medlev 12m.. IQF
Sliced Peaches g•
Sliced Peaches SM.. IQF
Pineanole Chunks 2/~.. IOF
Red Rasoberries ~··
Laroe Whole Strawberries 20ff•• IQF
Calif. 51. Strawberries g•
Calif. 51. Strawberries 6'hll•
Aoole Ju1ce 24/12 oz.••
Cranberry Juice 24/12 oz.•
Graoefru1t Juice 24/12 oz:•
Gralie Juice 24/12 oz."
Lemonade 24112 oz.•
Oranae Juice 2416 oz.••
Oranae Juice 24/12 Jz.••
Aso~araous Cuts & Tios 10fi1QF
Cut GrHn Beans 12/2'k*
Babv Lima Beans 1212'k*
Fordhook Lima Beans 12/2'hl
Broccoli Cuts 12/211
Broccoli Spears 12/211
Brussel Sprouts 12121
Sliced Carrots 121211
Cauliflower 12/211
Cob Corn 12/4 ct.
Whole Kernal Corn 12/2'hll
Breadoo Mushrooms 2/SM
FancvSL Mushrooms 215M
Garden Peas 12/2'hll
Whole Leaf Somach 12/311
Mixed Veoetables 12/2'k*
lenders Baaels 24/6
Sarah lee Pound Cake 12/12 oz.
French Fries 12/211
Shoestrino French Fries 12120 oz.
Potato Puffs 121211
Thomas' English Muffins t2112
Breaded Onion Rinas 8/211
Piua Slices Cheese 60/3 oz
French Bread Piua 24/5 oz.
Soft Pretzels 10012'11 oz.
Rllllufar Waffles 12/19 oz.
I
5.80
6.15
9.30
26.15
22.30
27.15
6.30
32.40
8.10
1920
19.38
2010
520
10.55
5.85
$139~3!79
We also carry
kerosene fuel
and many
other heaters.
§§
Replacement
Steel Door Unit
[][]
• 2'8" exterior door - easy
to install; primed
• Completely insulated for
energy savings
• Will not warp, split, or crack
• Vinyl weatherstripping
prevents air leakage
#155()'7:8
99
$139
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• Increases the
efficiency of
your fireplace
• Firebrick lined
• Wood-burning
• Slides easily
into most
fireplace
openings
• UL listed
Fits fireplace 24"-32"H and 32"-42"W, 15" 0.
Thermostatically controlled front mounted blower.
Insulation seals unit to prevent heat loss. #37368
sso
Variable Powered
Microwave Oven
Fireplace lnsert$44999
w/Giass Doors ....
•
S27999
%"x 4'x 8'
Particleboard
ss~59
• Plenty of room to cook your favorite dishes
(even a turkey!)
• Provides up to 60 minutes of continuous
cooking with one setting of timer
• Selects the correct cooking temperature
• Has defrost settings & temperature probe
• Also with illustrated cookbook
• Regular $329.99. #51752
Panel
Interior
Flat Latex
Wall Paint
$3~!
1 x 12 Ponderosa
Pine Shelving
• Ignites by pressing
a button!
• Uses regular propane
• Will light more than
30,000 times
#91316
125
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71eriCizmark..
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2~ .30
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16.70
12.35
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17.65
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1470
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1800
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1325
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Fuel Saver
Torch Kit
27.85
sag~3!n
12,500 BTU
Kerosene
Heater
~~~~
TIIIIAIIl
10,200 BTU
Kerosene
Heater
:::-.:::-::::.:..~·
Buy in bulk and you can enJOY "Farm Fresh" fru1ts and
vegetables at inflation-fighting prices. All products are top
quality, fresh picked and qu1ck frozen for natural taste.
l'rlllucl a.cn,llln
• Automatic ignition
& axtinguishing
• Safety shut-off if
overturned
• Removable tank for
easy refill. #30478
--=------
Satisfaction Guaranteed
We Must Have Your Order By March 2.
Qly.
$10999
• Aluminum door is completely
pre-hung & easy to install
• Lower storm glass panel slides
up to ventilate. #11131,2
H.D. Fitzpatrick, Jr.
INCOME TAX.
PREPARATION
.
19,600 BTU
Kerosene
Heater
6'fl''
Insulating
Storm Door
C ,01350
4 9 Linear Ft.
• Warranted to
cover in just
one coat
• Stain & fade
resistant
• Stock colors.
#49001,2
Decorative 3-1 n-1
Weather Forecaster
$999
• To lock tn heat &
save energy
• For most size
water heaters
• Cuts to fit
snugly
• Reg. $9.99
#24414
_-
25' Fiberglass
Pipe Wrap
99
C n4412
25Ft.
Decorative wall combination of
barometer, thermometer & humidity
meter. #98076
• Size-121f2"x 4 V2"
• Accurate indoor readings
• Wood-tone finished
l $P~NGFIEL[)~
Our Improvers · Can Install Virtually Anything We Sell. Ask Us For A Free Quote!
.
Add Sales tax in Va.
ORDER MIIST BE PICKED UP 011
MARCH 27, 1984
FARM & HOME STORE
So. Like Driw Prestonsbu11
Phone 886-8596
CHAROE IT!
Ask About Our $1000
Instant Credit
Store Hours:
Mon . thru Fri.
Ask About Delivery,
Raincheck & Installation
IN PAINTS ILLE
Located On Old Route 23
Phone 789-3800
un-Advertised
Specials Daily
8 a .m. tiiiS:30 a.m. • Sat . 8 a.m. tillS p.m. • Sun. 12 tillS p.m.
•
�Named Miss Wintertime
-Photo by Paula Goble
Rhonda Lynn Cantrell, 10-year-old
daughter of Ronnie Joe and Linda
Williams Cantrell, of East Point, was
named Miss Wintertime at the pageant
.eld Sunday, January 22, at Allen Central High School. She also won in the
sportswear and photogenic categories.
A fifth grade student in Mr. Horn's
room at Auxier Grade School, she expressed her appreciation to her
sponsors.
Newsreels Are Subject
Of KET Documentary
•
"The generation of Americans born
since 1960 has probably never seen a
newsreel," says Bill Moyers of his
documentary special, "The Reel World
of News, " which will air on KET
Wednesday, February 22, at 8:00p.m ..
Part of the series of documentary
specials, "A Walk Through the 20th Century with Bill Moyers," in which the host
explores the major events, personalities
~nd mores which shaped our century,
•The Reel World of News" depicts
newsreels as the point where generations divide. Newsreels, to a nation
without television sets, showed movie
theatre audiences vivid images of war,
pestilence and disaster, accompanied by
evocative music and the urgent bark of
an off-screen announcer. The lG-minute
reels would end with lighter, less
traumatic stories.
"The Reel World of News" features a
varied sampling of movie-house
•ewsreels and interviews with former
~ewsreel announcer Ed Herlihy,
cameramen Denny Bossone, "contact
man" Tom McMorrow and music editor
Hy Fuchs.
This program was produced by The
Corporation for Entertainment & Learning, Inc ., and presented by
WNET/ New York and KQED/San
Francisco.
Dyslexia, A Disorder
Of Visual Perception
Dyslexia-for most persons, this
terms means a reversal of letters.
But according to medical and
theoretical definitions, dyslexia goes
much farther into being termed "word
blindness", a disability that conservatively affects 10 to 15 percent of the
population, with six times more boys
than girls being affected.
Dyslexia is a visual motor perception
disability, caused by a breakdown in the
central nervous system and resulting in
reading, writing and spelling problems.
Further, a dyslexic child is one who
has trouble with reading, writing and
spelling even though he is intelligent;
has normal sight and hearing; does not
have a primary emotional problem; is
exposed to a conventional education,
and usually comes from a home which
stresses educational values.
According to the Kentucky Association for Specific Perceptual Motor
Disability, dyslexia is also seen as a
dysfunction in the central nervous
system which causes the child to have
at least seven problem areas, as follows:
psychiatrist, who noted that a good
many dyslexics are left-handed.
Since motor control of the left hand is
governed by the right side of the brain,
and since the language centers in most
people are located in the dominant left
cerebral hemisphere, Orton concluded
that the language problem in dyslexia
involved "mixed dominance"-meaning
a competition and confusion between the
left and right hemispheres. Neurologists
today tend to discount this, but they do
agree that dyslexia is a neurological problem centered in the brain.
<Next in the series-What is the
answer for dyslexia? Where is there professional help, and what can parents do
to assist in this? Can a child learn to
cope?
Blasting Safety Course
Slated To Begin Feb. 6
The Division of Explosives and
Blasting, Department of Mines and
Minerals, will conduct a course on
blasting safety and technique at the
Department of Mines and Minerals office on Chloe Creek road, Pikeville.
The course is open to anyone wishing
to obtain a Kentucky blaster's license as
well as licensed blasters desiring to
reacquai~t themselves with blasting
techniques and safety regulations.
The course will consist of 30 class
hours and will run from February 6, until March 7. Classes will be held on Monday and Wednesday evenings from 6 to
9 p.m. At the last class meeting, the
blaster's examination will be given to
anyone interested in obtaining a license.
For further information, (606) 257-8818
or (606) 254-0367.
"To plow is to pray - to
plant is to prophesy."
Robert G. Ingersoll
ALL AMERICA'S DOING IT!
RE T TO OWN
Reverse letters and words in reading
or writing; difficulty paying attention;
difficulty following directions; confuse
left and right; slow variability in performance; do poorly on written tests; and
display a unique performance on diabnostic tests which is different from that
of a mentally handicapped, emotionally disturbed, educationally deprived or
normal child.
The dyslexic person also has problems
metabolizing carbohydrates and often
reacts to medication adversely. Additionally, a dyslexic person usually has
allergies, and is labeled as lazy, immature or slow by teachers.
Serious medical study of dyslexia was
not begun until the 1920's by Dr. Samuel
T. Orton, a University of Iowa
IT'S VERY SIMPLE:
*First payment with delivery of set.
*No down payment, just first month's rent.·
REVOLVING
CHARGE
NOW
AVAILABLE
AT
CURTIS
MATHES!
IRS Tax Tapes
Available Locally
Many public libraries in Kentucky, in
cooperation with the Internal Revenue
Service, have audio cassettes available
to help taxpayers prepare their federal
income tax forms.
The tapes contain simple, line-by-line
instructions for filling out federal forms
1040EZ; 1040A and Schedule 1; and 1040
aud Schedules A, B, and W. They also
have useful tax tips and special rules for
veterans, military personnel and their
families, according to the IRS.
For more information on how to borrow the cassettes to use for tax preparation, contact or visit the local library in
your area.
·customer
must meet
requirements.
Stop in and see our
great selection of
televisions and video
recorders-SEE HOW
EASY IT IS TO OWN
A CURTIS MATHES!
rtisMathes
FREE
OWNED AND OPUATED IY SHAFFH TELEVISION
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10 TO 8, MONDAY THRU FRIDAY. 10 TO 3, SAT., CLOSED SUNDAY
339 MAIN STREET
HAZARD
439-4417
DELIVERY!
HIGHLANDS PLAZA, PRESTONSBURG
PHONE 886-8381
ciii"iin B·la·llna . . 8228
c1iiciiiiParmesan
. . 8229
= .$1
5
20 OZ. IANQUET ASSORTED
Fruit Pies. ................. . . . . . ..
PRICES GOOD THRU SUNDAY, FEB. 5, WHILE QUANITIES LAST.
09
$369
ChUCk
Roast
orUIIIN<:JLL'S "OLD FOLKS"
;:-::r·
LI
63
ntREl
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10 OZ. HYDE PARK
~f:::~ ~~ 79C
ALL PURPOSE
20
Ll. lAS
Potatoes
$239
3 Lb. BID Red
DeliCIOUS APPles
FlORIDA SWEET
oranges.
1Lb. carrots ..
FlESH CRISP
I..MTB)
sour cream.. .
"oz. SEAlmT
FOUR·
YEAR
WARRANTY
.. . .98C
11111
Coltaae Cheese. . .
1111
Cheese Slnales . . .
24 OZ. SEALTEST SMAll CUIID
I OZ. KIAFT PIMENTO 01 AMDICAN
...
JUMBO ROLL SCOn
Paper Towels
- --.
59c
ac. 1 Chees
$309
3/$109
16 OZ. VAC.PAK (IXCI" IUf)
U.S. IIUI'ICTID FmH
• .......... Ll. •, .
'~~~~~
....... .. ..
~1 69
~~r.O.~ . . . .Ll~ 2 ::~~~ ~alf.. spa
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ur::::s . . . . . . 1109
5
29
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16 OZ. PISOIIR MRLWOOO
EXa...usi\IE
WAI'fAAHfY
7 OZ. ,KRAR ....ER
SAUSAGE
'~~~
355 SOUTH MAIN
HARLAN
573-7111
I OZ. FILlER'S
Instant Collee
2·LB.
ROLL
FOUR
YEAR
HOME ENTERTAINMENT CENTER
Your Food Dollar
Buys more at ••••
BESTWAYI
w
Fryers
Curlis
Mathes
Ll.
,,.
12 OZ.
24 OZ. GOLDEN
16 OZ. HYDE PARK
While Bread
16 OZ. liED GOlD
3/$1
$
PEPSI, DIET PEPSI
16-0Z. RETURNABLES
MOUNTAIN DEW,
PEPSI FREE .......
17
16 OZ. KlAn PARKAY
Margarine
... •
ggc
49c
16 OZ. PILlSBURY INSTANT
Mashed POIBIO&S
French's Mustard
stewed Tomatoes.
converted Rice .
sandwrch Spread
Fudge ~mbles .
S2 OZ. UNaE lEN'S
$159
16 OZ. KRAFT
$129
22 OZ. PIUSIUIY ASSOITED
9
U OZ. HYDE P'ARKEVAI'. . AltD
. . . 1179
2/89c
Canned Milk .. .. .. ............ .
10 CT. PAll 110•ESTYL£ OIIIUTTEJIMIUI
$119
Hyde Park Biscuits ... ... ... ... ... .
MAlf GALLOII ITL TIIOPICANA
. . ... . . . . .
~~p~=~~~~~~~~~~~ ~~
$149
un,I'Wit,,..._,_._._,
__,
. - L Y , - LIMA, . . . . - · •ur--
• KACIIIYI-.
10 OZ. ICEEilEII WHEAT SNA-3S
Wheatburv
1oLb. Cal Chow
LIQUid Era
$399
25 Lb. DOD Food. .......... ...... .
c
79
Zesta Crackers ............ .
C
Chili with Beans ........... .69
75• OFF lABEl • PURINA
W OZ. D£TEIIGENT
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1·l& llllll£1
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THANKS FOR.PUYING OUR QUAUTY STAMP STAR
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PARnALLY FIU.ED STAR CAiiDS fOR YOUR EXTRA
QUAUTY STAMPS!!
~
�The Floyd County Times
Section One, Paae Ten
Now is the time to stock up on name brand
basics! This week, everything you need for
your home and family is priced lower to save
you even more. You! II find value and selection
in every department. It's happening now at
your nearest TG& Y Family C~nter... don't
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e
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Most advertised items are reduced from our everyday low prices. And upon their purchase, TG&Y insists upo!" your satisfact!on: If you or~ not hap~Y. with what you
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e
�The Floyd County Times
Wednesday, February 1, 1984
Section One, Paae Eleven
R g • Dahrey Stars
In Shakespeare Play
Roger Daltrey of "The Who" band
makes his Shakespeare debut when
KET presents "Comedy of Errors"
Monday, February 20, at 9:00p.m. on
• 'our Kentucky Network.
Daltrey stars as both of the Dromios
twms, and Michael Kitchen plays the
Antipholus twins in a story of two
masters and two servants who are constantly mistaken for each other.
The cast includes Cyril Cusack as
Aegeon, the father of the Antipholus
twins, who saved one .twin son and one
twin servant in a shipwreck·lUld wound
up in Syracuse. Wendy Hiller plays
e Aemilia, Aegeon's wife, who saved the
other twin, but wound up in Ephesus.
The action is set in Ephesus, noted in the
ancient world for the study of magic and
spells, and scene after scene adds a new
and inventive twist to the theme of
mistaken identity.
"Comedy of Errors" is part of the
'The Shakespeare Plays" cycle which is
presenting all 37 of the bard's plays on
public television. The sefies is a co.roduction of BBC-Tv and Time-Life.
5-8 LB. AVERAGE
WILSON'S CORN KING
BONELESS
HAM .....
U.S.D.A. CHOICE
T-BONE
STEAK
NURSES PINNED-Shirley Fugate, a Drift freshman, left,
and Arenja Hall, a Pikeville junior, right, were among
Morehead State University graduates pinned during recent
ceremonies.
NOTICE OF
INTENTION TO MINE
Pursuant to Application
Number 836-0031
( 1) In accordance with the provisions
of KRS 350.055, notice is hereby given
that Energy Elkhorn Coal, Inc., P.O.
Box 1178, Paintsville, Kentucky 41240
aPas filed an application for a surface and
~derground mining operation. The proposed operation will affect a surface
disturbance of 29.15 acres and will
underlie an additional 51.06 acres
located 1.3 miles southeast of Osborn in
Floyd county.
(2) The proposed operation is approximately 0.2 miles east from KY 1426's
junction with Keathley Branch Road
and located 0.06 miles northeast of Toler
Creek. The latitude is N 37• 27' 29' '. The
ongitude is W 82° 36' 12". The surface
area to be disturbed is owned by J.R.
Spears and the E.L. Osborn heirs.
(3) The proposed operation is located
on the Pikeville U.S.G.S. 7lh minute
quadrangle map. The operation shall
use the contour-strip method of mining
for the surface disturbance. The operation will underlie land owned by J.R.
Spears, E.L. Osborn heirs, W.T. Osborn,
Stonewall Osborn, and Rhoda Roberts
heirs.
(4) The application has been filed for
ublic inspection at the Department for
Surface Mining Reclamation and
Enforcement's Prestonsburg Regional
Office, 431 South Lake Drive, Prestonsburg, Ky. 41653. Written comments, objections, or requests for pennit conference must be filed with the Director
of the Division of Permits, 6th Floor,
Capital Plaza Tower, Frankfort, Kentucky 40601.
2-1-3t.
IN EFFECT
WED., FEB. 1
THRU TUES., FEB. 7
• QUANTITY RIGHTS
RESERVED
• NOT RESPONSIBLE
PRINTER'S EIUlOR:51
IDDII'IC'~
'NOVA' Looks At
Meaning Of Time
Permits Required
For Sewage Work
We are all acutely aware of the
passage of time. But if asked to define
time, most of us wo!Jld·not have an
answer. NOVA (tlatures British actor
Dudley MQOre ·in a lively quest for the
meaning of time in "It's About Time."
The program will air Tuesday,
February 21, at 8:00 p.m. CET), 7:00
p.m. (CT), on KET.
In his hunt for clues to the nature of
time, Moore sits at his piano and chats
with various experts, who materialize
out of the past and then vanish. St.
Augustine racks his brain over the
meaning of time in the fifth century.
Was there a beginning of time? Is there
an end to it? Albert Einstein explains
relativity with an animated film of moving clocks. Isaac Asimov helps Moore
grapple with the prospect of time travel.
Backwards is impossible, says
Asimov-but travel into the future, he
claims, is quite possible if we are willing to go on a one-way trip.
With animation and special effects,
"It's About Time" makes both humor
and sense of the mystery of time. Moore
and his piano come and go, assembling
and disassembling, as the film shifts
freely among times, locations and concepts. Time, it appears, is as great a
puzzle for philosophy as for science.
"It's About Time" is produced by
Chris Haws. NOVA is produced by
WGBH/Boston.
Before starting construction on any
new business or residence in Floyd county, you must first obtain a sub-surface
sewage permit from the Floyd County
Health Department. The only exemptions for a permit would be a person or
business connecting to an approved
municipal sewage system, or a previously approved existing sewage
system that was constructed before
July 1, 1982.
For more information concerning
these permits call the Floyd County
Health Department at 606-886-2788 between the hours ofS:00-9:30 a.m. or 3:30
and 4:30p.m.
SIRLOIN
STEAK
BONEI£SS
~~~~'·········
ARM
·ROAST........
$1 0 9
FISCHER'S CHUNK
$16 9
~
'~~hN........
SLICED .................. '1.191..8.
ta
$22 9
SSMOKED
PORK CHOPS ..
LB.
$18 9 THiCitSU.CEo $14 9
LB. '
BOLOGNA...
LB.
POSITION AVAILABLE
The Sandy Valley Senior Citizens, Inc.
is now taking applications for one fulltime RN and one part-time RN to service the five county Big Sandy area
Prevent-A-Care p(ogram. Responsibilities include supervision of nurse's aides
in ,the five county area and case
management of clients. Must be licensed RN with administrative experience,
preferably two years. Salary negotiable.
Applications may be picked up at the
Sandy Valley Senior Citizens office, 2nd
Floor Municipal Building, Prestonsburg
from 8-4, M-F. Please submit application and resume by February 8, 1984.
Equal Opportunity Employer
FISCHER'S
~2~1N........
$1 0 9 HOT.EDoG 2/79c
LB.
SLICED .................. '1.19LB.
SAUCE ...
• SEE OUR FUU PAGE AD l:LSEWHERE IN. THIS PA
ANNUAL APPR CIATION SALE
SPEIDEL AND
NAPIER JEWELRY
HERRIN-JOHNSON Is the ONLY
place In Eastern Kentucky
where you will find Price's Fine
Chocolates featuring Valentine
Hearts, Boxed Candles and
Candy Novelties.
25%oFF
ALL.OTHER
JEWELRY
SOME
COSMETICS
COLOGNES
AND SETS
IN REVLON, MAX FACTOR,
CHARLES OF THE RITZ,
JOVAN, COTY
• ALSO
MEN'S COLOGNES
AND AFTERSHAVES
ALL
25%
OFF
Y3 Y2
~.
ALL ITEMS
GIFT
GALLERY
to
SELECTED ITEMS
OFF
25%0Ff 50%0FF
ALL
PLUSH STUFFED ANIMALS,
Ml BEBE TALKING DOLLS,
AND TOYS
25%
TRINA
TRAVEL AND MAKEUP
ACCESSORIES
2
AMERICAN GREETING
EVERYDAY GIFT WRAP
AND
PARTY SUPPLIES
OFF
(SMURFS INCLUDED)
**THIS SALE DOES NOT APPLY TO VALENTINE ITEMS**
----------------------------~~------~----------------------------------~------------------~--~------------------- 4
_____________
�•
-·~~·~ed~n~esd~~ay~·-F~e_b_~~-ry~1~,_1_984
_____________~-------------------------------------------T_he
___F_Io~y~d~C~o~u_n_ty~T
__
I~
___s __________________________________________________________Sec====U=onOne,PaaeTwelve
Burchett~Elkins
Harold Couple To Observe
50th Wedding Anniversary
DOCIA B. WOOQS_, SOCIETY EDITOR
HOST BIRTHDAY DINNER
Mr. and Mrs. John Rodebaugh and
family honored Arthur <Redl Sturgill on
his 89th birthday, with a dinner at their
home this past Sunday. Also honored at
this time was Mrs. Dwaynne Rooebaugh, whose birthday was on that same
day. Following the dinner, decorated
birthday cake and other refreshments
were served.
Ms. Marcie Burchett and Mr. Rick
Elkins were united in marriage Saturday, December 31, at the Lancer Baptist
Church. The Rev. Cohen Campbell, pastor of Calvary Baptist Church, Betsy
Layne, was the officiating minister.
Mr. Ward Hale, of Harold, Ky., served as best man, and Loretta Akers, of
Martin, Ky., was matron of honor. A
reception was held in the church annex.
The bride is the daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Earl Branham, of Martin. Mr.
Elkins is the son of Mr. and Mrs.
Richard Elkins, of Lancer. The couple
will reside at Martin.
YOUTH MEET SET
Mrs. Sue Wells, chairman of the youth
social committee, at the Irene Cole
Memocial (First) Baptist Church, announces that there will be a youth spectacular meeting at the church, Saturday
night, February 4, following the ballgame at the Prestonsburg High School
gymnasium. Mrs. Wells would like to
add her thanks to all the church
members who furnished food or helped
in any way to make this program a success during the past year.
WOMAN'S CLUB TO MEET
Mrs. Elizabeth Ramey, president of
the Prestonsburg Woman 's Club,
reminds members that the executive
board will meet at the Floyd County
Library Thursday <tomorrow) night, at
7 o'clock and that the regular meeting
of the club will follow there at 7:30.
Jr. Woman's Club
To Meet Tuesday
The Prestonsburg Jr. Woman's Club
will hold a special meeting at the Floyd
County Library at 7 p.m., Tuesday,
February 7. The topic of the meeting will
be the Miss Floyd County Pageant. All
members are urged to attend.
HOSTS RELATIVES
Mrs. T.J. Leake had as her guest on
Wednesday of last week, her sister, Mrs.
Verner Conley, of Riceville. Her overnight guests recently were her brother
and sister-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Manard
Hackworth, of Ada, Ohio.
ALUMNI CHAIRMAN RECOGNIZED
George Peabody College for Teachers,
of Vanderbilt University, Nashville,
Tenn. recently completed a successful
fund-raising drive for Peabody. Chairman of the National Alumni phase of this
campaign was Dr. Jack Allen, retired
history professor of the institution, who
is a native of Prestonsburg. Dr. Willis
Hawley, Dean of Peabody College, commented: "Under the leadership of Jack
Allen, the gifts of Peabody alumni has
made splendid progress toward our
ongoing goal of providing the financial
support needed to continue Peabody's
pursuit of excellence." Dr. and Mrs.
Allen reside in Nashville.
IS HOSPITALIZED
Arnold Clark is a patient at St.
Joseph's Hospital, in Lexington. His
many friends and relatives hope that he
will recover real soon.
PAY RESPECTS
Relatives and friends from a distance
who called at the Carter Funeral Home
and those who attended services for
David J. (Dove) Vaughan, at the Community United Methodist Church here
this past week were: Dave Winters, Ed
Buban, John Passafiume, Jim Hoskins,
and Mr. and Mrs. Don Ball, of Lexington; Bob Free, Tom Beatty, Mr. and
Mrs. Frank Lucas, and Mr. and Mrs.
Lee Morehead, Greer.field, Ohio; Miss
Marcia Watson, Georgetown; Mr. and
Mrs. Robert Kuhnle and son, David,
Louisville; Mr. and Mrs. Harry Lyons,
Raceland; Mr. and Mrs. Paul Pruitt and
Mr. and Mrs. Jim Pruitt, Pikeville, and
Miss Georgia Mae Layne, of Betsy
Layne.
<...o;-.
.(...~~.. :' ::-:.
{~
v"~. :~
*FREE RING SIZING WHILE YOU WAIT
CLYDE BURCHETT
JEWELER
PHONE 886·2734
PRESTONSBURG
2·1·5t.
ACT AS PALLBEARERS
Active pallbearers at the funeral of
David J. (Dove) Vaughan were Paul
Vaughan, John D. Vaughan, Larry
Vaughan, Kirby Vaugha;1, Harry Lyons,
and Charles Collins. Honorary pallbearers were Wade Hall, Mitchell
Prater, Roscoe Evans, Philip Vaughan,
Print Ball, and George Thornsberry.
.Joe and Malta Yates, of Harold, will
observe their 50th wedding anniversary
Saturday, Feb. 4, with open house at the
Betsy Layne Elementary School lunchroom from 1 to 4 p.m. All friends and
relatives are invited. <No gifts, please.)
Mr. and Mrs. Yates were married
Feb. 5, 1934 at Honaker, Ky. They are
the parents of Leroy Yates, of Houston,
Texas.
RETURN TO OHIO
Mrs. Betty Brown, of Ada, Ohio and
Mrs. Donna Farrington, of Lima, Ohio,
who were called here due to the recent
death of their father, Tommy Hall, and
have spent some time visiting with their
mother, Mrs. Alta Hall, and their sisters,
Miss Phyllis Hall, returned this past
Sunday to their homes.
HOMEMAKERS MEMBERS UP
Floyd county presently has 514
homemakers members, an increase of
93 members over last year. The hope has
been expressed that three additional
regular members per club, and one additional members-at-large for each club
will be added during this year.
1
BAPTIST WOMEN TO MEET
Mrs. Ruby Garrett, president of the
Annie Allen W.M.U. of the Irene Cole
Baptist: Church announces that this
group will meet Monday evening,
February 6, at 7 p.m. at the home of
Mrs. Ora Bussey. Mrs. Carl Woods will
be co-hostess with Mrs. Bussey. All
members and prospective members are
urged to be present.
HOST FAMILY MEMBERS
Mr. and Mrs. Bill Hall and sons entertained with a dinner at their home in
Paintsville, Tuesday evening of last
week, having as their guests, his
mother, Mrs. Tommy Hall, and his
sister, Miss Phyllis Hall, of the Abbott
Road, and two of his other sisters, Mrs.
Betty Brown, of Ada, Ohio and Mrs.
Donna Farrington, of Lima.
IN,JURED WHILE HIKING
Mrs. Fred Harris suffered a broken
arm last week due to a fall while she was
hiking with a group of friends on Little
Paint. She is recovering nicely r.ow at
her home.
VISITS IN FRANKFORT
Mrs. Marietta Crager spent two weeks
recently in Frankfort, with her little
granddaughter, Mandy Karan Helton,
while her parents, Mr. and Mrs. George
Helton, vacationed in California and
Hawaii.
HERE FROM MOREHEAD
Dr. J.M. Smiley, of Morehead, was
here Fr.iday for a visit with his mother,
Mrs. Otelia Smiley, who he entertained
to dinner at May Lodge. Dr. Smiley is
a member of the faculty at Morehead
State University.
DRESSES, SUITS a DRESSY B~ USES
10°/ooFF
Cato has Spring's newest fashions in dresses, suits, jacket dresses, skirt sets and dressy blouses ...
all at 20% off the regular price!
HALF AND LARGE SIZE DRESSES, SUITS AND BLOUSES ALSO ON SALE AT !:)%OFF
In a candlelight ceremony Saturday,
November 12, at the First United
Methodist Church, Miss Ann Logan
Holbrook became the bride of Mr.
Calvin Gregory Herrick.
The bride is the daughter of Colonel
and Mrs. Jack H. Holbrook, of Sierra
Vista, Arizona. Mr. Herrick is the son of
Mr. and Mrs. Calvin P. Herrick, of Prestonsburg.
The double-ring ceremony was solemnized by Dr. Ted Nicholas and Dr.
Charles Music, uncle of the bride.
The bride, escorted by her father,
wore a gown of ivory organza and imported Belguim lace. The sheer yoke of
the high wedding band neckline and long
sheer sleeves were adorned with
iridescents and seed pearls. A molded
lace bodice and dropped waistline were
accented with a large satin bow. A
border of scalloped lace fell from the
waistline of the skirt creating a draped
overlay effect finishing the hemline of
the full skirt and cascading into a
cathedral-length train. The bride's
cathedral-length veil of imported
Zebulon Lodge To Confer
Master Mason Degree
Rodney Tackett, master of Prestonsburg's Zebulon Masonic Lodge No. 273
announces that the Master Mason
degree will be conferred at the meeting
of the lodge to be held Saturday evening,
beginning at 6:30.
A chili supper will be served about
7:30, and the degree work will continue.
All Master Masons are invited to
attend.
METHODIST WOMEN
REMEMBERED
Flowers were placed on the altar of
the First United Methodist Church for
services there this past Sunday morning
by the United Methodist Women, in
memory of the members of this organization who died during the year, 1983.
These included: Mesdames Katherine
Stephens, Francis Compton, Peggy
Spurlock, Gertrude Bradbury, Ann Scutchfield, and Ella Tankersley.
English illusion was held by a floral
wreath of silk flowers. She carried a
cascade of white roses, Swedish ivy and
lily of ihe valley.
Miss Kathy Harris, of East Point, was
maid of honor, and matron of honor was
Mrs. Steven BPntley, of Lexingto
Bridesmaids were Miss Vicky Holbrook,
of Richmond, and Miss Jacquie
Holbrook, of Sierra Vista, Arizona,
sisters of the bride.
Mr. Mitch Kalos, of Prestonsburg,
was bestman, and ushers were Mr. John
D. Sammons, of Prestonsburg, Mr. Alan
Herrick, of Bowling Green, and Dr.
Robtrt Herrick, of Prestonsburg.
A reception hllowed the ceremony in
the Fellowship Hall.
The bride is employed by Don J a co
Oldsmobile in Lexington, and the groom
is employed by Raymond builders on a
joint venture in the Indian Ocean.
After a wedding trip to Acapulco,
Mexico and Sierra Vista, Arizona, the
couple will make their home in Lexing,ton..
NEW CHURCH MEMBERS
Welcomed into the fellowship of the
Community United Methodist ChurclA
during services there on Sunday of last
week, were Mr~. Debbie Hyden Burke,
Donald and Karen Colvin, and Mrs. Debbie Sellards. The Reverend Taylor Biggs
is the pastor there.
TO WED SATURDAY
The wedding of Miss Barbara Lynn
Crager, of Prestonsburg, and Mr. Andy
Boyd Knicely, of Nitro, W.Va., will be
solemnized Saturday, February 4, at
2:30 p.m., at the Morehead Methodi •
Church. The gracious custom of ope
wedding will be observed.
Don't Be Sell&lled W llh An Old
F I• 1 Roof tho• box looking trailer
COME TO
CHEAP'S
In Flemlngoburg, Ky. and choose
from more than 80 new mobile
HOMEMAKERS MEET SET
Mrs. Frances Pitts, Floyd County
Home Economist, has announced that
the Homemakers' February lesson will
be given at the Kentucky Power Company here, Thursday, February 2, at
10:00 a.m., and that the topic will be
''Consumer Product Safety.'' Mrs. Pitts
adds that Ed Moore, from the Department of Consumer Services in Frankfort, will present this lesson. In case of
inclement weather, the date will be
February 7. All homemakers' clubs are
urged to send representatives.
VISITS HERE
Mrs. Zelia Wells, of Paintsville, visited
her parent.s, Mr. and Mrs. Robert
Wallace, on Riverside Drive recently.
While here, she called at the Carter
Funeral Home to offer condolences to
the family of a former neighbor, Clabe
Bingham.
FAMILY VISITS HERE
The first visits since their baby's recent birth were made this past Sunday
by Mr. and Mrs. Sam D. Hatcher and
their baby daughter, Samantha Sue. The
family attended services at the First
. United Methodist Church here Sunday
morning, and during the afternoon, they
visited with Mr. Hatcher's mother, Mrs.
Recca Hatcher, who is a patient at
Riverview Manor Nursing Home. They
also visited friends, Mrs. Rebecca
Rasnick, and Mr. and Mrs. Bill Pettrey,
at their home, and relatives, Mesdames
Anna May Mellon, Virginia Shive!,
·Josephine Fields, Douglas Perry, Lack
Roberts, and Mary Jo LaPointe at the
Davidson homeplace here.
For your· shopping convenience,
use Cato's very special layaway
plan ••• just $1 deposit will hold
your new spring selections.
e
Visa
e
MasterCard
886-6165
e
Prestonsburg
ATTEND BIRTHDAY OBSERVANCE
These names should be added to the
list of the family of Mr. and Mrs. Perry
Greene who attended Mr. Greene's 90th
birthday celebration recently: Mr. and
Mrs. C.H. Crisp, of Martin, and Mrs.
Glenda Stewart and sons, Bryan and
Richard, of Langley.
homes that look like and are built
like homea
CHEAP'S have Bergalna
like lheae:
._--..~1,
.:--·~~:··i:....r
f···:~:~:·
' · ··.
:t·r.
. ·: :
,, . ..
:-~-. ·'.C ·~ 1
~~t_~ij~· V,
.
.....1['-. ·'t '
7
' ••
1
!...."-·• ~
:< ·~~~~:.,. ·.. ,,_~·--:...:.:i:~~-: --':. -~t
·1~•.;,, •• •. ·-~~12& 14 Wid. .
House Type Construction
Double Wldu
Brick
front
If you buy a new home and
Don't consider Cheap's prices
and quality, you' nlose money.
Don't be mltled.
Kentucky
tel~cllon
hn
lhe
thai you
No dealer In
quality
and
will lind et
ChEAP'S.
FREE
300 M lie Delivery and nt up
on foundation. We Trade For
Anything Of Value
Open Aller Church on S11ndey
For Your lnapectlon
CHEAP'S
Flemlngaburg, Ky .
Phone 101 U5·2211
�The Floyd County Times
Wednesday, February 1, 1984
FESTIVAL BOARD MEETS
The first meeting of the Jenny Wiley
Festival board was held Thursday afternoon, January 26, at 4 p.m. at the Prestonsburg municipal building, with Mrs.
E.L. Bierman presiding.
Tentative plans for 1984 were discussed. The nominating committee, composed of Mrs. Joyce Ramey, Miss Ethel
Burke, and Mrs. Sharon Bingham announced the names of the following persons to serve during the coming year:
chairperson, Mrs. Maxine Bierman; cochairperson, Robert Schissler; secret{lry, Mrs. Linda Layne, and treasurer,
Paul P. Hughes.
Mrs. Bierman presented a list of
chairperson!; and events selected thus
far, as follows: gospel.. sing, Mrs.
Eleanor Robinson; pageant, (for Miss
Jenny Wiley), Mrs. Sharon Bingham;
Jenny Wiley Baby Contest, Mrs. Karen
Bingham; pie social, Mrs. Patsy Evans;
costume contest, Miss Ethel Burke;
parade, Ted Nairn; concessions, Ed
Bierman, and 10 k. run, Robert
Schissler. She added that other events
and chairpersons would be announced
as the festival plans progress.
Board members who have been
selected are: Phil Price, Phil Sirftpson,
Paul P. Hughes, Huck Francis, Sharon
Campbell, Linda Layne, Estill L. Carter,
Zelma McDowell, Betty Allen, E.L.
Bierman, Carl Castle, Hansel Cooley,
Robert Schissler, Alice G. Buchanan,
Patsy Evans, Ethel Burke, Maxine Bierman, Barry Howell, Sharon Bingham,
Karen Bingham, Joyce Ramey, Warren
Clark, Ted Nairn, and Vera Ford.
The next board meeting will be held
at the same location, Thursday afternoon, February 23, at 4 p.m. and at 5
p.m., that same day, there will be a
meeting there for all persons interested
in making plans for the festival.
UST IN TIME FOR VALENTINE'S DAY.
The HOccasionally Yours"
Floral and Gift Boutique
At McDowell
<iust south of the hospital)
Cordially invites you to stop in and browse and
register for the drawing for one dozen red roses, to be
held on Feb. 13.
Remember,
Valentine's Day
Feb. 14th
•
Say
I love you
with Balloons
886-3415
115 Dickerson
St.. Prestonsburg
J
2·J.2t.
FAMILY DINNER
Mrs. T.J. Leake entertained to dinner,
at her home near East Point, this past
Sunday, members of her family, Mrs.
Elizabeth Ramey, Mr. and Mrs. Fred
Harris, and Miss Kathy Harris.
ANNOUNCE BIRTH
_ Mr. and Mrs. Rick Heedick, of
Charlotte, N.C., announce the birth on
Jan. 26 of their second _child, first
daughter-Laura Anne. Mrs. Heedick is
the former Marsha Watson, daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Carl T. Watson, of Prestonsburg.
At
.* Tanning Salon
*
I
Aerobics
10 a.m.-2 p.m.
5 p.m.-7 p.m.
* Equipment for
all parts of
the body
*
Free Nursery
-
Mon.-Wed.-Fri.
9:30-11
~~
* ·o anskin "l.eotards and Tights
lf2
PRICE
For the shape of tomorrow,
Start today.
'PHONE 874·2800
TWIN SONS
The birth of twin sons to Mr. and Mrs.
Kenny Slone, of Virginia Beach, Va., on
Friday, Jan. 13 is announced. The twins
have been named Joshua Charles and
John Marvin. Their mother, whose Navy
duty ended only last August, is a granddaughter of the late Mr. and Mrs. Woot
Gearheart, of this county.
CHAPTER HOLDS MEET
Chapter G, PEO, met Monday at the
home of Mrs. carolyn i:or~on Arnold
Avenue. The business session was
presided over by the president, Miss
Elizabeth Lynn Frazier, after which
Miss Susan Wells was initiated into the
chapter.
Mrs. Lynn Neeley presented an interesting Founders' Day program and
cake and punch were served to: Mrs. Vivian Branham, Mrs. Velma Garland,
and Mrs. Jan Garland, of Paintsville;
Mrs. Ann Keller, of Nippa, and
Mesdames Vera Ford, Dorothy Wells,
Shirley Callihan, Sandy Burchett, Patsy Brown, Lynn Neeley, Linda Francis,
Wonnell God<ley, Cheryl Leslie, Ella Fay
Music, Ruth Hall, Edna Carol Greenwade, Kathryn Frazier, Mabel Brown,
and Patty Beatty, Misses Ann Callihan
'and Elizabeth Lynn Frazier, a new
member, Miss Susan Wells, and the
hostess, Mrs. Carolyn Ford, all of Prestonsburg.
··-·-~------~--~--·---~----~--~___tt_'__
J
n•.i
Section One, Pap Thirteen
Has 89th Birthday
CHURCH WOMEN MEET
Mrs. Gonnon Collins, Sr., president of
the local church women's organization,
held a meeting of members of the committee for the Loaves and Fishes Food
Pantry, at her home this past Friday.
This food pantry, which was the culmination of a year's planning by the local
church women and the Prestonsburg
Ministerial Association, is being supported by food and monetary donations
from several of the local churches and
others who are interested in this
endeavor. Persons who wish to contribute should contact their church or officers of this organization.
Committee members present on Friday were: Mrs. Eva Collins, Mrs. Vera
Ford, Mrs. Garnett Fairchild, and Mrs.
Eleanor Robinson.
RETURNS FROM NASHVILLE
Mrs. Leonard Grant was in Nashville,
Tenn. for several days recently, for a
visit with her daughter and son-in-law,
Mr. and Mrs. Paul Henry and their
daughter, Jennifer. While there, she was
joined by another daughter, Mrs. Mike
Stark,. of Ft. Mills, South Carolina, who
spent a few days with Mrs. Grant and
the Henry family, and accompanied her
[mother to her home here. Mrs. Stark
returned to her home on Sunday.
HERE FROM LOUISVILLE
Misses Chrystal and Melody Collins,
of Louisville, were here this past
weekend, for a visit with their mother,
Mrs. Scott Collins, and other relatives.
ELECTROLYSIS
Permanent Hair Removal
'!_~rtlfle~ by
State LlcenSI.
EYEBROW
*CONSULTATION
ftEE
UNDERARMS
Thurs. lr Fri., 10 a.m. to 4:30 p.m.
After 4:30 1r Sat. by appointment
24 HAS. ,HOllE
SER.VICE
886-8924
Court St. and Arnold Awe., PrestonsiM!rc • 816-9421
STORE HOURS: 9-5 Daily, Mon.·Sat.
Arthur "Red" Sturgill, well-known
Prestonsburg man, was honored on his
89th birthday Sunday, Jan. 15, with a
dinner given at the Water Gap Free Will
Baptist Church. Many friends and relatives of Mr. Sturgill joined him for the
occasion.
SET SPECIAL OBSERVANCE
The United Methodist Women, of the
First United Methodist Church, will hold
their annual Call to Prayer and SelfDenial observance at 7 p.m., on
February 6, at the church sanctuary.
The program topic will be "Strengthening Family Life." All women of the
church are urged to attend.
Ball~y
LADIES'
COATS AND
WOOL BLAZERS
50%
CHILDREN'S
MEN'S
OUTERWEAR
SWEATERS
40%
MEN'S
HEAVY JACK
LADIES'
SWEATERS
~E:!'YRNS
TO HOSPITAL
Doug Fitzpatrick, of Garrett, who
recently underwent treatment and examination following a heart attack, was
returned last week to Highlands Medical
Center here. His sister, Mrs. Eva Hyden,
of Auxier, underwent knee surgery this
week. at St. Joseph's Hospital, Lexington.
Don't Miss
Our
Quilt
Lovers'
Sale
• Downtown- Pikeville
• Weddington Plaza- Pikeville
• South Side Mall-South Williamson
The ovecoge P"""" mom oO<e emy
se_v_e_n_m_i_nu_t_es_d_u_r_in_g_s_le_ep_._ _ __
REG. $140
TO $180
REG. $185
.TO $255
Fall And Winter
SPOR
COATS
PRICED UP TO $180
NOW
$5495
ALL OTHER MERCHANDISE FOR MEN AND WOMEN .
ALL WINTER SHOES-MEN, WOMEN, CHILDREN
ALL WINTER MERCHANDISE AT DENIMLAND . .
.. 1/2 PRICE
.1/2 PRICE
.1/2 PRICE
We've Just Completed Additional
Markdowns On Most Fall And
Winter Fashions.
Come In Today For Great Savings On
Fashions For The Entire Family!
Terrific Savings in Every Department
�The Floyd County Times
Wedne.day, February 1, 1984
Section One, Pqe Fourteen
Hyde Park Sale!
Quality products at great savings That's the Hyde Park promise.
PRICES G_!)QD THRU Tj.JES., FEBRUARY 7,
19~4.
~
6~~~
HYDE PARK ASSORTED
2 Liter
Soft Drinks ...
HOLLY FARMS
Whole
Fryers
7
9e
LB.
PARTRIDGE FRO;\;TIER
Boneless Ham ................ LB.
BALLARDS FARM
~-LB.
HOT-8.\GE
Sausage ... .. ....... ~~~~-~~ - ........-~~P:.
$
Chunk Bologna ............ .. LB.
U.S.D.A. CHOICE BO!II:ELESS
ARMOUR
VERIBEST
FAMILY
PAK
s
LB.
I
6i)
S2S9
KY. BORDER
79
e
$
Sirloin Tip Steak .......... LB. 239
FRESH LEAN
Grou
Ch
s399
LEARD ............ ... .......... 1!-LB. PAIL
HOLLY FARMS GRADE 'A' FRESH
. LB_SJ49
Fryer Breast
HORMEL BONELESS
12 OZ. PKG. ARMOUR
.. _ SJ09
HotDogs.....
... 6699 Cooked Ham
LB_S249
Cube Steak
12 OZ. PKG. GUNNOE'S
. ...
.................
0
U.S.D.A. CHOICE BONELESS
Sliced Bacon .
LB.
s
12 OZ. PKG. ARMOUR
3 Lb. Canned Ham
S
/
j;~ 1~gna ......................
1-LB. PKG.
FROZEN 00 LB. BOX SJ3.79)
I9 Beef
Patties.... .. .................... LB.
'2.,
SI 59
'139
99
16 OZ. HYDE PARK
Apple
Sauce..... .
2/79~
CALIF. ICEBERG
Bead ·
Lettuce.... ....
59e
·
4_1:-B. BAG
-S-NOW WHITE
Navel
$ ._
Oranges.. .& 79
Mushrooms ...s oz.
8 OZ. ASSORTED
~-Mr. Juicy5Jgge Green
_ _.
29 OZ. HYDE PARK YELLOW CLING
Peach Slices or Halves ..
Instant Potatoes
64 OZ. PAIL · HYDE PARK
Peanut Butter ..
Grape Jelly ..
24 OZ. HYDE PARK FRESH PACKED
3 Lb. Can
Shortening.....
16 OZ. HYDE PARK WHOLE
... :... 8J29
8J29
Sweet Pickles .
32 OZ. HYDE PARK DILL
Hamburger Slices
8 oz. HYDE PARK A?SORTED
Potato Chtps
79~
·SOURWAM•IAIIEQUE
11 OZ. HYDE PARK ASSORTED
American Singles
Toaster Pastry .~CHERRY
16 OZ. HYDE PARK
150 CT. HYDE PARK
•ILUEIEUY •CINNAMON
•STRA'NIEIIIY ..... .
ge
6
59~
Facial Tissues
French Onion Dip
sge
'139 Trash Bags ...
...... 99~
Cheddar Cheese ... .. ... .. . . .. .
e
. 79~
Pineapple .............. ................. ..79
Cold Capsules
'1
C9
7
Cold
Medicine
.........................
.
Chili with Beans ................. .
7
8 39
D':t;:g=·t
.
.
.
.
.
.
·
.
1 .
Pinto Beans........... .................... .
API>~<?j~~~;~~-~- . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8 1 69 Fabric Softener................... ....... 7
8
oz. HYDE PARK SHREDDED MOZZARELLA OR
10 CT. HYDE PARK
ZC).()Z. CAN DOLE
10 CT. HYDE PARK
15 OZ. HYDE PARK
9~
HYDE PARK 2 LB. BAG
9~
6
oz. HYDE PARK NIGHTIME
20 CT. HYDE PARK SHEETS
2/ 79e
BuNcH
8J29
Kosher Spears.
•REGULAR •RIPPLE
12 OZ. HYDE PARK PIMENTO OR
Onions
8JC9
2 LB. JAR HYDE PARK
s .&
999
Drinks...... I
99
e
,..... 89~
. •4•9
13 OZ. HYDE PARK
HYDEPARKALLVEGETABLE
•
..
7~
HYDE PARK
f!:•t!~!:.~ . SJ39
2/'1 CJ9
8 OZ. HYDE
PA~K BRUSSEL SPROUTS OR
Broccoli Spears ............. .
2/'109
•269
.5 Lb. French Fries................. ..
80Z.HYDEPARK
Cauliflower ...................... ..
HYDE PARK CRINKLE CUT
•
�The Floyd County Times
Wednesday, February 1, 1984
Section Two, Pace One
PIICES
lfl EFFECT
WEDfiESDAY
· FEB. 1
THIU SIINDAY
FEB. 5
******************
!
4 LOCATIONS!
!
* • PIKEVILLE
• .ZEBULON
i'
! BETSY LAYNE • ELKHORN CITY !
! OPEN 1 DAYS A WEEK )c
• WE RESERVE THE RIGHT.
TO LIMIT QUANTITIES
• WE ARE NOT RESPONSIBLE
_ FOR PRINTER'S ERRORS ~
*
8 A.M. -TD J J P.M.
I~
*****************~
99c
4-ROLL PKG.
NORTHERN
BATH TISSUE ..... .
COBUNTRY ClOCK
MARGARINE ..... .
oixiELAND
ICE CREAM ...... .
$15 9
$119
. . ". .
6.5-0Z. CAN-61L OR WATER
~~=:~~~~
BONELESS
79c
CHUCK
59
ROAS
LB.
BIG BUDDY FRANKS ................... .
4/$1
::::i:.-:;.~ ......... .
303 SIZE
C
79
39
sLKINLESsLsMoKED sAusAGE _... _. $1
99
C
CHUNK BOLOGNA ..................... Lb.
1-LB. VALLEYDALE
1-LB.-VALLEYDALE
12-0Z.-VALLEYDALE
COOKED HAM ............................ .
$189
~.~i~ . . . . . . $129 7 CUT-UP FRYERS ...................... .. . 79 C
aACON.~~~~-L-E................................ $1 1 9
FIELDALE
FAB
BOX GIANT SIZE
$16 9
$2
59
GUNNOE'S $AUSAGE .................. .
2-LB. ROLL
DETERGENT ..... .
jFG.JAR
3-LB.-ARMOUR
$129
jFG.JAR
PEANUT BUnER
HOLLYWOOD STYLE
KRAFT
I
PORK SPARE RIBS .................... Lb.
$499
$12 9
FRESH
$259 HOiMEL
. $119
CORN DOGS ......... .
$19
9
SELF-RISING
10-LB. BAG-MARTHA WHITE
VELVEETA
CHEESE SLICES .
I
CANNED HAM ............................ .
MAYONNAISE ....
$149
FLOUR ............ ..
10-LB. BAG-MARTHA WHITE
$14 9
SELF-RISING
MEAL ............. ..
ORANGE JUICE. ..
CHUNKTRAIL BLAZER
SALAD DRESSING . ...
SHAMPOO
$19 9
$
$16 9 JENO'S
PEPSI, DIET PEPSI
MOUNTAIN DEW, 8-Pak
PEPSI FREE ......1.6;9~·
PLUS
DEPO-SI~r..,~ZZA ROLLS ......
69
PEAR HALVES .............. .
C
CUT GREEN BEANS ..... 2189
303SIZE
DEL
MONTE
.
89 c
SUCED, CRUSHED, CHUNK OR SPEARS
PINEAPPLE ...................
303SIZE
8-0Z.
DEL MONTE
EXTRA
LEAN
GROUND
.
1
~0~~~~~-· ............. .
32-0Z.
TOMATO SAUCE ......... ..
303 MONTE
SIZE
DEL
STEWED TOMATOES ....... .
ORANGES ..
ICEBERG
C
2199
4/$1 cEA;:uP.................... .$109
59C
2/9
C
P£:5~~.. ....... .......
9
c
HAWAIIAN PUNCH ................ 46-oz. 9
303SIZE
DEL MONTE
PORK NECK BONES ................... Lb.
.
37 9 BEEF ........................... . . . ·. . . . . .
WITH 18-0Z•
• . RINSE-FREE
303 SIZE
~
.
33
c
�. Wednesday, February 1, 1984
The Floyd County Times
1Photo
bv Bettv Hvden l
a
BETSY LAYNE'S Lester Newsome battles with
Johns
Creek Bearcat for a rebound during a game at Betsy Layne
last week. The Bobcats won the contest, 78-56.
Win Tournament Trophies
Sec:tlon Two, Paae Two
BLHS Records Three
Wins During Week
Recognized by USAF
For Superior Work
(Stats provided by Mal eta Campbell l
In basketball action over the past
week the powerful Betsy Layne Bobcats, with a 16-3 record for the season.
picked up three more wins against
Mullins. Wheelwright and Johns
Creek.
In action last Tuesday night at Betsy
Layne. the Bobcats downed Mullins
77-53. Jimmy Parsons was high scorer
for Betsy Layne with 23 points and 17
rebounds. Also contributing points
were Jeff Campbell with 19, Levi
Hamilton 17, Lester Newsome 8,
Dwayne Kidd and Duran Hall with 4
points each, and Brett Meade and Scott
Bailey with 2 each. For Mullins. scoring was as follows : Hall 16, Williams
14, Clevenger 8, McCoy 7, Green 5 and
Friend 2.
Travelling to Wheelwright. Friday
night, the Bobcats faced a determined
Trojan team who played tough before
falling to Betsy Layne 74-61. High
scorer for the Bobr.J>t"' .. :.::, Lester
Newsome with :l2 while Dwayne Kidd
contributed 14. Other scorers included
Jimmy Parsons 10, Levi Hamilton 9.
Brett Meade 8, Jeff Campbell 7, and
Duran Hall and Mike Conn with 2 each .
High scoring honors for Wheelwright
went to David Hall with 25 while the
Trojans' Cole also hit in double digits
with 16. Other scorers for Wheelwright
were Boyd 4, J . Hall 5, Hughes. Harris,
Hunter and Hutton with 2 each.
The Bobcats won over Johns Creek
High School 78-56 in a game Saturday
night at Betsy Layne. Levi Hamilton
and Jeff Campbell shared top scoring
honors with 16 each with Lester
Newsome contributing 12, Jimmy Parsons 13, Dwayne Kidd 10, Brett Meade
7, Duran Hall and Davie Mitchell 2
apiece. For Johns Creek, scorers included Rhodes 12, Hamilton 10,
Sanders 8, Spurlock 8, Runyon 8, Ray 2.
Maynard 6 and Adkins 2.
Depending on weather, the Bobcats
were scheduled to play Prestonsburg
last night <Tuesday), and will face
Boyd County at Betsy Layne, Friday
night, and the Allen Central Rebels in
another home game , Saturday.
Mrs Gail Goodman, formerly of
Allen, has been awarded a Special
Achievement Award by the Department
of the Air Force for Sustained Superior
Performance. The award was presented
by John H. Wambough, Jr., Colonel,
United States Air Force. Mrs. Goodman
maintained superior job performance
during the past three years while
employed by the United States Government, 20th Tactical Fighter Wing,
R.A.F . Upper Heyford, England. She is
married to Sgt. Dan Goodman, formerly of Martin, who has been assigned in
England with the U.S. Air Force for the
same period of time. S/Sgt. and Mrs.
Goodman have recently returned for
reassignment to the United States. Mrs.
Goodman is the daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Daniel Campbell, of Allen, and Joe
Simpson, of Martin.
G & G COMPUTER SALES
East Point. KY 41216
We have software for most computer systems·
I BM PC, Commodore, Apple, Radio Shack,
Victor, NEC, TeleVideo, and many more
We also have COLECO'S ADAM--more computer
for the money than any other.
Don't make the mistake of buying a computer
before you call us for the answers to your
computer questions.
Over 14 years of experience in the computer field.
Call Day or Night:
Charles Darwin completed
The Descent of Man
at the age of 62 and
wrote The Power of Move ment i n Plants at 71.
886-3667 or 789-6285
LUMBER & HOME CENTER
~~~LOWEST PBICES
Our 375 Store Buying Power enables us to sell at one low
price to everyone. You benefit with the highest quality
products at the ~lowest prices.
OPEN
84Hours
a Week.
•
These Incredible Prices Good Thru SUn.. Feb. 5.
PHS Class of '74 Reunion
We are organizing a class reunion of 1974
Prestonsburg High School graduates.
• Anyone interested, please call Teresa
Pelphrey Gibson, 886-6795 or Sue George
Justice, 874-2748.
1-25-2[
MAKE RESERVATIONS TO HAVE·
YOUR CHILD'S BEST BIRTHDAY PARTYTHIS YEAR!!
*
PARTY PLAN
#1
OR
PARTY PLAN
#2
The easiest and safest party you'll
ever have.
"AnENDENTS ON DUTY AT ALL TIMES"
84~ach
COUNTERTOP
With the purchase of
stock kitchen cabinets.
Minimum 8' of base
cabinets.
NO DEALERS PLEASE
·.. ·::·:LIMIT J DO PCS PER C
•
USTOMER
Nylon
TWEED CARPET
With Cushion Back
February 12-18 has been designated
National Vocational Education Week.
The theme selected for this year is
"Vocational Education: Creating Partnerships for Excellence" which denotes
the close association that vocational
education has with individuals, communities, businesses, labor, and government in preparing people for work.
Vocational education encompasses
more than 400 occupations in six distinct
fields. These fields include agriculture,
business, occupational home economics,
health, marketing and distribution,
trade and industry.
Vocational education is available to
students of all ages at all levels of education. It offers students opportunities to
explore career options, gain important
background understanding of an occupational area, obtain skills needed for
job entry or advancement, retrain for
new positions.
Vocational education provides many
opportunities for forming partnerships.
OUR REG. $4.99 ln.ft.
End caps and
mitres additional.
~Yd.
2"x4" Pre-Cut
Premium
PANEUNG
STUDS
Sandy Elm
YOUR CHOICE
or
ft84
light Hickory_ ;l";h;et ..,..• •
.,.;~.-~PLYWOOD
Aladdin.
ORDINANCE NO. 02 1984
rtfi:=.~~ KEROSENE
HEATERS
7.800 BTU
Tropic _ _ Reg. 64.84
5484
each
Temp-Rite 10 _Reg. 112.84
9884
10.500 BTU
With Fan _Reg. 159.84
';'leach
11.300 BTU
each
1")ft84
OnVEICtiOILREIO.
13Q.B41
52" Flush Mount
HI-UNE
CEIUNG FAN
1,.,-
1\o\ar~
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INSULATION
R-Vatues vary The h1gher the R-Value . !he greater the
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Acadia While
Water Saver
TOILET
9ne per
customer
while supplies
lastl
each
. . , . . each
Wall PMnB - \'li l Piece
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WAREHOUSE/SHOWROOMS
0
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WILLIAMSON, W.VA.
U.S. 52 and Chattaroy Rd.
-(304) 235-3884
PAINTSVILLE, KY.
Rt. 23 South at Hagerhill Exit
-{606) 789-8084
WttkdiYI 7:IXII.m. ta 8:00 p.m.
Slturdeya 8:00 a.m. tD 5:00 p.m.
Sundeya a:OO 1.m. to 5:00 p.m.
Wt rtatrvt tht right to limit quantltlta.
each
Pour-In / Blow-In
Cellulose
Qes~ PMnB - - ~ A84
rn 1\0\lf~
8484
09!~h
INSULATION
6~h
714
sheet.
For low ceilings.
R-19 6" Super Thick
cad Fiberglass
84
'p\eCB ______.-:\ 484
S4
. . each
'l p\ece - - - ft84
~lf11\a\e ' Piece
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1/2"x4'x8' COX
SHEATHING
AN ORDINANCE OF THE CITY
COUNCIL OF THE CITY OF MARTIN
ESTABLISHING A REGULAR MEETING TIME OF THE CITY COUNCIL.
WHEREAS: A newly elected council
has been sworn and seated in the City of
Martin, Ky., and
WHEREAS: A meeting time must be
established according to law; and
WHEREAS: The City Council is desirous of informing the public and the press
of their Regular Meeting time:
NOW THEREFORE BE IT ORDAINED BY THE CITY COUNCIL OF THE
CITY OF MARTIN AS FOLLOWS:
SECI'ION 1: The regular meeting
time of the City Council of the City of
Martin shall be the first Ostl Tuesday
of every month at the hour of 7 p.m. The
meeting will be held at the City Ha ll
Building, in Martin, Kentucky.
SECI'ION 2: Any Ordinance or parts
of Ordinance in conflict herein are
hereby expressly repealed to the extent
of such conflict.
Passed and adopted this 24 day of
January, 1984 by the City Council of
Martin, Ky.
.
RAYMOND GRIFFITH, Mayor
ATIEST:
Johnnie B. Stephens, City Clerk
FLOOD DAMAGE
PREVENTION ORDINANCE
ARTICLE 1. STATUTORY AUTHORIZATION, FINDINGS OF FACT, PURPOSE AND OBJECTIVES
ARTICLE A. STATUTORY AUTHORIZATION
The Legislature of the State of Kentucky has in 1966 delegated the responsibility to local governmental units to
adopt regulations designed to promote
the public health, safety, and general
welfare of its citizenry, Therefore, the
City Council of Martin, Kentucky does
ordain as follows :
The City Clerk is directed to publish
this Ordinance in reference and not in
its entirety.
PASSED AND ADOPTED THIS 24th
day of January , 1984, by the City Council of Martin, Kentucky
RAYMOND GRIFFITH, Mayor
This Ordinance is available for inspection a t the City Hall Building, Martin,
Kentucky Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, Friday 9 a.m. to 3 p.m.
JOHNNIE B. STEPHENS. City Clerk
lt.
<;;;?
/~bgill'lf
NO DEALERS PlEASE
OUR REG. S4.S9sq.rd.
Pre-Finished
ORDINANCE NO. 01-1984
*
CBUNG '
FREE!
Stock Butcher Block
Pattern Postlormed
lt.
*
Joe Hardy
President
Mystic White
2'x4' Lay-In
Vocational Ed Week
Designated Feb. 12-18
The Prestonsburg Boys Varsity Cheerleaders were presented with the first
place trophy at the Floyd County Pre-Season Tournament Dec. 17 and 2nd
place in the Jenny Wiley Tournament Dec. 30.
The squad was judged on personal appearance, where they received a
perfect score, floor cheers, sideline cheers, sportsmanship, and pep and
enthusiasm.
The girls will begin working on material to be used at the district-at-large
competition to be held on Feb. 18 at the Prestonsburg High School gym.
The squad is made up of nine seniors and three juniors and is sponsored
by Bonnie Spencer and Sally Allen.
Pictured, left to right 11st row>: Doris Click, Hope Sword, Paula Spencer,
captain, and Kim Rose; (2nd row): Donna Adams, Mona McKinney, Rachel
Allen, Laura Hereford, Angie Blair, Lisa Hall and Linda Whitten; (standing) :
Mary Porter, co-captain.
•
Dealers of qual ity hardware
and software .
1
•
3~b. bag
Approx1matety R-24 at
6 1/ 4" thiCk
1
�Wednesday, Febroary 1, 1984
The Floyd County Times
Sec:tlon Two, Pap nu.e
~!M9l2Tl!YS
THE FABULOUS GEMS
Will be on display
Wed., Feb. 1 thru Sat., Feb. 4
• Martin Store Only •
Solitaire D1•mond
8ndal Set•
WSith
Stones
ter31mg
or
Gold F1ned·
l.adies'Sohtalre•
..
'12 99
.
'24.99
Cluster Rings. •
1
19.99
'2~. 99
• SIMULATED
~®&I
a.-,..
~
25Stone
Ruby Cluster
1
...,.,......., '
Olnn"' Ring
21.99.
$2~.99
1
19.99
LIFETIME WARRANTY
BAND
'2~.99
Other Style
Bands Available
0
14K Gold cr Sterling S1lver
<Photo by Laura Cooley)
TONY WHITAKER becomes airborne in Prestonsburg's
defeat, last Tuesday night, of Millard.
<Photo by Laura Cooley)
THE ALLEN CENTRAL girls, shown here in action against
Prestonsburg, Friday night, were big winners, 62-49, against
the Lady Cats during Central's basketball homecoming.
FLOATING HEART
$12.9'
:THE BFSr OF THE ROCRIES.
Coors starts out clean and fresh.
And then it stays that way.
Uke every other beer in the world,
Coors starts with water.
But that's where the similarity .
ends.
··
You see, we start with pure
Rocky Mountain spring water.
That's because we make our
beer in one place and one place
only: Golden, Colorado. And its
perfect brewing water is why we
started there in the first place.
In the second place, we use
a brevving process that's unique to the
industry. We start with only natural ingredients-absolutely no additives or
preservatives-and then we brew Coors
more slowly and age it longer than most beers.
Then, we package Coors cold. Other beers
are subjected to extreme heat (up to 140°) after
being put in cans or bottles. Coors doesn't do that,
simply because the less you heat beer,
the better it tastes.
·>
<Photo by Laura Cooley)
•
PRESTONSBURG'S BLACKCATS avenged a loss earlier m
the season to Allen Central by slipping past the Rebels 71-68
during ACHS's homecoming game, Friday night. In photo,
the Cats' Kelly Cecil (No. 54) launches a shot.
One ofour secret ingredients has 18
wheels and weighs 32,000 pounds.
BACK PORCH
Restaurant
When Coors and Coors Ught are fmally
through aging, they have a wonderfully cold,
dean, brewery-fresh taste. The last thing in
the world we'd want to do is put that nice,~~~~t:
cold beer on a big, hot truck like
other brewers do. So we don't.
We use refrigerated
trucks. And they take our
beer-nice and coldup to 2,000 miles
Fine Food
Betsy Layne, Ky. 41605
·~------~--------------------~
or take
(give
a detour)
to our
'~ffjjii;~~:~
distributors. At this point, it makes no sense to truck
cold beer all that distance and let it get warm in some
warehouse.
Don't worry. It doesn't. Our distributors use refrigerated
warehouses for our beer. (It's more expensive, but we know they like
that brewery-fresh taste as much as we do.)
Next, our distributors take that nice, cold Coors and put it in their own
·
refrigerated trucks and take it to where you can fmally buy some.
Does Coors have to be refrigerated?
No. But every now and then, the folks who sell Coors
to you will have more on hand than they can keep on ice.
So, you might see Coors out in one of those big displays
at your store.
If you do, don't be concerned. Even though we go
through all the expense and trouble to keep Coors
and Coors Ught fresh from the Rockies to you,
our beer is no more affected by heat than any
other beer.
To kind of sum it up, we refrigerate
our beer because we want to, not
because we have to.
Now on tap.
Soon In your store.
We're iettmg Coors
and Coors Ug'ht out to
you as fast u we can.
Chances are, you mJPt
ftnd It ftnt on tap at your
favorite tawm. Cleek
aroulld.It's worth tt.
Aad when you cfo ftncf It,
.
give It a duuace. The real
beauty of Coon Is how It keeps
that bfewerr-fresh taste beer
after beer, hour after hour.
Thanks forreacflng all this,and
there's Just one more thing: Eqfoyt
_._.,,.,., ,_ .• L. ::
Dr. Virginia de Guzman
has joined
Dr. Ray de Guzman,
•
General Surgeon,
who is affiliated with the
McDowell Appalachian Regional Hospital,
®
The Best of the Rocldes Is yours!
© 1984Adolph Coors Company. Colden. Colorado 80401
in the de Guzman Clinic,
Ky. Highway 122 (Left Beaver Road)
Martin, Kentucky
285-3232
Dr. Virginia de Guzman-Clinic Days;
Tuesdays & Thursdays, 8 a.m. to 5 p.m.
2·1·2
�'NednndQ, Februllry 1, 1984
The Floyd County Times
Seven Years Old
Do Something Wild
With State Refund
The Kentucky cave shrimp, the
Blackside dace, Short's goldenrod and
at least seventeen other species of plants
and animals known to exist only in Kentucky need help to ensure their continued survival, help that Kentuckians
can give through a state program
available to all taxpayers.
The program, known as the "Do
Something Wild" contribution checkoff
to help non-game species protection and
habitat acquisition programs, is sponsored by the Kentucky Nature
Preserves Commission and the Kentucky Department of Fish and Wildlife
Resources.
Simply by filling in the amount of their
desired tax-deductible contribution on
line 21a of the Kentucky Income Tax
form, citizens can designate all or a portion of their state tax refund for these
programs, explained Nature Preserves
Director Richard Hannan.
"This program offers Kentuckians a
convenient way to participate in the protection and preservation of our rich
natural heritage," Hannan said. "The
fate of Kentucky's unique species has
been entrusted to all of us whose intelligence allows us to either protect or
destroy these species.''
Hannan noted that the original settlers
of the Commonwealth were first ''lured
to Kentucky by the tales of its bountiful
waters, its sk1es darkened by fowl and
its seemingly endless abundance of
game."
"It isn't useful or productive to lament
the loss of the buffalo, the passenger
pigeon, or the rich canelands and undulating prairies of primeval Kentucky," Hannan stated. "Each is now
history, the victim of man's pressures
for food, homes, work, and perhaps his
ignorance of nature's complexity."
"Today, however, citizens can help
protect the remaining natural history of
Kentucky for future generations by con•tributing all or a portion of their Ken' tucky tax refund to support natural area
acquisition and non-game species protection," Hannan said.
In the past, money raised through the
"Do Something Wild" program has been
equally shared by the two state agencies. Past contributions allowed the
Nature Preserves Commission to begin
negotiations for the acquisition of Metropolis Lake, a fifty-acre floodplain lake
in McCracken County which is a habitat
for five species of rare fish. Contributions will be used to finance the acquisition of this property.
Program funds were used by the Department of Fish and Wildlife Resources
to begin osprey "hacking" or reintroduction of ospreys to their former nesting
grounds in Kentucky.
For additional information on the program, contact the Kentucky Nature
Preserves Commission at (502) 564-2886
or the Kentucky Department of Fish and
Wildlife Resources at (502) 564-3400.
CARD OF THANKS
The family of Virgil Prater wishes to
thank all of those who were so kind and
considerate during our time of grief. We
want to thank those who sent flowers
and gifts of love. We especially want to
thank the ministers, Earl Waugh and
Kenneth LeMaster, and the Hall Funeral Home, for being so kind. All your
kindnesses were greatly appreciated.
GOOD, CLEAN
USED MOBILE HOMES
Sx40 two bedroom with bunk
beds furnished
$1800
• 10XSO with slide out
In living room
$3800
• 12x60 with fireplace,
two bedroom
$5200
Price Includes delivery
Don't Uud Mobllt Homts
W_, PratOIIIIIUrg IH-tll3
Crystal Lynn Jones, daughter of Ray
and Sue Jones, celebrated her seventh
birthday, January 8, at her home at
Bevinsville. She received many nice
gifts.
The paternal grandparents are Lillie
E. Jones, of Topmost, and the late
Thomas Tilden Jones. The maternal
grandparents are Ishmael W. and
Magnolia Hall, of Bevinsville. The great
grandfathers are Albert L. Cook, of Topmost, and Eligha Johnson, of Bevinsville
Buddy Rich To Appear
At Ashland Art Center
A professional performer practically
since birth, Buddy Rich will display his
famous drumming Monday, February 6,
at the Paramount Arts Center in Ashland.
The 66-year-{)ld Rich will appear along
with his band for an 8 p.m. concert of
jazz, swing and rock music. Tickets are
available by calling the PAC at
606/324-3175. Half-price student seats
will be sold beginning January 30.
People who expect Buddy Rich to live
up to his "bad boy" reputation will be
disappointed, at least according to his
press agent. He is supposed to be rude,
arrogant and volatile, but while Rich
describes himself as a man of little patience who hates social amenities, he
says, "I'm not really arrogant. I'm
secure at what I do."
Rich's personality may be controversial, but everyone agrees that he is a topnotch, professional drummer and band
leader. "I owe the audience the best I
can give them," he feels. "When an audience goes out and spends their bucks
they are totally entitled to the best performance you can give them, nothing
more."
Born Bernard Rich, "Buddy" first appeared on stage in a vaudeville act at
age 18 months. He played Broadway as
a boy, but by 1938 he turned to jazz.
After working with the likes of Frank
Sinatra, Artie Shaw, Tommy Dorsey
and Bunny Berigan, he formed his own
band in 1946. Ever since, he has earned
accolades as one of the greatest drummers in the world.
Rich's appearance is the third presentation on the annual four~vent Entertainment Paramount Series, which concludes March 19 with a concert by
pianist/humorist Victor Borge. For further information call Celeste Winters
at 606/324-3175.
IN APPRECIATION
Mrs. Opal Hale would like to thank all
those who helped her upon the passing
of her husband, Charlie Hale.
A special thanks to Herman Joseph
and the singers from the Freewill Baptist Church, of Martin, and the Merion
Funeral Home for their kind and efficient service.
H&R BLOCit
Found
Richard
$7
In a recent survey of customers who got refunds, we found 3 out
of 4 believed H&R Block got them bigger refunds than if they'd
prepared their own taxes. 3 out of 4. Are you one of them?
What can we find for you?
People who know their business go to
H&RBLOC~
..
z- ·
BB Richmond Plaza
Main Street
Prtatonaburg
816-31185
28!5-9879
Manln
Open 9 AM·9 PM Weekdays, 9-S Sat.
Consult your Yellow Pages for the office nearest you.
MasterCard and Visa accepted at most area locations
Section Two, P . .• Four
Support Pro-Consumer
Utility Legislation
Utility Ratecutters of Kentucky opened up their third state office in Covington
last week. At the same time, Rep. Terry
Mann announced his plans to sponsor
the Consumer Utility Rate Board
(CURB) in the General Assembly this
year. Other legislation supported by
Ratecutters and Project Independence
would save consumers millions of
dollars each year by having utilities buy
lower rate natural gas and to stop certain monopolistic practices that produce
higher gas and electrical rates.
The proposal of a Consumer Utility
Rate Board (CURB) is an important
milestone for utility consumers of our
state. It will give better representation
to the consumer in the regulatory process used in our state. Rep. Terry
Mann's decision to sponsor this bill is applauded by consumer groups throughout
the state and is especially important
because of his position as chairman of
the House Energy Committee.
Utility Ratecutters of Kentucky, a
consumer advocacy group fighting
spiralling utility rates, is part of a larger
coalition called Project Independence.
Project Independence is composed of
over 40 labor, consumer, community
and church groups through out the state
promoting consumer utility legislation
in the 1984 General Assembly.
Other legislation supported by Project
Independence include:
H.B. 57-This bill would direct the
Public Service Commission to review
transaction between affiliated companies to insure that the costs of coal and
gas sold to one another would be just and
reasonable. (Introduced by Harper,
Mann, Clapp, Layman, Petty Bronger
and Yates).
H.B. 215-Would require the PSC to
review gas purchasing practices to insure that the lowest priced gas is being
purchased. <Harper, Mann, and Yates).
S.B. 14-Would require all large
utilities to undergo a management and
operations audit for review by the 1986
General Assembly. <O'DanieD.
Pro consumer utility legislation has
been almost ignored in the general
assembly until now. With the recent
passage of utility reform bills in other
states and natural gas prices being
deregulated, interest arose in developing a similar piece of legislation for Kentucky. With the help of Project Independence, the Utility Consumer Protection Act is being introduced as bills
into the 1984 Kentucky General
Assembly.
Last April, representatives from
various citizens' organizations came
from throughout the state to the first
Kentucky Energy Conference to discuss
possible utility reform measures. The
meeting marked the first time that Kentucky citizens had joined together to
mount a coordinated campaign around
utility issues. Representatives then took
the pro~ legislation, called the Utility Consumer Protection Act, back to
their groups for endorsement and
support.
A steering committee was formed,
called Project Independence, and held
a press conference on July 4, 1983 at the
state capitol to announce their
legislative campaign. Copies of the Act
were sent to all the legislators and to all
government agencies affected by the
Act in order for them to review and comment on the proposed legislation.
Some of the highlights of the sevenpage bill include:
-a full moratorium on utility discon-
VA To Pay Dividend
On GI Insurance
Almost $7-million will be paid to 34,945
Kentucky veterans during 1984 as a
result of dividen~ declared by the
Veterans Administration on insurance
policies.
Lee Caudill, regional office director of
the VA in Louisville, said these veterans
have kept their GI insurance in force
since their discharge from military
service.
The record high dividend was made
possible because of improved interest
earnings on the insurance funds'
investments.
No application for the annual dividend
is needed, Caudill said. Each
policyholder will receive the dividend in
the month of the anniversary of the individual policy.
In Kentucky 530 World War I veterans
will receive $127,000 in dividends; 28,830
World War II veterans will receive
$6,008,000; 4,154 Korean War veterans
will receive $497,000, and 1,411 veterans
holding Veterans Reopened Insurance
policies will receive $277,000.
Dividends differ under each progtam
depending on the amount of insurance,
age, plan selected and length of time the
policy has been in force.
Subscription
Rates Per Yea.r
In Flo](d'County, $8.00
El-wltere In Kentucky, $10
Outside Kentucky, $12.50
Please note. expiration date
opposite yOur name on wrapper, or on your copy of The
Times. Becau- of Increased
mallln& COSts, 110tlces
aubscrtptlon ~ration are
no
lorl'aer
.ftalled
to
subscribers-
nections for needy households between
November 15 and April 15.
-requirements for gas and electric
utilities to demonstrate that they have
purchased the lowest price fuel possible.
-limit the frequency that utility companies can seek rate increased by not
allowing them to file for more than one
increase per year.
-a comprehensive conservation program that promotes weatherization and
provides incentives for investments in
renewable resources.
-the establishment of a Consumer
utility Rate Board that would represent
consumers before the PSC, as well as
sponsor consumer education programs,
and perform other consumer advocacy
services.
-requiring utilities to implement load
matching and progressive rate structures by 1985.
RALPH'S
TIRE SERVICE
U.S. 23 No~, Prestonsburg • 886-8806
• Computer Wheel Balancing
• New Tires (Steel & Glass Belted & Polyester)
• Recaps-Regular & Radial All Season,
4-Wheel Drive 10 & nx15
• New Banerles-36 mo. $39.95 Installed
plus exchange
• Rebuilt Banerles-90-day warranty $25.00
plus exchange
• Shocks-Lifetime warranty $19.95 each Installed
YOUR FUTURE
LOOKS GOOD
WITH IRA.
Today could be very special for you. If you make it a
point to plan for a very special day in your future ...
retirement. We can help make your retirement more
rewarding, more fina.ncially secure with a taxsheltered Individual Retirement Account (IRA).
An IRA is a high-yield savin~s plan to which you
make annual tax-deductible contributions. All
annual contributions and interest earned are taxdeferred until retirement, at which time you will
probably be in a lower tax bracket. Imagine the nest
egg waiting for you ...
Take a good look at our IRA plans today. You'll find
your future never looked so good.
AND EASTERN KENTUCKY TOO!
.
.
TilE BANK ·:BJ:· JOSEPHINE
Of
Subscriptions may be mafted to:
The Floyd County Times
Box 391
P~tonsbura, Ky. 41653
Prestonsburg • Garrett • Harold • Allen • Wheelwright
Member F.D.I.C.
C>MCMLXXXIV leon Shaffer Golnick Adv., Inc.
�•
Wednesday, February 1, 1984
�February 1, 1984
Prices effective thru Tues., eb. 7.
We reserve the right to limit quantities
and correct printing errors.
HOLLY FARM
GRAD£ A
FRESH LEAN
MIXED FRYER PARTS
c
GROUND BEEF
09
$
3-LBS.
OR MORE
• FEDERAL
FOOD STAMPS
WELCOME.
ARMOUR
TEST TENDER
SHOP
WITH
EASE
AT
DAN-DEE'S
$349
T-BONE ... .. ... ...
ARMOUR
lB.
$299
~~WL~r~~~.. .. $J2 9
SLICED QTR.
'•
La
FISCHER'S SELECT
PORK LOIN.....
FISCHER'S SELECT
CENTER CUT
PORK CHOPS.
LB.
$J89
LB.
FULLYCOOKED
BONELESS
$J69
·
WHOLE HAMS.......
LB.
69C
FRANKS .. .... .
69C
BOlOGNA.....
...---M::";R. TURKEY QUAUTY MEAT·:s---.
12-0Z. TURKEY.
PMG.
8-0Z. SLICED
PMG.
HAMC£~-~~~v. $1 2 ~
MARTHA WHITE
SELF-RISING FLOUR
2>LB.
BAG
9
$
FRESH
$480
PORK
.
NECK BONES ....
GRADE A
FRYER
$680
THIGHS .. .
ZESTA
SALTINES.
c
WHOLE
Liif QTRS. $8
80
FRESH
GROUNDB
�•
Wednesday, February 1, 1984
Section Two, Paae Seven
The Floyd County Times
-----------~---------------=-=..:....;;:.~;;..:....:.....__:__
Stanville, Ky. Phone 78.. 6 6
Hours: 8 a.m. to 9 p.m., Mon. thru Sat.
1 a.m. to 8 p.m., Sunday.
WEDNESDAY
IS
, DOUBLE STAMP
DAY!
50 EXTRA FREE
· QUALITY STAMPS
WITH THIS COUPON & PURCHASE OF
ANY 2 PKGS. OF
VALENTINE CARDS.
YAUD THRU FEB. 7, '84
-
50 EXTRA FREE
~QUALITY STAMPS
~~
~l
l
,Jll /
WITH THIS COUPON & PURCHASE OF
1-6--PAK OF
.
HYDE PARK BISCUITS
~-
VAUD THRU FEB. 7, '84
~
PLATTER
SLICEDSTYLE
BACON
$12 80
$12'
80
CHOPS.
CHOPS.
51680
F. .$10.80
KRAn
~~tPIMENTO
SINGLES
59
~
50 EXTRA FREE
QUALITY STAMPS
I/
~
WITH THIS COUPON & PURCHASE OF
2ROU$H~M
PAPER
TOWELS
•
1
VAUD THRU FEB. 7, '84
.
·~
•
i{
50 EXTRA FREE
.\ ~ QUALITY AMPS
~
WITH THIS COU
1
~~ I
h
1
lc PURCHASE OF
FAMILY SllEBOX PIJR£X
LAUNDRY DETERGENT
VAUD THRU FEB. 7, '84
~-
PORKD
PORKCUT
•
50 EXTRA FREE
~ '!,~H~~~c!!N~!~!'!~
I
BUnERMILK
d
50 EXTRA FREE
-~ QUALITY STAMPS
~ WITH THIS COUPON & PURCHASE OF
~~~
~j
lO·LI.BAG
·~!~~H~~!:~~~~
TOMATO CATSUP
MARGARINE
J~~- 2/99c
PKG. IN OIL OR WATER
BANQUET
STAR-KIST TUNA
FRIED CHICKEN
6.CAN
5-0Z. ·
age
TOMATO JUICE
PANCAKE MIX
gge
32-0Z.
BOX
FREEZER QUEEN
HYDE PARK
FROZEN ENTREES
PINTO BEANS
32-0Z.$1
69
CUCUMBERS,
4-LB.
BAG
$149
BANQUET
UMPKIN PIE
20-0Z.sgc
OR
RED RADISHES
4/ggc
CASEY'S
SANDWICH BREAD
16-0Z.3f$1
LOAF
~
HYDE PARK
SUGAR
BOX
HUNGRY JACK COMPLETE
age
GREEN PEPPERS .
32-0Z. $299
RED GOLD
46-0Z.
CAN
6/99c
VALID THRU FEB. 7, '84
NEW MAID
gge
LEMONS
HALF GAL HYDE PARK
HYDE PARK
32-0Z.
BTL.
JUMBO CAUFORNIA
5-L~ 139
BAG
UMIT ONE
FISCHER'S
�-~ednesday,
February 1, 1984
Section Two, PaK• Elaht
.The Floyd County Times
Milton Conley
Milton Conlej, 70, of Hu('ysville, died
Monday at St. Joseph's Hospital i:1 Lexington following an apparent heart
attack.
A retired miner, he was born March
18, 1913 in Knott county, a son of the late
Clabe and Rena Chaffins Conley.
He is survived by his wife, Mrs. Cordellia Layne Conley; six sons, Elwood,
Carmel, Carl, Alan David, and Roger
Dale Conley, all of Hueysville, and
Milton Conley, Jr., of Topmost; three
daughters, Jackie Prater, of Eastern,
Belva Vanover, of Hueysville, Velma
Hall, of Willard; three sisters, Della
Moore, of Langley, Dora Carter, of Cattlettsburg, and Eliza Reed, of Shelby,
Ohio; ~3 grandchildren and one greatgrandchild.
Funeral servict:..; will be conducted at
noon today <Wednesday\ at the Hueysville Church of Christ with ministers of
the church officiating. Burial will be
made in the Duncan cemetery at
Hueysville under direction of the Hall
Funeral Home.
James M. Hale
James M. (Blue) Hale, 89, of Blue
River, died Tuesday, January 24, at his
residence.
A farmer, he was born July 4, 1894 in
Magoffir. county, and was a son of the
late John M. and Pollie Castle Hale. He
was preceded in death by his wife, Mrs.
Mary Marsillett Hale.
· Survivors include two sons, Richard
Hale, of Blue River, and Linzie Hale, of
Prestonsburg; three daughters, Pollie
Prater, of Akron, Ind., Bertha Hicks, of
Blue River, and Emma Reffett; of Claypool, Ind.; two brothers, Willie Hale, of
Pyramid and Winfield Hale, of Hippo;
a si'Ster, Virgie Shepherd, of Gunlock; 37
grandchildren, and 45 great-grandchildren.
Funeral services were conducted at 1
p.m., Friday, at the Floyd Funeral
Home chapel with the Revs. Richmond
Shepherd and Bill Campbell officiating.
Burial was made in the family cemetery
at Buckeye.
Emmitt Hamilton
Emmitt Hamilton, 73, of McDermott,
Ohio, formerly of this county, died
Saturday at the University of Kentucky
Medical Center in Lexington, following
a long illness.
Born August 14, 1910 at East
McDowell, he was a son of the late Sam
and Mindy Jones Hamilton. A retired
miner, he was a member of the True
Baptist Church at Kite. His wife, Mrs.
Nannie Adams Hamilton survives him.
True Baptist ministers officiated at
funeral services conducted Tuesday at
1 p.m. at the Hall Funeral Home chapel.
Burial was made in Davidson Memorial
Gardens at Ivel.
MARTIN BRANCH
FREE WILL BAPTIST
CHURCH
ESTILL, KY.
GOSPEL SINGING
SAT., JAN. 28
7:00 P.M.
BLANTON FAMILY
OF SHELBY OHIO
I
TRUE BELIEVERS
PRESTONSBURG
Obituaries
David J. Vaughan
David J. <Dove) Vaughan, 82, of
Highland Terrace, Prestonsburg, died
January 25 at the Highlands Regional
Medical Center, victim of an apparent
heart attack.
A son of the late Williams and Lilly
Osborn Vaughan, he was born March 1,
1901 at Prestonsburg. He was a retired
electrician with the Princess Elkhorn
Coal Company, and was a member of
the Community United Methodist
Church.
Survivors include his wife, Mrs. Orbie
Prater Vaughan; four sons, Martin L.
Vaughan, of Lynchburg, Va., John E.
Vaughan, of Xenia, Ohio, Ronald E .
Vaughan, of Greenfield, Ohio, and Joe
L. Vaughan, of Lexington; a sister,
Alma Mitchell, of Abilene, Texas, and
ten grandchildren.
Funeral services were conducted at 11
a.m. Saturday at the Community United
Methodist Church with the Rev. Taylor
Biggs officiating. Burial was made in
the Mayo Memorial cemetery here
under direction of the Carter Funeral
Home.
Mrs. Ella Hamilton
Mrs. Ella Hamilton, 54, of Teaberry,
died Friday at her home following an apparent heart attack.
She was born April 16, 1929 at
McDowell and was a daughter of the late
William and Mattie Moore Blankenship.
A 19-year member of the Samaria
Regular Baptist Church at Teaberry,
she was preceded in death by her husband, Lummie Hamilton, in 1977.
She is survived by two sons, Elmer
and Jerry Lee Hamilton, both of Teaberry; four daughters, Shirlene
Johnson, of Teaberry, Dorothy Slone, of
Ligon, Helen Wyatt, of Camden, Tenn.,
and Normalene Berez, of Detroit, Mich. ;
six brothers, Henry Blankenship, of
LaGrange, Ind., Andy Blankenship, of
Walcottville, Ind., and Levi Blankenshil', of McDowell; six sisters, Delphia
Gayheart, of Hi Hat, Maxie Stumbo, of
Mongo, Ind., Elcie Gayheart, of Howe,
Ind., Allie Wiley, of Highland, Mich., Annie Hamilton, of Teaberry, Tinea Bolton,
of Walcottville, Ind., and five grandchildren.
Funeral services were conducted at 10
a.m. Monday at the Samaria Regular
Baptist Church at Teaberry with Regular Baptist ministers officiating. Burial
was made in the family cemetery at
Teaberry under direction of the Hall
Funeral Home.
BEST QUAUTY MEMORIALS
QUICK, EFFICIENT SERVICE
AND INSTALLATION
SEE OUR LARGE DISPLAY OF
COLORED lr GRAY GRANITES
LOCATED ON OLD U.S. 23 •
IN NEW ALLEN
North Lake Drivl'
Church SchoollO:OO a.m.
Morning Worship 11:15 a.m.
FIRST ASSEMBLY
OF GOD
West Prestonsburg, Ky.
WADE MARTIN HUGHES
Pastor
Sunday School
9:45a.m .
Morning Worship
11 a .m .
Evening Worship
7 p.m
Wednesday Prayer Study 7p.m .
Auxier Freewill
Baptist Church
Sunday School . .. 10:00 a.m.
Morning Worship . .. . 11 a .m.
Evening Worship .. 6:00p.m.
Prayer Meeting
-Thursday . ... . .. 6:30p.m.
Pastor, Elder Douglas Burkett
Asst. Pastor Clyde Bowling
12-14-lf.
I
Southern
81ptist
ATTENTION!
I
I
McDowell, Ky.
Special Teaching Classes
on:
Baptism of Holy Ghost
Spiritual Gifts
Sunday School . .
9:45a.m .
Morning Worship ..
11 a.m .
Evening Worship .. . .. .. .. 7 p.m .
Wednesday
Prayer Meeting
7 p.m
H . Bailey Sadler, Pastor
Visitors Expected
7 21-tf.
I Cor. Chapters 12, 13, and 14
Each Thursday Evening 7 p.m.
Teaching by Rev. Mike Manual
Pastor
Highland Avenue
Freewill Baptist
Church
ZION
DELIVERANCE
TABERNACLE
WAYLAND, KENTUCKY
Sunday School 11 a .m.
Evening Worship 7 p.m .
Wednesday Prayer Service 7 p.m.
Saturday Evening Worship 7 p .m.
Ada Mosley, Pastor
Everyone Welcome.
7p.m .
7p.m.
FIRST
UNITED
METHODIST
CHURCH
~-Ave., Prestonsburg
'60 So.:Arnold
Dr. Ted Nicholas. Minister
Sunday School ... . .. .. .. 9:45
Mormng Worship . . ... . 11:00
Junior and Senior UMYF2:30
Rhythmic Choir ......... 4:30
Wesley Bt ll Choir . ... .. . 5:15
Evening Service . . ..... .7:00
A CHRISTIAN WELCOME
AWAITS YOU.
SUN., WDOC AM-11:00
\l/
CHURCH
COME
WORSHIP
WITH US
AT
The First Church of God
University Dr., Prestonsburg, Ky.
KEVIN COLLINS. Pastor
SUNDAY:
.9:45p.m .
Sunday School .
.10:45 a.m.
Morning Worship
.6:00p.m .
Evening Service
TUESDAY:
Prayer Encounter . . . 7:00a.m .
WEDNESDAY:
Prayer Service . . .... 7:00p.m .
[fl.$~~
IEPIS<'OPAI.I
PRESTONSBliRG, KENTl'( ' KY -116.~:1
SUNDAYS
WDOC-AM
2:00 p.m. Sundays
EVERYONE WELCOME
Location:
Prestonsburg
Christian Academy
Riverside Drive
Prestonsburg, Ky.
WAYLAND
Everyor.e Welcome
Pastor Rev. D. Curry
H
10 a .m .
11 a.m .
Taylor L Biggs. Pastor
Phone: 8116-8087
All The Earth Shall Worship Thee. 12•14-tr.
Albert J . Greene, 58, of Tiffin, Ohio,
died Friday, January 6, at Autumnwood
Care Center, where he had been a patient since December 29.
Mr. Greene was born February 2,
1925, at Estill, a son of Albert and Sarah
Jane Severt Greene. He was married
May 3, 1947, at Prestonsburg, to Helen
Clark, who survives. Also surviving are
a daughter, Angie Greene, at home; two
sons, Sgt. First Class Richard H.
Greene, with the Army in Germany, and
Albert F. Greene, of Fostoria, Ohio; a
sister, Mrs. Dorothy Gayheart, of Tiffin,
Ohio, and three grandchildren.
Mr. Greene was employed for 41 years
at General Eleetric, Tiffin, as a plant
guard. He was a member of the Free
Will Baptist Church, was a veteran of
WW II, where he served in the Army,
and a member of the DAV.
Funeral services were held at 2 p.m.,
Monday, January 9, at Hannay-Nemeth
Mortuary, with the Rev. James White
officiating. Burial was made in Fairmont cemetery in Tiffin.
Two students from Floyd county have
been named to the Dean's List for the
1983 fall semester at Eastern Kentucky
University.
Dr. John D. Rowlett, vice-president
for academic affairs, said the list, totaling 872 students, includes 203 who made
a perfect 4.0 academic standing.
To attain the list, a student must make
a scholastic average of 3.5 or better for
14 or more credit hours in a semester.
The students on the Dean's List, with
the names of those making a perfect 4.0
standing underlined, includes Brenda
Kay Music, junior, of Prestonsburg, and
Cheri A. Hinchman, Allen senior.
Sunday School . . . .
Morning Worship .
Evening Worship ..
Wednesday Worship .
SUNDAY
Sunday School ........ .. . 10 a .m.
Worship Service . .. , ..... 11 a.m.
Evening Service . .... .. . . . 6 p.m.
WEDNESDAY
Prayer Meeting ......... .7 p.m.
CLIFFORD H. AUSTIN, Pastor
CHURCH
Local Students On
EKU Dean's List
"The Church Where Exciting
Things Are Happening"
t.45 a.111.-CIIIIrch
School illld Billie Class
11 a.111.-llo!y Co11t1111nion
Sponsored by Rock of
Revelation Church
~~u"lock
Bible Cltu"ch
R.R.#5
Prestonsburg, Kentucky .tl65:l "'
Spurlock Fork of Middle Crel'k .
2+3t:E<i:
SER\'IC'ES
FITZPATRICK
FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH
WPst Prestonsburg, Ky.
Across From ('lark School
Sunday &hool . . . . . . .
IO:OU a.m.
c('lasses ror all ag~s 1
Sunday Morning Worship Senic~ . 11 :00 a. m.
Sunda)· Evening S.,n ice .
. ... i : 00 p.m .
Wedn<Sda) · Praver and Bible Stud)7 :00 p.m .
-
CATHOLIC CHURCHES
Of Floyd County
Welcome You
St. Theodore. Prestonsburg
7 p.m., Sat : 11 a .m. Sun .
St. Juliana, Martin
5 p.m. Sat ; 9 a .m . Sun.
RADIO PROGRAMS
A church with a message
for children of all ages.
Sunday Schooi
9:45 a.m .
Morning Worship
11 a .m .
(Nursery Provided l
Come and grow with us!
Sun.-WMDJ Martin
11 : 00 a.m .
Sun .-WDOC-FM Prestons burg 11 :00 a.m .
Wed.-WDOC Prestonsburg
1Q: 55 a .m.
Fri.-WRLV Salyersville
7·50 am .
Pastor: Father Ralph Reiting
WEYMAN McGUIRE. Pastor
:15!!-441!1
285-3254
!EVERYONE IS ALWAYS WEU'O..,E!
Sunday School.
10:00 a .m .
Morning Worship
11 a.m .
Sun . Evening Worship 6:00p.m.
<except when schOol is ou!l 7 :00 p.m.
Wed. Bible Study . . . . 7:00p.m .
Youth Church for ages 5-10
during Sunday Morning Worship
•NURSERY PROVIDED•
REV. JOHN WOODS, Pastor
PHII.IPP1A"'S 2:16
··HOLDING FORTH THE WORD OF
!.1Ft: .. :·
Dan Heintzelman-Pastor
Box 1150, Martin. Ky . .tl64!1
Parsonage Phone-2R.<;-:14.t4
"A Christ Cpntt>red Church
Built On Lovt>"
.. . Gt1\\i.ll I TO BE LikE:!THE" lt"/fiJ. .
~..~, 10
~~
Prestonsburg, Ky.
10:45 A.M.
·.
FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH
710 Bvrile Ave.,
SUNDAY SCHOOL
~"k
:if
.·
CHURCH
9:30A.M.
REV. TIMOTHY D. JESSEN
Pastor
CARD OF THANKS
The family of Walter Scott Collins
would like to express our warmest appreciation to everyone who helped in any
way in our time of need. We are grateful
to those who sent food and those who
helped serve it, those who sent flowers
and other gifts of love, Rev. Steve
Hopkins , our pastor, Gus Kalos ,
minister of music, Betty Kalos, pianist,
Alice Grey Buchannan, organist, First
Baptist Church (Irene Cole Memorial),
Floyd Funeral Home for its excellent
and thoughtful service, and most of all,
thank you all for being there.
Our love and appreciation,
Rose Marie and Family
METHODIST
WORSHIP SERVICE
886-1688
PALLBEARERS LISTED
FOR COLLINS RITES
Pallbearers for the funeral of Walter
Scott Collins were Woodrow Adams,
George C. Brown, Charles Butcher, Billy
Ray Collins, David Cooley, J. Orville
Cooley, Bill Darby, Ronald Frasure,
Woodrow Horn, Sherridan R . Martin,
Wilce Rose, Corbett Taylor and Kenneth
Verley.
"THE AREA'S OLDEST ESTABUSHED
MONUMENT RRM."
First Presbyterian Church
Albert J. Greene
Pastor, Clinton Jones
874-2273 • ALLEN, KY.
COMMUNITY
UNITED
To the
For more information
- - ---------.;-- - -
1r BUILDING STONE CO., Inc.
You Are Invited
UNITED
METHODIST
EVERYONE WELCOME
SANDY VALLEY
MONUMENT
Madison Patrick
Madison <Mack ) Patrick, 47, of Sa lt
Lick, died Monday at his residence
following an apparent heart attack.
A son of the late Allen and Pearlie Collins Patrick, he was born January 30,
1936 at Soft Shell, Kentucky. He was a
retired miner and was a member of the
U.M.W.A., District 30.
Survivors include his wife, Mrs.
Madelyn Shepherd Patrick; two daughters, Carolyn Osborn, and Kathy Ellen
Wood, both of Albion, Mich. ; a brother,
James A. Patrick, of South Milford,
Ind.; three sisters, Bessie Salyers, of
Hindman, Beatrice Conley, of Hudson,
Ind., and Versie Elliott, of Harold, and
two grandchildren.
Funeral services were conducted
Thursday at 11 a.m. at the Salt Lick
United Baptist Church at Hueysville
with United Baptist ministers officiating. Burial was made in the Oxspring
cemetery at Hueysville under direction
of the Justice Funeral Home.
I
ACTS 2:1-47
~Sl'DNSBURG.
S4~Af C/fiJ.
.
~C.t
CHURCH OF ·CHRIS.T
SOUTH LAKE DRIVE
LORD'S DAY
·a1...E CLASS ....................... 10:00 A.M.
WORSHIP ......................... 10:45 A.M.
EVENING WORSHIP:·.......•.... 6 P.M. STD. TIME
7 P.M. D.S.T. TIME
WEDNES,AY
BIBLE STUDY ...••. . . ·~ •...•..........•
7 P.M.
.
'
RADIO BROADCAST
WPRT MONDAY thru FRIDAY 9:30A.M.
WMDj SUNDAY 9 A.M.
"Come Let U$ Reason Together" Isaiah 1:18•
Evangelist Bennie Bla~kenshlp 886-3379, 886-6223.
MAYTOWN
UNITED
METHODIST
CHURCH
PROCLAIMING
NEW TESTAMENT
CHRISTIANITY
The growing church for
the growing Christian.
Morning Worship ...... 9:30a.m .
Sunday School ,
.11 :00 a .m.
Youth Group
.. 5:00p.m.
EveningWorship
6:30p.m .
rn
No Book but the Bible.
No Creed but Dlrist .
No Name but Christian .
FIRST CHRISTIAN CHURCH
•
42!1 No. Arnold A• t>.
Prestonsburg
Sunday School .
Morning Worship .
Evening Worship .
Wed . Bibl~ Study
Come and g ro w with us !
Weyman McGuire, Pastor
3511-4419
10 a.m .
11 a.m.
6p.m .
7 p .m .
Walt Staude. Preacht>r
'------------i-4-iit...
ilf .._____. ,._____
886-8773
•
10_
-28·t.f ..
FIRST ASSEMBLY OF GOD
Lorie Vannucci, Pastor
Phone 285-3051
Martin, Ky.
Sunday Scllool. .... ........ . 10 a.m.
Children 's Church
. . . .. 11 a.m.
Morning Worship ......... 11 a.m .
.6p.m.
Youth Worship
Evangelistic Service ... . . 7 p .m .
Wednesday, 7 p.m ... Family Night
LOOKING FOI'SOMETHING DIFFERENT?
Attend Services At The
FIRST CHURCH OF GOD
For Transportation call 285-3051 or 285-9114
(LiUle Paint) 1J2 mile off Route 1428
Between Prestonsburg & East Point, Where
uTJIE DIFFERENCE IS WORTH THE DISTANCE"
SUNDAY SCHOOL ..... . 10:00 a.m.
MORNING WORSHIP . .. 10:45 a.m.
YOUTH SERVICE . .. . ... 6:00p.m.
EVENING WORSHIP .... 6:30p.m.
BIBLE STUDY <WED. > . . 7:00p.m.
..
-······
<NURSERY PROVIDED)
CARTER FUNERAL HOME
RADIO BROADCAST
WQHY-FM 95.5
MON.-FRI., 8-8:15 A.M.
47 SOUTH LAKE DRIVE • PRESTONSBURG
Phone 886·277 4
ROY L. TINCHER, Pastor
Bible Study . . . 9:45 a.m.
Mornina Worship .. . . 11 a.m.
Evening Worship 5:30 p.m.
Mid-Week Prayer Semce7 p.m.
FIRST AVENUE, DOWNTOWN PRESTONSBURG
NURSERY PROVIDED AND PLENTY Of PARKING
REV. STEVE HOPKINS, PASTOR. MINISTER OF MUSIC, GUS KALOS.
Morning
broadcast
11 : 15. WQHY FM 95.5
s~rvlce
li\·t .
�•
Wednesday, February 1, 1984
The Floyd County Times
To Lead Health Seminars at PCC
Section Two, P . . . . . . .
CONSOLIDATED REPORT OF CONDITION
(Including Domestic Subsidiaries}
LEGAL TITLE OF BANK
THE FIRST COMMONWEALTH BANK OF PRESTONSBURG, INC.
Prestonsburg
Kentucky
ATE BANK NO.
NO.
2'721
4
41653
CLOSE OF BUSINESS DATE
December 30, 1983
ASSETS
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
•
Sundaram
Raju
The Health Seminar series sponsored by the Floyd County Medical Association and PCC begins Tuesday, February
7 at 7 p.m. in Pike Auditorium. This series has been designed by health care professionals to give the public a chance
to learn about various medical specialties and to ask questions in an informal way.
The first seminar deals with sports ~njury and medicine and should be of interest to coaches and parents of both Little
League and school related sports. Leaders for this seminar are, from left, Dr. Sundaram, coordinator of the series, Dr.
Raju, and Dr. Ikram.
.Dr. Konduru Ruju is an orthopedic surgeon educated both in India and the U.S. He is licensed to practice in Connecticut, New York, and Kentucky. Prior to his affiliation with Methodist Hospital, Pikeville, Dr. Raju was associated witt(
Coney Island Hospital in New York. Dr. lkram is a general surgeon educated in India and England. He is married, ha~
two children and lives in Paintsville. Dr. Sundaram's specialities are pulmonary and internal medicine. He did his internship at Stanford Hospital in Connecticut and his residency at St. Vincent's Medical Center of Richmond in New York.
With two active growing children, he is very interested in the care and prevention of sports related injury.
Miss Wee Wintertime
Kimberly Dawn Shepherd, two years
old, of Prestonsburg, won the title of Little Miss Wee Wintertime and Little Miss
Photogenic, Jan. 22, at Allen Central
High School. Kimberly is the daughter
. f James R. and Greta Shepherd. She is
the granddaughter of Mr. and Mrs·
Isaac Crum, of Inez, and the grand:
daughter of Mrs. Anna Mae Shepherd,
of Prestonsburg, and the late Rev. Nero
Shepherd.
THANKS SPONSORS
Miss Rhonda Lynn Cantrell, who was
named Miss Wintertime, January 22,
wishes to thank her sponsors, Branham
Mining, Ken Isaa~, and Mountain
etai, all of Prestonsburg.
1t-pd.
NOTICE
I ftnt to tiNMik tilt Mwti11 Fin Dtpllrt·
-nt, 11peclllly tilt Rddtr lloya. for ll't·
tlng wter to Old Poat Office St.
during tile ,.cent wter ... rvptvre.
,..w.nta
U YMOND GRIFFitH
Mayor of Mllrtlw
'' c ~ c s1ett'4
\)ft'o~. do:co.
• ALL TYPES FURNITURE
• TRUCKS, CARS, BOATS
• CHURCH PEWS, ETC.
Locared apptox. 2 mile• on Cow CrHir
•
Call u1 now, 814-9n6·
~~--------------------~--~-3~._.
.
.
Power Demand Hits Record High
_During Latest-Cold Snap Here
During the last cold snap, customers
of Kentucky Power Company demanded more electricity during a one-hour
period than at any other time in the company's history. And, the record demand
came within about 2.6 percent of exceeding the generating capacity of the
company's Big Sandy Plant near
Louisa.
The peak demand was 1,033,000 kilowatts during the hour ending at 10 a.m.
Friday, Jan. 20, according to Robert E.
Matthews, president. This exceeded the
company's
previous
record
demand- 984,000 kilowatts in February
1981-by 5 percent. "Ironically, our Big
Sandy Unit 2, rated at 800,000 kilowatts,
was down for maintenance and repairs
at the time and, therefore, Kentucky
Power Company was totally dependent
on the other AFP company plants to
meet its customers' needs for electricity. This was a good demonstration of the
need to maintain strong transmission
ties with the AEP system," Matthews
said.
It was the second time the company
exceeded its 1983-84 forecast winter peak
of 970,000 kilowatts. On December 30,
1983, it reached !n3,000. The most recent
peak actually surpassed the forecast for
1984·85, which was 1,020,000 kilowatts.
Matthews added that the peak load was
10.8 percent greater than last winter's
peak of 932 mw.
He attributed the Kentucky Power
record to two factors. One was the very
Check Credentials of Person
Claiming to Represent IRS
Persons posing as employees of the Internal Revenue Service occasionally attempt to harass taxpayers or collect
money for what the imposter claims are
unpaid taxes.
Taxpayers should request to see the
credentials of any individual claiming to
represent the IRS. Every IRS employee
who makes contact with the-public is required to carry distinctive identification
and must show this when conducting official business. Generally, taxpayers
who owe money to the IRS will receive
written notification before being contacted in person.
Taxpayers who doubt the validity of
the credentials offered or the identity of
telephone callers can verify the person's
employment by contacting the IRS' Internal Security Division, Office of
Regional Inspector, collect at (502)
582-5298.
WEIGHT
WATCHERS
The most successful weight loss program in the world.
Is Opening. a Class in
;
:
MAYTOWN, KENTUCKY
DATE: Tuesday, February 7-6:00 PM
LOCATION: Maytown Elementary School
FREE-OPEN MEETING
For those who choose to join-the cost is $20 the first
week, then $7 weekly thereafter.
No contracts to sign.
:
:.
"QUICK START"
Weight Watchers New
Quick Weight Loss Plan
:
Join Us Today For a "Quick Start"
To a Beautiful Finish
::
Ikram
~:
~ ...............................................
"MJOHT WATCHERS" ANO. ARE REGiSTERED TRAOE.,.4AKS OF WEIGHT WATCHERS
INTERNATIONAL. INC MANHASSET, NV ewt!IOHT WATCHERS INTERNATIONAL. 1M4
cold temperatures which put the company's 20-county service area in eastern
Kentucky into a deep freeze. The other
was a general improvement in the
economy, with manufacturing and other
industries generally up.
''However, the record becomes even
more significant when one considers
that coal mining in the company's service area still has not seen a recovery.
The mining industry tends to lag the
general economy by many months and
many mining firms are still operating at
reduced capacity or are temporarily
shut down," Matthews added.
"It is obvious we need more generating capacity now, and that is the
reason we have been working to obtain
15% of the Rockport Plant," Matthews
said. Kentucky Power has made application for part ownership of the plant
under construction in Indiana.
He explained that Rockport unit 1 is
scheduled to go into operation later this
year, and the plant represents the best
option for Kentucky Power customers to
obtain needed additional generating
capacity.
Cash and due from depository Institutions
U.S. Treasury securities .
. . . .
Obligations of other U.S. Government agencies and corporations .
Obligations of States and political subdivisions in the United States
All other securities
. .
Federal funds sold and securities purchased under agreements to resell
a. loans, Total (excluding unearned income)
b. less: allowance for possible loan losses
c. loans, Net .
6. Lease financing receivables .
9. Bank premises, furniture and fixtures, and other assets representing bank premises
10. Real estate owned other than bank premises
11. a. Intangible assets
11. b. All other assets
12. TOTAL ASSETS (sum of items 1 thru 11)
LIABILITIES
13. Demand deposits of individuals, partnerships, and corporations
14. Time and savings deposits of Individuals, partnerships, and corporations)
15. Deposits of United States Government .
16. Deposits of States and political subdivisions in the United States
17. All other deposits .
16. Certified and officers' checks
19. Total Deposits {sum of Items 13 thru 18)
a. Total demand deposits •
b. Total time and savings deposits
20. Federal funds purchased and securities sold under agreements to repurchase
21. Interest-bearing demand notes {note balances) issued to the U.S Treasury and
other liabilities for borrowed money
22. Mortgage Indebtedness and liability for capitalized leases
23. All other liabilities .
24. TOTAL LIABILITIES (excluding subordinated notes and debentures) (sum of items 19 thru 23)
25. Subordinated notes and debentures
CAPITAL
26. Preferred stock
a. No. shares outstanding
NONE
27. Common Stock
a. No. shares authorized . 1 ;~: ~~~
b. No. shares outstanding
_____ _
28. Surplus .
29. Undivided profits and reserve for contingencies and other capital reserves
30. TOTAL EQUITY CAPITAL (sum of items 26 thru 29) .
31. TOTAL LIABILITIES AND EQUITY CAP..:..IT;..c.A..:L:....:.::..::..:..;...:o..:,_f;..c.ite:.:.m.:.;,;s:...2::.4;,;..,..:2.::..5.::a,;_nd:;..,..;..c.:__ _.;___..;__....:........:...._;__;__..:.
MEMORANDA
1. Amounts outstanding as of report date
a. Standby letters of credit, total
b. Time certificates of deposit In denominations of $100,000 or more
c. Other time deposits in amounts of $100,000 or more .
2. Average for 30 calendar days {or calendar month) ending with report date
to item 19 above)
a. Total
I
January 25, 1984
o..
Sam Blankenship
.
.
.
.
.
V~ce Pres~dent-Ch~ef F~nanc~al Off~cer
S~~IRECTOR
(MAltE MA.H FOR
NOTARY'S SEAL)
We, the undorsigned directors, attest the correctness of this Report of
Condition (Including the supporting schedules) and declare that it has
been examined by us and to the best of our knowledge end belief has been
re ared In conformance with the instructions and Is true and correct.
SIGNATURE OF 1T~
SIGNATURE OF DIRECTOR
f.l.,. . . . . . . . ........... . . . . .,
State of ............1\'~nt.ua
.............................................. ,...,County of .....
u:
Swom to and mb:sc ed b~/ore me this .........,?..f..?.'&, ... ............
·~···"·
19.. L'i...
and I hueby certify thatl om lint 1111 oftiur or dirutor of this bank. ~ /. /
My commission expires ......................... ./2./.~..f.~.:........ , 19 ././,... .... " / ........ _ (.,.. ~~Notary Public.
zay .........
FOR .SALE
RATLIFF ·& LENOX REAL ESTATE
WE HAVE HOME8-BOTH BRICK AND FRAME-THAT WILL.
QUALIFY FOR THE NEW FLOYD-JOHNSON COUNTY BOND
MONEY. WE ALSO HAVE U)'J'S-...:WOODED, SECLUDED AND
CLOSE TO TOWN-AND WE WILL HELP YOU WITH
PRELIMINARY PLANNING. CALL FOF FURTHER INFORMATION.
Almost new brick ranch with carport on a country size lot close to four .
Jane 80. There is a large living room with picture winctow. kitchenfamily area with utility room. three bedrooms, one and one half baths.
low gas rates and city water is available. This home has been well cared
for and FWYD COUN~Y BOND MONEY financing is available.
Two story home in Martin on big creekbank lot--room for garden. Li~
ing room with fireplace, dining room, den, eat-in kitchen, utility room,
three bedrooms, 2'/z baths. Partial basement. Forced air furnace, concrete bl~k double.garage. downtown location. Great family home.
Three-bedroom older home at an affordable price in Paintsville. Livmg
room, family room, kitchen dining combined, newer roof, new furnace
last year. Three-room apartment in back. Priced t~ sell at $45,000.
Small frame three-bedroom starter or retirement home in a real country setting. Present owners have given this four year old home excellent
care. thermopane windows. iully insulated. back patio. Possible
Farmers Homt' Administration financing. Priced under $40,000.00.
Buffalo Creek acreage~approximately one acre ot bottom land Is included in this twelve-acre tract near Pike Co. line. Located on blacktop road
and priced to s_ell.
2:
Modified A-frame with wrap-around deck: lots of windows and light.
beautiful stone fireplaces, one is two-story height. Foyer. living-diningkitchen <great room) area, three bedrooms, plus lower level rec room
and unfinished basement <utility, storage, workshop area). Central
heat and air. Good buy with Floyd County Bond money financinn
·available. Adjoining lot could be added. Owner financing also possible.
Close to Pr~mnsburg we have a 14 x 70 \\'mdsor mobile on a veryprivate lot with garden area and plenty of parking. Living room with
skylights, wood-burning stove. dining room with built-in buffet, equipped kitchen with appliances: also. washer-dryer to stay. Two bedrooms
and an extra unfinished add~n. carport and a storage building make
.
.this a very ·good buy at szo;ooo.
Charming three-bedroom, two-story home with front porch, two bath~.
kitchen with appliances and a fireplace in the living room. Remodeled,
with new carpeting and wallpaper, washer and dryer and window airconditioner to stay. Outside storage building with utilities.
Prestonsburg city water and gas. Located just below Sugarloaf on a
tree-shaded lot.
·
.
Commercial Prestonsburg lot contaiaaing approximately one leVf'l acn
at lntersedien of Porter and University Drive. Adjoining Highland
Plaza Shopping Center. ExceDent location in a growing and busy area.
Owner transferred. Bruncy-built ranch homt' on Abbott Creek with
oversize lot and special decorating. Entry foyer, long living-dining
room with sliders to patio and above-ground pool, equipped kitchen with
GE appliances. an abundance of cabinets and counter space and an eatin area. Family room panelled. with woodburning fireplace. thrt>e
bedrooms. two full baths. and an attached two-car garagt'. Storage
building to stay. Lovely area of well-kept homt>s. Old R 7/R% bond
money assumable loan available.
High, dry building ground within walking distance to hoapi~l. C..at 1M
two home sites or profestJional or business .office. ttZ' fr.t lll51' deep.
City water available.
We again have Kentucky Housing money available for new homes in
Jenkins. Old-time interest rates for a fe•v lucky buyers. Call for details:
Rarely available-wooded, secluded lots wKJa acreage; al10 lo&a wiU...
acreage. May Branch, Preston11burg locatioll.
New brick home readv for occupancy in a lovely area just outsidt>
Prestonsburg. Front p~rch. living room with picture window and fireplace wall. dining room, eat-in kitchen with GE appliances, sliders to
patio, master bedroom suite, two other bedrooms, two ceramic tile
baths, utility area and two-car garage. Central heat and air, fully Insulated for energy efficiency. The fireplace has blowers and the roof is
pitched steep with pull-down stairway for extra overhead storage. City
water." cable TV. Value priced. Floyd County Bond Money or let us help
with financing.
One of the largest and most beautifully built and decorated homes it has
been our pleasure to offer this year. Built of white stone !brick> from.
North Carolina. with privac.v (tO acres>. ,Vt't within three miles of
'Prestonsburg. Approximately :1200-sq. ft. of living space, plus oversizt>
garagt> of 750-sq. ft. and 100' patio in rear givt' great spread-out room for
family or parties. Space for pool if desirt'd. Old bond R 7/R% partial
:assumable mortgage available. Shown by appointment.
Un oaniels Creek we have a modular on 260 front feet, wedge shaped to
the top of the hill. Extra insulation and double-pane windows and a fireplace in the family room make this three-bedroom. two-bath home with
.beamed cathedral ceiling in living and dining room a real energy saver.
Special General Electric kitchen with side-by-side refrigerator, selfclean range, pot scrubber dishwasher, compactor and disposal, is open
to panelled family room. Central heat and air. deck area. utility
building to stay.
-
Two lots on May's Branch in VUiage Estates. City utilities; 'OW' con&raetor, your plans.
REDUCED
Brick home-three bedrooms, two baths, tull basement. l';qllipped .-~
chen. nice carpeting. Deck with bunt·in seating, central heat ..........
Two-ear garage. Professionally landscaped lot is tet'xztO'. Terrific
space for the money.
A-frame for rent or lease purchase: Call for details. Small home in private
location to rent in Prestonsburg. Newly remodeled twO-bedroom home
for rent in Martin.
we will help you sell what yoll have to sell-and try to find wliat y•
want to buy. Appra~ aDd counseling. You may be aelling too low ...
buying too high.
OFFICl PINIIE: -..ua
W•l11ritt Yet~ To CaH Us.
Office IMn: t a.•.-3:30 II·•· er ly A,_t_ftt
I"'IYWS IATUFF LEJIDI, leal t:state lrlker
...... ......,afttr711·•·
NAYIIE W. ltAnJFF, Jl., S..._a, P..ae: H-• 174-2720 aftw 6
JOYCE LYIIt UCKIQIIN, Seles ..,.seatatlve, Day 1-471-1450
ALTA JEAN GilSON, Sales I.,.....Utltt, Phlne ZIS-3717
VIICil 0. TUnER, s•s l.,....t.tlwe, PlleM ~..J317 aftw 4 p.a
GUS KALOS. Sllesl.,.....tatlve, ,._., 1·7-1707 aftw 6
UNDA LENOX, Sales • .,,.ltlltative, PlleM
JEWEL REED, Sales ltiM'tstllbtiwt, Pltolle 217-1424
CAROL llcCAm, Sales R.,.....UtiYe, PIIIM 217-3181.
P.•·
-..n
�r·-----------------------------------------Central KentuCky Blood Center
PRESTONSBURG STATION
r
tJ
•
(Mun.'efpoJ Bldg )
Lake
Dr11Jfl/ ~.ronsburg,
•
Kentucky 41653
DONATE BLOOD.
It only hurts '
when vou don't.
Commonwealth of. Kentucky
AUDITOR OF' PUBLIC ACCOUNTS
Frankfort, Kentucky 40601
Dr. James B. Graham
Auditor
Room 168, Capitol Annex
502-564-4Z!J6
Wednesday, February 1, 1984
IN APPRECIATION
The family of Jemima A. Shumate
would like to thank all of those who were
so kind and considerate during our time
of grief. Thanks to all who sent food,
flowers, prayers, and words of comfort
during this time of sorrow. Thanks to the
minister, John Adams, and the Eastern
Star for a beautiful service, and to the
Hall Funeral Home for being so kind. All
your kindnesses were greatly
appreciated.
July 25, 1983
To the People of Kentucky
Honorable John Y. Brown, Jr., Governor
Honorable Jotm M. Stumbo, County Judge-Executive
Members of the Floyd County Fiscal Court
.
-
We have examined the Statement of Receipts, Disbursements and Excess
Fees of the County Clerk of Floyd County for the year ended December 31,
1982, and the period January 1, 1983 through February 22, 1983. Our examination was made in accordance with the "Standards for Audit of Governmental
Organizations, Programs, Activities and Functions", issued by the Com!'
troller General of the United States, and accordingly, included such tests of
the accounting records and such other auditing procedures as we considered
necessary in the circwnstances.
As recommended by the State Local Finance Officer, pursuant to KRS
68.210, the accompanying financial statements are prepared primarily on a
cash basis. Consequently, certain revenues and the related assets are
recognized when received rather than when earned, and certain expenses
are recognized when paid rather than when a liability is incurred. Accordingly, the accompanying financial statements are not intended to present financial position and results of operations in confonnity with generally
accepted accounting principles.
We are unable to express an overall opinion on the receipts, disbursements
and excess fees of the office of the County Clerk because of lack of compliance with KRS 68.210 which establishes minimum accouhting requirements and internal control for all counties and county officials. We
have included in our report computations of excess fees for the year ended
December 31, 1982, and the period January 1, 1983 through February 22, 1983,
based on the available accounting records and computed in accordance with
the applicable laws and regulations. In our opinion, the excess fees reported
herein reflect a minimum amount due the county.
We did not conduct a study and evaluation of internal accounting control
as we concluded that the audit could be performed more efficiently by expanding substantive audit tests. Therefore, we placed very little reliance on
the internal accounting control system.
We also conducted tests of compliance with state laws and regulations,
and unless otherwise noted below, the tested items were in compliance with
applicable state laws and regulations. During our examination, nothing
came to our attention to cause us to believe that the untested items were not
in compliance.
Area of noncompliance are as follows:
EXCESS FEES:
The accompanying Computations of Excess Fees reflect that the
County Clerk owed excess fees to the county in the amounts of $7,057 for
calendar year 1982 and $4,351 for the period January 1, 1983 through
February 22, 1983.
DEFICIT IN ACCOUNTS:
Based on the available records, there was a deficit of $510,671 in the
County Clerk's official accounts as of April30, 1983.
DELINQUENT TAX DISTRIBUTION:
The County Clerk's office failed to properly distribute delinquent tax
collections during the audit period. There was no remittance of taxes due the
Health, Ubrary, Extension and Fire Protection Districts. The County Clerk
also did not pay the Floyd County Sheriff for the Sheriff's fees collected on
delinquent taxes, nor the County Treasurer for advertising costs collected.
The totals due from these collections and other inaccurate distributions for
the period January 1, 1982 through February 22, 1983 are: State- $457; County- $665; School- $388; County Attorney- $418; Sheriff- $1,277; Extension
District - $286; Health Department - $619; Ubrary Board - $395; Fire Protection- $94; A Total of- $4,599.
DEED TRANSFER TAX:
The County Clerk's office did not pay deed transfer tax totaling $1,806
for the audit period. This amount is comprised of $164 from calendar year
1982 and $1,642 from February 1983.
DUE COUNTY FROM PRIOR YEARS:
We call the fiscal court's attention to the fact that previous excess fee
audits of the County Clerk's office have indicated amounts due the county.
These reports are detailed below:
1976 - Auditor of Public Accounts - $30,812; 1977 - Burchett and Bottoms, CPAs- $11,046; 1978- Burchett and Bottoms, CPAs- $15,773; 1979- Burchett and Bottoms, CPAs - $124; 1980 - Burchett and Bottoms, CPAs (Overpayment) - ($6,708); 1981 -Burchett and Bottoms, CPAs- $0; A Total of$51,047.
According to OAG 80-579, the fiscal court no longer has a claim on the
excess fees due for calendar years 1976 and 1977 due to the five-year statute
of limitations.
The fiscal cowt should also be aware that the calendar year 19~11
report issued by Burchett and Bottoms, CPAs, indicates that in addition to
the excess fees owed, the County Clerk also owed the following to the county
or county agencies for calendar year 1977 through 1981:
Occupational Ucense Tax- $7,330; Deed Transfer Tax- $32,974; County Delinquent Taxes- $5,266; School Delinquent Taxes- $14,984; County Attorney Delinquent Taxes- $6,082.
We recommend the fiscal court direct the County Attorney to take any
necessary action to collect the remaining excess fees, i.e., calendar years
1978 through 1981, the taxes detailed in our previous comments and above,
plus the excess fees of $7,057 for calendar year 1982 and $4,351 for the period
January 1, 1983 through February 22, 1983 as shown in this report. We note
that the excess.fees in this report are dependent on the fiscal court's acceJ'
tance of the additional deputies salaries discussed under "Disallowed
Disbursements".
F AlLURE TO ISSUE RECEIPI'S:
The County Clerk failed to issue receipts as required by KRS 64.840.
PUBUCATION OF FINANCIAL STATEMENT:
The County Clerk failed to publish an annual financial statement for
calendar year 1982, resulting in a violation of KRS 424.220.
DIS.AU.OWED DISBURSEMENTS:
The Floyd County Times
-* CAJVCER HOPELINE *
This questions and answer column is
provided as a public service by the
McDowell Cancer Network. Questions
are answered by appropriate specialists
associated with the Network and represent some of the inquiries made by
callers who use our Hopeline.
The Cancer Hopeline is a toll free consultative telephone service avail3ble to
Conunonwealth of Kentucky
AUDITOR OF PUBLIC ACCOUNTS
Frankfort, Kentucky 40601
Dr. James B. Graham
Auditor
Section Two, Pase Ten
Room 168, Capitol Annex
502-564-4Z1S
August 8, 1983
To the People of Kentucky
Honorable Jolm Y. Brown, Jr., Governor
Honorable Jolm M. Stumbo, County Judge-Executive
Members of the Floyd County Fiscal Court
We have examined the Statement of Receipts, Disbursements and Excess
Fees of the Sheriff of Floyd County for the year ended December 31, 1982,
and the Jailer for the period January 1, 1982 through June 30, 1982. Our examination was made in accordance with the ''Standards for Audit of Governmental Organizations, Programs, Activities and Functions", issued by the
Comptroller General of the United States, and accordingly, included such
tests of the accounting records and such other auditing procedures as we
considered necessary in the circwnstances.
As recommended by the State Local Finance Officer, pursuant to KRS
68.210, the accompanying financial statements are prepared primarily on a
cash basis. Consequently, certain revenues and the related assets are
recognized when received rather than when earned, and certain expenses
are recognized when paid rather than when a liability is incurred. Accordingly, the accompanying financial statements are not intended to present financial position and results of operations in confonnity with generally
accepted accounting principles.
In our opinion, the accompanying financial statements present fairly the
receipts, disbursements and excess fees of the Sheriff for the year ended
December 31, 1982, and the Jailer for the period January 1, 1982 through June
30, 1982, in confonnity with the accounting system described above applied
on a basis consistent with that of the preceding year.
We did not conduct a study and evaluation of internal accounting control
as we concluded that the audit could be performed more efficiently by expanding substantive audit tests. Therefore, we placed very little reliance on
the internal accounting control system.
We also conducted tests of compliance with state laws and regulations,
and unless otherwise noted below, the tested items were in compliance with
applicable state laws and regulations. During our examination, nothing
came to our attention to cause us to believe that the untested items were not
in compliance.
Comments and areas of noncompliance are as follows:
EXCESS FEES DUE COUNTY:
The accompanying statements reflect that the Sheriff and Jailer owed
excess fees to the county in the amounts of $6,091 and $222 respectively at the
completion of this audit.
SHERIFF:
Deficit in Accounts: Based on the available records, there was a
deficit of $5,199 in the Sheriff's official accounts on December 31, 1982. He
had a cash balance of $892 in the bank, but owed the county excess fees of
$6,091.
Publication of Financial Statement: The Sheriff failed to publish an
annual financial statement as required by KRS 424.220. We recommend this
statement be published annually begimling with calendar year 1983.
Overpayment of Statutory Maximum Salary: During the year, the
Sheriff was paid $2,281 in excess of the statutory maximlllll salary of $28,387.
This overpayment occurred in September when the Sheriff was paid his
gross salary in advance for the months of October through December 1982.
The payroll taxes relating to this gross salary were subsequently paid from
the fee account without the account being reimbursed by the Sheriff. We
have explained this error to the Sheriff's Chief Clerk and the reimbursement
will be made.
Disallowed Disbursements: The Sheriff's disbursements included
some payments which were not allowed on the Statement of Receipts,
Disbursements and Excess Fees. We have deducted these payments from
the disbursements total as shown on page 6 of this report. We have included
notes A through D explaining why, in our opinion, these payments should not
refer the fiscal court to page 7 of our report.
be allowed.
We disallowed $645 paid to employees of the Sheriff's office in excess
of the amounts authorized by the fiscal court. These disallowed
disbursements are discussed in Note A. The fiscal court may at its discretion
agree to accept any or all of the $645 excess deputies salaries. It is our
understanding that the Sheriff's office considered the additional salary
necessary as compensation for overtime worked by the two individuals involved.
We also disallowed $1,800 of lumJ'Sum auto expenses as explained in
Note B. We have recommended the Sheriff obtain documentation of the
lumJ'sum auto expenses and this is currently being done. Should proper
documentation be obtained, the fiscal court may allow the amount
documented as credit against excess fees.
As explained in Note C, we have disallowed $48 paid to the Internal
Revenue Service as late payment penalties. We also disallowed $299 of
disbursements which we considered predominately personal in nature. Our
reason for disallowing these disbursements is discussed in more detail in
NoteD.
Recommend Fee Account Reimbursement: In addition to the $2,281
salary overpayment discussed on a previous page, we recommend the
Sheriff reimburse his fee account for the $48 IRS penalty and the $299 of personal expenses. We further recommend that the Sheriff reimburse his fee account for the lumJ'Sum auto expense which he cannot document to the
satisfaction of the fiscal court and all excess deputy salaries the fischl court
does not agree to accept.
We also recommend the Sheriff deposit to his fee account $125 he
received as a county election commisSioner. The Sheriff failed to deposit this
fee to his fee account upon its receipt.
we
The County Clerk's disbursements included several payments which
were not allowed on the Computation of Excess Fees. We have deducted
these payments from the disbursements totals as shown on pages 7 and 10 of
this report. We have also included notes explaining why, in our opinion, these
payments should not be allowed. We refer the fiscal court to pages 8 and 11 of
our report.
We note that the payment of personal expenses during 1982 detailed in
Note Bon page 8 constitutes a violation of KRS 64.850.
The fiscal court may at its descretion agree to accept any or all of the
amounts shown as "Deputies Salaries and Extra Labor in excess of Fiscal
Court Order". Any amount accepted by the fiscal court would serve to
decrease the amount of excess fees due for the particular audit period.
INADEQUATE RECORDS:
Although we did not conduct a study and evaluation of internal accounting control, the following matters came to our attention during the course of
our examination:
(1) The County Clerk failed to maintain either a cash receipts or cash
·
disbursements ledger.
.
(2) Daily receipts were not deposited promptly nor intact.
(3) Undeposited receipts were often held overnight or longer in a file
cabinet in the County Clerk's office.
(4) There were no l.Jank reconciliations.
( 5) Supporting documentation was not maintained for
disbursements.
Publication of Financial Statements: The Jailer failed to publish an
annual financial statement as required by KRS 424.220.
Disallowed Disbursements: As shown on page 8 and explained in Note
A on page 9 of this report, the Jailer paid Deputies Salaries of $2,080 and
Cook's Salary of $26 in excess of the amount allowed by the fiscal court. We
have disallowed these disbursements on the Jailler's Statement of Receipts,
Disbursements and Excess Fees. The fiscal court may, at its discretion,
agree to accept any or all of this overpaymert, and thus reduce the amount
of the Jailer's excess fees by a corresponding amount.
PIDOR YEAR EXCESS FEES:
On May 5, 1982, this office issued an audit report showing Ex-sheriff,
Douglas Lewis, owing excess fees of $20,843 to the county for the period
January 1, 1981 through August 31, 1981. This has not been paid to the county
at the date of this audit.
Respectfully submitted,
Respectfully submitted,
James B. Graham
Auditor of Public Accounts
James B. Graham
Auditor of Public Accounts
The above transmittal letter accompanied the audit report presented to
Fisccl Court and is published pursuant to KRS 43.090(2).
Copies of the complete audit report are available upon request by contacting the Auditor of Public Accounts, Room 168, Capitol Annex, Frankfort,
Kentucky 40601.
The above transmittal letter accompanied the audit report presented to
Fiscal Court and is published pursuant to KRS 43.090(2) .1
Copies of the complete audit report are available upon request by contacting the Auditor of Public Accounts, Room 168, Capitol Annex, Frankfort,
Kentucky 40601.
Contract' Labor: 1bere were some payments made as contact labor to
employees in 1982, all of which have been allowed; however, in our opinion,
these employees do not meet the criteria necessary to qualify as independent
contractors. 1bey are employees who are under the direct supervision of the
Sheriff with established working hours, and who may be discharged at any
time without any further financial responsibility. In order to avoid future
liabilities for payroll taxes, we reconunend strict adherence to state and
federal regulations regarding payroll tax withholdings.
JAILER:
•
NOTICE OF
BLASTI!'4G SCHF.DCL~
,
any Kentuckian who has a cancerrelated problem. Qualified counselors
take calls Monday-Friday from 9-5 and
return recorded messages the next
working day. They do not diagnose
cancer, recommend treatment for individual cases, nor dispense money.
Counselors do provide consultations with
specialisJs as well as support and
understanding. Because of its designation by the National Cancer Institute as
Kentucky's Cancer Information Service,
the Hopeline has rapid access to the
latest cancer information. All matters
are treated confidentially. Call the
Cancer Hopeline toll free at
1-800-4-CANCER, or write us at
McDowell Cancer Network, 915 South
Limestone Street, Lexington, Ky .
40536-0084'
Q. I'm 61 and female. My health is excellent and I'm looking forward to
retirement. However, I know because I
am getting older that cancer is a greater
possibility for me every day. I see my
doctor regularly. Is there any general
cancer information particularly for my
age group?
A. You are correct that your chances
of getting cancer increase with age; at
50, the incidence begins to rise significantly.
The National Cancer lr1stitute, with
which the Cancer Hopeline, Kentucky's
Cancer Information Service, is affiliated, has just published a new
brochure entitled "Cancer Facts for
People Over 50." It is free.
This brief document is written in question and answer form and deals with
such subjects as the symptoms for common cancer, what to do if you have a
symptom, the regular medical tests that
people over 50 should have, and what to
do if you learn that you do have cancer.
It also points out the progress that is being made in cancer care.
The Cancer Hopeline is a toll free consultative telephone service available to
any Kentuckian ·who has a cancerrelated problem. Qualified counselors
take calls Monday-Friday from 9-5 and
return recorded messages the next
working day. They do not diagnose
cancer, recommend treatment for individual cases, nor dispense money.
Counselors do provide consultations with
specialists as well as support and understanding. Because of its designation by
the National Cancer Institute as Kentucky's Cancer Information Service, the
Hopeline has rapid access to the latest
cancer information. All matters are
treated confidentially. Call the Cancer
Hopeline toll free at 1-SOO+CANCER, or
write us at McDowell Cancer Network,
915 South Limestone Street, Lexington,
Ky. 40536-0084.
Q. My little girl died of cancer this
summer. I was all right for a while, but
now that my other child is back in
school, and I'm back at work, the grief
is worse than ever. My husband is very
upset, too. 1s all this normal? Can .YOU
help?
A. Getting back into a routine after the
death of a child may seem impossible at
first and then even disloyal to the one
who died. Perhaps the following, excerpted from Darcie Sims, the San Antonio,
TX, newsletter of The Compassionate
Friends, a support group for bereaved
parents, will help:
"Why does it hurt so much? Why is
this grief so incapacitating? If only the
hurt weren't so crushing. Nothing can
touch the pain of burying a child.
"There are no magic formulas for surviving grief. .. We know ... the emptiness
will never go away. It will become
tolerable and liveable some day.
"Time is the longest word in our grief.
We used to measure time by the steps
of our child, the first word, the first
tooth, first date, first car. Now we don't
have to measure anymore. All we have
is time, and it only seems to make the
hurt worse.
"So what do we do? We must give
ourselves time to hurt, to grieve, to cry,
to remember.
"Be nice to yourself! Don't measure
your progress through grief against
anyone else. Be your own timekeeper.
"Don't push. Eventually, you will find
the hours and days of grief have turned
to minutes and then moments, but don't
expect them to go away. We will always
hurt. You don't get over grief. It only
becomes tolerable and liveable.
"Change your focus a bit. Instead of
dwelling on how much you lost, try
thinking of how much you had. Try letting the good memories come over you
as easily as the awful ones do. We didn't
lose our child, he died. We didn't lose the
love that flowed between us. It still
flows, just differently now.
"Does it help to know that if we didn't
love so much, it would not hurt so badly? Grief is the price we pay for love.
And as much as it hurts, I'm very, very
glad I loved!
"Don't death cause ugly shadows, but
rather warm memories of the loving
times you shared. Even though death
comes, love never goes away."
There are four active chapters of
Compassionate Friends in Kentucky.
Members will help other bereaved
parents around the state by listening on
the phone and by writing letters.
Contact Compassionate Friends at 711
Albany Road, Lexington 40503 or 5405
Wending Court, Louisville 40207 or 85
Woodford Avenue, c/ o John & Martine
Bristow, Owensboro 42301 or Jan Mohr,
130 Stiles Road, Route4, Box 331,
Paducah 42001.
If you would like to have some general
information about cancer, call the
Cancer Hopeline at 1-800-4-CANCER
weekdays from 9-5. Ask for your free
copy of "Cancer Facts for People Over
50," "Cancer: Every Body's Enemy,"
or "Cancer: What to Know What to do
About It." You may also write us at 915
South Limestone Street, Lexington, Ky.
40536-0084'
j)
Triple Elkhorn Mining Company, P.O.
Box 140, Ivel, Ky. 41642, shall conduct
blasting operations on its 74 acre surface
mining permit, application number
436-Q105. Said operation is located approximately 1.0 mile south of Stat.
Route 80 junction with Rt. No. 1428.
Latitude is 37° 35' 57". Longitude is 82'
43' 02". The surface of the area to be
mined is owned by E .l. Dupont De
Nemours and Company, Herman and
Berniece Porter, James E. Barnett, and
Palmer Crisp.
Blasting hours will be daily Monday
through Saturday from 11 :OOa.m. to 1:00
p.m., and 4:00p.m. to 6:00p.m. Any major change in the hours will be publish
ed in the local newspaper. No blastin
will be done before sunrise or after
sunset unless an emergency exists.
Unscheduled blasting may occur in
emergency situations where lightening,
rain, other atmospheric condition or the
safety of the operator or public requires
unscheduled detonation. Control of the
blasting area will be maintained by
blocking access roads to the blasting
area ten (10) minutes prior to the blast.
Post detonation access to the blastin
will be allowed only after an inspection
and determination that no hazards exist.
Warning devices will be air blast
horns and/ or sirens audible over a
distance of one half mile. Three !ong
blasts of the air horn/siren will be used
as a preliminary warning. After personnel have been cleared from the area and
just prior to detonation of explosives,
one additional long blast will be sounded. Personnel are to remain in "clear'
areas until areas are checked for fir
or burning holes. After a satisfactory
check, an all clear signal will be given
by soundir.g a series of short blasts on
the air horn/siren.
'-The preceeding notice is published
pursuant'to CfR 715.19, Surface Mining
Reclamation ailll Enforcement Provisions and KRS 350.220 and the regulations relating thereto. Kentucky Permit
Number 436-Q105.
1t
ADVERTISEMENT FOR BID
Sealed bids will be received by the
Prestonsburg City's Utilities Commission, Prestonsburg, Kentucky, on a 12
Ton capacity Trailer, at the City's
Utilities Commission office, 1048. South
Lake Drive, Prestonsburg, Kentucky,
until 7:30 p.m., February 9, 1984, at
which time bid..; will be publicly opened
and read aloud, for furnishing labor and
materials and performing all work se
forth by this advertisement for bids.
Specifications can be obtained from the
office of the City's utilities Commission,
1048 South Lake Drive, Prestonsburg,
Kentucky.
Bids received after the scheduled closing time for reception of bids will be
returned unopened to the bidder. Bids
must be accompanied by bid bonds, payable to the City's Utilities Commission
in an amount not less than 5% of the base
bid.
In event an award is made and the
successful bidder fails to execute contract for performance of the work under
the award, then the bid bond shall be
forfeited as liquidated damag~or such
failure.
Bids and bid bonds shall be in a sealed envelope bearing the bidder's identification, addressed to the Prestonsburg
City's Utilities Commission, 1048 South
Lake Drive, Prestonsburg, Kentucky
41653, labeled in the lower left-han
corner:
" Proposal No. 1: 12 Ton Capacity
Trailer."
The Prestonsburg City's Utilities
Commission reserves the right to reject
any or all bids, which bids shall not be
withdrawn for 45 days subsequent to the
opening of bids, without consent of the
Prestonsburg City's Utilities Commission.
BILL H. HOWARD, Superintendent
Prestonsburg City's
Utilities Commission
2-1-2t.
NOTICE OF
INTENTION TO MINE
Pursuant to Application
Number 836-5032
1) In accordance with the provisions
of KRS 350.055, notice is hereby given
that Blackhawk Mining Company, Inc,
P.O. Box 150, Prestonsburg, Ky. 4165,
has filed an application for a permit for
an underground mining operation. The
proposed operation will affect a surface
disturbance of 3 acres and will underlie
an additional 90 acres located 1 mile
northeast of Drift in Floyd county.
2) The proposed operation is approximately 1 mile east from State Route
122's junction with Stonecoal Branch
Road and located on the north side of
Stonecoal Branch. The latitude ·
37•-30'-41" . The longitude is 82'-44'-15".
3) The proposed operation is located
on the McDowell U.S.G.S. 7.5 minute
quadrangle map. The surface area to be
disturbed is owned by Harry and Reba
Martin. The operation will underlie land
owned by Harry and Reba Martin.
4) The application has been filed for
public inspection at the Department for
Surface Mining Reclamation and Enforcement's Prestonsburg Regional Office, South Lake Drive, Prestonsburg.
Kentucky 41653. Written comments o•
jections, or requests for a permit ~on
ference must be filed with the Director
of the Division of Permits, 6th Floor,
Capital Plaza Tower, Frankfort, Kentucky 40601.
2-1-3t.
PUBLIC NOTICE
The city of Wheelwright, by passing of
city ordinance number 120.5, has chan ed the regular monthly meeting day a
time, to the third Thursday of each
month, at 7:30p.m.
lt.
�Wednesday, February 1, 1984
The Floyd County Times
Observe Golden Wedding
•
•
Mr. and Mrs. Edd Allen, former Floyd countians who make their home at
Franklin Furnace, Ohio, celebrated their golden Wedding anniversary on Sunday Nov. 20.
The Aliens exchanged nuptial vows Nov. 20, 1933 at Ligon, Ky., with the Rev.
Hirman Adkins officiating. Mrs. Allen is the former Mallie Henson. Now
retired, Mr. Allen was associated with Goodyear Atomic Corp., Waverly, Ohio.
Mrs. Allen is a former employee of Fountainhead Nursing Home of Franklin
Furnace. They are parents of three daughters, Mrs. Wanda Hall, of Elyria,
Ohio, Mrs. Bonnie Shearer, of Franklin Furnace, and Mrs. Judy Tolbert, of
Wheelersburg, Ohio. They have nine grandchildren.
As a celebration for the golden anniversary, the children and grandchildren
hosted a reception at Ohio Furnace Baptist Church fellowship hall. They were
greeted by many friends and relatives and received many beautiful gifts.
Those attending from out of town were Mrs. Maudie Edmonds, Mr. and Mrs.
Russell Meiers and Mr. and Mrs. Jerry McKannon, all of Franciso, Ind., Mrs.
Harlos Hall and children, and Angie Collins, of Elyria, Darrell Henson and
son Brian, of Ashville, 0., Mr. and Mrs. Brian Heins, of Columbus, Ohio.
•
Artist In Education Show
Opens At Capitol Gallery
Ca.reful Addressing
Will Get It There
If you want your Valentines to be
delivered on target and on time, you can
help the postal service by addressing
them properly, Postmaster Don
Osborne, of Prestonsburg Postoffice,
said today.
" A return address snould be the first
address a person puts on an envelope"
he said. "If there is a delivery problem,
it will allow us to return the letter, card
or parcel to the sender."
Both the return address and mailing
address should contain complete address information. This includes all of
the following elements that apply.
Full name of recipient; apartment
mailbox number or house number; star
route number and box number; street
name and number or post office box
number ; city, state and-very
important-ZIP CODE.
Postmaster Osbome~lso urged use of
legible handwriting, a ball point pen
and correct postage (oversizedcards i:Ei=
quire extra postage).
Proper addressing is especially important around holidays such as Valentine's Day, when many people do not use
their return address in order to momentarily surprise the recipient. But when
the card or letter is undeliverable, the
one who is surprised is the sender when
he or she discovers it was not received,
Osborne said.
POSITION AVAILABLE
The Sandy Valley Senior Citizens Program Is now taking applications for a
clerk-typist. Responsibilities Include typIng 80 WPM. filing. and receptionist.
Prefer two years experience In general
office procedures. Salary tSI,OOO. Applications may be obtained at the Sandy Valley Senior Citizens office, 2nd
Floor municipal Building. Prestonsburg,
Ky. Application deadline February 10.
No telephone calla please.
Equal Opportunity Employer
2-l-2t.
The work of 15 Kentucky Arts Council Artists in Education as well as a
representative sampling of work by
their students will be on exhibit in the
State Capitol Art Lobby from Feb. 6 to
March 6.
The Kentucky Arts Council's Artists
in Education Program places professional artists into residencies in Kentucky schools and communities to work,
demonstrate their art forms and share
their ideas, creativity and talents. This
show presents work of visual artists,
craftspeople, media artists and a folklorist, all of whom participated in the
program during the past two years. Architects, dancers, folk artists, film and
videomakers, jazz artists, poets and
theater artists also conduct residencies
in communities across the state.
Exhibiting artists and their current
residency sites are: Pam Bell, Stamping Ground Elementary School; Madison Cawein, various schools, currently
at Eastern Elementary School in
Georgetown; Nancy Elkins, Crittenden
County Elementary School ; Lisa Falk,
several Jefferson County schools; and
Dan Hildenbrandt, McCracken County
Schools. Also, Shawn Lee, Grayson
County Schools; Bale McKnight, various
sites; Jeff Tull, Simpson County
Elementary School ; and Bob Wilson,
Owsley County Schools.
Artists formerly in the program who
will also be showing work are Larry
Hackley, North Middletown; Gwen Heffner, Prestonsburg; Joann Hofelich,
Louisville; Toni Price, Tompkinsville;
Martin Rollins, Louisville; and Debbie
Skaggs, Louisville. These artists worked in schools across the state, from
Burkesville to Leitchfield to Lexington
to Pikeville.
Artists, schools and community organizations interested in the Artists in
"Education Program should contact Nancy Carpenter at the Kentucky Arts Council (502) 564-3757 for guidelines and application forms. April1 is the deadline
for applications for residencies which
will take place during the 1984-85 school
year.
Section Two, Paae Eleven
Spring Into Tree Planting
Sitting in front of a roaring fire, thinking of spring, is a good way to spend
these cold winter days. A little planning
for the spring months can also be done
now. Spring tree planting ~>eason in Kentucky is March through April. Now is a
good time to ·order your trees io insure
getting the tree species you prefer.
Erosion control is a good reason to ·
plant trees. Many areas have been
bulldozed, exposing mineral soil. This
precious soil may wash away soon in
heavy rain. Planting grass and trees can
stabilize the ground and save the soil.
The trees will also increase in value as
they grow.
Beautification is another good reason
to plant trees. As a backdrop behind a
house or as a screen between properties,
roads, or swimming pool, trees can efficiently cut down on unwanted sound
and vision while improving the overall
appearance of the land. White pine is
especially desired for this purpose due
to its fast growth, beautiful blue-green
color, delicate symetry and limb-holding
ability.
Four other species of pine are also
available from the Kentucky Division of
Forestry, as well as 10 species of hardwoods, including black walnut. Trees
can be ordered in bundles of 100, 500 and
1000, with prices ranging from $12.00 to
$125.00. A special wildlife packet containing a mixture of 100 seedlings is also
available for $17.00
For more mformation or to order
trees, con"tact the Kentucky Division of
Forestry, 503 South Lake Drive, Prestonsburg, Ky. 41653, telephone· 886-8562.
Contact Company Representative
At:
(606) 478-2577 or (606) 478-5700
·STRAND
Starts Fri., Feb. 3
72 hours of liberty
to forget everything the
Navy ever taught them.
Thcrc's more to do In~ thin ski•
Job Training Funds
To Be Allocated
Human Resources Secretary AI
Austin recently announced preliminary
Job Training Partnership Act allocations to the state's nine service delivery
areas for programs operating between
July 1, 1984 and June 30, 1985.
"Almost $25.5 million is available
under Title II-A for such programs as
classroom and on-the-job training programs and employability skills development for youth and adults," he said. "In
addition, the allocation for 1985 summer
youth programs is nearly $12 million."
Each area's share of JTPA dollars
depends on the number of unemployed
and low-income people compared to
other areas, Employment Services
Commissioner James Daniels explained. "We have used our most recent
unemployment figures as the basis for
these preliminary allocations- so the
areas can have a 'ball park' estiiliate to
begin planning programs. However,
final allocations won't be known until
late February or early March because
they will be based on revised unemployment data," he said.
For EKCEP, which includes Floyd
and 22 other area counties, $4.8 million
in Title II-A funds have been allocated
along with $2.2 million for summer
youth.
\WI~
~
••• 7'HI MCWIII
~
EOMIIl S FEttNM PRn.CT~ 1()1 OOG h
A CROWN INTERNATIONAL PICTURES RELEASE
rnw~~·· -lllfll) ~
IWRICIOO.ISER TR.tCY N SM1H .OtUWliO< IBIR lfW«I(fPJO.SWIO TWaDC..
Color by DELUXE
·=QfiST(JM!IW KM:Jfl-M<E-.=:Pill.lG RI'.III.::I':Pmll-,.
iF~-:n-:::!- · -::MI<E- -:811'Mls ffltNM -;~~~
Showtlmes 7:15-9:30-Sunday Matinee Open 1:00 Start1:30 'Over 3:15
... Billy Maynard and
the crew at
JENNY WILEY TOYOTA!
*NOBODY BEATS OUR DEALS ON
NEW & USED TOYOTAS!
*IN 1983 WE PROVED WE ARE
LEASING
CHAMPION ...
THE
USED CAR
SPECIALS!
BELOW
BOOK VALUE!
WE LEASED MORE CARS THAN
ANYONE IN KENTUCKY FOR
GE CREDIT AUTO LEASE!
AUTO. & !5-SPEED, BEAUTIFUL & LOADED!
•
•
local mining company is interested in acqu ir ing existing coal
leases or_ negotiating new leases for the purposes of mineral
exploration, development and extraction . Serious inquiries
please.
STRAND I_
HELD OVER
LEASING SPECIALS WEEKLY! Ask lor derails.
COROLLA SPORT COUPES!
•
TOP DOllARS PAID FOR YOUR COAl lEASE
~ f\NAN~/
~ 48~Q
4x4's ASAL~W $18900
MONTHS
....................
Any Large Pizza and a
Pitcher of Soft Drink--$9.95
Every Tuesday Evening 4 to 9pm.
at participating Pizza Huf Restaurants
COROLLA LE OR SEDAN
$150°0 PtRU~O., 4B·MO. LEASE
SPECIAL-
WE HAVE JUST
RECEIVED SOME
1983 TOYOTAS
BACK ON LEASE.
!
._
!
!
!
ALL NEW XTRA CABS
LOCAL BANK ~~-------FINANCING ._
-="'~
AT 74.99%
._
A.P.R.
._
....................
Billy says, "We've got the best
Service Dept. In Eastern Ky!"
Ralph Maynard Is "Tops"/
886-3880
slsooo
AND UP
40·MO. LEASE.
LEASE WITH AN OPTION TO BUYI
SHORTBED 4-SPEED, $133.00 (NO EXTRAS)
CALL 1HE
BARGAIN
AND
LEASING
CHAMPION,
PH.: 886-3861
• GOOD CONDITION
• LOW PRICE
• ALSO, TAKE OVER
LEASE ON A
PICKUP.
U.S. 23 NO., PRESTONSBURG
Dallas, Gary, or Billy
�Wednetlday, February 1, 1984
The Floyd County Times
Section Two, Pqe Twelve
lllf~FB
IGA
BREAD
f
hAmming
mitlj
$
16-0z.
Loaves
IGA
POP
$
Get top-of-the-line
merchandise at
bottom-of-thebarrel prices. You
can always count
on us for the best
buys around.
VAN CAMP
PORK&
BEANS
.f
'g:l~~N ....... \".:t_;~ $1 2 ~. ~~7g~~~ ................. 79c
$
CENTER CUT
$199
LOIN CHOPS..............
Lb.
cHicKEN
89c
DRUMSTICKS..........
Lb.
~w~:r.s
FRESH
. . . . . . .$1 ! fw.f:.~-~ .................49~.
~::~k:~~ . . . . . . . $1 ~. :~~~~~~~ ~~~-~~:::89~.
2
2
1~>.
>,t•·•G
CENTER CUT
RIB CHOPS
$
89.1
LB.
...
1-LB. ROLL-IGA
!t~·.,.,.,...,.N\1
PINTO
BEANS
$
f
l""~·'tll
BREAKFAST
~..•>~~,..~~E ............... .
...... 99c
U.S.D NO. 1
RED DELICIOUS
APPLES
29
4-Lb.
~:-99c
FRESH CRISP
HEAD LEnUCE
49c
Bag
KRAn
f
AMERICAN
)~·, · . SINGLES
Quart
$
09
LB.
YELLOW
ONIONS
TRAY
SALAD TOMATOES
~Size·
PLATTER
BACON
c
99
3~:-99c
FRESH
CHICKEN
LEG
QUARTERS
c
~=- -;;r::.=~
FlELD
$799 GORDON
TWIN
2su.
POTATO CHIPS .....P~~.
PU RE LARD ......... PAIL
DINTY MOORE
24-0Z. $13 9
IGA
16.oz.3J$1 BEEF STEW ......... ~~~.
12-0z.
Pak
SAUERKRAUT .... ~~~.
··---LAR OR BUmRMILK
BISCUITS.
6.PAK
WE RESERVE
THE RIGHT TO
UMIT QUANTITIES
.AND
CORRECT PRINTING
ERRORS
~~:g
.............1.~t~z:2/89C
IGA
1
APPLE
SAUCE .....1&.oz.3/
c~~.
IGA
$
$
9
SPAM
12-oz.$159
LUNCHEON MEAT~~~
PANTRY PRIZE
$389
ARMOUR
99c
2
SELF-RISING FLOUR
:Al:. CHILl WITH BEANS~o~.
BETTY CROCKER18.s-oz89C IGA .
1-LB.59C
CAKE MIXES .........a~~.
CRACKERS ...........~o.x.
LB.
PRELATE
46-oz. 69C
1&-oz $159 RED GOLD
PINK SALMON ..... ~~~:
TOMATO JUICE .... ~~~.
SNICKERS, MILKY WAY
$149 MORTON
u.oz. 8
OR 3 MUSKETEERS ....... &PAK
TV DINNERS ........ ~~~PRICES
EFFECTIVE
THRU
SUNDAY
FEB. 5
•
�Wednesday, February 1, 1984
USAA Winner
Boulder Now in Georgia
Memorial to Floyd Romance
•
The United States Achievement Academy announced today that Patricia Ann
Howell has been named a 1984 United
States National Award winner in
science.
Miss Howell, who attends McDowell
High School was nominated for this National Award by Mrs. Joan Caldwell,
science teacher at the school, and will
appear in the United States Achievement Academy Official Yearbook, published nationally.
Miss Howell is the daughter of Delmer
and Ruth HowelL Her grandparents are
the late Henry and Rosa Skeans, of
Hunter, and the late Wayne and Nancy
Howell, of McDowell.
•
•
-----f--------
W-2 Forms Necessary
To File Tax Return
Every person employed during 1983
should receive a Form W-2, " Wage and
Tax Statement," from your employer(s)
by January 31, 1984. Even if you worked only part of the year, you must be furnished a statement.
Form W-2 provides a record of the
amount of wages that you were paid,
and the amount of federal income tax
withheld. It also shows the amount of
social security CFICA) tax that was
withheld from your wages, and any uncollected employee FICA tax on tips.
The form is important because a copy
of it must accompany your tax return as
proof of income a mi tax withheld. Taxpayers who worked for more than one
employer during the year must attach
a Form W-2 from each employer. If you
• have not received a Form W-2 from each
of your employers by mid-February you
· s hould first check with your
employer(s). After making a reasonable
effort to obtain the Form W-2 and having been unsuccessful, you should contact your local IRS office or call the IRS
a t 584-1361 in Louisville, or toll-free
1-800-424-1040 elsewhere in Kentucky.
Occasionally, a taxpayer receives a
"Wage and Tax Statement" which contains the wro~ Social Security number
or incorrect dolla r amounts In case of
a n er ror, ask that your employer issue
a F orm W-2C to replace the incorrect
W-2 A copy of the F orm W-2C statement, and copies of a ny other statements received, should be filed with
your return.
CARD OF THANKS
The family of William Earl Lyons
would like to express their thanks to all
who helped during the passing of our loved one. Thanks to all who sent food and
flowers and gifts of love. Thanks to the
m inisters and to the Hall Funeral Home
for being so kind.
THE FAMILY
INCOME TAX
PREPARATION
• Federal and State
********
Vernon Slone
Call 886-6060
•
886-9007
or
.___________________
_.1.
- l.l·t~r
•
The Floyd County Times
A rock that lies in the oackyard of J.J .
and Rosa Lee Jacob in the Waycross,
Georgia area is more than merely a little part of their native Floyd county. It
is a monument to their continuing
romance which began at Garrett almost
40 years ago.
They call the 842-pound boulder
"Rosie's Rock" and moved it last year
from its original site on the property of
Bessie Scott Jackson at Garrett to
Waycross. The story is reprinted in part
from The Times-Union, Jacksonville,
Fla.:
"It's just a big rock, but it's a very
sentimental rock," said Mrs. Jacobs, a
mobile-home sales manager in
Waycross.
"It brings back memories of our
childhood-of our meeting."
It was September, 1945 when Mrs.
Jacobs, a sophomore at Garrett CKy.)
High School, first saw Jacobs, now
director of marketing for Guerdon Industries Inc. in Waycross.
Young Jacobs was sitting on the huge
rock, a spot usually reserved for
tobacco-chewing and wood-whittling
folks.
"I used to walk home along the
railroad tracks, and I saw J .J. sitting on
the rock in front of the small country
store. I had never met him. He used to
'deliver feed and hay in a horse-drawn
wagon for the store," Mrs. Jacobs
recalls .
"I thought to myself that he was cute.
He had on a pair of bib overalls, a
checkered shirt and a brimmed hat that
was turned up in the front ... like what
Gabby Hayes used to wear."
Although shy, young Jacobs made the
first move. He said hello.
That brief greeting led him to bolder
action several days later when he knocked on his future wife's door.
"This I remember distinctly. I was out
back washing clothes. We didn't have
electricity, a washing machine or a
telephone. We boiled our clothes back
then in an old black kettle and used a
washboard," Mrs. Jacobs said.
"This must have been a Saturday
because we always washed on Saturday,
and J.J. asked me to go the show with
him the next day," she said.
At 16, Mrs. Jacobs said she had never
had a real date. She gave Jacobs a
maybe on his offer.
Playing hard-to-get, Mrs. Jacobs said,
she went to the movie with a girlfriend,
the former Bonnie Jean Daniels, who
later married Jacobs' older brother,
Russell.
"I saw J.J. at the sh~ and talked to
him when I came horne. He wanted to
know why I stood him up. He wouldn't
speak to me for a couple of days, but we
becam«;l close friends,'' she said.
After high school, the two went their
separate ways.
" J.J. went to Pennsylvania to pick
asparagus, and he later joined the Army. I went to live with my sister in
LaPorte, Ind. I worked in a laundry and
then in a canning factory in Belevedere,
Ill., but we kept in touch the whole
time," she said.
Named To Positions
With WVAH-TV 23
Robert W. Dickey, Jr., has been appointed account executive for WVAH-TV
23. Dickey was previously an account
executive with WPGH-TV, Pittsburgh.
He has also worked at KQV/WDVE-FM,
Pittsburgh, in the programming departments. Dickey is a 1980 graduate of the
University of Pittsburgh, is married and
has one child.
Diana Sole Shreve has been promoted
to the position of promotion director, according to Gary Dreispul, station manager, WVAH-TV. She was formerly promotions coordinator for WVAH-TV.
Shreve joined the station August, 1982 as
an employee of the production
department.
She is a graduate of Marshall University.
WVAH-TV 23 is West Virginia's first
independent television station. TV 23 is
licensed to the Charleston/Huntington
market and broadcasts with 5 million
watts of power. The station is owned and
operated by West Virginia Telecasting,
Inc .
Where Your Money Buys More!
-PRICE THAW SPECIALS-
$9 99 5°0
0
New 14' Wide, 3 Be drooms. •11 1 99 5°
0
New 24'x48' Doublewide. •21 99 5°
Repo's $99°0 Down - Take Over
New 14' Wide, 2 Bedroom s ...
•
*
1
1
Paym~nts.
VA -
•
FHA - County Bond Financing
874-903311B 478-959
They were married .May 3, 1951, in
Garrett.
Mr. and Mrs. Jacobs, who now have
two sons, Ricky and Greg, moved to
South Georgia in 1965-without the rock
But, while attending a family reunion
in Kentucky, the Jacobses thought of
moving the sentimental monument.
They obtained permission from Mrs.
Jackson to move the rock from her property, and son Ricky was dispatched to
transport the rock to Waycross in his
pickup truck.
''The rock's in the back yard, so I can
look out my window and see it," Mrs.
Jacobs said.
"It means a lot to me. It makes me
feel good to know that J .J. cared enough
for us to go get the rock."
Mrs. Jacobs is the former Rosa Lee
Turner and daughter of the late Alvin
and Cassie Warren Turner, of Stone
Coal. Her husband is the son of the late
Dan Jacobs, of Garrett.
Hotel/Motel Program
Offered At Mayo
The Eastern Kentucky Concentrated
Employment Service and the Mayo
State Vocational-Technical School are
beginning a training program for
hotel/motel workers to begin February
6, and run through June 15, 1984. The
major topics to be covered in the program include hotel/motel room cleaning
and maintenance, food preparation and
waitress/waiter training. Economic indicators in the area suggest that more
jobs in this area may be available in the
future.
Interested persons should contact the
Bureau of Manpower Services in Pikeville or Prestonsburg or the CEP's Office in Prestonsburg.
FOR SALE-22,000 glass lined
water tank. 600 gallon tank.
Meyers pump.
PHONE (AREA CODE 606):
928-4197 or 928-8169 ~t~~
Section Three, Page
SATELLITE TELEVISION
NEWS
SPORTS
MOVIES
RELIGION
• Bank
Financing
A~ailable
USTOM ANTEN
MARTIN, KY. • 285-3984
(Across the creek from Garth Vocational School
�Wednesday, February 1, 1984
The Floyd County Times
Section Three, Page Two
KIRBY SWEEPERS
Water Well
Drilling
s99 & UP
CALL 478-2882$i-'>
FOR RENT-3-bedroom brick
house plus in-ground, fenced
swimming pool.
BUSINESS CARDS
AT WHOLESALE PRICES
RAISED PRINTING-POST PD.
$21.70 per 1,000
$500.00 PER MONTH.
358-3571
10 a.m. to 11 p.m.
PHONE 874-2873
llpd
H
2l-pd .
---------------~
FOR ALL YOUR INSURANCEAuto, fire, homeowners. hospitalization,
IHe. Wlttl o-25" savings. Call Darby and
Allen Insurance Agency,
874-2347.
LOOK!••.
HOBBY.
A CAREER!
LIGHT FIXTURES : 112 price at GOBLE
LUMBER COMPANY, phone 874-9281.
4-11-tf.
Specialized sales
training helps you
develop professional
business skills.
WATCH REPAIR: If you want the best
job, bring watch repairs and jewelry
repairs
to
WRIGHT
BROS.
JEWELERS.
11-12-tf
L..- ~---
Take advantage of low winter
tares, and have yout building
and temodellng done now.
GOBLE
SECURITY SYSTEM
Call:
• 24-HOUR GUARD SERVICE
• PATROL SERVICE • UCE'NSEDI
BONDED • INSURED
CRASE HOME BUILDERS
for tree estimates,
PH.: 874-8949
358-9485.
Lorry Goble
2-1·2t.
ANY TYPE WILL IE MADE TO YOUR SPECIFICATIONS. FREE ESTIMATE-FREE DEUVERY
East Kentucky Root Truss Co.
Phone 606-886-9563, Prestonsburg, Kentucky (anytime)
886-2073
H.L. Set~er, President
NEW 198414' WIDE
'12,995°0
low Down Payment
Check This Monthly Payment At
..
•
..•
Call Larry Keene
'199
67
437-4078
..!::::=~~==~
L& H USED CARS
or ,358-9348
Rolph O'Quinn
1980 GMC SIERRA ..... WAS $3550 ..... NOW S3250
1977 CHEVY ........... _ ........... NOW $1795
1974 GMC ......................... NOW $850
1970 CHEVY .. _.... _ ............... NOW $550
-MECHANIC'S SPECIAL-
RT. 23 NORTH-BELOW PRESTONSBURG
~**********************************~
*
:*
*
:
Going Out Of Business Sale
:
1984 Mobile Home
:
$1 0 99 5°
1
Payment less Than Rent
Call :
Portable Welding
874-8166
285-9550
John Wrinht or Ollie Watts
~·
432-1401
:
*
**
*:
~***********************************t
NELSON'S
CONSTRUCTION CO.
We do: • Dozer and Loader Work
• Sewage Systems Installed • Mobile
Home Moving • Furnace Repairs
REASONABLE RATES.
Coli Ted Nelson, Jr.
886-2993 or 886-8549
1·25-4tpd.
15 YEARS EXPERIENCE.
CONTACT NORMA WRIGHT
AT 886-9181
OR 886-2527
12-21-st
HOUSE FOR SALE : Full basement,
forced air, natural gas. Call after 4,
886-3860, Ann Slone.
9-14-tf.
Remodeling . Siding, Roofing,
Heating & Air Conditioning, Additions, Garages & Custom Homes
HEY LOOK! We repair washers,
dryers, rang~. all types appliances.
Parts ordered for you. Call 358-4009 or
358-9617.
11-3-tfpd.
in Prestonsburg
PHONE 874-9281
Phone 886-1312
s.
~
LEARN TO DRIVE
TRACTOR-TRAILER
SAMPUNG AND lfflLYSIS OF
WATER AND WASTE WATER
s S"'.AJ
lu , .
O!!f.~-~
1_
._ :
(606) 874-9314
or 874-9633
• llacterioiQiical Alalrsis of Dtlll!$tic l Well
Wiler S.ppfies • C:O.pletioa of C)Jarteriy
II.P.D.lS. F.-s As R~1illd By SUte l EPA
• (IYinll lllbl I pact SUtet~~tnts l
1
~ 0~,..
~y.
NO EXPEIIIEHCE NEEDED I Wo or.... MEN
p-· . . . . . .
FuUotPor1--lr""""!'
FOR SALE : Cabin at Cave Run Lake.
Three bedrooms, air conditioned, all
new carpet. Reasonable price. Call
784-7250 or 784-9203, J.C. SPENCER.
5-25-tf.
Assm~~ eats
le•lter tf AST II I ne lbtioul E11iron ut
Healtll lsseciati•. LABORATORY liEn'S Ill
STAT£ OSI I EPA REGULATIOIIS.
1011
pr.->~
DOT~
ancl WOllEN No , _ 10 QUI!
~
BOB WHITE
CONSTRUCTION
PHONE 789-3258
U.S. 23 Sa., hintsrilo
Box 282, Prestonsburg, Ky.
Dozers • Backhoes
• Dump Trucks
MAKE MORE MONEY WORKING
OVERSEAS IN COUNTRIES UKE KUWAIT,
SAUDI ARABIA, VENEZUELA, ETC. ALSO
POSITIONS ARE AVAILABLE IN NORTHERN REGIONS OF CANADA, ALASKA
AND THE NORTH SEA. PERMANENT/TEMPORARY WORKERS NEEDED ARE
TRADESPEOPLE, LABORERS, PROFESSIONALS ETC. FOR FULL INFORMATION
SEND A SELf-ADDRESSED, STAMPED
ENVELOPE TO:
Overseas, Dept. 15032,
701 Washington Street
BUFFALO, N.Y. 142015
USA
FREE ESTIMATES
Call 886-3544
CARPENTRY WORK: Home building
and remodeling. Complete interior and .I
exterior. _Mas~nry and co~crete_$?rk, i·•
BRUSHLINE
1
all types mtenor and exter1or pamtmg.
_. Call for all painting and remodelAlso have spray equipment to spray , .... lng needs
barns and metal buildings. Free
874-2905 or 874-2895
estimates. Will furnish references. 15
Ask for Tom or Lee.
years' experience. Call 886-8896,
212l pd.
anytime. Robie Johnson, Jr. 9-21-tf.
Dozer Work
886-9551
~~t
Badger Construction Company
NOTICE-NOW HIRING
FOR SALE: Two-story, 11-room apartment building, $40,000. At Twin Bridges,
Martin, on 100x50 corner lot. Call J.R.
Samons, 285-3914.
12-14-tf.
CLEAN FURNACE FILTERS save
energy dollars and service call costs.
Sandy Valley Hardware S&T at Allen is
your one-stop furnace filter headquarters.
11-30-tf.
Taking applications for full
and part-time employment.
For appointment call:
874-9041
E.O.E.
251 Trimble Branch Rd., Prestonsburg, just 3 blocks
from downtown in a terrific, secluded neigborhood,
with good neighbors, turn-around driveway, tastefullY landscaped yard, uniquely styled freshly painted
total redwood exterior, new windows and gutters,
striking beveled glass double doors, best of fixtures,
new carpets and floor coverings, new drapes and curtains, new wall coverings, totally modern and in new
condition. 3 bedrooms, 2 full baths, formal living room
and foyer. completely equipped kitchen, family room
with stone fireplace. over-sized one car garage. 16'x32'
sundeck. Lots of storage and half basement. PRICED TO
I
:
RAISE, LEVEL, OR MOVE houses or
mobile homes. Also, do block and concrete work. Hall's House Raising. Phone
477-3242 or 447-2610.
11-9-tf.
FOR RENT : 4-room apartment near
clinic and college. 886-3154, T.E. Neeley.
11-9-tf.
NOW PAYING TOP DOLLAR for
mobile home wheels and axels. Ask for
Patty Wright, 639-4772.
12-7-tf.
1982 LINCOLN: Best deal in ~own. This
one has it all! Call Patty Wright,
639-4772.
12-7-tf.
1984 MOBILE HOME: 2 bedroom, 12'
wide, front kitchen, double windows.
Furnished. Total electric. Only $8,995.
Call John Wright, 432-1401.
12-7-tf.
SELL!
1-18-41.
1-4-tt.
PAYMENTS LESS THAN RENT :
14-wide mobile home. Only $10,995. Call
John Wright, 432-1401.
12-7-tf. •
DAN'S
APPLIANCE REPAIR
We repair all brandswashers, dryers and stoves.
• Guaranteed ports and work.
• Some day service.
• Discount to dealers.
• Fast dependable service.
CALL 3!58-9892 ANYTIME
2·1·5t
HITCHCOCK
REPAIR SERVICE
24-Hour
Emergency Service
• Heating • Refrigeration
• Laundry a Cooking
Equipment
PARTS
AVAILABLE
t f.
FHA AND VA
FINANCING!
Property owners-take advantage
of the low interest rates that FHA
& VA have to offer ! No points to.
pay! No hidden closing costs!
Hurry! This offer is limited for the
next four weeks ONL Yl
See Hubert Totloy/
b;-;;a,
CLa.qi:DIL
·zu.HD/t4ES
&i.kt~-
'·
TROY'S
CABINET
CENTER
scon
DOUBLEWIDE
$15,995.00 •
US 23, lvel, Ky.
Stock or Custom-Built Cabinets
Kitchen Cabinets, Vanities
Thermador Appliances
on Display
Free Estimates
Discount Prices
Call 478-5344
1-14-tf.
TWO NEW
DOUBLEWIDE
SPECIALS
New 1984, 3 Bed, 2 Bath, Garden Tub,
Total Electric, Wood-Siding, Shingle
Roof, Cathedral Ceilings, Beams, Stove,
Rtfrlg.. House Doors • Windows.
Carpet. Delivered anywhere and set.
You choose colors. Veterans no down
payment. Others pay $1700.00 down
and $217.00 per month. Fireplaces
available. TREEHAVEN HOMES. Office In
Clubhouse by swimming pool: Between
Exit 1187 and Exit 1194 off 1·84. Winchester. Ky. Phone (808) 744-n82.
1-4-Sl.
BEAUnFUL BUILDING
a!Ml
Buildiq Stone Co.
LEXINGTON LOCATION:
New 1984, 3 Bed, 2 Bath. Solid Construction, Gorden Tub, Total Electric,
Wood Siding, Shingle Roof, Corhedrol
Ceiling, Stove, Frost-Free Refrigerator,
House Doors lr Windows, Carpet.
Delivered • Set-up. ONLY $18,995.00.
See this home at 537 New Circle Rd..
Lexington. Phone (808) 293·1809.
RICHMOND LOCATION:
New Floor Plan. 1984. 515x24. 1224-Sq.
Ft., 3 Bed, 2 Bath, Gorden Tub, Utility
Room. Total Electric, All Walk-In
Closets, Cathedral Ceiling, Wood
Siding, Shingle Roof. Boy Window In
Master Bedroom, Fireplace, f!roat-Free
Refrigerator, Stove, Deluxe Carpet lr
Pod. Side Goble, all other Deluxe Op·
Ilona. ONLY $21,995.00. See tl'lla home
at Exit 1197 Off 1·75, Halfway between
Lexington • Richmond. Phone (606)
824·0200.
10 other doubles on display, 150 new 14
wldes. 20 repossessed homes. SO Us·
ed homes. V.A. no down payment. FHA
loons with 10% down.
GREAT AMERICAN HOMES
1-4·51
(lnc.l
•
•
•
•
UMESTON£ VENEERING
MAttBL£ LANDSCAPE CHIPS
PORTABLE CONCRETE STEPS
VERMONT SLAT£
Located On Old U.S.
In New Allen
-
~~
11\
~
~
~
~
PHONE:
886-6900
•
US U . Herolll Ky - 471 •241(
• Experienced • GDOd Machine
• Reasonable Rates • Free Estimates
1-
~
~
ENVIRONMENTAL MONITORING
SERVICE, INC.
INSTRUCTION
.OLLIE JONES
Prestonsllui'J,
Goble Townhouses. Two-bedroom,
unfurnished, total electric. $350 per
month, plus deposit. Couples only.
874-2318 after
RESIDENTIA.L
BUILDERS
FOR RENT : Rooms, weekly, monthly,
nightly. Also waterbeds available.
886-2385, 886-9310, Sandy Valley Motel,
N. Lake Drive.
1-5-tf.
FOR RENT
OFFICE
SPACE
NEW
TOWNHOUSES
FOR RENT
WILL DO TYPING
OR SHORTHAND.
FOR GLASS REPLACEMENT, bring
your window frames to Sandy Valley
Hardware at Allen. We specialize in
Plexiglas, cut to size.
11-9-tf.
BEAUTIFUL HOME FOR SALE
For more Information, call 886-3680 or 886-1416.
PHONE (606) 928-4197
OR (606) 928-8169 3 :.~
11-2-lf
FOR ALL YOUR INSURANCE-Auto,
fire, homeowners, hospitalization, life.
With 0-25% savings. Call Darby and
Allen Insurance Agency, 874-2347.
12-28-tf.
1972 MERCURY MONTEGO MX . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $450
1971 OLDS CUTLASS . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $325
Baths
Only 3 left. Latest model. New
5-yeor warranty.
Septic Tanks
TRUCKS
1
/2
24 HOUR SERVICE
Backhoe Work
Super clean Inside and out, law mileage
3 Bedrooms, l
REPO CLEANERS
ALL NEW OFFICE SPACE for lease: ~
Consisting of reception - library and I
• Experienced • GDOd Machine
four (4) connecting offices, with five (5)
• Reasonable Rates • Free Estimates
assigned parking spaces. Located on
1
886-9551
Third Avenue near the Courthouse,
!~- Badger Construction Company
downtown banks, postoffice, town center
parking lot, and the Floyd County Times
building. Ideal for physicians, attorneys,
accountants, realtors, and other
businesses and professions. Immediate
Installed and Hooked-up '
occupancy. Jim Hammond, 886-2376.
• All Material F..nished • Free Estimates
10-19-tf.
1·
886-9551
FOR SALE: Baby farms and building
!:~Badger
Construction
Company
lots from $4500 and up. 886-2601 after
5:00.
1tpd.
1979 PLYMOUTH VOLARE .............. NOW S2500
1977 BUICK REGAL (T-TOP) ............ NOW $2250
1976 PONTIAC BONNEVILLE ............. NOW $1750
1974 CAPRI CLASSIC .............. ... NOW $1395
1974 PONTIAC VENTURA HATCHBACK .......... $1450
1974 CHEVROLET IMPALA .............. NOW S1295
1973 DODGE DART SPORT ............. NOW $2250
a
CERTIFIED WELDERS
Call 478-9407
FOR SALE OR TRADE: Cardox auger,
conveyor, 24-inch steeL Phone 874-9033.
11-24-tf.
0
,, ll
FOR SALE
• 22,000 GAL. PORCELAIN
LINED TANK
• 600 GAL. WATER TANK
• MYERS DEEP WELL PUMP
An equal opportunity employer.
FOR RENT: 4-room unfurnished apartment, $200 rent, $150 deposit. Couples only, no pets. Call Jeanette Hubbard,
886-2557.
5-18-tf.
886-1225
:
~
UNITED SERVICE CO.
.IPhone 8?4-22581
HI-st.
ON THE LOT FINANCING
a
Keep America Strong"Weld It"
CALL 358-4520
DAMRON NEW & USED FURNITURE: Living room suites starting at
$159. A-1 appliances. Rt. 122, Drift, Ky.
Phone 377-2071.
·
5-25-tf.
3 Bedrooms
• nc.
rout HOMf IMI'tiOVfM(IIT IIUOS,
•Free estimates •Insured
CUSTOM-MADE drapes and matching
bedspreads by R.W. Norman and
McCanless. Measured to fit. BEN
FRANKLIN STORE, phone 886-2169, or
SALLY GOEBEL, phone 886-2657.
5-16-tf.
Allen, Ky.
Large regional manufacturing company
has opened an office In Prestonsburg,
Ky. We need aggressive hard working
Individuals who are Interested In a
career opportunity as a monufacrurlng
representative. Income $30,000.00
plus excellent fringe benefits. Must hove
serviceable auto.
Call: Greg Kendzlorakl
806-874-8171
l-25-2t.
DECKS
ROOFING
FENCES
STORAG£ BLDGS.
MOBILE HOME
MOVING SERVICE
FOR SALE: 1975 Mercedes-Benz 450-SL,
excellent conditiqn. Metalic green. New
top. Price $20,500. Call 1186-8506.
tf.
Roof Trusses for
Commercial lr Residential
Chain Link Fence, Residential
lr Commercial.
•
•
•
•
CALL 886-1640
5·2Hf
PERMA-SHIELD Anderson windows.
All styles, 20 percent off regular price
at GOBLE LUMBER CO., phone
874-9281.
4-11-tf.
_!-::~
REMODELING
PAINTING
DRYWALL
TEXTURING
Wf'lLL PAPERING
FOt All
GRAVEL FOR SALE : $8.75 per ton,
plus delivery charge. Call886-3425, JIM
cox.
6-23-tf.
A\'()0
____a: __
•
•
•
•
•
Kinzer Drilling Co.
IMMEDIATE
EMPLOYMENT
RAY HOWELL BUILDING
& HOME IMPROVEMENTS
TREATED utility poles, 18ft. 20ft. and
25ft. lengths. Also fence posts at GOBLE
LUMBER CO., phone 874-9281. 4-11-tf.
AVON.
NOTA
Call: 886-2082
874-2246 or 285-3928
12·2l·tf
INTERIOR AND EXTERIOR Porter
Paint. 1,000 colors to choose from. BEN
FRANKLIN STORE, phone 886-2169,
Prestonsburg.
5-16-tf
Most wells drilled in half a
day by Rotary rtachine.
• UCENSED • BONDED • INSURED
• 18 YEARS SECURITY EXPERIENCE •
• 24-HOUR GUARD SERVICE •
OR
(606) 886-9867 OR 886-3665
886-1473
JESSIE COLLINS, President
1 11 lf.
•
�•
The Floyd County Times
Wednesday, February 1, 1984
FOR RENT: 2-bedroom trailer, one
mile from Martin. $250 month . $100
deposit. 88&-3920
1-25-2tpd.
FOR RENT-Executive Apartments,
New Allen, 2-bedroom, upstairs apartment, completely furnished including
TV. l<'irepJace, dishwasher. central heat
and air; all utilities paid including cable
TV. Located on 4-lane U.S. 23 midway
between Pikeville and Prestonsburg. No
pets ; no children. Jim Hammond
886-2376.
1-11-tf.
•
APARTMENT FOR RENT-One
bedroom, furnished kitchen, central air
and heat. All utilities furnished. Mountain Parkway, near Prestonsburg. $300
month. Cleo DeRossett, 886-6568, day, or
886-1368, night.
1-11-tf.
DAN'S APPLIANCE REPAIR: We
repair washers, dryers and stoves. We
will make service calls. All work and
parts guaranteed. 358-9892 anytime.
2-1-5t.
BOLEN'S MOVING & DELIVERY
SERVICE: We move a house full or
deliver one piece - anywhere. Phone
35&9617, 35&4009.
12-14-12tpd.
NOW BUYING : Used washers, dryers,
ranges, refrigerators. Working or nonworking condition. Phone 358-9617.
ll-16-12tpd.
SELLING AT WINTER PRICE : 1981
Honda Silver Wing GL-500. Fully dressed, AM-FM cassette, cruise, 2 helmets,
and detachable trunks and rear seat.
Must see! $1995. Call Jim Clarke,
47&2614.
1-25-4t.
All classified ads scheduled
for only one week, must be
paid In advance. All cliissllled ads with only telephone
numbers must be paid In ad·
vance.
CLASSIFIED
ADVERTISING RATES
1 Oc Per word, If paid In advance
15<: Per word on cha.-.e ~~ecount
($2.50 minimum)
Dl..,lay claalllfled adver11alna
$3.00 per column Inch.
!h>adllne for ada: 4 p.m. Monda~
WHY BUY A NEW HOME when we
can fix your present home'?! We have
parts and supplies in stock. Special
orders invited! We even make '·house
calls!" Call us today! East Kentucky
Mobile Home Parts & Service, Inc ..
Allen, Ky., 60&-874-9400.
2-1-lt.
FOR SALE: 12x50 trailer. gas heat,
central air conditioner. Call 432-1550.
ltpd.
FOR SALE: Set of ladies golf clubs,
$70; Singer sewing machine with
walnut cabinet and matching chair,
$120; Bemco Flex-Malic bed, full size,
ltpd.
like new, $900. Call285-3419.
FOR SALE: Reconditioned washers,
dryers, gas and electric ranges, furniture, new and used parts for all
makes and models . Refrigeration
parts ordered for you. All guaranteed
60 days. For cheap appliances and
parts, plus a good guarantee, call us,
35&9617 or 358-4009.
1-1&12tpd.
FOR SALE: Kenmore heavy-duty
washer. Call 886-8602, Druther's
Restaurant.
ltpd.
I WILL PAY $100 for information as to
the person or persons who stole my
camera. Chester Fairchild, Martin,
~-
lt~.
WALLEN'S TRADING POST & TIRE
SALES. Retails and wholesales. New
and used tires, wheels, caps, lugs,
wheel covers, batteries, tubes, auto
parts, stereos and boosters, tubes and
much more. We trade for most anything of value. 874-2289.
2-1-5tpd.
ONE BEDROOM APARTMENT for
rent: $250 month, $250 deposit required. 478-9593 or 874-9033, Hylton
Homes.
~14£ .
FOR SALE: Registered Doberman
pups, very large breeding. Excellent
disposition. To good homes only. Call
2!17-3897, Rhonda Nelson.
2-1-tf
FOR RENT: Furnished trailer, near
college. Security deposit and lease required. No pets, please. Carlos E.
Neeley, 886-8565.
2-1-tf.
WILL BABYSIT in my home. one to
three years old. I have references. you
have references. 88&-9918.
1-25-2tpd.
FOR SALE: 12x60 2-bedroom mobile
home. Central air conditioning, blocks.
underpinning, steps, electric service .
Good cc~mdition. $6000. Phone 874-2879.
1-25-2tpd.
FOR LEASE: Building suitable for 2
office spaces and one reception room
or small warehouse. Owner will fix inside structure for either. Located at intersection of U.S. 23 and 80 and Ky. 3.
Centrally located to serve Pikeville,
Prestonsburg and Beaver Creek area .
Call Curtis Hatfield, 874-9939. 1-25-2tpd .
FOR SALE: 1983 Patriot mobile home,
14x60, 2-bedroom. Nice, like new .
$12,000. Also, would be interested in
trading toward house and land in this
area. Call88&-6342.
1-25-2tpd.
FOR SALE: Two bedroom mobile
home. Air conditioning, underpinning ,
blocks, electric service and steps.
Good condition . $3500. Phone 874-2879.
1-25-2tpd.
FOR SALE: 1974 Corvette. Red,
automatic, power steering, A/C, new
engine. Excellent condition. Call
886-3451 after 6 o'clock.
1·25-2tpd.
LOST: White garbage bag full of
clothes. Put into wrong white Eagle
jeep outside Unemployment Office
January 16. Finder please call 285-3939
or 285-9055.
l-25-2tpd.
Section Three, Pn~~ Three
W DOING PHOTOGRAPHY . ""
HOUSE
FOR SALE
Remember your speclol day
with beautiful portraits by Mike
Kirk.
Price the rest, then call
Three-bedroom brick. Large ramlly room
with fireplace, central heat and air.
Located 1120 Willow Lone, Lancer. Must
sell soon. $59,900.
(606) 478-2334
Call886-8148, day; 886·196!5, night.
--
...............~·.· .·~..r:w:.r....yol'»')o:·:·:..:.-·.·.·. •. •••••..- -
.-....~···~·
..,
116 Francis Ct., Prestonsburg
~
• Turn left off Third Street
between court House & catholic Church
2
• We service Electrolux, Kirby,
Compact Filter Queen.
• Belts and parts in stock.
Phone 789-55212-1-
THE PAPERBOOK BOOK
EXCHANGE STORE
~·
~
Sales on all brands of
sewing machines and
vacuum cleaners.
~
~
ttl
Cl;
4,
...~
~
ATTENTION!
AUCTION-DEALER
FLEA MARKET-JOBBERS
GROCERS-MERCHANTS...
BURTON DIST. WHOLESALE
is now open In Somerset; tools
turnfture, jewelry, housewares:
electronics, much, much
more-prices you will not be·
lie vel
Bring your tax no. and come
on ln. Burton Dlsf. 2600 So.
Hwy. 27, Somerset, Ky. ·
FREE
COLOR T.V.!
Purchase a new 70'x 14' with fire·
place, stock 116833, OR a new
60'x 14' deluxe h(lme, & receive
FREE a new remote-control color
T.V .! No gimmicks! Just quality
homes at affordable prices!
Col/ Hubert At:
b.:::.·
Cl.ngZbn..
.
(606) 679-8678.
HOlMES
'We Budt:t Ot.e.anr4..
us n
He,...l4 ICy
•11
2·1·41.
FOR SALE : 1!178 Cherokee 4x4, 36,000
miles, $3500. Call after 4, 47&9912,
Larry Kimbler.
1-25-4t.
DESPERATE?'? Looking for a
specialist who is trained and equipped
to repair your wrecked Toyota, Datsun, Volkswagen, or other foreign or
unitized bodied car? Call 'custom
Coach Building for an appointment at
874-2802.
1-25-4t.
CARPENTRY-CONCRETE WORK:
Sidewalks, patios, driveways, etc. Also
Coronado stove. Seven years' experience. Fre~ estimates. Laryl Branham, 452-2403 or 452-2368.
1-25-4tpd.
•
HAULING/MOVING: Commercial or
residential, local or long distance . Big
2()-foot enclosed trailer. Low, low rates.
Prices negotiable. Phone 789-4545.
1-25-4tpd.
FOR RENT : Two bedroom trailer
$300 monthly, partially furnished :
carpeted, air conditioner, washer and
dryer and garden space available.
Phone 874-9802.
1-25-4tpd.
•
JAPANESE SWORDS WANTED: Paying $300 minimum ea. Write Winter,
824 Patton, Springfield, Dl. 62702. (217)
544-7611, 523-8729.
1-25-4tpd.
SALES AGENT WANTED: Nationally
known calendar manufacturer and
specialty advertising company offers
an opportunity for an industrious selfstarter for full or part-time work . We
need a sales oriented person to present
our exclusive calendars, business gifts
a nd extensive advertising specialty
a ssortment to firms within the
business community. The Thos. D.
Murphy Co. is a pioneer in the advertising field since 1888, so you know we 're
here to s tay. If you can organize your
own time and determine your own success , write: Pat Murphy, The Thos . D.
Murphy Co. , P.O. Box 382, Red Oa k ,
Iowa 51566, or call 712~23-2591 , Ext. 51.
1-25-4t.
TOP DOLLAR paid for used washers,
dryers, gas and electric ranges, working or non-working condition. We pay
more. Phone 35&9617 or 358-4009.
1-18-12tpd.
WE CAN FIX IT! Your mobile home
needs us ! We have parts and supplies
in stock! Special orders invited. Don't
make your home do without any
longer ! Call us now! East Kentucky
Mobile Home Parts & Service, Inc .,
Allen, Ky., 606-874-9400.
2-1-lt.
•
•
HOUSE FOR SALE : 3-bedroom, living
room, dining room, kitchen, utility,
bathroom, with full-size basement.
Located in Maytown, near school and
between two churches. Reasonable
price. 358-4419, 285-3225, Weyman
McGuire.
1-1&3t.
LADIES: Unlimited ea ing potential.
Become an Undercoverwear Agent.
Sell lingerie at home parties. Have a
party and see what it is like.
Guaranteed fun, no obligation. Call
Sandi at 88&-2420 or 265-3654. 1-1&3tpd.
FOR SAU:: : 2-bedroom, 12x55 trailer,
underpinned, furnished, central air,
gas heat. Call between 4:30 and 7 p .m.,
886-3921, C.R . Baird.
1-1&3t.
•
TRAILER FOR RENT in Allen. No
pets, no children. Prefer singles or
couples. Deposit required . Call
874-2141. After 5, call 874-2114. Akers
Trailer Court.
1-18-31:.
NEW 3-BEDROOM HOME for sale
near Clark School in Woodland Hills
Subdivision. 1440 sq. ft. brick, 3 bedrooms, 2 full baths, living room with
fireplace, large built-in kitchen, dining
room and utility room with lots of
cabinet space. Central heat and air
conditioning, fully carpeted. Concrete
patio, beautifully landscaped. Ready
for immediate occupancy. Call
377-6405.
1·1&3tpd.
GERMAN SHEPHERD PUPPIES for
sale : $50 each. Gamis Martin, 35&9178.
1·1B-3t.
FOR SALE : 3-bedroom home with 2
full-size baths and extra large lot. Call
886-3394.
l -25-2tpd.
Classified ads will no longer be accepted after
12 noon, Mondays. For the coming week, these ads
are also accepted on Thursday, Fridays, and
Saturdays.
We trust this will not unduly inconvenience you,
and we will greatly appreciate your cooperation.
FOR SALE : 600 Mack coal truck, new
X1 tires. Phone 285-~96. Tom Williams.
1-11-4t.
FOR SALE: 1983 doublewide,
3-bedroom, 2 full baths, 20x20 carport,
20x20 and 8x12 decks, $24,000. 874-8941,
Jim Wipp.
1-11-4t-pd.
THE PAPER BACK BOOK STORE, 116
Francis Court, next to the courthouse.
We exchange and sell paper back books.
We have thousands of paper back books
10¢ each or 15 for $1.00. All other books
1h price.
1-11-3t-pd.
FOR SALE OR RENT- 1!179 2 bedroom
Fairmont trailer. 2 miles up Daniels
Creek at Banner. Call 874-9572. Dallas
Justice.
1-ll~t.
SALISBURY USED FURNITURE. Two
miles up Arkansas. 235-3549. 1-11-8t.
BOLEN'S APPLIANCE REPAIR &
PARTS : Repairs on washers, dryers,
gas and electric ranges. New and used
parts. We got it or we can get it, any
make or model. For all your appliance
repair and parts, call us, 358-9617 or
358-4009.
1-18-12tpd.
FOR SALE : Three bedroom brick
home. Located in Auxier. Must sell,
owner relocated. For more information, call 789-6830 after 5 p.m. B.
Prater.
1-1B-4t.
UNFURNISHED APARTMENTS for
rent in Prestonsburg. For more information, call 886-2094. After 5, call
88&-2132.
1-1&4tpd.
FOR SALE : 2-bedroom brick home at
Harold, Ky . Completely fenced lot.
Phone 478-9991 or 478-5836.
1-18-4tpd .
FOr. RENT : Trailer lot, M&D Trailer
Park. Located at lower end of Auxier.
Call collect, 513-549-2793 for information, Monday thru Saturday. No Sundaybusiness.
1-1&4t.
HOUSE FOR SALE : 4-bedrooms, 2
baths. For information, call or write
Roy Butcher, 3431 Marvel Ave., Titusville, Fla. 32796. Phone 305-268-0445.
1-18-4t.
FOR SALE : 1983 doublewide,
3-bedroom, 2 full baths, 20x20 carport,
20X20 and 8x12 decks, $23,000. 874-8942,
Jim Wipp.
1-18-4tpd.
3-BEDROOM HOME FOR SALE near
school in Maytown . Located on three
lots. Central heat, full basement.
Adjoining building, 16'x24' with full
baseme nt. Good neighborhood,
beautifully landscaped. Complete
fence . In the mid-30's. Call 285-3494.
1-18-6tpd.
USED FURNITURE. GUARANTEED
APPLIANCES. Moore's Discount Furniture. Located about 3 miles from
Martin on Rt. 122. Low prices. Call
285-9354.
1-11-Bt~.
BOLEN'S APPLIANCE REPAIR :
Repairs on washers, dryers, gas and
electric ranges, 12 years' experience.
All work and parts guaranteed 60 days.
For fast, clean, and efficient service,
call on us, 358-9617 or 358-4009.
1-18-12tpd.
F
•:r••
INCOME TAX PREPARATION, Bookkeeping. Call 886-6051.
1-25-2tpd.
CLASSIFIED ADVERTISERS
PLEASE NOTE!
FARM FOR SALE- 200 acres. Near
Lake Cumberland. 2-story colonial
house, 5-miles from Somerset. Call at
night 606-382-5643. Larry G. Vanhook.
1-ll-4t.
2· 1· 21
FOR SALE: 100 acres land . Old Addis
property on Doty Creek, McDowell.
Land is at head of hollow , lots of
timber, great for hunting. Must sell.
First $9800 gets it . 703-425-1249.
l -25-2tpd.
FOR SALE: Sofa hide-a -bed, queensize, beige, rust and blue floral. Used 5
months, excellent condition. Moving to
Arizona, must sacrifice, $550. Also
12'x12' rust, plush carpet. Phone
88&-3126.
ltpd.
FOR SALE: Singer sewing machine,
Touch & Sew model, Zig-Zag. 88&-8764.
ltpd .
I WANT SOMEONE TO STAY with
me. Will go half on the bills and furnish
food. I sure need company, man or
woman. Chester Fairchild, Martin, Ky.
ltpd.
FOR SALE OR RENT: One 197612x70
mobile home, 3 bedrooms, 2 baths,
large porch and fenced yard . For more
information, call 874-2593 after 5 p.m.
ltpd.
NEED CASH'? We buy gold and silver
coins and sterling silver dinnerware.
The Money Store, 886-9914.
ltpd.
WILL TRADE : Matching pair Norge
washer-dryer, 5 years old, heavy-duty,
for apartment size. Pair in good condition. Call886-6031 after 5 p.m.
ltpd.
PUPPIES FOR SALE : Mother, rabbit
dog. Call 874-2409.
ltpd.
FIREWOOD FOR SALE : 886-9460.
ltpd.
FOR RENT: On Arnold Avenue. Basement efficiency with outside entrance.
Utilities paid. Furnished, including
TV. Suitable for one person. No pets,
please. $225 per month, $100 securitv
deposit. Call 886-99n, Davict-tr.r.eSile.
1-25-2t.
FOR SALE : 600 R model Mack tractor
with 2&-ft. aluminum dump trailer,
$15,000 or best offer. Call Fred or Cliff
Branham at 874-9911.
1-25-2t.
HOUSE FOR RENT : Five rooms and
bath in Garrett. Call35&4154, J .D. Pritchard.
1-25-2t.
EMPLOYMENT: Jenkins Community
Hospital now accepting applications
for R.N., O.R. technicians, part-time
CRNA, and a medical records ART or
RRA consultant. Send resume to
Jenkins Community Hospital, P .O.
Drawer 472, Jenkins, Ky., 41537, Attn :
Director of Human Resources . E.O.E.
1-25-2t.
FOR RENT: Two mobile homes with
two bedrooms, fully furnished, 4/ 10 of a
mile from Ky. 80. Telephone
60&-88&-9121 during the hours of 8: 30
a .m. thru 5:00 p.m. Good neighbor·
hood, blacktop road. T&R Rentals,
P.O. Box 191, Prestonsburg , Ky . 41653.
1-25-2t.
NEW FURNITURE FOR SALE : Call
874-9329.
1-25-2tpd.
FOR SALE : G.E . electric, heavy-duty,
clothes dryer. Like new, $190. Call
874-2832.
ltpd.
AVON IS LOOKING FOR three ladies
who are willing to work 40 hours per
week and earn $500 every two weeks.
Must be 18 years of age and drive. Call
285-3928, 10a.m. to6p.m .
1-25-2t.
lt~ .
FOR SALE : 1975 Cadillac, good condi·
tion, $2000. Call874-2832.
ltpd.
FOR RENT : One bedroom furnished
trailer. One or two people only. No
children , no pe ts . Call 886-2145.
1-25-2tpd.
FOR RENT : 2-bedroom furnished
apartment. $300 per month, $100
deposit. 886-6030, Linda Vanover.
1-25-2t.
BUSINESS FOR SALE : Grocery store,
gas station and carry-Qut. Three bedroom brick home. Ph. 606~74-2314 .
1-25-2tpd.
CRAFT SKILLS : Sewing skill , woodcraft, artistic talent . Opportunity for
you to marke t your products and/or
teach youth and others in your community . Share in tomorrow. Write
Christian Project , P .O. Box 1119, Mar·
tin, KY, 41649.
.
1-25-2t .
FOR SALE : Two cooler s, one upright
with glass double doors; one chest
type. Call 886-6030. Linda Vanover.
1-25-2t.
FOR RENT : Trailer lot, M&D Trailer
Park . Located at lower end of Auxier.
Call 88&-2965 for information, Monday
thru Saturday. No Sunday business.
1-25-3t.
MACK HARVEY'S GARAGE located
one mile up Buck's Branch off new Ky.
80 at Martin. All types mechanic work .
Free estimates. Call285-3928. 1-25-4t.
John C. Hall
Founder
Hall Funeral Home
IS IT IMPORTANT TO ATTEND A FUNERAL?
Yes, it is, and for • wariety of reasons.
First, it shows you care. Yo..- bein& th.-e is appreciated by the memb.-s of the
femily. You cen help just by offerin& to help end meenin& it. By ettending the
funeral, you help share the crieving-and &rief-sbared is grief-diminished.
Of course, if you were out of town or incapecitated dwinc the funerll period, yo..not ettendin& is undentandlble. In such • case, • telecr~m, letter or phone call
helps the family understand your pli&ht.
Visiting the berened to offer yo..- assistence end condolences is proper conduct.
In fact, rillny mo..-ners lillY feel it your obliption to observe this custom out of
respect for the family or friendship for the deeeesed.
If you fell to observe these simple socielemenities, you RillY be unintentionally cuttine your ties with the femily of tt.e bereaved. It behooves you to attend, to visit, to
console the bereaved.
HALL FUNERAL HOME
Jlear JIIICiio• tf Ky. 10 ·alld Ky. 122, lartil
Phones 285-9261 OR 285-9262
FOR SALE : 1!174 Ford F250 pickup,
automatic 360 engine, doesn't rattle or
smoke. $700 firm. Ken McAskill,
35&9133.
1-25-2t.
FOR SALE : 6-room house, bath, basement, at Whee.Iwright, $2000 and take
over payments. Call after 5, 452-4179.
ltpd.
2-BEDROOM HOUSE on Arnold Ave.
for rent, $200 per month. Call 886-9937.
We're glad
you asked!
WANT TO SWAP 1!174 Ford F250 pickup, automatic 360 for smaller half-ton
pickup. Ken McAskill, 358-9133. 1-25-2t.
FOR SALE: 14x70 mobile home . Call
886-9065, Carlene Muncey.
1-25-2t.
FOR SALE : Puppies, ARC-Register ed
Shih-Tzu. Phone 606-789-8584, Ka y
Blair.
1-25-2t.
NEEDED: Handyman . Should have
some experience in plumbing and electrical work. On part-time basis. Send
application to Plantation Motel, Box
1-25-2t.
389, Prestonsburg, Ky. 41653.
MECHANIC FOR OUTBOARD motor
and small engine repair (full or parttime ). If you have knowledge, skill or
me chanical aptitude, plea::e write
Christian Project, P .O. Box 1119, Martin, KY. 41649.
1-25-2t.
PROFESSIONAL DOG TRAINING
a nd grooming. Fifteen years ' experience. All breeds. Call for appointme nt. 874:2910, Debbie Rodda m.
l -18-2t.
FOR SALE : 1975 Ford 250 Econoline
van. Asking $2100. Phone 886-9220, H.
1-25-2t.
Cooley, Jr.
CHRISTIAN SERVICE OPPORTUNITY: Fulltime or part-time assig nm e nts in several programs and projects in local area and Appalachian
r egion. Avenues for Christian service
as living-working volunteer. Nondenominational. Service to people .
Hou sing, food and stipend possible.
Write: Christian Project, P .O. Box
1119, Martin. KY. 41649 .
1-25-2t.
FOR
SALE
OR
All electric, 1% stories, 3-bedrooms, living room
& family room, kitchen & dining area, and utility
room. Located In Meadows Bronch.:.2 miles from
downtown Prestonsburg. CALL 886-1817.
�~ednoeday,
-·-
The Floyd County Times
February 1, 1984
Surplus Food To Be
Distributed Today
MISSING: Basset Hound. black and
tan, female, 8-months-old, wearing red
coJlar and white flea collar. Reward
offered for information leading to the
return of this PET. Call 874-9416. Tommy Harmon.
2+2tpd.
NEW 15x8 white spoke wheels, $26.95
each; 10..15 M&S white letter tires,
$67.95 each; 3-year batteries, $39.95
each; 14" and 15" tubes, $4.99 each;
1000x22 tubes, $16.95 each; 1100x22
tubes, $18.95 each. Where can you find
all these bargains'/ JIM'S TIRE SHOP.
of course! Phone 285-5058, Maytown.
2-1-2tpd.
EFFICIENCY APARTMENT FOR
RENT: Suitable for working lady or
gentleman. Sleeping room in private
home. Siamese kittens for sale
1186-9636.
2-l-2tpd.
FOR RENT ; House in town. $300.
886·9918.
2-1-2tpd.
TWO HOMES FOR SALE · F.H.A.loan ·
available. Located in Prestonsburg.
886-8((16.
2+2tpd.
FOR REl\"T · 2-bedroom. unfurnished
apartment. located at Town Branch.
Premonsburg. All electnc heat, TV
cable, city water Call 886~366 .
2-l-2tpd.
CHILD CARE: Will car~ for children
in my h.lme 886-9918.
2-1-2tpd.
COMPUTER WHEEL BALANCE, oniy $3.99 eacli t most wheeis). Ford truck
wheels, $8 each . 750x16 M&S recaps,
$:19 lib each. Bargains galore at Jim's
Tire Sht-.J. Maytown. Phone 285-5058.
2+2tpd.
$100.00
DOWN!!
New Homes! New Homes! Qualify
as 5100 DOWN! For further details, contact Hubert at :
as little
b -.
C6.ag_~u.li":.I L
HDi'WES
F
OUSLEY
CONCRETE
CONSTRUCTION
COMMERCIAL & RESIDENTIAL
Bldg. Floors • Sidewalks
footers • Driveways
Patios • Basements
Exposed Pea Gravel
• Free £.ttimates •
JAMES OUSL'EY
FOR SALE: AKC Brittany puppies.
$125 Winchester, Ky., call606-744-2985.
Glenda Lansdale.
2-1-2tpd.
TRAU...ER FOR RENT: 2-bedrooms at
Banner on Rice Branch. Call 874-2633.
Lillie Compton.
2-1-2t.
BREAK WITH TRADITION: Don't
send candy and flowers. show you really care with a beautifully decorated
Valentine cake. CAKES BY VIVIAN.
874-2206 or 886-3682.
2-1-2tpd.
FOR SAlE: 1981 Mustang Hatchback.
44,000 miles. power brakes. power
steering. air conditioned. Excellent
condition inside and out. AM-FM
8-track. digital clock panel. Asking
$5000. Also, truck camper. Phone
377-2079, Johnny Lee.
2-l-2t.
FOR SALE: 2-bedroom, split-level
house with five <5l lots. 7 years old.
Fireplace, patio, deck, two <2l baths.
Call George Bush, Jr.. 285-9677 or
285-9904, Cracker Bottom.
2-1-2tpd.
LAND FOR SALE: 15 acres with house
seat, 10 minutes from Prestonsburg, or
trade for land toward Pikeville.
874-2034 after 5.
2-1-2tpd.
FOR SALE: Commercial property
suitable for light industry offices or
apartments. Prestonsburg location.
Seen by appointment only. Call 886-9444
Monday-Friday.
2-l-2tpd.
FOR SALE: Hill side land with small
A-Frame house. One level Jot 50'x75'.
Around 12 acres of land in Cracker bottom. George Bush. Jr .. 285-9877.
2-1-2tpd.
FOR SALE: 1!174 Ford pickup, standard shift. 302 engine, price $2500. Call
377-6408.
2-1-2tpd.
LOST: White garbage bag full of
clothes. Put into wrong brown Eagle
jeep outside Unemployment Office
January 16. Finder please call 285-3939
or 285-9055.
1-25-2tpd.
FOR RENT: 4-room furnished apartment. No pets, no kids. 886~239 .
2-1-2tpd.
FOR RENT: House on Mountain Parkway with storage building and garden,
$250 per month plus $100 security
deposit. 118&-6041.
2-1-2tpd.
~SALE :
Allen, Ky.
Save on ·
Craftsman
Power Saws
YOUR
CHOICE
$29998
CUT '179
Craftsman
radial saw
10-in. radial saw has a
1112-HP motor that develops 2% HP. Large,
easy-to-read bevel,miter
scales. (1992)
CUT •311
Craftsman
table saw
10-in. table saw has a
large, heavy-duty castiron table. 1-HP motor
can develop 2.0 HP .
(29803)
SEE 10 BIG PAGES OF
HARDWAREANDTOOLVALUES
STARTING Willi Tl1E BACK
COVER Of OUR " FE" SALE
SUPPLEMENT
Pnces are catalog prtces • Now
ava•lable '" our ' FE' catalog
supplement • Stupptng extra • Ask
aboot Sears cred~ plans
Satisfaction Guaranteed
or Your Money Back
ISearsI
SEARS, ROEBUCK AND CO.
U.S. 23 North Prestonsburc
Phone:
886-8135 • 789-4416 •
FOR RENT: New trailer. 14x70, abedrooms, 2 baths, furnished. Phone
358-!1748 or 358-9207, Debbie Martin.
2-1-3t.
3-BEDROOM BRICK HOUSE with 6
acres land, 4 tillable and 2 in timber.
Pond and good well. 25 miles from
Somerset and Lake Cumberland .
$29,000. 379-2158, Charles Tackett.
2-1-3t.
FOR SALE: AKC registered Doberman pups. Wormed, have tails cut,
come from attack trained guard dogs.
Have good bloodlines. Call 285-5140,
Tim Ward.
2-1-3t.
HAVE YOU UPDATED YOUR PERSONAL insurance to meet today's
needs'/ If not, call us, we can insure the
entire family from o to 80. Call Sam
Wallen Insurance Agency. I have Peen
serving the insurance needs of Ky. for
over thirty years. Phone 874-2289.
2-1-Stpd.
FOR SAlE: Nice home in Wheelwright. Four rooms and bath, fenced
yard, garage, patio, $18,000. Georgia
Bolden, Box 76, Wheelwright, Ky.
41669.
2-1-2t.
WE CAN
EAST KENTUCKY
MOBILE HOME PARTS
AND SERVICE INC.
606-874-9400
FOR SALE: Irish Setter puppies and
quilting frames . Call 285-3679 after 4
p.m., Glenn Slone.
2-1-2t.
FOR IMMEDIATE SALE: 1982 14x58
2-bedroom mobile home. Owner
transfered. Selling for pay-off. 478-!1798
or478-9337, Vicky King.
2-1-2t.
FOR RENT: 2-bedroom · unfurnished
apartment, on Arnold Ave., $300 a
month. Utilities paid, $100 deposit.
Couples only or with one child. Call
886-8991, Alonzo Bowling.
2-1-2t.
Call us at
FOR SALE : 1977 Chrysler Cordoba,
white with red velour interior, new red
landau top, rebuilt transmission, new
tires and new battery. AM-FM CB
stereo, 65,000 miles. Has all options but
power windows, $2000. Nice, white cook
stove. $75. David Wyatt. 886~49 .
2-1-2t.
FOR SALE : New Age encyclopedia
and others, unused. Phone 874-2556.
2-1-3tpd.
FOR SALE : Fuel heater with tank.
Phone 886-8782, Rick Bailey.
2-1-2t.
Plenty of parts in stock for your
mobile home! Special orders invited! Do-it-yourselfers save
money, OR we will come to you!
FOR RENT: 4-room house with bath at
Hueysville. Call Taylor Reffett,
358-4228.
2-1-2t.
1!173 Volkswagen bus, in
good ~dition . One owner and air conditioned. eau. 886-8749 after 5 p.m.
2-t-2tpd.
FOR RENT : 3-bedroom mobile home,
furnished, located 1-1/2 miles out of
Prestonsburg on the Abbott road on a
private lot. Couples preferred or with
one child. No pets. References required. Rent, $250 plus $150 deposit
plus utili ties. Call after 5 p.m .. 1186-9583.
2-1-2t.
P.hone 886-8373
FIX IT!!
FOR SALE: Frigidaire 30" stove with
lighted exhaust hood, avocado green.
Excellent condition. 886-3953, Vonnie
24l-2t.
Chaffins.
NEED A JOB? Looking for an apprentice or operator of cosmotology. For
interview, call 88&-1556, Tuesday thru
Friday, 9:00till5:00.
2-1-2t.
PIANOS: Used medium-size upright
pianos, rebuilt and reconditioned by
Kentucky's only used piano dealer.
From $600 and up. Pianos tuned. Call
60&-365-9719, Ben Auxier. Jr.
2-1-2t.
WILL DO ANY KIND of odd jobs. Call
358-3481. Ask for Tim.
2-1-2t.
FOR SALE : 1!177 4-wheel drive Ford
truck . Phone 886-8782. Rick Bailey.
2-1-2t.
FOR SALE : "New Home" Brand sewing machine with free arm. straight
overcast blind hem, zig-zag and stretch
stitches, automatic, built-in button
holer, 25-year warranty. Regular
price, $568, brand new slice in
manufacturer's carton, $280 firm . Cash
only. 88&-1457 after 3 p.m. Mrs. Larry
Schuster.
2-1-2t.
FOR SALE : New Holland, 7-foot
mower. like new. $1500.886-3444, Bill G.
Smith.
2-1-2t.
FOR YOUR
SPRING DECORATING
CALL
STUMBO
PAINTING lr DRYWALLING
Free estimates
PHONE 886-1926
or 888-8486
l · l·2t
DAN'S GARAGE
WEST PRESTONSBURG
(on hill loehlncl Menln Mutlc Dltl.)
SPECIAL- FEB. 1-8
Rebuild transmission on mo•t
dome.tlc cars. •tartlng at
$139.99 and up
We do:
• R-r axle• • Rebuild motors
• Rebuild Foreign transmlulons
• 24-hour wrecker Mrvlce
CALL 886-9837 ANYTIME
Owner, Danny
~arrett
FOR SALE: 1962 Kawasaki 750 Spectre
motorcycle, low mileage. Call 447-2933,
A&C Carry-Out.
2-1-4t.
NEED MONEY? Pawn it, don't sell it.
We Joan money on almost anything.
Hock Shop, N. Lake Drive. 24 hours a
day. 886-2367.
2-Ht.
FOR SALE : Five used birch doors,
mint condition, three frames with trim,
two doors with half glass, priced
reasonable. One new Yamaha guitar
with case, one fiddle with hard case
and bow, one fiddle with coffin case,
one mandolin with hard case. One
Polaroid camera, large size, with
leather case and accessories, $30. One
lawn mower, $35, needs some repair.
Phone 886-2601 after 5:00.
ltpd.
FOR SALE: AKC-Registered Bird
Dog, German short hair pointer.
2-years-old, $200. Phone ~93. ltpd.
FOR SALE : Air Compressor, 5 h.p., 3
phase, BOgaL tank, $900.377-1151. 1tpd.
FOR SALE: Mattress, color TV, bicycle, cook stove, stereo, diamond rings,
mirrors, sewing machine, jewelry.
886-2367.
ltpd.
FOR SALE : Grill, meat saw, meat
slicer, bun warmer, popcorn popper,
trays, plates, coffee warmer. 886-2385.
ltpd.
2-BEDROOM APARTMENT for rent :
Over Wallace TV Repair, Old 23. Phone
874-9174or 874-2644.
ltpd.
FOR SALE OR TRADE : 1974 GMC
Jimmy. Good shape, 4-wheel drive.
Perfect. Asking $1000. 886-9956. ltpd.
FOR SALE : Valleydale pool tables,
3/ 4-inch slate top, good condition. Also
pinball machines and jukebox. Call
587-2787. or night, 587-2954.
ltpd.
WANTED TO DO : Tree trimming, cutting hedges, hillsides. clearing. Free
estimates. 25 years' experienc~. Call
886-1631.
ltpd .
CARD OF THANKS
The family of Carl Stephenson would
like to express their thanks and appreciation to their many friends a nd
relatives who comforted us in our time
of sorrow in the passing away of our
father. Many thanks to the ones who sent
flowers and food. A very special tha nks
to Dr. J .D. Adams and staff, Rev .. Clifford Austin and the Highlands Fteewill
Baptist Church for the beautiful singing
and comforti.ftg words, and especia lly
the Floyd tuner«MMome for their kindness and understanding they showed the
family.
FUND-RAISING PROGRAM
Can your church, school, club or civic
organization use extra money. Family
portraits by Mike Kirk can help.
For more ln~ormatlon
Call (606)478-2334 n zt
The Big Sandy Area Community Action Program will be giving out commodities to qualified low-income people
in Floyd county today (Wednesday), according to Paul Frasure, CAP coordinator.
Applications will be taken and commodities given out at the following locations: CAP Office, 552 South Lake Drive,
Prestonsburg; Senior Citizens Center,
Wheelwright; Mud Creek Volunteer
Fire Dept., Grethel; and the Coal Bldg.
Martin.
Distribution will start at 8 a.m. and
will continue until all commodities are
given out. Applicants must show identification that shows a valid Social
Security number.
Persons unable to pick up commodities can authorize another person to be
their representative. The representative
will need to show a signed, dated statement by the intended recipient which
authorizes the representative to pick up
their commodities. The authorized
representative will also need to have one
form of identification for the recipient
such as driver's license, medical card,
social security card, etc. Elderly and
handicapped persons will have priority.
Further information may be obtained
by calling the Big Sandy CAP office at
Prestonsburg, 886-36!17.
Tired of sitting day after day ar·a flea
market with the same thing-with very little or no profit?
MAKE 1984 WORTH YOUR TIME
AND HAVE FUN DOING IT!
I can set you In on-new or used-most any Item
of value. A different load each time. You set up.
Tips on how, where, when, and what to sell with
guaranteed sales and profit on every load.
Need ten to twenty men or women, 18 or over,
own car or truck, $500 or more to start.
WRITE: BOX 143, HIPPO, KY. 41637
Or give me a call at 358-9630
30 years experience In flea market and·auctions.
Wholesale to dealers only.
Hearst Foundation
Sponsors Award
In 18!17 Phoebe Apperson Hearst,
mother of newspaper magnate, William
Randolph Hearst, helped to found the
National Congress of Mothers, which
later became the National Congress of
Parents and Teachers (PTA). The
William Randolph Hearst Foundation, in
memory of Mrs. Hearst and her commitment to excellence in education, has
granted the National PTA $75,000 to
establish the annual Phoebe Apperson
Hearst Outstanding Educator Award.
According to Elaine Stienkemeyer,
president of the 5.3 million member National PTA, " The Phoebe Apperson
Hearst Outstanding Edcator Award will
honor an outstanding educator whose
achievements and commitment to education inspire excellence in students and
educators. We will ask our 25,000 PTAs
to nominate an outstanding educator in
their community who continues to carry
on the work of Mrs. Hearst by contributing to the mental, physical and
emotional development of children."
The outstanding educator who is
selected will receive a cash award of
$2,500 and a trip to the National PTA
convention which in 1984 will be held
June 17-20 in Las Vegas, Nevada. The
local PTA which nominated the Outstanding Educator will also receive $2,500 to
use in a school project of interest to. the
winning educator. The name of the outstanding educator and nominating local
at that time.unit
-- will be announced
Nominating forms will be sent to
presidents of local unit PTAs to fill out
and return to National PTA Headquarters. Entries will be judged by a
selection committee consisting of National PTA leaders. Deadline for entry
forms will be midnight, April, 1984.
With direct deposit,
you don't gamble
aga1nst
bad luck,
theft,
loss,
or destruction
of your
government check.
.
'
Not just social security, but black lung,
veterans retirement, railroad retirement and
civil service retirement, just to name a few of
them.
.·
Remember, if you're 62 and retired, First
Commonwealth checking is free of required
balance charges.
First
Commonwealth
Bank
M ember FDIC
Marttn • Bet s y Layne • Two loc at1ons In Prest o n sbu rg
•
�•
Wednesday, February 1, 1984
The Floyd Cou,..ty Times
To Wed March 31
DR. VIRGINIA A. de GUZMA1V
The 4-H members receiving recognition included:
NO APPOINTMENT NECESSARY
Area Code 606/789-6489
Monday-Wednesday-Friday
8:00 A.M.-4:00P.M.
1-25-31.
WD§!lal
HOMEMADE PIUA- SPAGHETTI- SUBMARINE SANDWICHES
ALL INGREDIENTS MADE FRESH DAllY
WE USE FRESH PIZZA DOUGH • Not Frozen • Not Pre-Biked • No Substitutes.
9AM-1AM TUES-SAT
lOAM-lAM SUNDAY-CLOSED MONDAY
CRISP FLAVORFUL PIZZAS
CUSTOM MADE IN
10"- 12"- 14"- 17" SIZES
DEfiCIOUS GONDOLA & STEAK
SANDWICHES
YOU RING ..•WE BRING
FOR PROMPT CARRY OUT ~ALL
886-8118
OR
886-8119
HOBERT'S
PIZZARIA
LANCER KY ·
Income Tax by
Dan Tax.
One hundred and three Floyd county
4-H Club members were selected to
receive county 4-H medals for achievement in projects and activities during
1983.
PAINTSVILLE CLINIC BUILDING
111 MAIN STREET
PAINTSVILLE, KENTUCKY 41240
OPEN
4-H CLUB NEWS
By JACK \1. FRIAR
Co. Ext. Agent 4-H
FAMILY PRACTICE AND OB
Saturday
8:30 A.M.-12:00 Noon
Section Three, Pqe Five
I
Mr. and Mrs. James Branham, of
Clyde, Ohio, are announcing the engagement and forthcoming marriage of their
daughter, Annette, to Mr. Jack Stephenson, son of Mr. and Mrs. Jack Stephenson, of Lucas, Ohio. Both Miss Branham
and Mr. Stephenson are graduates of
Ohio State University and are employed
by Western Electric, Columbus, Ohio_
The wedding will take place on March
31, at the ·First United Presbyterian
Church, Clyde, Ohio and the gracious
custom of an open church ceremony will
be observed. The hide-elect is the
maternal granddaughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Robert Newman, of Grethel, and
the paternal granddaughter of Mr. Troy
Branham, of Craynor, and the late Stella
Branham.
Poultry Influenza
Causes Price Rise
As a result of the avian influenza outbreak in the eastern United States, egg
and broiler prices are higher now than
they have been for some time, according
to Extension animal scientist Dr. John
Tuttle in the University of Kentucky College of Agriculture.
"When the influenza was first discovered in Pennsylvania last April, the
mortality rate was about one percent,''
he said. "Since then, the virus has
modified and mortalities run as high as
100 percent."
Since April, losses from the influenza-through the disease and through
eradication efforts-have been more
than nine million birds. The disease is
still spreading and eradication efforts
have not quelled its spread.
Egg and broiler prices will continue to
be high until late spring at least, Tuttle
said. He advises consumers to shop
around. "Some supermarkets are still
carrying broilers as a loss leader and it
pays to seek out such specials," he said.
AUTOMOTl V.I!:-Robert Mayton,
Chris Hays; POULTRY JUDGINGTerry Boyd, Randell Martin, Shawn
John~on, Scott Tackett, Michael Hale,
Darwm Prater, John Bush, Randy Hunter, Chris Hall and Jamie Hall;
BREADS-Robin Trimble; CITIZENSHIP-Michelle Stratton and Marcella
Wright; CLOTHING-Michelle Charles,
Pam Wright, Beth Wheeler and Kim
Hall; CONSERVATION-Shawn Johnson and Ruthie Conn; DAIRY FOODSMichelle Ratliff; DOG FOODS-Mary
Collins and Michelle Ratliff; FOOD
PRESERVATION-Marcella Wright
and Mary Collins; FORESTRY-Pam
Wright; VEGETABLE JUDGINGBarry Parsons and Richie Maggard;
HEALTH-Tammy Johnson and Christy Stumbo; HOME MANAGEMENTMarcella Wright ; HORSE-Patricia
Lawson; SMALL ENGINES-Chris
Hayes; PHOTOGRAPHY -Patricia
Lawson; SPEECH-8abrina West, Brad
Barker, Marcella Wright, Pam Wright,
Kim Hunter and Shelli Hunter;
SAFETY-Tammy Morgan, Missy Reynolds, Michael Hale and Shawn Johnson.
WOOD WORK-Michael Hale; YARD
IMPROVEMENT -Jamie Smith;
TEEN LEADERS-Terry Boyd, Randall Martin, Wendell Shepherd, Wendy
Kaylor, Marie Martin, Jennifer Ousley,
Brian Halbert, Steve Allen, John
Lackey, Johnny Layne, Scott Castle,
Roger Reed, Sharon Salisbury, Pam
Jenkins, Savannah Holbrook, Lenora
Reed, Rhonda Johnson and Tena
Mosley; SEWING-Melissa Griffith,
Clark, Debbie Slone, Osborne, Denise
Bush, Harold, Denise Akers, Stumbo,
Tephanie Green, Osborne, Angela Clark,
Stumbo, Lori Stanley, Harold, Marcy
Nenne, Maytown, Anita Brown, Martin,
Melissa Salisbury, Harold, Beth Hamm,
Clark, Teresa Conn, Allen, Donna
NeKamp, Wayland, Jessica Damron,
Harold, Yvette DePoy, Allen, Chantel
Reed, Garrett, April Reed, Garrett,
Darnella Bradley, Maytown, Christy
Stewart, Wayland, Hope Gray, Martin,
Michelle DePoy, Allen, Deanna Howard,
Harold, Laura Justice, Harold, Julia
Spears, Harold, Janie Smith, Harold,
Patti Meade, Harold, Ann Osborne,
Clark, Kathlene Keen, Wayland and
Melissa Johnson, Osborne.
The People's Choice
WITH 20 OFF ICES throughout the tri-state area,
DanTax is becoming a force to be reckoned with .
With highly trained tax preparers and fees that
start at $7.50 for both a Federal and State return,
more and more people are choosing DanTax as
the firm to assist them in filing their Income Tax
Returns. Thousands of taxpayers in Kentucky,
West Virginia and Ohio have enjoyed the plea·
sant, professiona l atmosphere of a DanTax office .
Do yourself a favor. This year give DanTax a fry.
DanTax
Coal Run Village
Pikeville, Ky.
DanTax
112 West Court St.
Prestonsburg, Ky.
437-4131
886-9952
~,,
.4~-,
1·11-l~t
Pharmacy ·
Footnotes
By HAROLD COOLEY
Diuretics are often prescribed for patients without
their being appraised of the potential dangers. The instant
slimming power of diuretics, commonly prescribed to
relieve menstrual bloating, is seductive. Unfortunately
many women think that they are losing weight when in
reality they are losing salt and water. Soon they turn to
the pills whenever they want to shed a few pounds in a
hurry. When taken chronically, diuretics can pose a real
danger. The chronic user's potassium level can become
abnormally low, leading to erratic heart rhythms, which
in turn can lead to sudden death. Diuretic abuse can also
lead to metabolic disturbances and deterioration of
kidney function.
Whether your physician prescribes a diuretic or any
other type of medication for you or a member of your
family have him call it into COOLEY APOTHECARY. We
meet the highest level of professionalism in our business
and would be honored to become your pharmacy. We are
located in No. 2 Town Center Bldg., 886-8106. Master
Charge and Visa. All third party payments welcomed including Insurance, Medicaid and Union plans. Open:
Mon.-Fri., 9-5 :30 ; Sat., 9-4.
HANDY HINT:
There is no substitute for exercise and a sensible diet
for long-term weight loss.
CAMPBELL PRESENTS
"I'LL BE THERE, TOO!"
IN CONCERT
MARCH 3, 1984
AT VIKING HALL
BRISTOL, TN.
TICKETS ARE ONLY
$6.00 EACH AT ANY
CAMPBELL FORD LOCATION.
ALL SEATS
ARE RESERVED. SO HURRYI
WHY ARE WE DOING IT? BECAUSE WE THINK YOU MIGHT FALL IN LOVE WnH ONE OF OUR NEW CARS OR TRUCKS
WHEN YOU COME IN TO GET YOUR TICKETS. MAYBE NOT. WE BELIEVE IT'S WORTH A SHOT.
�The Floyd County Times
Tuesday, January 31, 1984
Section Three, Pace Six
•
PRICES
EFFECTIVE
THROUGH
FEBHUARY
5TH
We
reserve
the right
to limit
Quantities
and correct
pnn!lng errors
FAST
FRIENDLY
SERVICE
ALL THE WAY
TO YOUR CAR!!
$2
19
MARTHA WHITE FLOUR..... •
10-LB. BAG
6.5-0Z. CAN
STAR KIST TUNA .............
iYRUP~:~ ................................... $1 79
$17
3
SUGAR CRISP ........................ .
CoMPLETE PANcAKE Mlx ... $1 °9
18-0Z.-POST
15-0Z.-RAGU THREE FLAVORS
SPAGHETTI SAUCE ......
32-0Z.-HEINZ
KEG '0 KETCHUP ......... .
2 LITER BOTTLE-FIVE FLAVORS
'
IGA SODA .................... .
·
.
~--~~-------------------------
IOES
39
3-Lb.
Bag .
20-Lb.
Bag
LETTUC
.PPLE
3-Lb.
' Bag
HEAD
3-0Z.
MIX OR MATCH
12-0Z.
JELLO GELATIN
IGA
MARTHA WHITE
10-LB. BAG
29
AMERICAN
SINGLES ....... ~
$169
POTATO CHIPS .................. ..
16-0Z.
ggc
CHEESE POP CORN ............. .
ggc
CORN CHIPS ........... ... .. .. ....... .
ggc
CHEESE.TWIST .................... .
75C
BATHROOM TISSUE ............ .
~
12-0Z.
12-0Z.
IGA
IGA
PIMENTO
SINGLES
SWISS
SINGLES
9
1&-oz.
12-oz..
4-ROLL
2/$1
PAPER TOWELS ................. .
SINGU ROLL
IGA
BUTTERMILK
BISCUITS
c
$
9
MEAL............... .
�•
The Floyd County Times
Tuesday, January 31, 1984
Section Three, Pap Seven
FULLY COOKED
FULLY COOKED
HAM
HAM
SLICES
BUTT
PORTION
CENTER CUT
69
LB•
....... 79c r:.a~~~
. .... .~ . . ·. . . ~ . ·-.99c
24-0Z.- DINTY MOORE
1¥~~ . . . . . . . . . . . . . $139c
2-LB. PKG.
FRESH
ARMOUR STAR
GROUND BEEF
COLUMBIA BACON
119
TWIN PAK
~s~:v: CHIPS............ 99
. 149
LB.
FRESH FRYER
KY. BORDER
BOLOGNA
WHOLE OR HALF ROLL
::r~~~~~~RESERVES $1 c.....~-~·-·_· __9~~~-~~~..........-~
9
~L
~
-----~
ESH FISH
49
. . . ~~: LLl~lftoNI........ . ......... 99
.. .. .. .
1
32-0Z.-IGA
'c
..... 79
99 c
LONG
SPAGHETTI ... :..............
LOW ONIONS
aAss, PERcH, cATFisH,wHITE FLouNDER, TRouT
-NEVER FROZEN-
IGA
WI NERS
~OZ.
PKG.
IGA
WHdulf'sHOG
SAUSAGE SAUSAGE
991~.
ROLL
$
~-LB.
ROLL
-FAMILY PAK SALE-
FRYER
DRUMSTICKS
Complete your
China·Set tod~y!
•
Hearthside Stoneware
SAUCERS, CUPS, PLATES, SALAD DISHES
COMPL£TED PIECES $3.99
NO LIMIT ON
ANY PIECE
ALL49c
BANQUET
POT
PIES
(CHICKEN, BEEF, TURKEY)
SPAGHETTI a MEAT BAUS, BEEF STEW, SAUER KRAUT i WIENERS,
FRIED CHICKEN, MACARONI i CHEESE, MASHED POTATOES,
GREEN BEANS, CORN ON THE COB, HOT DOGS, CORN BREAD.
ROLLS. PEACH COBBLER.
2/89c ·
6-0Z. JENO'S
PEPPERONI OR SAUSAGE
ROLLS
age
IGA
ORANGE JUICE
gc
PEPPERONI, HAMBURGER,
SAUSAGE & COMBINATION
JENO'S PIZZA
$
09
THURSDAY
BAKED CHICKEN BREAST, FISH AND HUSH PUPPY, FRIED CHICKEN
UVERS, HAMBURGER AND HOT DOOS, C.ORN, GREEN BEANS, FRIED
POTATOES, BROWN BEANS, MUSTARD GREENS, CORN BREAD, C.
NER ROLL, BLACKBERRY COBBLER.
FRIDAY
TURKEY AND DRESSING, STEAK AND GRAVY, MEAT LOAF, MASH·
ED POTATOES. GREEN BEANS. CORN. PEAS, BAKED BEANS, SWEET
POTATOES, MUSTARD GREENS, CORN BREAD, ROLLS,
STRAWBERRY COBBLER.
SATURDA
CABBAGE ROLLS. FRIED CHICKEN, SALISBURY STEAK i GRAVY.
PORK CHOPS lr DRESSING, GREFN BEANS, CORN, PEAS, BROWN
BEANS. OVEN BROWN POTATOES, HOT DOGS, ROUS, CHERRY
COBBLER.
SUNDAY
CHICKEN i NOODLES, MEAT LOAF, FRIED CHiCKEN, MASHED
POTATOES, GREEN lEANS, CORN, BAKED lEANS, MUSTARD
GREENS, BROWN BEANS, PEACH COBBLER.
MONDAY
CHICKEN i DUMPUNGS, HAM AND BAKED APPLES, STEAK i
GRAVY, FRIED CHICKEN, HOT DOGS, TACOS, MACARONI i
CHEESE. GREEN BEANS. CORN, PEAS. MAftiEi'iiOTATOES, APPLE
COBBLER. MUSTARD GREENS, BROWN BEANS.
TUESDAY
ROAST BEEF i GRAVY, BBQ RIBS, FRIED CHICKEN. PORK BBQ,
GREEN BEANS. CORN. HASH BROWN POTATOES, PEAS, HOT DOGS,
MUSTARD GREENS, BROWN BEANS, CORN BREAD, ROLLS,
BLACKBERRY COBBLER.
�The Floyd County Times
Wedn.-day, Feb111ary 1, 1984
Mrs. Adams To Chair
Bea er Bike-a-thon
0!
God won't accept Sunday. He
sold the Sabbath, not th Fir t
Day. Jesus said It was a vain
worship to keep man's comand·
ments and not God's-Mark 7:7.
CHURCH OF GOD
(SEVENTH DAY)
c/o Jerry Bentley
Rt. 4, Box 737
Pikeville, Ky. 41501
~,_.
The Central Regional Office of St.
Jude Children's Research Hospital announced today that Mrs. Debra Adams
has agreed to chair the Sl. Jude Children' · Research Hospital Bike-a-Thon in
Reaver.
St. Jude Children's Research Hospital
was founded by entertainer Danny
Thomas. The institution opened its doors
to the public 1n 1962 to combat catastrophic diseases which afflict our children.
St. Jude Hospital is non·sectanan, nondiscriminatory, and provides medical
care to over 4,200 patients.
At St. Jude, scientists and physicians
are working side by side seeking not only
a better means of treatment, but also the
causes, cures and prevention of these
terrible killers.
Free cassenes or written
llteroture-speclfy which.
12·28-61
'1r
from~
.=;
SAVE
ON
JFG OR SABRO GROUND COFFEE
I
f
SURGEON
Section Three, Paae El&ht
In Appreciation
I find that it is impossible for me to
thank each individual who has been so
kind to me during my illness. So I use
this method to acknowledge my deep
gratitude to each of you who remem·
bered me with vis1ts, cards, prayers and
other expressions of love and concern.
You have meant more to me than you
perhaps realize.
DOUG FITZPATRICK
el Heatedly Defends
Quality of Operations
Saying its business practices will
management audit, to prove that we're
withstand the toughest examination,
neither.
South Central Bell has asked the Ken"Some folks will say we wouldn't ask
tucky Public Service Commission <PSC>
for an audit if we didn't think we'd look
to conduct a full management audit of good. That's absolutely right-we think
C Everett Koop. M 0
Bell's Kentucky operotions.
we'll look very, very good. And if the
US DIPilllmenl o• t1f.llth iiAd Hum•n ~t "vltt " Pub41C Hro~llh Serv·c ..
"We're completely frustrated by the
audit shows areas we need to shape up,
PSC's unjustified criticism of how we we'll do it. Nobody's perfect."
Osteoporosis Can Be Prevented run the business," said Stan Dickson,
Nevertheless, study after study shows
Many of us know someone-usually a Bell vice president. "We want an audit,
the Bell companies to be among the
woman over the age of 60-who has to remove the cloak of suspicion thrown
country's best-operated, Dickson said.
broken a hip or wrist while doing a over us by the PSC's latest rate order,
Proof lies in the fact that telephone rates
routine task. Bone fractures are com- and to resolve the issues keeping the
have risen less than half as much as conmon among elderly women, we have company and the PSC apart."
sumer prices, while at the same time,
heard, because their bones simply
The PSC's harsh judgments of Bell
servic .. quality continues to improve, he
weaken with age. In point of fact, operations are completely unfounded,
newspaper
argued.
weakening of the bones is not an in- Dickson said.
oQvertising done
evitable part of the aging process. It is
"Every one of our employees has
effectively! and in·
a treatable disease called osteoporosis. worked hard and sacrificed to trim this Money Problems ...
expensively!We'll
Roughly 15 million Americans suffer company down and bring it through a
Money problems are not confined to
help you do the entire
from some degree of osteoporosis, and period of wrenching change," he said. people on the lower end of the economy,
job from ther'e to copy
about 88 percent of the cases occur in "We've cut our employee force by 28 the February Reader's Digest reports.
ro artwo~ ...for the cost
women. Osteoporosis can begin as ear- percent since 1980. This enabled us to Because salaries usually lag behind risohhe ad spoce alone!
ly as age 35, so that by the time a per- save about $60 million in s~laries and ing expenses, 36 percent of families with
son reaches the age of 60, her <or his) wages in 1983 alone. There's been no annual incomes over $25,000 interviewlnterestedi' Call Ken Peters at
886·8506 and he"ll call on you!
bones are thinner and break more easi- recognition of this effort from the PSC. ed in a recent survey reported that they
ly than those of someone who has not Instead, we get reprimands for sup- "frequently" had trouble meeting their
The Floyd County Times
developed the disease. Every year, posedly doing little to cut costs."
monthly bill$.
190,000 elderly persons fracture hip
A letter detailing Bell's audit request
bones. Osteoporosis is often the underly- was delivered to the commission Thursing cause, and many of these people day. The letter emphasized that the
decline in health and die within six audit firm the PSC chooses should have
months of the 'injury. This tragedy is the experience and resources to fully
made all the more terrible by the fact study a company Bell's size.
that osteoporosis is largely preventable.
"We want this job done right, to erase
Osteoporosis is a progressive disease, any quest10ns about the quality of our
meaning that once it begins, it continues operation," Dickson said. "The fact is,
to worsen if not treated. Osteoporosis is we've done too good a job for any knowcaused by a decrease in calcium and ledgeable organization to ignore.
other substances that maintain strong
"Kentucky's telecommunications netbones. Women are more likely to contact work is second to none. We've steadily
the disease, partly because their bones provided the latest technology to Kenare smaller to start with, and also tucky homes and business, and we're
because changes that occur during serving more customers and more
menopause lower the levels of calcium phone lines than ever. We're switching
and estrogen in their bodies, thereby ac- more than 9.5 million local calls everycelerating their los!: of bone tissue.
day, and the number continues to grow.
For most women, the gradual bone~ We've accomplished all this while conthinning process that occurs in osteo- tinually cutting our costs and trimming
porosis is painless. In fact, the first sign our work force," Dickson said.
of disease often appears on an x-ray
"That's just the tip of the iceberg. The
taken for another purpose or, unfor- fact is, we've done a whale of a job here.
tunately, when a bone is fractured. The We've set the standards for all Kentucky
Phone: 377-2897, Price, Ky.
disorder usually shows up first in the companies, not just regulated ones. We
Home phone: 587-2816 or 587-2775, Beaver, Ky.
bones of the forearm and the spine. It think it's time for the PSC to recognize
may later affect the upper part of the that, and to recognize the day-to-day
thigh bone, where it helps to form the realities of our operation.
hip. Women who lose bone mass in their
" Our business doesn't run on textvertebrae or spine may suffer from books theories-we have to deal with
lower back pains because the shrunken real competition and real costs, ·and we
• All Major brands.available
vertebrae move closer together and put have to be there when the customer
• 60-day free service
strain on the back muscles. This type of wants a dial tone. We've done an
~ 3-year warranty on mounts
bone loss and weakening can result in outstanding job, yet the commission's
loss of height or a curvature of the spine latest ruling hints that we're stupid or
that you may have heard referred to as dishonest or both. We're requesting a
''dowager's hump.' '
Doctors try to stop or slow down the
CONSOLIDATED REPORT OF CONDITION
rate of bone loss in patients with
(Including Domestic Subsidiaries)
osteoporosis in a number of ways- by
prescribing diets rich in calcium and
LEGAL TITLE OF BANK
adequate in protein, for example, and by
encouraging patients to get plenty of daily exercise, such as walking, bicycling
The Bank Josephine
or another activity appropriate to the
COUNTY
age and physical condition of the patient.
41653
Prestonsburg
Vitamin D supplements often are
prescribed because vitamin D aids in the
STATE BANK NO.
absorption of calcium from food. An efDecember 31, 1983
4
73- 293
fective and common drug treatment for
slowing bone loss in women after
ASSETS
menopause is estrogen therapy. Neither
1. Cash and due from depository institutions
vitamin D nor estrogen should be used,
2. U.S. Treasury securities .
however, except under close medical
3. Obligations of other U.S. Government agencies anrl corporations
supervision.
4. Obligations of States and political subdivisions in the United States
Of course, the osteoporosis that shows
5. All other securities
up in the later years had its beginnings
6. Federal funds sold and securities purchased under agreements to resell
much earlier, which is why medical ex7. a. Loans, Total (excluding unearned income)
perts today recommend that preventive
b. Less: allowance for JlOSsible loan losses
measures be started as early as possic . Loans, Net .
ble. A woman should get plenty of
8. Lease financing receivables . . . .
calcium in her diet throughout life, but
9. Bank premises, furniture and fixtures, and other assets representing bank premises
part~cularly after the age of 40 and
10. Real estate owned other than bank premises
following menopause. Dark green, leafy
· 1 1. a. Intangible assets
vegetables are excellent sources of
11. b. All other assets
calcium, as are milk and milk products.
12. TOTAL ASSETS (sum of items 1 thru 11)
To make sure that you get the calcium
LIABILITIES
you need, discuss your diet with your
13. Demand deposits of individuals, partnerships, and corporations
doctor. After estimating the calcium
14. Time and savings deposits of individuals, partnerships, and corporations)
content of a person's normal diet, a doc15.
Deposits of United States Government .
tor can recommend calcium supplement
16. Deposits of States and political subdivisions in the United States
tablets, if necessary, to bring daily
17. All other deposits .
calcium intake up to the proper level for
18. Certified and officers' checks
that individual.
19. Total Deposits (sum of items 13 thru 18)
Staying active appears to protect
a. Total demand deposits .
against osteoporosis, too. While there is
b. Total time and savings deposits
no hard proof that exercise will prevent
20. Federal funds purchased and securities sold under agreements to repurchase .
the disorder, we do know that lack of
21 . Interest-bearing demand notes (note balances) issued to the U.S. Treasury and
physical activity hastens bone loss and
other liabilities for borrowed money
that regular exercise of the type that
22. Mortgage Indebtedness and liability for capitalized leases .
works the muscles against gravity, such
23. All other liabilities
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . · · · · ·
as walking, bicycling and running,
24. TOTAL LIABILITIES (excluding subordinated notes and debentures) (sum of items 19 thru 23)
serves to maintain and actually
?.5. Subordinated notes and debentures
strengthen bones.
CAPITAL
26. Preferred stock
a. No shares outstanding r~~E
Osteoporosis is a common problem, a
a. No. shares authorized
000 000
27. Common Stock
serious problem for millions of
b. No. sha res outstanding
2 000 :ooo
Americans. But it is not an inevitable
28. Surplus . . .
consequence of the aging process. By
29. Undivided profits and reserve for contingencies and other capital reserves
keeping your calcium intake at the pro30. TOTAL EQUITY CAPITAL (sum of items 26 thru 29) .
per level and by getting the right kinds
31. TOTAL LIABILITIES AND EQUITY CAP..:.IT:..:.A.:.:L:....!::=:.::~o:.:.f...:.it:.:e.::.
m:::
s..:2:..:
4.:..
, =.25
~
a...:.
nd
::...:.=-:..._..:,.__:_-'---'-_,.;,.---'-'---'--
of exercise on a regular basis, you can
MEMORANDA
do a great deal to protect yourself
1. Ar.1ounts outstanding as of report date
against this disabling, but preventable,
a. Standby letters of credit, total
disease. Why not start today?
b. Time certificates of deposit in denominations of $100,000 or more .
c. Other time deposits in amounts of $100,000 or more .
2. Average for 30 calendar days (or calendar month) ending with report date
Kentucky Music Educators
a. Total deposits (corresponds to item 19 above)
the
GENERAL
B.&M.
SATELLITE
25...
• • • • • • • STORECOUPON
1§
•
SAVE
I
I
I
I
I
•
I
~------·
§1I
0NANYSIZE
~ JFG OR SABRO
GROUND COFFEE
~~~
Tt T1tt ,,..,, JFG CoHee Company""" reHnllurse )Ou lor the face value of this coupon
plus 7C for handling 1! vou recetve 11 on tile sale of !he SI)OCified product and if upon
request you submit evtdence thereof ~tis factory to JFG CoHee Company. Coupon may
not be ass.gned or transferred. Customer must oay
sates Ia• Void where prohibited.
taxed or restriclell by law Cash value 1120e. Coupon will '101 be honored 1f presented
lhtough out.ide agencies. brokers or others who are '
not retail distributors of our merchandise or SPecifically
authorized by us to present coupons tor redemption 1
Redeemable only on merchandiSe 1nd1cated Any other
use const1tutes fraud For redemption of prooerly re
cetved and handled coupon mail to, JFG COFFEE CO.. •
P 0 BOX 1245. CLINTON. IOWA 52734. limit one coupon
'"Y
I
I
1
I
I
•
479 0 0 7 0 00 b 4
•
-.;~·; .;;E;t;.0~\.;84- • • • • • • - . --.I
You Make Us Famous!
105 North Lake Drive, Near the U.S. 23 Intersection
PHONE 886-1396 PRESTONSBURG
WEDNESDAY
SPECIAL
.
.
.. .
Try Our Famous
3 Piece Dinner!
3 pieces of golden brown Famous Recipe
Fried Chicken, mashed potatoes and gravy,
creamy cole slaw and one fresh, hot biscuit.
"r\IC COUPON NEEDED~'
.
Regular or Mild Spicy
•10 Pieces of delicious
Famous Recipe Fried
Chicken
•2 Salads of your
choice
EFFECTIVE
ANY DAY
REG. $9.55
VALUE
.*
ANY DAY *.
.*
ANY DAY
*
Hamilton's Discount Furniture
WILL NOT BE UNDERSOLD ON ANY
SATELLITE SYSTEM.
-B ank Financing Available
To Convene In Lexington
The Kentucky Music Educators
Association will convene for their
Twenty-Sixth Annual In-Service Conference, February 1-4 at the Lexington
Convention Center-Hyatt RegencyRadisson Plaza complex in Lexington.
An impressive array of over thirty clinic
sessions will be provided the practicing
music educators plus opportunities to
hear musical performances by twentysix performing groups from Kentucky's
elementary and secondary schools, colleges and universities. The theme for the
1984 In-Service Conference is "Speak
Out For Music Education" as the Kentucky Music Educators showcase music
education in the Commonwealth.
NOT£: This report must be sianed by an authonzed officer(s) end attested by not less than th ree directors other than the off1cer(s) sianin& the report.
I/YII, tile underslped officer(s) do hereby declare that th1s Report of Condition (includ1ng the supportin& schedules) is t rue to the best of my knowledae and belief.
SIG/ATURE OF OFFICER(S) AUTHORIZED TO SIGN REPORT
AREA CODE/ TELEPHONE NO.
DATE SIGNED
1,},
.
):)
606
886-9101
25
1984
fWIIIE MD TITLE Of OFFICER(S) AUTliORIZED TO SIGN REPORT
Burieta Gearhart
Vice President
Controller
&
SIGNATURE OF DIRECTOR
E,..: . .~·
~ ( W~E MA.U. fQ.II
~ ~'?Ji~8 SHl )
~
....
Stnu of
s-rn
..
10
.K..entw::ky............... . .... ... ........... .. ..., County
and srtbscrib~d /Iefort me this .....
of .........f.l.oY.d.
.. . . ....... ... .day of ...Janwu:y
..................... ............., u :
...................... 19...84...,
:;: ~:~;,~~;:;':%:::' .~.ap:!JL~l'r.~~..~~~~~~~~; it.~~~.Q. ~.........
Notary Public.
•
•
�(.,__
MQr ltrlny~ O!nunty Qrimrs ·
Wednesday,
1, 1984Tuesday,
February 7, 1984
F~ry
«wednesday))
2!1/84
MORNING
9:00 m
MOVIE: 'Silent
Victory: The Kitty
O'Neil Story' Kiny overcomes her deafness
to become a success in
the Hollywood stunt
world. Stockard Channing, James Farentino.
Colleen
Dewhurst.
1979
AFTERNOON
1:00
6:00
m
MOVIE: 'Mister
Corey' A slum boy
from Chicago builds a
reputation as a gambler. Tony Curtis, MarHyer,
Charles
tha
Bickford. 1957.
EVENING
D ill D
(I) G ill
tiD Cl) News
Uttle House on the
Prairie
fB Cil MacNeil/Lehrer
Newshour
@i) ® 3-2-1. Contact
0 (]) CiD Cl) NBC
News
0 (I) CBS News
I&) (!) ABC News
@i)
®
Business
Report
D (])PM Magazine
D
(I) Wheel of
Fortune
I&)(!) People's Court
Carol Burnett
f.B
ffi Kentucky
General Assembly
@i) ® MacNeil/Lehrer
Newshour
tiD Cl) Switch
D (]) Tic Tac Dough
D (I) Family Feud
I&)
Jeffersons
Hogan's Heroes
D (]) tiD Cl) Real
People Tonig,h t's program features some
waterskiing stunts, a
look at commercial actress Irish Schacon and
a husband and wife California Highway Patrol
team. (60 min.)
D (I) Domestic Ufe
Dr. Pate, the Cranes'
longtime
dentist,
plunges the family into
a depression bordering
on panic .
I&) (!) Fall Guy Colt's
sister finds her life in
danger when she accidentally videotapes a
kidnapping . (60 min .)
MOVIE: 'Oklahoma Crude'
The
story of an independent woman oil driller in
rough and tumble Oklahoma who banles the
immensely powerful 011
company that wants to
drive tier from her land.
George C. Scon. Faye
Dunaway, John Mills.
m
6:30
7:00
m
B:OO
rn
m
1973
f.BCIJ@i)®Uvefrom
the Met 'Don Carlo.·
Placido Domingo stars
in this special performance of Verdi's classic
opera 'Don Carlo.· (3
hrs., 30 min.)
8:30 D (]) Empire Led by
Jack Willow. the board
gangs up behind Ben's
back to make sure he
gets into trouble on his
trip to Africa.
9:00 8 Cil
Facts of
Ufe
e (})
• (J) MOVIE: 'Final
Conflict' A priest sets
out to destroy the satanic mission of Damian, the antichriat. Sam
Neill, Rossano Brazzi.
Lias Harrow. 1981.
Katharine Hepburn (top)
and Henry Fonda star as a loving couple who have spent 48
summers together, and Jane
Fonda portrays their daughter.
"On Golden Pond," the Academy Award-winning film airs
SUNDAY, FEB. 5 on "NBC
Sunday Night at the Movies."
D (]) D Cil G C!l
CiD (})News
m All In the Family
11 :30 D (]) CiD Cl) Tonight
D
m
m
CHECK LISTINGS FOR EXACT TIME
@1984Compulog
m
m
m
1 :00
2/2/84
MORNING
9:00
director attempts suicide when he cannot
break with his estranged wife,
who
wants to possess him
body and soul. Jose
Ferrer, June Allyson.
6:00
1955.
6:30
m
MOVIE:
'The
Shrike' A Broadway
1955
EVENING
tiD Cl) Appalachian
Encounters
7:30 D (])Tic Tac Dough
D
Prairie
m
MOVIE:
'The
Treasure of Pancho
Villa' An American adventurer,
supporting
Villa for pay, masterminds a robbery of a
Federal gold train. Rory
Calhoun, Shelley Winters, Gilbert Roland.
omornmrn
tiD Cl) News
m Little House on the
fB Cil MacNeil/Lehrer
AFTERNOON
((thursday»
m
7:30
ON GOLDEN POND
m
Show
(I) Police Story
I&) C!l Nightline
Catlins
12:00
MOVIE:
'The
Chapman Report' A
psychologist and his
staff conduct a scientific sex survey on a
group
of
'typical'
American
suburban
wives. Efrem Zimbalist.
Jr., Shelley Winters,
Jane Fonda. 1962.
®
latenight
America (JIP)
12:30 D (]) late Night with
David Letterman
0 (I) MOVIE: 'Goldie
and the Boxer Go to
Hollywood'
I&)
C!l To Be
Announced
1 :00 I&) (!) Bionic Woman
2:45
MOVIE: 'Tiger
Shark'
4:30
Open Up
('
TV
SCHEDULE
m NCAA Basketball:
I&) (!) Dynasty
D (]) CD Cl) Night
Court
1 0:00 D (]) CiD Cl) St.
Elsewhere
I&) C!l Arthur Hailey's
Hotel
1 0:15
TBS
Evening
News
9:30
11 :00
c
7:00
News hour
@i) ® 3-2-1, Contact
0 Cil tiD (]) NBC
News
0 (§) CBS News
I&) (!) ABC News
@i)
®
Business
Report
D (]) PM Magazine
D (I) Wheel of
Fortune
I&)(!) People's Court
Carol Burnett
f.B
ffi Kentucky
General Assembly
@i) ® MacNeil/Lehrer
Newshour
I&)
(I) Family Feud
rn Jeffersons
m Hogan's Heroes
tiD Cl) Lome Greene's
Wilderness
Cl) Gimme a
Break When Nell's
therapist dies, it leaves
Nell with a triggering
mechanism that is activated whenever anyone knocks three
times.
D (I) Magnum P.l.
I&) (!) Automan Walter and Automan discover a deadly diamond smuggling operation. (60 min.)
8:00 D (])
m
m
--Movie Week--
Vanderbilt at Mississippi State
fB
Cil
People's
Business
@i) ® Sneak Previews Co-hos!s Neal
Gabler and Jeffrey
lyons take ~ look at
what's happening at
the movies.
8:30 U (])
Family
Ties
G ® Good Neighbors
e (})
9:00 D (]) fiB (I) Cheers
Sam tnes to restore order at Cheers aher a
new antique scale gets
everyone believing that
it has magical powers.
D (I) Simon & Simon
An emerging ballerina
hires Rick and .,P..J. to
find out who IJ threatening her life before
her big debut. (60 min.)
I&) (!) Masquerade
fB Cil Scholastic
Challenge
@i) ® Mysterj! 'Reilly:
Ace of Spies.' Reilly is
sent on a mission to a
German shivyard to obtam the plans of a new
Krupps naval gun. (60
min.) [Closed Captioned]
9:30 D ®
Cl) Buffalo
Bill Jo-Jo, agonizing
over a decision on
whether to have an
abortion, is unaware
that Bill has decided
that he should be the
one to determine the
fate of the child.
1 o:oo
Hill
Street Blues
D (I) Knots Landing
m
o m m rn
m rn 20120
m
ffi
Business
Report
@i) ®Avengers
10:30 f.B ffi Inside Story
'Superbowl/
Supers takes.· The big
buildup to one of America's most lucrative television moments is
examined.
11:oo
M.D.
I&) (!) Nightline
Catlins
®
Latenight
America
12:00
MOVIE: 'Ten Uttle
Indians' House guests
at a mountain castle become murder victims
one by one. Hugh
O'Brian, Shirley Eaton,
Fabian. 1966.
12:30 D (I) Late Night with
David lettennan
0 (I) MOVIE: ' ... And
Your Name Is Jonah'
A couple's deaf son is
incorrectly diagnosed
as mentally retarded.
Sally Struthers, James
Woods, Jeffrey Bravis.
m
m
m
(CBS) SUNDAY NIGHT MOVIE
"CHARIOTS OF FIRE" ( 1981) Ben Cross. lan Charleson. Based
on a true story about two men superbly trained to represent their
country in the 1924 Olympics. one to honor the glory of God and
the other as a defense against bigotry.
Dudley Moore and Liza Minnelli co-star in "Arthur," the
romantic comedy about a millionaire playboy. ABC airs
the 1981 film on Monday, Feb. 6.
"ARTHUR" (1981) Dudley Moore. Liza Minelli. Comedy about a
dissolute millionaire playboy who romances a working woman
from Queens. John Gielgud steals the show as Arthur's foulmouthed butler.
WEDNESDAY
(CBS) WEDNESDAY NIGHT MOVIE
"LITTLE HOUSE ON THE PRAIRIE: THE LAST FAREWELL"
( 1983) Michael Landon. Karen Grassle. Matthew Laborteaux,
Melissa Gilbert. Victor French, Dean Butler. When a group of
Eastern financiers reveal that they own all of Walnut Grove, the
town's citizens become enraged and vow to destroy their homes,
leaving the new owners a demolished community.
"A GOOD SPORT'' (1983) Ralph Waite. Lee Remick. Romantic
comedy about a newspaper sports columnist and an elegant
fashion magazine editor who try to develop a close friendship
without allowing sex to intrude.
·
TUESDAY
(CBS) TUESDAY NIGHT MOVIE
FRIDAY
(NBC) FRIDAY NIGHT MOVIE
"THE SKY'S NO LIMIT" (1983) Sharon Glass. Dee Wallace,
Anne Archer. Three women astronauts battle NASA's intense
training requirements and their own personal problems as they vie
for the glory of becoming the United States' first woman astronaut and a berth on the next Challengef Space Shuttle FliQht.
f.B ffi fiB (I)
lD All In the
m
(NBC) SUNDAY NIGHT MOVIE
(NBC) MONDAY NIGHT MOVIE
om o cum rn
News
Family .
@i)(fl)Dr. Who
11 :30 D (])
00 Tonight
Show
0 (§) Trapper John,
"ON GOLDEN POND" ( 1981) Henry Fonda. Katharine
Hepburn. Jane Fonda, Dabney Coleman. B retired professor and
his wife reopen their summer home on the occasion of his 80th
birthday and come to terms with lifelong communication and
acceptance problems they have had with their estranged daughter.
MONDAY
(ABC) MONDAY NIGHT MOVIE
Evening
fB
SUNDAY
(ABC) SUNDAY NIGHT MOVIE
"MY MOTHER'S SECRET LIFE" (1983) Loni Anderson. Paul
Sorv1no. A high-priced San Francisco call girl's uhexpected
reun1on with her 16-year-old daughter forces her into a frightening
deCISion - either to continue in her "glamourous." emotionally
isolated profession. or risk reaching out to another human being.
TBS
News
"THE FANTASTIC WORLD OF D.C. COLLINS" ( 1983) Gary
Coleman, Bernie Casey, Shelley Smith. Michael Ansara. The son
of an American United Nations diplomat, who has difficulty
separating his fantasies from reality, continually daydreams that
he is one of his favorite heroes.
1979.
ill To Be
Announced
1 :00 8 C!l Bionic Woman
2:00 •
MOVIE: 'Battling
Bellhop' Rivalry between boxing managers erupts into a
shootout after a double
double-cross.
Bene
Davis, Edward G. Robinson, Humphrey So-
llil
.I
4:15 ~~Up·
4:45 • WclllciiiMge
�(
«frid~
(
(
2/3/84
WINTER OLYMPICS
MORNING
9:00
Cfj MOVIE: 'Woman
ir. Hiding' A husband
arranges an accident
for his wife's death. Ida
lupino. Howard Duff,
Stephen
McNally.
AFTERNOON
1 :00
3:30
12:30
Jim McKay hosts ABC's
coverage of the 1984 Winter
Olympics from Sarajevo,
Yugoslavia. ABC's coverage
of
the
games
begins
MONDAY, FEB. 6 and ends
with closing ceremonies on
SUNDAY, FEB.19.
Cfj MOVIE: 'Drango'
A major, assigned to a
small Georgia town he
had ravaged during the
Civil War, tries to govern without the use of a
Jeff Chandler,
gun.
Joanne Dru. Ronald Howard. 1957.
fB CI) New Shapes in
Education
m
1 :00
CHECK LISTINGS FOR EXACT TIME
@)1984 Compulog
m
1:30
EVENING
6:oo
6:3o
o rn o oo m m
(lD (J) News
ID little House on the
Prairie
fB ® MacNeil/Lehrer
Newshour
CID 3-2-1, Contact
NBc
News
0 (I) CBS News
6l G) ABC News
CID Business
Report
0 (I) PM Magazine
0
(I) Wheel of
Fortune
6l G) People's Court
ID Carol Burnett
fB ® Enterprise 'The
Colonel Comes to Japan.
Tonight's program looks at Kentucky
Fried Chicken's effort
to succeed in Japan. (R)
[Closed Captioned]
€E) CID MacNeil/Lehrer
Newshour
(lD 00 Goins Brothers
0 (I) Tic Tac Dough
0 (I) Family Feud
Jeffersons
ID NBA Basketball:
Atlanta at Philadelphia
fB ® Comment on
Kentucky
(lD 00 This Week in
Country Music
0 (I) (lD 00 Legmen
Jack and David become the victims of a
super con man. (60
m1n.)
0
(I) Dukes of
Hazzard The Dukes become some unlikely secret agents when they
try to break up a cnme
nng. (60 min.)
6l G) Benson
m
o m m m
m
7:00
7:30
mm
8:00
m
m mWeek/
CID
Washington
Review Paul Duke is
JOined by top Washington journalists analyzIng the week's news.
8:30 6) G) Webster
CID wall
Street Week Lows Aukeyser analyzes the
'80s with a weekly re'"ew of economic and
Investment matters.
9:00 0 (I) (lD 00 Master
The Master and Max
become entangled in a
union organizing fracas. (60 min.)
0 (I) Dallas J.R .. upset with Miss Ellie and
Clayton's
reconciliation, continues to make
trouble by working on
Cliff's greed. (60 min.)
6l G) Blue Thunder
fB
®
Kentucky
General Assembly
CID Session '84
9:30
CID Enterprise 'The
Colonel Comes to Japan· Tonight's program looks at Kentucky
Fried Chicken's effort
to succeed in Japan. (R)
[Closed Captioned]
9:45 ID
TBS
Evening
News
m m m
m
10:000 (I) (lD 00 New
Show
0 (I) Falcon Crest
Joseph's custody bat-.
tie goes to court and
Maggie is stalked by an
unknown
aggressor.
(60 min.)
6l G) Matt Houston
Matt investigates the
murder of a secretary.
(60 min.) [Closed Captioned]
fB
®
Business
Report
CID Austin City
Limits 'Freddie Powers
with Willie Nelson and
Merle Haggard.' Songwriter and musician
Freddie Powers shares
his special sound with
friends Willie Nelson
and Merle Haggard. (60
min.)
10:30 fB ([) International
Edition Ford Rowan
hosts this look at important
trends
and
news events in the U.S.
as they are reported by
foreign Journalists.
11:oo
fBffi(lD(l)News
ID All In the Family
CID Dr. Who
11:30 0 (I) (lD 00 Tonight
Show
0 (I) MOVIE: 'Death
Car on the Freeway' A
psychotic killer singles
out lone female travelers and torments them
by forc1ng them off the
road. George Hamilton,
Shelley Hack 1979.
6l G) Nightline
Catlins
ill) MOVIE: 'Never
Give a Sucker an Even
Break' A promoter aspires for either a wealthy woman's hand or
her daughter's. W.C.
Fields. Gloria Jean.
Leon Errol. 1941 .
12:00 ID Night Tracks
12:30 0
(I) (lD 00 Friday
Night Videos
6l
G)
To
Be
Announced
1 :00 6)
G)
Pentecost
Today
1 :30 Q) G) Bionic Woman
2:00 0@ News
m
m
m
((saturday»
2/4/84
MORNING
5:00
5:30
6:00
m
6:15
6:30
7:00
ID
Night
Tracks
Cont'd
&lGJRev. Pete Rowe
0
Cil Saturday
Report
6l G) Farm Digest
ID TBS Morning
News
6)G)Forum19
0 Cil T.V. Classroom
6l G) Town Crier
0
Joy
of
Gardening
0
Cil
Captain
m
0
(I) Bugs Bunny/
Road Runner
fB
®
Business
Management
CID Woodwright's
Shop
(lD 00 Fishing Fever
m
7:30
m
om o oo m m
Kangaroo
G)
To
Be
Announc:ed
ID Between the Lines
CID Market to
Market
«lD
00 Amazing
Spiderman/lncredible
Hulk
0 (J) Bugs Bunny &
Friends
6l G) ABC Weekend
Special 'Stanley the
Ugly Duckling.'
ID Romper Room and
Friends
(fij Great Chefs/
San Francisco
6l
m
2:30
6l
G) America's Top
Ten
fB
®
Business
Management
CID Washington
3:00
m
m
3:30
oFlintstone
m Funnies
m CIJ
0 ® Biskitts
6l G) Monchhichis/
Little Rascals/Richie
Rich
ID Starcade.
CID Two Ronnies
8:3o.
m
o m m m
shirt
Tales
0
(I)
Saturday
Supercade
ID MOVIE: 'Run Wild,
Run Free' A mute ten
year old boy is taught
by a retired Army colonel about nature and a
white colt that runs
wild on Dart moor. John
Mills. Mark Lester, Sylvia S1ms. Gordon Jackson. 1969
CID Fawlty Towers
9:00 0 Cil
Smurfs
6l G) New Scooby/
Scrappy Doo
CID To the Manor
Born
9:30 0 (I) Dungeons and
Dragons
6) G) Pac-Man/Rubik
Cube Hour
CID Dave Allen at
Large
10:00 0 (I) Plasticman
CID Dad's Army
10:30 0 (I) (lD 00 Alvin &
the Chipmunks
0 (I) Charlie Brown
& Snoopy
Littles
ID MOVIE: 'Golden
Moment: An Olympic
Love Story' An American decathalon hopeful
becomes romantically
involved with a Soviet
gymnast during their
participation
in
the
Olympic
Games
in
Moscow.
Stephanie
Zimbalist. David Keith,
Jack Palance. 1980.
fB ® Social Problems/Ciassrm.
ill) House For All
Seasons
11:00 0 (I) (lD Cil Mr. T
0 (I) Benji/Zax/ Alien
Prince
6l G) Puppy/Scooby
Doo Show
fB ® Bits and Bytes
ill) All New This
Old House
11 :30 0
(J)
Amazing
Spiderman/lncredible
Hulk
m
m
mm
m
m
ommmAI
McGuire Special ·A
Tribute to Ray Meyer.'
Basketball analyst AI
McGuire pays tribute to
one of America's winningest coaches, DePaul's Ray Meyer.
fB ® Another Page
4:00 0 ® NCAA Basketball: St. John's at
DePaul
0 (I) Bing Crosby
National Pro-Am Golf
Coverage of the third
round is presented
from Pebble Beach,
CA. (2 hrs.)
6l G) SEC Basketball:
Tennessee at Mississippi
ID High Chaparral
fB ([) GED Series
CID All Creatures
Great and Small
(lD (I) NCAA Basketball: Tennessee at
Mississippi
4:30 fB ([) GED Series
5:00 ID Fishin' w/Orlando
Wilson
m m firing Line
CID Masterpiece
Theatre
'The
Irish
R.M. · After becoming a
Resident Magistrate in
Ireland, Major Sinclair
Yeates begins to sus·
pect that he doesn't
belong in his new country. (60 min.) [Closed
Captioned]
5:30 ID Motorwe~k Illustrated
m
m (])
HOT DOG... THE MOVIE. (R·MGM- UA) Starring David
Naughton. Patrick Houser. Tracy N Smith
* *
*
m
By J. T. YURKO
m
m
Rat Patrol
fB ®American Gov't
Survey
CID Making It
Count
6l G) Sarajevo '84
ID 24 Hours of
Daytona Ken Squier reports on the pre-race
activities leading up to
the 24 Hours of Daytona.
fB Cil American Gov't
Survey
CID Vietnam: A
Television History
m
m
8:00
ID
m
m
2:00
AFTERNOON
12:00
We /Review
Paul
Duke is joined by top
Washington journalists
analyzing the week's
news.
(lD (]) That Nashville
Music
0@ Thundarr
6l
(!)
American
Bandstand
fB Cil Here's to Your
Health
CID Wall Street
Week
(lD (]) Greatest Sports
Legends
0 (I) Dudley Moore:
Man & Movies
0 Cil Let's Go To The
Races
fB ® Here's to Your
Health
CID Family Portrait
(lD 00 America's Top
Ten
0 (J) (lD (])NCAA
Basketball: Kentucky
at Alabama
0 Cil Fishing w/
Roland Martin
6l G) Love Connection
fB
®
Focus on
Society
CID Family Portrait
0 Cil NCAA Basketball: Teams to be
Announced
6l G) World Cup
Skiing
fB
Cil Focus on
Society
CID Making It
Count
Not long ago teen scream
mov1es came forth with regularity. Take a few teenagers.
put them 1n a cab1n. add one
man1ac with a talent for instant
adolescent d1ssection. and you
had a mov1e. Then you d1d a
sequel of the movie. The third
time around you did it in 3-D.
Mov1e producers then found
that they could save a lot of
money on take blood by havIng the same teenagers in the
same cab1n JUSt take the1r
clothes oft. Wnat a long way
movies have come since
Frankie ogled Annette in her
polka-dot bikini.
Essentially "Hot Dog ... The
Mov1e" is little more than a
Frank1e-and-Annette film. but
updated w1th such staples of
t 980s teen movies as wet Tshirt contests and sex in a
jaCUZZI.
The scriot. however, does little to improve on the old
formula. Boy siill meets g1rl,
loses g1rl and gets girl, but
there 1sn't much more motivation or complexity than that.
"Hot Dog" concerns itself
with sk1 slopes instead of
beaches and surfboards, but
the rest of the details aren't
worth mentioning. The film
does have remarkable footage
of skiers competing in treestyle competition. Th1s 1s the
closest thing to dance and
acrobatics on skis that you'll
ever see, and some of it is
quite spectacular.
Mike Marvin, who wrote and
directed three films about skiing in the early 1970s, was
responsible for shooting the
special ski sequences. He also
desig11ed the skiing I parachute
chase tor James Bond in "The
Spy Who Loved Me."
Unfortunately, Marvin 1S also
this film's scriptwnter. That
task should have been given to
someone else, since the story
and characters are secondary
to the skiing sequences. With a
better script, "Hot Dog" might
have approached the best
teen movies such as "Risky
Business." As it is. "Hot Dog"
is a mindless diversion with
plenty of nudity to keep you
diverted.
@)1984 Compulog
EVENING
6:00
0
(I)
0
(§) News
6l G:l Sportsbeat
ID World Championship Wrestling
fB ([) Matinee at the
Bijou 'Tex Rides with
the Soy Scouts.'
CID Undersea
World of Jacques
Cousteau
(lD (I) At The Movies
0
(I) (lD (]) NBC
News
0 Cil Concern
6) G) Dance Fever
0 (I) Dance Fever
0 (I) Hee Haw
6l G) Solid Gold
ill) Dr. Who Movie
liD Cil Jamboree
0 (I) NCAA Basketball:
Marshall
at
Tennessee- Chattanooga
m
6:30
7:00
m
7:30
�(
OLYMPICS ON ICE
ABC commentator AI
Michaels (r.) will be joined by
Hockey Hall of Famer Ken
Dryden (center) and Mike
Eruzione, captain of the 1980
U.S. Olympic hockey team for
all hockey games at the 1984
Olympics. ABC's coverage of
the games from Sarajevo,
Yugoslavia begins MONDAY,
FEB. 6 and ends with closing
ceremonies on SUNDAY,
FEB.19.
CHECK LISTINGS FOR EXACT TIME
@1984 Compuiog
fB Cil
Sneak Prev-
iews
8:00
0 Cil Whiz
Kids
6) (f) T. J. Hooker
Hooker and his team
are betrayed by an insic..ler as they try to catch
a top gangster. (60
min.) [Closed Captioned)
Cfj NBA Basketball:
Philadelphia at Atlanta
fB Cil Nature . A Quesof
Learning.'
tion
Tonight's program investigates how animals
learn . (R) (60 min .)
[Closed Captioned)
CiD
(I)
Diff' rent
Strokes
Conclusion.
Arnold struggles in a
desperate effort to rescue Kimberly after an
evil
stranger gives
them a lift.
8:30 CiD (]) Silver Spoons
9:00 0 (]) Airwolf
6) (f) love Boat Capt.
Stubing and the crew
set up a special adventure of romance and intrigue when they set
sail for Hong Kong (2
hrs.)
[Closed
Captioned)
fB ffi All Creatures
Great and Small
CiD (])We Got It Made
9:30 0 (I) CiD (]) Mama's
Family Naomi is furious
when
Mama
gets
promoted over her at
the supermarket.
@) @ Bear Next Door
1o:ooo
Hollywood's
Unsolved Mysteries Ben
Gazarra hosts this look
at some famous Hollywood mysteries, murders and crimes that
are still unsolved . (60
min.)
0 (]) Mickey Spillane's Mike Hammer
fB ffi Mystery! 'Reilly:
Ace of Spies. · After
being instructed to help
the Japanese Navy,
Reilly obtains information that leads to the
sinking of an entire
Russian Squadron . (60
min .)
[Closed
t:aptioned)
@) @ Peter Batty
Special
1 0:1 5 Cfj Unknown War
11:00 0 (I) 0 (])News
&)(f) ABC News
fB Cil International
Edition Ford Rowan
hosts this look at important trends and
news events in the U.S.
as they are reported by
foreign journalists .
@)@MOVIE: 'Agent
8 3/4' A British spy,
working in a Czechoslavakian glass works,
falls in love with the
daughter of the chief of
the Czech counter es-
rn
m m
pionage service.
irk
Bogarde, Sylva Koscina, Robert Morley.
1965.
CiD (]) Music Magazine
11:15 6) (f) News
Cfj
TBS
Evening
News
11 :30 0
00
late
Night with
David
Letterman
0 (1) Alabama and
Friends
6) (f) Music Magazine
11 :45 Cfj Night Tracks
12:00 6) (f) Black Music
Magazine
12:30 6) (f) Rockford Files
1 :00 0 00 MOVIE: 'This
Way Please' An exchorus girl takes a job
as an usherette in a
movie theater to attract
the attention of a handsome band leader.
3uddy Rogers, Betty
Grabel. Fibber McGee &
Molly. 1937
2:00 Cfj
Night
Tracks
Cont'd
6:30
HIGH FLIERS
Dee Wallace
(1.) and
Sharon Gless are two of three
women who vie to become the
United States' first female
astronaut in "The Sky's No
Limit," airing TUESDAY,
FEB. 7 on "The CBS Tuesday
Niqht Movie." Anne Archer
plays the third would-be astronaut.
m (])
«sunday))
2/5/84
MORNING
5:00
6:00
G)(f)Rev.PeteRowe
mmomni
CfjNews
6:15 Cfj Week/Review
6:30 0 00 TV Chapel
0 Cil Better .Way
G) (f) What Does the
Bible Say?
TBS
Morning
Cfj
News
7:00 0 @ Music and the
Spoken Word
0 (1) Jerry Falwell
&l (f) Roger Sparks
Religion
CHECK LISTINGS FOR EXACT TIME
@)1984 Compuiog
7:30
8:00
Cfj- World Tomorrow
@) @ MOVIE: 'Dr.
Kildare's
Strange
Case' Dr. Kildare saves
a promising brain surgeon from ostracism.
Lew Ayres, Lionel Barrymore, Laraine Day.
1940.
CiD ffi Time for
Refreshing
7:30 0 00 Fountain of Life
6) (f) James Robison
Cfj It Is Written
8:00 0 00 Hour of Power
0
(1)
Day
of
Discovery
6) (f) Jerry Falwell
m Cartoon Carnival
fB Cil Sesame Street
[Closed Captioned)
CiD
(I)
Gateway
Gospel
8:30 0 @ Oral Roberts
and You
0 Cil Christ for the
World
MEDIA MONITOR
Dee Wallace soars
as female astronaut
By Joan Crosby
Dee Wallace. who portrayed the mother who hid
the playful extratP.rrestrial
in "E. T .. " gets a chance to
go into outer space herself
in "The Sky's No Limit."
airing Feb. 7 on CBS.
The film portrays the
competition between three
women
(Miss Wallace,
Sharon Gless and Anne
Archer) to become the
United States' first female
astronaut. Miss Wallace
portrays Maureen Harris, a
botanist and physicist from
California with two young
children - the only mother
among the prospective
astronauts.
The drama was filmed on
location at the Lyndon B.
Johnson Space Center in
Houston. The actresses
wore real space suits,
which Miss Wallace says
she found awkward.
"There's a mesh jumpsuit into which tubes go
and it's possible to make
the temperature warmer or
cooler. Then on the outside
is that thing I call the
'doughboy' look. When
that's on, the gloves go on
and are locked on. The helmet is locked on. You have
to depend on someone else
to get you in it and out of it.
"It's a very claustropho-
7:00
Dee Wallace
bic feeling in there.
remember saying to the
director, 'There will be
someone standing by to
get us out of these, won't
there?' "
Miss Wallace says the
movie might be criticized
for making the women
astronauts seem overly
emotional. "One of the
things we hear in life in that
astronauts shouldn't bare
emotions. That's like saying preachers shouldn't
make money or psychiatrists never go to psychiatrists."
In addition to "E.T.,"
Miss Wallace had a small
role in the film "10" and
several TV roles. She says
she plans to do a series
soon, but the deal has not
yet been signed.
m Starcade
@) @ Wild America
CiD (]) Biblical Viewpoint
9:00 0 (I) Rex Humbard
0 ® Sunday Morning
6)
(f)
Kenneth
Copeland
Cfj leave It to Beaver
fB ffi Sesame Street
[Closed Captioned)
@) @ River of Sand
CiD (I) Sunday School
9:30 0
00
Kenneth
Copeland
Cfj Andy Griffith
CiD CZ) Rev. R.A. West
10:00 6) G) Rev. R.A. West
Cfj Good News
fB Cil Mr. Rogers'
Neighborhood
@) @ Nova 'Antarctica : Earth's Last Frontier.' Tonight's program looks at how
climatic changes in Antarctica can affect the
world's climate and
whether Antarctica can
remain politically neutral. (60 min.) (Closed
Captioned)
CiD CZ) Big Creek
Baptist
1 0:30 0 00 Dr. D. James
Kennedy
0 Cil Ernest Angley
6) (f) Jimmy Swaggart
Cfj MOVIE: 'Operation
Petticoat'
fB
Cil
Electric
Company
11 :00 fB Cil Sesame Street
[Closed Captioned)
@)
@
MOVIE:
'Phantom Thunderbolt'
CiD CZ) Leonard Repass
11:30 0
@
Bill Dance
Outdoors
0 Cil Viewpoint
6) (f) World Tomorrow
Cifj (])Rev. R.A. West
AFTERNOON
12:00
0 @ At Issue
0 Cil Addams Family
6)@ This Week with
David Brinkley
fB
Cil
Working
Women
@) @ Sesame Street
[Closed Captioned)
fiB CZ) Old Time
Gospel
12:30 0 @ Meet the Press
0 (]) Fishing Report
fB Cil Comment on
Kentucky
1 :00 0
00 All Star
Wrestling
0 Cil NCAA Basketball: Oregon State at
Michigan State
6) (f) Biblical Viewpoint
fB Cil Capitol Connection
@) @ Victory Garden
CiD (]) Wild Kingdom
1 :30 6) (f) Virgil Wacks
Presents
Cfj MOVIE: 'Dakota'
fB ffi
Business of
Management
@)
@
Working
Women
liD CZ) Olympic Gold
2:00 0 @ NCAA Basketball:
Syracuse
at
Villanova
6) (f) Superstars Coverage of this tournament is presented from
Key Biscayne, FL. (90
min.)
fB Cil Business of
Management
@)@MOVIE: 'You're
Only Young Once'
Andy and his sister Miriam find fun and romance during a family
vacation at Catalina Island.
Leis
Stone,
Mickey Rooney, Cecilia
Parker. 1938
CiD CZ) NCAA Basketbal!: Teams to be
Announced
2:30 fB
ffi Focus on
Society
3:00 0
Cil Bing Crosby
National Pro-Am Golf
Cfj 24 Hours of
Daytona (Conclusion)
Watch the checkered
flag fall on this grueling
24 hour contest of
champions 1n exclusive
coverage of the race's
conclusion . Commentary by Ken Squier. (60
min.)
fB Cil Focus on
Society
3 :30 6) Cfl love Conection
fB ffi Making It
Count
@)
@
Barbara's
Horses & Ponies
4:oo
SportsWorld Today's
program features the
World Professional Figurt· Skating Championships and World
Cup Skiing. (2 hrs.)
6)
(f) Basketball:
Auburn at Florida
m Cimarron Strip
fB ffi Making It
Count
@) @ Inside Story
'The
Anchor.'
Tonight's program looks
at the ·stuff' that· s
needed to make America watch the nightly
news .
4:30 fB (I) Social Problents/Ciassrm.
@) @ New Tech
Times
5:00 fB ffi All New This
Old House
@) @ Blatt ProAM
Bowling Chamrionships
5:30 Cfj Jacques Cousteau
fB (1) Woodwright's
Shop
EVENING
o
6:00
0
0
fB
oo
m
m
Cl) 0 (]) News
(f) Star Search
(1) Motorweek
6) @ Dad's Army
fiB (]) Bill Francis
Gardening
0
J.
(I)
(I) NBC
News
0 (]) CBS News
Cfj Wild World of
Animals
fB (1) Great Chefs/
San Francisco
@) @ Fawlty Towers
0 00 CiD CZ) First
Camera
0 Cil 60 Minutes
6) (f) Ripley's Believe
It or Not!
Cfj Best of World
Championship Wrestling
fB Cil Nature 'The Disof
Animal
covery
Behavior.' Fifth of 6
parts. T omght' s program looks at naturalists' efforts over the
centuries to learn the
language of animals. (R)
@) @ Tony Brown's
Journal
6)@ lawmakers
0 00 CiD (I) Knight
Rider Michael Knight
tries to track down a
suitable donor for a little girl who needs a
bone marrow transplant. (60 min.)
0 (1) Four Seasons
When Danny's beloved
Mercedes is stolen, the
trail leads to a hilarious
visit to Las Vegas by
Danny and his friends.
6) (f) Hardcastle &
McCormick Hardcastle and McCormick take
on a ring of judges who
have decided that they
will deal out the1r own
brand of judgement.
America's Music
Tracks
fB Cil Pallisers
@) @ Nature 'Osprey.' Tonight 's program
follows
the
osprey's progress from
its hatching , through
migration to its breeding grounds. (60 m1n.)
0
(1)
MOVIE:
't,;hariots of Fire' Two
men, one a devoutly religous Scot missionary
and the other, the son
of wealthy Jewish parents. compete for the
honor of representing
their country in the
1924 Olymp1cs Ben
Cross, lan Charleson,
Denn1~
Christopher
0 @ CiD (I) MOVIE:
'On Golden Pond'
Three generations confront each other dunng
a vacation at a New
England cottage. Katharine Hepburn, Henry
Fonda, Jane Fonda.
1981.
6) (f) MOVIE: 'My
Mother's Secret Life'
A high-priced call girl.
who reunites with her
16-year-old daughter.
tries to decide between
continuing her life in her
profession
or
risk
reaching out to another
human being . Loni Anderson, Paul Sorvino,
Amanda Wyss. 1984.
Cfj Week In Review
m
8:30
9:00
m
m m ®
Masterpiece Theatre
'The Irish R.M.' Yeates
wants to buy Philippa a
horse and the MaJor
finds himself caught u;>
in one of Flurry's
schemes. (60 min.)
1 0:00 Cfj Sports Page
fB 00 Bits and Bytes
6)@ Poldark
10:30 mOral Roberts
fB (1) Writing Time
11
®
News
0 (!)ABC News
m Jerry Falwell
@) @ Not the Nine
O'Clock News
11 :15 0 (!) Forum 19
11 :30 0
(I)
MOVIE:
'Shadow of a Doubt'
A man eludes the police .and hides out in
:oo o oo o
mm
�0 ill Hot Potato
0 Cil CiD (I) News
&l C!J Family Feud
ID Perry Mason
12:30 0 (I) News
0 Cil Young and the
Restless
&l (])Ryan's Hope
CiD (I) Search For
1 :00
1 :30
2:00
2:30
3:00
3:30
«daytirne))
MORNING
ID Varied
Programs
4 :30
&l (!) Rev. Pete Rowe
0 (])
NBC News at
Sunrise
0 (]) &l
Jimmy
Swaggart
ID T BS Morning
News
6 :15 @I ® Varied Programs
6 :30 0 (]) News
0
(]) CBS Early
Morning News
&l (!) Assembly
Echoes
6 :45 &) (!) ABC News This
Morning
@I ® Weather
7: 00 0 (]) CiD 00 Today
0 00 CBS Morning
News
&l (!) Good Morning
America
ID SuperStation Funtime
@I ® Varied Programs
7: 30 ID I Dream of Jeannie
8 :00 ID Bewitched
@.} (I) Weather
@I ® Sesame St reet
[Closed Captioned]
8 : 1 5 @.} (I) Instructional
Programs
8 :30 ID I Love Lucy
9:00 0
@
Braun and
Company
0 (j) Andy Griffith
&l (!) Jim Bakker
lfjMovie
@I ® Instructional
Programs
CiD (I) 700 Club
9:30 0 (j) Here's Lucy
1 0:00 0 ill CD (I) Facts of
Ufe
0 @ New $25.000
Pyramid
&l (!) 700 Club
1 0:30 0
ill Sale of the
Century
0 (I) Press Your
Luck
(I)
Morning
Stretch
11 :00 G ill
Wheel of
Fortune
D Cl) Price Is Right
m
e
e ([)
a
a
00 Benson
Catlins
e
(I)
W Dream
House
8 (!)Loving
11:30 •
•Texas
AFTERNOON
fB
12:00
4:00
5:00
5 :30
6 :00
~
(
/
small California town
with his sister's family .
Teresa .Wright, Joseph
Macdonald
Cotten,
Carey. 1943
0 (I) This Week in
Country Music
&l (!) Pentecost
Today
@I (jj) Monty Python
Flying Circus
CD
(I)
MOVIE:
'Honeyboy' A young
boxer pays a high price
for his fame and fortune
when he rises to be a
contender for the middleweight championship . Erik
Estrada ,
Morgan Fairchild , Hector Elizondo. 1982.
12:00 0 (I) Face the Nation
&l (!) Jim Bakker
ID People Who
Fish ...America
@I (jj) Dave Allen at
Large
12:30 0 (]) MOVIE: 'Kiss
Kiss. Kill Kill' A master criminal plots to
control the world . Tony
Kendall, Brad Harris,
Maria Perschy. 1966.
1 :00 &l (!) Star Search
ID MOVIE: 'Zorba,
the Greek' A student
travels with a lusty individualist to learn about
life. Anthony Quinn ,
Alan Bates. Irene Pappas ,
Lila
Kedrova .
1964.
4:00 ID Americans
5:00
5:30
Tomorrow
(I) Days of Our
Uves
&l (!) All My Children
I& Movie
CiD (I) Sale of the
Century
0 (I) As the World
Turns
CiD (I) Days of Our
Uves
0 (I) Another World
&l (]) One Life to Live
@I ® 3-2-1. Contact
0 (])Capitol
@I ®
Instructional
Programs
CiD (I) Another World
0 (I) Match Game/
Hollywood
Squares
Hour
0 (]) Guiding Ught
&l
(!)
General
Hospital
ID SuperStation Funtime
@I ®
Varied Programs
ID Flintstones
@.}
(I)
Electric
Company
liD (I) Match Game/
Hollywood
Squares
Hour
0 (I) Mr. Cartoon
0 (]) Hour Magazine
&J (!) Rockford Files
lfj Munsters
@.} (I) Sesame Street
[Closed Captioned]
@I ® 3-2-1, Contact
lfj Brady Bunch
@l ® Mr. Rogers'
Neighborhood
CiD (I) Hot Potato
0@ B.J./Lobo Show
0 (]) Hawaii Five-0
&l (!) Superfriends
lfj Leave It to Beaver
@.} (I) Mr. Rogers'
Neighborhood
@I ® Sesame Street
[Closed Captioned]
CiD 00 PTL Club
&l (!)Tic Tac Dough
ID Beverly Hillbillies
@.} (I) 3-2-1. Contact
0
((rnanday»
2/6/84
MORNING
7:30
9 :00
@I ® Sesame Street
[Closed Captioned]
ID MOVIE: 'Casanova
Brown' A divorced college professor, about
to remarry, discovers
that he ' s a father. Gary
Cooper.
Teresa
Wright, Frank Morgan.
1944.
AFTERNOON
1:00
ID MOVIE: 'Winchester 73' A prized
Winchester
rifle
changes hands many
times before it is recovered by its rightful
owner. James Stewart,
Dan Duryea, Shelley
Winters. 1967.
EVENING
6:00
O®OCIJ&lffi
CD (I) News
ED Little House on the
Prairie
• ([) MacNeil/Lehrer
Newshour
.(jj)Dr. Who
(I) NBC
6:30 II (I)
News
D Cil CBS News
G @ABC News
•
®
Business
Report
7:00 8 (I) PM Magazine
8 ()) Wheel of
Fortune
• (]) People's Court
• Carol Bumett
e
CI) Presentel
~ r---------~~--------~------~
@I (jj) MacNeil/Lehrer
News hour
liD Cil How the West
Was Won
0 (I) Tic Tac Dough
0 (I) Family Feud
(!) Jefferson&
ID Hogan's Heroes
@.l
CI)
University
Journal
8:00 0 ill CiD (}) MOVIE:
'Uttle House on the
Prairie:
The
Last
Farewell' When a
group of Eastern financiers reveal that they
own all of Walnut
Grove, the town ' s citizens become enraged
and vow to destroy
their homes. Michael
Landon, Karen Grassle,
Melissa Gilbert. 1984.
0 (j) Scarecrow and
Mrs. King
&l (!) NCAA Basketball: Tennessee at
L.S.U.
ID MOVIE: 'Cactus
Flower'
A
dentist
wants to marry his
young mistress and
asks his nurse to help
him win the girl. Ingrid
Bergman, Walter Matthau, Goldie Hawn.
1969.
@.} (I) @l ® Frontline
'The Old Man With the
Gun.' The conflict in Ireland, as seen through
the eyes of Irish Ameri. cans who support the
IRA, is examined. (60
min.) [Closed Captioned]
9:00 0 (]) AfterMASH
@.l (I) @I ® Great
Performances
'La
Cenerentola.'
Gioacchino Rossini's two-act
opera,
which
was
based on the 'Cinderella' fairy tale, is presented in a special
performance. (3 hrs.)
9:30 0 (]) Newhart Dick
wrestles with the problems of a guest and Kirk
Devane 'pops the question .'
7:30
m
1o:oo o rn m oo rv
Bloopers & Practical
Jokes Dick Clark and
Ed McMahon host this
look at scenes never intended for viewing by
an audience. (60 min.)
0 (]) Emerald Point
N.A .S.
&l
(!)
Barbara
Walters Special
1 0:15 ID
TBS
Evening
News
11:00 0@ 0 00 &l (!)
liD (I) News
ID All In the Family
11 :30 0 @ Tonight Show
0 (]) Hart to Hart
&) (!) XIV Winter
Olympic Games Tonight' s program features a special preview
of the upcoming Winter
Olympics from Sarajevo. Yugoslavia.
ID Catlins
liD 00 NCAA Basketball: Tennessee at
L.S.U.
12:00 G) (!) Nightline
ID MOVIE: 'The
Adding Machine' After an accountant is
tried and electrocuted
for the murder of his
boss, he finds himself
in the next world . Phyllis Diller, Milo O'Shea,
Billie Whitelaw. 1969.
12:30 0 @ Late Night with
David Letterman
0 (I) Columbo
8 (]) Andy Griffith
1 :00 G (]) Bionic Woman
2:00 8 MOVIE: 'Modesty
Blaise' Modesty and
her sidekicks are hired
by the British Secret
Service to insure safe
delivery of priceless
gems to a shelk. Monica Vitti, Dirk Bogarde,
Terence Stamp. 1966.
4:30
Americans
e
GOOD SPORT
Ralph Waite stars as a
sports columnist in pursuit of a
fashion magazine editor (Lee
Remick) in "A Good Sport,"
airing on WEDNESDAY, FEB.
8 on "The CBS Wednesday
Night Movie."
CHECK LISTINGS FOR EXACT TIME
@)19114 Compulog
sents the way of life of
Africa's Mbuti Pygmies . (R) (60 min .)
[Closed Captioned]
0 (I) liD (I) Riptide
0 (]) MOVIE: 'Sky's
No
Limit'
Three
women battle NASA's
intense training requirements and their own
personal problems as
they compete for the
glory of becoming the
United States' first
woman
astronaut.
Sharon Glass, Dee
Wallace, Anne Archer.
1984.
@.}(I) @I® American
Playhouse
'Nothing
but a Man.' A proud
black man trys to lead a
normal life in a small,
racially-bigoted southern town. (90 min .)
(Ctuesday»
2/7/84
9:00
MORNING
ID MOVIE: 'A Child Is
Waiting' A superintendent and a music
teacher at a' school for
the mentally retarded
seek to create new
methods of training.
Burt Lancaster, Judy
Garland, Gena Rowlands. 1963.
AFTERNOON
9-:00
ID MOVIE: 'Slaughter
1 :00
On Tenth Avenue' An
assistant D.A. runs into
formidable obstacles
when he tries to get the
goods on waterfront
hoodlums.
Richard
Egan , Jan Sterling, Dan
Duryea. 1957.
EVENING
6:00
0 (]) 0 00 &l (!)
liD(}) News
ID Little House on the
Prairie
@.} ill MacNeil/Lehrer
News hour
@)®Dr. Who
6 :30 0 ill liD 00 NBC
News
0 (]) CBS News
&l (!) ABC News
@I
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Business
Report
7:00 0 (I) PM Magazine
0
Cil Wheel of
Fortune
&l (!)People's Gourt
ID Carol Burnett
@.}
(I)
Kentucky
General Assembly
@I (jj) MacNeil/Lehrer
News hour
liD Cil At The Movies
7 :30 0 (I) Tic Tac Dough
0 (I) Family Feud
&l (]) Jeffersons
ID Hogan's Heroes
@.} ([) Play Bridge
liD Cil Headwaters
8:00 0 (I) CD Cil A Team
The A T earn takes on a
gang of modern-day
stagecoach
robbers.
(60 min.)
0 (I) Mississippi _
&) (!) XIV Winter
Olympic Games Today' s program features
the U.S.A. vs. Canada
in ice hockey and a .
preview of other Winter Olympic events. (3
hrs.)
8 MOVIE: 'The Sons
of Katie Elder' Four
brothers retum home
for their mother's funeral and unite to avenge her death. John
Wayne, Dean Martin,
George
Kennedy.
1965.
f8 (I)
<ID Nova
'BaMiki BaNdula: Children of the Forest.' Tonight's program pre-
1o:oo o
m
m
oo
Remington
Steele
Laura
checks
out
charges of her brotherin-law's infidelity and
Remington
uncovers
some sinister activities.
(60 min .)
10:30@.} (I) Tony Brown's
Journal
@I (jj) Firing Une
1 0:45
ID
TBS
Evening
News
11 :00 0 (I) 0 Cil &l (!)
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11 :30 0 (I) liD (I) Tonight
Show
0 (I) Magnum P .I.
18 (!) Nightline
ID Catlins
®
Latenight
America
12:00 lfj
MOVIE:
'The
Bofors Gun' A British
army camp in the
1950s is disturbed by
the presence of a rebellious Irish gunner. Nicol
Williamson, lan Holm,
David Warner. 1968.
12:30 0 (I) Late Night with
David Letterman
0 (I) McCloud
&l (!) Andy Griffith
1:00 &l ® ·Bionic Woman
2:15 lfj
MOVIE:
'The
Bigamist' A man is
tormented by his secret
of being married to two
women and loving
both . Joan Fontaine,
Edmond
O'Brien.
1953.
4:00 ID MOVIE:
'Easy
Living'
m
,..- Compiled by the staff of the World Almanac
~IJilris 1.11.
1. Which National League outfielder committed the most errors in 1983?
2. Which NBA team recently scored a record
186 points In a game?
3. Which NBA player has made the most foul
shots during his career?
4. Who won the Wimbledon men's singles
title in 1983?
5. Who was his final opponent?
6. Which NHL team lost the most games in
1982-83?
7. In which hall of fame Is Billy Welu enshrined?
8. Which New York Meta pitcher won the
most games In 1983?
9. Name the first jockey to earn more than
$10 million In annual purses.
10. Which teams participated in the only tie
game during the 1983 NFL regular
season?
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�The Floyd County Times, February 1, 1984
State-Jobless Rate
Hits Two-Year Low
•
•
SAVE 2.30
Kentucky's preliminary unemployment rate fa( December was 9.8 percent, the lowesfrate in ty,ro years and the
first time in 19 months it ha"!l faUeJlbelow
the 10.0 percent mark, according to
figures released today by the Cabinet for
Human Resources. The rate was onetenth of a percent less than the 9.9 percent rate recorded in May 1982, the last
time the rate was below 10.0 percent,
and the same as the 9.8 percent rate for
December 1981.
"Seasonal hiring in tobacco and trade
primarily was responsible for the rate
decrease." said state labor market
analyst Ed Blackwell. The rate dropped
•
six-tenths of a percent from the revised
November rate of 10.4 percent. The comparable national rate was 8.0 percent in
December, down from 8.1 prcent in
•
November.
"Total employment increased by
15,600, from 1,512,900 in November to
1,528,500 in December," Blackwell said.
"The December estimate was 43,400
higher than the 1,485,100 recorded in
December 1982 and the highest total
•
recorded since October 1982, when
employment was 1,529,700."
Employment in nonagricultural wage
and salary jobs increased by 7,200 in
trade, which Blackwell said included_
temporary jobs in retail traq~ for tile
Christmas season &nd somdobs in the
tobacco wholesale trade industry, such
as marketing and warehousing. Employment was up by 2,500 in tobacco
manufacturing because of a seasonal inBIG SNOWMEN, six feet and over, became common in yards
. crease in stemming and redrying jobs.
and
playgrounds throughout the county during the recent
Other employment increases were in
manufacturing of non-electrical machinwintry weather. This nice specimen, capped with a Dower
ery, 400; manufacting of electrical
pot, was seen in a Wheelwright yard.
machinery, 300; finance, insurance and
real estate, 300; state and local educaDon't Wait For Tax
Johnson Attending
tion, 300; manufacturing of lumber and
furniture, 200; manufacturing of
Package To File Return
UK Dental School
transportation equipment, 200; and
If you haven't received your tax
Jimmie Lee Johnson, of Richmond, a
bituminous coal mining, 200, Blackwell package by now, you probably won't 1979 graduate of Model High School, is
said.
receive one this year, the Internal presently attending the University of
The number of Kentuckians who were ·Revenue Service says.
Kentucky College of Dentistry. Mr.
unemployed in December was 165,300,
Tax packages are mailed each year Johnson bas attended the University of
the lowest figure recorded since shortly after the December holidays, Kentucky since August of 1979 majoring
December 1981, when 165,100 were
and are received by most taxpayers dur- in biology and chemistry, and was also
unemployed. Last month's figure is
ing the first two weeks in January or a member of the Kappa Alpha Order.
down 9,600 from Novomber, when
earlier. Due to the postage costs involvIn the past two years he bas been ac174,900 were unemployed, and 31,700 ·ed, tax packages only receive limited cepted to the University of Kentucky
below the 197,000 recorded in December 'forwarding. Those that cannot be College of Pharmacy, and the Universi1982, when the rate was 11.7 percent.
delivered as addressed are not forward- ty of Louisville College of Dentistry, but
The civilian labor force increased for
ed outside of local carrier routes, IRS has elected to pursue his dental educathe fifth consecutive month, reaching
explains.
tion at the University of Kentucky.
1,693,800 in December, compared to
Some taxpayers wait well into
He is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Jimmie
1,687,800 for November and 1,682,100 for
February hoping that their tax packages Johnson, of Richmond, and the grandDecember 1982. The labor force includes will still arrive in the mail. Although tax son of Mrs .. Dora Johnson, of Melvin.
only non-military persons who current- packages are very helpful in filing fedely are employed and unemployed people ral tax returns, especially due to the
actively seeking work.
computerized peel-off address labels
JOE D.
and coded envelopes they contain, these
ON W INTER-TIME
FAVORITES
Ward off winter chills
and enjoy big savings
with Paramount Chili
and/or Tamales. Stock
up now and make meals
simple and super with
the meaty, zesty taste
that everyone will love!
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
~te:::;~~notabsolutelynecessarytofile
WE.DDINGJON
Taxpayers who do not receive tax
returns forms in the mail may obtain
forms from many libraries, banks, post
offices, IRS offices, or by calling the IRS
R~AL Jo;STATE
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
.r
State
L
M2007 -284
1
Zip
Offer Expires: Man:h 31, 1984.
M2007 -284
I
J
dian invention.
•~--~P~o~pic~or;n~i~~;a;n~A;m;e;r;ic;a;n;l;n·;;;;;;t;o;ll
-;fr;ee;;n;um;;be;r;;l-;8~;;;;4·;1~;;-;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~~~~~~~~.~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~;;;;~-----..
WE ACCEPT
s• T
M
•
SUPERAMERICA
CREDIT
CARDS
TM
SUPERAMERICA
DIVISIOn of Ashland 0.1. Inc.
Great gas, good goods, every night 'n day
JUlinl Grand Opening
••
Specials Good February 2 Through February 5
Pepsi
81.59
16 Oz. 8 Pack
Plus Bottle Deposit
Brea d
16 Oz. Loaves
sSuperAmerica -Oil
3/ 1.00 sA!~!?89
25c
8
SAVE UP TO 60¢
Valvoline
Gas Line
Antifreeze
Tropicana 100°/o
Orange Juice
Orange
Juice
iliRUF1111111)
89Cauar1
•
Candy Bars
12 Oz. Cup
SAVE UP TO 40e
SAVE UP TO
10e
Hot Dogs
NOT AVAILABLE IN ALL STORES
case
Coffee
SAVE UP TO 30e
8
3/ 1.00
Dozen Glazed Donuts
Sugar Creek Bacon
99 C
12 Oz. Package
4JS1,00
Reg. Price 35¢ Each
Potato Chips
SAVE UP TO 30e
Jersey Gloves
NOT AVAILABL E IN ALL STORES
419 North Lake Drive, Prestonsburg, KY
Ky. Hwy. 40 & Depot Road, Paintsville, KY
U.S. 23 & Jefferson Avenue, Paintsville, KY
Ky. Route 80, Martin, KY
102 E. Madison St., Louisa, KY
Gallon
WE RESERVE THE RIGHT
TO LIMIT QUANTITIES ON ALL ITEMS
BUY ONE
GET ONE FREE
�·~.ednesday,
The Floyd County Times
February 1, 1984
The Kentucky Garden Journal
By Bonnie Lee Appleton
State Urban Garden & Home Horticulture Specialist
COOPERATIVE EXTENSION PROGRAM
KENTUCKY STATE UNIVERSITY
Are you like me-you love new things?
A new pair of shoes, a new book, a
heavenly, gooey chocolate candy bar
(only one week and my New Year's
resolution to diet is gone!>.
For gardeners, each new year brings
new plants-tastier vegetables, new colored flowers, more productive apple
trees, hardier trees and shrubs. I always
look forward to the announcement of
each year's All American Selection winners, and order my seed when the first
catalogs arrive to be sure I get my
share.
Two vegetables and one flower were
chosen as 1984 winners. One in particular interests me because ever since
the release in 1979 of the original Sugar
Snap edible round-podded pea, improvements have continued to be made
of this delicious vegetable.
This year the snap pea "Sugar Ann"
won a silver medal. Although I liked last
year's Suga~ Bon, Sugar Ann sounds
even better. Improvements in this snap
pea variety are its dwarf size-18
inches-no trellis required, and its early harvest-two weeks ahead of Sugar
Snap. Eat it raw, steamed, sauteed or
stir-fried, and can or freeze any extra.
The other new vegetable is "Celebrity", a tomato that produced very well
1ast year in test gardens despite the
\trought. A major objective in its
oreeding was to develop as much
disease resistance as possible. This was
accomplished as Celebrity as resistant
to two fungal wilts-verticillum <V> and
fusarium <F-races 1 and 2), to the major tomato virus-tobacco mosaic virus
<TMV), and to those microscopic wormlike organisms, nematodes <N>, that
Subscription
Rates. J>er Year
In Floyd County, $8.00
EJ-whereln K.,tucky, 51o
outside Kentueky, 512.so
Please note. expl...tlon c(at6
~poslte your .name on wrap·
per or on yoar copy of The
Times. Becau- of Increased
malllha· costs, notices of
subscription .exPiration are
no lonaef mailed to
subscribers.
SultScriptlons INIJ be mailed to:
The Floyd County Times
Box391
Prestonsbura, Ky. 41653
cause large growths or root knots on
tomato plant roots.
Celebrity is a determinate, not a
climbing or indeterminate plant,
although a cage or short pole is recommended. First fruits begin maturing
about 70 days after transplant. Fruits
are round, smooth, firm and flavorful.
The 1984 AAS flower winner is the
rose-pink, double-bloomed zinnia
"Border Beauty Rose". Heat and
disease resistant, plenty of flowers are
produced on the twenty-inch plants for
cutting and for show. Look for the red,
white and blue AAS shield on seed
packets of all three of these winners.
There are many, many other wonderful new fruits and vegetables this year
but the lists are so long. I've tried to
highlight tht: more unusual or productive ones:
*Florida Lanai-a 12 to 15 inch tomato
plant for six-inch pots. Up to 40 halfounch fruits per plant. <Pan American
Seed Company)
*Bush Pickle Hybrid-four to five inch
pickling cucumbers on a small vine good
for containers or small gardens.
<Goldsmith and Liberty)
*Packman-heavy-headed broccoli
with good side shoot development after
main head is cut. <Stokes, Twilley and
other seed companies)
• Jade Pagoda, Tropical Delight,
China Pride and Hybrid G-new
varieties of the incr~<>,;:irud.Y popular
Chinese cabbage. <Agway, Twilley and
Liberty)
*Green Magic-48 day, six to eightinch dark green zucchini squash on 18
mch by 18 inch plants. (Park Seed)
*Easter Egg and Rainbow-mixtures
of round-rooted purple, violet, red, pink
and white radishes. <Park Seed and
Thompson & Morgan)
*Bush Star-two pound, salmonfleshed cantaloupe on vines spreading
only two feet. <Harris and Liberty)
*Red Salad Bowl-a heat tolerant red
leafed lettuce. <Liberty)
*Spud-Buds-marble-sized potato
tubers that yield large potatoes when
planted. (Park Seed)
Timely Tip: If you start your own
transplants, develop an easy-to-checkcalendar of starting dates to keep you on
schedule. For example, start broccoli
transplants in late January to early
February for mid to late March planting, and tomatoes when you plant your
broccoli for late April to mid May planting. Post your seeding calendar where
you'll readily and frequently see it-on
the refrigerator, by the telephone, even
on the washing machine lid.
Section Three, Paae Tw61ve
Accepted To Med School
Agribusiness, Pesticide
Meeting Set Feb. 13-14
More than 70 agribusiness, pesticide,
university and government people will
provide leadership and training for the
second annual Agribusiness and
Pesticide Conference scheduled Feb. 13
and 14 in Louisville.
The comprehensive educatiOnal
meeting is expected to draw some 500
participants from Kentucky and surrounding states, according to Dr. Chris
Christensen, Extension entomologist in
the University of Kentucky College of
Agriculture and conference coordinator.
Four different educational programs
will be presented concurrently during
the conference. "These are designed to
provide technical update training for
members from the participating
organizations," said Christensen.
The programs to be presented during
the conference, which is being sponsored
by eight different organizations, are: an
agricultural pesticide workshop; turf
and ornamental workshop; fumigation
short course and pesticide applicator
certification training.
Besides pesticide applicator certification training, the conference will provide
continuing certification credit for commercial pesticide applicators and
private applicator recertification credit.
"Private applicators, which includes
farmers, must attend one approved
training meeting every five years to
maintain their certified status,"
Christensen noted.
The Kentucky Department of
Agriculture's division of pesticides
handles certification examination and
credit for Kentucky applicators.
Christensen said continuing certification credit for pesticide applicators certified in other states has been requested
from Indiana, Ohio, Missouri, Kansas,
New York, Virginia, West Virginia,
Georgia and North Carolina.
In addition to the educational sessions,
technical presentations will be available
in the form of poster exhibits and live
specimen displays.
The Galt House in Louisville is headquarters for the conference. Christensen
said individuals should make their own
lodging reservations. Registration will
be at the door, unless pre-registration is
specifically required by an organization.
The fee is $40 per person, and an extra
$10 for people attending a fumigation
short course to cover the cost of a workbook.
More information is available from
Christensen at: S225 Ag Science Center
North, Department of Entomology,
University of Kentucky, Lexington, Ky.
40546-0091. His phone number is
606·257·5956.
George Christor>her Stephens, a senior
at Transylvania University, Lexington,
has been accepted at the University of
Kentucky, the University of Louisville
and Washington University Medical
Schools
Stephens is the son of Mr. and Mrs.
Danny Stephens of Langley and he is a
graduate of Prestonsburg High School.
....-...
~-
Central Kentucky Blood Center
PRESTONSBURG STATION
(Municipal Bldg.)
N Lake Drive/Prestonsburg. Kentucky 41653
Enioy a buc~ and
abarga1n
from Fischer~!
$19!
when you buy three
packages of Fischer's Mellwood Bacon
NAME
ADDRESS
STATE
CITY
-----=ZI_P_ _
Send the labels from three packages of Ftscher"s Mellwood Bacon.
along with sales receipt, to Fischer"s $1 Rebate P 0 Box 4312.
Monticello. MN 55365 Coupon must include a ztp code and only one
rebate ts allowed per household or address No facsimiles will be
accepted Allow 6-8 weeks for processing Void where prohtbited . taxed
or restricted .
the Bacon-makin'people
Offer expires April 1, 1984.
ATTACH 3 LABELS and MAIL
on any package of
Fischer's Wieners.
The first iron printing press
to be used was the Stanhope
press, invented by Charles,
the third Earl of Stanhope
in 1798.
lOG CABIN
CHARMIN
BATH TISSUE
4-Roll
Pkg.
PRICES EFFECTIVE FEB. 1 THRU FEB. 4
WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES
AND CORRECT PRINTING ERRORS.
IXJNATEBLOOD.
IT ONLY HURTS WHEN YOU DONT.
25-LBS.
MEAL
$1 09
$
PURINA DOG CHOW .... .
25-LIJS.
749
29
ARMouR BEEF STEW ... $1
12-0Z.
$109
ARMOUR TREET ....
6-0Z. STAR-KIST
TUNA IN OIL .......... .79
32-0Z. WAGNER'S
ORANGE DRIN
C
.:... 59c
$3$9
40-CT.
BOUNCE ................. $199
2-LBS. ARMOUR
CHOPPED HAM ..... $349
3-LBS. APPLE BLACKBERRY
DAN DEE JELLY ..... $159
32-0Z.
$109
DEL MONTE CATSUP ....
2·LBS. TURKEY/SALIS. STEAK/SP. & MEAT $159
BANQUET SUPPERS..... .
99 C CHiC.KEN iRE'AST $1 99
CORNED BEEF ....... .
C
$119
DISH LIQUID .... .... ..
HORMEL BACON ...79
12-0Z. TORO
22-0Z. SUN LIGHT
VALUE PAK
LB.
3
99
C
GENERIC BLEACH ....... .69 BISCUITS....... l~:·
GALBTL.
C
BIG TEXAS STYLE
1
AFFINITY
SHAIIPoo
7-oz.
$1.89
•
�
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Floyd County Times 1984
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Floyd County Times February 1, 1984
-
http://history.fclib.org/files/original/41/3329/02-08-1984.pdf
ad35c954ee95b788ad86f789895179ba
PDF Text
Text
mt
Speaking of
and for
.
Floyd County
PRESTONSBURG,
JJrlny~
KENTUCKY 41653
<trnunty iimrs
Read Each Week by More
Th~n
USPS·2027-0000
Volume LVII
No.6
'2
s~
WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 8, 1984
12,500 Famil.ies.
Four Are Hospitalized
In School Bus Wreck
.Maytown Man
Booked Again
On DUI Charge
.
•
.
(Photo by Ken Peters l
SCHOOL BUS, m which mne Betsy Layne High School students were injured Friday morning, is
shown being pulled back onto KY 979 near Grethel from the bottom of an embankment where it
came to rest after being sideswiped by a coal truck.
Ex-Workers Tell Jury
Of Threats, Gunfire
At Ray-Mac Mine Site
Former workers at the Ray-Mac strip
mine on Bill Hall Branch, near
McDowell, and truck drivers who hauled coal from the mine told a federal
court jury last week that they were
threa tened and fired on by workers from
nearby mines.
:F'edera\ prQsecutors Glaim the sh,.ots
were fired by miners in league with
Edgar Jones, president of the rival JRM
Coal Company, as part of a plot to
disrupt the new Ray-Mac mine and take
over the operation themselves. Defense
attorneys say two weeks of incidents
reported at the Ray-Mac operation two
years ago stemmed from efforts by
UMWA members to organize the nonunion mine.
Da nny Blanton, of McDowell, who
drove a coal truck under contract with
Ray-Mac, told of pickets gathered at the
entrance to the Ray-Mac mine as he attempted to lead a convoy of three laden
coal trucks off the site on Tuesday, Feb. ,
16, 1982. His truck was sprayed with gunfire as he crossed the picket line, he said.
Blanton said he saw Drexil Hall, one
of the defendants , take aim at him with
a handgun as he approached the mine
entrance. He shifted to neutral and lay
down as a bullet whistled through the
open cab window, the driver said. About
Another thing I don't like about
February : It has one of these Monday
holidays.
SOMETHI~G
BETTER TO DO
For some reason I found the statement
made by an oldtimer the other day to be
of unusual interest. He and other senior
citizens had been given something to do
by a bank and were being paid to do itnot a lot but enough to help with the
groceries. Asked how he liked the work
and the pay, the old fellow replied, "It's
better than sitting around, just watching
your ankles swell "
,\;\;S\VERED PRAYER
Then there's the story of the man who
prayed day after day, importuning the
Lord to lend him a helping hand, meanwhile making no effort to help himself...
until, finally , he received answer to his
prayer :
''Already I have given you a helping
hand. n :s there on the end of your arm."
SEEIN' NOT BELIEVI:'\'
There still are those who refuse to
believe that man has walked on the
moon. Delmas Saunders recalls a discussion of the matter by one unbeliever
and his neighbor.
"Remember ," the neighbor advised,
"television has shown a man walking on
the moon, the newspapers and magazines have printed p1ctures of the
event- it's all right there before your
eyes .,
"Sure," agreed the Doubting Thomas.
" But when 1 was a child I saw pictures
of a cow jumpin' over the moon, but that
didn' t make it so."
HOT STOVE FISHI:'\G
There was a t1me- before TV and its
basketball and football games and the
like - when what was calted the Hot
cSee Story No . 5. PagP 4l
100 shots were fired, including some
which damaged his truck's engine and
brake lines, he said.
The pickets scattered when Ray-Mac
foremen Raymond "Pete" Barker and
Glenn Hurley and equipment operator
David Stevens returned their fire, Blanton testified.
Over the objections of defense counsel,
Blanton also told of telephone threats he
allegedly received at home the night .
before. Phillip Booth, whom he . identified as one of those firing shots at the
Ray-Mac mine entrance Tuesday
morning, had warned him Monday night
not to haul any more coal from the mine,
Blanton said. Booth told him, "we'll get
you one way or another," the truck
driver testified. Earlier that day, Hall
threatened to blow up Blanton's coal
truck, the driver alleged.
Booth, who is listed by the government
as an unindicted co-conspirator, is expected to be a key prosecution witness.
U.S. District Judge G. Wix Unthank admonished the jury that Booth's alleged
threats to Blanton could not be counted
as evidence against any of the defendants unless it was subsequently shown
that they were in fact linked with him in
a conspiracy.
(See Story No. 6, Page 4l
Fire Guts Cow Creek Home
MARRIAGE LICENSES
Kent Williamson. 19. and Wanda
Spriggs, 18, both of Drift : Stewart Henson. 23, and Donna Rose Curry. 24. both
of McDowell: Otis Eugene Wallen. 33.
of Martin. and Ruby Jean Yates. 26. of
Printer.
SUITS FILED
Debra Hurt Slone vs. Danny Ray
Slone : Wanda Messer vs . James
Messer: Citizens National Bank vs.
Johnny Gibson et al : Prudential Insurance vs. Harry Hager : Phillip
Keathley vs. Lucrissa Hall Keathley:
Tammy Compton vs. Frank Compton:
Patricia Ann Spears vs . Jack Spears:
Yang A. McKinney vs. Charles G.
McKinney : Patricia Ann Tipton vs.
John William Tipton: Sharlene Wilson
vs . Linda June Wilson : Kentucky
Foundation Drilling Co. vs. Coalfields
ISee Story No. 1. Page 4l
Ligon Tipple
Owners, State.
Reach Accord
Fire, which is believed to have erupted from a gas cookstove, destroyed
the interior of this frame house. Monday afternoon near the mouth of Cow
Creek. Members of the Cow Creek Volunteer Fire Department were joined
by firefighters from Allen to contain the blaze, although niost of the possessions of the Danny and Mary Hickman family were lost.
The house, a single-story wood frame structure where the Hickmans had
resided for the past three years, was owned by Richard Lewis, Jr .. of Emma.
Mr. Hickman and three young children were able to escape serious injury
although Hickman was treated for minor burns and released from an area
hospital.
Jim Caldwell, of the Cow Creek Volunteer Fire Department, said anyone
who wished to donate clothes or household items to the Hickman family
could contact any member of the fire department or Cow Creek Community
Development Club. Donations may also be made through Tony Hall. of Emma where the family is currently residing.
Petition Could Put
Utility Tax to Vote
A movement to repeal the 3 percent
utilities tax levied last month by the
Board of Education has become more
organized in recent weeks with opponents of the measure gathering signatures from all parts of the county for a
petition to put it on the ballot.
Some 2309 signatures-equal to 15 percent of those in this county who voted in
the last presidential election- are needed by Feb. 19 in order to force the tax
to a vote. And, according to state law,
all 46 precincts must be represented in
the petition.
If a petition is properly filed, a special
election on the issue will be scheduled
within 90 days.
McDowell Principal Gary Frazier, a
leading advocate of the tax, predicted
that, from his sampling of opinion
around the county, opponents of the
measure will be hard-pressed to come
up with enough signatures to warrant a
vote.
On the other hand, those opposed to
the tax express the opinion that the only problem 1S seeing that voters h<tve. the
opportunity to sign a petition to put 1t to
a vote.
Opposition to the tax generally
focusses on the hardships it would impose on the poor and elderly. "It's a
regressive tax, a tax on the very poor,"
said Bill Reynolds, of Allen, a former
state legislator.
And some who are not necessarily opposed to the tax argue that the measure
should nevertheless be put to a vote.
"That was the reason the state took off
the utilities tax- to give every district
the right to vote on it themselves,"
Reynolds said. "All it is, is democracy."
A statewide utilities ta~ was lifted by
A Maytown man convicted of reckless
homicide after a fatal auto accident six
years ago was booked at the Floyd county jail last week on a drunk driving
charge.
Forrest Ray Moore, 35, refused to submit to a breathalyser test after his arrest by State ';l'rooper A.L. Weddington
at 10:25 on Thursday morning. He was
released after posting a $2500 bond and
is scheduled to appear in Floyd District
Court for arraignment Mar. 1.
It is the second time Moore has faced
drunk driving charges since his conviction in the 1977 collision at Betsy Layne
which claimed the life of an 18-year-old
Banner youth. He was fined the maximum $500 and ordered to attend a stateISee Story No . 2, Page 4l
-
the legislature during the administration
of former Gov. Wendell Ford in 1972.
About half the state's 180 school districts
have since levied the tax .
Even Board Chairman Dr. J .D.
Adams, who said he still thinks the tax
is a good idea, consented to put in his office petitions to have the measure placed on the ballot. "If people want it on the
ballot, that's perfectly fine with me," he
said Tuesday. "I don't want to push anything dow'n anyone's throat."
County Judges Ask
Road Money, Levy
On Alcohol Sales
There is no way they can repair county roads unless they get a bigger share
of state road money, members of the
Kentucky County Judges Association
told state legislators last week.
At the same time, Floyd JudgeExecutive John M. Stumbo asked the
director of the association for help in
drafting a bill authorizing county
governments to impose a tax on alcoholic beverage sales.
A decline in severance tax revenues
(See Story No . 4. Page 4>
Following a meeting Thursday between state environmental officials and
operators of a Ligon tipple shut down
last week for polluting a nearby stream,
one of the officials said the operators
"seemed willing to take the steps needed to upgrade the plant. "
But Helen Newsome, the Clear Creek
housewife whose complaint led to the
shutdown of the plant's waste disposal
system, said she will be convinced only
by results.
John Thacker, regional administrator
here for the Bureau of Surface Mining
Reclamation and Enforcement, said
state and company officials reached
general agreement on short-term
remedies for environmental problems
caused by the tipple operation and
discussed some long-term alternatives
to the present, antiquated system of piping slurry wastes into old mine workings
at the head of Clear Creek .
Tipple operators agreed to remove
two valves which permitted discharge
of wastes directly into Clear Creek and
to provide better protection for the
pipeline, Thacker said. The pipes would
probably be buried, he said.
ln the long run, the whole system of
injecting coal waste into the surrounding
hills may have to be scrapped in favor
of a more satisfactory disposal method,
the state official said. The tipple owners
are being required to submit their plans
for upgrading the plant as part of an application for a mining permit revision,
he said.
The cessation order which closed
down the slurry line on Jan. 28 was the
plant's fifth citation in as many months.
"Noncompliances" were issued by mining inspectors for various infractions on
Sept. 1, Nov. 10, Jan. 16 and Jan. 24.
In a Nov. 16 letter to Jackie Swigart,
then-Secretary of the Natural Resources
and Environmental Protection Cabinet,
a New York geology professor said the
Ligon tipple's waste disposal system
posed a "grave danger" to the lives, property and water supplies of nearby residents. Dr. R. Laurence Davis, assistant
professor of geology and environmental
studies at Alfred University, said a "sudden and catastrophic failure " of waste
(See Story No 3, Page 4)
MAKING A POINT at a public forum sponsored by state legislators here Saturday was Bufford
Conn, of Martin, in center of picture. About 15 people turned out for the courthouse meeting sponsored by Rep. Greg Stumbo and Sen. Benny Ray Bailey.
Friday Morning
Near Grethel As
Coal1hlck Skids
Nine high school students were hospitalized Friday as the result of a collision
between ii school bus and a coal truck
on the Mild Creek road, near Grethel.
The accident occurred less than a mile
from the scene of a similar mishap four
years ago.
According to a state police report, the
school bus, which was carrying 41
students from the Mink Br.anch and
Tackett Fork areas to Betsy iliyne High
School, left the road <1fter being
sideswiped by an empty coal truck
traveling in the opposite direction.
The bus ran down a 5-foot embankment and landed on its side, its door
against the ground. Passers-by guided
students out through the emergency
door in the rear of the bus.
Police said the accident occurred
around 7:30a.m. , when the coal truck
skidded on an icy downhill curve, two
miles north of Grethel. No citations·were
issu~d against the truck driver, Gene
Pinson, 47, of Pikeville, or the bus
driver, Dennie Carroll, 24, of Craynor.
Students hospitalized included Patrick
McKinney, 16, of Craynor, who was admitted to Pikeville Methodist Hospital
with a broken leg; Leann Hall, 16, Tina
Newsome, 16, Tet;esa Evans, 16, and
Thedia Henderson, 14, all of Craynor,
who were admitted to the McDowell Appalachian Regional Hospital for x-rays
and observation; Michelle Tackett, 14,
and Yuleme Tackett, 17, both of
Craynor, who were treated and released from Methodist Hospital ; Priscilla
Tackett, 15, of Craynor, treated at Betsy Layne, and Greg Frasure, 16, of
Grethel who was also treated and released from an area hospital. All were later
reported in satisfactory condition.
D wayne Hail and Johnny Tackett,
who helped passengers from the overturned bus, said the students remained
calm. Also on the scene were workers
from the nearby Mud Creek Clinic,
where some of the students were taken
for first aid.
On Jan . 2, 1980, three grade-school
children were hospitalized with bone
fractures after a school bus collided with
a county gravel truck, about half a mile
south of the scene of Friday's accident.
Board Endorses
Minerals Levy
The Board of Education last week
voted to "endorse and support" a bill
which would tax unmined coal like any
other real property.
The vote to back House Bill 92, which
is currently in the hands of a state
legislative committee, followed recommendations by a task force set up by .
Supt. E.P. Grigsby, Jr. to study ways of
financing the Floyd school district and
by the Kentucky Fair Tax Coalition.
The task force, which was represented
at last Wednesday's board meeting by
McDowell Principal Gary Frazier, a lso
won board support for legislation permitting local governments to levy a
sales tax on alcoholic beverages and for
consideration of a state lottery as a way
of fundin~ the schools.
Joe SzaK.os, of David, an organizer for
the Kentucky Fair Tax Coalition, said
Floyd county's estimated 3.5 billion tons
of unmined coal could yield $1.7 million
in revenue for the county and $1.5
million for the school district, based on
1982 tax rates. Szakos had previously appeared several times before the board
to seek its support for an unmined
minerals tax.
School principals have been told they
must not use school time for basketball
practice, Grigsby told the board. A team
of state inspectors said in a report to the
board last month that they had turned
up some instances of physical education
classes being devoted to ball practice.
In a curt memorandum initialled by
Grigsby, Asst. Supt. Ron Hager and
Phys ical Education Coordinator
Frankie Francis, principals were told
the class-time practice " is to stop immediately." Grigsby said later that Betsy Layne and Allen Central high schools
had been named as offenders by the
state inspectors. School board policy requires that a minimum of six hours daily be given to classroom instruction.
Hired by the board were :
Bonita King, teacher at Clark E lementa ry ; Ruth Webb, certified substitute
teacher ; Joyce Hall, Headstart bus
driver at Stumbo Elementary ; Pamela
tittle, janitor at Melvin; Deborah
Belcher, pru:t..time clerk at Clark; and
Nancy Va~ Martin, emergency substitute teacher.
�The Floyd County Times
Section One, Paee Two
Talk Health-Care Costs
Ch il Air Patrol
Schedules Meeting
SATELLITE TELEVISION
The Dewey Lake Comp. Sq. No. 15090
or the Civil Air Patrol will hold its next
scheduled meeting on Tuesday. Feb. 14.
at 7 p.m. The meeting will take place at
the Lancer Fire Station. upstairs. All
members and interested people are urged to attend.
NEWS
SPORTS
MOVIES
RELIGION
We started numbering our highways
on a nationwide basis in 1925, adopting
the now familiar U.S. shield sign.
• Bank
Financing
Available
B1rd banding was first done by John
James Audubon in 1803, in Pennsylvania.
Wil§!JbJ
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MARTIN, KY. • 285-3984
(Across the creek from Garth Vocational School
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UTILITY TAX: WHY?
By GARY FRAZIER
In a recent survey of customers who got refunds, we found 3 out
of 4 believed H&R Block got them bigger refunds than if they'd
prepared their own taxes. 3 out of 4. Are you one of them? ·
What can we find for you?
People who know their business go to
H&RBLOC~
..
z-
SB Richmond Plaza
Main Street
Prestonsburg
886-3685
28!1-9879
Martin
Open 9 AM9 PM Weekdays, 9-5 Sat.
Consult your Yellow Pages for the office nearest you.
MasterCard and Visa accepted at most area locations
STRAND II
STRAND I
.HELD OVER
Storts Fri., Feb. 10
72 hours of liberty
"to forget euerything the
Nauy euer taught them
•
PARAMOUNT PK:'TU'lES PRESENTS A MIUUS·F8TSHANS PAODl.JOOON
A TEO KOTCHEFF FILM· GENE HI\CKMAN U~OMMON VALOR
FRED WARO·REB BRCNIN·RANDALL 'TEX COOB·PATRCK $WJ11(ZE
HAFO..D SYLVESTER Tfvl THOMERSON AND ROBERT ST.ocK AS
M.o<:GREGOR · MUSIC BY.w..<ES ~ WRITTEN BY JOE GAYTON
PR:XJUCED BY JOHN MILIUS AND BUZZ FI;ITSHANS
Of1ECTEO BY TEO KOTCI£FF
A FAAAMOUNT PICTURE ....
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wtw:::zo~rr
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YELLOW
By PAT PHILLIPS
Leonard Stephenson, Sharon Spradlin,
The Prestonsburg Donor Center held Robert Prater, Bill Coleman, Lloyd
its Third Annual Donorama, December Howard, Franklin Reed, Alex Lovely,
20 and December 22. A total of 101 peo- Judy Lawson, Linda Roy, Estill Carter,
ple registered and 90 pints were given Iris Calhoun, Janice Hamilton, Robert
for the best days' results ever at the Carpenter, Patty Carpenter, John Bays,
Center.
Dow Phillips, Buddy Lemaster, Mary
Thanks is extended to Carla Boyd;
Hall, Steven Rice, David Tackett, SienRadio Stations WPRT, WQHY-WDOC; na Risner, Kara Alexander, Janie King,
and Floyd County Times for excellent Dwight Frasure, Wayne Low, Jean
promotion of the need for blood during Burke, Helen Ormerod, Derek Merion,
the holidays. Thanks also to Super- Douglas Woody and Gregory Hall.
America, IGA, Piggly Wiggly and Pic
There is a Central Kentucky Blood
Pac for donating food and to Pizza Hut, Center donor facility in Somerset which
Lee's Famous Recipe and Kentucky competes with the Prestonsburg Center.
Fried Chicken for coupons to present to Prestonsburg has out-drawn them by 26
the donors.
pints in 1983 and by 17 pints in the
Beautiful gifts were made available Donorama. We appreciate the support
for a drawing at the end of the drive. given to the blood program and hope you
B.F. Casual gave an American Touris- will continue to support the Center and
ter piece of luggage which was won by help provide a needed medical service
Kerry Sluss; Russell May contributed to the patients. Call886-1557 to make an
two prints which were won by Charlotte appointment to help save lives.
Harris and Estill Carter, and the video
One
variety of South
game set was won by Mark Brown.
American wasp builds its
GIFT SHOP HOURS-10 AM TO 6:30 PM
Jenny Wiley Florists, Posy Peddler,
homes with a mixture of
Jan's Florists and Allen's Florists
earth and paper pulp. The
PRESTONSBURG, KY. PHONE 886-2711
donated carnations for the donors. Marwalls of these dwellings
tha Hicks was presented with a Christare nearly as solid as stone.
mas stocking when she became the 13th
donor which broke last year's record of
1258 pints. Debbie Roddam received a
wicker bell decoration for being the 1300
pint donor. Steve Sanders and Aubrey
Onkst received gifts of good cheer for
saying the magic words selected for
each day.
The end of the year at the Center
showed a total of 1355 pints compared to
1258 pints donated in 1982. Much thanks '
On January 19, 1984, the Floyd County Board of Education proposed a 3% utility tax to finance imis extended to the very special people
provements in our local schools. This action came following the recommendation pf the Floyd County Task
who donate and share their good health
with patients in Kentucky hospitals.
Force on School Finance. As a member of that Task Force, I found that we needed to address several funThe following registered to give at the
damental questions concerning our schools:
Donorama:
Kelly Allen, Paula Jolly, Tara Allen,
1. Are improvements needed in inst111ctional programs in the Floyd County Schools?
Todd Ward, Bobby Allen, Joseph Bent2. Are new buildings and/or renovation of existing structures necessary?
ley, Robert Custer, James Goble, Elma
3.
Is there sufficient revenue available to fund the improvements in instructional programs and con·
Jessen, Timothy Jessen, Carol Shepherd, Betsy Lafferty, Martha Hicks,
struct or renovate buildings?
Charlotte Harris, Anna Isaac, Connie
4. Is it feasible for the Floyd County Board of Education to adopt a utility tax at this time?
Stratton, Ann Slone, Anita Shelton, Della
Jervis, Auval Gunter, Alecia Ousley,
As a task force, we found the answers to these questions to be relatively obvious. It was our conclusion
Crystal Spurlock, Jessica Holbrook,
that improvements are needed in existing instructional programs in Floyd County. While the tremendous
Ricky Fuller, Emily Marsillett, Loumajority of our teachers are making every effort to provide quality instruction for our children, they are
quida Stephens, Curtis Goble, Hubert
hindered in this effort by a lack of instructional materials, a shortage of needed, but expensive, sup·
Goble, Paul Chaffins, John Bryant, Rick
Branham, Cathy Goble, Sandra Vanoplemental materials for reading, etc., lack of funds for field trips, a lack of funds for needed paper,
ver, Stephen Sanders, Alacia Setser,
duplicating materials, equipment, etc. We found that there was no question that improvements are needed,
Lewis Caudill, William Moore, Jean
and most of them are expensive.
Rosenberg, John Rosenberg, Thomas
The second question can be answered with a tour of the existing schools in Floyd County. Many of our
Blackburn, Michael Blackburn, William
Slone, Paul Vincent, Danny McCoy,
children are attending school in the same buildings attended by their grandparents! Other buildings in the
Robert Thomas, Michael Mays, Jerry
county system are very overcrowded. The need for a new middle school in the Prestonsburg area is critical.
Smith, Kerry Sluss, Gerald McMasters,
New facilities are desperately needed for McDowell High School and Wheelwright High School. Additions
Jimmy Soard, Sharon Tackett, Jeannie
and/or renovation are needed at Allen Elementary, Prestonsburg High School, Allen Central High School,
Nelson, Martha Bradbury, John
Spradlin, Aubrey Onkst, Glenna
Garrett Elementary, Prestonsburg Elementary, Wayland Elementary, and Melvin Elementary.
Bradley, Debbie Rod dam, Clyde
The third question was the simplest to answer. Sufficient revenue does not exist to fund the imTurner, Patsy Brown, Kathy Chaffin,
provements
in instructional programs and to const111ct new buildings or renovate existing structures. The
Robert Johnson, Marilyn Stevens, RayFloyd
County
school system is not adequately financed to fund existing instructional programs and main·
mond Hicks, Kevin Franks, Harietta
Ranier, Lee Corbett, Mark Brown,
tain existing st111ctures proper1y. To suggest that the mentioned improvements could be done without a
10" • 12" -14" • 17" SIZES
;
1-4-tf.
Donor Center Gives Recognition
CRISP FLAVORFUL PIZZAS
CUSTOM MADE IN
a:
As health-care costs continue to climb, health-insurance rates have become
a big issue before the 1984 General Assembly. Sen. Benny Ray Bailey <left l,
a Democrat who administers a health clinic near Hindman, discusses the problem with two members of the Senate's Banking and Insurance Committee.
Senator Frank Miller <rightl, D-Bowling Green. and Sen. John Rogers, RSomerset.
.. ·- ---
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jt.
~
A CROWN INTERNATIONAL PtCf_!:J~~EASE
Color by DELUXE
Showtlmes 7:15-9:30-Sundoy Matinee Open 1:00 Start 1:30 Over 3:15
substantial increase in revenue is fantasy! On the contrary, unless more revenue is generated locally, cutbacks in existing programs will surely begin next year!
---rhe fourth question concerns the feasibility of the utility tax at this time. The Task Force felt that the
tax was not only feasible but necessary. We favor the utility 'tax because it will provide the needed revenue,
will be simple to administer and collect, and will fall fairly on all classes of taxpayers. If, for example, an
average family has a utility bill totaling $100, then the tax would amount to $3.00 per month. Surely, no
one could argue with payment of such a small sum to provide quality education for Floyd County's children.
One final question needs to be answered: What will the money which results from the utility tax achieve
for Floyd County? The bonding capacity generated by the utility tax would allow the following building projects to begin in the near future:
1. A new middle school in the Prestonsburg vicinity to serve grades ~~ to relieve overcrowding at
Clark and Prestonsburg Elementary Schools.
2. A new addition at Allen Elementary consisting of six classrooms, library, physical education facility,
administrative offices, and restrooms. The existing structure will be renovated.
3. A new high school at McDowell.
4. Additions at Prestonsburg High School and Allen Central High School to house industrial education
programs.
5. A new high school to replace the existing facility at Wheelwright.
6. A new kitchen/cafeteria at Martin Elementary with conversion of the existing cafeteria area to in·
structional space.
7. The following elementary schools would be renovated:
a. Garrett
d. Wayland
b. Prestonsburg
e. Auxier
c. Melvin
8. A four-classroom addition at Betsy Layne Elementary. The existing facilities would be renovated
and the old high school structure removed from the site.
Additionally, the new revenue would allow our schools to have art teachers, music teachers, counselors
for the elementary schools, computer education, as well as significant increases in instructional materials.
We have an opportunity in Floyd County to provide the revenue needed to make the improvements we
all know are necessary for our schools. The price each of us will pay for these improvements, however, is
small. The question should not be whether we can afford to pass the utility tax; for the future of .our
children, can we afford not to?
(Paid for by the Floyd County Task Force on School Finance; Ralph O'Quinn, chairman; Billy Arms, co-chairman)
�Wednesday, February 8, 1984
Section One, Paae Three
The Floyd County Times
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Wedneaday, February 8, 1984
~qr lliloyb
...
The Floyd
otnunty iitnrs
County Tlmea
Published Every Wednesday by
Our Yesterdays
Prestonsburg Publishing Company
(Items taken from The Floyd County
Times, 10, 20, 30, 40 and 50 years ago.)
NORMAN ALLEN Editor
Subscription Rates Per Year:
In Floyd County, $8.00
Elsewhere in Kentucky, $10.00
Outside Kentucky, $12.50
Entered as second class matter June 18,
1927, at the postoffice at Prestonsburg,
Kentucky, under the act of March 3, 1879.
--- 1 ---
! C'.ontinued from Page One)
Reclamation. Inc.: Willie Gene
Hamilton vs. Clara Collins: United
!<'arm Tools Inc. vs. Michael Prater et
al: Gopal Majmundar vs. GMAC:
Lester Johnson. Jr. vs. Maudie
Johnson et al: Jackie D. Slone vs.
Susan F Slone: William Hall vs. PIA
Coal Co.: First National Bank vs. Bill
G. Smith et al.
Similar Names
Cause Confusion
The Gregory Conn listed in Suits Fil·
ed in the February 1 issue of the Times
i~ not the Gregory Conn. formerly of
Dana, who now resides at Emma.
--- 3 ---
C'.ontinued from Page One>
piles at the head of Clear Creek was
possible
Regional Admmistrator Thacker said
he had referred questions about the
waste piles to the state Division of Aban·
doned Lands. Inspectors from that office
were scheduled to conduct tests at the
site yesterday !Tuesday l.
Tests by state and federal environmental off:~ials have not demonstrated
any link between the disposal of tipple
wastes and contamination of residents'
wells. Thacker said.
Natural Resources Cabinet officials
who met Thursdav included, besides
Thacker. Deputy· Secretary Charles
Martin, Susan Bush; a staff geologist;
and Joe Dietz, d1rector of field services.
The tipple operators were represented
by Joe Jacobs, of the Turner Elkhorn
Minmg Co. and Don Ely and Phil Brick,
of Pickand Mathers, the parent
company.
"If they do something, that will be
good," Helen Newsome said last week.
"If thev don't, I won't be surprised."
Of charges made by a foreman that
she was just trying to get the tipple
owners to buy her out, Mrs. Newsome
said, "Why would I want to do that? I
was born and raised here. This is my
home."
<
--- 5 ---
!Continued from Page One) I
Stove League , was one of the main
wintertime sports of those who liked
their baseball. Lovers of the sport could
talk a great game while the weather outside ripped and snorted.
Fishermen need some sort of break
while immobilized by ice and snow and
other vagaries of the elements, and
Bassin' Buddies and Music-CarterHughes have come up with something
that should spell "relief" for the angler
who is painfully at anchor indoors.
They have Billy Westmoreland, one of
the country's top fishermen, coming
here Saturday to talk fishing- when,
where and how.
"How"- now that's a rather important matter I need to discuss at some
length with this Mr. Westmoreland. I
may be able to help him.
MYSTERIOUS VISITOR
Back in the days when the 20th century was young, there was a sheltering
roof for every stranger, for the ne'er-dowell, the feeble-minded, all whose handicaps, mental or physical, left them at
the mercy of others. Refuge for such as
these was not supplied at taxpayers' expense in those days. Instead, charitable
householders accepted these unfortunates, almost without exception.
A
As a consequence, some strange
characters showed up as guests.
Perhaps the strangest of these to visit
and remain for a time in our rural community was a man known only as Captain Jenks.
Whence he came has not to this day
been fully determined. Sotpe said ~e was
a Rebel captain who had made hts way
up from Virginia; others said he hailed
from nearby Magoffin county.
Anyway, he was first reported in our
area at a farm where the owner was doing his spring plowing. Without a word,
the burly visitor shunted the farmer
away from the plow and himself began
doing the work, continuing till he tired
and then walking off without a word.
After that, Captain Jenks becam~ a
familiar neighborhood figure, gomg
uninvited to various farmhouses, walking in-almost bursting in- without a
knock at the door, helping with the
chores and acc~pting as his due his bed
and board.
Sometimes he was friendly, engaging
in fireside conversation with his hosts;
at other times he was a forbidding figure
as he sat glowering, silent even when
addressed.
The man remained in the community
perhaps a year, then disappeared as
mysteriously as he had appeared.
Where he came from and why, what his
antecedents were, why the name- all
these questions were as puzzling as his
eccentricities.
Incidentally, the last heard of Captain
Jenks was that he had been killed in
Virginia-shot by a householder at
whose door the captain had, as usual,
failed to knock before entering.
--- 2 --! Continued from Page One l
run class for alcoholic drivers in August.
1982, after a drunk driving conviction in
district court.
Moore was said by police to have been
intoxicated on October 14, 1977, when the
car he was driving ran head-on into a
pickup driven by Harold Paul Curry,
fatally injuring the youth. At the time of
the collision, Moore was reportedly driving south in the northbound lanes of U.S.
23. Curry, a student at Mayo State Vocational School, had just left for home after
working at a Betsy Layne gas station.
Convicted by a circuit court jury of
reckless homicide in the death of Curry,
Moore was sentenced in October. 1978, to
a three-year term· in the state penitentiary. He was paroled after serving 10
months at the Harlan County Forestry
Camp. His civil rights were restored in
1981 by proclamation of former Gov.
John Y. Brown, Jr.
--- 6 ---
<Continued from Page One\
Pikeville attorney Bernard Pafunda,
representing Drexil Hall, pointed out
that Blanton had not mentioned Hall's
name when describing the incidents of
Feb. 16 to federal investigators three
months later, nor had he alluded to
Hall's alleged threat of the previous day.
Neither was his client harned in a civil
suit filed by Blanton and Ray-Mac officials in connection with the shooting,
the attorney noted.
Furthermore, in speaking with a news
reporter the day of the shooting, Blanton said he was confronted at the picket
line by a man with a rifle, not a handgun,
Pafunda charged.
Blanton said the federal agents he
spoke to had not included in their report
all he had told them and that Ray-Mac
attorneys were responsible for listing
defendants in the civil suit filed by the
firm. He denied talking to any news
reporter about the Feb. 16 incident.
Besides Hall, Blanton identified Jason
Moore, Benny Caudill, Kenneth Rolland,
Hermit Newsome, Linville Mosley,
Austin "Bo" Moore, and Raymond
Moore as being involved in the events of
Feb. 16. Questioned by defense attorney
David Thomas, Blanton said he did not
remember defendant Eugene Tackett
being among the group.
Judge Unthank warned Blanton's
mother, Mrs. Kathleen Stumbo, that she
would have to leave the courtroom while
her son was testifying Thursday "if you
cannot control your emotions." Defense
attorney Pafunda had complained that,
in earlier testimony involving her son,
Mrs. Stumbo had wept in the presence
of the jury. He asked that she and Blanton's wife, Glenda, be excluded from the
courtroom. Prosecutor Thomas Self said
he ''strenuously opposed closing the trial
to any participant.'' The two women re·
mained composed during Blanton's
testimony.
The trial is expected to continue
through Friday of this week, after which
a week's recess is anticipated.
Cable TV Firm
Asked To Better
Local Services
Representatives of a cable firm serving many Prestonsburg households have
agreed to submit plans for improving
television service at a meeting of the city
council next month.
The agreement followed a meeting
last Friday between five council
members and representatives of
Cablentertainment, Inc., during which
the city officials relayed to the cable
operators what were described as sharply escalating citizen complaints about
the quality of TV service here.
Poor reception, tardy response to service requests, and the lack of Lexington
channels were said to figure among the
main complaints.
Cable company officials acknowledged there are problems, which they attribute to the age of the system.
Cablentertainment succeeded Flanery
and Dingus, the firm which built the
system some 30 years ago. Relatively ~it
tie of the original line has been rebuilt,
it was said.
The council is expected to hear company proposals for impro.ving the
system at its March 12 meetmg.
In a special session Monday, the council voted to modify its recent ban on outof-town fire runs.
In response to concern about the ban
expreSsed by Floyd Judge-Executive
John M. Stumbo, the council agreed to
respond to fire calls from Highlands
Regional Medical Center and from county schools.
. . .
But, unless the fiscal court IS wilhng
to help fund an expanded service, the
city fire department will not leave town
to respond to residential fires or even to
fires at public establishments like May
Lodge, the council decided.
The snow-capped Bhutan, north of India, issued a postage stamp that is actually a tiny phonograph record. It plays
the Bhutanese national anthem .
Section One, Paae Four
Thornsberry Reinstated
As Wayland Policeman
Ten Years Ago
<February 6, 1974)
The fuel shortage became more than a mere something to read or hear
about for Floyd countians last Sautrday and by Tuesday the county and
entire section joined most parts of the nation in enduring what threatens
to be a paralysis of most activities connected with trans-portation. In
addition, Superintendent Charles Clark announced Tuesday afternoon
that because of the fuel shortage all Floyd county schools will be closed
for the remainder of the week ... The mandatory pregnancy leave required
of Floyd teachers since March 3, 1962 is no longer in effect ... Stripmining
permits of two coal companies operating in this county were suspended
last week due to environmental regulation violations ... Born: to Mr. and
Mrs. Gregory Jones, of East McDowell, a daughter, Jan. 30: to Mr. and
Mrs. Abe C. Howell, of Orkney, a son, Feb. 3: to Mr. and Mrs. Ronald M.
Yabroff, of Wilmington, Del .. a daughter, Jennifer Grace... There died:
Charlie Lafferty, 71, last Tuesday at his home here; Fonzo Crum, 59, of
Martin. Thursday at Our Lady of the Way Hospital there: Pearlie
Stephens Bradley, 71, of Langley, last Tuesday at Martin: Emery Ray.
74, last Tuesday at his home at Teaberry: Vallie Carl Pittinger, 33, of
Garrett, last Thursday at Highlands Regional Medical Center here: Mrs.
. Ollie Mae McCoy Gilliland, formerly of this county, Saturday at
Methodist Hospital, Pikeville.
Twenty Years Ago.
(February 13, 1964 l
The long-awaited Appalachian Plan of the Johnson administration
which will be submitted to Congress February 25 will recommend $41
billion for the depressed areas of ten states with a billion dollars of that
sum being asked for Eastern Kentucky ... Twenty-six more job training
classes will open in Eastern Kentucky this month under the recent $8.7
million grant to Kentucky for training the jobless in a 44-county area ... Attorney General Robert matthews last Friday said that missionaries who
have been making periodic visits to schools in Floyd county and conducting religious services during regular class hours would, under the recent
Supreme Court ruling, "be precluded from continuing such
practices" ...One of the biggest hauls of intoxicants to be taken from an
automobile in this county was seized by Trooper Elmo Allen Wednesday
afternoon at Lancer. Taken from the luggage area of the car were 166
half-pints of whiskey, 24 half-pints gin, 12 fifths of whiskey, and 488 cans
of beer ... Two men were killed in separate auto accidents last week. They
are: William F. Hughes, 50, of Wheelwright, killed Saturday in Lawrence
county, and James A. Damron, 20, who succumbed to injuries sustained
in a wreck near Grethel ...Theredied: Moses Hall, 44, native of McDowell,
Monday at Lexington: Joe Nelson, 70 years old, of Blue River. Friday at
·his home; Mrs. Ella Hamilton. 62-year-old Martin resident, Tuesday at
Our Lady of the Way Hospital there: Mrs. Mary Flannery, 82, of Martin,
Tuesday at home; Charles C. Calhoun, 34, of Prestonsburg, Tuesday at
the home of his mother.
Forty Years Ago
<February 10. 1944)
Technical Sergeant James D. Fitzpatrick, of Gar:ett, n.ow serving as
aerial engineer with a troop carrier unit of the Fifth Air Forc_e. was
recently awarded the Distinguished Flyi~~ ~;o~ for "~?tstandmg accomplish.nent in the face of great danger_ .. . ~~to! Joe Hall, 52. was
shot and killed at Drift, Saturday ...Defective wmng was the cause of a
fire in the Floyd county courthouse here Saturday afternoon, .inflicting
damage ranging from $1,500 to $2,000... An official. of_Wheelwnght local
union, United Mine Workers, presented Mrs. Wmme F. Johns, DAR
chairman of the Blood Plasma Fund drive a check for $1,152 as ~e
workers' contribution to the fund ... Mrs. Sarah Ann Howard, 53, d1ed
Tuesday night of burns suffered January 29 w~en she fe!~ !nto a~ ?pen
grate at the home of her daughter near Hueysvllle... The Good Citlz~n
ship" award of John Graham chapter DAR, ma~e ann~ally to the hi~h
school student whose activities are most deservmg, Will be made th1s
year to Miss Mattie Burnett Hollifield, of Prestonsburg ... Born: to Mr.
and Mrs. Harry Wills. of Water Gap, a daughter: to Mr. and Mrs.
Richardson. of Cracker. a daughter, Rose Carol, January 20: to ~r . and
Mrs. Alex Anderson, of Hite, a daughter .. .There died : Mrs. Lomse Collins, 76. at home at Prestonsburg, Sunday; Miss Edna Reynolds. 21 . of
Ligon. Sunday: Mrs. Lona Hall Stumbo, 55, at home at McDowell . Tuesday.
Fifty Years Ago
(February 9, 1934)
A loan of $43 000 for the construction of a waterworks system in Martin
was granted I~st week by the Public Works Administration ... Approximately 5,000 miners. members of the United Mine Worker:s gathered at
Henry Clay, Pike county. Saturday for the funeral service~ of Perry
Adkins, 45, who was slain January 29 in a clash between stnkmg. mmers
and Pike county officers at Henry Clay ... A. G.Harmon,. of Aux1~r. ~as
been named head of the Minute Men. an American LegiOn orgamzabon
formed to assist peace officers in capturing murd~rers. '?bber~ and other
criminals ...The third annual Floyd County Mus1c Festival w11l be held
here March 24 ... Miss Naomi Goble. of Prestonsbu~. is on the hon~r roll
at Eastern Kentucky State College with an all-A ratmg .. ,Love for h1s d~g
cost six-year-old Joe Tackett, Jr .. son of Robert Tackett, of McDowell. h1s
life Wednesday as he attempted to snatch the family pet from the path ?f
a passenger train near Dwale ... Mrs . T. Br~h ~as. severely burned th1s
week at her home at Martin when her clothmg 1gmted from a bathroom
stove D Hollender Hall. Knott county native. has established law of·
fices h~r~ ... Helen, small daughter of Prof. and Mrs. !shmael Triplett. is
convalescing from an attack of pneumonia ... There,d1ed : ~rs. Marga~!
Boyd. 86. Tuesday at Martin : Mrs. Elizabeth Burchett Robmson. 85. Fnday near wonder : Mrs. Riley Prater. last Thursday at her home at Blue
River.
Donate blood.
It only hurts
when you don't.
CENTRAL KENTUCKY BLOOD CENTER
PRE STO NSBURG STAT ION
(Munic ipal Bldg .)
N. Lake Drive/Prestonsburg, Kentucky 41653 -
making an arrest. But the unproven •
allegations did not add up to a justification for firing him under the city's current personnel policy, insisted Mayor
Murphy.
The mayor's position was supported
by Larry Wingate, a local government
specialist with the Big Sandy Area
Development District, and Lee Troutwine, an advisor with the state Department of Community and Regional
Development. Both officials met with
Wayland officials in a special meeting
of the city commission last week, which
also attracted an unusually large audience of townsfolk.
Wayland's personnel policy is part of
a "pretty standard" ordinance he helped
draft as part of a statewide effort to
bring order into the affairs of local
governments, Wingate explained. Troutwine told council members that, if they
found fault with a city employee, they
should give verbal and written warnings
before firing the employee.
Troutwine "told us some of the
awfullest tales there ever was," Banks
said later. "He said if he was a lawyer
he'd take (Thornsberry's) case and sue
the town and us as individuals.'" He has
asked for an attorney-general's opinion
on the matter, Banks said.
After the state official had spoken to
them, Bonnie Clark said she felt that
reinstating the police officer was· "the
only way we could go without being
sued." In any event, Thornsberry "does
the best job he can," she said, adding,
"We don't have much to choose from."
Mrs. Webb and Steve Banks voted
against Thornsberry to the end. But
Mrs. Clark joined the mayor and Fraley
in voting last week to reinstate the
officer.
--- 4 ---
LETTERS
<Continued from Page One)
was cited as a reason for both proposals;
and word that Floyd county would sufThe views expressed here are those or the
fer a 50 percent cut in federal revenuewriter, and not nec:essarily those of this
newspaper. No unsigned contributions will
sharing money this year gave the meabe published.
sures added urgency here.
On the argument that an estimated 18 Quality Means Cost
percent of travel in Kentucky is on local
There are two basic questions involvroads, the judges' association is asking
the legislature to return to the cities and ed in most discussions of the Board of
counties 18 percent of the money col- Education's tax on utility receipts. What
lected in motor vehicle license fees and should be accomplished through public
gasoline tax. Local governments cur- education? How much should it cost?
These two questions are interrelated.
rently receive 11.1 percent of the state
When
the quarttity or quality of educaroad fund.
Floyd county, which received $388,337 tion is increased, financial support
in state road money this year, would generally needs to be increased. When
receive an additional $258,892 under the the financial support is restricted, the
quantity and quality of education are
proposed formula, Stumbo said.
In the meantime, the counties need an likely to be limited. Financial provisions
emergency appropriation from the state establish the limits within which schools
road fund to repair winter-damaged must operate.
Some voters begin their consideration
roads, a delegation of judges-executive
told Gov. Martha Layne Collins last of the utilities tax with the assumption
Thursday. The need is especially acute that a reasonable quantity and quality
in coal counties, where road damage is of education can and should be financsevere and the coal slump has reduced ed. Others begin with the assumption
to a trickle the share of coal severance that taxes are high and financial support
must be limited accordingly.
taxes returned to the counties.
The better educated people become,
Floyd county has received a mere
$106,751 in coal severance taxes this the more clearly they seem to recognize
fiscal year and the state Revenue the need for increased education. QuanCabinet has told the county to expect no titative increases- in supportive sermore before June 30. In the 1982-'83 vices, materials and supplies, and
budget year, Floyd received $511,309 in building programs- would set the
climate for providing quality education
revenue from the severance tax.
Stumbo cited the cut in severance tax for all Floyd county students.
RALPH G. O' QUINN,
as a reason for seeking also a five perPrincipal,
cent sales tax on alcoholic beverages.
Garrett Grade School
Under existing law, city governments
may levy such a tax provided the
revenues raised by it are spent on the ex- Child Support Duty
tra police work needed to enforce state
There is a golden opportunity for our
liquor laws: In a letter to Ed Logsdon, area to get the attention of the Kentucky
executive director of the Kentucky Legislature in organizing for the enCounty Judges Association, Stumbo ask- forcement of child support.
ed for help in drafting a bill that would
One does not have to be in Earlene
allow counties to levy the tax, but Newsome's situation as stated in the
without restrictions as to its use.
Floyd County Times article of Jan. 25,
Of the $400,000 Floyd authorities ex- to join and support the concept that men
pected to receive this year in federal or women must face the responsibility
revenue-sharing monies, only $176,000 of supporting their children.
will be forthcoming, it has been learnThere is power in numbers! United
ed. Over half the anticipated money has voices will be heard.
already been committed to the county's
DORLAS FLANNERY
solid waste system ; much of the rePrestonsburg, Ky.
mainder was earmarked for road
materials.
State officials explained that the Nub of the Question
reason for the cut is that, because of a
Why exactly is it so difficult for child
1981 error in Washington, Floyd receiv- support laws to be enforced?.
ed too much revenue-sharing money in
EDITH LAWSON
1982 and 1983. Revenue-sharing funds
Prestonsburg, Ky.
are awarded on the basis of a formula
which takes into account a county 's
population, its per capita income, and
Pre-Measurement
funds generated by local taxes. A
Service
Available
Washington bureaucrat calculating ,
The Agricultural Stabilization and
Floyd's share three years ago overstated the amount of tax revenue rais- Conservation Service provides premeasurement and other producer sered here and consequently overpaid the
vices to assure farmers that they are in
county the next two years.
compliance with 1984 acreage reduction
Because of the high unemployment
requirements and eligible for program
rate- and lower per-capita income-this
benefits .
county's revenue-sharing allotment inAt the request of the producer, the Sercreased this year, but Floyd will see a
vice will stake and measure acreages
net cut in revenue to make up for the two
before crop planting time. Farmers are
years the county was overpaid.
required to plant within the stakes that
are placed when the land is measured
Pageant Is Scheduled
The Miss Northeast Kentucky Cameo and to report their crop acreages to our
Pageant will be held February 25, at office when planting is completed.
To be eligible for price support loans,
Greenbo.Lake State Park. The deadline
target
prices and other program benefor entries is February 12. Competition
categories include Modeling and Inter - fits, producers must certify actual
view, Talent, and Photogenic events for planted acreages. Thus re-measurement
girls ages 3 through 23. Contestants may is important in helping farmers plan
enter any or all events. Entry forms which land to devote to the acreage conmay be obtained from Ilene Rader, servation reserve and which fields to
606/873-6036,
Sandy
Graham , plant.
Other ASCS producer services include
606 / 272-6177, or Cyndi Shields,
measuring total cropland, field or sub606/223-1748.
Numerous prizes will be offered, in- divisions to be planted and land areas
cluding U.S. Savings Bonds, crowns , for other purposes. Fees vary, based on
•
banners, trophies and modeling scholar- the type of service rendered.
ships. The winners will advance to the
In order to service the requests on a
Miss Kentucky Cameo P ageant to be timely basis, farmers are encouraged to
held in August, 1984.
apply early.
To the Editor
Thirty Years Ago
<February 11, 1954)
The survey party of the Commerce Department conducting a study of
industrial facilities and economic opportunities in Kentucky labor
surplus areas is due in Prestonsburg for a conference today <Thurs~ay>.
Senator John Sherman Cooper notified Mayor Curtis Clark ... Details of
the handling of surplus foodstuffs to be distributed to the needy in this
county through federal and state channels had not been worked out t~is
weeek, it was said at the office of County Judge Henry Stumbo ... Shenff
Gormon Collins was complaining this week of the citizens who want
bootleg establishments raided but refuse to swear out search warrants or
even give their names... Coal production of t~e mines represented by t~e
Big Sandy-Elkhorn Coal Operators Association decreased 14.2 percent m
January under the same the period last year ... As part of the program to
establish this county as a strawberry producing area, orders for 20,000
strawberry plants have been given to County Agent 0. E. Boggs, he said
this week ... Killing of the third deer of a herd of 20 released about two
months ago in the Dewey Lake game refuge resulted last week in an intensive investigation involving residents of Martin county ... Born: to Mr.
and Mrs. Robert Steinau, of Louisville, a daughter, Claudia Ann, January
26; to Lt. and Mrs. Charles Tackett, a daughter, Joni Dionne, February 3
at Camp Stoneham, Calif.; to Mr. and Mrs. Bill Vanhoose, a son, Ronald
Edward, January 26, at the Paintsville Hospital...There died: J. C. Kindred, 67, at home at Allen Sunday; Eli Hall, 51, of Minnie, Februar;Y 6 at
the Beaver Valley Hospital, Martin; Tom Tussey, 69, at home at Risner,
February 7; Mrs. Oma Jarrell, 69, at home at West Prestonsburg, Tuesday; Hugh H. Stumbo, 70, Friday at McDowell; Mrs. Worlie Hurd, 45, of
Ivel, Wednesday at the Paintsville Hospital.
It used to be that those in charge could
hire and fire whom they pleased, noted
Steve Banks who, as a city commissioner, is one of five in charge at Wayland.
As she understood it, his wife added,
this is one of the main reasons people get
to choose their city officials in the first
place. "Why do people put someone new
in there if not to get a change for the better?" she wanted to know.
But city employees are protected by
the law, countered Mayor Patricia
Murphy-specifically, by a two-year-old
ordinance passed by the Wayland board
of commissioners in the ,wake of a
"home rule" bill enacted by the last
state legislature. One of the provisions
of the ordinance is that city workers can
be fired only "for cause."
The issue came to a head in Wayland
last month when a majority on the new
council voted not to rehire the town's only police officer, Normes Thornsberry.
Banks, a disabled miner, said replacing
Thornsberry was one of the main
reasons that he, Linda Webb and Bonnie Clark-the three newly-elected1
commissioners-had run for office. The
three ran as a slate, he said.
The way incumbent Sam Fraley put
it, what happened was that "a new
bunch took the election over" in order
to hire Glenn Martin, an unemployed
miner, as town policeman. Thornsberry,
who has been Wayland's law officer for
the last six years, is "a good
policeman," said Fraley, who added,
"The new bunch thought they could fire
him for nothing."
Thornsberry's opponents said they
had good reasons for wanting to get rid
of him, including misuse of the police
patrol car and use of excessive force in
~
�Wednesday, February 8, 1984
The Floyd County Times
Section One, Page Five
Volunteer Counselors
Provide Free Tax Aid
To Discuss Anesthesia at PCC
LEATHER
Tax counseling for the elderly is now
available each Tuesday and Thursday
from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. at the Floyd County Public Library here until April 12 and
in Martin at The First Guaranty Bank
from lOa.m. to 2:30p.m. each Tuesday
and Thursday until April 12.
Volunteer counselors trained by the
Internal .Revenue Service will fill out
federal and state tax forms and explain
special benefits for older citizens. Bring
copies of your last year's tax returns,
pension, withholding and interest statements, also tax forms you have received from the I.R.S.
Dr. Mina
Dr. Arriola
Entertainers, Craftsmen
Being Sought By State
Choose Your Tax Return
Preparer With Care
The state Department of Travel
Development is looking for entertainers
and craftspeople to show off Kentucky's
rich artistic heritage at the 1984 New
Orleans World Exposition, said Tourism
Secretary Wendell Combs.
The department is scheduling performers desiring to play for thousands
of visitors either at Kentucky's exhibit
or on one of six stages situated on the
fair site. Kentucky's exhibit is located
in tht: Louisiana Exhibition Hall, aboard
a riverboat replica, the Great River
Queen. Kentucky shares the boat with
nine other states and two Canadian provinces that comprise a tourism collective called the Great River Road Association.
The Travel Development Department
will take written requests only from
square dancers, Bluegrass musicians
and others whose entertainment or
demonstrations symbolize Kentucky.
Craftspeople like room-makers and potters will be considered, provided the artisan actively involves the audience in
the demonstration.
Performers won't be paid and must
provide their own transportation, food
and lodging. Each will be admitted to
the fair free on the day of performance,
Combs said.
The department and world's fair officials together will schedule performances. It would be useful for applicants to provide several alternative
dates .
Applicants should furnish the department with this written information: a
description of the act, the number of persons in the group, stage equipment
needs, and the desired date for performing. The department's address is:
Department of Travel Development,
Attn.: Kim Aubrey, 22nd Floor, Capital
Plaza Tower, Frankfort, Ky. 40601.
The choosing of a preparer by taxpayers to do their federal income tax
returns should be done carefully and
wisely.
Most tax return preparers are honest
and do not deliberately attempt to
defraud either their clients or the IRS.
However, a few misuse the responsibility of preparing a tax return for someone
else, and we have some suggestions on
how to identify these preparers.
Do not sign a blank return, or one
which is partially complete. These
returns could be altered by the preparer.
Tax returns preparers are required by
law to sign and date the return and to
enter his or her identification number.
You must be furnished a copy of the
completed return.
Preparers who promise a refund,
claim a special relationship with the
IRS, or boast of ways to beat the tax
system should be avoided.
The choosing of a preparer is particularly important because you, not the
preparer, are responsible for the accuracy of your tax return. As much care
should go into the choosing of a tax
preparer as the selection of any attorney, doctor, or any professional
service.
ACCEPTING
APPLICATIONS
•
Big Sandy ADD Is acceptmg applications for on In-Home Services Clerk/
Assistant. MaJor responsibility entails
working with computer forms.
Salary Is negotiable based upon
education and work experience.
Submit resume to Big Sandy ADD,
Municipal Building, 2nd Floor, Prestonsburg, Kentucky by February 1!5, 1984.
Equal Opportunity Employer
Mathew Hall, son of Terry and
Marcella Hall, of Wayne, Michigan,
celebrated his second birthday,
December 29. He received many nice
gifts.
His paternal grandparents are Harlos
Hall, of Bevinsville, and Evelyn Arnett,
of Marion, Ohio. The maternal grandparents are Alvin and Mae Newsome, of
Bevinsville.
Ratliff Exhibits Work
At Louisville Gallery
Terry Ratliff, artist and craftsman of,
Manton, is one of three Kentuckians
whose work is being shown in the Mainly Furniture exhibit at the Swearingen
Gallery in Louisville. The exhibit, which
:>pened January 21, will continue
through March.
Of only nine selected to exhibit their
work at the Swearingen Gallery, two are
from this area. In addition to Mr. Ratliff,
Rachel Wash Law, of Magoffin county,
is exhibiting basket work.
Mr. Ratliff will also be showing his
furniture at the Kentucky Wholesale
Crafts Market scheduled March 1o-11 at
the Convention Center in Lexington and
sponsored by the Kentucky Department
of the Arts and The Arts Foundation.
We're glad
you asked!
John C. Hall
Founder
THER & SUEDE
3% Utility Tax?
Dr. Jung
Anesthesia: What the Public Should Know, will be presented at Prestonsburg Community College in Pike Auditorium
at 7 p.m., Tuesday, February 14. This is the second presentation of the Medical Seminar Series to be presented by the
Floyd County Medical Association.
·
Dr. Arriola, who will chair this session, is board certified in anesthesia and comes from the Philipines and Boston
where she did her residency at Harvard. She was a fellow in anesthesia at Harvard Medical School and a consultant
and professor for Boston University and Boston City Hospital. Her topics will be local and regional anesthesia.
Speaking on outpatient obstetric anesthesia will be Dr. Mina Majmundar. Dr. Mina is a Fellow of the American College of Anesthesiology. She is from India and did her residency at the College of Medicine and Dentistry in New Jersey.
She is associated with Highlands Regional and Paintsville Hospital.
Dr. Jung will be speaking on monitoring anesthesia and its complications. Dr. Jung is from Korea and completed
his medical training at Baylor College of Medicine in Houston and was associated with the Department of Anesthesiology
at Baylor University in Houston. He is associated with Highlands Regional Medical Center and is in private practice.
The fourth panel member is Willie Barrowman who will discuss general anesthesia. Mr. Barrowman, a nurse anesthetist
with Our Lady of the Way Hospital, is from Elkhorn City. He received his BS in nursing from the University of South
Carolina and his BSNCRNA from Richlands Memorial Hospital for nurse anesthetists. He holds the Advanced Registration for Nurse Practioners in Kentucky. Mr. Barrowman is married and has two children. He resides at Stanville.
Reg. 24.95
MENS ?V2 · 12
BROWN
Let the Voters Decide!
When you sign a petition asking for an opportunity to vote on the 3%
utility tax, BE SURE your school district number and precinct number are
listed at the top of the petition. This will Insure that your signature will be
counted.
Below is a legally acceptable petition form which may have as many lines
as wanted for names of signers. These petitions are available in every part
of the county.
·-----------------------------------------------,
We, the undersigned, as registered and qualified voters in Floyd County, Kentucky, hereby
petition the Floyd County Board of Elections to p lace the levying of a utility tax, passed
by the Floyd County Board of Education on January 19, 1984, on the ballot for voter
approval or disapproval at the next general election.
School Board District #
Precinct:
Name (print)
Signature
Address
~--~--------------------------------------------Mall Your Petitions To:
Everett Akers
Rt. 2, Box 89
Martin, Ky. 41649
W. J. (Bill) Reynolds, Jr.
Box 456
Allen, Ky. 41601
or
Petry's Furniture & Appliance
·~LUES
Recliners
.
I
I
$29995 1
~~~
~ •.-ak
AND UP
19'diagonal
I
I
I
I
I
I
Living Room
17-function Channelock Remote- Co ntrol
95
Convertible
Dishwasher
Electronic Tuning
Hall Funeral Home
HOW DOES ONE DEAL WITH A DECEASED'S BELONGINGS?
Dining Room
One of the most plinful jobs the family of the deceued must fue after the funer1l
is the disposition of the decened's penonal possessions.
Hastily discarding possessions Is not always the wise thing to do. Memorabilia Clft
become valuable with time; not intrinsiCIIIy, pemaps, but sentimentally.
•
Clothinc, jewelry, books, a st1mp collection, 1 c1men, 1 pocket watcJ.-are these
items to be discarded? Or retained as keepsakes?
We've observed that m1ny artides, like jewelry, or a watch, are not discarded;
rather they are prized by members of the family as precious mementos. Nos'-l&ia
often takes over and a simple item, like a small pocket knife, becomes a son's
pride and bitter$WI!I!t plil!asure.
Clothin&, on the other hand, may find its way into tlte hands of the needy by w~y of
1 favored charity; or, very often, many mourner$ take great pleasure in seem& a
close relative repled in a favorite suede jacket, a suit, a fur.
5- PIECE DINETTES
TEN DAy .SALE - FEBRUARY 8-17 ~ TEN DA Yl
(ref: Dr. A Frees._"Help for your grief" 19771
•
•
HALL FUNERAL HOME
llear JIIIICtio• tf Ky. 10 alld Ky. 122, lartiR
Phones 285-9261 OR 285-9262
.
I
.....
Petry's Furniture &Appliance
Martin
.
~~service
Is Our Best Salesman"
285-3214
I
'.
�Wednesday, February 8, 1984
The Floyd County Times
Stewart-Rexroat Vows Spoken
David Crafts Releases
New Photo Catalogue
A new photograph catalogue featuring
over 70 crafts was released by David Appalachian Crafts this past week.
The non-profit craft organization with
a membership of approximately 133
men and women sells its work to over
50 retail shops and department stores
throughout the country.
The craft shop utilized a sketch
catalogue for several years which served the center well, but due to an increase
of catalogue requests as far away as
Mame, California and Alaska. according
to center personnel. a photograph catalogue was required to convey the exceptionally high quality of the handcrafts.
The Craft Center hopes the following
five benefits will result from the
catalogue: 1. The crafts of 133 craftspeople will be exposed to at least 2000 people in the U.S. and abroad; 2. the income
of 133 craftspeople will benefit by sales·
of their crafts through the catalogue: 3.
the momentum of the crafts movement
will be thrust forward by high quality
crafts being presented in a high quality
catalogue; 4. the preservation and proliferation of traditional mountain crafts
will be continued, and respect and
understanding of handmade goods and
their unique value will be spread
throughout the US . and abroad.
The craft center functions as a cottage
industry allowing craftspeople to work
in their homes at their individual pace.
Local craftspeople from six counties
create quilts, sewn items. wood crafts.
pottery, corn shuck items and other
traditional crafts. Many of which are included in the catalogue and are on
display at the David shop.
David crafts received financial
assistance for the catalogue's production from the Public Welfare Foundation, The Kentucky Crafts Council and
Christian Appalachian Project. Paula
Goble , of Prestonsburg. did all
photography and Gwen Heffner. a local
potter and graphic artist. played the major role in design and layout.
The 2000 catalogues will be released
to the public for the spring buying
season. Retail craft shops, department
stores and individuals will be mailed
copies upon request for $2.00.
The catalogue is now available at
David Appalachian Crafts in David,
located on Rt. 404. The public is invited
to visit the shop Mon-Fri. 10-4.
Five million tons of sugar are consumed in the U.S. every year. Each person,
on average, eats his weight in sugar
annually.
WEDDINGTON
--______..-----874-9633
RI!:.\L t;STATE
Southern
States
Auxier Homemakers Meet
The Auxier Homemakers met Thurs
day, Feb. 2, with nme members present.
The lesson by Mrs. Pitts was on Fraud
and Crime Prevention Devotion was led
by Betty Curnutte.
Refreshments and decorations in the
Valentine's theme were by Betty and
Debbie Curnutte. Other members pre
sent wee Pat Salyers, Kaye Hale, Marty Ward, Sue Wells, Peggy Wells, Helen
Music and Audrey Hall.
Next meeting will be Thursday ,
March 1 at 7 p.m. at the Auxier United
Methodist Church. If there is no school
there will be no club meeting.
FOR SALE
•
Promoted In Hawaii
Marine Lance Cpl. David M. Fitzpatrick, son of Samuel H. and Elizabeth
Fitzpatrick, of W. Prestonsburg, has
been promoted to his present rank while
serving with First Marine Brigade,
Kaneohe Bay, Hawaii.
REDUCED TO $52,500
Charminglttree·bedroom, twc.-stol} home with front porch, two baths, kitchen
with applilnces and a ps log fireplace in the Jiving room. New carpeting.
washer and dryer to stay, and an outside storage building with utilities.
Prestonsburg city water and gas, located just below Sugarloaf on a tree-shaded
lot.
INCOME TAX
PREPARATION
Brent Renfroe, Mrs. Kenneth Bosss, and
Miss Flecia Salisbury were hostesses for
a bridal shower.
Following a wedding trip to Snowshoe
Ski Resort, Mr. and Mrs . Rexroat are
residing in Indianapolis.
The bride is the granddaughter of
Mrs. James W. Salisbury, of Prestonsburg, and of Mrs. Walter E. Stewart, of
Allen.
CARD OF TH:\1\;KS
The family of Kenis Tackett wishes to
thank all of those who were so kind and
considerate during our time of grief. We
want to thank those who sent flowers
and gifts of love. We especially want to
thank the members of the Pilgrim Home
Regular Baptist Church, the nurses,
aids, and especially the cooks at the
Mountain Manor Nursing Home, Pikeville, Ky., and the Hall Funeral Home
for being so kind.
THE FAMILY
JOE D.
@
Miss LuAnne Stewart and Mr. Jeffery
David Rexroat were united in marriage
in an afternoon,ceremony January 21, in
Oakland Avenue Baptist Church,
Catlettsburg. The Rev. J. Gene Hall performed the double-ring ceremony at 2:30
following a program of nuptial selections
by Mrs. Jack Taylor. organist. Jill
Taylor, piahist. and Keri Skasss, soloist.
The bride is the daughter of Dr. and
Mrs. Melvin K. Stewart, CAtlettsburg.
She was given in marriage by her
father. The bridegroom is the son of
Mrs. Mary Rexroat, of Campbellsville.
Ky., and J.D. Rexroat. of Tennessee.
Julie Stibbe. Dayton, Ohio, was maid
of honor, and bridesmaids were Lisa
Salisbury, Printer, Ky., cousin of the
bride, and Barbara Lee. Elizabethtown,
Ky., cousin of the groom. Dr. William
Lee, Jr. served his nephew as best man.
Groomsmen were Alan Witham, Campbellsville, and Todd A. Stewart, brother
of the bride. Barry Lee, Elizabethtown,
cousin of the groom, was ringbearer.
The bride's aunt. Mrs. Timothy J.
Salisbury, of Printer, presided at the
guest register.
A reception was held in the church immediately following the ceremony.
The bride is a graduate of Boyd County High School and the University of
Kentucky where she earned a B.S.
degree in Computer Science. She is
employed by McCormack and
Associates, Indianapolis, Indiana.
The bridegroom is a graduate of
Taylor County High School and the
University of Kentucky where he earned a B.S. degree in Computer Science.
He is employed by Naval Avionics,
Indianapolis.
Out-of-town gu~ts attending the
ceremony were Mrs. Mary Rexroat, Mr.
and Mrs. Eddie Graham, Mrs. Alan
Witham, Campbellsville; Mrs. William
Lee, Jr. , Elizabethtown; Mrs. James W.
Salisbury, Prestonsburg; Mrs. Walter
E. Stewart. Allen; Mr. and Mrs. David
Shaw, Miss Jane Driskell, Miss Lexi
Bohn, David Simmons, Mrs. Helen
Smith, Miss Donna Scrosham, John Entsminser, Gres Mudd, all of Lexington;
Robert Stacey; Miss Donna Cline, Mr.
and Mrs. Glen Pinkerton, Dr. and Mrs.
Bob Crider. all of Ashland; Mr. Gary
Adkins, Kenova, W.Va.; Mr. and Mrs.
Andrew Howell, Cincinnati, Ohio.
The bridegroom's mother was hostess
tor a rehearsal dinner at the Convention
Center Hotel in Huntington, W. Va. On
Wednesday preceding the wedding Mrs.
Section One, Page Six
Ratliff & lenox
LOCATED ACROSS FROM
MARTIN GRADE SCHOOL
IN THE OLD WESTERN
AUTO BUILDING.
f!&a/8~
Phyllis Ratliff Lenox, Real Estate Broker
Prestonsburg, Ky . 41653
Office (606) 886-6138
REASONABLE RATES
CHARLOTTE KEATHLEY2_1.3t.
C R~USEL
lthe No.1
microwave
oven in
America!
Frozen Fruit & Vegetable
CASE LOT SALE
SiiARP'S tAROUSti SYSTEi¥1
TURNS THE FOOD
SO YOU DON'T HAVE TO!
Satisfaction Guaranteed
Buy in bulk and you can enjoy "Farm Fresh" fruits and
vegetables at inflation-fighting prices. All products are top
quality, fresh picked and quick frozen for natural taste.
R-5515
Big· Savings In a Trim Size!
..
• Carousel System turns the food so you ciOft'l
have to and ensures even cooking
• Compact 0.6 cu. ft. capacity; a great
space saver
.Ae~~·mt~nl~\~~~·~~~~~~~~
easy clean ups
• Oven light allows you
to view food as It cooks
We Must Have Your Order By March 2.
Qly.
lilt ,rice
rnducto-tplllft
Sliced ADilles eli'
Blackberries 51#*• IQF
Black Rasoberries SM•• IQF
Cultivated Blueberries 2Qjf••
Wild Blueberries 1SM''
Dark Sweet Cherries 3(W•
Dark Sweet Cherries 51#.. IQF
Red Tart Cherries 3011•
Red Tart Cherries 51#.. IQF
Mixed Fruit 2()jf.. IQF
N.W. Fruit Medlev 12/W' IQF
Sliced Peaches 30tf1•
Sliced Peaches SM'• IQF
Pineaoole Chunks 2/51#.. IQF
Red Rasoberries SM"
Laroe Whole Strawberries 2011'' IQF
Calif. Sl. Strawberries 3!W'
Calif. Sl. Strawberries 6'hll'
Apple Juice 24/12 oz.''
Cranbwv Juice 24/12 oz.•
Grapefruit Juice 24/12 oz...
Grape Juice 24/12 oz."
Lemonade 24/12 oz.'
Oranae Juice 24/6 oz."
Oranae Juice 24/t2 oz."
Asoaraaus Cuts & Tips 1()jiiQF
Cut Green Beans 12/2'/zll
Babv Lima Beans 12/2'1211
Fordhook Lima Beans 12/2'1211
Broccoli Cuts 12/211>
Broccoli Soears 12/211
Brussel Sorouts 12/211
Sliced Carrots 12/211
Cauliflower 12/211
Cob Corn 12/4 ct.
Whole Kernal Corn 12/2'hll
Breaded Mushrooms 2/SM
Fancv SL Mushrooms 2/SM
Garden Peas 12/2'hll
Whole Leaf Soinach 12/JM
Mixed Veoetables 12/2'hll
Lenders Bailels 24/6
Sarah Lee Pound Cake 12/12 oz.
French Fries 12/2N
Shoestrina French Fries 12/20 oz.
Potato Puffs 1212*
Thomas' Enol ish Mu!fins. 12/12
Breaded Onion Rinas 8/211
Piua Slices Cheese 60/3 oz
French Bread Piua, 24/5 oz.
Soft Pretzels 100/2'1! oz.
Regular Waffles 12/19 oz.
'Sugar Added
"No Sugar
I TIIIIAIII.
5.80
6.15
9.30
26.15
22.30
27.15
6.30
32.40
8.10
1920
19.33
20.10
520
10.55
5.85
24.30
27.85
725
18.50
29.30
14.95
16.70
12.35
12.60
21.60.
17.85
16.95
22.55
27.50
14.70
19.00
18.00
13.30
19.00
13.00
2020
14.45
13.50
20.70
16.30
19.35
15.60
15.85
13.10
10.45
14.05
18.20
15.50
14.85
12.90
11.35
1325
ADDAESS
CITY
Pt«lNE
R-4840
Carousel Microwave Oven
Turns The Food So You
Don't Have To!
• Convection cooking for tastier,
juicier roasts, succulent broiling,
superior baking
• It bakes, browns, broils and crisps
• Carousel System turns the food
so you don't have to
• Convection temperature control
from 100• F to 450• F
• Durable stainless steel interior
with large 1.53 cu. ft. capacity
• Auto-Touch'" microprocessor
controls, programmable to
3 cooking sequences.
• Automatic temperature probe with
Sensor Temp assures perfectly
cooked meats and poultry.
• Space saving 1.0 cu . ft. size holds
12 pound turkey.
Reg. $799.95
'649
95
TOP SAVINGS
MIKE~S
-Reg. $439.95
Add Sales tax in IJa.
OlDER MUST BE PICKED UP ON
MARCH 27, 1914
FARM & HOME STORE
So. uke Drift PrHtonsbui'J
Phone 886-8596
R-4620
Carousel Microwave Oven
with Variable Cooking!
• Carousel Microwave Oven turns
the food so you don't have to
• Variable Cooking Control includes
automatic defrost
• No-stick, easy clean up
acrylic interior
•1.0cu. ft.
Reg.$349.95
capacity
cooks a 12
pound turkey. •
$
29 995
SPECIAL OFFER
$3198_8
Price Breakthrough
B&W
SOUND
TV AND
APPLIANCES & GALLERY
886-9682 • North Lake Drive, Prestonsburg
TOTAL AMOURT
IQF ltfMna lttdWfdueiJp, Quick Frozen
Advanced orders only- ayment with order.
NAME
R·8320 CCM
Auto-Touch™ Convection
Microwave Oven
FREE COOKING SCHOOL
WITH THE PURCHASE OF
ANY Sharp Microwave
Oven. $29.95 Value!
There will be live demonstrations-:
Friday, February 10, 1984 from 12 noon to 5 p.m. and
·saturday, February 11, 1984from 10:00a.m. to 1:30p.m.
•
•
�Wednesday, February 8, 1984
Section One, Page Seven
The Floyd County Times
B CK
R est a
MAYTOWN NEWS
• CHILDREN'S THINGS, NEWBORN TO ax, FANCY DRESSES, DRESSY COVER-ALLS,
NIGHTIES, JOGGING SUITS, CABBAGE PATCH SHIRTS, WINTER COATS ax THRU 12.
• BEDSPREADS-LOTS OF COLORS AND DESIGNS IN FULL, QUEEN AND KING, SHEET
SETS, TOWELS, CURTAINS, AND MORE.
rhs small store with big sorlngs
-OPEN 11·5 EXCEPT SUNDAYSU.S. 23 NORTH-NEXT TO JERRY 8r GERRYS SHOE STORE
(BEHIND THE PHILATINA BEAUTY SALON)
ERNEST C. HOLBROOK, M.D. FACS
announces the opening of his office
THE PAINTSVILLE CLINIC BUILDING
111 Main street, Paintsville, Kentucky
for the practice of
~.l:.:l~.·
-:·:·
.....
UROLOGY
;:~:~
:;:;:
Telephone (606> 789-7584
MONDAY-WEDNESDAY-FRIDAY
10:00 AM until 4:30 PM
<Betsy Layne office closed February 1l
~:;:
-~:;:
·:;:;:
:;:;:
:;:;:
2B6t. ::;:;
Claude Jennings Webb. II, celebrated
his ninth birthday, Friday, F'eb. 3, with
a party at the home of his parents, Mr.
and Mrs. Claude J. Webb. Among therefreshments was a Yogi Bear cake baked by his mother. Guests attending or
sending gifts were Mr. and Mrs. Gorman Cooley, Mr. and Mrs Claud E.
Webb, Mr. and Mrs. Delbert Goins and
Delbert Milton, Mr. and Mrs. I<<'ith
Hicks, Amy and Maria, Mr. and Mrs.
Buddy Woods and Steve, Mr . and Mrs.
Eugene Howard and Angela, Mr. and
Mrs. Jackie Edford Owens and Jackie,
Mr. and Mrs. Rodney Isaac and Jason,
Mr. and Mrs. Johnny Skeans and Brandon, Mr. and Mrs. Darrell Patton, Jimmy Darrel, Mark and Stephanie, Mrs.
Thurmal Click, Mrs. Lula Webb, Mrs.
Rebecca Salisbury, Heather Kimberly,
Chris Anderson and Mr. and Mrs.
Claude J. Webb, Mecca and Gary.
Mrs. Tamyra Hensley underwent
open-heart surgery at St. Joseph's
Hospital in Lexington, recently, and is
doing nicely.
Mrs. Kathy Halbert underwent surgery, recently, at Highlands Regional
Hospital.
Our sympathy to Mrs. Dorothy Pratt
Langford whose husband, James Langford, of Cleveland, Tenn., passed away
last week of a sudden heart attack. Mrs.
Langford is a former resident of Maytown .
Ray Prater was a recent patient at St.
Joseph's Hospital in Lexington for ob-
·······························:·:·:························································· .•••.•••••••·••••·••·•·•·••••··•••·• •••••••·•·••••••• .-:~: serva
tion. Manuel was a patient at St.
::.:-:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:-:-:-:-:::·::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:
Johnny
Joseph's Hospital in Lexington for tests
and treatment and is now recuperating
at home.
Mrs. Evelyn Patton has been receiving treatment at St. Joseph's Hospital in
Lexington.
Donny Robinson has been a patient at
Our Lady of the Way Hospital.
Mrs. Beulah Hayes underwent surgery at the McDowell Regional Hospital,
last week.
All Ladles' Winter
:U~~s
Mrs. Joyce Rowe has been a patient
• Sportswear and Coats
lO off
at the Paintsville Hospital.
Men's
Men's and Ladles'
• Sportcoats ........ .
Mrs. Kitty Rowland is a patient at Our
• Lee Jeans . . . ...... .
Lady of the Way Hospital for treatment
Men's
Men's and Ladles' Winter
• Jackets and Overcoats . 2 price
of a chronic condition.
• Shoes and Boots . . . . . .
2 off
Mr. and Mrs. Norvel-Fetty, of HuntMen's
Men's
• Levi Jeans ... ...... .
ington, were guests of relatives and
• Sweaters . . . . . . . . .
EACH
friends here last week.
Sympathy to Mrs. Della Moore whose
brother, Milton Conley, of Garrett, pass~f~o-PEN ·
HIS AND HERS .
ed away last week.
SIXIDAYS A WEEK
Mrs. Betty Frasure underwent recent
N,~~~?~ ~UNDAY
·
HIGHLANDS PLAZA
surgery at Highlands Regional Medical
·
Center.
Mrs. Evelyn Patton is a patient at
Highlands Regional Medical Center for
treatment.
Mrs. Phyllis Robinson is a patient at
Our Lady of the Way Hospital.
Mr. and Mrs. Paul Hagans visited
Mrs. Mae Hagans at Louisville Hospital
over the weekend. She is doing well
following surgery.
Earl Allen, of Detroit, Mich., was arecent guest of his mother, Mrs. Tivis
Reynolds and Mr. Reynolds.
Howard Ramey spent the weekend in
Portsmouth, Ohio visiting his mother,
Mrs. Cora Ramey, and other relatives.
Mr. and Mrs. Jeff Jones announce the
birth of their second child, first son,
William Jefferson, Feb. 1, at the Pikeville Methodist Hospital. Grandparents ·
are Mr. and Mrs. Alroy Click, of Martin, and Mr. and Mrs. Tommy Jones, of
Langley.
Phone 886-9100 • Pikeville 432-0194
60Q/
$1798
• ...... ·....... $5995
lV:
s1ooo
S5QOO
lV:
$1998
l
Fine Food
Betsy Layne, Ky. 41605
Ben Franklin
Verlie Rice, of Little Paint. was the
winner of a case of apple butter given
away December 22 at Mountain Manor
Nursing Home. The apple butter was
dona ted by the East Point Development
Club, and tickets were sold to help purchase Christmas gifts for the residents
at Mountain Manor.
The winning ticket was drawn by Miss
Judy Griffith, of Paintsville, with the
help of Mary Stambaugh, volunteer
worker at Mountain Manor. Irene
Wallen is activity director.
Downtown Prestonsburg
Better quality for less
Permanent
ress Prints
Wheelwright High
Lists Honor Roll
Freshmen-Sherry Branham, Connie
Bryant, Beth Curry, Bernal Day, Darren Green, Sara Gullett, Belinda M.
Hall, Sabrina Hall, Shannon R. Hall,
Sheila Hamilton, Johnny Isaac, Barry
Johnson, Norma Johnson, John Justice,
Elizabeth Little, Samantha Mays, Brian
Tackett, Donna Tackett, Jimmy
Tackett, Tammy Waddles, Ramona
Woods.
Sophomores- Tami Blair. Jeff Boyd,
Patricia Edwards , Ruth Gullett, Darrell
Hall, David Hall , Donna Hall, Howard
Hall, Shannon L. Hall , Chris Holbrook,
Bruce Johnson, Shirley Jones, Michelle
Little, Charles Martin, Karen Meade,
Terry Moore, Rhoda Patrick, Charles
Price, Kim Vicars.
Juniors-Mark Anderson, Lisa Burke,
Terry Clemons, Sabrina Curry, Monette
Holbrook, Tim Hughes, Connie Johnson,
Kim Johnson, Onis Johnson, Ronda
Johnson, Billie Ann Little, Kim Little,
Penny Little, Karen Mitchell, Anna
Mullins, Shayne Mullins, James Price,
Bill Slone, Clark Slone, Stanley Tackett.
Seniors- Tammy Amburgy, Keith
Bartley, Evelyn Boyd, Stoney Burke,
Pam Caldwell, Tim Cole, Jamie Cook,
Norman Cook, Dena Curry, Bethe Hall,
Kay Hall, Nawonia Hall, Tina Hamby,
Marilynn Harris, Tim Harris, Charles
Horn, Delmas Johnson, Dreama Johnson, Patricia Johnson, Mia Jones.
Seniors-Kim J. Little, Robert Little,
Tammy Little, Betty Meade, Lisa
Osborne, Regina Anderson , Shirley
Keenes, Regina Messer, Ricky Mullins,
Tony Stiltner, Jerri A. Tackett, Ruth
Castle.
The Magellanic penguin of
the South Atlantic spends
five months of the year at
sea, never once touching
land.
Get started on great fashIon looks for spring and
summer with our 100%
cotton and poly/ cotton
print fabrics • •4/45 -in .
w•dths.
25 Fabrlca nor alfallable
In all afore•
Our Low Price
MaJesty
Polyester
Elastic
Tee-Shirt
Knits
Save now on elastic
sewing
needs! '.4-in . to >;,.;n.
widths.
• Machine washable
!Dr all yO\Jr
Cool and comfortable poly/cotton knits are a
nalural for sporty summer tops, dresses and kids '
wear! You'll find a variety of prints . stripes and
~~~~s in super fashion colors for spring. 54/60-in.
,.
5
118
50
yard
Seer•uc~er
Plaids & Stripes
Only
Ruffled •velet
yard
~=~!~=~~=~nd 2$1
crafts in 1-in. to 1'4-in.
YDS.
widths.
RON LAWSON, Broker
PRIME COMMERCIAL PROPERTY
Prime Commercial Property that has a thriving business operation at this time.
This commercial corner lot and all improvements are available for your consideration. Call today for a private showing!
RESIDENTIAL PROPERTY:
ESTILL-2-bedroom, 1-bath, 900-sq. ft. on approx. 7 acres.
Priced to sell at $11,000.
McDOWELL- 6-bedroom, 2 baths, 2050-sq. ft. and lot 80x100.
Can be two apartments. $30,000.
BYPR0-2-bedroom, 1-bath, 1100-sq. ft. and one acre lot .
Central heat 'and air. $30,000.
DAVI D- 6-bedroom, 2-bath, dining room, fireplace, 2700-sq.
ft., 1.5 acres. Three year old roof. $59,000.
PRESTONSBURG, Westminister St.-3-bedroom, 2-bath,
dining room, fireplace, 1830-sq. ft., 1.5 acre lot. Close to
stores. $67,000.
LITTLE PAINT-3-bedroom, 2-bath, dining room, fireplace,
1224-sq. ft., 112 acre lot. Private area. $65,000.
PRESTONSBURG, Mays Branch - 3-bedroom , 1-bath,
950-sq. ft ., one acre lot . 1-bedroom, 1-bath, 612-sq. ft., one
acre lot. Two older houses. $49,500.
ABBOTT MTN.-3-bedroom, 2-bath, dining room, fireplace,
1;2 acre lot. 1200 sq. ft. basement. $69,500.
PRESTONSBURG, Highland Ave.-3-bedroom, 2112-bath ,
dining room, two fireplaces, 3300-sq. ft., 95x175 lot. Ideal
location . $130,000.
ABBOTT CREEK- 3 bedroom, 2112-bath, dining room, fireplace, 2250-sq . ft., 100x200 lot. Excellent condition. $120,000.
LITTLE PAINT-3-bedroom, 1-bath;dining room, 1248-sq.
ft., 130x60 lot . Qualifies for FmHA. $39,500.
IVEL-4-bedroom, 4-bath, dining room, two fireplaces,
4740-sq. ft., 3,4 acre lot. Between Preston sburg and Pikeville .
$147,500.
ABBOTT CREEK- 175x35 building lots. $6500.
ALLEN - 4-bedroom, 2112-bath, dining room, firep lace,
3200-sq. ft., 260x160 lot. Garage and full basement. $139,000.
ABBOTT CREEK-200 acres. Farm or coal. $135,000.
Join VVintercare
Lieutenant Governor Steve Beshear,
a member of the executive committee
of the Wintercare Energy Fund Board,
announced last Wednesday the participation of six new utility companies
in the fund . These utilities are Big Sandy R .E.C.C., Cumberland Valley
R.E.C .C., Owen County R.E.C.C,
Jackson County R.E.C.C., Kentucky
Power Company, and the Frankfort
Electric and Water Plant Board, which
join Kentucky Utilities and Fox Creek
R.E.C.C. in the program.
Wintercare is a statewide energy fund
for needy and elderly Kentuckians. It is
supported by private, tax-deductible
contrib.utions made by utility company
customers. A space is provided on your
electric bill for you to designate a desire
to contribute. The utility will act as a collecting agent for Wintercare and available funds will be distributed by the local
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NOTICE OF
INTENTION TO MINE
·:.(/.
·> ·. :: ..:- ·>
Pursuant to Application
Number 436-5 193
In accordance with the provisions of
KAR 350.055, notice is hereby given that
Big "D" Excavating, Inc., P .O. Box 34,
Betsy Layne, Kentucky, 41605, has filed
an application for a permit for an underground mining operation. The proposed
operation will affect a surface disturbance of 9.88 acres and will underlie an
additional 62.50 acres located 1.0 miles
southwest of Allen in Floyd county.
The proposed operation is approximately 0.5 miles northwest from
Oklahoma Road's junction with Eel's
Branch Road and located 1.5 miles north
of Martin. The latitude is 37' 35' 47". The
longitude is 82' 44' 58".
The proposed operation is located on
the Harold U.S.G.S. 7 1/5 minute quad·
rangle map. The surface a rea to be
disturbed is owned by Robert Ousley
heirs. The operation will underlie land
owned by Robert Ousley heirs.
The application has been filed for
public inspection at the Department for
Surface Mining Reclamation and Enforcement's Prestonsburg Regional Office, 503 South Lake Drive, Prestonsburg, Ky. 41653. Written comments, objections, or requests for a permit conference must have attached a copy of
the newspaper clipping and must be filed with the Regional Administrator of
the Prestonsburg Regional Office, 503
South Lake Drive, Prestonsburg, K)'
41653 .
2-8·3t.
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Heart~ of f'Vf'ry "ii?f' and "hape HE>arh sE>t m E>verv
way HE>art~ to E'XprE>ss your hE-art's dP''>IrE', and vour
affection<. 14K gold alonE' or w1th diamonds
gemstones or c ulturf'd pear l ' A-. lastmg in beaut ) d'\
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�Page Eight
The Floyd County Times, February 8, 1984
0
SOMET lNG
IRS Notes 1983
Form I 040A Changes
UK Issu(>s Admissions
D(>adline Reminder
Feb. 15 is the priority deadline for
freshman admission to the University of
Kentuckv for the fall semester of 1984,
says George Gaddie, associate dean of
admissions.
After that date. Gaddie says only
students meeting the criteria for
automatic acceptance to UK will be
admitted.
Gaddie also reminded students who
have been admitted to CK and assigned summer academic advising conference dates to confirm by Feb. 15 with
the admissions office their intent to participate in their scheduled summer advising conferences This should be done
by returning the reply card they have
received. Gaddie savs
Students who are currently in the
delayed consideration pool can expect to
receive an admiss10ns decision after
. March 15.
Taxpa)ers who qualify to file the form
1040A Federal Tax return this vear will
notice a few changes and additions ,t~e
Internal Revenue Service said
One additional credit and one addi·
tiona! deduction have been added to the
Form 1040A. These are the credit for
child and dependent care expenses and
the deduction for contributions made to
an IndiviC:ual Retirement Arrangement
<IRA l. In the past, taxpayers were re·
quired to file the Form 1040 to take ad·
vantage of these tax benefits.
Also, for the first lime, a schedule has
been added to the 1040A Form. The fourpart Schedule 1 includes sechons to
report interest income, dividend income,
the deduction for a married couple when
both work. and the credit for child and
dtsabled dependent care expenses.
The Form 1040A tax package contains
complete instruction!: for preparing the
form plus several worksheets to help
taxpayers.
The people of Italy consume a million
and a half tons of pasta every year.
WILD!
Wildlife needs your help No amount is too small.
Do Something Wild!
8.8%
ON ALL
Mqde In The U.S.A.
Your tax deductible contribution will support
non-game species protection programs by
the Department of Fish and Wildlife
Resources and the purchase and maintenance of natural areas by the Kentucky
Nature Preserves Commission. These
programs hove no other sources of funding.
'•
T''
''MOVE'EM
CLAUDE MAYNARD SAYS:
factory
Authorized
Kentuckians con now participate in the protection and preseNation of our rich natural
heritage. On Line 21 ~·you con designate
all or a portion of your Kentucky tax refund
to help wildlife.
A. P.R.
Is Back
Choose tro1n over
From $,5,999
·6Maxirnas
•18Sentras
-4PulsarNXs
·4300ZXs
•7 Stanzas •22 Trucks&4x4s
1984 NISSAN/DATSUN TRUCKS AND 4x4's
&0
Total Availability 62-22 In Stock-40 Enroute
Finance For •2 Months
Regular Payment
At 8.8% A.P.R.
--
$5 ,000
$5,500
$6.000
$163
$179.30
$195 60
$139
$152 .90
$2-4
$7 000
$7,500
$211 .90
s'228.21>
$244.50
$166.80 I
$180.70
$194 .60
$208 .50
$26.-40
$28.80
$31.20
$33.60
$36 .00
$1 ,008 $1 108.80
$1 2()q 60
$1 .310.-40
$1 ,411 .20
$1 512.00
You Save Per Month
You Save Total Contract -
$6 5001
aseSpecial
Sentra Standard. U.S.A.'s
no. llmport. Front wheel
drive, room for 5 people,
5 speed w/o.d., steel
belted tires, maintenance free battery,
E.D.A. 49/35
$1 2941
a month
Original Factory Stickers Stay On All New Cars and Trucks-No lllp-OHs/
NEW CAR TR DE-IN SALE
....--• ALL PRICES AND EQUIPMENT ALWAYS LISTED ON CARS •-------.
1979 DODGE RAMCHARGER 4x4
Go anywhere In this one-owner, beautiful blue and rugged
Romchorger 4x4. V-8 automatic. power steering and brakes.
air and radio.
Sale Priced s4995
1979 VW DASHER WAGON
4-cyllnder diesel, 4-speed, AM/FM stereo cassette, working
clock, tinted gloss, luggcge rock, fold-down rear seat. whitewalls with fancy wheels, luggage rack, and finished In blue.
1978 BUICK RIVIERA
Luxury car finished In platinum with landau top and red velour
Interior. V-8, automatic, power steering and brakes. olr. tilt,
cruise. AM/FM stereo cassette, 8-woy power seat, power door
locks and windows, tinted gluss, moon roof, rear window
defroster, fancy wheels with whitewalls, and only M.114
miles.
Sale Priced s4995
1978 CHEVROLET TOOL TRUCK
Custom Deluxe 20 with only 41.670 miles, 3-speed, V-8,
AM/FM stereo. finished In white with contrasting blue stripes,
and rear step bumper.
Sale Priced s4495
1978 TOYOTA COROLLA SR5
LIFTBACK. 4-cyllnder, !5-speed w/overdrlve for the practical
person who wants o sporty car. Finished In brown w/lown
Interior. wrapped steering wheel, AM/FM stereo, rear window defroster, tinted glass, fold down rear seat, new steel
belted whitewall tires ond great gas economy.
Sale Priced s3995
1977 FORD 4x4 F150 RANGER XLT
8eoutllul red finish w/motchlng Interior accented by fancy
chrome sldegord moldings with block Inserts, white spoked
wheels, whitewall tires, dual ultra-mirrors, rear step bumper,
V8, automatic, power steering and brakes, air and AM/FM
stereo cassette.
Sale Priced s3995
1977 MARK V
Locally-owned sharp Mark V. finished In metallic blue with
leather Interior. Loaded with air, cruise, till, AM/FM 8-track,
power windows, door locks, and seats. Luxury and prestige.
Sale Priced s5495
1977 CORVETTE
Classy Hop Corvette finished In dark pewter with leather
Interior and only 41,98!5 miles. V-8 3!50 c.l., automatic, power
steering, brakes, air, cruise, till, CB, and a fantastic Marantz
stereo with Dolby system.
Sale Priced
s9995
1981 CHEVROLET IMPALA
Aqua 4-door sedan, V-8 30!5, automatic, power steering and
brakes, air, rodlo, tinted gloss, BFG lifesaver radial whitewalls with wire wheel covers, accent stripe, stdeguard
molding, 37,89!5 miles, and roc;m for the entire family.
Sale Priced s6995 ·
1981 DODGE OMNI
4-door, finished In sliver w/black vinyl Interior, bucket seats.
fold-down rear seat. 4-cyllnder, 4-speed, radial tires, rear win·
dow defroster, wiper, and washer. Economical family cor and
frunt wheel drive.
Sale Priced s3495
1981 DeLOREAN
The perfect prestigious sports cor lor the Individual who wonts
to make on Investment and enjoy a world renowned cor every
day. One-owner. 13,!527 certified miles, &-cylinder Fl. 5-speed,
AM/FM stereo cassette, power windows and door locks,
leather Interior, finished In stainless and Goodyear NCT tires
on alloy wheels.
Sale Priced s14,500
1981 CHEVROLET LUV 4x4
You'll love this Luv. finished In black with contrasting, wide
4x4 stripes, btockwollllres, white spoked wheels, rear step
bumper, red, sott-knlt vinyl Interior with matching plush
carpeting, lockable glove box. dual mirrors, tinted gloss,
day/night mirror, 4-cyllnder, 4-speed, otr, AM/FM stereo
8-trock and only 29,108 miles.
Sale Priced s5995
This Is the perfect truck for the person who doesn't wont to
spend $12,000 to $13,000. Uke brand new, Immaculate condillon, never been on a dirt rood, only 23,!599 one-owner
miles, &-cylinder, automatic, power steering and brakes, air,
tilt. cruise. AM/FM stereo. 3D-gallon gas tonk, transferable
lifetime rustproof warranty, rear sliding window, west coast
mirrors, rear chrome bumper, molding, finished In red with
white accent stripe and goregous cloth Interior, white cop,
and It has the prospector package.
Sale Priced 58995
1982 TOYOTA LANDCRUISER 4x4
14,464 one-owner miles, 4-speed with overdrive, tilt, air,
AM/FM stereo, tinted glass, rear window defroster. steelbelted tires with raised white letter tires, white finish with
beautiful cloth Interior.
SALE PRICED
1982 DATSUN KING CAB
Mint condition, one-owner, 12,0!5!5 miles, 5-speed with overdrive, rear bench seat, steel-belted whitewalls, rear step
bumper, light blue finish with matching Interior.
SALE PRICED
1982 TOYOTA STARLET
one-owner finished In beige with matching Interior and con·
trostlng block exterior stripes. 5-speed, AM / FM, rear window
defroster. told down rear seat. steel belted tires, ond only
38,944 miles.
1980 CHEVROLET SCOTTSDALE
Locally owned and well taken core of. V-8. !5.7 Iller diesel,
automatic, power steering and brakes, olr, till, AM/FM stereo,
dual tanks. t>ench seats and finished In red w/chrome
moldings w/black Inserts, wheel lip moldings, dual mirrors,
rear step bumper and Michelin whitewalls.
Sale Priced 5 4995
1979 FORD SUPER VAN
Super doesn't describe this one of a kind beautiful block
customized van that will make you the envy ol your fftends
and enemies. Black finish w/chrome wheels, radial white·
wall raised letter tires, chrome spore cover. dual chrome
bumpers, roof rock, roof ladder, dual west coast mirrors.
chrome running boards, log lights, fender flares, front bug
guard, VS-302, power steering and brakes, air, Jensen
AM/FM stereo cassette w/8-woy speakers, .4 elite captain
choirs w/swlvel, duo I couchs. overhead lighting counsel, Ice
chest, curtains w/venetlon blinds, overhead air vent and
much, much morel
SALE PRICED
1981 OLDS 98 REGENCY
Burgundy leather Interior and tutonellnlsh w/ occent stripes
and moldings highlight this stylish cor. V8·!5.7 liter diesel.
automatic, power steering, brakes, windows, door locks
60/ 40 power seats, air, tilt, cruise, AM/ FM stereo Strock,
clock, tinted gloss, rear window defroster, dual mirrors. steel
belted radial tires w/ wlre wheel covers and tender skirts.
Of course there's more.
SALE PRICED
1981 DATSUN 289ZX TURBO
A block beauty coupe you'll be proud to ownl Gold leather
Interior, automatic, power steering and brakes, AM/ FM
a-speaker stereo cassette, power windows, tinted glass, air,
rear window defroster, fancy gold wheels and radial tires.
Hurry, If's loaded.
SALE PRICED
Sale Priced s10,495
1979 CHEVROLET MALIBU CLASSIC
1984 GRAND WAGONEER
1982 DODGE RAM 0150
1981 JEEP J10 TRUCK
Finished In block. Will be a perfect family cor. V-8, outt'moflc,
power steering and brakes, AM/FM stereo 8-trock.
4-door family cor finished In gray w/ scorlet vinyl top, accent
stripes, moldings, and red vinyl Interior with practical
6-cyllnder engine, power steering, brakes, air, stereo cassette,
tinted gloss, steel belted !Ires with wire wheel covers.
Previous owner averaged 17·18 miles per gallon In this
6-cyllnder, thunder block half-ton truck. equipped with new
shocks, power steering and brakes, air, AM / FM radio, rear
step bumper, west coast m1rrors, and locally owned.
Sale Priced 51995
Sale Priced s4495
SALE PRICED
1976 CHEVY NOVA 4-DOOR SEDAN
Burgundy metallic finish with woodgrain accent, has only
2,314 one-owner miles and loaded. V-8, !5.9 liter, Selec-tro,
power steering, brokea. windows. seats, cruise. till, stereo
cassette w/ 4 coaxial speakers, air, luggage rock, tinted gloss
gouges. leather Interior and much, much more.
Sale Priced s19,999
1983 MERCURY COUGAR
Finished In deep blue metallic with contrasting accent stripe
and light blue, velour Interior and only 3,158 one-owner miles.
V-8, automatic, power steering, brakes, windows, seats, door
tockl, tilt, cruise, olr, AM/ FM stereo cassette, center console. rear window defroster, tinted gloss. molding, accent
stripe and steel belled whitewall tires with fancy wheels.
Sale Priced s10,900
1983 PULSAR NX TURBO
Zoom away In this loaded, one owner, platinum finished sports
cor with black/ red NX stripes. Only 1.967 certified miles, turbo
charged 4 cylinder, automatic, power steering and disc
brakes, tilt steering column, 4 speaker AM/ FM stereo
cassette, tinted glass. rear window defroster, sport cloth,
Halogen hlde-o-woy headlights, sunroof w/ sun screen, Bridgestone radial tires w/ whlte raised letters and sport wheel
covers, plus the balance of Datsun's famous 2-yeor/ 2!5,000
mile new cor warranty. Who says you can't be sporty and
practical? Datsun doesn't.
$300 Cash Down
Take over lease payments of 5232°0 a month
1983 DATSUN 280ZX TURBO
Never titled Demo with only 6400 miles. Finished In tutone
diamond mist, automatic, power steering and brakes. air.
cruise, AM/ FM stereo, and loaded with extras. Sold new for
over $20,000.
Sale Price $17,995
1982 FORD F150 XL 4x4
Ultra-sharp In every way. Local, one owner, 2!5,468 certified
miles, 6-cyllnder 300 c.t., 4-speed, power steering and
brakes, air, AM/ FM stereo cassette, tinted gloss, ultra-mirrors,
finished In tutone red and white with chrome moldings, white
spoked wheels, and rear step bumper.
Was $8995-SALE PRICED
1982 DATSUN DIESEL LWB
Only 24,000 certified miles on this sharp one-owner beouty, llnlshed In metallic diamond mist with contrasting tutone '
factory graphics and moldings. 4-cyllnder diesel, !!·speed
w/ o.d., E.P.A. 39/ 33, factory olr-cond., ultra-mirrors, tinted
gloss, tool box, rear step bumper, and much more.
Sale Priced s5995
1982 TOYOTA COROLLA WAGON
32,662 one-owner miles, 5-speed, AM/ FM stereo, told-down
rear seat, luggage rock, rear window defroster, white finish
with stunning blue Interior and contrasting fancy accent stripe
and motdlno. Local vehicle.
Sale Priced s5495
CLAUDE MAYNARD'S-- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - _ . . ; . __ _ _ _ __
PIKE-FLOYD MOTORS
FORMERLY ATKINS' DATSUN
7 MILES NORTH OF PIKEVILLE
U.S. 23 NORTH, PIKEVILLE, KENTUCKY
OPEN
DAILY
8 to 8
SAT., 8 to 5
SERVICE &
PARTS
OPEN DAILY, 8-5
SATURDAY, 8-12
PHONE:
478-
9572
�Wednesday, February 8, 1984
The Floyd County Times
Section One, Paae Nine
Legislators Sponsor Public Forum
Stumbo, Bailey Disagree
On Unmined Minerals Tax
A courthouse meeting sponsored
by Rep. Greg Stumbo and Sen.
Benny Ray Bailey prompted spirited
debate over a wide range of issues, including one measure the stale
lawmakers had nothing to do with.
Bufford Conn, a miner from Arkansas
wanted to know how the Floyd
of Education could impose a
· ities tax without putting the measure
a popular vote. "It's like comnism," he said, "to pass something
that without the people having a
right to say what they want."
Some decisions are meant to be left to
the lawmakers in a representative
demvcracy, Bailey answered. And the
Board of Education's utilities tax might
yet be put to the vote if enough people
sign a petition to that effect, it was
pointed out.
Stumbo noted also that Floyd taxJayers contribute only four percent of
a e monies needed to run the county
schools, compared to a statewide
average of 20 percent. "Why don't we
have decmt schools?" the legislator asked. "(It's because) we don't pay any
taxes."
The state representative urged more
realistic assessments on Floyd properties, noting that the county boasts real
property worth around $4 billion. "If we
can't raise enough property taxes off
.at, we ought to quit," he said.
But Sen. Bailey rated as "slim and
none" the chances of lifting the four percent cap on annual increases in property lax revenues. Because of the ceiling
imposed by House Bill 44 in 1979, an increase in the assessed value of properties would not necessarily yield more tax
revenue.
Both legislators expressed confidence
in a bill limiting the application of Ken.cky's broadform deeds- the bill pas~-
NOTICE OF
INTENTION TO MINE
Pursuant to Application
Number 436-5231
In accordance with the provisions of
KAR 350.055, notice is hereby given that
Buck Coal, Inc. , Route 2, Branham
Village, Prestonsburg, Kentucky, 41653,
has filed an application for a permit for
an underground mining operation. The
•roposed operation will affect a surface
~isturbance of 5.0 acres and will underlie
an additional81.0 acres located 1.1 miles
north of Hunter in Floyd county.
The proposed operation is approximately 0.5 miles west from State Route
122's junction with Akers Branch Road
and located 0.25 miles west of Akers
Branch. The latitude is 37° 31' 18". The
longitude is 82° 45' 45".
The proposed operation is located on
....t,he Martin U.S.G.S. 7 1/5 minute quadWangle map. The s urface area to be
disturbed is owned by Jake Bates and
Orphie Akers. The operation will underlie land owned by Claube Webb, Bud
Hayes, Mander Moore, Virgil Moore,
and James Slone.
The application has been filed for
public inspection at the Department for
Surface Mining Reclamation and Enforcement's Prestonsburg Regional Office, 503 South Lake Drive, Prestonsburg, Ky. 41653. Written comments, ob*ctions, or requests for a permit con....,erence must have attached a copy of
the newspaper clipping and must be filed with the Regional Administrator of
the Prestonsburg Regional Office, 503
South Lake Drive, Prestonsburg, Ky.
41653.
2-8-3t.
ed in the House of Representatives by 87
votes to 10 Monday-and were skeptical
of reports that an alternative bill, backed by coal interests, had been introduced in the Senate by a northern Kentucky
legislator.
<Sen .• August "Gus" Sheehan, DCovington, has reportedly filed a bill
Senate Bill 198-that would give landowners a right to claim for damages
done by stripmining on their property
but would not permit them to block the
operation.)
On the question of legislation taxing
unmined minerals at the same rate as
other real property, the two local
legislators parted company. Despite
uncertainty about how much revenue
such a tax would yield, he supported it
because "it is the right thing to do," said
Bailey.
But Stumbo said he did not want to
make it harder for the state's sagging
coal industry to compete with coal producers in other states and overseas. "If
<the unmined minerals tax) were to
cause one person to lose his job in
eastern Kentucky, I'd be against it," he
said.
If it meant helping 12,000 school
children have better schools, he would
"tell that person he's just going to have
to lose his job,'' Bailey replied.
The state senator told Dr. Henry
Campbell, director of Prestonsburg
Community College, he understood the
college's need for a $2.2 million
classroom block. "If they don't get it,
they'll have to start teaching classes at
Jerry's," Bailey explained.
Getting funding for the project would
depend on winning the governor's backing, and "that will depend on how badly she needs us to get something passed,'' he said.
Bailey held out little hope for teachers
who retired before 1976, however, noting
that no increase in teachers' retirement
benefits was recommended in the governor's budget. Mrs. Norma Stepp, president of the Floyd County Retired
Teachers' Association, noted that
teachers retired seven years or more
receive only a fraction of the benefits
given more recent retirees.
Home Improvemen!
Loans Are Available
Home improvement loans through
FmHA can be made to low income
families who may not need or cannot afford a new house but need some work
done on their present dwelling.
Loans may be made for $7,500 or Jess
at 1% interest. The maximum repayment period is 15 years.
To be eligible for such a home improvement loan, the family income must
be less than $6,000 annually, and be
owner-occupant of a dwelling in need of
repairs to make it safe and sanitary, or
to remove health hazards.
Those who would like to apply for a
home improvement loan should come to
the Farmers Home Administration office in Prestonsburg on any Monday
from 8 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. Applications
may also be placed at the ASCS Office
at Pikeville on the second Wednesday of
each month from 10 a.m. to noon.
Answers to questions may be procured
by calling 886-9545 .
Sen. Benny Ray Bailey, right, answered a question from the audience during a public meeting sponsored by state legislators in the Floyd circuit courtroom, Saturday. Also on hand were Rep. Greg Stumbo, left, and District 4
Magistrate Lowell Sammons.
B&K TRUCKING
DOZER AND BACKHOE WORK
285-9260
Dr. Mary Fox, of the Pike County Board of Health, explained the problems
of drug-trafficking and abuse from a local angle at Monday night meeting
here.
Members of the Floyd County Chapter of the Kentucky War On Drugs met
at the Floyd County Library here Monday evening to hear Dr. Mary Fox
summarize the drug problem as it exists in this area.
Dr. Fox, of the Pike County Board of Health, listed marijuana, PCP or
"angel dust," and Mexican Quaaludes as the drugs of most concern in
Eastern Kentucky although she pointed to cocaine as showing up more and
more frequently.
Pointing out that "drugs will always be a problem as long as pushers can
make a profit," she illustrated by comparing prescription prices for various
drugs as compared to "street" value. Dilaudid, potent pain-killer, for example, costs about 30 cents through a legal prescription purchase from a pharmacy, while the same tablet commonly brings as much as $35 on the street.
She discussed dangers of drug abuse, both physical and mental, and cited
PCP as particularly hazardous since it may cause irreversible brain
damage in many cases. She also listed symptoms demonstrated by young
people involved in drug abuse as a means of helping parents detect a possible problem.
The Kentucky War on Drugs Task Force, which concentrates particularly
on educating young people to the dangers of drug use and abuse, is open to
anyone who would like to become involved in trying to better control drug
problems in the area. The Task Force meets the first and third Mondays of
each month at the library here at 7:30p.m.
Anyone needing additional information can contact Robert Schissler at
886-8123.
To Conduct
Bass Seminar
FARM EQUIPMENT
Located 15 miles south of Dayton, 30 miles north of Cincinnati, 2 miles northwest of Lebanon, 4 miles east of Interstate 75, 4 miles west of Interstate 71, on State Route
122 and Hart Rd.
PRESIDENT'S DAY
MONDAY, FEBRUARY 20, 1984 at 9:00
TRACTORS: J D 8630-4640-4620-4440-4430-4240-4230-4030-4020-4010-3020
3010-2840-2640-2440-2240-20 10- 1530-1520· 1020-730-630-530-430· 70-50- R·A.
I HC 1566-1206-1066-986-966-674-656-574 ·560-454-444-424-400-354- B275·185o
140- & 130 w / cult.·Super A & C's w / cult .-C's w / cult., MF 1135-1085
275-265-255-245·230·175-165-150-135·65-50·35-30. FORD TW 20-8600-6600-4600
4500-4000-3910-3600-3400-3000-2600·1900-800-600-8 N's-9 N's-Jubliees. Case
2670-1816-1290-1210-1200-1070-990-970-930-885-570-530-430-CC 1936. White 2
150·2-105·2-70-1B55-1650-1550·G-1000 MM-850 MM-550. A.C. 7080 81
C&A&Duals-7060 81 C&A&Duals-190-185-175-160-0 17· D 14-G' w / cult. WDWD 45.
Ford 4000 tractor w / pix all green bean picker; 25 50-HP and less tractors w / loaders; 15 1 & 2-row cultivating tractors ; 10 lawn and garden
tractors; 15 salvage tractors.
Over 600 pieces of farm equipment including industrial equipment and
combines with corn heads and grain tables.
Kentucky C. of C.
Official Named
Kentucky Chamber of Commerce
president Philip A. Thompson has announced the promotion of Jim Wiseman
to the position of Administrative Vice
President for the Chamber.
Wiseman, 32, was formerly the Communications Director for the State
Chamber. His new position will include
administrative responsibilities in addition to continued management of the
Chamber's communications effort.
TRUCKS: Road Tractors, tandem grain trucks and grain trailers.
Airports, motels, restaurants and shopping malls within 60 minutes. For
complete sale listings and other details call or write.
HALE'S FARM EQUIPMENT
3099 Hart Rd., Lebanon, Ohio 45036
Ph. 1·(513)932-4925
NOT RESPONSIBLE FOR ACCIDENTS • LUNCH SERVED n
I
Three pairs of English rabbits were let
loose in Australia in the middle of the
19th century. Within a decade, the six
rabbits had multiplied into millions.
NUNNERY REALTV
RESIDENTIAL PROPERTY
PRESTONSBURG- M1yo Addition 1t Lancer. lSOO.sq. ft., brick r~nch with 3
bedrooms, b1th, livin& room, built-in kitchen, utility room, l1rce f1mily room with
stone fireplace. Centr~l he1t 1nd 1ir conditionln&. M1rtlet priced in low 60's.
PRESTONSBURG- BeYins St. 1t Lancer. Nice two-bedroom home with livin& room,
ut-in kitchen, utility room, one-blth. Fully Clrpeted with centrll he1t 1nd 1ir.
Recently remodeled. Good condition.
RESIDENTIAL LOT
PRESTONSBURG- Prime riverb•nk lot loc.ted on M•ple Ave. in town's most exclusive residenti•l •ru.
Shepherd Subd. Ne•r Cl•k School. Approx. 2,000·541- ft. of liwin& •re•, with 3
bedrooms, two IN!ths, liw. rm., din. rm., 1&. fm. rm. with stone fireplace, bit-in kit
L&. lot with public w•ter •nd sew•&•· M.rtlet priced in low 80's.
PRESTONSBURG- Louted Centr•l Ave. Four bedrooms, 2'12 b•ths, blt.-in kitchen,
fm. rm. with firepl•ce, c:entnll hut •nd 1.c., enclosed sun porc:h. L&- swimmin&
pool •ncl priYKJ p•tio. Much more. C•ll for ..tdition-' dehrils. Shown bJ •ppointment oniJ. OWNER SAYS S£LL PRICED REDUCED! MAKE US AN OFFER!
PRESTONSBURG- Centr1l Ave. lnw-•lot property. Three nice •pts. with offstreet IN! riling. Rent1l income, $7 S'l.on~tll with potent!• I for more.
DAVID- Good condition. Nice thr- ... • ONTRACT liw. rm., ut-in kitchen, one
hth. New •lum. sidin& •nt UNDER ~-- .....vsCiped lot. Owner uys sell. PRICE
REDUCED!
COMMERCIAL PROPERTY
Billy Westmoreland. of Celina,
Tenn., six-time Bass Masters Class
qualifier. TV personality. and the
angler generally agreed upon as the
"king" of smallmouth bass fishermen,
will conduct a bass-fishing seminar.
Saturday. at Music-Carter-Hughes
Chevrolet-Buick here.
Billed as Music-Carter-Hughes and
Bassin' Buddies Bass Club's first annual Fishing Seminar, the day's activities will begin at 12 noon and will
feature angling tips and tales from the
popular East Tennessee angler as well
as a show of fishing boats, motors,
baits and tackle .
The public is invited to attend the
seminar which is free of charge.
U.S. Has Gasoline Tax
Advantage In Survey
Drivers in the United States enjoy a
significant gasoline cost advantage compared to other drivers around the world,
according to a newly released report by
the Energy Information Administration
(EIAl. The advantage is due to large differences in other countries' energy
taxes. In the fourth quarter of 1982,
average European gasoline taxes constituted 40 to 60 percent of the total retail
price, compared to 26 percent for
Canada, 19 percent for Australia, and
only 11 percent for the United States.
ALL 1964 WHEELWRIGHT
HIGH SCHOOL
GRADUATES
PRESTONSBURG- Excellent property IOCited in h..rt of business district. 220
feet fronting South LAke Driwe •nd Riverside Drive. Improved with 2,000-sq. H.
commerci•l c•r~&e •nd oHic:es. Lot ~J~~rti•IIJ pned.
OIXON NUNNERY,
PUBLIC AUCTION IN OHIO
Real Estate Broker, 886-6464, Day or Night
• WE BUY REAL ESTATE •
interested in attending the 20
Year Reunion, please contact:
• SARAH NEWMAN HALL
HI HAT, KY. 41636, or
• DORA SHUMATE BATES,
(606) 452·4260.
~ K ll ·pd
J-fave a liear-e...
I
on Tuesday, February 14. Remember your special Valentines with a gift of Russell Stover
Candies. We have a wide variety of traditional heart boxes, as well as your favorite boxed
assortments, specially decorated for the holiday. Foil, Satin or Velvet Hearts help you ex·
press yourself to friends, relatives and that special Valentine. Have a heart - give the finest
in chocolates and butter bons - quality you've known and loved for over 60 years
from
~tiM&Q_ Stwvue~
KORNER DRUG STORE
886-8311
Court Street Prestonsburg
�__ednesday, Febntary 8, 1984
The Floyd County Times
PHS Students Named to All-State Chorus
Five Prestonsburg High School
students were selected through
statewide auditions to perform with the
1984 Kentucky All-State Chorus. They
are from left, above, John Anderson son
of Mr. and Mrs. John Anderson; D~nna
DeRossett, daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Kenneth DeRossett; Lisa Lafferty,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. James Lafferty. At left are Mona McKinney, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Dale McKinney, and
right, John Goble, son of Mr. and Mrs.
John Goble.
The chorus performed, February 3, at
the Kentucky Music Educator's InService Conference in Lexington. The
choral director of Prestonsburg High
School is Elizabeth Frazier, who has
been selected as a member of the KMEA
Choral Council.
Mrs. Rister To Lead
Garrett Bike-a-Thon
· E KU Again Offers
College Warm-Up
High school seniors graduating this
spring can jog into a college atmosphere
in a special program at Eastern Kentucky University, .June 18-August 3.
C.:!1ege Warm-Up will again offer
c;tudents seven college credit hours prior
to their freshman year, according to
Benny Hall, director of the program.
College Warm-Up will give students
foundation courses in English composition, college reading and study skills,
and orientation before they attempt
the1r first full semester of college. The
program will also offer an honors
English composition course for the first
hme, enabling honors students to satisfy
the normal requirement of six hours of
English composition by taking the threetirJur hooors course
. Credits earned can be transferred to
another college or applied directly to a
degree program at Eastern. Thus, College Warm-Up can assist all high school
:>eniors, but especially those who want
a constructive start to their college
careers, wish to strengthen their
language and study skills, or are not
sure about a college major, said Hall.
"Students will be given academic and
vocational counseling, as well the opportunity to develop skills and habits
necessary for the successful completion
of college courses,'' he said.
Information about enrolling in College
Warm-Up may be obtained from Hall,
, who is an assistant professor in the
Department of Learning Skills. Any student considering applying to the WarmUp program should have a composite
, ACT score of at least 14 and a high
school grade point average of at least 2.2
<C+) on a 4.0 scale.
Registration will be held on Eastern's
campus at 9 a.m. in the Grise Room of
the Combs Building, June 18.
C.\HD OF THA:\KS
The family of Emmitt Hamilton would
like to take this opportunity to thank
everyone for their help in the passing of
our loved one : those who sent food,
flowers or just spoke comforting words.
We deeply appreciate you all . A special
thanks to the minis ters and to the Hall
Funeral Home for being so kind.
. THE FAMILY
\
Conservation News
SEEK ABANDONED
:\liNE INFORMATION
The local ccnservation district needs
help in locating coal mine lands that
were left abandoned or inadequately
reclaimed before August 3, 1977. Persons who have information about these
sites are asked to call the conservation
district at 886-3128. It is the district's
goal to get these abandoned mine sites
reclaimed through the Rural Abandoned Mine Program (RAMP). RAMP is a
second chance to get needed funds and
technical assistance to correct the
adverse effects of past mining. Under
RAMP, Floyd county gets high priority
funding for situations that are hazardous
to human health, safety and welfare. So
far only one RAMP job has been done in
Floyd county. In a heavily mined county such as Floyd there are surely more
sites than this. Conservation district
supervisors ask that citizens help in getting these sites identified and correctly
reclaimed. There may not be another
chance like this one.
BIRTH ANNOUNCEMENT
Mr. and Mrs. David Allen Barber, of
Prestonsburg, are announcing the birth
of their first child, a daughter, Betty
Megan , January 19 at Highlands
Regional Medical Center.
Maternal grandparents are Ron and
Connie Cc,oley, of Prestonsburg, and
paternal grandparents are Harold
Barber, of White Fish, Montana, and the
late Betty Banks. Maternal great-grandparents are Mr. and Mrs. W.H. Patton,
of Prestonsburg, and paternal greatgrandparents are Mr. and Mrs. Stewart
Banks, of Hueysville.
A rose was placed on the altar of the
Community Methodist Church, Sunday,
January 30, for Betty Megan.
The Central Regional Office of St.
Jude Children's Research Hospital announced today that Mrs. Patricia Rister
has agreed to chair the St. Jude Children's Research Hospital Bike-a-Thon in
Garrett.
St. Jude Children's Research Hospital
was founded by entertainer Danny
Thomas. The institution opened its doors
to the public in 1962 to combat catastrophic diseases which afflict our children.
St. Jude Hospital is non-sectarian, nondiscriminatory, and provides medical
care to over 4,200 patients.
All findings and information gaine<;l at
the hospital are shared freely with doc
tors and hospitals all over the world.
Thanks to St. Jude's, children who have
leukemia, Hodgkin's disease, sickle cell
anemia, and other child killing diseases
now have a better chance to Jive.
The funds raised in the Bike-a-Thons
this spring will help assure the continuation of the life giving work at the
hospital.
The concern which Mrs. Rister has for
the work being done at St. Jude is greatly appreciated. The children hope that
the citizens of Garrett will wholeheartedly support the upcoming Bike-aThon.
Section One, P a c e T en
•
Working Couples Get
Special Tax Break
Married couples who work are eligible for a special tax deduction worth as
much as $3,000, according to the Internal Revenue Service.
This deductior. :"' ::.uotracted from
gross income and may be taken without
itemizing deductions, which means that
taxpayers may use Form 1040A, the IRS
added. If Form 1040A is used, the deduction must be figured on Part III of
Schedule I, which must- be attached to
the return. If Form 1040 is used, the
deduction is figured on Schedule W,
which also must be attached to the
return, the IRS said. In either case
however, a joint return must be filed.'
The most that may be deducted is the·
smaller of 10 percent of the qualified
earned income of the lesser-earning
spouse, or 10 percent of $30,000 for a
maximum deduction of $3,000. To take
the deduction both spouses must have
earned income, such as wages, salaries
and tips. However, income earned by
one spouse working for the other does
not qualify. Neither does such income as
interest, dividends, pensions, annuities,
distributions from an individual retirement arrangement (IRS) , unemployment compensation, deferred compensations or nontaxable income.
Last year, the deduction was new and
was based on five percent of the
qualified earned income of the lesserearning spouse or $30,000, whichever
was smaller. However, some two million
taxpayers, or nine percent of the 22
million eligible taxpayers, failed to take
advantage of this tax break, the IRS
said. They can still do so by filing an
amended return using Form 1040X the
IRS noted. Since the rate of the deduction has increased to 10 percent for the
1983 tax year, the IRS added, it is even
more advantageous for taxpayers to
take it.
More information can be obtained by
calling the IRS at 584-1361 in Louisville
or toll-free Hl00-424-1040, elsewhere in
Kentucky.
You ·Make ·Us Famous!
.
.
105 North Lake Drive, Near the U.S. 23 Intersection
PHONE.886-1396 PRESTONSBURG
4
.
•
'
•
WED"'ESD~Y
.
.
•
SPEC.IAL
.
Try Our Famous
3 Piece Dinner!
Passport Office
In New Location
3 pieces of golden brown Famous Recipe
Fried Chicken , mashed potatoes and gravy,
creamy cole slaw and one fresh, hot biscuit.
The U.S. District Court clerk's office
in Pikeville will no longer accept passport applications, the clerk has announced. Application forms are available at
the main Pikeville post office, South
Mayo Trail, however.
"NO COUPON NEEDED"
.
• Roses • Roses • Roses •
ONE DOZEN
RED ROSES .... only
REG. $45.00
s3s95
WHEN PRE-ORDERED
BY FEBRUARY 10.
Care today and save!
The "Occasionally Yours"
Floral and Gift Boutique
CARD OF THANKS
The family of Russell Spencer would
like to thank·our neighbors, friends, and
relatives for their prayers, flowers,
cards, and money, or for an-y act of kindness we received upon the death of our
loved one. May the Lord bless you.
At McDowell (just south of the hospital) • Phone 377-2069
Cupid_
c
iaS
99
TOMATO
99
CATSU 2
USCH 24-12-0z.$ 725
BEER........ Cans
CASE
MILLER 24-12-0z.
. $849
BEER......... Cans
CASE·
BLUE BONNET
MARGARINE.....
TOM'S
CHIPS .........
. ....... 8-0z.
CHOICE OF FOUR FLAVORS
STOKELY
·-
.
~.
~
~-, Pharmacy ·.
A~
Footnotes,.
By HAROLD COOLEY
The common cold and winter flu may be counted
among mankind's greatest nuisances. However, it looks
as though a speedy and effective treatment for those viral
infections may be near. Researchers at the Baylor College of Medicine in Houston report that an aerosol drug
called ribavirin has been found to relieve the discomfort
and half the duration of fever from these illnesses.
Riba virin also minimizes the contagiousness of viruses
to prevent their spreading as easily as in the past. The
aerosol application of the antiviral drug is more effective
than oral administration because it reaches the
respiratory tract more quickly.
Our entire staff at COOLEY APOTHECARY keeps
up to date with the latest developments and products in
our industry. We can provide you and your family with
your total prescription needs as well as any over-thecounter remedies you require. We are located in No. 2
Town Center Bldg., 886-8106. Master Charge and Visa .
Open: Mon. -Fri.; 9-5:30, Sat., 9-4.
HANDY HINT :
Use only those over-the-counter cold remedies that
treat your specific symptoms .
14-0z.
Bottles
KRAFT
2J$J59
75c
·sALAD
DRESSING fr.~;~
Si~;;~ck
�Wednesday, February 8, 1984
The Floyd County Times
Brighter Economic Picture
Predicted for Coming Year
Brian White. of Harold, celebrated his
lOth birthday, January 20. He is the son
of Randall and Billie Joyce Coggins. The
theme of his birthday was ·•smurfs",
and h1s cake was baked and decorated
by a friend of the family, Glenda Stum·bo. He received many gifts and cards
from people unable to attend. Brian is
the grandson of George E. and Effie
.lark, of Hardld, and Jim and Edith
hite, of Lexington. His stepgrandparents are Nell Ruth Bohanan, of
Southgate, Michigan, and Raymond
Coggins, of Shelbiana, Ky.
Park "Crawlathon"
Focuses On Caving
The fast-growing sport of caving will
be the focus for the Carter Caves Resort
ark "crawlathon, ··scheduled for Feb.
10-11, said Parks Commissioner Fran
Curci.
Nationally known cavers will conduct
programs introducing the skills needed
to explore caves. The weekend is not
designed only for beginners, though.
Sessions also will be conducted for advanced cavers.
Participants must provide their own
equipment; a small registration fee will
be charged. For further information,
call Carter Caves near Olive Hill in
ortheastern Kentucky at (606) 286-4411.
Kentuckians can look forward to a
brighter economic picture as they usher
in 1984, especially those who are looking
for clerical or service jobs, according to
Cabinet for Human Resources studies.
State labor market analyst Ed Blackwell cited Department for Manpower
Services figures which show employment could increase by some 25,000 during 1984.
"We expect most of the job openings
in 1984 to be for clerical and service
workers. We could have more than
12,000 job openings for clerical workers,
with about 4,800 being new jobs," he
said. "We expect to see about as many
openings for service workers, with some
4,500 due to economic growth. While
most of these probably will be for food
service workers, especially in fast food
restaurants, we also anticipate a number of job openings for janitors, nurses
aides and orderlies, child care workers,
and guards and doorkeepers."
The Manpower Services studies project a continued increase in white collar
workers, following a 30-year trend. In
addition to clerical jobs, other white collar occupations in which substantial job
openings are expected are for sales
workers, health technologists and technicians, professional nurses and teachers .
"In the blue collar sector our projections show almost 2,500 openings for
workers in construction crafts, such as
carpenters, electricians, and plumbers
and pipefitters," Blackwell said.
"Almost half of these are expected to be
new jobs." Other blue collar workers
who can expect substantial job openings
are mechanics, assemblers, semi-skilled
metalworkers and semi-skilled packers
and inspectors.
The manpower department's projections are based on surveys completed by
the state's employers and include information on about 1,500 non-agricultural
jobs, he said. "The data reflect job activity for about 86 percent of the state's
total labor force. Agricultural workers,
who are expected to make up about four
percent of the state's labor force by 1985,
and self-employed workers and people
who work on an unpaid basis in a family business, who are expected to make
up about 10 percent of the work force,
were not included in the surve~s."
Collecting data on these ·t'wo categories of workers is difficult to do, said
Blackwell, whose staff gathers employment and occupational data. "We are
trying to work with the federal Bureau
of Labor Statistics to develop a method
Scholarship Pageant
Scheduled April 7
a
rose
perfect for your valentine
February 14th
is Valentine's Day.
Jenny Wil~y
Florist
886-2793
2-1 2t.
The Pikeville Junior Woman's Club is
once again preparing for its annual
scholarship pageant. The pageant date
is set April 7, at Faith Chapel on the
Pikeville College campus.
The Pike, Floyd, Johnson, Martin,
Perry, Letcher, and Magoffin counties
are eligible to send contestants to the
pageant.
The Miss East Kentucky Scholarship
Pageant is an official preliminary to the
Miss Kentucky Scholarship Pageant and
the Miss America Scholarship Pageant
System.
To qualify for the pageant, a young
woman must be between the ages of 17
and 26 on Labor Day, must be single,
never been married or had a marriage
annulled, of good moral character, and
a United States citizen.
The contestants will be judged on their
quality of talent, personal interview,
swimsuit, and evening gown.
The deadline for entries is February
17. Anyone interested in entering the
pageant, should contact Janet Thompson at (606) 432-1191, Susie Mullins at
(606) 835-2354, or any member of the
Pikeville Junior Woman's Club.
Any Large Pizza and a
Pitcher of Soft Drink-$9.95
Every Tuesday Evening 4 to 9pm.
at participating Pizza Huf Restaurants
to use census figures to make projections for agricultural and self-employed
workers, but we don't expect to be able
to do this for several years," he said.
He pointed out that the occupational
projections are based on continued
economic recovery. "Since employment
dropped to 1,448,700 in February, the
lowest level for th1s recession, we've
recorded steady employment gains. We
did have a jump in unemployment during the summer, but this was a normal
seasonal occurrence. Overall, there has
been gradual improvement," he said,
noting 1,508,500 Kentuckians had jobs in
November. "However, we don't expect
our employment in 1984 to reach the October 1981 level, when 1,568,600 people
were working, an all time high for Kentucky."
Section One, Paae Eleven
KET To Televise
State Tournament Draw
KET will air the 1984 State High
School Basketball Tournament drawings from the KET Network Center in
Lexington at 2 p.m. Friday, Feb. 24.
Earl Cox. Courier-Journal sports columnist, will host the program. which
will feature guests Vanous Lloyd, coach
of Warren Central High School, last
year's winning girls' team, and AI
Prewitt; coach of Henry Clay High
School, last year's boys' champs.
The drawings will determine the pairings in the first round of this year's competition. The boys' tournament will be
held March 1417 at Rupp Arena in Lexington; the girls' tournament will be
March 21-24 at Eastern Kentucky University in Richmond.
Correction.. Noted
Miss Shirley Fugate, of Drift, was erroneously listed in last week's edition as
being a freshman at Morehead State
University. Miss Fugate, a senior,
received her nurse's pin at graduation
ceremonies held recently at Morehead.
Remember,
Valentine's Day
Feb. 14th
Say
I love you
with Balloons
Balloon-A -Gram ,i.,.
886-3415
~
115 Dickerson St., Prestonsburg /
2-J-2t.
�TO UNDEIH.iO SURGERY
Harry W. Short who ha::> bct•n n
h\lspital patwnt for about two weeks.
was scheduled In underg0 openheart
surgery at the HumanJ Audubon Hospital, in Louisville, Tuesd<~y. Mrs. Short,
their son, Richard, and thl'!r daughter,
:\!aria, have been with him most of the
time during his stay there. Relatives and
friends are hopeful for a successful
operation and an early recovery and
they ask your prayers.
IL\\'E Gl'ESTS
Mr. and Mrs. L.B. Fairchild had as
their guests on Thursday of last week,
Mr. and Mrs. Carlisle Howard, of Lexington.
GROUP TO :\IEET
The "Mommie" Ransdell Circle of the
Irene Cole Memorial (Firstl Baptist
Church will meet Thursday evening.
February 7, at the home of the church's
secretary, Mrs. Judy Hooker. All members and prospective members are urged to be present.
El':TERTAINS TO LU~CH
Miss Burieta Gearheart entertained to
lunch at May Lodge Sunday, Mr. and
1\lrs. James P. Allen, and their son,
James Kenneth. and Mrs. Theckley
Short.
RETUR '\S FROM N.Y.
Joe Weddmgton has returned to his
home here after having spent last week
in New York City, visiting with his
daughter, Mrs. Lynn Weddington
Tucker and Mr. Tucker.
ALLERGY
CHILDREN It ADULTS
S.K. JAIN, M.D.
Professional Building
Pikeville, Ky.
• HEADACHES • DIUINESS
• ASTHMA • SINUS
• COliTIS
U.,\.H. :\IEET SET
The regular monthly mPcting of the
.John Graham Chapter, Daughters of the
American Revolution, (D.A.R ), will be
held at the Floyd County Library, Tuesday afternoon. February 14. at 3:30. The
program lead.'rs and hostesses will be
l\lrs. Eleanor Horn and Mrs. Sally
Goebel. The speaker will be Charles
Wells. of Paintsville. and his topic will
be "American History." Mrs. Frances
Brackett, the chapter's regent, urges all
members and others who may be eligible to become members to attend this
meeting.
\'ISITOR HERE
Mrs. Kay Roberts Baird, of Pikeville,
was here one day this past week, shopping and visiting with her mother. Mrs.
May K. Roberts.
PALLBEARERS LISTED
Active pallbearers at funeral services
for Mrs. Lennie <Josephine A. l Moore,
at the Floyd Funeral Home, this past
Sunday were: Larry Totten, Dr Allen J.
Hyden, John Earl Hunt. Clifford B. Latta. Dewey Greer, Shannon Greer.
Adrian Lafferty, John Thompson, and
Donald Hunt. Honorary pallbearers
were: Robert Wallace, Everett Patton,
Woodrow Greenwade, Print Ball, Ernest
Osborne. L.J. Music, Carl Osborne,
Ralph Davis. Dean Webb. and Marvin
Alley.
,\ TTE~D WEDDI1'\G
Persons from Prestonsburg and
vicinity who attended the wedding of
Miss Barbara Lynn Crager and Mr. Andy Boyd Knicely at the Morehead United
Methodist Church, Saturday, February
4, and the reception following, at Crager
Hall, Morehead State University, were:
her mother, Mrs. Marietta Crager, and
other relatives and friends, Mr. and
Mrs. Barry Howell and daughters, Misty and Angela, Mrs. Willia Mae Branham. Mrs. Anna Jean Howell, Mrs.
Judith Endicott, Mr. and Mrs. Carmen
Spears, Mrs. Nell Lawson, her son, Ronnie and daughter, Rhonda, and Mr. and
Mrs. Dallas Sammons.
ABBOTT GROUP TO MEET
Mrs. Cynthia Frasure and Mrs. Ruby
Frasure will be the hostesses for the Abbott Homemakers' meeting, which will
be held at the church annex there, Tuesday evening, February 14, at 7 o'clock.
An invitation is extended by the club's
president, Mrs. Sharon Sparr, to all the
women of this community to attend.
For appointment:
606-432-3837
e.o.w.
TRADE-IN RING
SALE
.·~.uf~
t._
-• . ,\
.
..
·~·
Section One, Paae Twelve
The Floyd County Times
Wednesday, February 8, 1984
50~0
OFF
...
~~;:.~_~f~~~f/:
~ ~· ~.
('~
v"::. ·-:/
*FREE RING SIZING WHILE YOU WAIT
CLYDE BURCHETT
JEWELER
PHONE 886-2734
PRESTONSBURG
2+5t.
DOCIA B. WOOQ$_,
Sl1FFEHS IIE.\HT :\TTA('K
Pat Mills. of Highland Terrace, is a
patient m the mtensive care unit at Highlands Regional Medical Center. after
suffering a heart attack.
,\.A.R.P. MEET SET
Jack Freed. president of the Jenny
Wiley chapter of the American Association of Retired Persons <A.A.R.P. l, announces that there will be a board
meeting Friday night, February 10, at
7 o'clock, at the Prestonsburg,Municipal
Building. Mr. Freed adds that the next
regular dinner meeting of this chapter
will be on Friday evening, February 24,
at 7 o'clock, and that the location of this
event will be announced soon.
HOLD YOUTH ACTIVITY
An overflow crowd attended the Youth
Spectacular held at the Irene Cole
Memorial <Firstl Baptist Church annex,
following the Blackcat basketball game
h~re with Letcher County Saturday
night. Mrs. Sue Wells and other
members of the youth social committee
at the church were in charge of arrangements. Refreshments were served to those in attendance.
INJURED IN FALL
Mrs. Margaret P. Alley is confined to
her home on Riverside Drive, due to a
fall sustained this past week while walk·
ing out to get the morning newspaper
during the icy weather. Her family and
friends are concerned about her and are
hoping she will show improvement soon.
.
EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE MEETS
The G.FW.C./Prestonsburg Woman's
Club's executive committee met Thursday evening, February 2, at 7 o'clock, at
the Floyd County Library, with Mrs.
Elizabeth Ramey, president, presiding.
A discussion regarding membership
dues and the dinner-meeting for the installation of officers during the early
part of May was held. Board members
present were, Mesdames Elizabeth
Ramey, Betty Rowland, Arnita Snavely, Dorothy Harris, and Joyce Allen.
The regular meeting of the club was
held at 7:30 at the Emma Wells May
Cultural Center there, with Mrs. Ramey
in charge. Members recited the Lord's
Prayer in unison and gave the Pledge of
Allegiance to the American Flag. Mrs.
Ramey welcomed those in attendance.
The minutes were read by Mrs. Joyce
Allen, secretary, and the treasurer, Mrs.
Dorothy Harris, gave her report. Mrs.
Joyce Allen read a letter stating that
Monday night, March 5, is K.F.W.C.
night on the K.E.T. teletl>on, which will
be in progress at that time. The president announced that th~ club's publicity committee had submitted the Prestonsburg Woman's Club Press Book to
the K.F.W.C. headquarters to be on
display · during the forthcoming
K.F.W.C. convention, and that news of
the local club had been sent to the "Kentucky Club Woman" magazine.
Mrs. Wonnell Godsey, a member of
the Arts and Crafts committee, reported
that ceramics classes would start soon
at the club's arts and crafts building at
Archer Park.
Mrs. Eva Collins, program chairman,
presented Mrs. Pat Salisbury, assistant
vice-president and manager of the Twin
Bridge Branch of the First Commonwealth Bank at Martin, who spoke on,
"Women and Finance." Mrs. Salisbury
covered importance phases of banking,
as they relate to women, and distributed
I.R.A. pamphlets to those present.
A desert course was served by the
hostesses, Wonnell Godsey, Ora Bussey,
and Nancy Martin. Those in attendance
were: Pat Salisbury, ::t guest, and
members, Elizabeth Ramey, Betty
Rowland, Arnita Snavely, Dorothy Harris, Joyce Allen, Eva Collins, Mabel
Brown, Dorothy Osborne, Mabel Donahoe, Rebecca Rasnick, Dolly Pettrey,
Dorothy Burke, and the hostesses.
The n~xt meeting will be Thursday
evening, March 1, at this same location,
with Garnett Fairchild, Sarah Goble,
Betty Francis, Norcie Burchett, Honey
May, Lois George, and Christine Spradlin as hostesses. The program on
"Education" will have Roberta Davidson as leader. Phyllis Herrick will lead
the devotionals.
HOLD SPECIAL SERVICE
An ordination service was held at the
Irene Cole Memorial <Firstl Baptist
Church, this past Sunday night, with the
ordination of Larry Whitt as deacon, and
the recognition of Delmas Saunders as
Deacon Emeritus. The church's pastor,
the Rev. Steve Hopkins, presided.
The program presented at this time
follows: Call to Worship, Ron Johnson;
Hymn of Praise. ''To God be the Glory:"
Prayer, Huck Francis; Welcome and
Announcements, Rev. Hopkins; Hymn
of Service, "Our Best;" Responsive
Reading, Eric Herrin; Offeratory
prayer. Johnny Evans: Scripture
Reading, Mitch Kalos; Recognition of
Deacon Emeritus; Testimony, Delmas
Saunders; Presentation of Deacon Candidate; Testimony, Larry Whitt; Special
music, Gus Kalos; Charge to the
Church. Rev. Don McGuire; Charge to
the Deacon. Rev. Steve Hopkms; Prayer
of Dedication. Paul Nunn: Laying on of
Hands; Presentation of Deacon; Benediction. Aaron Akers.
The Rev. Hopkins was assisted with
the program by tl"le Rev. Don McGuire.
director of missions for the Baptist
Enterprise Associ<:Jtion of this area.
Recognized. other than Mr. Saunders
and Mr. Whitt, were other Deacons of
the church; Paul Nunn. Johnny Evans,
Ronald Johnson, Camden Garrett, H.C.
cHuck> Francis. Eric Herrin. Mitch
Kalos. Aaron Akers. and Gus Kalos.
~OCIETY
:\IEETS LISTED
Adah C'haptcr No. 24, Order of the
Eastern Star, meets the second and
fourth Mondays of each month aL 7 p.m.,
at the Masonic Lodge buildmg here. All
members are urged to attend these
meetings.
EDITOR
HONORED WITH FLOWEHS
Flowers were placed on the altar of
the First United Methodist Church for
services held there, last Sunday, in
memory of Mrs. Katherine Stephens, by
Mr. and Mrs. Fred Harris; also in honor
of Linda and Gary May and John Lafferty, on their birthdays, by Mrs. John
Lafferty. and in honor of Sandy Horn, on
her birthday, by Mr. and Mrs. Dexter
Horn.
RETURNS HOME
Mrs. Peg Hewlett has returned to her
home here, after spending approximately two weeks visiting with her sister and
brother-in-law, Dr. and Mrs. G.A. Culbertson, in Paris, Kentucky, and her son
and daughter-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Tom
Hewlett, in Lexington.
HERE FROM BENHAM
Mrs. Florence Castle Tson, formerly
of this county, now of Benham, Kentucky, was here during the weekend for
a visit with her cousin, Mrs. J.P. Hill and
Mr. Hill, of the Abbott Road. The condition of Mrs. Hill, who has been ill for a
while, is satisfactory.
RETURN HOME
The sons of Mrs. David move>
Vaughan and the late Mr. Vaughan,
their wives and members of their
families, who were called here recently due to the death of their father, have
now returned to their homes after spending several days here with Mrs.
Vaughan at her home in the Highland
Terrace Apartments. They are: Mr. and
Mrs. Luke Vaughan and daughter,
Tricia, of Lynchburg, Virginia; their
son, Kirby Vaughan, of Boston, · ss.;
Mr. and Mrs. John Vaughan, of Aenia,
Ohio; their son, David Vaughan, of Los
Angeles, and their daughter, Miss Vicki
Vaughan, of Atlanta; Mr. and Mrs. Ronnie Vaughan, their son, Brad, and
daughters, Carrie and Susan, of Greenfield, Ohio, and Mr. and Mrs. Joe
Vaughan and their sons, Larry, Phillip
and Marty Vaughan, of Lexington, Kentucky.
SWEETHEART BANQUET
A sweetheart banquet will be held at
the First United Methodist Church, Friday evening, February 17. Tickets are
available at the church office.
FOR SALE-22,000 glass lined
water tank. 800 gallon tank.
Meyers pump.
PHONE (AREA CODE 808):
928-4197 or 928-8189 Ji18·
LEE JEANS
LADIES
and
29.00-22.99
30.00-23.99
31.00-24.99
32.00-25.99
JUNIORS
886-942 1
PRESTONSBURG. KY.
SAVE UP TO
6. 01
LEVI JEANS
LADIES
and
29.00-22.99
30.00-23.99
32.00-25.99
JUNIORS
SAVE UP TO
6. 01
LADIES
CHIC JEANS
and
31.00-24.99
33.00-26.99
36.00-28.99
JUNIORS
SAVE UP TO
7. 01
MEN'S
Levi w/ Fash ion Pocket
24.00-18.99
STRAIGHT LEG
24.00-19.99
BOY'S LEE 8-14
20.00-16.99
LEE STUDENT & HUSKY
22.00-18.99
LEE FOR LITILE BOYS
Sizes 2-4, 16.50-13.50
Sizes 4-7, 18.00-14.99
GIRLS
LEVI RED TAG-22.00-17.99
LEVI WHITE PATCH-22.00-17.99
STORE HOURS:
9:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m.-Mon. thru Sat.
Valentine Briefs
Skan!s® Brief
Bath Kilt
Tapered Boxers
I
Tapered construction
wtth abbreviated legs.
I
)
Packaged in a clever
"Cupid made me
do it" gift box.
{\
A Great Companion
Gift- Jockey® V-Neck
T-Shirt.
Valentine
Gift from
""!-
<00CKEY
INTERNATIONAL ®
See our selection. of beautiful
"VALENTINE GIFTS FOR HER"
wrapped Free
Prestonsburg
�Wednesday, February 8, 1984
BIHTHDA YS,
•
•
Section One, Paae Thlrteea
The Floyd Cou nty Times
USAA Winner
HECOG~IZED
A custom in the Fidelis Sunday School
class taught by Mrs. Grace Conley at the
Irene Cole Memorial Wirstl Baptist
Church is to celebrate the birthdays of
members of the class by sharing a meal
together at one of the local restaurants .
On Sunday. January 29, Mrs. Zelia Archer and Mrs. Pat Minns were honored
by several of the class members and the
husband of one of the group, Bill Pettrey, at Jerry's Restaurant. On Friday,
February 3. Mrs. Ethel Ratliff was so
honored by several of the members of
the class and some of her close friends,
Mrs. Cynthia Frasure, Mrs. Goldia
Williams, and Mrs. Gale Music for lunch
at this same location. On each occasion,
remembrances were presented to the
honorees.
special gifts for the
loves of your life
DAY HOMEMAKERS TO MEET
The Prestonsburg Day Homemakers
will meet Tuesday afternoon at 1
o'clock, February 14, at Fellowship Hall,
of the First United Methodist Church.
Hostesses will be Mesdames Myrtle
Allen, May K. Roberts, and Docia
Woods, and the topic '¥ill be "Consumer
Product Safety." The club's president,
Mrs. Eleanor Horn, urges all members
and those who may be interested in
becoming members to be present.
HERE FROM W. VA.
Mr. and Mrs. Lon C. Hill, formerly of
Prestonsburg, now of Huntington,
<W.Va., were here this past Sunday for
a visit with his sisters, Mrs. Peg Hewlett
and Mrs. Myrtie Davis, and with their
uncle, Mr. and Mrs. H.T. Hill, on the Abbott Road.
East Point Masons
To Confer Degrees
BIFOCAL
CONTACT LENSES
and
Marcus Minix
optical
522 Collage street
Paintsville, Ky.
789-6000
contact Lens society
of America
2-8-3t.
Mrs. E.L. Bierman is recovering nicely at her home following cataract surgery this past week at Suburban
Hospital, Louisville. Mr. Bierman was
with her during her hospttallzation.
ACCOMPANY FATHER HERE
Mr. and Mrs. Fred Sievers, of
Evansville, Indiana, accompanied her
father, Lennie Moore. to his home here,
this past week, following the death of
Mrs. Moore at the Sievers' home, where
they had spent the past five months.
They are remaining with him for awhile
at the Moore home on Riverside Drive.
A .valentine's Day
' Gift for You
reg. 35.00 and 40.00
springy jackets for
juniors and misses
a toothbrush set
for your
Valentine's smile
for fitness and fun
Give your favorite man
active sportswear he11
enjoy every day of the
year. Select from
sweat pants, shirts ,
shorts and more
by Nike, Adidas
and Spalding,
S,M,L,XL.
Choose the stadium look for misses
with button-off hood. In almond,
oyster or blue poplin, 8-16. Juniors
~~"'- love the sporty reversible style
of lilac chintz reversing to
seersucker stripes, S,M,L.
Either a perfect surprise
on February 14th!
each
reg. 14.00
junior's active
CJtrr~kiH~L~IBJ separates in
perky prints
Choose colorful tulips or
sentimental hearts screen-printed
on comfy cotton/ acrylic knit
~fffil~§~~~~ll
[
...
~
U)
c
0
•
~
0
(ij
CJ)
e
• 19 y<'ars of suc·c·t•ss in thl' flgurl'-shap ing 111'111
~ow's th<• pc·rfPI'l timl' to t•tHI your 11gurl' frustrations. Start your wt•f'k at fl-It a tn·atnwnt toda~· !
:J
"'
ii
(ij
.s::.
U)
a;
Linda {'lark lost 3 7 3f.a lhs. & 50 % in<'ht>s +
Gloria Marshall . ..
the best friend your figure
ever had
••
varies with each
EAHY CREDIT
-------···------··
Low
Paym('nt.s
~lonthly
TER~lH
t
.,
::E
"'
<)
<;:)
•
~
8
a
V~-~~
~
4.99
~~~~~
reg. 6.99
-~~
Phone 789-7441
Use Watson 's c onvement lay-away
plus 2 great ways to charge
COUPON EXPIRES FEB. 14, 1984
) Wf'l'k
84¢
84
·--------------------------------·······----~
'BINd on a 5 treatment program lor OM w"k. Thla Introductory offer Ia to
Interest you In purc:h..lng 1 rt9ular program. Other programa otlortd.
Limit ont per peraon, new patrona only. Valid only at participating Nlona.
romantic eyelet
pillows
The ps.rfect expression of your love
to grace her bed. Pretty heart,
square or round shaped pillows with
ruffled edges. In white or ecru.
U.S. Highway 23
Paintsville
1 W('('k
sweat pants and shirts,
S,M,L.
CX)
anat~·sis
a tn•atnll'nt
24.99
orig. 7.99-29.99
Gloria :\larshall has thP I>Pst \ 'aiPntin<'s Day
gift P\'l'r- a gift that'll start you toward a
slim. trim flgurP! It's a spP<'ial on<'-W<'<'k
\'alfmtinc>s Uay ofT<•r . .. only 8-H a tr<•at nwnt!
~ow's tht• linw to losP thosP unwantPd
pounds and inl'ht•s th<' <aoria :\Iarsh all waytht• sanw wa\· 30.000 wnmt•n han· t·om!' to
trusL And thrrr's no wondrr. Hrn's what
<Jloria :llarshall gi\·ps ,nm:
• ~o strt•nuous I'XPrl'ist•nr lll't'd tn c·han)!t'
l'lotht•;,
• .\ fri!'ndly. rl'laxinl( atmosph<•rf' and ,n lllr
own pPrsonal Figurt• ('ounst•lor
• .\ frt•t•. no-ohligation tll'mon.,tration and figurc ·
¢
3.99
4.99 to 19.99
Valentine's Day
Special
•
Be sure to see our other special gift
selections from Aigner, too.
The Floyd County Library will have a
special storyhour 10 :30 a.m. February
14 for children two to five years of age.
There will be a Valentine story and a
craft activity.
During Our One Week
;n~::~~~11oss
Surprise her on Valentine's Day with
fashion gloves from Aigner. Select
from knit palmers, Antron® lined
leather and acrylic lined leather styles.
reg. 4.99
on~y 84~~ent
•
a heartwarming
gift from Aigner
STORY HOUR
AT LIBRARY
Member of
•
orig. 24.50-40.00
New members of the various homemakers ' clubs of Floyd county and the
clubs to which they have been welcome
are: Beverly Goble, North Prestonsburg; Marty Ward, and Billie Wells,
Auxier, and Grace Scott, Martin.
Welcomed as members-at-large have
been, Georgia Layne, Zelda Vaughn,
Lucille Warren, and Nancy Bauers.
Our specialty
•
14.99 to23.99
NEW HOMEMAKERS
EXTENDED WEAR
CONTACTS
~
The United States Achievement
Academy announced today that Paula
Ann Spencer has been named a 1984
Umted States National Award winner in
business education.
Miss Spencer, who attends Prestonsburg High School was nominated for this
national award by Mrs . Francis
Brackett, business education teacher, at
the school, and her name will appear in
the United States Achievement Academy Offictal Yearbook, published
nationally.
Miss Spencer is the daughter of Paul
and Bonnie Spencer, of Prestonsburg.
Her grandparents are Mrs. Anna Mae
Spencer, of Martin, and Mrs. Mabel
Hopson, of Prestonsburg.
RECOVERING AT HOME
East Point Lodge 657 F&AM, will be
conferring the Master Mason Degree on
four candidates, Feb. 11, starting about
5 p.m. A dinner will be served after the
first section of Master Mason Degree is
conferred, and D.D.G.M. Bill Haywood
will be making his official visit.
Members may bring a covered dish,
and all master masons are invited.
~
• Downtown-Pikeville
• Weddington Plaza-Pikeville
• South Sit'e Mall-South Williamson
a tn•atmrnt
�Wednesday, February 8, 1984
•
S ection O n e , Page F ourteen
The Floyd County Times
Warm up
_your
Budget
with these
great....
PRfCES GOOD THRU TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 14, 1984.
WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO UMIT QUANTITIES It TO CORRECT ANY PRINTING ERRORS. FEDERAL FOOD STAMPS WELCOME.
WHOLE
PARTRIDGE
FRONTIER
Wllcdla ilrnll®IT
.WI CIDilon®~~
Bone
-or
ho
Ha
MINUTE MAID
Orange
Juice
HAlf GAl.
CTN.
s
17 OZ. REG . OR LITE
Del Monte
Fruit
s J19
69
ARMOUR&
VERIBEST
LB.
~ ''fAll
:m~lo'~~w.M
HALVES
•CHUNKY MIXED
FIIUIT
12-0Z. PKG.
3~~~. (~-~!~.~ .... $299
I' CHO
U.S.D.A.
Sirlo
Stea
FIELD'S - 16 OZ.
Sliced
1
Bacon... ................. ..... 8 79
2 LB. ROLL BALLARD'S-HOT, SAGE, OR MILD
16 OZ.
18 OZ. PACKAGE
~:::!~~---·<I·:~;:f"". . .$2S9
~TRS .
Wheaties
Cereal
Mrs. Filbert's
Margarine
SJ69
2/'1
LB.
ARMOUR VJ::RIBEST
~~~p~~~~~- .
62
$ 1r
DELI-SLICED
.C.9 oked Ham .................. :..... LB
.
~Ieners ........................ 12-oz.
AAMOUR VERIBEST
PKG.
LB.
~:l;.~~:~~-~-~
32 OZ. DISH LIQUID
Ivory
.Lb.S13C)
3
Pot~toes
Radishes
li-OZ. PKG.
29e
29
5 Lbs.SI
39
P;~urs ............. ........... .................Lb. 59e
Bag
Red
... . . . sz29
l~:ie'!~~~. . . . . ... .S I
Lemons
'2~.000FF
LABEl
CRISP EASTERN GROWN RED
JUICY
--~'..-.win-Pack
89~..
e
16 0~. O~CAR MAYER
ALL PURPOSE
Niblets
Corn
9
79
'159
Sltced
Bologna
......................
.
Center Cut
$I 79
Chops .......... ..............
i>~~:;i;~r:; . . ·. ... . ... . . . . . . . 8 1 29
COR_N KING
. .LB.8J79
LB.
10 OZ. GREEN
..&
Brussel
Sprouts
LB.79C
FRESH CALIF.
Leaf Lettuee .... ....... .... ...... .... .Lb .
IFLORIDA IS at'IIUSI
'Te~ple
NUTRITIOUS
89
e
·
Oranges......... S/99'
7
ftC:
Paper Napkins...... ...................... 7
'129
Pine Sol Cleaner...................... ..
140 COUNT PACKAGE NORTHERN
8 OZ. HYDE PARK
Crescent Rolls
e~usrLooKw~AT
8 OZ. SLICED AMERICAN,PIM~TO OR SWISS
Kraft Deluxe Cheese . ... ..
1'
BUYI
s·ALEI
l:ll Y ()'I; I:: lfi OZ. PKG. KIUSPY CRACKERS
GET OlliE HYDE PARK 10.; OZ. CAlli
Chicken Noodle Soup
BUY ONE u oz. .IAR HYDE PARK 8PA&.MUCI!.
GET ONE 7 OZ. ELBOW, SHELL OR THIN
I
BUY ONE 16 OZ. PKG. KUI'T .On PAIIKAY
GET ONE 7 OZ. JIFFY MIX
1
Dehaonlco Spag. 01' Mac.
&aebeaay Muffin ...... ...... .
F;~;:.Grc;:~Tta
30
. . . . . .... .... . . . . '11 C9
oz. ORE IDA REGULAR OR WITH ONIONS
STICKS
Crunchy Fish Fillets ..... ·~~160Z.V~CAMP'S
.....
'1"
....
Quaker Oats Cereal. . .. . ... ... .
BUY ONE 7.7 OZ. PKG. OIIDM TACO 8HI!.LU
GET ONE 1% OZ. ORTEGA TACO
lA
BUY ONE 14 OZ. TABL£ TREAT 81'1!.AK.UMM
GET ONE 3 OZ. .IAR B IN B
tA
BUY ONE 2 LB. .IAR WELCHES 8llAJ'I!. .II!.UY
GET ONE 11 OZ. PKG. HYDE PARK
~
~
~
147 OZ. BOX· 50' OFF LABEL
tA
Purex Detergent. ..
·
Pancake Syrup ............. .
BUY ONE 24 OZ. UGHT 'N UVELY CO'nAGE CHI!UI!.
GET ONE 8 OZ. BREAKSTONE
Soar Creaaa ..... ......... ..... .
Cold Tablets
T~~~ESa~~~R-~~T
7 9~
T:c~S~j;;o~.~-~·T·T~~~ . . . . . . . . . 811
. ... . . . . .. .. . ..... . .........
· ·· ····
100 COUNT PKG. ·FOR FAST RELIEF
1
Bufferin ...... .. .... ..... .. ...
48 CT. PKG. MEDIUM OR 32 CT. PKG. LARGE
lA
Luvs Diapers. . . .. ......... ..
~
PURINA - 5 LBS. FREE!
30 Lb. Dog Chow.
sn~
7
' ·· · ·· · ····· ·· · . '
10 COUNT PKG. DRIXORAL
BUY ONE 32 OZ. PillSBURY COMP. PANCAKE NIX
GET ONE 16 OZ. HYDE PARK WAFFLE OR
2/7ftC:
7
18 OZ. REGULAR OR QUICK
~
Mr. Coffee Fllten .... .... .. . .
oz. PET
Pork & Beans. .
tA
BUY ONE 16 OZ. JAR COfFEl!. JIATI! C8I!AJIIU
GET ONE 50 CT. PKG.
$I 59
Fruit Cobblers .................. .
26
tA
EngU.h Mafflaa...............
Crispy Crowns Potatoes ..... .
8 oz. GORTON
tA
~
• ~
1
· Seaaonlng Mix .............. .
1
Sliced Ma•hrooaaa ....... .
1
89
8
1
15 OZ. BOTTLE FRESH SCENTED
f:STdT£
___....Iv;~~~i;~~~:; ~TdPic-PA~'i 19
'399
'249
.'299
'
... .
·sss9
. . ........ '749 '
Feature of the Yleek
Cup
Painted 89'
'1" ...,... ~!~~~c~ers: ···················s ~~ Hand
A-1 Steak Sauce........ ............. ...
Stoneware
2/ftftC:
7
10 OZ. BTLSTEAK FAVORITE
16
~z. NABisco
1
1r 49.
With e.ct. $5.00
Pun:hue
8 OZ. VAN CAMP'S CHILEE WEENEES OR
Beanee Weenees... .. .... .... .
77
Faaal Ttssues.............. .
7
''-~IIWI!!!I!!I!!!!~--......._..;.....;;;~;;.;;;.;;;~
�Wednesday, February 8, 1984
MUS I -CART S&
ASS I ' BUDDIES BASS CLUB
invite the Public to our First Annual
SATURDAY,
FEBRUARY 11.
FROM NOON
TILL???
FEATURING
DISPLAYS
FAMOUS
SMALLMOUTH
FISHERMAN
OF
MOTORS,
BOATS,
BAIT
AND
TELEVISION
PERSONALITY
BILL''e~M
estft10R
BOAT AND
TACKLE SHOW!
FREE! NO ADMI SION! FREE!
OPAL'S BEDSPREAD OUTLET
Jet. 1091 and 7-Above Bestway Market
Topmost, Ky.
PHONE 477-2266 OPEN MON.-SAT.
2·1-2t.
·Free Hearing Tests Set
For Prestonsburg Area
FREE ELECTRONIC
HEARING TESTS
Thursday
Feb. 16
WiH Be Given BY
9:00 Till
12:00 Noon
Mr. Robert Black
BELTONE Consultant Who Will Be At:
Dr. Phillip Simpson's 22 Court St., Prestonsburg
Anyone who Ills trouble hearing is welcome to have a hearing test
using modem electronic equipment to determine if his loss is one
which may be helped. Some of the causes of hearing loss will be
explained and diagrams of how the ear works will be shown.
We Also Service and Repair All Makes of Hearing Aids.
Batteries And Supplies For All Makes For Sale.
IF YOU CANNOT COME INCALL FOR A HOME APPOINTMENT.
PHONE 606-88&-1416
DENTAL TIPS
Dr.
H.G. Salisbury
RICHMOND PLAZA,
PRESTONSBURG
PHONE 886-2676 .
PREMATURE PERMANENT TEETH
Q. Do permanent teeth ever come through a child's gums
before the first teeth are gone?
A. Once in a while, adult teeth will come through the gums
earlier than expected and create a temporary second row
of teeth in a child's mouth. This happens more often in
the lower jaw. If the baby teeth are already sufficiently
loose, they probably can be removed at home; if not, the
services of a professional should be obtained.
When a double row of teeth pops through in the upper jaw,
see a dentist right away, as this may be a more complicated condition. Once the baby teeth have been removed, the new adult teeth should move into proper alignment via the normal action of tongue and/or cheek
muscles.
Rated High
On Nat'l Test
The most recent testing on the National Educational Development Tests
the following ninth and· tenth graders
scored in the upper 10% nationally and
received a certificate of Educational
Development in recognition of this
accomplishment:
Ninth Grade- Cathy J. Horn,
daughter of John and Mary Lou Horn;
Brian D. Wallace, son of Frank and
Virginia Wallace; Sharon L. Minns,
daughter of Edward and Patty Minns;
S~n P. Cooley, daughter of Jlarold and
Kay Cooley; Anthony Patton, son of
Kenny and Lema Lyon; Jackie Stanford, daughter of Jack and Lucinda
Stanford. Tenth Grade-David P. Allen,
son of Denzil and Janice Allen; William
Fleming, son of Harold and Verla Fleming; William M. Hager, son of Randall
and Judy Hager. All are from the Prestonsburg area.
This test is a nationally administered
test and is given to ninth and tenth
graders who take it on a strictly voluntary basis. It is sponsored by Science
Research Associates, Inc. The areas
tested are English Usage, Mathematics
Usage, Natural Sciences Reading,
Social Studies Reading, and Educational
Ability. It is nationally normed.
The purposes of the test are to help the
student and his parents to identify areas
of strengths and weaknesses early in
his high school career and to recognize
those who demonstrate a high degree of
Educational Development <who score in
the top 10% nationally).
FLOYD COUNTY
HEALTH NEWS
By JANE BOND
Health Educator
There will be a Pap clinic at the
Health Department, today, <Wednesday) from 8:30 untilll: 30 and from 1:00
until2:00. This clinic is open to women
of all ages but those women age 45 and
over are especially urged to take advantage of this service since this is the high
risk age for the disease. This is a free
service of the health department.
Glaucoma screening clinics will be
held at the health department on Friday,
February 10, and Wednesday, February
15. These clinics are free services of the
health department and are open to persons of all ages, but those persons age
40 and over are urged to be screened for
glaucoma since this is the high risk age
for the disease.
A nurse from the health department
will be in Wayland at the Methodist.
Church on Monday, February 13, from
10 until 2. She will offer T.B. skin tests,
urmalyses, anemia screenings, blood
pressures, and immunizations. This
clinic is a service of the health department and the public is welcome.
LI.TTLE BEAR
MARKET A~~~-~~Y.
.M~-1 P.M. SU!'!D_A_! .~0
75
.
c:
LB.
....- ..... IN
WED., FEB. 8
THRU TUES., FEB. 14
• QUANTITY RIGHTS
RESERVED
• NOT RESPONSIBLE
PRINTER'S ERilORSI
69
LB.
RouND $249 BREAKFAST$-279
ROAST.....
RUMP
ROAST ... "
LB.
STEAK .....
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gc
& BEANS 7
$189. POiK"CAMP
LB.
CUBED $249 COKE OR $159
STEAK .....
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DIET COKE
• SEE OUft FULL PAGE AD ELSEWHERE IN. THIS PA,_ •·
�Wednesday, February 8, 1984
The Floyd County Times·
Bobcats Add Two
Wins To Record
By BETTY HYDEN
The Betsy Layne Bobcats added two
more victories to their already impressive 18-4 season record by
defeating the Boyd County Lions and
Allen Central. Friday and Saturday
nights at Betsy Layne.
In Friday's game against Boyd
County. the score was neck-in-neck
during the opening quarter although
Betsy Layne had established a 31-28
lead by halftime. The second half was
also close throughout until the closing
minutes when Betsy Layne. through
excellent foul shooting, beat the Lions.
70~2 .
CPhoto by Laura Cooley>
. PLAY WAS INTENSE during last Tuesday night's fourth meeting between county rivals, Betsy
; Layne and Prestonsburg. Here, P-burg's Tony Whitaker is shown in action during the contest
; which his team won, 55-53.
Blackcats Break
Betsy Layne Jinx
By LAURA COOLEY
(Scoring slats by Maleta Campbell>
Four was the lucky number for the
Prestonsburg boys, Tuesday night, as
the Blackcats secured a long-awaited
victory over the rival Betsy Layne, the
c.ats' first in four meetings with the
Bobcats.
The game was tense throughout and
scoring never went beyond four points
difference. By halftime the score was
tied at 28-28.
After the half. both teams came out
fired up and ready to go. The nip-andtuck game continued and at under a
minute-and-a-half to go in the game the
Blackcats were ahead by two points.
The score was tied when Betsy Layne's
Levi Hamilton connected on a layup.
At that point Prestonsburg regained
control of the ball and ran the clock
down to two seconds when Blackcat
Kelly Cecil was fouled by Jeff Campbell. Cecil came through for the Cats
hitting both foul shots securing for
Prestonsburg the win. 55-53.
Betsy Layne showed a better
shooting percentage with 63 percent
over Prestonsburg's 41 percent while
free throw percentages were practically identical with Betsy Layne 71 and
P-burg 70.
~restonsburg's Kelly Cecil was high
scorer for his team as well as the
game's top scorer with 17 points . Other
Blackcats figures were Tony Whitaker
14, Marty Minix 12. Todd Nairn 8, and
Gordie Ratliff 4.
Betsy Layne's scorers included
Dwayne Kidd with 16. Levi Hamilton
11. Jeff Campbell 10. Lester Newsome
8. and Jimmy Parsons 8.
Scorers for Betsy Layne were all in
double figures including Levi Hamilton
and Jeff Campbell with 17 points each,
Lester Newsome 13, Jimmy Parsons
12, and Dwayne Kidd 11.
Allen Central. following a win over
Lawrence County. Friday night.
traveled to Betsy Layne, Saturday.
where they fell to the Bobcats, 68-58.
Levi Hamilton was high scorer for
the game with 24. Other Bobcat scorers
included Jimmy Parsons 18. Jeff
Campbell 10, Mike Conn 6, Dwayne
Kidd and Dwayne Hall, 4 each, and
Brett Meade 2. Parsons pulled down 10
rebounds and Hamilton six.
For Allen Central, Craig Hall hit for
16 points while Tim Lawson, Dale Pack
and David Green all contributed 12
points each. Paul Rice hit for six and
Don Moore, 2. Allen Central now stands
with a 14-8 record.
The Bobcats were scheduled to play
Paintsville last night <Tuesday> and
will face Elkhorn City Saturday night
for Betsy Layne's Homecoming.
Steel rails used by railroads
in the early 20th century
often weighed less than
60 pounds per yard. Today they weigh more than
150 pounds per yard.
(Photo by Betty Hyden)
DWAYNE KIDD, of Betsy Layne, going up for two against
the defensive efforts of Allen Central Rebel Dale Pack. The
Bobcats won the game, which was played Saturday night,
.68-58.
Allen Central Downs
Wheelwright, 88-49
By BETTY HYDEN
Allen Central's Rebels downed the
Wheelwright Trojans last Tuesday at
Allen Central in a fairly easy win.
88-49.
With a halftime lead of 52-25 over the
young Trojans. ACHS Coach John Martin used his reserves who made an impressive showing scoring 36 to the TroJans 24 points.
Craig Hall scored 20 points to lead
the Rebels. He was followed by Tim
Lawson and Dale Pack with 14 points
each, David Green 10. Mike Rister 8.
Jeff Powell 7. Larry Gibson 4. Don
Moore. Stan Mullins and Ronnie
Ousley. all with 2 points each, Paul
Rice and Fred Ridener. 1 each.
For Wheelwright. David Hall was top
scorer with 11. Tim Cole had 10.
Charlie Martin and Jeff Boyd. 7 each.
James Hall 6. Tim Harris 4. Tim
Hughes 3. and Jack Hall 2.
P-burg Girls Down
Morgan Lady Cougars
By LAURA COOLEY
<Photo by Melinda Sellards)
rHE BETSY LAYNE Bobcats scored an impressive 70-62
victory over Boyd . County High School, Friday night, and
Lester Newsome, pictured here going after two of his 13
· points for the night was one of five Bobcats in double figures.
Alben Barkley, who served
with President Truman, was
the only Vice-President to
marry while in office. He
married his second wife, Mrs.
Carleton S. Hadley in 1949.
<Photo by Betty Hyden)
Bassin' Buddies Fishing Tips
By TEE WATKINS
PREVENTABLE MISTAKES
Did you ever wonder why some fishermen always catch more fish than others.
Could it be the bait they are using; could
it be their boat; maybe their knowledge
of the lake; maybe their knowledge of
fish behavior; maybe their equipment.
Certainly all these things and many
more are important. All fishermen know
that the sport can be very challenging.
There is one simple thing all good
fishermen have in common, they do not
nake preventable mistakes. No one has
tet come up with a way to force fish to
oite. That's one thing we don't have control over, but we do have control over
preventable mistakes. Let's take a look
at a few mistakes most fishermen make
which are all preventable.
HOOKS-Alll\rres have one thing in
common no matter what kind or size,
they all have hooks. Most lures are purchased, placed in-a -taclde box and not
looked at until on the water at which
time they are tied on and thrown out
with hopes of a strike. The hooks are
never looked at- preventable mistake!
Fact, Most hooks that come on new lures
are not sharp. A good way to check a
hook is to gently slide it· across your
fingernail . It should scratch your nail.
U it doesn't, it is not sharp! A good habit
to get into is go through your tackle box
every winter and sharpen all hooks, and
as new lures are bought, sharpen before
placing in box, and always check before
each use. Hooks will need to be touched
up as they are used.
LINE- Fishing line is the only legal
link between the fish and the livewell,
but yet this is often the most overlooked and abused item a fisherman has .
Line is usually bought, put on a reel and
forgotten for years. This is a very
preventable mistake! If you frequent the
lakes or streams several times a year,
you should replace your line annually.
Most tournament fisherman think line
is so important that they replace it daily when fishing a major event.
When purchasing line, try to match
the size to your fishing condition. If the
water you will be fishing is clear with little cover, select line in the 6 to 10 lb. size.
If the water is stained with heavy cover,
try 14 to 20 lb. line. A good rule to
remember is try to use as small a line
as conditions will allow. Learn how to tie
a good quality kn~t and always wet the
knot before pulling it tight. This will
reduce friction and make the knot stronger. Check the first two feet of line from
~ lure frequently when fishing,
esJ)ecially if using it in heavy cover. A
good way to cheeR 1t is to run the line
between your thumb and forefinger. If
any nicks are felt, cut out and retie.
Believe me, there is nothing more disgusting than to break a line after several
hours of hard fishing-just to get one
strike. This is preventable 90% of the
time with good line maintenance.
FAIRY WANDS- This is a name frequently given to very limber rods. These
rods are fine for small panfish, such as
bluegill and crappie, but they are a NONO for bass fishing. These rods are a lot
of fun to fight a fish on, but offer several
disadvantages. Because they bend from
the tip all the way to the handle it is very
difficult to set the hook, especially if the
fish is over 3 lbs. These rods are so
limber it is very difficult to cast a lure
which, weighs over 1/4 oz. very accurate-·
ly, and once a fish is hooked the fishermen has no power to force the fish away
from cover.
There are literally hundreds of good
quality rods on the market today. They
come in all lengths and actions and it is
very difficult to pick up a rod at the bait
shop and tell much about it. You need
time on the water under real life condition to properly judge a rod, but two
things to look for at the bait shop is the
tip and the butt.
The tip or last third of the rod should
have the action you want. This is the
part of the rod that throws the bait and
plays the fish once hooked. The butt or
first two thirds of the rod should have
enough backbone to firmly set the hook
and force the fish when in heavy cover.
These are just a few simple mistakes
fishermen make all the time without
realizing it. Ask any good fisherman you
know and I assure you they do these little things without ever giving them a second thought. Start practicing these
tricks and I !lm sure you will put a few
more fish in your livewell each year and
next time you are on the water and lose
a fish, for whatever reason, ask yourself,
"was that a preventable mistake"?
God bless and good fishin' .
ACTION during last Tuesday night's meeting between Allen
Central and the Wheelwright Trojans. The Rebels downed
the Trojans 88-49, upping their record to 14-8.
* KENTUCKY AFIELD *
J,AifE SEASON HUNTING
"Although most hunt!ng seaso~ are
still open, many sportsmen have left the
field and are already beginning to think
about spring fishing.
But there's a small, dedicated group
of sportsmen who continue to hunt until
the seasons close. They find the woods
and fields less crowded and hunting conditions often better than earlier in the
season.
Squirrel season closed Dec. 31, along
with the deer archery season. But waterfowl and small game seasons are still
open. Rabbit and quail seasons will close
Feb. 12 and grouse season, Feb. 29.
Seasons for both ducks and geese will
run thi'ough Jan. 20, except in the
Ballard Quota Zone, where the season
closed Jan. 5 after the 6,000 goose quota
was taken. Furbearer hunting and trapping seasons will run through Jan. 31.
But before you grab your gun, whistle up old Rover and head out, better
check your hunting license. 1983licenses
expired at midnight, Dec. 31, so you'll
need a new license to hunt now.
The best bet for the sportsman who
both hunts and fishes is to buy a combination license, so you'll be able to hunt
now and also be all set when the walleye,
white bass or crappie start running in a
couple of months.
A resident hunting or fishing license
costs $7.50 each, while a combination
license is $14. Youngsters under 16 years
old may fish without a license, but they
will need a junior hunting license $4.00
for residents- non-resident youngsters
must pay the full price for a non-resident
license) .
An annual non-resident license costs
$40, while a three-day non-resident small
game permit is $14.50. Deer permits arE
$H.50 and turkey permits $6.50 for both
residents and non-residents.
Non-resident fishing licenses are $5.00
for a three day permit and $6.50 for a
15-day license. Trout stamps are $3.50
for both resident and non-resident trout
fishermen.
Kentucky residents 65 years old or
older do not need sport licenses, but they
should obtain a free lifetime license
from their county court clerk. Landowners and members of their immediate families do not need licenses to
hunt or fish on their own property.
Tenants and their family members also
don't need licenses to hunt or fish on
lands where they both reside and work.
Non-resident landowners must have
licenses.
The revenue from license fees represents the main source of funding for the
Department of Fish and Wildlife
Resources, which receives none of your
state income tax, sales tax or other tax
monies.
The Prestonsburg Lady Cats recorded their sixth win of the season, Feb. 2,
by defeating the visiting Morgan County Cougars girls squad, 60 to 57.
Although the final score was close.
the Lady Cats led for most of the the
game, at one point the score being 31 to
16. Morgan County fought back in the
second half to pull within three of PHS.
but the Cats prevailed, led by Jeana
McKenzie with 26 points. Glenda
Shepherd and Lucreasie Reed joined
forces to pull down 12 and seven rebounds, respectively.
The Lady Cats were scheduled to
play the strong Wheelwright Lady Trojans last night <Tuesday> at the gym nasium here.
Anne Morrow Lindbergh
On 'Smithsonian World'
Wednesday, February 15, at 8 p.m.,
KET will air "Crossing the Distance,"
the second program in the "Smithsonian
World" series. The program emphasizes
the ingenuity, daring and imagination
man brings to the challenge of getting
from Point A to Point B as directly as
he can, as well as some of the ways he
has accomplished this goal, scientifically, technologically and artistically.
"Crossing the Distance" features an
exclusive interview with Anne Morrow
Lindbergh, who served as co-pilot,
navigator and radio operator with her
husband, Col. Charles A. Lindbergh, on
global pioneering flights charting routes
50 years ago that are still used in international air travel. Anne Lindbergh
became an accomplished pilot on her
own, and much of the program is
devoted to her historic travels.
The program also takes a new look at
the Panama Canal from deep inside one •
of its huge locks, and visits the Smithsonian Tropical Research Institute in
Panama, located on an island created
when the canal was built.
�The Floyd County nmes
Wednesday, February 8, 1984
Section Two, Paae Three
.
NOTICE OF HEARING
Notice is hereby given that a hearing
will be held on the 9th day of February,
1984 at the hour of 10:00 a.m. in the Conference R<. :>m of the Floyd County Annex, Prestonsburg, Kentucky. The purpose of this hearing is to determine if Archer Boyd and Jeff Mullins, residents of
General Delivery, Betsy Layne, Kentucky should receive an entertainment
license. All interested parties should be
•
pr~sent,
ARNOLD TURNER, JR.
Fl<?yd County Attorney
•
-~ ~
~- ~
'
f1w_
o
~V..__>->=:=~
STYLING
SALON
JISS
So. Lake
Drive
A new hairstyle is exciting and goad for your self-image and o•·era/1
appearance.
Here at the Hairport my main concern is finding a style best suited for
you and a style that is equally easy to maintain.
For the latest in hair cutting and permanents, call the Hairport for your
appointment today. Together we 'Jl find the look for you in '84.
Tues. thru Sat.
lt.
OWNED AND OPERATED BY
MIKE BRANHAM
BY APPOINTMENT ONLY
IIHJ44
2-1-3
I
JENNY-WILEY TOYOTA.
"THE BARGAIN CHAMPION;'
"THE LEASING CHAMPION;'
But D-e finitely...
''THE SERVICE CHAMPION!''
CUT OUT THESE COUPONS IMMEDIATEL Yl
Billy and Ralph, ·Manager and Service
-------------------------. Manager, are going after RECORD BREAKING
! SPARK PLUGS ! AIR FILTERS
Parts Br Service sales in '84-so NOBODY is
I ·
I
5
going to give better, prompter service in this
~EACH
~J area.
~
EACH
!II I
NOBODY is going to give better prices.
l--------~-------~------~
'-----------------------~
And our LABOR RATE (among the lowest
- . . .- - 2~YEAR. EXTENDED SERVICE _.
.· in the state) has risen so in 2 years. NO INFLATION at Jenny Wiley Toyota!
SOME MORE SPECIALSWHAT'S COOKING?
~ ~
1
t/ SERVICE SPECIALS
~fo~~
-~.. rR11 QUALITY STAMPS WITH
t/ LEASE SPECIALS
t~~
"'JgJ EVERY PARTS PURCHASE! 1/ TAX REFUND LOANS ~ ~
*ENJOY OUR COLOR TV IN THE WAITING ROOM
t/6-10% CASH REBATES
*OR LOOK AT THE NEW TOYOTAS THAT HAVE
....-.-UST ARRIVED!_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __., 1/ LOWER BANK RATES
i
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ggc
:
3.95 .
OFFER GOOD WITH THIS COUPON
THRU APRIL 1, 1984
OFFER GOOD WITH THIS COUPON
THRU APRIL 1, 1984
.
.
.
~
• COROLLA SPORT COUPES
• SUPRAS
General
Electric
Credit
A.UTO liiASl tNC
• XTRA
CABS
•
5
9495°
0 sTRAIGHT OUTI
and
Sales!
*LEASE WiTH AN
OPTION TO BUYI
(LESS THAN LAST YEARI) "WE'RE THE BARGAIN CHAMPSI"
BRAND NAME COOKBOOK-
Help us
reach
our goal
in February
in Parts,
Service,
FREE COOKBOOK
WITH EVERY LEASED
CAR OR
TRUCK
IN
FEB.
CALL THE CHAMPIONSI
• 'BARGAIN CHAMPION
• LEASING CHAMPION
• SERVICE CHAMPION
Jenny
Wiley
Toyota
Ph: 886-3861
or call Ralph at 886-
80
�The Floyd County nmes
Wednesday, February 8, 1984
Honored On Birthday
Receives Sgt. Rank
Ball~y
.ELECTROLYSIS
.-ermanenT rtalr Removal
* CONSULTATION
FtEE
UNDERARMS
Thurs. • Fri., 10 a.m. ro 4:30 p.m.
Aner 4:30 • Sat. by appointment
$1,000 REWARD
Frazier Elected To Board
Of Lindsey Wilson College
Mrs. Verdie Stumbo was honored on
her 75th birthday when members of her
family entertained her with a surprise
dinner at the Stumbo home. Wednesday,
January 11. To share this occasion with
her were her sisters, Annie Stumbo,
Maggie Newman, Edna Sizemore and
her brother, and his wife, Mr. and Mrs.
Vermen Hall, all of McDowell; Mr. and
Mrs. Paul Stumbo and Pam, Mr. Stan
Stumbo, Mike, Nicholas and Joshua, Mr.
and Mrs. Dale Stumbo, Mr. and Mrs.
Klein Stumbo, Jeff and Alicia, Mr. and
Mrs. Steve Rowan, Mr. and Mrs. Peco
Hall, Mr. Larry Stumbo, Mr. and Mrs.
Johnny Stumbo, Jonathan, James and
Iris, Mr. and Mrs. Daryl Gibson, all of
McDowell; Mr. and Mrs. Don Stumbo
and Donna, Mr. and Mrs. Randy Stumbo and daughters, all of Martin, Mr. and
Mrs. Carl Stumbo and Jaynie, of Prestonsburg. The dinner was prepared by
Mrs. Stumbo's daughters and daughterin-laws. Mrs. Nancy Gibson also decorated a birthday cake in her honor. Mrs.
Stumbo received many gifts from her
family.
certified by
Stare License.
Section Two, Paae Four
Freddie A. Conn, son of Bert Conn, of
Grethel, has been promoted to Master
Sergeant in the United ~tat · ' ·~Force.
Sergeant Conn, a 1967 graduate of Betsy Layne High School, has been in the
Air Force since July, 1968. He is presently a college recruiter in Potsdam, New
York.
He is married to the former Bonnie
Lehman, of Vestal, N.Y. and they have
three children, Adam, Jeremy an~
Rebecca.
Chalmer H. Frazier, of Prestonsburg,
has been elected to the board of trustees
of Lindsey Wilson College, Columbia,
Kentucky.
Mr. Frazier, a native of Martin, attended Berea College and received his
master's from the University of Kentucky in 1939. He served in various positions in the educational field, including
math teacher, principal and superintendent of Prestonsburg City Schools. In
1956 he became administrator of Prestonsburg General Hospital. Through the
efforts of Mr. Frazier, Congressman
Carl D. Perkins and the late Dr. George
P. Archer, the dream of Highlands
Regional Medical Center became a
reality. Frazier became president of
Highlands Regional Medical Center in
1974.
He has served the Kentucky Hospital
Association in many capacities, including president of Blue Grass Hospital
District, chairman of the KHA Legislative Committee and president of the
Association in 1970-71. He is a member
of the American College of Hospital Administrators; on the board of trustees of
Blue Cross, and is a member of the Big
Sandy Comprehensive Health Planning
Council. Mr. Frazier is a member of the
Kiwanis Club and has served as president of the Prestonsburg Club. He is a
past president of the Jenny Wiley
Drama Association and the Floyd County Historical Society, is treasurer of the
Eastern Kentucky Concert Association
and has served on the board of directors
of Prestonsburg Community College. He
also serves as chairman of the administrative board of the First United
Methodist Church, Prestonsburg.
Lindsey Wilson College is a two-year
college affiliated with the United
Methodist Church.
A $1,000 reward will be paid for Information leading
to the arrest and conviction or the person or persons
who have stolen tools, torches, and other property from
Dick's Sign Company, 448 South Lake Drive,
Prestonsburg, on the weekend or January 21-22. All
calls confidential. Ask for Dick or Chuck.
CALL 886-2111
In District Court
Sentenced in district court. following guilty pleas or verdicts. were :
Dennis Wayne Conn . Martin, drunk.
disorderly, criminal trespass. 60 days'
probation, $197.50 in fine and court
costs: Donnie Branham. Prestonsburg, drun~ driving, criminal littering.
$137.50: Michael Dale Wallen. Allen.
reckless driving. $57.50. referred to
state traffic school: Tommy E.
Justice. Harold. drunk driving. $137.50.
referred to alcoholic driver education .
-FOR RENT• 1-BEDROOM APARTMENTLOCATED ON SOUTH LAKE
DRIVE.
• OFFICE SPACE-LOCATED
ON SOUTH LAKE DRIVE.
CALL: 886-6056
886-3442 after 5
2-1-2t.
24 HIS. PttOIIE
SIIVICE
886-8924
It-
INCOME TAX
PREPARATION
Federal and State
********
Vernon Slone
Call 886-6060
or
886-9007
1·11-U
Subscription
Rates Per Year
In Floyd County, $8.00
Ehewhere In .Kentucky, $10
Outside Ket.~tuclty, $12.50
Plea.e qote experauon da\e
oppo..te your name .on wrap.,_ or on yolfr copy of The
Times. BecauM of lncrea.ed
malllna cP-~·· notlcea ~'
aubacrlp~ .
no lonaer
aubacrlbers.
expiration are
mailed to
Wscriptioa .,, be mailecl to:
The Floyd County Times
Box391
Preston~ra. Ky. 41653
Appear Before Panel
Studying Education
Floyd County Citizens Education
Council members Kathy Hatfield and
Joyce Everly appeared before members
of a panel studying Educational Excellence and Equity in Kentucky and the
nation, January 26, in Louisville. Their
area of testimony was "Access to information and decision making on the local
school district level."
A series of hearings will be held by the
National Coalition of Advocates for
Children and it's affiliated organizations
all over the United States. The hearings
in Kentucky were sponsored by Kentucky Youth Advocates. Testimony was
obtained from many professional people
throughout the Jefferson and Fayette
County area. FCCEC and a member of
Citizens for Better Schools in Lexington
were the only non-professional people to
give testimony at this hearing.
Kentucky Youth Advocates will compile a report to be distributed to the
Governor, members of the General
Assembly and Superintendent of Public
Instruction. National Coalition for Advocates for Children will publish its final
report next Spring.
Members of the panel were: Joan
First, Exec. Dir. of NCAC, Geoff Ellis,
Vice-Pres., Louisville Branch of
NAACP, Carolyn Hutto, teacher and
former board member of Jefferson
County Board of Education, Stuart Jay,
member State Board of Education, Dr.
Marion Wright-Edelman, President,
Children's Defense Fund, and Harold
Howell, lecturer at Harvard University
and panel chairman.
------ --------
---
------
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You choose the length of time to invest your
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Ban
OUR PU:DGl:
1. AFFORDABLE PRICES.
2. ONE-DAY SERVICE ON DENTURE REPAIRS AND RELINES.
3. AVAIUBIUTY: Fll.LINCS, EXTitACTIONS.
4. NO SURPRISES; TREATMENT AND COSTAR£ DISCUSSED FIRST.
YOU DElUMIIIE TME AMOUNT OF SERVIC£.
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DENTURE REPAIRS: REUNES ALSO AYAii.ABi.i:
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ALLEN DENTAL CENTER
PHONE 606/874-2020 ALLEN, KY.
OR. R.I. GOODMAN D.M.D.
DR. W. FU D.M.D.
.Martin • Betsy layne • Two locations In Prestonsburg
11.
�•
Wednesday, February 8, 1984
The Floyd County Times
Section Two, Paae Five
-PIICES
Ill EFFECT
0
I
-
WEDNESDAY
FEB. 8
THIU SIINDAY
FEB. 12
,,_
,
**************~***
~0
0
*
0~
__* 4 LOCATIONS! •
* • PIKEVILLE • ZEBULON •
•WERESERVETHERIGHT
TOLIMITQUANTITIES
• WE ARE NOT RESPONSIBLE
: BETSY LAYNE • ELKHORN CITY ~0
:
OPEN ·1 DAYS A WEEK it
*
8 A.M. TO JJ P.M.
* *_*_
* *_*_
**_*_
* *_*_
* ** * *
_
0
FOR PRINTER'S l'.itRORS
•
0
0
.__......
-~
•
WE GLADLY
ACCEPT
U.S.D.A.
FOODSTAMPS
. .
Oo
VELOCITY MARKET
BREAD
FISCHER'S .·•.
FRESH LIKE
WHOLE KERNEL CORN
iACON'.~ -~R.E~~.
age
.
2
l2.0z.
Cans
49
$1
ggc
WIENERS ..........................
$18
9
SMOKED SAUSAGE .......
49
iEEF CHUCK ........... ............LB.$1
' .' . . . ...
.l U
PKG.
ARMOUR REG.
BUTTERMILK
HALF
GALLON
89
e
12-0Z. PKG.
HII!LSHIRE
'
La.
CHOICE
SIRLOIN TIP ROAST ..... La.
·
$149
REG. or BEEF,
FISCHER s BOLOGNA .......
$199
1-LB.PKG•
. •PEARS
· 5/sl.OO
.. .. · BANANAS
3 LBS.$1.00{.
~-~.'
.
�Th Floyd County Times, February 8, 1984
Section Two, Page Six
lien Living In The U.S.
Have ede al Tax Obligations
• 1lVe
Visitors from other countries who are
m the U.S. on other than tourist visas
may have a Federal income tax obligation. Aliens are classed as either resident or nonresident under U.S. tax laws
and have to pay income tax accordingly. Those classed as resident aliens are
generally required to pay tax on income
earned both within and outside of the
U.S. They are taxed in the same man·
ner as U.S. citizens and are subject to
the same tax regulations and guidelines.
The Kentucky Human£> Soctety·
Animal Rescue League announced to·
day their support, in conjunction with
the Humane Society of the United States,
in Washington, D.C. and Friends of
Animals, of Kentucky, in getting a bill
passed that will make dogfighting a
felony in Kentucky.
j
Subscription
Rates. Per Year
In Floyd County, $8.00
Elsewhere'lrt.Kentucky, $10
outside K~~u~ky, 512.so
Please note explr•tlon
~ate
~poslte'y~r.ftame on wrap·
per or on your copy of The
Times. Because of Increased
malllh&• costs, notices of
subscription .expiration are
no
lo11&et' • mailed
to
subscribers.
SubsCriptions may be mailed to:
The Floyd County Times
Box 391
Preetonsbura, Ky. 41653
Under Way To Make
Dogfighting A Felony
The bill, which currently is in the
house and senate, is sponsored by
Senator Lewis Peniston, of Henry county, and State Representative, Louie
Guenther, of Jefferson county.
Dogfighting is illegal in all states,
however, in Kentucky, it is only a misdemeanor. In Kentucky's neighboring
states, dogfighting is a felony. Due to our
state's lax law, dogfighters select Kentucky as a major sport for their cruelty. And in Kentucky, dogfighting is
spreading.
Dogfighting is a criminal act which
encourages illegal gambling, use of illegal firearms, and cruelty to animals.
Dogs fight for up to two hours until one
is too mangled to continue fighting and
the other is declared a winner. Pets are
stolen and commonly used as bait for
dogs training to fight and kill.
The Humane Society is asking letters
'be sent to state legislators to help stop
dogfighting. This, is said, could help to
save the life of someone's pet.
RALPH'S
TIRE SERVICE
U.S. 23 No., Prestonsburg • 886-8806
• Computer Wheel Balancing
• New Tires (Steel & Glass Belted & Polyester)
• Recaps-Regular & Radial All Season,
4·Wheel Drive 10 & 11x15
• New Banerles-36 mo. $39.95 Installed
plus exchange
• Rebuilt Banerles-90-day warranty $25.00
plus exchange
• Shocks-Lifetime warranty $19.95 each IP.stalled
Has Pool Party
SUNDAl, FEB. 12 thru WEDNESDAY, FEB. 1
Dean Hall, pictured, celebrated his
15th birthday last month with a party at
Pikeville city swimming pooL A freshman at Betsy Layne High School, he is
the son of Eula Hall, of Honaker.
State Nurseries Offer
Low-Cost Seedlings
By some state estimates, there are
currently more than one million acres
of land in Kentucky in need of reforestation.
The land is often farmland which is no
longer being farmed or land which is
poorly forested, with defective or
undesirable trees, Forestry Director
Donald A. Hamm said.
"In an attempt to make this land more
productive and to upgrade the timber
produced on it, we have, for a number
of years, offered a very low-cost way for
Kentucky's landowners to reforest their
land. We offer, at nominal cost, tree
seedlings from the state's tree nurseries," Hamm explained.
"These seedlings are useful to landowners for a variety of reasonserosion control, windbreaks, reforestation and provision of wildlife habitats,"
he said.
The seedlings, sold by the state Division of Forestry in bundles of 100, 500
and 1,000, are one to two years old and
range in height from six to sixteen inches, depending to species.
Prices for the seedling bundles range
from $12 per 100 for most species to $125
per 1,000 for black walnut seedlings and
Chinese chestnut seedlings.
§lchVISIOM.
VIDEO lAME CARIRIDIES
Originally Sold For 522.94 To 529.94
STOCK
UP!
YOUR CHOICE
FOR YOUR ATARI® 2600 TM VIDEO
COMPUTER SYSTEM TM
Weddington Plaza
Pikeville, K .
Cherry Blossom Soup, a Japanese
delicacy, is made by placing pickled
cherry blossoms in hot water.
CAMPI
ENTS
IN CONCERT
MARCH 3,1984
AT VIKING HALL
BRISTOL. TN.
TICKETS ARE ONLY
$6.00 EACH AT ANY
CAMPBELL FORD LOCATION.
ALL SEATS
ARE RESERVED. SO HURRY!
WHY ARE WE DOING IT? BECAUSE WE THINK YOU MIGHT FALL IN LOVE WITH ONE OF OUR NEW CARS OR TRUCKS
WHEN YOU COME IN TO GET YOUR TICKETS. MAYBE NOT. WE BELIEVE IT'S WORTH A SHOT.
�-
-
Wednesday, February 8, 1984
Publ' c
1,..eetings
The Floyd County Times
Section Two, Paae Seven
Is Sweepstakes Prize Winner
Set
ES EQUI
To IHw ,, e ublic
Of Red River Status
•
The Forest Service, U.S Department
of Agriculture, will hold a number of
public information meetings regarding
the Red River Draft Environmental Impact Statement and Wild and Scenic
River Study Report which was made
available recently for public review.
The U.S. Congress authorized a study
in 1978 to determine if a section of the
Red River should be included in the National Wild and Scenic River System. A
nine mile section of the river is a
designated wild river under the Kentucky Wild Rivers Act.
Richard H. Wengert, Forest Supervisor, Daniel Boone National Forest,
Winchester, has announced the following schedule for the meetings :
7:00p.m. Monday, January 30, Stanton, Powell County High School; 7:00
p.m. Tuesday, January 31, Frenchburg,
Menifee County High School; 7:00p.m .
Wednesday, February 1, Campton,
Wolfe County High School; 7:00 p.m.
Friday, February 3, Lexington, Seay
Auditorium , Agricultural Science
Building North, University of Kentucky.
These will be information type meetings, according to Wengert, with the
Forest Service presenting a brief overview of the study and answering questions. Individuals or organizations desiring to present a statement for the record
should bring a written copy to the
meeting or mail it by March 15 to the
following address:
Forest Supervisor, Daniel Boone National Forest, 100 Vaught Road, Win·
chester, Ky. 40391.
INDIVIDUAL
GARAGE-R-STORAGE
-STOR-IT
-LOCK-IT
-POCKET THE KEY
U
MONTHLY RATES
•
•
•
•
10X10
10X20
10X30
20X30
.. .. .. $25
...... $55
...... $65
..... $100
(606)886-2734 or 886-2412
CLYDE I. IUICHm
Coun Sr., Prestonsburg, Ky. 41853
2+U.
•
I
OF MARTIN, KY.
Introduces a totally new malntenam:e system to underground coal mines.
"THE HUGHES MAINTENANCE STATION"
Mrs. Mary Alice Herald, of the Spurlock Fork of Middle ('reek is pictured
with one of a collection of five hunting rifles and shotguns which she won as
part of the National Ririe Association's "Great American Hunting Guns
Sweepstakes. She is shown with her son, Bob <left) and Frank Foote. N.R .A.
representative who made the official presentation Monday.
Mrs. Herald accepted the collection or three rifles and two shotguns on
behalf of her latr husband. Edgar. who entered the sweepstakes last April.
Mr. Herald' s entry was one of 365,000 received in the sweepstakes which was
held as a fund-~aiser for theN .R.A. 's Whittington ('enter in Raton, New Mexico. The guns are valued at approximately $2,100.
Unemployment in Floyd
Tops in Big Sandy ADD
The unemployment rate went down in
78 Kentucky counties in December as
the state rate dropped below 10 percent,
according to Cabinet for Human
Resources figures released last
Thursday.
Unemployment in the Big Sandy
district dropped from 16.1 percent in
November to 14.6 percent in December.
Rates ranged from a low of 7.1 percent
in Martin county, the only one with
single-digit unemployment, to a high of
16.4 percent in Floyd county.
The monthly sample of unemployment insurance benefits recipients
showed 55.8 percent had held jobs in
mining, 12.5 percent in trade and 11.3
percent in services.
In the Kentucky River district
unemployment fell from 16.7 percent in
November to 15.5 percent in December.
Rates ranged from a low of 10.0 percent
in Breathitt county to a high of 22.4 percent in Letcher.
There were 63 counties reporting rates
of 10.0 percent or higher, compared to
68 in November. For the first time~
months the state reported sin~e-digi t
unemployment, as the rate fell from 10.4
percent in November;o-·a ~preliminary
9.8 percent in pec~mber. Nationally
unemployment dropped from 8.1 per-
cent in November to 8.0 percent in
December.
Jobless rates in Kentucky's 120 counties ranged from a low of 3.5 percent in
Bourbon and Woodford counties to a
high of 34.3 percent in Russell county,
where state labor market analyst Ed
Blackwell said, " The closing of a
clothing manufacturing plant cast a
dark shadow over the employment picture." Menifee county's 26.4 percent rate
was the second highest, followed by
Casey county's 24.3 percent, Greenup
coqnty's 23.1 percent, Morgan county's
22.8 percent and Letcher county's 22.4
percent.
Employment figures for counties of
the Big Sandy district follow :
Unemp.
Employed
Floyd
Johnson
Mag offin
Martin
Pike
Unemp.
15,034
8,209
5,526
8,330
31,056
Rate
3,366
1,481
1,027
754
6,427
18.3
15.3
15.7
8.3
17.1
PATENT PENDING
A Fully-Supplied "Hughes Maintenance Station" can reduce a coal
mine's Down Time by SO%.
Standard Equipment on each unit:
1) Hose crimper- 2) Grinder- 3) 4" vise- 4) torch and gauges- 5) 225 amp
welder- 6) trouble llght-7) 84 cu. H. of storage space. 6.50 x 10 loam filled wheels
are optional.
THE HUGHES MAINTENANCE STATION AND OTHER UNDERGROUND EQUIPMENT
IS ON DISPLAY-ONE MILE OFF RT. 80 ON BUCKS BRANCH ROAD AT BILL AND
SAM'S WELDING SHOP-NEAR MARTIN.
HUGHES EQUIPMENT INC.
NEW DIRECTIONS
I
The Occupational Safety and Health
Apministration has allocated $6.8
million to the agency's New Directions
program in the 1984 fiscal year, the U.S.
Department of Labor reports.
P.O. BOX 440
MARTIN, KY. 41649
Phone: 285-3804 or 285-9900
Your Food Dollar
Buys more at....
BESTWAY!
PRICES GOOD THRU SUNDAY, FEB. 12, WHILE QUANTITIES LAST.
VAN CAMP'S" oz.
Beans. . . · · ··
3I $1
2-8·11·
I) MMIC
VAN CAW. oz.
3'
HominY... .. . . . ... .............. . . . ...... ~·
.Chllaa waanaas....~Jaa
30 Lb. DOl C OW..... ... .·r-
iaiiai·.waanaas 2199c
iiiiiiw. ...... . . ..... . . .... ... .5149
Pork I
~~,
VAN CAMP'S 15 OZ.
I'UIINA ·I LIS. fiB I
..,.
IESIA SALII.ES
rackers
IOSa.nnsnu
Pork
asI
9
~··~.79c
PIC.I.
FAIRK SOFIE.ER
16 OZ. FISCHER' S MELLWOOQ.
U.S.D.A. CHOia IONllUS
s249
Steak................ w.
=~g==·· · · · · · · · ··1Br
1111
Cuba
U.S.D.A. OIOICIIONUUS
s249
TID Roast ... ..
12·0Z~ FISCHER'S
Sirloin
W1eners .....
La.
fiiiSHLIAN
~r::k
DELMONICO 7 OZ. ELBOW OR THIN
aa.
or
4JS1
l acaronl..
PR
UCE
. ...... . . L.~l '
PliOliN
2
Whlllna
Flsa.......... ........
&9C
$119
HALF
IAL.
99c
Yellow Onions ... 9 9 c
MILD I'LAYOIID
3-lb
aag·
IAL.
PKI.
Ill.
16 OZ. MARGARINE QUARTERS
POIIIOIS
,,LANKS
•WtDGH
. •tHINS
Tyson Pallles
wesson 011
~~;179
Blue
c
Bonnet 59
Banuuat 2J7BC
Pol Pies
8 OZ. BEEF,CKN.,TURK.,SPAG.,MAC.&CHEESE
OU IDA :U OZ. HOMESTYLE
12 OZ. CHICKEN OR TURKEY IIIEAST
30• OFF LAIEL
3 Lb. IDDIBS
,..~.69c
HALF
oranaa Juice
Chill
c
wt8eans79
.. .8179 .
Cake MillS
m IIAII
15 OZ. CAN ARMOUR
GIIAT '011 IAnNG I
COOKING • JOHA'"AN
Downy
$199
L• •
a•.
Lb. Baa 'l=''
3ulcy
oranaas
IETIY ClOCKER ASSOilta
175 COUNT PACKAGE
Pulls Tissues............. .
79 c
S COUNT
Hu!'gry
J~ck
BISCUitS
CHEER LAU.DRY
~oataraanl
..!199
lOX
2 I 7g C
�Weclnesd8y, Febnlary a, 1984
* GOOD NEWS REPORT *
By THOMAS W. PAUKEN
"I do very much appreciate the
Director of ACTION
thoughtfulness and kindness which
When Raechel Browe, of Wells, Ver·
comes from your family group and I
mont, dropped in to see Marsh Peck, thank you and so does my family, but I
editor and publisher of The Vermont feel there is a much greater need to be
News Guide, she had a special purpose met, and I think your group could do a
in mind: to put $200 to good use.
great job. I would like to help in any way
Sixteen years old, an 11th grader, ex· that I can, too ... Love always, Raechel
tremely attractive in looks and manner, Browe.
Raechel did not give the impression of
Raechel's long-range plan is to
one whose life for the past year had been become involved in the medical profesin grave danger. Born without the link sion herself. Thanks to Dr. Luden Leape
between her esophagus and stomach, of Boston Floating Hospital of Tufts
she had grown up with an artificially University, chances are good that she
placed connection which as the years will do just that. Through Dr. Leap's .
passed, became less and less operative. skill and four operations, Raechel is now
As a result, she has spent half of the last able to eat normally and is back in
ten months in hospitals and when at school. "I push myself every day to keep
home, 12 out of every 24 hours on a going and not give up and get discouragfeeding machine.
ed," she wrote. And as Marsh Peck puts
As Raechel was to write: "I almost it, "Her courage and thoughtfulness are
died three different times, but each time something special, and believe me, so is
I fought my way back to life because I she."
had the love of people back home, pull·
i.ng for me, praying I would not give up."
Of course, she didn't give up, and her
coming to Editor Peck was not so much
to talk about her own problems as it was
The Kentucky Baptist Convention will
to talk about the problems of other kids
she had seen while in the hospital. It was conduct an area evangelism conference,
Monday, Feb. 20, at the First Baptist
her wish to help them.
Church,
Allen.
Because Clf her illness, the hospitaliza·
tion and the treatment it required, the . The conference is for pastors, Sunday
community of Wells had pitched in to School workers, church leaders, lay
raise funds to help Raechel's parents, witnesses, and other church members.
Dick and Peg Browe, with the medical The time is 7 p.m. to 9:25p.m.
Group conferences will be conducted
bills. One such effort was a dance held
by the Wells Modern Woodman of on the following subjects: Women and
America Teen Club. The Club raised Family Evangelism, Youth Evange$200.00 and here is some of what Raechel lism, Laymen in Evangelism, Evangewrote in thanks-and talked to Marsh lism Resources, and Evangelism
Follow-up with the Survival Kit.
Peck about:
The group conferences will include in"My illness is very rare, and even in
Boston they never had a case exactly formation on evangelizing the family,
like mine. I met a lot of kids down there, training and leading youth in evangereally sick kids, some who won't make lism, conducting lay-led revivals,
it-some who will... ~kids, one was counseling for the evangelistic invitaonly 13 and had a heroin addiction; it's tion, conducting prayer seminars, perhorrible to think Mre I am and many sonal witness training and conserving
others born into this world sick with the results of evangelism.
Kentucky Baptist personnel will inphysical or mental defects who suffer a
life-long battle with illness. Then there clude Rev. and Mrs. Harry Hunter, Rev.
• are ones born perfect and end up on Harold Barnes, Dr. Donald Garrison,
Rev. Vernon Cole, and Rev. Jay Brown.
drugs or alcohol, destroying themselves.
Why? Because they take a dare or want Rev. James Cartwright, Rev. Luell
to be liked by the rest of the crowd. Some Smith, and Rev. Glenn Smith from the
kids I saw, because of drugs and alcohol, Baptist Sunday School Roard in Nashcan't even be left alone to go to the bath- ville will also assist in the group
room. They have bodyguards-straight conferences.
Rev. Jay Brown, of the Department of
jackets. Drugs made them crazy, lifeless, helpless. I wish to give back the Evangelism of the Kentucky Baptist
$200.00 and ask your wonderfw group to Convention, will be directing the
sponsor a drug and alcohol awareness conference.
program for the kids and parents in this
community. I want to do something to
help others, and I hope, as a group, you
can use this money to hire guest
speakers who can tell everyone about
what drugs and alcohol can do to your
body and mind.
In Floid'Coqnty' $8.00
Baptist Evangelism
Area Conference Set
Subscription
Rates P.er Yea,r
Eha~lnM4.nbEky,$JO
REVI.VAL
Of
DINWOOD
COMMUNITY CHURCH
Beginning
SUNDAY, FEBRUARY12
7 P.M.
EYEIYONE WELCOMECOME AND IE WITH US.
lnlatir Rev. Gus Case
Outside
SINGING AND
PREACHING
You Are Invited
First Presbyterian Church
North Lake Drive
SALISBURY
METHODIST CHURCH
aubaqip~,
no
lorf&er
ewWaiJon ....
m•lled
to
aubac:rlben~
Wtscri,~ . ., lite ...... tr.
The F1oyct.Founty Tlmea
Box391
•
Preatonabura,
Ky. 41653
WORSHI
Church School 10:00 a.m.
Morning Worship 11:15 a.m.
Feb. 11 at 7 p.m.
EVERYONE WELCOM_E.
2-ll·lt.
FIRST ASSEMBLY
OF GOD
GOSPEL SINGING
West PrestoMbtq, Ky.
COW CREEK
FREE WILL BAPTIST CHURCH
WADE MARTIN HUGHES
Pastor
Sunday School
.. 9:45a.m.
Morning Worship .
. .. 11 a.m .
Evening Worship ...
7 p.m.
WednesdayPrayerStudy 7p.m .
Sat., Feb. 11-7 p.m.
Featuring: Gospel Harvesters, Pigeon
Church Singers, Deliverance Singers,
Jackie Powers Family
E'IERYONE INVITED.
Rev. George David GarreH, Pastor
Auxier Freewill
Baptist Church
GOSPEL SING
Sunday School ... 10:00 a.m.
Morning Worship .... 11 a.m.
Evening Worship .. 6:00p.m.
Prayer Meeting
~Thursday ....... 6:30p.m.
at
LANCER
BAPTIST CHURCH
Feb. 11 at 7:00 p.m.
Pastor, Eldel' Douglas Burkett
Asst. Pastor Clyde Bowling
Fearurlng:
The Arbormen and
The True Believers
12·14-tf.
I
Southern
Bartist
2-8-1t.
I
~}.·
I
I Cor. Chapters 12, 13, and 14
Each Thursday Evening 7 p.m.
Teaching by Rev. Mike Manual
BETSY LAYNE, KENTUCKY 41605
The Betsy Layne United Methodist Women's Society has just published their 2nd edition of their favorite recipes. To order a copy, please
fill out the order form, or contact Mrs. G. H. Blackburn at (606) 478-5410.
The cost is $5.00, plus $1.00 postage and handling.
Name _________________________________
Ad~---------------------------------
City & State,_____________
~
hone No._ __
Send order form to:
Betsy Layne United Methodist Church
%Mrs. G. H. Blackburn
Rt. 1, Box 1
Betsy Layne, Kentucky 41605
ETERNAL PUNISHMENT
Yes. God is going to punish Sinners, (un-saved), forever in Hell. 2 Thes. 1: 7-9, Matthew 25: 31-46, Romans 6:23
•Jl,ev. 20: 11-15, Matthew 18: 8-9.
Some people think, Rom. 6:23 refers to Physical Death
Only. Not so, Paul is saying, Sin entered the world. As
a result it brought Physical Death. It also brought
Spiritual Death. (Eternal separation from God), in Hell.
This is referred to as the Second Death, for the un-saved.
Rev. 20: 14-l:>.
Those who do not get right with God in this life by obeying the Gospel of Christ, Mark 16:15-16, and live faithful
until death, II Peter 2:20-22, will live in the torments of
·Hell forever and ever.
Hell, (Eternal Punishment) for the wicked, <un-saved)
will last just as long as Heaven will for the Saved.
Hell, (Eternal Punishment) for the wicked, will be just
as real, as Heaven will be for the Saved.
Eternal, Everlasting are the same, Matthew 25:41-46,
Jude v.7.
If you have questions or comments, about this article,
please contact,
Prestonsburg Church of Christ
%Bennie Blankenship
P.O. Box 547
Prestonsburg, KY 41653
WAYLAND, KENTUCKY
Sunday School 11 a.m.
Evening Worship 7 p.m.
Wednesday Prayer Service 7 p.m.
Saturday Evening Worship 7 p.m.
Ada Mosley. Pastor
Everyone Welcome.
r".--
FIRST
UNITED
METHODIST
CHURCH
.60 si):-'Arnold Ave., Prestonsburg
Dr. Ted Nicholas, Minister
Sunday School .... .... . . 9:4?
Morning Worship .... .. 11:00
Junior and Senior UMYF2:30
. Rhythmic Choir .. .. .. .. .4:30
Wesley Bell Sh0ir ..... : . 5: 15
Evening Service . . . . . .. 7: 00
· A CHRISTIAN WELCOME
AWAITS YOU.
All The Earth Shall Worship Thee. 12_14-tf.
SUN., WDOC AM-11:00
EPISCOPAL
CHURCH
COME
WORSHIP
WITH US
AT
I EPISCOPAL!
PRF.STONSBliRG. Kf;STl '('K\.
The First Church of God
~1653
SUIIDAYS
University
Dr., PrestoiSbarg, Ky.
KEVI~ COLLI~S.
Pastor
SUNDAY:
Sunday School . .
. 9:45p.m.
Morning Worship . . . 10:45 a.m.
6:ru p.m.
Evening Service
TUESDAY~
Prayer Encounter
WEDNESDAY :
PrayerService .
7:00a.m.
7:00p.m.
WDOC-AM
2:00 p.m. Sundays
EVERYONE WELCOME
Location:
Prestonsburg
Christian Academy
Riverside Drive
Prestonsburg, Ky.
WAYLAND
UNITED
METHODIST
CHURCH
For more information
886-1688
Everyone Welcome
Pastor Rev. D. Curry
;-
2·1·3t~
Prestonsburg, Kentucky 41653
Spurlock Fork of Middle Creek
SERVICES
FITZPATRICK
/
FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH
West Prestonsburg, Ky. ·
Across From Clark School
1U:OO a.m.
Sunday School
Morning Worship
... . 11 a.m.
Sun. Evening Worship .6:00p.m.
•except wh1!n school 1s outl 7:00 p.m .
Wed. Bible Study
7:00p.m.
Youth Church for ages 5·10
during SWiday Morning Worship
•NURSERY PROVIDED•
REV. JOHN WOODS, Pastor
Sunday Sehool
.. . .
. . . . 10:00 a.m.
I ('las sf'S for all agf's 1
Sunday Morning Worship Service . II :00 a.m.
Sunday Evening Service . ......... 7:00p.m.
Wednrsday·Prayn and Bible Study7 :OOp.m.
A church with a message
for children of all ages.
Sunday School
9:45a.m.
Morning Worship
11 a.m .
<Nursery Provided>
Come and grow with us!
WEYMAN McGUIRE. Pastor
:l511-4419
CATHOLIC CHURCHES
Of Floyd Co1nty
Welcome You
St. Theodore. Prestonsburg
7 p.m., Sat: 11 a.m. Sun.
St. Juliana. Martin
5 p.m Sat.: 9 am Sun.
RADIO PROGRAMS
Sun.-WIIIDJ Marlm
ll.ffi am
Sun.-WDOC·FM Prestonsburg 11:00 a.m .
Wed - WDOC Prestonsburg
Fri -WRLV Salyersville
10:55 a .m
7:50 r. .m .
Pastor: Father Ralph Beiting
285-3254
rn
!EVERYONF. IS ALWAYS WF.J.('OME !
PHII.IPPIASS 2: 16
••HOLDING FORTH THE WORD OF
I.IFE .. :·
Dan Heintzelman-Pastor
Box 850, Martin. Ky.'4164!J
Parsonage Phone-2R.';-:1444
.. i\ Christ Centered Church
Built On Lovt>"
ACTS 2:1-47
~~1.£
II c~
PRESTONSBURG
MAYTOWN
UNITED
METHODIST
CHURCH
The growing church for
the growing Christian.
1\'U TO BE LIKE THE lEitiJ.
Betsy Layne Meth-
ZION
DELIVERANCE
TAKINACLE
.10 a.m.
11 a.m .
7p.m.
7p.m .
Taylor 1. . Biggs. Pastor
Phont>: 1!1!6-ROH7
t.45 u.-CIIIrdt
Schol and lillie Class
11 a.11.-llely O..•lrio~
Sponsored by Rock of
Revelation Church
~~~
Sunday School
Morning Worship
Evening Worship.
Wednesday Worship
SUNDAY
Sunday School . . ........ 10 a.m.
Worship Service .... .. ... 11 a .m.
E"ening Service ......... .6 p.m.
WEDNESDAY
Prayer Meeting ....... . .. 7 p.m.
CLIFFORD H. AUSTIN, Pastor
·.
Sunday School. ..
_ 9:45a .m.
Morning Worship .. . . 11 a.m .
Evening Worship ........ 7 p.m.
Wednesday
Prayer Meeting
7 p.m .
H. Bailey Sadler, Pastor
Visitors Expected
7-21-t£.
"The Church Where Exciting
Things Are Happening"
Highland Avenue
Freewill Baptist
Church
McOowell, Ky.
Special Teaching Classes
on:
Baptism of Holy Ghost
Spiritual Gifts
~\·~
Preston$burc, Ky.
Pastor
FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH
AnENTION!
1oGt
710 11111le An.,
SUNDAY SCHOOL
10:45 A.M.
Wlfh Rev. Mabry Holbrook
and The Born Free Singers
EVERYONE INVmO
9:30A.M.
REV. TIMOTHY D. JESSEN
Pastor
....... .f'O..........IIandate
Times, Bec:auM.,Of Inc,...._
mall'lna cost., ~tlc:ea.., ~~
c
To the
at the
K.muc:ky, $12.50
.....,....~.-..,. .onwrap
p-;. or em )fqur ~PY: of The'
Eight
Section
ri~C.t
CHURCH OF CHRIST
SOUTH LAKE DRIVE
LORD'S DAY
BIBLE CLASS .•.................... 10:00 A.M.
WORSHIP •........................ 10:45 A.M.
EVENING WORSHIP ............. 6 P.M. STD. TIME
7 P.M. D.S.T. TIME
WEDNESDAY
BIBLE STUDY .......................... 7 P.M.
RADIO BROADCAST
WPRT MONDAY thru FRIDAY 9:30 A.M.
WMDJ SUNDAY 9 A.M.
"Come Let Us Reason Toitther" lsailh 1:18
Evilnlelist Bennie Blankenship 886-3379, 886-6223
LOOKING FOR SOMETHING DIFFERENT?
Morning Worship .. .... 9:30a.m.
Sunday School. .. . .... 11:00 a.m .
Youth Group ....... ... 5:00p.m.
Evening Worship . . . . .6: 30 p.m.
Come and grow with us!
PROCLAIMING
NEW TESTAMENT
CHRISTIANITY
No Book but the Bible .
No Creed but Christ.
No Name but Christian.
FIRST CHRISTIAN CHURCH
429 No. Arnold A\e.
Prestonsburg
Sunday School
Morning Worship
Evening Worship .
Wed. Bible Study .
Weyman McGuire, Pastor
358-4419
10 a.m.
11 a .m .
6p.m
7 p.m. ,
Walt Staude. Preacht>r
886-8773
. _. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
i·-~t_.r .:. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ..-to·28--t~r
FIRST .ASSEMBLY OF GOD
Lorie Vannucci, Pastor
Phone 285-3051
Martin, Ky.
s·unday Sc;)lool
. . . . 10 a.m.
Childrest's Church . . . . . .. ll a.m .
Morning Worship ....... 11 a.m.
Youth Worship . . . . . . .6p.m.
Evangelistic Service. ...
. . 7 p.m.
Wednesday, 7 p.m . .... Family Night
Attend Services At The
FIRST CHURCH OF GOD
(Little Paint) % mile off Route 1428
Between Prestonsburg & East Point, Where
"THE DIFFERENCE IS WORTH THE DISTANCE"
SUNDAY SCHOOL ...... . 10:00 a .m.
MORNING WORSHIP ... 10:4S a.m.
YOUTH SERVICE ...... .. 6:00p.m.
EVENING WORSHIP ..... 6:30p.m.
BIBLE STUDY <WED.> ... 7:00p.m .
<NURSERY PROVIDED>
Bible Study
. . 9:45 a.m.
Motning Worship . • 11 a.m.
Evening Worship 5:30 p.m.
Mid-Week Ptayer SeJ¥ice7 p.m.
RADIO BROADCAST
WQHY-FM 95.5
MON.-FRI., 8-8: 15 A.M.
ROY 1-. TINCHER. Pastor
FIRST AVEIIUE, DOWNTOWII PRESTONSBURG
NURSERY PROVIDm AND PL£NTY OF PARKING
REV. SrEVE HOPKINS, PASTOR. MHIISTER OF MUSIC, GUS KALOS.
~Iorning
'~n·irt
broadcast
lhe. ll : t.;. WQHY FM 95.:;
•
�Wednesday, February 8, 1984
The Floyd County Tlmea
OVEN-READY HOMEMADE
•
MEAT LOAF
$1.39LI,
·OPEN Sro 10
1
PH: 478-5275
HAROLD, KY •.
EVERY DAY
$1
98
SIRLOIN TIP ROAST ..................
gc
CHICKEN LIVER .............................
c
GROUND BEEF ......... ." ..................... 98
HAM HOCKS ................................. 69c
69c
SLICED PORK LIVER .......................
1USDA CHOICE
LB.
•
FRESH
4·
LB.
FRESH
·
LB.
La.
FREsH
,
LB.
Siiotr ••as ........................ ·~~· ..... -~.89c
HORMEL DERIND
·1
SLAB
BACON
IDAHO
POTATOES
51.75
SIRLOIN
nP
STEAK
.
10-LB. BAG
$219
USDA
1
6-0Z. PIC.
RADISHES
ASST'D. COLORS CHARMIN
BATH TISSUE
4-Rouggc
RED OR GOLDEN
WIIESAP
Pkg.
APPLES ..... ~~:
.·
.Turnip Lover's Delight
Income Tax by
The People's Choice
WITH 20 OFFICES throughout the tri-state area,
DanTax is becoming a force to be reckoned with.
With highly trained tax preparers and fees that
start at $7.50 for both a Federal and State return,
more and more people are choosing DanTax as
the firm to assist them in filing their Income Tax
Returns. Thousands of taxpayers in Kentucky,
West Virginia and Ohio have enjoyed the pleasant, professional atmosphere of a DanTax office.
Do yourself a favor. This year give DanTax a trv.
DanTax
LB!
FREE DELIVERY WITH MINIMUM S20 PURCHASE
WITHIN 3 MILE RADIUS.
• PRICES EFFECTIVE THRU FEB. 12.
• NOT RESPOWSIBLE FOR PRINTER'S ERRORS
• WE HAVE FEED FOR LIVESTOCK.
• WE WELCOME FEDERAL FOOD ST~MPS•
UK Gets Its Largest Gift
c • c\.s1ett'«
The University of Kentucky has treatment of cancer patients and is
received the largest single cash gift in scheduled to be operational next year.
Both phases of the cancer center are
its history-$4,877,776 from the Lucille
being financed with private gifts and the
Parker Markey Charitable Trust.
• ALL TYPES FURNITURE
The gift, accepted officially (Jan. 25) total cost is estimated to be about $17
by the UK board of trustees, is part of million.
• TRUCKS, CARS, BOATS
The second building of the new cancer
a $5 million matching-fund grant from ·
• CHURCH PEWS, ETC.
the estate of the late Lucille Parker center will be named in honor of the late
LoctJttd
apptox. 2 m/111 on Cow CtHk
Markey. It will be used for the construc- Dorothy Enslow Combs.
Mrs. Combs was the wife of Lexington
tion of a comprehensive cancer treatcall naw, 874-9n5 ·
1ment and research facility at UK's horseman Leslie Combs of Spendthrift ·
Farm.
· Albert B. Chandler Medical Center.
Mrs. Markey was owner of Calumet ----------------------------------------------- ~
Farm in Lexington, one of the most
famous horse farms in the world, from
1950 until her death in 1982.
"Mrs. Markey was so generous during her lifetime, and now this latest gift
from her estate will serve as a lasting
memorial to her support for cancer care
and research," said Dr. Otis Singletary,
president of the University of Kentucky.
"The most important part about her
generosity, of course, is that it will
benefit thousands of Kentuckians and
other people throughout our nation and
world for years to come," Singletary
said.
Mrs. Markey was an early supporter
of cancer care and research at the
university, contributing $5,192,763 during her lifetime. Remembering this supKy. Highway 122 (Left Beaver Road)
port in her estate, Mrs. Markey bequeathed $641,800 to the continued pursuit of the cancer research project. With
285-3232
this most recent gift, the generosity of
. -.
Mrs. Markey has now research
$10,712,021.
This latest gift insures construction of
Phase II, the research component of the
2-1-2
cancer center. Phase I, already under
construction, will focus on the care and
-------------------------------:------------'------:--------
\)ft'0 we do:cO·
Dan Tax.
u•
.
·v r. Virginia de Guzman
DanTax
Coal Run Village
Pikeville, Ky.
437-41 ~-
J$1
79 c
CHOI~
has joined
112 West Court St.·
Prestonsburg, Ky.
86-995
-.- . i-u-1it:
• ·-
~
·Dr. Ray de Guzman,
.r-·
I
General Surgeon,
who is affiiia ted with the
McDowell Appalachian Regional Hospital,
It's All Here
in the de Guzman Clinic;
Jobie Puckett is shown with one of the
largest turnips his farm on Middle Creek
has produced in many years. This whopper weighed in at 5% pounds and
measured 24 inches around.
NOW
'Frontline' Probes
Hunger And Politics
* Tanning Salon
Several weeks ago the Presidential
Task Force on Food Assistance in
America submitted its controversial
report. "Frontline" examines the commission's findings and tak~ a look at the
evidence presented by private groups on
"Bread, Butter, and ·P olitics," airing
Monday, February 20, at 8 p.m. on KET.
* Aerobics
10 a.m.-2 p.m.
5 p.m.-7 p.m.
* Equipment for
all parts of
the body
* Free Nursery
Mon.-Wed.-Frl.
9:30-11
*
~
--~
Danskin--t.eotards and Tights
Y2
PRICE
For the shape of tomorrow,
Start today.
PHONE 874-2800
-l-
t.
2 2
~~~~tl:tl~
At the center of the controversy is the
number of people facing starvation in
America. A pitched debate has raged in
the press, beginning with Edwin Meese's
December 9 comment: Some people go
to soup kitchens "because the food is
free and... that's easier than paying for
it." On December 11, the Chicago
Tribune responded: "More than one
million residents in the Chicago area
suffer from severe hunger and often go
to bed unsure whether they have food for
the next day."
President Reagan, in an effort to so,Ive
the dilemma, appointed a ~~ commission to explore . .the"' problem of
hunger in Ameri6. Several private
groups have castigated the commission's findings and its blue ribbon sponsors as being grossly inaccurate.
"Frontline" is a production of
WGBH/Boston.
Martin, Kentucky
Dr. Virginia de Guzman-Clinic Days;
Tuesdays & Thursdays, 8 a.m. to 5 p.m.
You can always count on Jerry's for
value. Like our Husky Breakfast ...
21arge eggs, cooked to order,. 3 sizzling
bacon slices, 2 pancakes, syrup and
chilled juice-all at a great price. Come
in and see for yourself how at Jerry's,
value is one more way ...
....
,..•
.....
~
".
•••
.
~·
•
1-11-at.
..•
••
�The Floyd County nmes
Wednesday, February 8, 1984
Reynold D. Nelson
Reynold D. Nelson, 63, of Dwale, died
Friday at the Highlands Regional
Medical Center following an extended
illness.
A son of the late Will and Mary Clifton Nelson, he was born March 15, 1920
at Dwale. A retired employee of the C
and 0 Railroad Company, he was an Army veteran of World War Two, and was
a member of the V. F. W. Post 5837, Prestonsburg.
He is survived by his wife, Mrs. Sally
May Nelson; two sons, William (Butch)
Harold Nelson, and Tommy Glenn
Nelson, of Dwale; four daughters,
Patricia Dillion, of Prestonsburg,
Phyllis Davis and Anna Sue Gooch, both
of Danville, and Joey Adams, of Dwale:
a sister, Helen Crisp, of Danville; nine
grandchildren, and two great-grandchildren.
Military rites were performed by the
Auxier D A.V. Post 18 at funeral services conducted Monday at 1 p.m. at the
Floyd E<'uneral Home chapel with
Church of God mimsters officiating.
Burial was made in the Richmond cemetery.
Mrs. Stella Crum
Funeral services were cor.ducted at 11
am. Tuesday at the Arkansas Church of
Christ for Mrs. Stella Crum, 76, of Martin. who died Sunday at the Highlands
Regional Medical Center.
Mrs. Crum was born February 8, 1907
at Martin and was a daughter of the late
Preston and Sarah Conn. She was a
member of the Church of Christ at
Arkansas Creek, and was preceded in
death by her husband, Oliver H. Crum,
who died in February, 1950.
Survivors include five sons, Ellis
Crum, of Paintsville, Clifford Crum, of
Banner, Ballard Crum, of Eastern, and
Elmer and Charles Crum, Jr., both of
:\lartin: three daughters, Norma Cole,
of Battle Creek, Mich., Nancy Crum and
B('atrice Conn. both of Martin; a sister,
(Jma Hamilton, of Allen; 24 grandcl•ildren, and 16 great-grandchildren.
The Revs. Ronnie Sammons and
J)(•!mar Jervis officiated, and burial was
made in the Adkins cemetery at Arkansas Creek under direction of the Floyd
Funeral Home.
Mrs. Josephine Moore
Obituaries
Mrs. Barbara Gibson
Mrs. Barbara Thornsbury Gib~on, 70,
of Indian Hills, died Jamw1 y 31, at her
home following S\r. t:xtended illness.
A dlughter of the late Dock and Minda Caudill Thornsbury, she was born
May 12, 1913 at Mullins Branch in Knott
county. She was a member of the United
Baptist Church.
She is survived by her husband, Jerry
Gibson, four sons, Pearl Gibson, of
Belleville, Mich., Henry H. Gibson, of
Grawn, Mich., Bass H. Gibson, of Willis,
Mich., and Robert Thomas, of Pensacola, Fla.; two sisters, Emma Morre, of
Lackey and Myrtle Wallen, of Ypsilanti,
Mich., 13 grandchildren, and 13 greatgrandchildren.
Funeral services were conducted Friday at 1 p.m. at the United Baptist
Church at West Prestonsburg with
Elders Richmond Shepherd and David
B. Mollette officiating. Burial was made
in the Wallen family cemetery at West
Prestonsburg under direction of the
Carter Funeral Home.
Pallbearers were Ralph a:nd John
Wallen, Melvin, Junior, and Jerry
Coger, Johnny Casto, Virgil Moore, and
James Clevenger.
Bennie Lafferty
Retired Allen merchant, Bennie Lafferty, 75, died Monday at the Humana
Hospital in Somerset.
He was a son of the late James
William and Betty Lafferty and was
born April 28, 1908 at Bull Creek. A
member of the Allen United Methodist
Church, he was a Sunday school teacher
for 14 years, a postmaster for eight
years, and had served as an Allen police
judge for 12 years. He was a member of
the Allen City council
He is survived by his wife, Mrs. Gretchen Hall Lafferty; a son, Bennie Lynwood Lafferty, of Allen; a sister, Mrs.
Tincy Crisp, of Allen, two grandchildren,
and one great-grandchild.
Funeral services will be conducted at
11 a.m. tomorrow <Thursday) at the
Allen United Methodist Church. Burial
will be made in Davidson Memorial
Gardens at Ivel. Visitation may be made
at the Hall Funeral Home.
Carl Hall
Carl <Budgel Hall, 65, of Martin, died
Monday at the St. Joseph's Hospital in
Lexington after a short illness.
He was born January~:n. 1919 at Emma, and was a son of the late Willie and
Laura Hall. He was a retired coal miner.
He is survived by his wife, Mrs.
Virginia Hall; a son, Carl D. Hall, of
Banner, and one granddaughter.
Funeral services will be conducted
tomorrow <Thursday) at 11 a.m. at the
Faith Bible Church in Martin. Burial
will be made in the Davidson Memorial
Gardens at Iv~lj?uder dir~ction of the
Hall Funeral HoUle. Visitation is at the
funeral home.
Elizabeth Jeanne Patton
Elizabeth Jeanne Patton, one-day-old
daughter of Glenn and Carol Bellware
Patton, of Martin, died Wednesday,
February 1, at Our Lady of the Way
Hospital at Martin.
Surviving, in addition to the parents
are the paternal grandmother, Mrs ..
Irelene Patton, of Martin, and greatgrandmother, Mrs. Clare Miller, in
Michigan; the maternal grandparents,
Mr and Mrs. Richard A. Bellware, of
Cocoa Beach, Fla., and great-grandmother, Mrs. Verna Bellware, of
Florida.
Graveside services were conducted at
3 p.m., Wednesday, by Sister Marie
Gangwish, and burial was made in the
Martin cemetery under direction of the
Hall Funeral Home.
SANDY VALLEY
MONUMENT
t BUILDING STONE CO•• Inc.
874·2273 • ALLEN, KY.
"THE AREA'S OLDEST ESTAIUSHED,
IIONUMENT RRM."
BEST QUAUTY MEMORIALS
QUICK, EffiCIENT SUVICE
AND INSTALLAnOtt
SEE OUR LARGE DISPLAY OF
COLORED t GRAY GRANITES
LOCATED ON OLD U.S. 23
IN NEW ALLEN
Thomas J. Stratton
Thomas J . Stratton, 74, of Flatwoods,
formerly of Betsy Layne, died Saturday
at Our Lady of Bellefonte Hospital in
Russell, following a short illness.
A son of the late William Lewis and
Nancy Stratton, he was born September
6, 1909. He was a retired machinist, and
a member of the International Pentecostal Church of Christ at Flatwoods.
He is survived by his wife, Mrs. Della
E. Layne Stratton; two daughters,
Dolores Ilene Conn, of Garden City,
Mich., and Nancy Ann Pennington, of
Flatwoods; one brother, Kelly Stratton,
of Satsuma, Florida; eight grandchildren, and seven great-grandchildren.
The Revs. Ellis Cornette and Tom
Geissinger officiated at funeral services
conducted at 1 p.m. Tuesday at the Hall
Funeral Home chapel. Burial was made
in Davidson Memorial Gardens.
Russell Spencer
Mrs. Josephine A. Moore, 91, of Riverside Drive, died Friday at the residence
of her daughter, Mrs. Billie Sievers, in
Evansville, Indiana, following a prolonged illness.
She was a daughter of the late Jake
and Mary Etta Burchett Setser and was
born March 24, 1892 at John's Creek. She
had been a member of the Church of
Christ for 71 years.
In addition to her daughter, she is survived by her husband, Lenna B. Moore;
two sisters, Nellie P. Pemberton, of
Pomona, Calif. and Mrs. Okie Hunt, of
Prestonsburg, and one granddaughter,
Miss Arlene Sievers, of the Netherlands.
Funeral services were conducted Sunday at 2 p.m. at the Floyd Funeral Home
with the Rev. Timothy Jessen officiating . Burial was made in the Richmond cemetery.
Pallbearers were Donald Hunt, Shannon Greer, Dewey Greer, Dr. Alan Joe
Hyden, John Earl Hunt, Mark Stephens,
Clifford Latta, Larry Parker Totten, and
Adrian Laff~rty.
Irene Layne Elkins
Mrs. Irene Layne Elkins, 73, of
Harold, died Tuesday, January 31, at
U.K. Medical Center in Lexington.
Born January 24, 1911, she was a
daughter of the late James B. and Ollie
Hall Layne and was a member of the
Church of Christ. Her husband, Ned
Elkins, preceded her in death in 1981.
She is survived by two sons, Robert
Elkins, of Frankfort, and Von Elkins, of
Nokesville, Va.; two daughters, Mrs.
Billie Meek, of Paintsville, Mrs. Lana
Scott, of Servierville, Tenn.; a stepdaughter, Mrs. Joann Keathley, of South
Williamson; two brothers, Arthur
Layne, in Michigan, and Otis Layne, of
Cattletsburg; four sisters, Mrs. Lynn
Hubbard, of Jacksono 0., Mrs. Lucille
Craft, of Flatwoods, Mrs. Mary Lee and
Mrs. Anna Sue Clark, both of Harold,
and seven grandchildren.
Funeral services were conducted last
Friday at 1 p.m·. in the chapel of the J.W.
Call and Son Funeral Home in Pikeville
by the officiating minister, Jerry Scott.
Burial was made in the Jim Layne
cemetery at Harold.
Section Two, Pqe Ten
Two-Car Accident
Friday, Claims One
of
CARTER FUNERAl HOME
47 SDm, LAKE DRIVE • PRESTONSBUIC
'PhCJne 8&6-2774
Prestonsburg 874-9633 Pikeville 432-4721
REA LTOR
RESIDENnAL:
·.
DANA-one 1cre m/1 wilt! 1 65x14 no1rty now mobllft home. 2 bdnns, 2 btths,
flre,etee. Lots of rootn far p•klnJ.
AllEN-A hlndy1111n's special offered at price you won't want to pan up. Two
bedrooms, lqo kitchen with cabinets, ps heat. HGUso has been rllsod tbovo
floed plain doubllnl llvlncarea. A barpln 1t $22,500. Owner will f111111ca on LAND
CONTIACT.
woe...,~rnlna
NEW ALlEN-Over 2,000-sq. ft. of llvlnl sp~ee in tlis 4-b*m. bridl home. Cor..
crete drive 1nd patio, badl y1rd fenced in. Conveniently loated to school, chw·
chos anlll shopptnc.
UTnE MUD CII£EX-L.-te 2-bb. home on 1 aero more or less. City wltor 1nd
ps, one llrce bkt1. now belnl used as a e~ny-out store. Call for mortlnfo..-tlon.
TRAM-10 1cros mort or loss with thrH txlstlnc houses. Lots of room for more
dnoleptnent If desired. Only five minutes from U.S. 23.
PRESTONSaJIG-Spadous, 2-b*m., 1 '12-bath, town houses located In 1 most
doslreble nel....rhood. ldul for people with little time for upkeep. P1tlo, woodbll'nlnc flroplaca, central lir/heat, w1shor 1nd dryer hook-11p, superior Insulation
1nd seund-control.
•
SAUSIURY-Five (5) triCts of lancl on Loft lenor Ck. C111 be sold In sop•lte
tr~cts ar 111 whole. One triCt Is 100xl00 with 1 1,000-sq. fl homo IIIII 1 s11tr11e
bktJ. C1ll if lntarosted in 111 o.- 1 part.
I!
1:
I:
AWN AREA-Larce, 3-bdrm., homo located ne1r tho Allen coif ctuno. Mltif
spedal feltwes lnduclln1 flroplteo, duslc kitchen, ciSMisher, and 1501300-fl
lot.
,~
I~
VACATION PROPUTY In Myrtle BelCh, S.C. lS.ft. pw1111nently sit-up tr1Uor 011
Dco1n Likes P1rtl. Screened-In porch 1nd 1ir-c:ondlttoninJ, Enlly rented when not
In use by owner. Only 514,000.
JOHNSON C0.-70-acre f•m just 'h·mile off new liwy. 460, betwHn Sllyersvlllo
1nd Paintsville, 10 1cros bottomllnd with older house 1nd bam. All mlner1l rilhts
included. ktul for suiMIIvlcllnJ.
r:
1:
,,
t.
I~
I~
I•
WAYUND-3-bdnn. homt on Front Street. Block exterior. Moderately priced.
UTTL£ PAIIT-8ro11thl111
1'00111 1nd more can be yours In tlis 3-b*lll., 2-bath,
bridl homo sl1uttod on 10 ICI"OS m/1. C1ll1bout the MANY other features.
:
BETSY LAYJI£-flut 2-bdrm. homo in Piko-floylll holow. Roc!-" to $34,000.
NOTICE OF
INTENTION TO MINE
AgEAQE ANP , • •RCIAL
'rR£STOJISIURG AR£A-Ow•r fl111ndn1 IVIIII•to for this 3.4-tcre lo¥11/sllptly
rolfinl trtct. A pr;•e location for sln&lelmult.-flllllly development. Owner flnano1111 ~ltfllow down payment to qu~llfled ..rty.
MARnN AIEA-35 1cros, 33 hilly woodt.ll 1nd 2 1c'" of level bottom lind,
lec:~tad 3 Illites west of Mlrtln.
PR£STOJISIUIIG- A Cood cem.~wdll lot frentinl on U.S. 23 • • HI&IUnds
Hospital.
MARnN-If yau 1ro Interested In 1 thrlvlnl llllsl•ou, lot us sll• you 0110 of tho
111ost doslrlble ,rop,orties In Mlrtln. Three (3) very successful bninessos
opw1tln1 1t present with •e1 for one otfler. Alse, a splldous 2·1t*m. 1pt.
upstlln- Call for specific dotllls.
L-..,llt""'A
..IID~Y~IKE~G~ES~TA~TES~-~Lq_e_r-estrt~ct~od-:-r-osl':'"d:"'e~nt':"'ll~lb:""ul':'ldl~n-l-:lo~t:-s-ne-.-.:-,..
nn'""y':WII:::1ey~
Stlte P1rtl and lust mllllltes from U.S. 23 1nd Hwy. 80. 511,000 tnd up.
AUXIER- Comcniently loc:1ted residential bide. lot. $12,000.
MAGOFRJI CO.-tO 1cros 11111 the Short Fork Ck. of Bll'ninl Forti 1nd ICijoininl Mt.
Plrtlw1y 1101r Sllyersvlllo.
1 ,~
PRATER CII££K4 llrce relidOfltillltulldina lots-one !l'lth chilled nter nil.
~FOR RENT
.
BETSY UYII£-2-'IIIrm. hotne In 1 nice nel&hbomood.
A~Z-b*M. '*no with f1l bl10111ent. Within wtlklnl cistance of school.
PRESTONSBURG-NEW TOW~HOUS~. 2 bdrm., 1~2 bath.
JOE D. W£DDIJICTON, Broker 874-1633 or 432-4721
DDitOTHY HARRIS, lroker-Safos 874-1633 or 874-2050
DOUG HICKS, Silos 478-2Sl8-STEPII£N R. AlLEN, Silos 116-1040
SUZANtE REYNOLDS, _S.Ies 874-9361-RANDALl SltWAIT, S1les 639-6950
BIG BEDROOM CLOSE OUT
SALE
RON'S BARGAIN BARN
.
'·
PHONE 886-1551 ·
MOU~TAIN ·PARKWAY,; PRESTONSBURG
ALSO, A LIMITED QUANTITY OF THE
HARD TO FIND CABBAGE PATCH DOLLS
WILL BE AVAILABLE FOR SALE THIS SAT.
WHILE QUANTITIES LAST.
fromColeco
SIX-PIECE
..
T"'-t-.,IOIUie-.,fl.oo.......... tw<~M,.,...I""th
.,.,...~...,.,ll',..~ ·nNocl_
............ .......O"'tt.,...&II-O'&MCINt-1
"o;ll ~ II 0'-11•11 ~ O,"'t • QUt<<:l , I
PIOC:•II f Ke>e'l•lll:l lOr n t lltr(Jnl t t t ~CI
!Nt~T ... I"'o,,tttlmoti'O'IOOI . .•IOI~el\0
~·~'~·· ~lllmlllil l
.
Regular Price 1 699"-1799"
LIVING ROOM SUITES .......... s4ggaa
QUEEN SIZE MAnRESS .......... 58911
BUNK BEDS . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . sggoo
COME SEE US. WE.MA VE A BETTER DEAL THAN
'. ~90 DAYS SAME ~ CASH."
..
PUBLIC NOTICE
Six-Eleven Quick Stop doing business
at r 2 mile west of Garrett, on Rt. 80, by
Emil Hall, Box 195, Leburn,• Ky. 41831,
hereby declares his intention to apply for
a license as a retail package beer dealer
under the state law.
ltpd.
REAL ESTATE
INEZ-3-bocWoom "-ne on 2 1cros m/1. PriCid in mil-20's. SPECIAL FINANCING
AVAilABLE.
Pursuant to Two-Acre-or-Less
Application Number 836-0087
In accordance with the provisions of
Mrs. Susie Hughes Adkins KRS 365.055, notice is hereby given that
Mrs. Susie Hughes Adkins, 87, of Goble Mining, Inc., has filed ::1n applicaHueysville, died Sunday at her home tion for a permit for a surface coal minfollowing a long illness.
ing and reclamation operation of apBorn August 2, 1896 at Gunlock, she proximately 2.0 acres located .75 miles
was a daughter of the late Daniel and northwest of Banner in Floyd county.
Martha Prater Hughes. A member of
The proposed operation is approxthe Regular Baptist Church for 38 years, imately .5 miles northwest from 23/460
she was preceded in death by her hus- junction with Daniels Creek Road and
band, Jack Adkins, in 1953.
located .10 miles north of Levisa Fork.
Survivors include three sons, Orville The latitude is 37' 36' 48". The longitude
and Tramble Adkins, both of Hueysville;
is 82' 42' 53".
and Ezra Adkins, of Marshall, Mich.;
The surface area is owned by Emma
two daughters, Mildred Bellamy, of Anthony.
Hueysville, and Christine Vanderpool, of
The proposed operation is located on
Albion, Mich.; two brothers, Billy the Harold U.S.G.S. 71fz minute quadranHughes, of Hueysville, and Jake gle map. The operation will use the conHughes, ~f Kalamazoo, Mich. ; a sister, tour strip method of mining.
Sarah Collins, of Hueysville; 15 grandThe application has been filed for
children, and 29 great-grandchildren.
public inspection at the Department for
Funeral services will be conducted to- Surface Mining Reclamation and En ·
day <Wednesday)' 'at 11 .a.m. at the forcement's Prestonsburg Regional OfPhiladelphia Regular Baptist Church at fice, 503 South Lake Drive. Written comHippo with ministers of the church of- ments, objections, or requests for a perficiating. Burial will be made in the mit conference must be filed with the
Adkins cemetery at Hueysville under Regional Office, 503 South Lake Drive.
direction ·of the Hall Funeral Home.
This is the final advertisement of the ap:Pallbearers were Richard an~ Terry plication; all comments, objecti'lns or
Bellamy, Adam, Adrian, Denver, Jim-· request for a permit conference must be
received within thirty (30) days of toTQY, Steve, and Brent Adkins.
day's date.
lt.
Russell Spencer, 72, of Willard, Ohio,
formerly of Floyd county, died February
1 at the Willard Area Hospital following
a long illness.
John Fredrick Wallace
He was born January 6, 1912, and was
John Fredrick Wallace, 56, of Allen,
a son of the late Martin and Maudie
Moore Spencer. A resident of Willard for ·died Monday at the St. Mary's Hospital
in Huntington, West Virginia .
30 years, he was first married to Mrs.
A son of Mrs. Ruby Campbell Wallace,
Daisy Moore Spencer, who preceded
him in death October 26, 1961. He later of Garrett, and the late O.K. Wallace, he
married Mrs. Ettie Cook Wireman Spen- was born January 31, 1928 at Garrett. An
cer, who survives. A former miner, he operator with the Columbia Gas Comwas employed by Burma Farms in pany at Langley, he was a mem~r of
Celeryville, Oh., and was a member of the First Baptist Church at Martm for
the Little Rebecca Old Regular Baptist two years, and was also a member of the
Garrett D.A.V., Chapter 128, having
Church i~ Plymouth, Ohio.
In addition to his wife, he is survived served with the United States Army durby three sons, J.C. Spencer, ofMore- ing the Korean War.
In addition to his mother, he is survivhead, Ova Spencer, of Hueysville, and
Darvin Spencer, of Prestonsburg; eight ed by his wjfe, Mrs. Pauline Workman
daughters, Mrs. Coletta Bolen, Mrs. Ann Wallace; three brothers, Harry James
Thurston, Mrs. Linda Jones, all of Wallace, of Auxier, Frank Wallace, of
McGuffey, Oh., Mrs. Betty Tuttle, Mrs. Prestonsburg, and Kennith Wallace, of
Gail Sowers, and Mrs. Patti Henry, all Hueysville; two sisters, Wanda Prater,
and Brenda Stephens, both of Kendallof Willard, (Yh., Mrs.Ruih iiowar~.
Mansfield, Oh., Mrs. Muriel Jonnson, ot ville, Indiana.
Funeral services will be conducted at
Shelby, Oh.; five brothers, Lee and Mac
Spencer, both of Apopka, Florida, Ar- 1 p.m. Friday at the Hall Funeral Home
chie Spencer, of Cleveland, Oh., Rush Chapel and burial will be made in the
Spencer, of Martin, and Jay Spencer, of Davidson Memorial Gardens at Ivel.
Willard Oh.; a sister, Mrs. Peacie War- Visitation may be made at the funeral
ren, of Martin; 28 grandchildren, 16 home.
great-grandchildren.
Services were conducted Friday at the
Mitchell Zimbro
Little Rebecca Regular Baptist Church
Mitchell Zimbro, 58, of Benton,. Ill. ,
with Elders Buddy Carty, Newton
Vanderpool, and Claude Ousley offici- formerly of this area, died Tuesday,
ating. Burial was made in the Green- January 31, at the Franklin Hospital in
Benton.
lawn cemetery at Plymouth.
Born May 3, 1925 at Hazard, he was a
Pallbearers were his grandsons,
Russell Lee Spencer, Jerry Tuttle, son of Ella and William Smith Zimbro.
Loren Gayheart, Charlie, Mike and He was employed by Inland Steel Corporation for 31 years and was a veteran
Barry Bolen.
of World War II.
He is survived by his wife, Ruth
Chaney Zimbro; one daughter, Mrs.
Sandra Sm1th, of Benton, Ill.; three sons,
Kenneth and Tim Zimbro, both of Citrus
Springs, Fla., and James Zimbro, of
Sesser, Ill.; two sisters, Mrs. Leah
Napier and Mrs. Vita Bolen, both of
Hazard, and six grandchildren.
Funeral services were conducted last
Friday at the Brayfield Fune:ral Home
in Sesser, Illinois by the Revs. Dan
Williams and Dale Burzyski. Burial was
made in Sesser, Illinois.
JOE D. WEDDINGTON
Leonard Anderson, 65, of McDowell,
was dead on arrival at the McDowell Appalachian Regional Hospital, Friday,
where he was taken shortly after colliding head-on with a pickup truck while
traveling south on Ky. 122.
A witness to the accident told state
police that the Anderson vehicle veered
across the centerline several times
before striking the pickup driven by
Paul Caud1ll, and according to the State
Police a large quantity of alcoholic
beverage was found in Anderson's car.
Caudill, driver of the pickup, was
treated for minor injuries at McDowell
Appalachian Regional Hospital, and
released.
Born March 8, 1918 at McDowell,
Anderson was a son of the late Melvin
and Mary Jane Sizemore Anderson. He
was a disabled dental technician. His
first wife, Gladys Patton Anderson, died
in 1953, and he later married Annie
Tackett Anderson, who survives him .
In addition to his wife, he is survived
by two sons, Willie C. Anderson, of Topmost, and Danny Anderson , of
McDowell; three daughters, Mrs. Donna Rigsby, of Miami, Fla., Mrs. Peggy
Sue Hubbarg and Mrs. Roberta
Hawkins, both of Waynesburg ; three
brothers, Milford G. Anderson, of Dandridge, Tenn., John Anderson, of Fairborn, 0 ., and Richard Anderson, of Lexington; five sisters, Elymas Olsen, of
Cedartown, Ga., Rose Floyd, Mary
Anderson, and Sarah King, all of
McDowell, and Zelia Howell, of Neville,
Ohio. Fourteen grandchildren and two
great-grandchildren also survive.
Funeral services were conducted at 11
a.m., Monday, at the First Baptist
Church of McDowell by the Rev. H.
Billie Sadler, and burial was made in the
family cemetery at McDowell under
direction of the Hall Funeral Home.
• WATER BEDS .. s299°
0
•~i~EnE SETs .. s1ggoo
0
I
USED
• ELECTRIC RANGE
LARGE S~LECTION
USED: FARM TRACTORS
I
AMANA- 18-CU. FT.
• REFRIGERATOR-FREEZER *59911
WHITE
W/ ITDdt
• MAYTAG DRYER . . . . . *349"
W/ lfOcle
1
~
.
II'
�Section Two, ..... l:leven
The Floyd County nmea
/wedneMJay, February 8, 1984
Because the largest percentage of a ban.k 's expenses are
incurred in processing checking account transactions, most
banks charge a nominal fee for this service.
.
.
Like you, we have always felt that charges can become
burdensome. That's why WE base our checking account
charges on AVERAGE balances rather than minimum
balances, like our competitors.
-
DAY
THE BANK JOSEPHINE
BANK Z
BANK Y
Balance
Potential
Charge
Balance
Pot.
Charge
Balance
Pot.
Charge
1
$350
-0-
$350
$4.00
$350
-0-
2
$250
-0-
$250
$5.00
$250
$3.00
3
$300
-0-
$1,000
---
$1,000
---
TOTALS
$900
-0-
$1,600
$5.00
$1,600
$3.00
As you can see, our checking accounts
really DO cost less. In our example your total
balance Is divided by 3. And even though your
balance at The Bank Josephine dropped
below $300 tor one day during the period,
you pay NO service charge since your
AVERAGE balance was $300. Banks Y and z
charge on MINIMUM balances. And even
though your average balance with them was
higher, you will still pay their HIGHEST charge
just because your balance dropped below the
minimum tor only one dayl
AND TALK ABOUT CONVENIENCE!! We have six full-service locations.
Bank Y has four: Bank Z has only one.
You'll find a Bank Josephine location on every maior highway in Floyd
County. And our combined locations offer a total of 102 more banking hours
per week than Bank Y and 208 more than Bank Z. And NONE of OUR locations close for an hour in the middle of a busy Friday.
Now, you know what we mean when we say we're ....AND EASTERN KENTUCKY TOO!
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
Prestonsburg • Garrett • Harold • Allen • Wheelwright
Member F .D.I.C.
�Wedne.day, February 8, 1984
•
Section Two, Page Twelve
The Floyd County Times
SALE DATES: Items and prices
good February 5·11, 1984.
• ~antity Rights Reserved
A SWEETHEART
OFA
MILLIONS
piggly wiggly
we welcome
FOOD STAMP
SHOPPERS
rmm
$$
OF
$$
CASH PRIZES
Prestonsburg, Ky.
TWO
WAYS to PLAY
North Lake Drive
Morrell's Golden Smoke
raos
.o·-······"'···
"u·c·.---·
Boneless
Scratch one bo" only!
If a prize appurs you
win it'
Saw all Match
Num~rs. Ch«k the
store poster each v;sit.
Match any num~r and
win the prize indicated!
Ham
Whole or Half,
6 to 9 lb. avg.
814!
~trand Theatre,
PQcoedW{3 ~
69(:
Chicken . . .
lb.
7 9(:
Piggly Wiggly Grade A
Cut Up Frying
Chicken . . .
1"9
FREE Admission!
Wllh 2 Labels from s..lected Piggly Wiggly rnoducts
Get complete detail• at your nearby Piggly Wiggly!
Sausaget6oz.rou
------=~~'s ARMOUR:{\
lb.
Armour Star Spiced
~~~h~~~.•••.s 159
Buy One 12 oz. pkg. Elm Hill Cooked
SUced Ham . . . • •t'229
and Get One 12 oz. pkg. Elm Hill Sliced
• • • for
8
Gunnoe's Whole Hog
Advacfuu
at 12 noon
will show
Piggly Wiggly Grade A
Whole Frying
BoJ~a
Prestonsburg
Armour Star Spiced
ropicana Pure
~!~~ ........8339
s299
ONLY49-c
U.S.D.A. Choice Bottom
Juice
Sirloin
2
Steak .•... 8 2 ! Ham .•. 2lb. caD
64 oz. glass jar
Armour Star Chopped
SJ29
Kraft
Dubuque Lunc
Mayonnaise
Temt
32 oz. jar
12 oz. can
99~
Del Monte Early Garden Spinach , Early Garden Sweet Peas.
Cream Style or Whole Kernel G o l d ' 2 / 9 9
$129
Corn . oz.
15
•P
Del Monte Stewed
Tomatoes u.s oz.6 9
(:
69e
Del Monte Bartlett Halves
Pears .. 16 oz.
(:
caD
,..Margarine Quarters
Beans16
2/99
Del Monte Tomato
Sauce ..
Del
Mo~e
(:
4fS 1
oz. can
s 1 09
8 oz. un
Pineapple
J Utce . . .
,.
Pet Ritz
Pie
Blue 59~
Bonnet
...1 lb. pkg .
Del Monte Green French Style or
Blue Lake Cut
46 oz.
·
Sheus65
~
pkg. of 2 shells
_....
Borden Individually Wrapped
19~ OFF
Brawny 2-Piy
"''Il
Towels
American
~~~ese$139
Assorted or Designer, 85 sq. ft. roll
59~
8 129
Armour Beef
Havorich Rich 'n Creamy
SteW ... 24oz.can
Ice
8219
69(:
Cream . ~sal. ctn.
Beans . oz. can
8149
Cheese 10 oz. pkg.
Hash . ·~ 15 oz. caD
Chili with Beans or
Texas Chili
t·mnuur
15.5
Weight Watchers Sliced
Armour Corned Beef or Roast Beef
99(:
Pet
•
Whtp
.
65~
Topping
8 oz. ctn.
Piggly Wiggly Elbow Macaroni, Vermicelli,
sp;~h;tti /89~ Motor
69(:
2
Gulf Pride 10W40
Fruit Juicy Red, Hawaiian
Punch . 46 oz. caD
S
9
8
2
Lysol .... oz.
Spray Disinfectant Regular or Scent II
18
~~·
7
Fresh Salad
_ ·
~
Spinach.o.oz.pk.89
c;~ots
. 87 9~
lb. bag
Thompson Seedless White or Red
Detergent
Fab
$169
49 oz. box
~
WIDE BAND
KNEE HIGH<)
SPalr.~5oo
9
Grapes . . . . 15lb.
No 1 Idaho
8249
No . 1 Me;ium Yellow
99(:
Potatoes1o lb. bag
Ontons . lb. bag
3
(:
Oranges. 7 9
(:
Radishes.b. b•s6 9
Florida Temple
Florida Temcole
6/
�•
The Floyd County Times
Wednesday, February 8, 1984
I
·
Section Three, Paae One
THOMPSON'S
¥ ALENTINE'S DAY SALE!
Two Days Only-Friday U Saturday, Feb·. IO U 11
GORDON'S
POTATO CHIPS
sgc~
COLUMBIA
BACO
WILSON CORN KING
WIENERS
z69c
ARMOUR STAR
PORK SAUSAGE
ggc
WHOLE
BOSTON BUTT
$1 ,1~
1-LB.
ROLL
IGA
BREAD
16-0Z. LOAVES
4/$1
FAMILY PAK
PORK STEAK
$12!
1
�Wednesday, February 8, 1984
Section Three, Pace Two "
The Floyd County Times
-
KIRBY SWEEPERS
$Elt·IT MSI.I
$99 & UP
"BIW IT RlfiNT.I
CALL 478-288~_25.t\.
• • • FREE ESTIMATES • • •
FOR RENT-3-bedroom brick
house plus in-ground, fenced
swimming pool.
~
~
ANYTYPE
DOZER
·-~ OR BACKHOE
Fl~· WORK ANYWHERE.
~
PROMPT SERVICE.
f\
~\.\\ CONs,.
~
.....
~T
BOX 192
•
$500.00 PER MONTH.
PHONE 874-2873 2~-~
•
REPO CLEANERS
.
It ·pd
t'A
~
Only 3 left. Latest model. New
5-year warranty.
FOR ALL YOUR INSURANCEAuto, tire, homeowners, hospitalization.
111e. With D-25% savings. Call Darby and
Allen Insurance Agency.
Call 478-9407
874-2347.
PHONE(606)~9551
2-8·2!.
12·21·1f.
An equal opportunity employer.
11·2-tf.
LOOK!...
BRUSH LINE
Call for all painting and remodeling needs
GOBLE
SECURITY SYSTEM
Take ad~antage of low winter
rates, and ha~e your building
and remode/Jng done now.
874-2905 or 874-2895
Ask for Tom or Lee.
• 2~·HOUR GUARD SERVICE
• PATROL SERVICE • uc~:N:SI:DI
• BONDED • INSURED
Call:
2 1 21 pel
CRASE HOME BUILDERS
tor tree estimates,
FUND-RAISING PROGRAM
Can your church, school, club or civic
organization use extra money. Family
portraits by Mike Kirk can help.
For more Information
Call (606)478-2334 2 1 21
Larry Goble
358-9485.
2+2t.
SCOTT
DOUBLEWIDE
FREE
•
•
•
•
•
REMODELING
PAINTING
DRYWAll
TEXTURING
W'lll PAPERING
• DECKS
• ROOFING
• FENCES
• STORAGE BLDGS.
• ETC.
New 19U. 3 led, 2 lath. Garden Tub.
Total Electric, Wood-Siding, Shingle
Roof, Cathedral Ceilings, Beams, Stove.
Refrlg., House Doors • Windows,
Carpet, Delivered anywhere and set.
You choose colors. Veterans no down
payment. Others pay $1700.00 down
and $217.00 per month. Fireplaces
available. TREEHAVEN HOMES. Oftlceln
Clubhouse by swimming pool. Between
Exit 187 and Exll 194 on 1-84. Win·
chester. Ky. Phone (808) 744-n82.
Purchase a new 70'x 14' with fire·
place, stock 16833, OR a new
60'x 14' deluxe home, & receive
FREE a new remote control color
T .V.! No gimmicks! Just quality
homes at. affordable prices!
b:_~
C(ng_IDIL
HDNrES
'«k Budd~·
WILL DO TYPING
OR SHORTHAND.
15 YEARS EXPERIENCE.
CONTACT NORMA WRIGHT
AT 886-9181
OR 886-2527
12-21-st
SERVICE
REPRESENTATIVE
Part-time person to service
j ewelry dept. one morning per
w eek. Must have car. Excellent
hourly wage.
Co II toll free
1·800-556-7694
It-pd .
LAND
FOR SALE
BEAUTIFUL BUILDING STONE
On Prater Fork oH
Brush Creek (Rt. 850)
Sandy Valley Monument
Phone 358-9560
Building Stone Co.
It pel
Dozers • Backhoes
• Dump Trucks
Roof Trusses for
Commercial & Residential
Chain Link Fence, Residential
& Commercial.
Phone 606-886-9563, Prestonsburg, Kentucky (anytime)
886-2073
H.L. Setser, President
~
"THE PAPERBACK BOOK
;.
EXCHANGE STORE
~
118 Francis St.. Prestonsburg
• Turn left off Third Street
between court House & catholic Church
§
from
24 HOUR SERVICE
Portable Welding
874-8166
285-9550
~
~
•
•
•
•
UMESTONE VENEERING
MARBli LANDSCAPE CHIPS
PORTABli CONCRETE STEPS
V£RMONT SLATE
Located On Old U.S. 23
In New Allen
C5
'~
~
...,;
6·3-1£.
NEW
TOWNHOUSES
FOR RENT
Goble Townhouses. Two-bedroom,
unfurnished, total electric. $350 per
month, plus deposit. Couples only.
after
..
s.
WHEN WE BUILT IT, YOU GET MORE
BUILDING FOR YOUR MONEY.
251 Trimble Branch Rd., Prestonsburg, just 3 blocks
from downtown in a terrific, secluded neigborhood,
with good neighbors, turn-around driveway, tastefully landscaped yard, uniquely styled freshlY painted
total redwood exterior, new windows and gutters,
striking beveled glass double doors, best of fixtures,
new carpets and floor coverings, new drapes and curtains, new wall coverings, totally modern and in new
condition. 3 bedrooms, 2 full baths, formal living room
and foyer. completely equipped kitchen, family room
with stone fireplace. over-sized one car garage. 16'x32'
sundeck. Lots of storage and half basement. PRICED TO
BEl
Free Estimates
We do: • Dozer and Loader Work
• sewage Systems Installed • Molille
Home Moving • Furnace Repairs
~
REASONABLE RATES.
Call Ted Nelson, Jr.
886·2993 Of 886·8549
FOR RENT
OFFICE
SPACE
• llacteriolacical Allillysis of Domestic l Well
Water Suppfies • eon.,letion of "arterty
II.P.D.E.S. Fo1111s As Required By State l EPl
• Euironmenbl lmput Sbte11ents &
Assessments
le111ber tf AST Ml Tile Natiollill Environment
Healtll Association. LABORATORY MEETS All
Prestonsburg, Ky. 41653
H8-4t.
L&H USED CARS
ON THE LOT FINANCING
886-1225
ALL PRICES .REDUCED!
b -.
•
Super clean Inside and out, low mileage
TRUCKS
1980 GMC SIERRA ..... WAS $3550 ..... NOW $3250
1977 CHEVY .............. ... ...... NOW $1795
1976 EL CAMINO .................... $2495
-MECHANIC'S SPECIAL1972 MERCURY MONTEGO MX . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $4~0
1971 OLDS CUTLASS . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $325
APPLIANCE REPAIR
New Homes! New Homes! Qualify
as little as SlOO DOWN! For fur
ther details, contact Hubert at:
Ia;
·we&dd.~·
uS 23
Horo1d Ky
We repair all brandswashers, dryers and stoves.
• Guaranteed parts and work.
• Same day service.
• Discount to dealers.
• Fast dependable service.
HDIWES
.'•
1979 PlYMOUTH VOLARE . . . . . . . . . .' . . . . NOW $2500
1977 BUICK REGAL (T-TOP) . ... : . ...... NOW $2250
1976 PONTIAC BONNEVILLE . . . . . . . . . . . . . NOW $1750
1971 TOYOTA . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $950
1974 PONTIAC VENTURA HATCHBACK .......... $1450
1974 CHEVROLET IMPALA ...... . . . . ... . NOW $1295
1973 DODGE DART SPORT .. ........... NOW $2250
DAN'S
$100.00
DOWN!!
Cl.og~lb"'=
If.
U.S. 23 5<1., Paintsville
•
FHA AND VA
FINANCING!
Property owners-t ake advantage
of the low interest rates t hat FHA
& VA have to offer ! No point s t o
pay ! No hidden clos ing cost s !
Hurry! This offer is lim ited for t he
next four weeks ONLY!
See Hubert Today!
b;--;.
CLag_ZD.-a.
HDIWES
U . Me•ol4
Ky
'
- 478 9246
NOTICE-NOW HIRING
Taking applications for full
and part-time employment.
CALL 358-9892 ANYTIME
471 '9241>
2-1·51
ATTENTION!
AUCTION-DEALER
FLEA MARKET-JOBBERS
GROCERS-MERCHANTS...
BURTON DIST. WHOLESALE
Is now open In Somerset; tools,
furniture, jewelry, housewares,
electronics, much. much
more-prices you will not bellevel
Bring your tax no. and come
on ln. Burton Dlst. 2600 So.
Hwy. 27. Somerset. Ky.
(606) 679-8678.
2· 1 <t
HITCHCOCK
REPAIR SERVICE
24-Hour
Emergency Service
• Heating • Refrigeration
• Laundry Be Cooking
Equipment
_._..
PARTS
AVAILABLE
PHONE:
886-6900
.~ ~
for appointment call:
Discount Prices
874-9041
E.O.E.
1--4-tt.
Save on
Craftsman
Power Saws'
-.'
..
,,
TWO NEW
DOUBLEWIDE
SPECIALS
WHEN YOU KNOW WHO WE ARE ,
YOU WON'T BUILD ANY OTHER WAY.
.
In Prestonsburg
Phone 886-1312
YOUR
CHOICE
,: .
$29998
CUT '179
606-886-8852
SELL!
-~
H-2l
1-14-tf.
F. E. E., Inc.
•
PHONE 789-3258
Call 478-5344
VARCO-PRUOEN AUTHORIZED BUILDER
•
STATE 05111 l EPA REGULAnONS.
Stock or Custom-Built Cabinets
Kitchen Cabinets, Vanities
Thermador Appliances
on Display
We custom-design and construct
buildings to fit your precise
needs-without cost penalties or
added construction time. lnd us·
trial, commercial, w!!rehouses.
agricultural, recreational and institutional. Durable, attractive
and energy effiCient.
:~ .
SAMPUNG AND ANIUYSIS OF
WATER AND WASTE WATER
TROY'S
CABINET
CENTER
HIRE'S WHY:
•
ENVIRONMENTAL MONITORING
SERVICE, INC.
US 23, lvel, Ky.
BEAUTIFUL HOME FOR SALE
~
·~~
PHONE (606) 928-4197
OR (606) 928·8169 3~~-
US .
886-9131
RT. 23 NORTH-BELOW PRESTONSBURG
IPhone 8?4-22581
1·11·5t
HWY. 23 SO., PRESTONSBURG
.
~
MAKE MORE MONEY WORKING
OVERSEAS IN COUNTRIES UKE KUWAIT,
SAUDI ARABIA. VENEZUELA, ETC. ALSO
POSITIONS ARE AVAILABLE IN NORTHERN REGIONS Of CANADA, ALASKA
AND THE NORTH SEA. PERMANENT/TEMPORARY WORKERS NEEDED ARE
TRADESPEOPLE. LABORERS, PROFEsSIONALS ETC. FOR FUU INFORMAnON
SEND A SELF-ADDRESSED. STAMPED
ENVELOPE TO:
Overseas. Dept. !1032.
701 washington Strut
BUFFALO. N.Y. 1420!1
USA
East Equipment
For more Information, call 886-3680 or 886-1416.
Allen, Ky.
1·25-4tpd.
PHONE 886·1926
or 886-6466
~
Rent a heatgun (900°)
CERTIFIED WELDERS
Free estimates
Call 886-3544
.I\.•
Kinzer Drilling Co. ~~
NELSON'S
CONSTRUCTION CO.
UNITED SERVICE CO.
STUMBO
FREE ESTIMATES
~
WATER PIPES FROZEN?
"Weld It"
PAINTING Be DRYWALLING
ANY TYPE WILL BE MADE TO YOUR SPECIFICATIONS. FREE ESTIMATE-FREE DEUVERY
East Kentucky Roof Truss Co.
Keep America Strong-
FOR YOUR
SPRING DECORATING
CALL
Box 282, Prestonsburg, Ky.
I
• 22,000 GAL. PORCELAIN
LINED TANK
• 600 GAL. WATER TANK
• MYERS DEEP WELL PUMP
(Inc.)
Phone 874-2273-AIIen, Ky.
· CONSTRUCTION
i·B-4t.
I'
FOR SALE
OLLIE JONES'
874-2318
BOB WHITE
I
Most wells drilled in half a
day by Rotary Machine.
RESIDENT#A.£
.BUILDERS
PHONE 874-9281 :::
and
(Ask for Pat)
44'
(606) 874-9314
or 874-9633
Prestonsbur&, Ky.
CALL 886 -1640
5·25 11
daily from 1 to 3 p.m.
$15,995.00
COLOR T.V.!
CCIII Hubert At:
RAY HOWELL BUILDING
& HOME IMPROVEMENTS
'67 CAMARO CONVERTIBLE
Rebuilt 327 engine. Body In excellent
condition. New tires, top, back quarter
panels • much more. $!1,000 firm.
Serious Inquiries only-(606)784-~427
Remodel i ng , Siding, Roofing;
Heat ing & A ir Conditioning , Addi·
tions . C.arages & Custom Homes
FOl All YOUt HOIIII IIIII'IOVIIIIINr NlfDS,
AUXIER, KY. 41602
Water Well
Drilling
Craftsman
radial saw
LEXINGTON LOCATION:
New 1984, 3 Bed, 2 lath, Solid Construction, Garden Tub, Total Electric,
wood Siding, Shingle Roof, Cathedral
Ceiling, Stove, Frost-Free Refrigerator,
House Doors &r Windows. Carpet.
Delivered • Set-up. ONLY $18.99!1.00.
See this home at !137 New Circle Rd.,
Lexington. Phone (606) 293·1609.
RICHMOND LOCATION:
New Floor Plan, 1984, 5!5x24, 1224-Sq.
Ft., 3 Bed, 2 Bath, Garden Tub, Utility
Room, Total Electric, All Walk-In
Closets. Cathedral Ceiling, Wood
Siding. Shingle Roof, Bay Window In
Master Bedroom. Fireplace. j!rost-frefl
Refrigerator, Stove, Deluxe Carpet •
Pad. Side Gable, all other Deluxe Options. ONLY $21,99!1.00. See this home
at Exit 197 OH 1·7!1, Halfway between
Lexington • Richmond. Phone (808)
624-0200.
10 other doubles on display, !50 new 14
wldes. 20 repossessed homes. SO Used homes. V.A. no down payment. FHA
loans with 10% down.
GREAT AMERICAN HOMES
2-8·4t.
10-in. radial saw has a
1%-HP motor that develops 2V2 HP. Large,
easy-to-read bevel,miter
scales. (1992)
CUT '311
Craftsman
table saw
10-in. table saw has a
large, heavy-duty castiron table. 1-HP motor
can develop 2.0 HP.
(29803)
SEE 10 BIG PAGES OF
HARDWARE ANO TOOL VALUES
STARTING WITH THE BACK
COVER OF OUR " FE" SALE
SUPPLEMENT
Proces are catalog pnces • Now
avao1able in our "FE' catalog
supplement • Shipping extra • Ask
about Sears credit plans
Satisfaction Guaranteed
or Your Money Back
ISears I
SEARS, ROEBUCK AND CO.
U.S. 23 North Prestonsburg
Phone:
886·8135 • 789-4416.
COLLINS SECURITY SERV!CE
• LICENSED • BONDED • INSURED
• 18 YEARS SECURITY EXPERIENCE •
• 24-HOUR GUARD SERVICE •
OR
(606) 886-9867 OR 886-3665
886-1473
JESSIE COLLINS, President
�Wednesday, February 8, 1984
The Floyd County Times
FOR SALE 1968 Chrysler in good eon
dition. Call Walter Banks. !174-2:!52
2-!l-2t .
SEll. IT RIST.I
BW IT INfiiiT.I
FOR RENT-Executive Apartments,
New Allen, 2-bedroom, upstairs apart. nt, completely furnished including
TV. Fireplace, dishwasher, central heat
and air; all utilities paid including cable
TV. Located on 4-lane U.S. 23 midway
between Pikeville and Prestonsburg. No
pets; no children. Jim Hammond
886-2376.
1-ll-ti.
APARTMENT FOR RENT-One
bedroom, furnished kitchen, central air
and heat. All utilities furnished. Mouna n Parkway, near Prestonsburg. $300
'll(lpf'onth. Cleo DeRossett, 886-6568, day, or
886-1368, night.
1-11-tf.
DAN'S APPLIANCE REPAIR: We
repair washers. dryers and stoves. We
will make service calls. All work and
parts guaranteed. 358-9892 anytime.
2-1-5t.
BOLEN'S MOVING & DELIVERY
~RVICE: We move a house full or
.liver one piece - anywhere. Phone
358-9617,358-4009.
12-14-12tpd.
NOW BUYING: Used washers, dryers,
ranges, refrigerators. Working or nonworking condition. Phone 358-9617.
ll-16-12tpd.
SELLING AT WINTER PRICE: 1981
Honda Silver Wing GL-500. Fully dressed, AM-FM cassette, cruise, 2 helmets,
.-pd detachable trunks and rear seat.
Wust see! $1995. Call Jim Clarke,
478-2614.
1-25-4t.
FOR SALE: 1978 Cherokee 4x4, 36,000
miles, $3500. Call after 4, 478-9912,
Larry Kimbler.
l-25-4t.
DESPERATE?? Looking for a
specialist who is trained and equipped
to repair your wrecked Toyota, Datsun, Volkswagen, or other foreign or
A itized bodied car? Call Custom
""r!'oach Building for an appointment at
874-2802.
l-25-4t.
CARPENTRY-CONCRETE WORK:
Sidewalks, patios, driveways, etc. Also
Coronado stove. Seven years' experience. Free ~stimates. Laryl Branham, 452-2403 or 452-2368.
l-25-4tpd.
HAULING/MOVING: Commercial or
residential. local or long distance. Big
~foot enclosed trailer. Low, low rates.
•ces negotiable. Phone 789-4545.
l-25-4tpd.
FOR RENT: Two bedroom trailer,
$300 monthly, partially furnished,
carpeted, air conditioner, washer and
dryer and garden space available.
Phone 874-9802.
1-25-4tpd.
JAPANESE SWORDS WANTED: Paying $300 minimum ea. Write Winter,
~Patton, Springfield, Dl. 62702. (217)
544-7611, 523-8729.
1-25-4tpd.
SALES AGENT WANTED: Nationally
known calendar manufacturer and
specialty advertising company offers
an opportunity for an industrious selfstarter for full or part-time work. We
need a sales oriented person to present
our exclusive calendars, business gifts
and extensive advertising specialty
assortment to firms within the
siness community. The Thos. D.
urphy Co. is a pioneer in the advertising field since 1888, so you know we're
here to stay. If you can organize your
own time and determine your own success, write : Pat Murphy, The Thos. D.
Murphy Co., P.O. Box 382, Red Oak,
Iowa 51566, or call 712-623-2591, Ext. 51.
1-25-4t.
TOP DOLLAR paid for used washers,
dryers, gas and electric ranges, work•
or non-working condition. We pay
• ore. Phone 353-9617 or 356-4009.
l-18-12tpd.
FOR RENT: Two bedroom furnished
trailer ~t David. Call886-6926.
ttpd .
GET YOUR LAWNMOWERS and
equipment ready for Spring. Contact
Eric Pitts. 285-3807.
ltpd .
FOR RENT : Feb. 10. A-Frame house.
Total electric. Deposit required. No
pets. Couple preferred. $275 month. Ina-section Ky. 80. Watergap. 874-2358.
~rious calls only.
Itpd.
FOR SALE : Two bedroom house in city. Low 30's. Assumable Joan with
s·mall down payment. Call !186-6458 between Sand 7p.m .
ltpd.
SWEET HEART SPECIAL: $4 off on
hair cut. shampoo and style : $15 off on
permanent wave: extra-special mania re and facial. $10. Prices good till
"P'e b. 21. 886-6736.
ltpd.
FOR RENT: 4-room apartment near
clinic and college. 886-3154, T.E. Neeley.
11-9-tf.
FOR GLASS REPLACEMENT, bring
your window frames to Sandy Valley
Hardware at Allen. We specialize in
11-9-tf.
Plexiglas, cut to size.
JjOW PAYING TOP DOLLAR for
.obile home wheels and axels. Ask for
Patty Wright, 639-4772.
12-7-tf.
1982 LINCOLN : Best deal in town. This
one has it all! Call Patty Wright,
639-4772.
12-7-tf.
1984 MOBILE HOME : 2 bedroom, 12'
wide, front kitchen, double windows.
Furnished. Total electric. Only $8,995.
Call John Wright, 432-1401.
12-7-tf.
'
AYMENTS LESS THAN RENT :
14-wide mobile home. Only $10,995. Call
John Wright, 432-1401.
12-7-tf.
Section Three, Page Three
TO
ADVERTISERS
All classified ads scheduled
for only one week, must be
paid In advance. All classllled ads with only telephotle
numbers must be paid In ad. vance.
CLASSIFIED
ADVERTISING RATES
10c: Per word, If paid In advance
15c: P e r - on c:harae ac:c:ount
($2.50 minimum)
DIIIPiay da..tfled advertlalna
$3.00 per c:olu...., Inch.
!teadllne for ada: -4 p.m. Monday_;
FOR ALL YOUR INSURANCE-Auto,
fire, homeowners, hospitalization, life.
With 0-25% savings. Call Darby and
Allen Insurance Agency, 874-2347.
12-28-tf.
FOR SALE: Two-story, 11-room apartment building, $40,000. At Twin Bridges,
Martin, on 100x50 corner lot. Call J.R.
Samons, 285-3914.
12-14-tf.
CLEAN FURNACE FILTERS save
energy dollars and service call costs.
Sandy Valley Hardware S&T at Allen is
your one-stop furnace filter headquarters.
ll-30-tf.
FOR SALE: Reconditioned washers,
dryers, gas and electric ranges, furniture, new and used parts for all
makes and models. Refrigeration
parts ordered for you. All guaranteed
60 days. For cheap appliances and
parts, plus a good guarantee, call us,
358-9617 or 358-4009.
1-18-12tpd.
MACK HARVEY'S GARAGE located
one mile up Buck's Branch off new Ky.
80 at Martin. All types mechanic work.
Free estimates. Call285-3928. 1-25-4t.
FOR SALE: FIRE WOOD. 886·9460.
ltpd.
WALLEN'S TRADING POST & TIRE
SALES. Retails and wholesales. New
and used tires. wheels, caps, lugs,
wheel covers. batteries, tubes, auto
parts, stereos and boosters. tubes and
much more. We trade for most anything of value. 874-2289.
2-1-Stpd.
ONE BEDROOM APARTMENT for
rent: $250 month. $250 deposit required. 478-9593 or 874-9033, Hylton
2-1-tf.
Homes.
FOR SALE: Registered Doberman
pups, very large breeding. Excellent
disposition. To good homes only. Call
297-3897, Rhonda Nelson.
2-1-tf
FOR RENT: Furnished trailer, near
college. Security deposit and lease required . No pets, please. Carlos E.
Neeley, 886-8565.
2-1-tf.
CLASSIFIED ADVERTISERS
PLEASE NOTEI
Classified ads will no longer be accepted after
12 noon, Mondays. For the coming week, these ads
are also accepted on Thursday, Fridays, and
Saturdays.
We trust this will not unduly Inconvenience you,
and we will greatly appreciate your cooperation.
FOR SALE OR RENT- 1979 2 bedroom
Fairmont trailer. 2 miles up Daniels
Creek at Banner. Call 874-9572. Dallas
Justice.
1-ll-6t.
SALISBURY USED FURNITURE. Two
miles. up Arkansas. 285-3549. 1-ll-8t.
FOR SALE OR TRADE: Cardox auger,
conveyor, 24-inch steel. Phone 874-9033.
11-24-tf.
ALL NEW OFFICE SPACE for lease:
Consisting of reception - library and
four (4) connecting offices, with five (5)
assigned parking spaces·. : Located on
Third Avenue near the Courthouse,
downtown banks, postoffice, town center
parking lot, and the Floyd County Times
building. Ideal for physicians, attorneys,
accountants, realtors, and other
businesses and professions. Immediate
occupancy. Jim Hammond, 886-2376.
I.
10-19-tf.
FOR SALE: Old barber chair: old dentist chair: bicycle : washer: 40-gal. hot
water heater <newl: old Pepsi
machine : CB base station. 886-2385.
ltpd.
BOLEN'S APPLIANCE REPAffi &
PARTS : Repairs on washers, dryers,
gas and electric ranges. New and used
parts. We got it or we can get it, any
make or model. For all your appliance
repair and parts, call us, 358-9617 or
358-4009.
1-18-12tpd.
FOR SALE:· Three bedroom brick
home. Located in Auxier. Must sell,
owner relocated. For more information, call 789-6830 after 5 p.m. B.
Prater.
1-18-4t.
FOR RENT: Trailer lot, M&D Trailer
Park. Located at lower end of Auxier.
Call 88&2965 for infonnation, Monday
thru Saturday. No Sunday business.
1-25-3t.
THE AVON EARNING OPPORTUNITY: A new earning's plan now
lets you make up to 50 percent off
everything you sell. A new bonus pr<r
gram rewards you financially for introducing others to Avon. All this plus
Avon's famous products can earn you
lots of money. Call today. 285-3928.
1tpd.
INTERIOR AND EXTERIOR Porter
Paint. 1,000 colors to choose from. BEN
FRANKLIN STORE, - phone 886-2169,
Prestonsburg.
5-16-tf.
TREATED utility poles, 18ft. 20ft. and
25ft. lengths. Also fence posts at GOBLE
LUMBER CO., phone 874-9281. 4-11-tf.
GRAVEL FOR SALE: $8.75 per ton,
plus delivery charge. C{lll886-3425, JIM
cox.
6-23-tf.
LIGHT FIXTURES: lh price at GOBLE
LUMBER COMPANY, phone 874-9281.
4-11-tf.
WATCH REPAIR: If you want the best
job, bring watch repairs and jewelry
repairs
to
WRIGHT
BROS.
JEWELERS.
11-12-tf.
PERMA..SHIELD Anderson windows.
All styles, 20 percent off regular price
at GOBLE LUMBER CO., phone
874-9281.
4-11-tf.
UNFURNISHED APARTMENTS for
rent in Prestonsburg. For more information, call 886-2094. After 5, call
886-2132.
1-18-4tpd.
CUSTOM-MADE drapes and matching
bedspreads by R.W. Norman and
McCanless. Measured to fit. BEN
FRANKLIN STORE, phone 886-2169, or
SALLY GOEBEL, phone 886-2657.
5-16-tf.
FOR SALE: 2-bedroom brick home at
Harold, Ky. Completely fenced lot.
Phone 478-9991 or 478-5836.
1-18-4tpd.
HOUSE FOR SALE: Full basement,
forced air, natural gas. Call after 4,
886-386o, Ann Slone.
9-14-tf.
FOR ilENT: Trailer lot, M&D Trailer
Park. Located at lower end of Auxier.
Call collect, 513-54~2793 for information, Monday thru Saturday. No Sunday business.
1-18-4t.
FOR SALE : 1975 Mercedes-Benz 450-SL,
excellent conditiQn. Metalic green. New
tf.
top. Price $20,500. Call (186-8506.
HOUSE FOR SALE : 4-bedrooms, 2
baths. For infonnation, call or write
Roy Butcher, 3431 Marvel Ave., Titusville, Fla. 32796. Phone 305-268-0445.
l-18-4t.
FOR SALE: 1983 doublewide,
3-bedroom, 2 full baths, 20X20 carport,
20X20 and 8x12 decks, $23,000. 874-8942,
Jim Wipp.
1-18-4tpd.
3-BEDROOM HOME FOR SALE near
school in Maytown. Located on three
lots. Central heat, full basement.
Adjoining building, 16'x24' with full
basement. Good neighborhood,
beautifully landscaped. Complete
fence . In the mid-30's. Call 285-3494.
1-18-6tpd.
USED FURNITURE. GUARANTEED
APPLIANCES. Moore's Discount Furniture. Located about 3 miles from
Martin on Rt . 122. Low prices. Call
285-9354.
1-11-Btpd.
BOLEN'S APPLIANCE REPAIR :
Repairs on washers, dryers, gas and
electric ranges, 12 years' experience.
All work and parts guaranteed 60 days.
For fast, clean, and efficient service,
call on us, 358-9617 or 358-4009.
' 1-18-12tpd.
HEY LOOK! We repair washers,
dryers, rangeS', all types appliances.
Parts ordered for you . Call 358-4009 or
358-9617.
11-3-tfJ)d.
FOR RENT: Rooms, weekly, monthly,
nightly. Also waterbeds available.
886-2385, 886-9310, Sandy Valley Motel,
N. Lake Drive.
1-5-tf.
FOR SALE: Cabin at Cave Run Lake.
Three bedrooms, air conditioned, all
new carpet. Reasonable price. Call
784-7250 or 784-9203, J .C. SPENCER.
5-25-tf.
DAMRON NEW & USED FURNITURE: Living room suites starting at
$159. A-1 appliances. Rt. 122, Drift, Ky.
Phone 377-2071.
5-25-tf.
CARPENTRY WORK: Home building
and remodeling. Complete interior and
exterior. Masonry and concrete work,
all types interior and exterior painting.
Also have spray equipment to spray
barns and metal buildings . Free
estimates. Will furnish references. 15
years' experience. Call 886-8896,
9-21-tf.
anytime. Robie Johnson, Jr.
FOR RENT: 4-room unfurnished apartment, $200 rent, $150 deposit. Couples only, no pets. Call Jeanette Hubbard,
886-2557.
5-18-tf.
FOR SALE: Block house at mouth of
Hunter's Branch of Left Beaver Creek .
C.all after five. 285-9819 or 177-2202.
Freddie Osborne.
1-8-2t .
CALL 358-4520
Ralph O'Quinn
I lOll
WEDDING PHOTOGRAPHY
CALL 874-2246
Remember your special day with
beautiful portraits by Mike Kirk
from 8 a.m. to 10 a.m.
or 6 p.m. to 10 p.m.
Price the rest, then call
(606) 478-2334
2-i-21
2 openings available In area to
sell established product. Car
helpful. Will help you earn $250
week potential. Apply at
building 119, Hayes Complex
Building, Friday, Feb. 10, between 10 and 11 a.m.
• Custom or Basic Design
• Professional Installation
• Guaranteed Work
QUAUTY WITH SAVINGS
EQUAL 0,1'0/tTUN/TY EM,LOYER
For Free Estimates, for
POSITION
AVAILABLE
Any Size Building...
COIITACT:
DAN HALL
478-2389
DARKROOM EQUIPMENT FOR
SALE: Omega color enlarger with all
accessories. Perfect condition. $400.
Call 447-2669 after 6 p.m.
2-8-21pd.
2·8·21.
WORK NEAR HOME
METAL
BUILDINGS INC.
(North Ameriun Steel Buildi._s)
FOR SALE : 1979 Honda Odyssey with
roll cage and new rear tires and built
motor. 886-3489. call after 5:00.
2-8-21pd .
4-ROOM FURNISHED APARTMENT: No children. No pets. !186-6239.
2-8-2tpd .
FOR SALE: 14x70 mobile home . Call
886-9065.
2-8-2tpd.
Needed In these areas;
Tram, Harold, Mullins, Mudcreek, etc., or near your own
home. AVON.
or .358-9348
HOUSE FOR RENT: Downtown Prestonsburg. convenient to shops, schools.
library and churches. 3 bedrooms. 2
baths. References and deposit required. $350 per month. Contact
Frances or Scott at Benchmark Real·
2-!l-2!.
ty. 886-9100
WANTED TO DO: Machine quilting
with zig-zag stitch. Experienced. $10
per quilt. Phone 874-2902.
2-8-2tpd.
MAKE MONEY, MEET PEOPLE,
BE YOUR OWN BOSSI
•Free esti~ates •Insured
f<'OR RENT : Two bedroom mobile
home in Auxier . No childr~>n or pets.
$175 monthly. $100 deposit Ca ll
886-9846.
2-!l-2tpd
FOR RENT : Trailer. fully furnished.
city water and gas. Privatelv owned
lot. Lo~ated on new U.S . 2:3. Katv
Friend. Water Gap Road . Phon~
886-8964, D.A. Wallen
2-8-21.
Attention! Career Opportunity!
MOBILE HOME
MOVING SERVICE
The Sandy Valley Senior Citizens, Inc.
Is now seeking apptlcar.ts for a full time
RN and a part time RN or Social Worker
with Bachelors Degree. Responsibilities
Include development or a Core Plan tor
In-home service delivery, monitoring
and supervision of Homemaker/ Home
Health Aides. Salary negotiable.
Submit application and resume by
February 17, 1984. Applications may be
obtained at the SVSC otttce, 2nd Floor
Municipal Building, Prestonsburg. 8-.4
p.m., Mon.-Fri.
Equal Opportunity Employer.
11.
NEW HOUSE
FOR RENT
• Abbott Mtn., fireplace,
2 baths, basement.
PHONE 886-6900
2-8·21
WANTED : Quality homemade crafts .
New gift shop will feature wide variety
of crafts on consignment basis. For
more information, call 377-2069 or
377-6800, Erma Johnson.
2-8-2!.
GOOD 8x40 TRAILER FOR SALE :
$1800 includes delivery: 8x35 1979
trailer. 886-9683. Don's Mobile Home
2-8-2t
Salvage.
FOR RENT: 2-bedroom trai ler. one
mile from Martin. $250 month. $100
deposit . Call886-3920after 5. 2-R-2tpd.
POSITION
AVAILABLE
FOR SALE: 1971 Ford Ranger XIT
pickup. 360 automatic . Good shape.
285-9149.
2-8-2tpd.
28-2t.
WE CAN
FIX IT!!
Plenty of parts in stock for your
mobile home! Special orders invited! Do-it-yourselfers save
money, OR we will come to you!
Call us at:
EAST KENTUCKY
MOBILE HOME PARTS
AND SERVICE INC.
606-874-9400
FOR RENT : One bedroom furnished
trailer. One or two people only. No
children, no pets. 886-2145.
2-8-21pd.
FOR IMMEDIATE SALE : 1982 14x5R
2-bedroom mobile home. Owner transferred. Selling for payoff. $8,967.
478-9798or478-9337. Vicky King. 2-1-21.
FOR SALE : Black Tennessee Walking
Horse. with papers. Paid $2500 for
horse. will sell for feed bill due. Call
285-3959 between 9:30 and 5:00 for information. J . Hall .
2-8-21 .
Allen, Ky.
COLLINS FURNITURE & AP PLIANCES on C-0w Creek . Appliances
$150 each with a 30-day warranty on
parts and labor. Beds. chests. dressers
and baby items priced to fit your
budget. open 9 a .m . till 5 p.m. Phone
874-2058. Perlinda Collins·.
2-8-2t .
FOR SALE : Maytag washer. dryer
set. Westinghouse refrigerator . frost
free. equipped for an ice maker. been
used 6 months. Cost was $2400. will sell
for $1200. Call Downtowner Beauty
Salon after 12 11oon. 285-9087. Jennifer
2-8-21 .
Tackett.
COMPLETE
ELECTRICAL SERVICES
by Licensed Electrician
Call 946-2226
or 946-2677
ACCEPTING
APPLICATIONS
llg Sandy ADD Is accepting applications tor an ln·Home Services Clerk/
Assistant. Major responsibility entails
working with computer forms.
Salary Is negotiable based upon
education and work experience.
Submit resume to Big Sandy ADD,
Municipal Building, 2nd Floor, Prestonsburg, Kentucky by February 1!5, 1984.
SALES ON ALL BRANDS OF SEWING MACHINES AND VACUUM
CLEANERS.
• We service Electrolux, Kirby,
Compact Filter Queen.
• logs, Belts, parts In stock.
ROSIE'S SEW If VAC CENTER
Van Lear, Ky.
Phone collect 789-
For further details, call
Doug Woody or John Woods at
The Bank Josephine
886-9101 ext. 243 or 244
24!-lt.
2-8-41
~**********************************~
:
:
:
FOR SALE : Two racing go-<:arts. One
has 100cc McClough engine with two
5-gal. aluminum fuel tanks. one on
each side. also wide tires grooved for
dirt track. priced $450. Second cart has
wide tires grooved for dirt track.
equipped with 5 h.p. Tucumse engine.
governor has been removed. has
straight out exhaust. wi\1 run . $250.
377-6716, Don Fraley. Jr.
2-R-21 .
• 1978 Ford Thunderbird Town
landau 2-door hardtop. Navy
blue, landau roof, AM-FM
with 8·track, interior luxury
group, 6-way power seats,
power windows, power door
locks, w ire wheel covers,
speed control, tilt steering,
air-conditioning, built-in C. B.,
power antenna, power moon
roof, electronic rear defroster,
sports decor group, 78,000
miles. Excellent condition.
$3,500.
• 1979 Dodge Challenger 2-door
Coupe. 4-cylinder, fan, AMFM with cassette, reclining
bucket seats, overhead console group, 5-speed transmis·
sion, aluminum wheels, 48,000
miles. Excellent condition.
$3,100.
• 1981 Dodge Ram 150-112-Ton
Pickup. Yellow/white, AMFM, 6-cylinder, 3-speed transmission with overdrive, 49,000
miles. Needs tires, otherwise
excellent condition. $4,500.
The Sqndy Volley Senior Citizens, Inc.,
is now accepting applications tor a
clerk/ typist. Responsibilities Include accurate typing skills. riling, and comple·
tlon of computer forms. Two years experience preferred. Salary negotiable.
Applications may be obtained at the
SVSC office, 2nd Floor Municipal
Building, Prestonsburg, 8-4 p.m., Mon.Fri. Deadline February 17, 1984.
Equal Opportunity Employer.
FOR SALE : Three bedroom home. 2
full-size baths. With extra-large lot .
886-3394.
2-8-2tpd .
FOR SALE OR RENT: Furnished
trailer. 12x65. Washer and dryer. all
utilities paid. $300 month. Will accept
one small child. Phone 886-8724. Edith
Stumbo.
2-8-2t .
FOR SALE
*
*
:
:
Going Out Of Business Sale
1984 Mobile Home
3 Bedrooms, 1 v, Baths
'1 0 99 5°0
1
Payment Less Than Rent
Call:
John Wright or Ollie Watts
432-1401
a
a
1
*
•:
:
~***********************************t
NEW 198414' WIDE
3 Bedrooms
'12,995°0
Low Down Payment
Check This Monthly Payment At
Call Larry Keene
'19967
437-4078
�Wednesday, February 8, 1984
FOR SALE: AKC Brittany puppies.
$125. Winchester. Ky., call606-744-2985,
Glenda Lansdale.
2-l-2tpd.
BREAK WITH TRADITION: Don't
send candy and flowers, show you really care with a beautifully decorated
Valentine cake. CAKES BY VIVIAN.
874-2206or886-3682.
2-l-2tpd.
FOR SALE: 2-bedroom. split-level
house with five C5l lots, 7 years old.
Fireplace, patio, deck, two C2l baths.
Call George Bush, Jr., 285-9877 or
285-9904, Cracker Bottom.
2-1-2tpd.
LAND FOR SALE: 15 acres with house
seat, 10 minutes from Prestonsburg, or
trade for land toward Pikeville.
874-2034 after 5.
2-1-2tpd.
FOR SALE: Commercial property
suitable for light industry offices or
apartments. Prestonsburg location.
Seen by appointment only. Call886-9444
Monday-Friday.
2-1-2tpd.
FOR SALE: Hill side land with small
A-Frame house. One level lot 50'x75'.
Arountt12 acres of land m Cracker bottom. George Bush. Jr.. 285-9877.
2-l-2tpd.
FOR SALE: 1974 Ford pickup. standard shift. 302 engine. price $2500. Call
377-6403.
2-l-2tpd.
LOST: White garbage bag full of
clothes. Put into wrong brown Eagle
jeep outstde Unemployment Office
January 16. Finder please call 28&-3939
or 285-905!;
l-25-2tpd.
FOR RENT: 4-room furnished apartment. No pets, no kids. 886-62.19.
2-1-2tpd.
FOR SALE: Nice home in Wheelwright. Four rooms and bath, fenced
yard, garage. patio, $18,000. Georgia
Bolden. Box 76, Wheelwright, Ky.
41669.
2-1-2t.
'li1QR SALE: 1973 Volkswagen bus, in
good"too\,dition. One owner and air conditioned. ean_886-8749 after 5 p.m.
2-1-2tpd.
FOR RENT: 3-bedroom mobile home,
furnished, located 1-1/2 miles out of
Prestonsburg on the Abbott road on a
private lot. Couples preferred or with
one child. No pets. References required . Rent, $250 plus $150 deposit
plus utilities. Call after 5 p.m .. 886-9583.
2-l-2t.
FOR SALE: Fuel heater with tank.
Phone 886-8782, Rick Bailey.
2-1-2t.
FOR RENT: 2-bedroom unfurnished
apartment. on Arnold Ave.• $300 a
month. Utilities paid. $100 deposit.
Couples only or with one child. Call
886-8991. Alonzo Bowling.
2-1-2t.
NEED A JOB? Looking for an apprentice or operator of cosmotology. For
interview. call 886-1556, Tuesday thru
Friday. 9:00 till5:00.
2-1-2t.
PIANOS: Used medium-size upright
pianos, rebuilt and reconditioned by
Kentucky's only used piano dealer.
From $600 and up. Pianos tuned. Call
606-36&-9779, Ben Auxier, Jr.
2-1-2t.
WILL DO ANY KIND of odd jobs. Call
35S.3481. Ask for Tim.
2-1-2t.
FOR SALE: 1977 4-wheel drive Ford
truck. Phone 886-8782, Rick Bailey.
2-1-2t .
FOR SALE: "New Home" Brand sewing machine with free arm. straight
overcast blind hem, zig-zag and stretch
stitches. automatic, built-in button
holer, 25-year warranty. Regular
price, $568, brand new slice in
manufacturer's carton, $280 firm. Cash
only. 886-1457 after 3 p.m. Mrs. Larry
Schuster.
2-1-2t.
FOR SALE: New Holland. 7-foot
mower,like new, $1500. 886-3444, Bill G.
Smith.
2-1-2t.
FOR RENT: 3-bedroom mobile home.
$175 month. $150 deposit . 1174-9059, Curt
Jarvis.
ltpd.
SWEET HEART SPECIAL: Chains
and diamonds. 25 percent off. Stereos.
radios. turntables. tape decks. 25 percent off. Hock Shop. 886-2.167.
ttpd .
FOR SALE : Used floor furnace: 14-ft .
Johnboat. Call886-2642.
ltpd.
WANTED TO DO : Tree trimming, cut ling hedges. hillsides. clearing. Free
estimates. 25 years' experience Call
886-1631 or 1174-8910.
It pd.
TWO BEDROOM APARTMENT for
rent in Prestonsburg. Also 3-bedroom
14x70 trailer on Abbott. total electric.
central heat and air. 886-895.'5.
ltpd
MISSING: Tan and white female
Basset Hound. Lost in the Water Gap
area. REWARD offered for information leading to return of this dog . Call
874-2601 or 1174-2035.
It pd.
I DO HOUSE CLEANING. Good
reference and my own transportation.
Call 285-9883 Monday and Tuesday. 10
a.m. to6p.m .
ltpd.
The Floyd County Times
MISSING: Basset Hound. black and
tan, female, S.months-old. wearing red
collar and white flea collar. Reward
offered for information leading to the
return of this PET. Call 874-9416. Tommy Harmon.
2-1-2tpd.
NEW 15x8 white spoke wheels. $26.95
each; 10..15 M&S white letter tires,
$67.95 each; 3-year batteries, $39.95
each; 14" and 15" tubes, $4.99 each;
1000x22 tubes, $16.95 each; 1100x22
tubes, $18.95 each. Where can you find
all these bargains? JIM'S TIRE SHOP.
of course! Phone 285-5058, Maytown.
2-1-2tpd.
EFFICIENCY APARTMENT FOR
RENT: Suitable for working lady or
gentleman. Sleeping room in private
home. Siamese kittens for sale.
886-9636.
2-1-2tpd.
FOR RENT: House in town. $300.
886-9918.
2-1-2tpd.
TWO HOMES FOR SALE: F.H.A.loan
available. Located in Prestonsburg.
886-8076.
2-1-2tpd.
FOR RENT: 2-bedroom, unfurnished
apartment. located at Town Branch,
Prestonsburg. All electric heat. TV
cable, city water. Call 886-6366.
2-l-2tpd.
CHILD CARE: Will care for children
in my home. 886-9918.
2-l-2tpd
COMPUTER WHEEL BALANCE, only $3.99each <most wheels>. Ford truck
wheels, $8 each. 750x16 M&S recaps,
$39.95 each. Bargains galore at Jim's
Tire Shop, Maytown. Phone 285-5058.
2-1-2tpd.
FOR RENT: New trailer, 14x70. 3 bedrooms. 2 baths, furnished. Phone
358-9748 or 35S.9207, Debbie Martin.
2-1-3t.
3-BEDROOM BRICK HOUSE with 6
acres land, 4 tillable and 2 in timber.
Pond and good well. 25 miles from
Somerset and Lake Cumberland.
$29,000. 379-2158, Charles Tackett.
2-l-3t.
FOR SALE: AKC registered Doberman pups. Wormed, have tails cut,
come from attack trained guard dogs.
Have good bloodlines. Call 285-5140,
Tim Ward.
2-1-3t.
FOR SALE: New Age encyclopedia
and others, unused. Phone 874-2556.
2-1-3tpd.
FOR SALE: 1982 Kawasaki 750 Spectre
motorcycle, low mileage. Call 447-2933,
A&C Carry-Out.
2-l-4t.
NEED MONEY? Pawn it, don't sell it.
We loan money on almost anything.
Hock Shop, N. Lake Drive. 24 hours a
day, 886-2367.
2-1-4t.
HAVE YOU UPDATED YOUR PERSONAL insurance to meet today's
needs? H not, call us, we can insure the
entire family from 0 to 80. Call Sam
Wallen Insurance Agency. I have been
serving the insurance needs of Ky. for
over thirty years. Phone 874-2289.
2-1-5tpd.
TRAILER FOR RENT: 2-bedrooms at
Banner on Rice Branch. Call 874-2633,
Lillie Compton.
2-1-2t.
FOR SALE: 1981 Mustang Hatchback,
44,000 miles, power brakes, power
steering, air conditioned. Excellent
condition inside and out. AM-FM
8-track. digital clock panel. Asking
$5000. Also, truck camper. Phone
m-2079, Johnny Lee.
2-1-2t.
FOR SALE: Frigidaire 30" stove with
lighted exhaust hood, avocado green.
Excellent condition. 886-3953, Vonnie
2-1-2t.
Chaffins.
FOR SALI':: Prop<'rly on Man• Cr<'t•k
!<'or fuT1hPr information. call 47K·5260.
.John (; Ra I I iff
2 K:lt
J<'OR RJ<:NT m AIIPn Nn
pets. no childrPn. Deposit rPquirPd .
NicP. ciPan court. ('all 874·2141. Aftpr 5.
call 874-2114. AkPrs Trailer Court
2-ll-:lt
TRAILI<~R
ROATS J<'OR SALE: 19114 f'ish & Ski
bass boat. 17-ft. 5-inchl's, nt-ver been in
water. savt> $2500. 1984 Glassport
V-hull. 120 h.p. OM(' inboard. outboard
Pngine. sa vt> $2600. 1983 Somerset 1~ft.
7-inches. 3!'i1 V8 engine with boval outdrive Boat is deep V-hull Excellt-nt
condition. attractive price Phone
285-9892 or 285-98AA. Christian Appalachian Project
2-B-:lt
1981 HONDA XL500. Excellent condi·
lion. 1350 milt-s. Only rode on stret>t
and dirt roads. Never hill climbed ot·
trail ridden. $1250. 61111-652-4735
2-8-3tpd.
REAUTWUL QUARTER HOH..<;E for
sale. Good saddlt> horse for kids or can
he worked . Has worked in tobacco. Call
606-652-4735 anvtime
2-8-:Upd.
TELEPHONES. .JACKS.
A<'·
C'ESSORIES: We sell. install and ser·
vice. All work guaranteed. Service con·
tract. $15 a year residential. $20 commercial. R&R Telephone. BPside Mar·
tin Police Station. ('all 285-:1727 an:v·
time.
2·R-4tpd.
FOR SALE : llnfurnisht-d 12x70
Marlett mobile homt>. 2 bedrooms.
$7!'i00 New carpet. lots of extras. 2
dt>cks ('a II 606-652-4735 anyti mt>
2-8-4tpd.
CORN FOR SALE· Ear or shelled.
R74-223H.
2-8-6tpd.
X-Ray Radiation Cut
At Pikeville Methodist
When the Radiology Department at
the Pikeville Methodist Hospital recently began using Kodak Lanex rare earth
intensifying screens, it immediately cut
radiation exposure to patients by 50 percent, according to Doug Hall, Chief Xray Technologist.
"The new screens can also save
money and increase efficiency in the
department," he said. "The speed of exposure helps reduce the number of x-ray
examinations that must be redone if the
patient moves. The less time it takes for
the exposure, the less likelihood of
movement blurring the x-ray study,
which reduces the number of retakes,"
he said.
But it is the reduction in radiation exposure to patients and staff that Doctors
Poulos and Kim consider most important.
"Everyone involved in the use of
diagnostic x-rays is concerned with
minimizing unnecessary exposures to
achieve a diagnosis. The opportunity to
reduce x-ray exposure to the patient is
one that must always be seized. We have
seen the reports in the journals and
noted the results of tests of these screens
and they indicate that the combination
reduces patients' exposure between two
and three times that of conventional
screen/film combination."
They also noted that radiologic
technologists and others who work with
x-rays also are exposed to less radiation,
one study indicating a 62 percent reduction to the staff. Protection of the staff
has always been carefully controlled
and monitored to maintain minimum
radiation levels. The new screen/film
combination makes it that much easier
and provides greater protection.
To Avoid Penalty, File
Information Tax Returns
DR. VIRGINIA A. de GUZMAN
Farmers and other business operators
still have a little time left to file infor·
rna•· ·'lal returns, otherwise known as
Illi.. urm 1099-MISC, for payments of
$600 or more they made to nonemployees who performed services for,
them during the year.
That reminder comes from Dr. Chuck
Moore, Extension farm management
specialist in the University of Kentucky
College of Agriculture.
"This requirement is not new, but the
penalty for failure to file has finally attracted business owners' interest,"
Moore said.
The penalty for each failure to file is
$50, with a maximum of $50,000 per
calendar year.
If farmers in the course of their
business pay more than $600 to a nonincorporated business or an individual
who is not an employee, they must file
a 1099-MISC. One copy must go to the
payee by January 31 and one copy to the
IRS by February 28.
If the payment is interest of more than
$600 to such an individual, then a
1099-INT is required (but not for interest
paid to lending institutions).
Moore gives several examples of
payments that would necessitate filing
a 1099-MISC:
Contracting with someone to paint a
barn for $1,500 where $600 or more was
for services.
Paying a non-incorporated repair
shop for overhauling a tractor, say for
$2,000.
A landowner paying a farm manager
to manage his farm.
A farmer paying $4,000 in cash rent for
·
additionalland.
A farmer paying a crew chief or independent contractor $1,500 to harvest
his crop.
Farmers who filed informational
forms last year for calendar year 1982
may remember form 1099-NEC that was
used for non-employee compensation.
But, Moore said, for 1983 this form has
been discontinued and 1099-MIC is to be
used instead.
The IRS copy of each 1099 must be attached to the transmittal from 1096 and
filed with the IRS service center by
February 28, said Moore.
"With the $50 penalty for failure to file,
it could be very costly to farmers and
other business owners if very many of
these required forms were neglected,"
Moore said.
FAMILY PRACTICE AND OB
Saturday
8:30 A.M.-12:00 Noon
1·25·31
B. &M.
SATELLITE
Ham.ilton's Discount Furniture
Phone: 377-2897, Price, Ky.
.Home phone: 587-2816 or 587-2775, Beaver, ,.K y.
WILL NOT BE UNDERSOLD ON ANY
SATELLITE SYSTEM.
• All Major brands available
• 60-day free service
• 3-year warranty on mounts
Bank Financing Available.
lt.
Call Frederick & May Lumber Company
West Liberty, Ky. East on U.S. 460
Phone ( 606) 743-3136
*First payment with delivery of set.
*No down payment, just first month's rent.
REVOLVING
CHARGE
NOW
AVAILABLE
AT
CURTIS
MATHES!
FOR SALE : 1975 Olds Omega. Asking
$800. Runs good. Good condition. Call
1174-9836. ask for Ezra or Geraldine
Endicott .
1tpd .
FOR RENT: 3-bedroom home. 1-1/2
bath. family room. central heat and
air. On Mountain Parkway. Call
1174-2821.
ltpd.
Monday-Wednesday-Friday
8:00 A.M.-4:00 P.M.
--,OAK LOGS
FOR SALE: Four white. 8-spoke. J<'ord
truck rims. $1!0: 4 Mustang TRX mag
wheels. $115: F&W pool table. $60: one
female Bluetick . Caii35B-9106. 2-8-2tpd.
PUPPIES : Adorable females. Spr·
inger and Shepherd mix . FREE TO
GOOD HOME. 886-8928 or 886-9645.
Janet Stumbo.
ltpd.
Area Code 606/789-6489
IT'S VERY SIMPLE:
FOR SALE: Irish Setter puppies and
quilting frames. Call 285-3679 after 4
p.m .. Glenn Slone.
2-1-2t.
PROFESSIONAL DOG TRAINING
and grooming. Fifteen years' experience. All breeds . Call for appoint ·
ment. 874-2910, Debbie Roddam . ltpd.
NO APPOINTMENT NECESSARY
RE T TO OWN
FOR SALE: 1977 Chrysler Cordoba.
white with red velour interior. new red
landau top, rebuilt transmission, new
tires and new battery. AM-FM CB
stereo, 65,000 miles. Has all options but
power windows, $2000. Nice, white cook
stove, $75. David Wyatt. 886-6349.
2-1-2t.
FOR SALE: Sofa hide-a-bed. queensize. beige. rust and blue floral. Used 5
months. excellent condition . Moving to
Arizona. must sacrifice. $550. Also
10'xl2' rust. plush carpet. Phone
2-8-lt .
886 -3126.
•
PAINTSVILLE CLINIC BUILDING
111 MAIN STREET
PAINTSVILLE, KENTUCKY 41240
ALL AMERICA'S DOING IT!
FOR RENT : 4-room house with bath at
Hueysville. Call Taylor Reffett,
35S.4228.
2-1-2t.
FOR SALE: Internationai"Super A"
tractor. Three new tires. new paint.
complete overhaul. plows. wheel
weights and disk. After 4 p.m ..
285-9474.
ltpd
Section Three, Paae Fo u r
rtis
FOUR
YEAR
EXWJSIYE
lMTED
WIIPIVHfY
Stop In and see our
great selection of
televisions and video
recorders-SEE HOW
EASY IT IS TO OWN
A CURTIS MATHESI
athes
HOME ENTERTAINMENT CENTER
OWNED AND OPERATED IY SHAFRI TELIVISION
FREE
DELIVERY!
339 MAIN STREET
HAZARD
439-4477
PRESTONSBURG STORE HOURS:
10 TO 8, MONDAY THRU FRIDAY, 10 TO 3, SAT., CLOSED SUNDAY
HIGHLANDS PLAZA, PRESTONSBURG
PHONE 886-8381
355 SOUTH MAIN
HARLAN
573-7111
Curtis
Mathes
FOUR
YEAR
EXa..usiiiE
LM1"ED
w~
FREE
�•
~
__ed
__ne~_sd
__
a~y~,_F_e_b_ru
__a_ry
__8_,__1_9_8_4__________________________________________________________T_he~_R_o~y~d~C~o~u~n~ty~11~~~·~--------------------~---------------------------------------SectionThree,PageFivc
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With the help of his prehistoric f~iend, Daphne, teacher-demonstrator Winston Baird presents "GasWorks: Pipeline
to the Future" to area students. The traveling energy education program, sponsored by Columbia Gas of Kentucky,
will be presented to Allen Central High School students, Monday, February 20.
"GasWorks" was developed by Oak Ridge Associated Universities. a not-for-profit science education and research
organization headquartered at Oak Ridge, Tennessee, near Knoxville. It uses a variety of colorful graphic and electronic teaching aids to explain where gas comes from, how it is transported and stored, and how natural gas will continue to play a vital role in the U.S. energy picture.
"GasWorks" features a giant dinosaur to illustrate the origin of fossil fuels; an illuminated map of the million-mile,
cross-country pipeline network; liquid nitrogen to demonstrate how super-cold temperatures liquify natural gas for ease
in overseas transportation; and tips to encourage wise and economical energy management in the home.
Students participate in most of the demonstrations led by program conductor Winston Baird of Oak Ridge Associated
Universities. Baird, a former teacher and guidance counselor, received extensive training m energy technology and
research to prepare him to demonstrate the "GasWorks" program, Cameron said.
The assembly program may be followed by special classroom sessions where teachers and students explore ideas
about current energy concerns and the impact of science and technology on social issues.
The traveling energy education program is one of six "GasWorks" units being presented to students across the country, Cameron said.
McDowell High Beta Club
EDB Incidence
In State Said
.Extremely Low
Kentucky Commissioner of Agriculture David E. Boswell has asserted
that Department samplings of bulk
grains in storage areas and handling
facilities across the Commonwealth indicate an extremely low incidence of the
banned fumigant chemical ethylene
dibromide <EDB). The testing was done
on a random basis during recent days by
the Department's Division of Pesticides.
•
"These results show that at the grain
handling level at least, Kentucky is in
extremely positive shape with regard to
the use of this chemical,'' Commissioner
Boswell said. There are a number of
other pesticide/fumigants that can be as
effectively used and our research indicates that the Kentucky industry
generally selected che!nicals other than
EDB."
The federal Environmental Protection
Agency Friday, Feb. 3, issued a general
ban on the agricultural use of EDB.
Tolerance levels for human consumption in stored grain also established today by EPA are well above those identified through Kentucky Agriculture
Department testing. EPA indicates that
a tolerance of .9 parts per million for
human consumption is acceptable for
grain in handling and storage facilities .
Kentucky's figures for wheat indicate a
level of .035 parts per million and for
white corn of .004 parts per million.
"We know that no milling operation in
Kentucky is using EDB," Commissioner
Boswell said today. "We have also contacted chemical companies that have
EDB registered in Kentucky and know
that since an earlier September cancellation imposed by EPA, there has been
no EDB shipped into Kentucky."
The action by the federal EPA comes
right on the heels of correspondence today with Washington by Commissioner
Boswell on behalf of Governor Martha
Layne Collins in which he communicated the information about the trace
levels found in Kentucky's grain handling and grain storage facilities.
Commissioner Boswell notes that the
Department of Agriculture has not been
involved in checking manufactured and
processed grain food stuffs on store
shelves in the Commonwealth. These activities are the responsibility of the
Cabinet for Human Resource~. Human
consumption tolerance levels issued to• day by EPA for such foods as flour,
meals and mixes are .15 parts per
million and for such ready-to-eat items
as breads and cookies, .03 parts per
million.
"We stand ready to cooperate in any
and every way with EPA in its action today," said Boswell," and we are glad to
be able to issue a note of some comfort
in this matter on the subject of the agricultural use of this chemical in Kentucky."
•
•
CARD OF THANKS
The family of Tommy Hall wish to
take this opportunity to thank everyone
who helped in any way during our father
and grandfather's illness and death . To
the relatives, friends, and neighbors for
food, flowers, and cards; The Carter
Funeral Home for their efficient service; Doug Frasure for cleaning driveway and church parking lot; Dr. Adams
and nurses at Highlands Regional; to
Rev. Bill Campbell and Rev. Orbon
Dickerson for their comforting words. A
special thanks to Harold Greene for fixing frozen water pipes.
The charter chapter of the McDowell High School Beta Club recently held
an induction ceremony for those students who were invited to join.
The National Beta Club is a service, leadership organization to reward merit,
encourage effort, and promote high ideals among high school students.
Membership is based on honorable character, good mentality, creditable
achievement, and commendable attitude. These students meet all these re·quirements, as well as a school requirement, which is maintaining at least
a 3.3 grade average.
The club sponsors are Freda Burke and Joan Caldwell. Members pictured
'in first row, left to right, are Linda Hall, Lisa Chaffins, Barbara Collins, Lisa
Scalf, Pam Salisbury, Freda Newsome, Brenda Mullins, Gail Lafferty. In second row, from left, are Sherry Tackett, Angela Tackett, Patty Howell, Sharon
Fugate, Joell Allen, Tammy Clark, Cammie Lawson, Deborah Wilhite, Tina
Hall, Sheridan Martin. In third row, from left, are Bob Caudill, Eric Lawson,
Kevin Shelton, Douglas Hall, Steven Dawson, Marion Krumm. In the back
,-ow are Ricky Tackett, Randy Spears. Not pictured is Ken Hall.
Nam~d
Miss Christmas Time
MARTIN NEWS
RESIDE 1:\ LOUISVILLE
Mr. and Mrs. Garland Hutchinson,
formerly of Martin, have moved into
their new home at 1236 Central Ave.,
Louisville, Ky.
Mrs. Hutchinson will be remembered
as the former Eula Mae Setser. They
have many friends and relatives in
Floyd Cp. area .
Drema Osborne, Director of Nursing
at Highlands Regional Medical Center,
has successfully completed all requirements to qualify as a certified nursing administrator. The American Nursing Association <ANAl gives the certification examination one time each
year. Mrs. Osborne is one of only 23 nursing administrators to become certified
in the entire state of Kentucky.
Certification by the ANA serves as an
identifiable yardstick of nursing skills
and achievement. It demonstrates
specialized knowledge and ability in
leadership, judgement and decision
making. Mrs. Osborne, who has lead the
Highlands Regional Nursing staff for
five years, is a diploma graduate of
Louisville General Hospital's School of
Nursing. She holds a bachelor's degree
m Health Care Administration from St.
Joseph's College in Maine and is currently undertaking graduate study
through the University of Kentucky.
"I'm proud to become certified and
feel it.demonstrates that the HRMC Nuremg staff and I can meet or exceed strict
national standards for nursing care,"
said Mrs. Osborne.
Completes Basic Training
Pvt. Jeffery D. DeRossett, son of
Damon and Barbara DeRossett, of
Wheelwright, has been assigned to the
Naval Air Station, in Pennsacola, Fla.,
after completing basic training at· Fort
Jackson, S.C. During basic training,
Pvt. DeRossett trained in radio communications in the United States Army
Intelligence Department.
A 1983 graduate of Wheelwright High
School, he is married to Carolyn Hitchcock :rfeRossett, formerly of Wheelwright.
A Special Valentine
Want to give a special valentine to
your loved ones this year? How about
your heart-and a pledge to keep it
healthy.
The gift suggestion comes from the
Health Education Unit in th.e statP.'s
Cabinet for Human Resources. Rebecca Ford, head of the unit, believes such
a " pledge from the heart" can be a
priceless gift, indeed.
"Heart disease is the cause of more
than 38 percent of the deaths in the state
and the leading killer of Kentuckians
over ·age 20," Ford said. "What a tremendous expression of love, to say to a
spouse or a child, 'I want us to be
together for a long, long time, so I'm going to do what it takes to have the
strongest heart I can have."
Photo by Paula Goble
Kristy Lynn Bishop, 12-year-old
daughter of Richard and Thelma
Bishop, of Auxier, was named Miss
Christmas Time at the pageant held at
Jenny Wiley State Park. She also won in
the costume category and was voted as
the wearer of the prettiest dress. She
also won a special award for Miss Congeniality. This award was voted on by
the girls in Kristy's age group.
Nursing Director Certified
What it takes, said Ford, is common
sense, moderation and attention to all
the daily habits that can help or hurt
your heart.
"Federal data indicates that 54 per
cent of the heart problems leading to
death in Kentucky are caused by lifesty.le factors-things we can control,"
she said. "Most of those factors center
around diet and weight control, blood
pressure, smoking and exercise."
How can you reduce your risk of heart
disease? The following recommendations are adapted from American Heart
Association guidelines:
*Try to quit smoking permanently In
many communities, special classes or
group programs offer help to people who
want to quit. Check with your local
health department, your doctor, a near·
by hospital or a representative of the
American Cancer Society.
*Have your blood pressure checked
regulary, preferably every 12 months
after age 40. If your blood pressure is
high, see your physician. If medication
is prescribed, take it regularly.
*Get some exercise-brisk walking,
swimming, cycling, jogging or other
vigorous and sustained activity at least
three times a week. You should check
with your doctor before starting any of
these activities.
*Give some thought to your diet. If you
are overweight or eat a lot of foods high
in saturated fat or cholesterol (whole
milk, cheese, eggs, butter, fatty foods,
fried foods), changes should be made in
your diet. The American Heart Association Cookbook is available in bookstores.
Your doctor can help you plan a weightloss plan.
*Ask your physician, your local health
department or the Heart Association for
further information and copies of free
pamphlets on topics "dear to your
heart":
-Reducing your risk of heart attack.
-Controlling high blood pressure.
-Eating to keep your heart healthy.
-How to stop smoking.
-Exercising for good health .
Allen Park Drainage
Planned Next Spring
The proposed improvements include
tiling for 15 acres, vegetative cover for
two acres of critical area, and a grassed waterway with a rip-rap outlet to control erosion. Money for the project was
made available through the Big Sandy
Resource Conservation and Development District.
The project is designed to improve the
general appearance of the area and
reduce the cost and inconvenience of
cancellations. rescheduling. and excessive maintenance of ball fields due to
w.et conditions. At present Allen Park
loses an average of 30 days use due to
rain and poorly drained fields during the
playing season.
The Floyd County Conservation District and the Soil Conservation Service
provides free technical assistance on
drainage problems such as the Allen
Park situatiOn as well as for private
landowners
Mark Gol · .
•
..t:»...~~.nivei
sary
The Rev. and Mrs. Phil Fraley, former Floyd countians, who now reside
in Louisville, celebrated their 50th wedding anniversary with an open house
at the Bethel Missionary Baptist Church, Louisville, on January 20. The
celebration was hosted by their children and grandchildren. Gifts were
presented to the couple by their family and friends.
The couple was entertained by the Celestials, a gospel group, of which their
granddaughter Kathi is lead singer.
Is Your Drinking Water Safe?
What is the quality of the water in your
home? Is it safe or has it been contaminated with bacteria? How can you
tell and what can you do about it? These
are questions that should be given important consideration, especially if you
live on a farm.
The most important type of water
quality problem is bacteria, according
to Dr. Richard Warner, Extension soil
and water specialist in the University of
Kentucky College of Agriculture.
"The disease-producing types of
bacteria are viruses and protozoa which
call cause illnesses such as typhoid
fever, dysentery, diarrhea and hepatitis," he said. "Whenever a disease occurs in the household, especially a recurring disease, there is a potential for having unsafe water and the water should
be tested."
Bacteria enter farm water supplies
through poor seals between the well and
the ground, Warner explained. If you
have a pond or stream, it is possible that
the runoff entering it may have bacterial
growth.
The bacteria in animal wastes infiltrate through the ground. "These can
be present if you have cattle grazing
upflow from the pond or any animal
around the vicinity of the pond, such as
deer," said Warner. If there are any
animals around the area it is likely that
they will carry fecal wastes into the
water.
Other water constituents that people
should be concerned about are the
elements iron and manganese. Iron
causes the rust-colored stains in water.
'l'he black stains that appear on fixtures
and clothes are a result of manganese.
"Ir{ln bacteria are normally the cause
of the colored slime in toilet tanks,' '
Warner said.
Water hardness made up of dissolved
minerals such as calcium and magnesium leaves a gray tint discoloring clothes
and also leaves soap suds on wash water
and bath water. Hydrogen sulfide, which
smells like rotten eggs, tends to cause
black discoloration.
In western Kentucky there is acid
water, or water with a low pH level. This
acidic water tends to corrode metal
pipes and pumps, said Warner.
If you suspect that your water is contaminated with any of these constituents, you should have a water test conducted. A bacteriological test should
also be done when you install a new
water system such as a well, cistern,
pond or stream, Warner recommended.
There are several commercial water
testing laboratories in Kentucky that are
qualified by the Department of Natural
Resources and Environmental Protec·
lion. They will provide you with a sterile
sampling bottle, instructions and a list
of fees.
"What they are really testing for is
culiform bacteria-those found in the
fecal wastes of warm-blooded mammals," Warner said. "This is an indicator organism that is easy to test for.
It simply indicates the possible presence
of a disease-causing organism."
If you think that your water should be
tested, you should first locate a cold
water faucet. It cannot be one which
mixes hot and cold water and certainly
not one that is leaky or connected to a
hose. Then remove any strainer device
on the faucet and sterilize the inside surfaces of the faucet by flaming them with
a propane torch.
If you don't have a propane torch, you
can make a homemade one. Take a cotton ball, saturate it in rubbing alcohol
and hold it with pliers. Then light it and
use as you would a blow torch.
Make sure to wash your hands prl()r
to taking the sample. Then open the
faucet to full flow for five to 10 minutes.
This empties the water pressure in the
tank and causes the pump to start, and
allows you to test all the water in the
system.
After 10 minutes, close the faucet to
a pencil-sized stream and Jet it flow for
about one minute. Fill the sterile bottle
about three quarters full. Make sure not
to rinse the bottle or contaminate the
bottle cap.
When you have obtained the sample,
personally deliver it to the laboratory if
at all possible. Otherwise, take it to the
post office right before mail dispatch
time. This is necessary because a sample that is more than 30 hours old gives
inaccurate results, Warner said.
If the tests reveal that your water is
contaminated, you need to shock
chlorinate. "When shock chlorinating,
you overload the water supply with a
high dosage of chlorine that has the
potential to kill the bacteria," said
Warner.
You shock the system by flushing the
chlorine through the system and letting
the water run for a while. Then pump the
well until the smell of chlorine is gone.
"If you can still taste the chlorine in
the water, then the level may be too
high," said Warner " Let the water run
for a while longer."
The bacteria is killed by having the
proper dosage of chlorine and correct
amount of contact time. A contact time
of about 10 minutes is considered
minimal, said Warner. "At the normal
chlorine dosage, the chlorine needs to be
in contact with the water for at least the
amount of time to be able to kill the
bacteria."
"It's a good idea to chlorinate all the
water for domestic use even if you don' t
suspect contamination," he said.
Third Birthday
Jackie Edford Owens II, son of Jackie
Edford and Hattie Owens, of Hueysville,
celebrated his third birthday with a
Snoopy party at his home, January 27.
Those attending werre Edna Cooley,
Molly Owens. Clettis Howard, Agnes
and Steve Woods, Harold and Velva
Cooley, Lou and Kelli Campbell, Janet.
Mecca, Jertnings, and Gary Webb.
Glema, Amy, and Maria Hicks, Caryol
Allen, Priscilla and Marie Martin, Ina
and Shawn Robinson, Teresa and Ryan
Owens, John, Delis·a , and Wesley
Howard, Lynn and Jason Isaac.
Those sending gifts but unable to attend were Gorman Cooley. Carl, Ginger
and Nat?.Jie Cooley, Tanessa Fletcher,
Lema and Bob Bradley.
Jackie is the grandson of Gorman and
Edna Cooley, of Prater Fork, and Molly Owens and the late Ralph Owen!>, of
Langley.
Fasten a few spare strands
of yarn onto the back
of a finished needlepoint
project. It may come In
handy for future repairs.
�Section Three, Paae Six
The Floyd County Times
•
Wednesday, February 8, 1984
:
WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES AND CORREa PRINTING ERRORS •
•
••
•
••
BUTT STYLE
ORKROAST
Ame~ca,
t!.~
••
youre
leaning
on
Pork.™
29
LB.
LB. ·
•
$16 9
CENTER CUT LOIN
PORK CHOPS .
$
SAUSAGE ....... .
3 9 PORK
$
STEAKS ............ ..
FRESH HoMEMADE
LB.
LOIN END
PORK ROAST......
$
LB.
s139 PORK
LOIN HALF
WHOLE
•
•
••
••
•
•
12-0z.
19
$
.
.
LB.
.
CENTER CUT LOIN
LB.
BEEF
HOT DOGS
39
PORK LOI ~~~~~o
LOIN,~r~.~~9~
$159
BOSTON
$119
BUTT
·. 5~~~~0
PORK CHOPS.......
69
29
PORK ................$1
PORK CHOPS $1
STEAKS
4
49
~~R~~~N,N:~~~~grs$1 ! ~X~%:~·~·-· $1
WHOLE
ARMOUR
LB.
$159 .
SUCED
LB.
•
•·
•
•
09
LB.
LB•
2-LB. PKG.
.... ...
LB•
..
· ~--~ ~------~·~------~----~~--------------~
·
BACON
D
YMSALr
TURKEY
~ 79c
12
ACON
FRANKS .. . ...
••
Pk!l:
1-Lb.
$
9
$
19
ARMOUR
PURE PORK
-Lb.
1
SAUSAGE .........~~·L
Pkg.
ARMOUR
ARMOUR
CHICKEN FRIED
BEEF PATTIES
59
ARMOUR
-Lb.
1
BOLOGNA ..~,:
ARMOUR
99 C
$1 59
~-o•.$
1
LB.
H M. .. . .... ..Pk~,
'-----------"''----------_,
cxOKED
28 9
..
••
•
•• •••••••• •••
•••
�The Floyd County Times
Wednesday, February 8, 1984
Section Three, Pace Seven ••
•
PRICES IN EFFEO WED., FEB. 8 THRU SUN., FEB. 12
IDAHO
POTATOES
$ 89
GOLDEN RIPE
BANANAS
$
5/$1
5/$1
YELLOW DELICIOUS APPLES ... .
PEARST~~~ ............................. 5/~ 1
BROCOLI ............ ·............... 89C
$129
MUSHROOMS ........................ .
STATE
CRISP
D DELICIOUS APPLES ..... -.....
LETTUCE
88-CT. WASHINGTON STATE
c
Bunch
8.0Z. CUP
Head
_,
'
..... j
•
•
PILLSBURY
COUNTRY STYI,.E OR.
BUTTERMILK
BISCUITS
......
'
'·
'
~ !! • ', } • .'
'
7 VARIETIES
ORANGE
JUICE
MORTON
DINNERS
6~0Z.$1
59
~:~,r~sc~~~~A~ . . . . . . . 3:L•~ 1
49
~l!z~ 1
••• :::~FRUIT
6~A~~
JUICE ........
TURKEY AND DRESSING, STEAK AND GRAVY, FRIED CHICKEN, FISH AND
HUSH PUPPIES, HOT DOGS, SWEET POTATOES. GREEN BEANS, CORN,
MASHED POTATOES, BROWN BEANS, MUSTARD GREENS, CORN BREAD,
ROLLS. APPLE COBBLER.
SATURDAY
...:L
KRAFT
09
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e
e
~------------F
~R~I~~------------4 •
~
'
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•e
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~----------------~--------------~ •·
.
.
.- . . DAIRY
. .·... -.
'.'
'
• MEAT LOAF. STEAK AND GRAVY, SPAGHETI, HOT DOGS, FRIED CHICKEN,
HAMBURGERS, CORN, PEAS, MASHED POTATOES, GREEN BEANS,
MUSTARD GREENS, BROWN BEANS, CORN BREAD, ROLLS, PEACH
COBBLER.
69
l ·OZ.
89 c
HAMBURGER, SAUSAGE
PEPPERONI, CANADIAN
BACON
TOTINO
PIZZA
10-0Z.-HUNGRY JACK
OZ.-BLACKBERRY
PEACH, STRAWBERRY
MICROWAVE
POPCORN ...
PET RITZ
COBBLERS ..
$129
$
99
FRIED
2
CHICKEN ....
30-0Z. BANQUET
09
$
16-0Z.-IGA
ORANGE
JUICE ....... .
$
$
149
119
MEAT LOAF, FRIED CHICKEN, STEAK AND GRAVY, HOT DOGS, CORN,
GREEN BEANS, MUSTARD GREENS, BROWN BEANS.
•e
e,
•
~~~----------------------------~ ·
SUNDAY
•
BEEF STEW, STEAK AND GRAVY, FRIED CHICKEN, GREEN BEANS, CORN
ON COB, MASHED POTATOES, PEAS. HOT DOGS. CORN BREAD, ROLLS,
BLACKBERRY COBBLER.
I
CHICKEN AND DUMPLINGS, HAM AND BAKED APPLES, PORK CHOP AND
DRESSING, KRAUT AND WIENERS, MACARONI AND CHEESE, HOT DOGS,
GREEN BEANS, CORN ON COB, SCALLOPED POTATOES, PEAS, BROWN
BEANS, MASHED POTATOES, CORN BREAD, ROLLS, PEACH COBBLER.
LIVER AND ONIONS, MEAT LOAF, CABBAGE ROll, SALISBURY STEAK AND
GRAVY. HOT DOGS, GREEN BEANS. PEAS, CORN, MASHED POTATOES.
MUSTARD GREENS, BROWN BEANS, CORN BREAD, ROLLS, CHERRY
COBBLER .
•
•
e
e
e
e
e
•e
•
e
�The Floyd County Time•
Wednesday, February 8, 1984
ADVERTISEMENT FOR BID
St>.alcd bids will te reC'eived by the
NOTICE OF
INTENTION TO MINE
Prestonsburg C1ty's Utilities ComMission, Prestonsburg, Kentucky, on a 12
Ton capacity Trailer, at the City's
Utilities Commission office, 1048 South
Lake Drive, Prestonsburg, Kentucky,
until 7:30 p.m , February 9, 1984, at
which time bids will be publicly opened
and read aloud, for furnishing labor and
materials and performing all work set
forth by this advertisement for bids.
Specifications can be obtained from the
office of the City's Utilities Commission,
1048 South Lake Drive, Prestonsburg,
Kentucky.
Bids received after the scheduled clos·
ing time for reception of bids will be
returned unopened to the bidder. Bids
must be accompanied by bid bonds, payable to the City's Utilities Commission
in an amount not less than 5% of the base
bid.
In event an award is made and the
successful bidder fails to execute contract for performance of the work under
the award, then the bid bond shall be
forfeited as liquidated damages for such
failure.
Bids and bid bonds shall be in a sealed envelope bearing the bidder's identificatiCln, addressed to the Prestonsburg
City's Utilities Commission, 1048 South
Lake Drive, Prestonsburg, Kentucky
41653, labE:led in the lowP.r left-hand
corner:
"Proposal No. 1: 12 Ton Capacity
Trailer."
The Prestonsburg City's Utilities
Commission reserves the right to reject
any or all bids, which bids shall not be
withdrawn for 45 days subsequent to the
opening of bids, without consent of the
Prestonsburg City's Utilities Commission.
BILL H. HOWARD, Superintendent
Prestonsburg City's
Utilities Commission
2-1-2t.
Pursuant to Application
Number 836-0085
In accordance with the provision of
KRS 350.055, notice is hereby given that
Renegade Mining, Inc. 2885, Pikeville,
Ky. 41501, has filed an application for a
permit for an underground mining operation. The proposed operation will affect a surface disturbance of 16.37 acres
and will enderlie an additional 64.85
acres located 1.50 miles southeast of
Osborn in Floyd county.
The proposed operation is approximately 1.0 miles northeast from State
Route 1426 junction with Bush Branch.
and located 0.25 miles northeast of Bush'
Branch. The latitude is 37' 28' 22". The
longitude is 82' 35' 41".
The proposed operation is located on
the Pikeville USGS 71;2 minute quadrangle map. The surface area to be disturbed is owned by Osborn heirs. The operation will underlie land owned by Osborn
heirs, Estill Salisbury, L & J McClanahan, Ruth & Green Tackett.
The application has been filed for
public inspection at the Department for
Surface Mining Reclamation and Enforcement's Prestonsburg Regional Office, 503 South Lake Drive, Prestonsburg, Ky 41653. Written comments, objections, or requests for a permit conference must have attached a copy of
the newspaper clipping and must be
filed with the Regional Administrator of
the Prestonsburg Regional Office, 503
South Lake Drive, Prestonsburg, Ky.
41653.
2-1-3t ..
NOTICE OF
INTENTION TO MINE
Pursuant to Application
Number 836-5032
1) In accordance with the provisions
of KRS 350.055, notice is hereby given
that Blackhawk Mining Company, Inc.,
P.O. Box 150, Prestonsburg, Ky. 41653,
has filed an application for a permit for
an underground mining operation. The
proposed operation will affect a surface
disturbance of 3 acres and will underlie
an additional.90 acres located 1 mile
northeast of Drift in Floyd county.
2) The proposed operation is approximately 1 mile east from State Route
122's junction with Stonecoal Branch
Road and located on the north side of
Stonecoal Branch. The latitude is
37'-30'-41". The longitude is 82'-44'-15".
3) The proposed operation is located
on the McDowell U.S.G.S. 7.5 minute
quadrangle map. The surface area to be
disturbed is owned by Harry and Reba
Martin. The operation will underlie land
owned by Harry and Reba Martin.
4) The application has been filed for,
public inspection at the Department for
Surface Mining Reclamation and Enforcement's Prestonsburg Regional Office, South Lake Drive, Prestonsburg,
Kentucky 41653. Written comments, objections, or requests for a permit conference must be filed with the Director
of the Division of Permits, 6th Floor,
Capital Plaza Tower, Frankfort, Kentucky 40601.
2-1·3t.
NOTICE OF
INTENTION TO MINE
Pursuant to Application
Number 836-0025
In accordance with the provisions of
KRS 350.055, notice is hereby given that
Brashae Coal Co., Inc., P.O. Box 628,
Hindman, Ky. 41653, has filed an application for a permit. for a surface coal
mining and reclamation operation of approximately 391.34 acres located 1.0
miles southeast of Risner, in Floyd
county.
T~e proposed operation ia approximately 0.57 miles northeast from
Wolfpen Branch's junction With KY 1210
and located 0.2 miles east of Wo!fpen
Branch. The latitude is~· 34' 22"N. The
longitude is 83' 48' 25"W. The surface
area is owned by Solomon Caudill,
Ronald and Betty Chaffin, John Click,
NarcieOiek, Whits Click, Ellen Cooper,
Bill, Car1; and Lois Dudley, Herschel
Flanery, Virgil Flanery, Vernon Flannery, Frazier Catalog Agency, Ernest
Gibson, Clyde Hale, David Hale, Joe
Hughes, McArthur Jacobs, John Justice,
Sandy and Polly Justice, Laura and Bill
Kilburn, Albert Marshall, Mullins heirs,
Bessie Ousley, Wade Ousley, R.E. Pitts,
Frank Skeans, Johnny Skeans, Mae
Skeans, Myrtle Skeans, S.C. Stevens,
Glen and Bessie Wards.
The proposed operation is located on
the Martin U.S.G.S. 7% minu~ quadrangle map. The operation will use the contour, area, combination method of mining. The application also includes a proposed land use change from the
forestland pre-mining land use to a
pastureland post-mining land use.
The application has been filed for
public inspection at {he Department for
Surface Mining Reclamation and Enforcenwmt's Prestonsburg Regional Office, 503 South Lake Drive, Prestonsburg, Ky. 41653. Written comments, objections, or requests for a permit conference must be filed with the Director
of the Division of Permits, 6th Floor,
Capital Plaza Tower, Frankfort, Kentucky 40601.
l-25-3t.
PUBLIC NOTICE
Upon and after publication of this
notice, I will no longer be responsible for
any debts incurred by anyone other than
myself
CHARLES HICKS II
Blue River, Ky. 41607
SHERIFF'S SALE
FWYD DlSTRICT COURT
ACTION NO. 83-C-180
Citizens Fidelity Bank and Trust Company .................................... Plaintiff
VS:
Robert W. Roberts Lola T. Roberts ...
Defendants
I, Henry C. Hale, Sheriff of Floyd
County Kentucky will offer for sale in
front of the Courthouse in Prestonsburg,
Kentucky on Feb. 17th 1984 at the hour
of 10:00 o'clock A.M. to satisfy judgment
on behalf of Plaintiff entered on August
29, 1983 against.the defendant Robert W.
Roberts, in the amount of WT7 .86 plus interest & court cost. The.·e is a mortgage
of approximately Forty Thousand
($40,000.00) owing to the Bank Josephine
of Prestonsburg, Ky. Following described property to-wit:
A certain tract or parcel of land lying
in Floyd County, Ky. on Branham's
Creek and being part of t}>e same land
conveyed to first parties by Kenas
Tackett and Lue Creasie Tackett, his
wife by deed bearing date Sept. 30, 1971,
which is duly recorded in Deed book 206,
page 321, Floyd County Clerk's office
containing 2 acres more or less. Bounded and described as follows : Beginning
on the right-hand side as you go up
Branham's Creek at a culvert at the
road; thence straight across the bottom
with the ditch line to the center of the
Creek; thence down the creek as it
meanders to John Martin's line, Lot No.
7; then crossing the bottom with Martin's lot No. 7, to an iron stake at the
Branham's Creek Road; thence up
Branhams Creek road to the place of
beginning.
HENRY C. HALE
Sheriff of Floyd County, Ky.
2-1-3t.
NOTICE OF PUBLIC SALE
A public sale will be held by The Bank
Josephine on the 17th day of February,
1984 at The Bank Josephine's Harold
Branch. Time of sale 10:00 a.m.
Sale is for the purpose of disposing of
a 1981 J-10 Jeep Pickup Truck bearing
Serial No. IJTCM26N5BT042888 and a
1978 Ford F-250 Ser. No. F26BNBH4092
to satisfy a Commercial Loan Agreement dated the 16th day of February,
1983.
The Bank Josephine reserves the right
to bid.
Terms of sale: CASH.
2-1-3t.
NOTICE OF
TO MINE
INT~NTION
Pursuant to Application
Number 836-0031
( 1) In accordance with the provisions
of KRS 350.055, notice is hereby given
that Energy Elkhorn Coal, Inc., P.O.
Box 1178. Paintsville, Kentucky 41240
has filed an application for a surface and
underground mining operation. The proposed operation will affect a surface
disturbance of 29.15 acres and will
underlie an additional 51.06 acres
located 1.3 miles southeast of Osborn in
Floyd county.
(2) The proposed operaticn is approximately 0.2 miles east from KY 1426's
junction with Keathley Branch Road
and located 0.06 miles northeast Qf Toler
Creek. The latitude is N 37' 27' 29". The
longitude is W 82' 36' 12". The surface
area to be disturbed is owned by J.R.
Spears and the E.L. Osborn he1rs.
(3) The proposed operation is located
on the Pikeville U.S.G.S. 7112 minute
quadrangle map. The operation shall
use the contour-strip method of mining
for the surface disturbance. The o;>eration will underlie land owned by J.R.
Spears, E.L. Osborn heirs, W.T. Osborn,
Stonewall Osborn, and Rhoda Roberts
heirs.
(4) The application has been filed for
public inspection at the Department for
Surface Mining Reclamation and
Enforcement's Prestonsburg Regional
Office, 431 South Lake Drive, Prestonsburg, Ky. 41653. Written comments, objections, or requests for permit conference must be filed with the Director
of the Division of Permits, 6th Floor,
Capital Plaza Tower, Frankfort, Kentucky 40601.
2-1-3t.
NOTICE OF
INTENTION TO MINE
NOTICE OF
INTENTION TO MINE
Pursuant to Application
Pursuant to Application
Number 8:!6-5033
Number 836-0080
<1) In accordance with the provisions
In accordance with the provisions of
of KRS 350.055, notice is hereby given KRS 350.055, notice is hereby given that
that Amber Coal Co., Inc., Box 6367,
Raschella Coal Company, Rt. 4, Box
Beauty, Kentucky, 41203, has filed an ap- 962-Y, Pikeville, Ky. 41501, has filed an
plication for a permit for an
application for a permit for a surface
underground mining operation. The pro- coal mining and reclamation operatwn
posed operation will affect a surface 1of approximately 64.88 acres located 4.1
disturbance of 2.69 acres and will miles south of Grethel, m Floyd county.
underlie an additional 40.87 acres
The proposed o~ration is approxlocated 1.0 mile northeast of Risner in imately 1/8 miles east from State Route
Floyd county.
979 junction with Akers Branch Road
(2) The proposed operation is approxand located 112 miles west of Branham
imately 0.2 miles east from Johnson Creek. The latitude is 37' 27' 41". The
Fork Road's junction with KY 1210 and longitude is 83' 31' 21". The surface area
is located on Johnson Fork of Caney iis owned by Russell Clark, Akers heirs,
Creek. The latitude is 37' 36' 05"N. The •B. & M. Coal Company, Cline ·Mitchell,
longitude is 82' 50' 24"W.
Foster Mitchell and Henry Martin.
(3) The proposed operation is located
The proposCd operation is located on
on the Martin U.S. G .S. 7112 minute quad- the McDowell U.S.G.S. 7% minute quadrangle map. The surface area to be rangle map. The operation will use the
disturbed is owned by Manis Ousley and mountain top removal method of
Austin Johnson. The operation will mining.
underlie land owned by Otis Ousley,
The application has been filed for
Manis Ousley, Callie Skeans, Verlin public inspection at the Department for
Johnson and Austin Johnson. The opera- Surface Mining Reclamation and Ention will affect an area within 100 feet of forcement's Prestonsburg Regional Ofpublic road Johnson Fork Road. The fice, at 431 South Lake Drive, Prestonsoperation will not involve relocation of burg; Ky. 41653. Written comments, obJohnson Fork Road.
jections, or requests for a permit con(4) The application has been filed for ference must be filed with the Director
public inspection at the Department for of the Division of Permits, 6th Floor,
Surface Mining Reclamation and En- Capital Plaza Tower, Frankfort, Kenforcement's Prestonsburg Regional Oftucky 40601.
1-25-3t.
fice, 503 South Lake Drive, Prestonsbur~. Kentucky 41653. Written comNOTICE OF
ments, objections, or requests for a permit conference must be filed with the
INTENTION TO MINE
Director of the Division of Permits, 6th
Pursuant to Application
Floor, Capital Plaza Tower, Frankfort,
Number 436-5101
Kentucky 40601.
In accordance with the provisions of
This is the final advertisP.ment of this
KRS 350.055, notice is hereby given that
application; all comments, objections,
Melana Coal Company, Drift, Kentucky
or requests for a permit conference
41619, has filed an application for a permust be received within thirty (30) days
mit for an underground mining operaof loday's date.
1t.
tion. The proposed operation will affect
a surface disturbance of I acre and will
NOTICE OF
underlie an additional 49 acres located
1.5 miles northeast of Drift in Floyd
INTENTION TO MINE
county.
Pursuant to Application
The proposed operation is approxNumber 836-0070
In accordance with the provisions of imately 2 miles northeast of State Route
122's junction with Kentucky Route 1022
KRS 350.055, notice is hereby given that
Rock Ridge Resources, P .O. Box 140, and 'located on the south side of
Pine Top, Kentucky 41843, has filed an Stonecoal Branch. The latitude is
application for a permit for an under- 37'-29'-41". The longitude is 82'-44'-20".
The proposed operation is located on
ground and surface mining operation.
the McDowell U.S.G.S. ? 12 minute quadThe proposed operation will affect a surrangle map. The surface area to be
face disturbance of 16.11 acres and will
disturbed is owned by Harry and Reba
underlie an additional 10.28 acres
Martin. The operation will underlie land
located 1.5 miles southwest of Grethel in
owned by Harry and Reba Martin.
Floyd county.
The operation will affect an area
The proposed operation is approxwithin 100 feet of public road, Stone Coal
imately 0.62 miles northwest from KY
Branch Road. The operation will not in680's junction with KY 979 and located
volve relocation of the public road.
0.5 miles north of Hamilton Branch. The
The application has been filed for
latitude is 37' 28' OO"N. The longitude is
public inspection at the Department for
82' 40' OO"W.
Surface Mining Reclamation and Er.The proposed operation is located on
forcement's Prestonsburg Regional Ofthe McDowell U.S. G .S. 7'h. minute quadfice, South Lake Drive, Prestonsburg,
rangle map. The operation will use the
Kentucky 41653. Written comments, obcontour and auger method of mining.
jections, or requests for a permit conThe surface area to be disturbed is ownference must be filed with the Director
ed by Dennis Jones, Emmet Lawson,
of the Division of Permits, 6th Floor,
Silas Akers and The Elkhorn Coal CorCapital Plaza Tower, Frankfort, Kenporation. The operation will underlie
tucky 40601.
2-8-4t.
land owned by Silas Akers, and Dennis
Jones.
The application has been filed for
PUBLIC NOTICE
public inspection at the Department for
An application for a place of entertainSurface Mining Reclamation and Enment license has been filed by Thelma
forcement's Prestonsburg Regional OfMcAskill, of P.O. Box 69, Garrett, Kenfice, 401 South Lake Drive, Prestonstucky. The nature of the business will be
burg, Kentucky 41653. Written coma drive-in restaurant.
ments, objections, or requests for a perThe County Attorney's Office is remit conference must be filed with the
quired to file a written report to the
Director of the Division of Permits, 6th
County Judge Executive's office reflecFloor, Capital Plaza Tower, Frankfort,
ting if thP. person applying is "not of good
Kentucky 40601.
moral character or who will not, in the
This is the final advertisement of this
judgment of the Court, <County Judge
application; all comments, objections,
Executive) obey the laws of the state in
or requests for a permit conference
the carrying on of the business."
must be received within thirty (30) days
Any interested citizen having informaof today's date.
lt.
tion relative to said applicant's lack of
"good moral character" or willingness
to obey the laws of the state in the car·
NOTICE OF
rying on of the business is requested to
INTENTION TO MINE
file the same in writing, with the CounPursuant to Application
ty Attorney's office. Said written inforNumber: 860-5023
mation shall be signed, dated, and
In accordance with the provisions of reflect the current address of said
KRS 350.055, notice is hereby given that citizen, and must be delivered to the
National Mines Corporation, Box 12022, County Attorney's office no later than
101 East Vine Street, Lexington, Ken- the 16th day of February, 1984.
tucky 40579, has filed an application for
ARNOLD TURNER, JR.
a permit for an underground .mini~g
Floyd County Attorney
operation. The proposed operabon wtll
2-8-2t.
affect a surface disturbance of 3.13 acres
and will underlie an additional 135.49
NOTICE OF
acres located 2. 7 miles southwest of GarINTENTION TO MINE
rett in Knott county.
Pursuant to Application
The proposed operation is approxNumber 836-5031
imately 2.0 miles southwest from Route
(1) In accordance with the provisions
55o junction with Route 7 and located 0.7
miles southeast of Jones Fork. The lati- of KRS 350.055, notice is hereby given
tude is 37' 26' 37". The longitude is 82' that Apollo Coal Co., Inc., P.O. Box 9,
Wayland, Ky. 41666, has filed an applica50' 05".
The proposed operation is located on tion for a permit for an underground and
the Wayland U.S.G.S. 7112 minute quad- contour/auger method mining operarangle map. The surface area to be tion. The proposed operation will affect
di&turbed is owned by Glen Click. The a surface disturbance of 10.51 acres and
operation will underlie land owned by will underlie an additional 36.57 acres
Glen Click, Mont Conley, Gordon located .45 miles southwest of Dema in
Howard, Arnold Fitch, National Mines Floyd county.
(2) The proposed operation is approxCorporation, Charles and Juanita
Thornsburg, James and Francis Allen. imately .2 miles south from Bradley
This application also includes a propos- Branch Road's junction with KY 7 and
ed land use change from the forest land located on Bradley Branch. The latitud~
pre-mining land use to· a pastu~e la~d is 37' 24' 57"N. The longitude is 82' 48'
post-mining land use. The operation w~ll 40"W.
(3) The proposed operation is located
affect an area within 100 feet of pubhc
1
road Triplett Branch. The operation will on the Wayland U.S.G.S. 7 ,2 minute
not involve relocation of the public road. quadrangle map. The surface area to be
The application has been filed for pub- disturbed is owned by Gliden and Rosa
lic inspection at the Department for Sur- Bradley and Lena Bradley Hopkins. A
face Mining Reclamation and Enforce- brief description of the kind of mining
ment, Jackson Regional Office, Howell activity proposed is: underground and
Heights Building, Route 2, Box 500, contour/auger method of mining.
Jackson, Kentucky 41339. Written com(4) The application has been filed for
ments, objections, or requests for a per- public inspection at the Department for
mit conference must be filed with the Surface Mining Reclamation and EnDirector of the Division of Permits, 6th forcement's Prestonsburg Regional OfFloor, Capital Plaza Tower, Frankfort, fice, 503 South Lake Drive, Prestonsburg, Ky. 416:>3. Written comments, obKentucky 40601.
This is the final advertisement of this jections, or requests for a permit conapplication; all comments, objections, ference must be filed with the Director
or requests for a permit conference of the Division of Permits, 6th Floor,
must be received within thirty (30) days Capital Plaza Tower, Frankfort, Kentucky 40601.
1-25-3t.
lt.
of today's date.
Section Three, Paae El&ht
FLOYD CIRCUIT COURT
!tl-CI·I 55
PUBLIC NOTICE OF
BLASTING SCHEDULE
The First Commonwealth Bank of PresBrashae Coal Co. Inc., P 0. Box 628,
tonsburg. Kentucky ..................... Piff. Hindman, Kentucky, 41822, shall conVS: NOTICE OF SALE
. duct blasting operations on its 322 acre
Henry Albert Lewis and Inez Lewis surface mine permit, located approx................................................ Defts. imately 2 miles east of the junction of
By virtue of a judgment and order of KY 120 and Wolfpen Branch Road, near
sale of the Floyd Circuit Court rendered the community of Risner. Latitude 37"
at the October 4 term, 1983, in the above· 34' 21 ", longitude 82' 48' 25 ". The surface
styled cause I shall proceed to offer for of the area on which blasting will occur
sale at the Courthouse door in Prestons- is owned by : Glen Woods, Johnny
burg, Kentucky, to th~ highest and best Skeans, Virgil Flannery, John Click.
bidder, at public auction, on the 23 day Albert Marshall, Wade Ousley, Whit
of February, 1984, at 10:30 o'clock a.m. , Click, Narcie Click, Clyde Hale, S.C.
same being a day of the regular term of Stevens, and Ernest Gibson.
Blasting oper.a tions will take place 3-5
the Floyd Circuit Court, for cash or upon
a credit of six months, the following p.m., Monday through Saturday. At no
described property, to-wit:
time will blasting be done after dark.
That certain tract of land, lying and This schedule shall be in effect for 90
being on,the waters of the Levisa Fork days after publication. Any major alterof the Big Sandy River in Floyd Coun- ation of this schedule will be published.
Unscheduled blasting may occur in
ty, ;'entucky, and being the same land
conveyed Henry Albert Lewis and Inez emergency situations where rain, lightnLewis, his wife, on September 8, 1973 by ing, other atmospheric conditions,
Frank and Louise Derossett, as record- operations or public safety requires
ed in Deed Book 214, page 384 on unscheduled detonation. Then, the nearSeptember 13, 1973, and described more by residents will be notified of the
unscheduled blast by the most appropriparticularly as follows:
Lots 24 and 25 of Block 1 of the Town ate means, and the blast shall then proHall Addition to the City of Allen, Ken- ceed as a regular blast.
Control of the blasting area will be
tucky, as shown in map filed on August
5, 1946 as Map No. 108 in the Floyd Coun- maintaiued by blocking access roads to
ty Clerk's Office, based on survey by the area 1G minutes prior to the blast.
Townsel Combs, Engineer, of Langley, Post-detonation access to the blasting
area will be allowed only after an inspecKentucky.
The amount of money to be raised by tion and determination that no hazards
this sale shall be in the principal sum of exist
There will be predetonation warnings,
$12,772.54 with interest thereon 12% annually from the 4 day of October, 1983 consisting of a 1 minute series of long
until satisfied and the costs of this ac- blasts, 5 minutes prior to the blast
tion, including costs of advertising of signal. Then, there wi 11 be a blast signal
this sale and the fees and commissions consisting of a series of short blasts, 1
minute prior to the shot. A postfor conducting this sale.
For the purchase price the purchaser detonation blast will follow inspectijon
must execute bond with approved sure- of the blast area. These signals will be
ty or sureties, bearing legal interest audible within one-half mile to the
from the day of sale until paid and hav- blasting area.
ing the force the effect of a judgment
The preceding notice is published purwith a lien·retained upon said property suant to CFR 715.19, Surface Mining
as a further security. Bidders will be Reclamation and Enforcement Proviprepared to comply with these terms. sions, and KRS 350.028, and the regulaGiven under my hand, this 6th day of tions relating thereto. Kentucky Dept. of
February, 1984.
Surface Mining permit No. 036-0048,
MARSHALL DAVIDSON,
MSHA ID No. 15-09926.
lt.
Master Commissioner
2-8-3t.
DEPARTMENT OF THE TREASURY/ INTERNAL REVENUE SERVICE . Notice of Public Auction Sale.
FLOYD CIRCUIT COURT
Under the authority in Internal Revenue
83-CI-728
Code section 6331, the property describThe First Commonwealth Bank of Pres- ed below has been seized for nonpaytonsburg, Ky ............................... Piff.
ment of internal revenue taxes due from
VS: NOTICE OF SALE
Jane E. Howard, Box 1234, Ivyton, Ky.
Theda L. Johnson, Rt. I, Prestonsburg, 41444. The property will be sold at public
Ky. 41653 .................................... Deft. auction as provided by Internal Revenue
By virtue of a judgment and order of Code section 6335 and related regulasale of the Floyd Circuit Court rendered tions. Date of Sale: February 15, 1984.
at the November 22 term, 1983, in the Time of Sale: 1:00 p.m. Place of Sale:
above-styled cause I shall proceed to of· Magoffin County Courthouse steps,
fer for sale at the Courthouse door in Salyersville, Ky. Title Offered: Only the
Prestonsburg, Kentucky, to the highest right, title, and interest of Jane E.
and best bidder, at public auction, on the Howard in and to the property will be of23 day of February, 1984, at 10:00 o'clock. fered for sale. If requested, the Internal
a.m. , same being a day of the regular Revenue Service will furnish informaterm of the Floyd Circuit Court, for cash tion about possible encumbrances,
or upon a credit of six months, the which may be useful in determining the
value of the interest being sold. Descripfollowing described property, to-wit:
That certain tract or parcel of land, ly- tion of Property: A four-bedroom frame
ing and being on the waters of Middle house (approximately 1400 sq. ft.),
Creek in Floyd County, Kentucky, and cleared lot, and approximately 25 acres
being the same property conveyed to of wooded hillside located at the head of
Theda L. Johnson by deed from Frank Burning Fork Creek, 2 miles off Ky. Rt.
Adams and Susie Adams, his wife, dated 1888, just before the Ivyton Post Office,
June 5, 1962, recorded in Deed Book 180, Magoffin County, Kentucky. Property
page 51, Floyd County Clerk's Office, may be Inspected at: Turn right off Ky.
which is more particularly described as _Rt. 1888 traveling from Salyersville;
property located 2 miles up hollow on
follows:
Beginning on an elm near the State right. Payment Terms: Full payment
Road Fork Creek; thence running with required on acceptance of highest bid.
A.E. Vaughn's line to the top of the hill; Form of Payment: All payments must
thence with Woodrow Whitaker's line be by cash, certified check, cashier's or
down the ridge with George Spradlin's treasurer's check or by a United States
line; thence with Spradlin's line to Ben postal, bank, expr~s. or telegraph
Parker's line; thence with Parker's line money order. Make check or money
to the creek; thence with the creek back order payable to the Internal Revenue
Service.
lt.
to the place of beginning.
The amount of money to be raised by
this sale shall be in the principal sum of
$14,378.03 subject to a rebate in interest
for payment prior to maturity on July
14, 1987, and the costs of this action, in·
eluding costs of advertising of this sale
People who received unemployment
and the fees and commissions for con· compensation last year need to report
dueling this sale.
the payments on income tax returns, acFor the purchase price the purchaser cording to state Cabinet for Human
must execute bond with approved sure- Resources officials. These include peoty or sureties, bearing legal interest ple who received unemployment infrom the day of sale until paid and hav- surance benefits and those who receiving the force the effect of a judgment ed trade readjustment allowances
with a lien retained upon said property because they were totally or partially
as a further security. Bidders will be seperated from their jobs as a result of
prepared to comply with these terms.
increased imports.
Given under my hand, this 6 day of
"About 200,000 Kentuckians received
February, 1984.
these benefits last year," said Mae
MARSHALL DAVIDSON,
Girkey, director of the cabinet's Division
Master Commissioner
for Unemployment Insurance. "We will
2-8-3t. send each one a statement by Jan. 31,
showing the amount of benefits he or she
recieved. " The UI statement is similar
to a W-2 iorm and must be attached to
PUBLIC NOTICE
The City of Prestonsburg will accept the tax return.
"While anyone who receives $10 or
bids until 4:00 p.m. on Thursday,
more
in benefits must report it on a tax
February 9, 1984 for the purchase of
regular and unleaded gasoline for city return, the federal government has set
vehicles. The city uses approximately income levels, based on a person's fil50, 000 gallons of gasoline a year. The ci- ing status, at which benefits become taxty has their own tanks and the gasoline able, "Girkey said. The amount of
benefits is added to a person's adjusted
would be delivered to the tank locations.
gross income.
Mail bids top City Administrator, P.O.
Information for figuring the amount
Box 31, Prestonsburg, Ky. 41653. If you
to be included on a tax return is includhave any questions, call 886-2335.
ed in the instructions for federal income
DAVID EVANS
tax returns and in Publication 905, "Tax
City Administrator
Information on Unemployment
2-1-2t.
Compensation."
Anyone who received unemployment
compensation during 1983 who doesn't
PUBLIC NOTICE
receive a form by the second week of
The Comprehensive Plan, Zoning Feburary or who questions the amount
Regulations and Zoning Map for the on the statement should contact the local
City of Prestonsburg is on file in the office where he or she filed for the
Municipal Building, located on North benefits, Girkey said.
Lake Drive. The regular hours for inspection of these documents are from
For camping or picnics,
8:00 am. through 4:00 p.m. Mondayfreeze water, lemonade,
Friday. The public is invited to inspect
tea, etc., in gallon plastic
these documents .
jugs. Store in portable ice
HAROLD W. COOLEY, Mayor
chests. The frozen liquids
JAMES A. HUGHES. Chairman
will keep other items cold
Prestonsburg Planning Commission
and will melt slowly to
lt.
provide
icy
drinks.
Unemployment Comp
Subject to Taxation
�QrQr JJUnyb Qtouuty miitirs
Wed...ctay,
February 8, 1984Tuesday,
February 14, 1984
«wednesday))
2/8/84
MORNING
9:00
CD MOVIE: 'Midnight
lace'
AFTERNOON
1:00 CD MOVIE: 'Aicatraz
Express'
EVENING
6:oo
ornm®moo
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Wheel of
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CD H09!1n's Heroes
fB CIJ
Kentucky
General Assembly
0) (fl) MacNeil/lehrer
Newshour
m (I) Switch
7:30 0 rn Tic Tac Dough
Iii ® Family Feud
Ci) (!) Jeffersons
Sanford and Son
8:00 0 rn m (I) Real
People
1iJ ® MOVIE: 'Bugs
Bunny/Road Runner
Movie' ·
Ci) (!) 20/20
CD MOVIE: 'Big Jake'
A man estranged from
his family for 15 years.
joins his two sons to
search for his kidnapped
grandson.
0)
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latenight
America
12:00 Ci) (!) Nlghtline
CD MOVIE: 'Fear No
Evil'
12:30 0 rn late Night with
David letterman
li) ®MOVIE: 'Magnificent Hustle'
Ci) (!) Andy Griffith
1:00 Ci) (!) Bionic Woman
2:00 CD MOVIE: 'legend of
Custer' The flamboyant early career of
George
Armstrong
Custer,
the
army
general who fought
Indians in the wild
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is
depicted.
Wayne Maunder, Slim
Pickens, Michael Danter. 1968.
4:00 C6 Rat Patrol
4:30 CD Candid Camera
Geographic
Special
'love Those Trains.'
9:00 0 rn ·m (I) Facts of
life
li) ()) MOVIE: 'Good
Sport'
Ci) . (!) XIV Winter
Olympic Games Today's program features the Opening
Ceremonies and the
Men's Downhill Trials.
(2 hrs.)
fB CI:l Walk Through
the 20th Century with
Bill Moyers
0) (fl) MOVIE: 'Goliath
Awaits' Part 1 A diver
discovers living passengers aboard a ship
sunk 40 years earlier.
Mark Hamill, Christopher lee. 1981 .
9:3o o rn m
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Court
1o:oo o
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oo st.
Elsewhere
fa({) Business Report
0) (fl) MOVIE: 'Goliath
Awaits' Part 2
10:15 CDTBS Evening News
Journalist Kleber Cantrell
(Ben Masters) weds playwright Ceil Shannon (Karen
Aust1n) in " Celebrity," the
three-part NBC m1n1senes
based on Thomas Thompson's novel. The drama , which
co-stars Michael Beck and
Joseph
Bottoms .
airs
SUNDAY,
FEB.
12,
MONDAY, FEB. 13 and
TUESDAY, FEB.14.
CHECK LISTINGS FOR EXACT TIME
@)t984 Compulog
«thursday))
2/9/84
MORNING
9:00
CD MOVIE: 'It Started
In Naples'
AFTERNOON
1:00 CD
MOVIE:
'The
Bedford Incident'
m
fB ([) 0) (fl) National
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CD Andy Griffith
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6:30 0 rn m (I) NBC
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CD Carol Burnett
O)(fl) Business Report
7:00 0 rn PM Magazine
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Ci) (!) People's Court
CD Ho~n·s Heroes
fB W
Kentucky
General Assembly
0) (j]) MacNeil/lehrer
Newshour
6:oo
m (I) Appalachian
Encounters
7:30 0 rn Tic Tac Dough
li) ® Family Feud
Ci) (!) Jeffersons
CD Sanford and Son
m (I) lorna Greene's
Wilderness
8:00 0 rn m (I) Gimme a
Nell
plays
Break
Cupid to the entire
Kanisky clan and then
has to face the family
when her advice turns
sour.
liJ ® Magnum P.l.
Ci) (!) XIV Winter
Olympic GamesCS MOVIE: 'Rio lobo'
After the Civil War, a
Union Colonel sets out
to take revenge on two
traitors. John Wayne,
Jorge Rivera, Jennifer
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Co-hosts
Jeffrey
lyons and Neal Gabler review and show
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sickened when he
learns two gang members have committed
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Abby's world comes
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10:15 CDTBS Evening News
10:30 fB (]) Inside Story
'The
Anchor.'
Tonight's program looks
at the 'stuff' that's
needed to make America watch the nightly
news.
rn
®
C!l
11 :oo
fB ® m (}) News
CD All In the Family
0) @ Not the Nine
O'Clock News
·
11:30 0 rn m (I) Tonight
Show
li) ® Trapper John,
M.D.
Ci) (!) XIV Winter
Olympic Games To-
m (])
o
m
TV
SCHEDULE
night's program features highlights of the
day's ~ctivities at the
Winter Olympics from
Sarajevo, Yugoslavia.
CD Catlins
@)
@
latenight
America
12:00 Ci) @ Nightline
CD
MOVIE:
'The
Apprenticeship
of
Duddy Kravitz' A Canadian Jew in the mid40s tries to make his
fortune by fa1r means
or foui. Richard Dreyfuss. Jack Warden,
Micheline
lancton.
1974.
12:30 0 ® !.ate Night with
David letterman
liJ ® MOVIE: 'The
Promise' Two young
college students vow
to love each other, but
a st~ange fate intervenes. Kathleen Quinlan, Stephen Collins.
1979.
Ci) (!) Andy Griffith
1:00 Ci) (!) Bionic Woman
2:30 CD MOVIE: 'Timbuktu'
An American adventurer gets involved in
political upheavals in
Africa during World
War II. Victor Mature,
Carlo,
Yvonne
De
John Dehner. 1959.
4:30 CD Americans
«fri~
2/10/84
MORNING
9:00
CD
MOVIE:
'The
Tattered Dress' A renowned criminal lawyer defends a wealthy
couple against murder
charges. Jeff Chandler, Jeanne Crain,
Jack Carson. 1957.
AFTERNOON
1:00
C6 MOVIE: 'Raiders of
m
the Seven Seas' A
dashing pirate saves a
beautiful woman from
the rascal she is about
to marry. John Payne.
Donna Reed. Gerald
Mohr. 1953.
3:30 fB (I) New Shapes in
Education
EVENING
rn
6:oo
1 L1nker and Steel
5 ""Family _ ..
9 "" You -There ""
10 ··cagney - Lacey""
12 Patty Duke 15 Chevy 18 Pnssy
20 lnsh Gaelic language
21Yoko 22 Jew1sh month
24 Cary or Lee
25 Com1c Bob
28 '" Hee -""
31 Author unknown : abbr .
32 Mr. Kmevel
34 She ' s Juhe McCoy
36 HOISting mach1ne (clue
to puzzle arswer)
37 Baseball stat1st1c: abbr.
39 ""Much - About
Noth1ng ""
4 1 Letter reply: abbr.
42 Force out
m (I) Tony Brown's
Journal
11 :oo o rn m ® m oo
10:30
m
0
ACROSS
oo
moo News
C6 All In the Family
0) (fl) Not the Nine
O'Clock News
11 :30 0 rn m (I) Tonight
Show
Iii ® Police Story
'The Witness.' Police
investigate a series of
holdups. (A) (60 min.)
Ci) (!) XIV Winter
Olympic Games Tonicht's program features highlights of the
day's activities at the
Winter Olympics in
Sarajevo, Yugoslavia.
Catllns
rn m ® Family
Ties Mallory becomes
seriously
involved
with a college boy.
0) (fl) Good Neighbors
9:00 0 rn m 00 Cheers
Sam plans to take off
on a wild weekend
while telling Diane
that he is attending an
uncle's funeral.
li) Cil Simon & Simon
When some people
con a former astronaut into investing in a
porno movie, they decide to use murder to
cover up the scandal.
(60 min.)
Scholastic
Challenge
O)(fl) Mysteryi'Reilly:
Ace of Spies.' After
having his wife desert
him, Reilly is unexpectedly confronted
by
his mysterious
past. (60 min.) [Closed
Captioned]
9:30 0 rn m 00 Buffalo
Bill
10:00 OrnmCI:J Hill Street
Blues Capt. Furillo is
8:30
c
3
4
5
6
Year · abbr .
Actor Connery
Soft mmeral
Consumer advocate' s
monogram
7 · "Kmght R1der " co-star
8 B1lly Crystal senes
11 Ted Danson senes
13 Full house: abbr.
14 S1d ' s partner
16 Jody on ·" The Fall Guy ··
17 Soc1al Secunty
Admm1stra11on :
abbr
19 Don or Maud
23 Talkat1ve
26 ··- Day at a T1me ""
27 She ' s Jenmfer Hart
29 LUIS30 Skm tumor
33 Horsley and MaJors
35 "" Real People "" host
36 She ' s Soon-Lee
38 He was ""Tenspeed"".
I nit .
2 Small swallow (clue
to puzzle answer)
000000
0000
40 Iowa umvers1ty : abbr .
@)t984 Compulog
o rn moo m
moo News
CD Andy Griffith
fB Cil MacNeil/lehrer
Newshour
0) (}])Dr. Who
6:30 0 rn m (I) NBC
News
Iii (I) CBS News
Ci) @
XIV Winter
Olympic Games Today's program features
men's
and
women's 500 meter
speed skating, ice
dancing, the figure
pairs/short
skating
program. the two-man
bobsled, men's crosscountry skiing and
men's and women's
singles luge. (3 hrs.,
30 min .)
CD Carol Burnett
01 (fiJ 8usinass Report
7:00 II® PM Magazine
C!J (§) Wheel of
Fortune
H~n·s Heroes
t1) Cl)
Enterprise
' Room at the Top.' Tonight's program looks
at the questions surrounding the new
Weston Hotel that is
planning to open in
Boston. MA. [Closed
Captioned)
m
�(
--~
@)@ MacNeil/Lehrer
Newshour
liB ® Goins Brothers
7:30 U (]) Tic Tac Dough
0 ® Family Feud
Sanford and Son
fB @ Comment on
Kentucky
llfl ® This Week in
Country Music
8:00 IJ (]) llfj ® MOVIE:
'Fantastic World of
D.C. Collins' A 1 4year-old
boy, who
l ives out his fantasies
as his favorite heroes,
becomes entangled in
a real nuclear blackmail plot. Gary Coleman, Marilyn McCaa,
Bernie Casey. 1984.
0
®
Dukes of
Hazzerd The Dukes try
to maintain their cover
as race-car drivers
while working as government spies. (60
min.)
(6 NCAA Basketball:
Alabama at Georgia
3:00
m
m m m
®
CELEBRITY
Con artist T.J. Luther
(Michael Beck) becomes a
charismatic
evangelical
preacher in "Celebrity," the
three-part NBC miniseries
based on Thomas Thompson's novel. The drama, which
co-stars Joseph Bottoms and
Ben Masters, airs SUNDAY,
FEB. 12, MONDAY, FEB. 13
and TUESDAY, FEB. 14.
CHECK LISTINGS FOR EXACT TIME
I
I
4
«saturday»
Washington
Week/
Review Paul Duke is
joined by top Washington journalists ana2/11/84
lyzing
the
week's
MORNING
news.
8:30 fB @ OJ (jJ) Wall 5:00 (6
Night
Tracks
Street Week Louis AuCont'd
keyser analyzes the 5:30 &) @ Rev. Pete Rowe
'80s with a weekly re- 6:00 8 (])Saturday Report
view of economic and
&) @ Farm Digest
investment matters.
(6 TBS Morning News
9:00 0
®
Dallas J.R. 6:15 &) @Forum 19
rushes to Sue Ellen's 6:30 0 ®T.V. Classroom
bedside and receives
&) @ Town Crier
a shocking piece of 7:00 U
(])
Joy
of
news after she is
Gardening
struck by a car. (60
0 ® Captain Kangamin.)
roo
&)
@
To
Be
fB
@
Kentucky
Announced
General Assembly
OJ @ Session '84
(6 Between the Lines
9:30 OJ
(jJ)
Enterprise
OJ @
Market to
Market
'Room at the Top.' Tonight's program looks
llfj
(J)
Amazing
Spiderman/lncr~dible
at the questions surHulk
rounding
the
new
Weston Hotel that is 7:30 U (]) Bugs Bunny &
Friends
planning to open in
&) @ ABC Weekend
Boston, MA. [Closed
Special
Captioned)
10:00 U (]) llfj ® New
(6 Romper Room and
Friends
Show
OJ @ Great Chefs/
0 ® Falcon Crest
San Francisco
Power hungry Melissa
sells her soul and her 8:00 IJ (])fiB (J) Flintstone
Funnies
son to Angela and Terry's party explodes
0 ® Charlie Brown
&Snoopy
into a blaze of tempers. (60 min.)
&) @ Monchhichis/
Little Rascals/Richie
CD TBS Evening News
Rich
fB® Business Report
(6 Starcade
@) @
Austin City
OJ (jJ) Two Ronnies
Limits 'Gary Morris/
8:3o
llfj
shirt
Gail Davies.'
Tales
10:30 fB ® International
0
®
Saturday
Edition Ford Rowan
Supercede
hosts this look at
(6 MOVIE: 'Return of
trends and news evthe Badman' An Oklaents as they are rehoma homesteader reported
by
foreign
forms a lady outlaw
journalists.
and then must face
11:00IJ@O®&l@
her co-horts-Billy the
fB@&l(J)News
Kid and the Dalton
(6 All In the Family
Brothers.
Randolph
@) []) Not the Nine
Scott. Robert Ryan,
O'Clock News
Anne Jeffreys. 1948.
11:30 IJ (])fiB(]) Tonight
Show
OJ @ Fawlty Towers
9:00 U (]) llfj (J) Smurfs
0 ® MOVIE: 'SST:
Disaster in the Sky'
&) @ New Scooby/
Scrappy Doo
&) @ XIV Winter
OJ @ To the Manor
Olympic Games ToBorn
night's program features highlights of the 9:30 0 ® Dungeons and
Dra~ns
day's activities at the
&l @ Pac-Man/Rubik
Winter Olympics from
Cube Hour
Sarajevo, Yugoslavia.
OJ @ Dave Allen at
Catlins
Large
@)@MOVIE: 'Poppy'
10:00 0 ®Tarzan: Lord of
A carnival barker's
the Jungle
young ward is passed
OJ @ Dad's Army
off as an heiress to an
10:30 IJ (]) fiB (J) Alvin &
estate. W .C. Fields,
the Chipmunks
Rochelle Hudson, Ri0 ® Bugs Bunny/
chard
Cromwell.
Road Runner Show
12:00 &) @ Nightline
m@ Littles
(6 Night Tracks
(6 MOVIE: 'Green
12:30 1J (]) fiB ® Friday
Berets' A cynical war
Night Videos
correspondent goes
&) @ Andy Griffith
on special assignment
1 :00 &)
@
Pentecost
to Vietnam with an
Today
army career man.
1:30 &) @ Bionic Woman
John Wayne, David
u m
m
m
@1984 Compulog
Janssen, Jim Hutton,
Aldo Ray. 1968.
fB @ Social Problems/Ciassrm.
OJ []) House For All
Seasons
1 1:00 IJ (])fiB® Mr. T
&) @ XIV Winter
Olympic Games Today's program features the women's
Alpine
downhill
skiing, the U.S.A. vs.
Norway in ice hockey,
the two-man bobsled,
the Nordic combined
70 meter jump, the
Biathlon
and
the
men's and women's
singles luge. (2 hrs.,
30 min.)
fB @ Bits and Bytes
OJ @ All New This
Old House
@
Amazing
11 :30 U
Spiderman/lncredible
Hulk
fB
®
Business
Management
OJ @ Woodwright's
Shop
llfj ® Fishing Fever
AFTERNOON
1 2:00 0
® Biskitts
®
Busine3s
Mana..s_ement
OJ (!1) Washington
Week/Review
Paul
Duke is joined by top
Washington journalists
analyzing
the
week's news.
llfj (J) That Nashville
Music
1 2:30 U (]) Thundarr
0 ([) Benji/Zax/Alien
Prince
fB ®Here's to Your
Health
OJ @ Wall Street
Week Louis Rukeyser
analyzes the '80s with
a weekly review of
economic and investment matters.
llfj ® At The Movies
1:00 U (]) That Nashville
Music
0 ® Let's Go To The
Races
fB ® Here's to Your
Health
OJ G1l Family Portrait
fiB (J) Fishing Championships
1:30 IJ (]) NCAA Basketball:
Virginia
at
Louisville
0
®
Fishing w/
Roland Martin
&l @ Professional
Bowlers Tour Coverage of the $ 125,000
Angle Open is presented from Dick Weber Lanes, St. Louis,
(6 . MOVIE:
'The
Fighting Seabees' A
tough
construction
foreman and a navy
man work close to the
Japanese lines during
WWII. John Wayne,
Susan Hayward, Dennis O'Keefe. 1944.
fB
fB (]) Focus on
Society
OJ[]) Family Portrait
fiB ® Olympic Gold
2:00 0 ® NCAA Basketball: Brigham Young
vs. Georgetown
fB aD Focus on
Society
OJ@ Making It Count
llfj (}) NCAA Basketball: Auburn at Kentuc~
2:30
fB W American Gov't
Survey
OJ[]) Making It Count
&) @
XIV Winter
Olympic Games Today's program features the women's
Alpine
downhill
skiing, the U.S.A. vs.
Norway in ice hockey,
the two-man bobsled,
the Nordic combined
70 meter jump, the
Biathlon
and
the
men's and women's
singles luge. (2 hrs.)
fB ® American Gov't
Survey
OJ Clll Vietnam: A
Television History
3:30 0 (]) NCAA Basketball: Miami at Ohio
(6
MOVIE:
'War
Drums' A Cavalryman
and an Apache chief
try to prevent a war
between whites and
Indians. Lex Barker,
Joan
Taylor,
Ben
Johnson. 1957.
fB ® Another Page
4:00 0 ([) NCAA Basketball: DePaul at Notre
Dame
fB ® GED Series
OJ []) All Creatures
Great and Small
llfj ® Greatest Sports
Legends
4:30 fB ® GED Series
fiB® America's Top
Ten
5:00 &) @ Wide World of
Sports
(6 Fishin' w/Orlando
Wilson
INNER
By Joan Crosby
111B£
WEDDING NEWS - Janina Turner, who briefly was on
"General Hospital," playing a Laura Spencer look-alike
during Genie Francis' absence, will marry Alec
Baldwin in May. He appeared in 'Cutter to Houston,"
the canceled CBS medical series.
SOAP STARS PRODUCE- Deidre Hall of "Days of
Our Lives" is co-producing a Los Angeles production of
Shaw's "Caesar and Cleopatra," which opens this
month at the Melrose Theater. Her co-producer and
director is John de Lancie, who plays Eugene Bradford
on the same soap.
COOKING CAROL - Carol Lawrence. a great cook,
has decided to write a cookbook. "I've collected recipes
from all over the world includng Morocco, India and
France," Miss Lawrence says. "The book will include my
favorite recipes and also incorporate shortcuts 1 have
learned. Some of my late mother's cherished recipes will
also be there."
CHINESE NEWS - Deborah Raffln, who is popular
with audiences in China, says that the American movie
"The Omen" was a big hit behind the Bamboo Curtain.
"I think they thought that a picture that ended with the
devil in line to be the president of the United States was
a documentary," she says.
CASTING NEWS - Ari Meyers has been added as
one of the children to the cast of "Kate and Allie." The
CBS series, about two single mothers, will probably start
airing in March. The mothers are played by Susan Saint
James and Jane Curtin.
Deborah Raffln
fB ® Firing Line
OJ []) Masterpiece
Theatre 'The
Irish
A.M.' Yeates wants to
buy Philippa a horse
and the Major finds
himself caught up in
of
Flurry's
one
schemes. {60 min.)
[Closed Captioned)
fiB (2) Hawaiian Open
Golf Coverage of the
semifinal round is presented from the Waialae
Country
Club,
Honolulu, HA. (90
min.)
5:30 IJ CI) Hawaiian Open
JIP
(6 Motorweek Illustrated
EVENING
6:00
O®News
(6 World Championship Wrestling
fB (J) Matinee at the
Bijou 'Tarzan's Revenge.'
OJ
[])
Undersea
World of Jacques
Cousteau
6:30 IJ (]) €D (}) NBC
News
0 CID Concern
&) @ Dance Fever
7:00 Urn News
0 ® Hee Haw
&) @ Solid Gold
OJ[]) Dr. Who Movie
(2) Jamboree
7:30 IJ
Dance Fever
fB (I) Sneak Previews
Co-hosts
Jeffrey
Lyons and Neal Gabler review and show
scer.es from the new
movies in town including
'Unfaithfully
Yours' and 'And the
Ship Sails On.'
m
m
8:00
m
IJ
@6 ® Diff'rent
Strokes When Maggie
flees after an arg ument with Mr. Drummond, Phil and the
kids take off to get her
back.
0 ® Charlie Brown
Special 'Be My Valentine, Charlie Brown.'
&) @ XIV Winter
Olympic Games Today's program features the women's
Alpine
downhill
skiing, the U.S.A. vs.
Norway in ice hockey,
the two-man bobsled,
the Nordic combined
70 meter jump, the
Biathlon
and
the
men's and women's
singles luge. (3 hrs.)
(6 MOVIE: 'The Last
Train From Gun Hill' A
sheriff must fight off
an entire town to bring
a young killer to justice. Kirk Douglas, Anthony Quinn, Carolyn
Jones. 1959.
fB (I) Nature 'The Discovery of Animal Behavior.' Fifth of 6
�«sunday»
6:00
MORNING
5:00 &) @ Rev. Pete Rowe
6:00 &)@Omni
mNews
UeN 'i'ork Ctty Mayor Ed
Koch gtves advtce to tounsts
Nell (Nell Carter. r ) and Addy
(Thelma Hopktns) when they
travel to the Btg Apple on
"Gimme a Break." atring
THURSDAY, FEB. 16 on
NBC.
6:15 m Week/Review
6:30 8 CI) TV Chapel
Clark Gable portrays Rhett
Butler and Vivien Leigh is
Scarlett 0' Hara in the classic
Civil War epic "Gone with the
W ind ," airing TUESDAY,
FEB. 14 and WEDNESDAY,
FEB. 15 on CBS.
7:00
CHECK LISTINGS FOR EXACT TIME
@19~ Compulog
7:30
8:00
0 ® Better Way
&) ® What Does the
Bible Say?
m TBS Morning News
8 CI) Music and the
Spoken Word
0 ® Jerry Falwell
&) @ Roger Sparks
Religion
m World Tomorrow
el @ MOVIE: 'Dr.
Kildare's
Victory'
€D (]) Time for
Refreshing
8 (I) Fountain of life
&) @ James Robison
m It Is Written
8 CI) Hour of Power
0
Cl)
Day
of
Discovery
&) @ Jerry Falwell
m Cartoon Carnival
@) ® Sesame Street
[Closed Captioned]
€D ell
Gateway
Gospel
8 CI) Oral Roberts
and You
0 ® Christ for the
World
m Starcade
el @ Wild America
€D 00 Biblical Viewpoint
8 CI) Rex Humbard
0 ® Sunday Morning
parts. Tonight's program.looks at naturalists' efforts over the
centuries to learn the
language of animals.
(!'!) (60 min .) [Closed
Captioned]
8:30 0 CI:l €D 00 Silver
Spoons When Derek's 8:30
parents separate, he
becomes upset when
he witnesses so much
love at Ricky's house.
0 ® Bugs Bunny's
Valentine
el @ Hitch Hikers
Guide/Galaxy
9:00
9:00 8 (I) €D 00 We Got It
Made
0 ® Airwolf
@) ® All Creatures
Great and Small
el@ World War I
9:30 8 CI:l €D 00 Mama's
Family
el
@
Men
of
Company 208
10:00 8 (I) €D (]) Yellow
Rose
0 ClJ Mickey Spillane's Mike Hammer
Hammer tries to track
down the persons responsible for eliminatBy Connie Passalacqua
ing
some
private
detectives. (60 min .)
Even on soaps, art somem TBS Evening News
times imitates life. The latfll® Mysteryi ' Reilly:
est example can be found
Ace of Spies.'
on "As the World Turns"
@) @ NCAA Basketball:
Davidson
at
where Frannie Hughes
Marshall
(Terri VandenBosch) has
11:00 8 CI) 0 ®News
begun to show the symp&)@ABC News
toms of anorexia nervosa.
m Unknown War
In real life, Miss Vanden@) ®
Austin City
Bosch struggled for two
limits
·
€D 00 Music Magayears with the disease, in
zine
which victims. primarily
11:15 &) @News
young women. starve
11:30 8 (I) Saturday Night
themselves.
live
"I 've been over it for a
0 Cl) MOVIE: 'Dr.
year now," says Miss
Doolittle' A doctor
who loves and cares
VandenBosch.
"I've
for animals learns to
worked with a therapist in
speak 500 animal lan"Albany (N .Y.). where I
guages and together
went to college and I was
witt, three friends sets
involved in support groups
sail in search of the
Great Pink Sea Snail.
for anorexia victims while I
Rex Harrison. Samanlived there."
tha Eggar, Anthony
Miss VandenBosch is
Newley. 1967.
candid about the experi. &) @ XIV Winter
ence. which saw her weight
Olympic Games
shrink to 79 pounds. She
€D 00 NCAA Basketnow weighs 105. "I had to
ball:
Virginia
at
louisville
be hospitalized three times.
12:00 &) @ NCAA Baskt~t·
That's when I realized I
ball: Auburn at Kenneeded tlelp. It starts as a
tucky
vanity thing , at least that's
m Night Tracks
how lots of girls like me
el @ MOVIE: 'Third
explain it to themselves.
Key' Scotland Yard's
search for a safe" But deep down it's
cracker leads them to
more. It's a feeling that
a murder. Jack Hawkyou're not good enough .
ins, Geoffrey Keene.
You tell yourself that every1956.
one wants to be thin and
1:00 8 CI) MOVIE: 'The
·maybe you can be really
Accused'
good at getting thin. You
2:00 m
Night
Tracks
take pride in the control
Confd
r
)
News
Star Search
Motorweek
Dad's Army
News
0 0 CBS News
m
Wild World of
Animals
@) C~ Great Chefs/
San Francisco
el (1!J Fawlty Towers
liD ~ NBC News
&) Ll
@)
el (1
6:30 8
!)
2/12/84
GONE WITH THE WIND
0
1:oo e
m
m
e
rn
m
Chipmunk Valentine
Alvin becomes the
subject of an ingenious scheme in which
the others try to get
him to escort Brittany
to the year's big holiday dance.
0 ® 60 Minutes
&) @ XIV Winter
Olympic Games Today's program features pairs/free program figure skating,
ice dancing, men's
5,000 meter speed
skating, ski jumping.
men's and women's
luge
and
singles
cross-country skiing .
(4 hrs.)
m
Best of World
Championship Wrestling_
@) (].) Nature 'The Discovery
of
Animal
Behavior.' Fifth of 6
parts. Tonight's program looks at naturalists' efforts over the
centuries to learn the
language of animals.
(R) (60 min.) [Closed
Captioned]
el (fl) Tony Brown's
Journal 'The longest
Struggle: The Call.'
CHECK LISTINGS FOR EXACT TIME
@1984 Compulog
0) @ Kenneth Cope-
10:00 &) @ Rev. R.A. West
land
m leave It to Beaver
@l CID Sesame Street-
m Good News
fa ([) Mr. Rogers'
Neighborhood
@il (fl) Nova 'BaMiki
BaNdula : Children of
the Forest.' Tonight's
program presents the
way of life of Africa's
Mbuti Pygmies. (R)
(60 min.) [Closed Cap-
el (fl) National Geographic Special 'love
Those Trains.' Tonight's program takes
a look at the world of
trains and the train
buffs who keep the
railroad era live. (60
min .) [Closed Captioned]
€D 00 Sunday School
9:30 8 CI) Kenneth Copeland
m Andy Griffith
€D 00 Rev. R.A. West
Soap Beat
~ned]
Ulll
(])
1975 .
Big
Creek
Baptist
10:30 8 CI) Dr. D. James
Kennedy
0 ® Ernest Angley
&) @ Jimmy Swag5jrt MOVIE: 'Mackenna's Gold' Treasure
hunters search for a
lost canyon of gold in
the old West while
being chased by Indians and cavalrymen.
Gregory Peck. Omar
Shariff, Telly Savalas.
1969.
Ex-victim battles
anorexia on 'ATWT'
2:00
® Electric Company
11 :00 @) ([) Sesame Street
(Closed Captioned]
el (fl) MOVIE: 'Six
Shooting Sheriff A
member of a wild
gang redeems himself. Ken Maynard.
@)
1938
€D (]) leonard Repass
11:30 8
CI) Bill Dance
Outdoors
0 ® Viewpoint
&) @ World Tomorrow
€D (]) Rev. R.A. West
AFTERNOON
0
®
CBS Sports
Special Today's program features the Vitalis Olympic Invitational Indoor Track
Meet from The Meadowlands, East Rutherford, N.J. (60 min .)
&) @ XIV Winter
Olympic Games Today's program features pairs/free program figure skating,
ice dancing. men's
5,000 meter speed
skating, ski jumping,
men's and women's
singles
luge
and
cross-country skiing.
(2 hrs .• 30 min.)
@) ® Business of
Management
el @ World of My
America
2:30 @) ®
Focus on
Society
3:00 0 ® Busch Clash
Coverage of this 50mile NASCAR race is
presented from Daytona
International
Speedway, Daytona
Beach, FL.
@il(fl) Your Tax Return-
1984
€D ®
12:00 8 CI) At Issue
0
®
MOVIE: 'The
Borrowers'
Terri VandenBosch
you have over your own
body.
" Best of all, " she continues, " people take care of
you. They try to protect
you and try to make you
eat. You're like a child
again - you don 't have to
be an adult yet."
Frannie is now confronted by many problems that
have led to the disease.
She is just about to give up
her virginity to her first
boyfriend. Kirk (Christian
LeBlanc) , and her father
Bob (Don Hastings) was
shot by a mysterious
assassin. "Frannie really
doesn' t want to become an
adult," says Miss VandenBosch.
She views her anorexia
as a phase in her life. "I
don't ever want to go
back," she says. "I'm
grown up now."
@18~ Computog
el
@
Working
Women
8 CI) MOVIE: 'The
Eiger Sanction' A retired hit-man is hired
to seek out two men
who have stolen secret United States microfilm . Clint Eastwood, George Kennedy, Vonetta McGee.
&) @This Week with
David Brinkley
@)
®
Working
Women
el @ Sesame Street
[Closed Captioned]
€D (]) Old Time
Gospel
12:30 8 CI) Meet the Press
@) ® Comment on
Kentucky
1:00 8 (I) Bowling
&) @ Biblical Viewpoint
@) ® Capitol Connection
el @ Victory Garden
€D ® NCAA Basketball: Teams to be
Announced
1:15 m
MOVIE: 'Harper
Valley P.T.A.' This comedy is the adaptation of the hit song
about a sexy young
woman taking on a
group of small-town
hypocrites.
Barbara
Eden, Nanette Fabray,
Ronny Cox. 1978.
1:30 0 ® Fishing Report
&) @ Virgil Wacks
Presents
@) (]) Business of
Management
3:15
SportsWorld
Today's program features the World Professional Figure Skating
Championship
and
Japan
Sumo
Wrestling. (90 min.)
m MOVIE: 'To Hell
and Back' This is the
true story of war heroturned-movie star Audie Murphy, the most
decorated soldier in
WW II. Audie Murphy,
Susan Kohner. Marshall
Thompson.
1955.
3:30 0 ®
NBA Basketball: Teams to be
Announced
@) ® Making It Count
4:00 @) ® Making It Count
4:30 8 (I) €D 00 Hawaiian
Open Coverage of the
final round is presented from rhe Waialae
Country
Club,
Honolulu, HI. (2 hrs.)
&) @ SEC Basketball
@) CID Social Problems/Ciassrm.
5:00 @) ([) All New This
Old House
el (fl) Two Ronnies
5:30 m Jacques Cousteau
@) (]) Woodwright's
Shop
el (ll) To the Manor
Born
7:3o
8:oo
oo
Berenstain Bears Special 'The Berenstain
Bears Comic Valentiole.
Brother Bear
learns that he has a secret
admirer
who
sends him valentines
and little Sister Bear
happily plays Cupid.
(R)
[Closed
Captioned]
m@ lawmakers
Knight
Rider !lllichael checks
into the activities of
motorcycle
racers
who have entered a
Foundationsponsored event. (60
min.)
0 ® Four Seasons
The gang goes on a
camping trip where
they encounter a hungry bear and Danny
learns that he has
failed his dental exam .
m America's Music
Tracks
fll® Pallisers
@il@Nature'Big Business in Bees.' Bee cultivation,
a
giant
industry of great importance to the United
States, is examined.
(60 min .) [Closed Captioned]
e rn m m
8:30 0
® One Day at a
Time Schneider turns
fifty and reminisces
about his first adobscent love.
9:00 8 Cil €D 00 MOVIE:
'Celebrity'
Part
1
Three high school seniors share a night of
violence and passion
that will ultimately
shatter each of their
successful Gareers 25
years later. Michael
Beck, Joseph Bottoms. Ben Masters.
1984.
0
Cl)
Jeffersons
louise
discovers
through a dream that
it's easier to like
George than to be like
him.
�C..m
Week In Review
®
m
llll
Masterpiece Theatre
'The Irish R.M.' Sally
Knox arrives at the
Horse Fair on the arm
of Bernard Shute and
Flurry sells Bernard
his dangerous mare
Juno. (60 min .)
[Closed Captioned]
9:30 liJ ®Alice The local
dentist falls for Alice.
10:00 liJ (]) Trapper John,
M.D. A young pediatrician has a difficult
time accepting the
grim diagnosis of one
of his patients. (60
min .)
Gi Sports Page
f1} ® Bits and Bytes
0) (fi) Poldark
10:30 Gi Oral Roberts
f1} ®
New Tech
Times Nicholas Johnson hosts this look at
the technology explo- .
sion which has moved
from the workplace to
the home.
_11:00 liJ (1) News
II)@ ABC News
Gi Jerry Falwell
0) @ Not the Nine
O'Clock News
11:15 II)@ Forum 19
11:30 U (I) News
liJ (]) This Week in
Country Music
II) @ Winter Olympics Highlights
0) @ Monty Python
Flying Circus
@D (I)
It's
Your
Business
12:00 U
~
6:45 II)@ ABC News This
(I) MOVIE: 'Next
Time We Love' A triangle developes a husband goes abroad as a
foreign correspondent
and his wife becomes
a stage star. Margaret
Sullivan, James Stewart, Ray Milland.
Morning
7:00
7:30
8:00
8 :15
8:30
9:00
9:30
10:00
0) (J]) Weather
U (I) @D (})Today
liJ (1) CBS Morning
News
II) @ Good Morning
America
Gi SuperStation Funtime
0) @
Varied Pro9!_ams
W I Dream of Jeannie
Gi Bewitched
f»®Weather
0) (!]) Sesame Street
[Closed Captioned]
f1} @
Instructional
Programs
Gi I Love Lucy
U
CID Braun and
Company
liJ ® Andy Griffith
II) @ Jim Bakker
Gi Movie
0) (fi) Instructional
PrOQ!ams
700 Club
liJ ®Here's Lucy
U (I) Facts of Life
liJ (1) New $25,000
mcv
~ramid
Ql@ 700 Club
00
Diff'rent
Strokes
10:30 U (I) Sale of the
Century
liJ (]) Press Your Luck
@D
(I)
Morning
Stretch
11:00 U (I) @D (I) Wheel of
Fortune
liJ (1) Price Is Right
II)@ New Newlywed
Game
Gi Catlins
11 :30 U (I) @D (I) Dream
House
II)@ Loving
Gi Texas
AFTERNOON
@D
12:00 U (]) Hot Potato
liJ (1) (iB (I) News
II)@ Family Feud
Gi Perry Mason
1935
12:30 U (]) News
liJ ® Face the Nation
liJ (I) Young and the
II) @
Pentecost
Restless
Today
II)@ Ryan's Hope
Gi
People
Who
1:00 U (I) ·Days of Our
Fish ... America
Lives
0) (!]) Dave Allen at
II)@ All My Children
Lar~
Gi Movie
@D (I) MOVIE: 'Sidney
Sale of the
Shorr' A middle-aged
Century
New Yorker's relation·
1 :30 liJ ® As the World
ship with a young
Turns
woman provides him
@D (}) Days of Our
with the opportunity
Lives
to raise her child as 2:00 U (I) Another World
his own. Tony Randall,
II) @ One Life to Live
Lorna Patterson, Ka0) (J]) 3-2-1. Contact
leena Kiff. 1981.
2:30 liJ ® Capitol
12:30 liJ ® MOVIE: 'Place
0) (fi) Instructional
To Die' When the docPrOQ!&ms
tor arrives in town
@D (]J Another World
with his new bride, a 3:00 U (]) Match Game/
cult of devil worshiHollywood
Squares
pers come to believe
Hour
that she is to be their
liJ (]) Guiding Light
new leader. Alexandra
II) @ General HospiHay, Bryan Marshall,
tal
Sally Stevens. 1973
Gi Flintstones
II) @ Jim Bakker
0) (J]) Varied Pro1:00 Gi MOVIE: 'Romeo
9.!_ams
and Juliet' Young lov- 3:30 W
Battle of the
ers are kept apart by
Planets
their feuding families .
f1} ®
Varied Proin this version of Shak9!ams
espeare's tragic romlifJ (I) Match Game/
ance . Leonard Whit·
Hollywood
Squares
ing, Olivia Hussey,
Hour
Milo O'Shea. 1968.
4:00 U (I) Mr. Cartoon
1:30 . II) @ Star Search
liJ ® Hour Magazine
4:00 Gi MOVIE: 'Biondie'
II) @ Rockford Files
W Munsters .
f1} ®Sesame Street
(Closed Captioned]
0) (!]) 3-2-1, Contact
4:30 · Gi Leave It to Beaver
MORNING
0) (!]) Mr. Rogers'
5:00 Gi Varied Programs
Neighborhood
5:30 II)@ Rev. Pete Rowe
CiB (I) Hot Potato
6:00 U (I) NBC News at 5:00 U CID B.J./Lobo Show
Sunrise
liJ (1) Hawaii Five-0
liJ ®
@ Jimmy
II) @ Superfriends
Swaggart
Gi Little House on the
Gi TBS Morning News
Prairie
f1} (]) Mr. Rogers'
6:15 0) (fi) Varied ProNeighborhood
Q!.&ms
0) (!]) Sesame Street
6:30 UCl:l News
[Closed Captioned)
liJ (1) CBS Early
@D I]J PTL Club
Morni'!B News
5:30 II)@ Tic Tee Dough
II)
C!J
Assembly
f1} ® 3-2-1, Contact
Echoes
m (})
(
(
«monday))
MORNING
7:30 0) [}) Sesame Street
9:00 Gi MOVIE: 'Footsteps
In the Dark'
FALCON CREST
AFTERNOON
Angela Channing (Jane
Wyman) and Phillip Erikson
(Mel Ferrer) warm the cockles of each other's hearts on
"Falcon Crest," a~r~ng
FRIDAY, FEB. 17 on CBS.
1:00 Gi
MOVIE:,
'Six
Bridges to Cross'
EVENING
6:00 U®l!J®II)@
(iBCl) News
Gi Andy Griffith
f1} ® MacNeil/Lehrer
CHECK LISTINGS FOR EXACT TIME
Newshour
6:30
0) (J]) Dr. Who
U (]) (iB (I)
NBC
@1984 Compulog
News
liJ (]) CBS News
II)@ ABC News
Gi Carol Burnett
0) (J]) Business Report
7:00 U (I) PM Magazine
liJ (I) Wheel of
Fortune
II)(!) People's Court
Gi Hogan's Heroes
f1} (]) Presentel
0) (J]) MacNeil/Lehrer
Newshour
@D (I) How the West
Was Won
7:30 U (]) Tic Tee Dough
liJ (I) Family Feud
@ Jeffersons
Gi Sanford and Son
f1}
(])
University
Journal
8:00 U (]) (iB (I) TV's
Bloopers and Practical
Jokes Dick Clark
·
liJ llJ Scarecrow ana
Mrs. King ·
II) @ XIV Winter
Olympic Games
Gi MOVIE: 'A Man
Called Horse'
f1} ® 0) (J]) Frontline
9:00 U (I) ($ C1) MOVIE:
'Celebrity' Part 2
liJ (1) AfterMASH
f1} (]) 0) (J]) Great
Performances
9:30 U cil Newhart
10:00 liJ (1) Emerald Point
N.A.S. Deanna
f1}@ Bu-siness Report
0) (j]) NCAA Basketball:
Appalachian
State at Marshall
10:30 Gi TBS Evening News
f1} (]) Tony Brown's
Journal
«tuesday»
9:00
1:00
answer
m
MARTIN
MULL
m
u (])
6:00
u (])
m
6:30
7:00
liJ (])Hart to Hart
II) @ XIV Winter
Olympic Games
Gi Catlins
(iB ® Tonight &how
12:00 II) @ Nightline
Gi
MOVIE:
'The
Strange
Love
of
Martha Ivers'
@I)
@
Latenight
America
12:30 liJ ®Columbo ' Mind
Over Mayhem.'
II) (!) Andy Griffith
1:00 Q) @ Bionic Woman
2:30 Gi MOVIE: 'The Boy
with Green Hair'
m
-
u m m CIJ moo
ball: Florida at Ken-
m
m
@Dei) News
11:30 U (I) NCAA Baskettuc~
0) (J]) Nova
liJ (I) Magnum P.l.
'China's Only Child.'
@ . XIV Winter
Tonight's
program
Olympic Games To·
looks at the People's
Republic of China's ef·
(J])
Latenight
forts to control their
America
MORNING
population problems.
11:45 1D Catlins
(60 min.) [Closed CapGi MOVIE: 'Written
12:00 II) @ Nightline
tioned]
on the Wind' An inno12:15 ID MOVIE: 'The St.
c~nt
young woman 9:00 U (]) @D (I) MOVIE:
Valentine's Day Mas'Celebrity' Part 3
weds a millionaire and .
sacre'
liJ (I) MOVIE: 'Gone
gets caught up in his
12:30 U Cl) Late Night with
with the Wind' Part 1
tangled family life.
David Letterman
Rock Hudson, Lauren
liJ ® McCloud 'The
Search For Equity
Bacall, Robert Stack,
Gang that Stole Man·
f1} (I) 0) (fi) American
Dorothy
Malone.
hattan.' McCloud tries
Playhouse
'Popular
1957.
to solve a multi-million
Neurotics.'
AFTERNOON
dollar jewel heist. (R)
9:30
NBA Basketball:
(90 min.)
Gi
MOVIE:
'The
Atlanta at Utah
II) (!) Andy Griffith
Prince Who Was a
10:00 f1} (])Business Report 1:00 II) (!) Bionic Woman
-Thief An 'Arabian
0) (fi) Firing Line
2:30 ID MOVIE: 'In Our
Nights' adventure of a
10:30 f»® lnsideStory'SuTime' An English girl
prince
raised
by
perbowl/
and her Polish husthieves and the street
Superstakes.'
band work for the Polurchin who loves him.
ish resistance during
11:00
liJ (])II)@
Tony Curtis, Piper
WWII. Ida Lupino,
@Dei) News
Laurie, Everett Sloane.
Paul Henreid, Alta Na0) (J]) Not the Nine
1951.
zimove. 1944.
O'Clock News
EVENING
MOVIE:
'The
11:30 U (]) @D (I) Tonight 4:30 Gi
Hatchet Man'
Show
Cl Cl) II) @
I!BCil News
Andy Griffith
fB Cil MacNeil/Lehrer
Newshour
(fi) Dr. Who
8 (]) @D (]) NBC
SUNDAY
News
Cl® CBS News
I (NBC) SUNDAy NIGHT MOVIE
Q)@ABC News
"CELEBRITY" (1984) Michael Beck, Joseph Bottoms, Ben
Gi Carol Burnett
Masters. Part I of a three-part miniseries based on the best-seller
0) (J]) Business Report
of the same name about three charming and popular Texas high
U (]) PM Magazine
school seniors - prophetically dubbed "the three princes" by
liJ (I) Wheel of
their classmates - who share a night of violence and passion
Fortune
that will ultimately shatter each of their enormously successful .
II)@ People's Court
·careers 25 years later.
'
Ho~n·s Heroes
f1}
CIJ
Kentucky
General Assembly
0) (fi) MacNeil/Lehrer
MONDAY
Newshour
(NBC) MONDAY NIGHT MOVIE
@D ® At The Movies
"CELEBRITY" ( 1984) Michael Beck, Joseph Bottoms. Ben
U (]) Tic Tee Dough
Masters. Part II. The ambitions of "the· three princes" shape the
liJ (]) Family Feud
course of their lives as one becomes a popular TV and film star,
II) @ Jeffersons
Gi Sanford and Son
one a reporter at Life magazine and the third a powerful and
f1} ® Play Bridge
controversial faith healer.
@D (I) Headwaters
U (I) (iB ® A Team
TUESDAY
When a friend of
(CBS) TUESDAY NIGHT MOVIE
B.A.'s is ripped off and ·
"GONE WITH THE WIND" ( 1939) Clark Gable. Vivien Leigh.
beaten by an used car
Leslie Howard. Hattie McDaniel. Olivia de Havilland. Part I of a
salesman, the team
two-part special. The story recounts the tempestuous relationship
wages an all-out war
of the willful Southern belle Scarlett 0' Hara and the dashing Rhett
that leads to a 'high
noon' shootout.
Butler, her unrequited love for gentlemanly Ashley Wilkes, and her
bitter rivalry with Melanie.
liJ tiD Disney's All·
Star Valentine Party
Donald Duck heads a
(NBC) TUESDAY NIGHT MOVIE
host of Walt Disney
"CELEBRITY" ( 1984) Michael Beck, Joseph Bottoms. Ben
characters in this ValMasters. In the conclusion of the three-parter, " the three princes"
entine's Day special.
attain power and national prominence. but at the height of their
(60 min.)
respective careers they are reunited by a strange twist of fate in
II) @ XIV Winter
an emotionally charged meeting that ends with one of them dead,
Olympic Games Toone seriously wounded and another charged with murder.
day's program features women's giant
slalom, men's short
WEDNESDAY
program figure skating,
ice
dancing,
(CBS) WEDNESDAY NIGHT MOVIE
men's 1,000 meter
"GONE WITH THE WIND" (1939) Clark Gable, Vivien Leigh,
speed skating and the
Leslie Howard, Hattie McDaniel, Olivia de Havilland. Part II of the
biathlon. (3 hrs.)
tempestuous relationship of Scarlett O'Hara and Rhett Butler.
Portrait of America: New Jersey
2/14/84
m
11:oo
f1} ®
a
m
7:30 '
8:00
m
-Movie
Week~
·
�Wednesday, February 8, 1984
The Floyd County Times
Need For KPDES
Permits Removed
•
•
The First Commonwealth Bank of
Prestonsburg announces Vanessa
Robinson has completed 10-years service as of January 21. She is the administrative assistant of the Martin
Branch.
Robinson began her career at the
main office as a file clerk. After serving
in that capacity, she advanced to the
bank's bookkeeping department and
after training, worked in quality control
and as a proof operator.
In 1980, she transferred to the Martin
Branch and entered teller training. After
the expansion of that branch in 1981,
Robinson assumed her present duties.
A graduate of Betsy Layne High
School, Robinson's professional education includes completion of "Product
Kbowledge and Cross-Selling" in 1980
and 1983. She has attended numerous
other seminars and workshops throughout her career.
Vanessa Robinson, a native of Floyd
county, lives at Garrett with her family.
_..,.__
.
_______
Subscription
Rates Per Year
In Floyd County, $8.00
Elsewhere In Kentuc~y, $10.
Outslde,Kentucky, $12.50
•
Please note expiration date
opposite your name on wrap·
P.- or on your· copy of The
Times. Becau's e of Increased
mailing costs, .notices qf
subscriAtlon expiration are
no
lonaer
mailed
to
subscribers.
Beginning March 1, 1984, a general
permit issued by the state Dtvision of
Water will allow wash'water discharges
from most coal-mining activities,
·removing the need for individual Kentucky Pollution Discharge Elimmation
System, KPDES, pcrmtts for most coalmining activities.
The sites covered in the general per
mit, KY G04001, include active mining
sites, coal preparation plant associated
areas and coal refuse disposal piles
which have "satisfied the conditions of
the applied permit and which hold valid
permanent program permits," said
Clyde Baldwin, manager of the Division
of Water's permit review branch.
The general permit. issued January
31. 1984 by Richard Shogren, director of
the Dtvision of Water, contains limitations on the amounts of pollutants that
can be discharged from mining sites.
Also included in the general permit are
additional conditions, such as the requirement of routine submittal of selfmonitoring reports from all mining
sites.
''Any operator with a valid permanent
program mining permit, as defined in
KRS Chapter 350, may request a general
KPDES permit coverage for mmingrelated discharges by contacting the appropriate regional office of the Kentucky
Department for Surface Mining
Reclamation and Enforcement,'' Baldwin said.
"All requests for general permit
coverage which are under review by the
Division of Water will be made public
and all comments relevant to the applicability of the general permit will be
considered by the Division of Water
prior to any final action," he explained.
The general permit will expire on
January 31, 1989, state officials said.
Prior to the issuance of the general
permit, individual mining operations
were required to file KPDES permit applications. Jurisdiction over the pollution discharge elimination system permits was granted the state Division of
Water in 1983 by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency.
Additional information on the general
permit, its conditions and exceptions, is
available from the Division of Water's
Frankfort offices. For information, contact Larry Sowder of the Division of
Water's Permit Review Branch, telephone (502) 564-3410 or the Permits Division of the Department for Surface Mining Reclamation and Enforcement, telephone (502) 564-3220.
Copies of the general permit and fact
sheet are available upon request from
the Division of Water or the Department
for Surface Mining Reclamation and Enforcement.
Section Three, Paae Eleven
Second Birthday
SUPER SPECIALS!
FROM YOUR
SUNDRY
STORE
. ._ t"'. i \ ~./1
"· y·~ ':
.
Gi Gi Renee Henson celebrated her
second birthday, January 15, at her
grandparents home. She is the daughter
of Ricky and Darlene Henson, of Beaver, and is the granddaughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Frank Johnson, and the late Ted
and Minnie Henson, of Beaver. Attending the party was Marlin Hamilton, Misty Johnson, Christy Johnson, Beth
Tucker, Carrie Hamilton, Jennifer Gayheart. She had a Ballirena cake and
received' many gifts.
~..•~·.
·--
DETERIEIT
ONlY!
,
·'
"'-·-
2.
.
\,
~
0EXATRIM Xtra Stren(lh Plus v.t.mons r
CENTRUM JR'S 60'S
ONE A DAY PlUS IRON IOO'S
SINUS cAPs MAXIMUM STRENGTH zo·s
ALKA SELTZER PLUS 20'S
CO TYLENOL 20 CAPS.
KAZ VAPORIZER <76 1.2 GALLON
409VALUE
217
11
ONLY! 1
11
ONLV! 2
1150 VALUE
ONLY!&··
IJI
OR
JOIITUE 1 oz.
3
•
r·\ .
~··
VAlUES TO 9SI
111
·~~
11
ONLY! 2
'
ONLT! 1" ~·-•
77
ONLY! 3
·~
.......
13
ONLY! 1
11
ONLY! 2
~
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ONLY!
5.15 VALUE
3J9VALUE!
5.09 mUE
1.15 YILUI
--
;I-_,
J,·· v·:'
"
0
~-·
·' .
I
:::.~·:::-::.-::.~
h~ ~~~~
I
I
I
( -1
2 Fish & Chicken Dinners $3.99
Each dinner includes a fish fillet, 2 whitemeat Chicken Planks,' fryes, & slaw.
Valid thru: February 29, 1984
Only at: U.S. 23 North,
Prestonsburg
I
I
I
I
1
I
I
··············••WITHCOUPON•••••••••••••••I
I
Breaded Shrimp Platter $2.99
lb. of lightly breaded shrimp, fryes, slaw & 2 hushpuppies.
(Good up to 4 offers)
Valid thru: February 29, 1984
Only at: U.S. 23 North,
Prestonsburg
i
1
I
II
I
I
I
I
·-~
.
r
>1t :i';..~';ii;l;' ,.__
I
J./5 VALUE
j,~
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ONLY!
227
3.19 VAlUE
2°1
31
ONLY! 2
1.99 VALUE
ONLY!
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4.00 VALUE
147
41
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ONLY! 1"
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ONLY!
2.09 VALUE
2"
~
_.
/_,..,·~··
BIG ROLL
HIIHUII
7
PIPER
TOWELS
......
59
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ONlY!
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2.69 VAlUE
3.19 VALUE
-.r.~
~
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~~~·
s~~,(
~UNDRYCO~ON
.
EXTRA STRENGTH
-,~-~
!\ I
NAIL POLISH REMOVER MISS om·s 6 oz.
FLEX SHAMPOO t6 oz.
LOVING CARE HAIR COLORING
FROST &TIP KIT
CLAIRMIST •oz.
DIAL SOLID ANTI PERS. 2 oz.
ATRA CARTRIDGE s·s
BARBASOL SHAVE CREAM 11 oz.
------....,,
10.39 VALUE
ONLY!
ONLY!
1.39 VALUE
SAVE!
2.99 VALUE
UO VALUE
ONLY'
au
111
11
ONlY' 1
ONLY• 1U
ONLY' 81•
ONLY!
·----SUNDRYCOUPON ____ -,.
•
TYLENoL
~:SULES
US VALUE
69'
21t
51
ONLY! 2
SAVE!
3.29 VALUE
I
PLAYTEX NON DEODORANT
j
TAMPOI$RE~~1
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Taxpayers interested in year-round
tax tips as well as in a thorough guide
to filing season tax information can obtain a copy of the free IRS publication
910, "Taxpayer's Guide to IRS Information and Assistance,'' the Internal
Revenue Service said. Publication 910 is
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the IRS Forms Distribution Center, P .O.
Box 6900, Florence, Ky. 41042.
Contained in publication 910 are
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help taxpayers prepare their tax returns
or to receive assistance with their
returns. The booklet explains how to
resolve questions on bills, letters, and
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accounts and the status of refunds they
expect.
Of particular interest to taxpayers,
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numbers for both Tele-Tax, the recorded telephone tax information service,
and for the IRS toll-free telephone lines,
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speak to an IRS employee for tax assistance.
Other items of interest in the publication are explanations on collection of
taxes, examination of returns, and how
to file an amended return. Further, the
guide describes many of the free publications that are most often requested by
taxpayers and includes a handy order
blank.
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�Wednesday, February 8, 1984
The Floyd County Times
Boy Scout Leaders in Conference
Lonesome Pine District, Boy Scouts of America, was represented at a recent conference held at Camp Blanton in Harlan county by 10 of its 12 commissioners. These adult volunteers are responsible for carrying out the
Scouting program in the district's five-county area. Seated, from left, are
Elmer Kendrick, unit commissioner, Elkhorn City, Pike county; Jimmie
England, unit commissioner, Pikeville, Pike county; Dr. Phil Fairchild, assistant district commissioner, McDowell, Floyd county ; Dr. Don Bryson, assistant district commissioner of Magoffin, Johnson and Martin counties ; Art
Leach, Lonesome Pine District commissioner; E .R. Thompson, assistant
district commissioner of Pike county ; Mrs. John Anderson, John Anderson,
unit commissioner of the Dorton area, Pike county ; and Johnny Ratliff, unit
commissioner of the Virgie area, Pike county. <Photo by J. Parker Locke)
G & G COMPUTER SALES
East Point. KY 41216
Dealers of quality hardware
and software.
We have software for most computer systems:
IBM PC, Commodore, Apple, Radio Shack,
Victor, NEC, TeleVid~o. and many more.
We also have COLECO'S ADAM--more computer
for the money than any other.
Don't make the mistake of buying a computer
before you call us for the answers to your
computer questions.
Dress To Avoid Chill
When North Wind Blows
There's more to protecting oneself
from severe cold temperatures than just
bundling up, according to a Western
Kentucky University emergency care
expert.
Hypothermia, a condition caused by
exposure to severe cold, can happen to
people quickly as well as over a long
period of time, even from being in a
snowball fight, says Dr. Henry Baughman, coordinator of emergency care
technology at WKU.
Any body temperature below 95
degrees is considered a state of hypothermia, Baughman says, and since the
National Weather Service has predicted
more below normal temperatures for
February, Baughman offers some tips
on how to avoid hypothermia and frost
bite.
Tips for dressing m cold weather include: covering the head and face, wearing layers of clothing, wearing outer
garments that are wind and waterproof,
maintaining a healthy body, eating more
often and consuming higher energy
foods, and keeping active and dry.
"Covering the head is something
many people don't do because they are
afraid it will mess up their hair, or
because it is simply too much trouble,''
Baughman says, adding, " Fifty percent
of body heat is lost from the shoulders
up."
Baughman also says to avoid alcoholic
beverages and smoking when you're going to be out in the cold, because both
cause body heat to escape more rapidly.
"It is important to remember that
once the body temperature has dropped
below 95 degrees it cannot be rewarmed simply by eating more food or by putting on more clothing, since clothing only acts to retain body heat which has
already been lost," says Baughman.
"It is important to remove the wet or
constricting clothing and to then consume foods which are body temperature- 100 degrees to 114 degrees," he
adds . "Don't rub frostbitten areas
because that will only damage the tissue
even further," he says.
Some symptoms of hypothermia include a slowing down of the body, stiffening of the muscles, hallucinations,
amnesia, staggering and poor coordination, shock, low body temperature, irregular pulse and weak respiration,
numbness in the fingers and toes, followed by severe pain until eventually there
is no pain at all, and chill bumps, white
and puffy skin.
Section Three, Pa&e T~elve
To Wed March 17
FULL EXPENSE SCHOLARSHIPS
fOR TRANSfER JUNIORS
AT TRANSYLVANIA UNIVERSITY
Transylvania University, a co-educational
liberal arts college established in 1780, is
now accepting applications for its prestigious
Thomas Jefferson Scholars Program. Fifteen
scholarships will be made available for students entering Transylvania as juniors for
the 1984-85 academic year, The scholarships,
each valued at over $8,000 per year, include
remission of tuition, fees, and charges for
room and board, and are renewable for the
senior year. Selection is made entirely on the
basis of merit as demonstrated by academic
achievement, leadership, character, and
promise for continued development.
Leneda S. Rigsby and H. Kenneth
Fuller announce their engagement and
forthcoming marriage on Saturday,
March 17, at 1:30 p.m. at the First Baptist Church in Paintsville, Kentucky.
Miss Rigsby is the daughter of
William L. and Ruth Rigsby, of Paintsville, and is presently employed by
Transcontinental Coal Processing, Inc.,
in Prestonsburg. Mr. Fuller is the son of
Virgie H. Fuller, of Somerset, and Hugh
W. Fuller, of Monticello, and is an
Associate Professor at Prestonsburg
Community College.
The gracious custom of an open
church ceremony will be observed and
a ll friends and relatives are invited to
attend the wedding and reception which
will follow at the church.
•
•
Applications and inquiries should be sent to:
Jefferson Scholars Coordinator
Transylvania University
Lexington, Kentucky 40508
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Floyd County Times 1984
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Floyd County Times February 8, 1984
-
http://history.fclib.org/files/original/41/3328/02-15-1984.pdf
46cbad4a7bee88cac0325f6014319904
PDF Text
Text
•
M r ~lny~ <ttnunty Mimrn
Speaktng of
and for
• loyd County
PRESTONSBURG,
Read Each Week by More Than 12,500 Families.
USPS-2027 -0000
Volume LVII
No.7
25~
WEDNESDAY, ~~BRUARY 15, 1984
McGuffey Enters Plea,
'To Testify For· State
Jury Selection
Under Way In
arshall Trial
One of two half-brothers facing trial
in Fayette Circuit Court this week for
complicity in the murder last June of a
McDowell school teacher entered a guilty plea yesterday (Tuesday) and agreed
to testify against his brother.
In a plea bargain worked out during
e first day of the trial, Monday, and
nnounced shortly after 8 a.m. Tuesday
morning, Bobby Gene McGuffey, 30, of
Lafayette, Tenn., pleaded guilty of complicity in the death last June 20 of Glenda Sharon Marshall.
Commonwealth's Attorney James R.
Allen, prosecutor in the case, recommended that McGuffey be given a life
sentence. Conviction could have resulted
in the death penalty.
Jury selection began J:t~E!Sday in the
:ial of the remaintbgdefendant, Clyde
Douglas Marshall, 31, of McDowell, husband of the dead woman.
..
.
The charred body of Mrs. Marshall, a
35-year-old math teacher at McDowell
High School, was found inside a burned
automobile that had plunged several'
hundred feet off Sizemore Mountain,
near Minnie. Police said she had apparently been killed by a blow to the
head before the vehicle burned.
Marshall, McGuffey and Carl Harold
. fcFarland, 52, of Glasgow, Ky., were
mdicted last August for conspiracy to
murder Mrs. Marshall. McGuffey and
another man, Edward Wright, were said
to have actually committed the murder.
Wright was shot and killed last July
outside the cabinet shop which he and
McGuffey operated near Lafayette.
McFarland previously agreed to turn
Set> Story No. !'i. Page 4>
rand J_ury
Held Over The February term of the Floyd Circuit Court grand jury, which would normally be sitting at this time, has been
postponed because of the current Lexington murder trial of Clyde Douglas
Marshall and Bobby Gene McGuffey,
said Commonwealth's Attorney James
R. Allen. The grand jury will be called
into session when that trial, which began
this week, is over, Allen said.
-
M ARRIAGE LICEI\SES
Thomas Lee Young, 19. of Varney.
and Donna Lee Carroll. 17. of Grethel:
Ronald Lee Robinette. of Meta. and
Tracey Lynn Johnson. 23. of Pikeville:
Billy Len Craft. 16, and Connie Patrick.
18, both of Tram: Gary Dean Daniels.
21, of Drift, and Connie Jean Prater. 18.
of Prestonsburg: Donald Raymond
Craft, 47, and Betty Joe Shepherd. 47.
both of Prestonsburg: Barry Edwin
Sanders. 28, of Pikeville. and Anneita
Kay Hall. 17. of Betsy Layne.
SUITS FILED
Phyllis Aileen Ison vs. Paul R. I son:
Barry T. Frasure vs. Albert T.
Hackworth: First Guaranty Bank vs.
Dale and Judy Gayle Bradley: First
Guaranty Bank vs. Junior and Mildred
Martin: Sharon Lynn Huff vs. Arthur
Huff: Citicorp Acceptance Corp. vs.
Ralph and Polly Whitaker: Bruce
rSee Story No. 1. Page 4l
Almost 9,000 petitions asking that the
move by the Floyd County Board of Education to impose a 3% utilities tax on
residents of this county be put to a vote
will be presented to County Clerk Carla
R. Boyd, today (Wednesday). Everett
Akers, one of the leaders of the drive to
put the queStion to a vote, will deliver the
petitions to the clerk's office at 10:30.
Following delivery of the petitions, the
clerk is required to send via certified
mail notification to the Board of Education of a petition having been filed. Upon
receipt and acknowledgement of the
notice by the Board, the utilities tax will
be held in abeyance until verification or
rejection of the petitions by the election
commissioners. If they are judged valid,
the tax will not be imposed unless a majority of voters cast their ballots for it
in the next general election.
The number of petitions required is
2,308 or 15 percent of votes cast in this
county in the last presidential election.
THE SUN WAS SHINING and temperatures hovered around the 60 mark, Sunday, perfect conditions for Prestonsburg youngsters Robert Lafferty (left) and Shawn Slone to practice the
time-honored art of blowing soap bubbles.
Civil Air Patrol
Unit Here Plans
Recruiting Drive
Even as one emergency services
organization closed its doors here,
another was out recruiting new
members. While the Big Sandy Chapter
of the American Red Cross disbanded
after 55 years in this county, the Dewey
Lake Squadron of the Civil Air Patrol
<CAP> struggled to take off.
The local squadron, part of a group
that embraces 32 eastern Kentucky
counties, was chartered last June. The
group boasts a single light aircraft-a
Cessna T41B retired by the U.S. Air
Force-which is housed at the Combs
airport here. And this week the
35-member squadron met to plan a drive
to boost its numbers.
If the CAP has lost some of the
romance of its early, wartime yearsit was founded in 1941 to draw volunteer
civilian fliers into the war effort-it still
has an important peacetime role, said
Major Denzil Allen, a Prestonsburg insurance agent who heads CAP Group 3.
With more than a little nostalgia, auto
r See Story No.4. Page 4 l
Murder Attempt Alleged,
Bond of $100,000 Posted
A Cow Creek man was accused of at:
tempted murder and criminal mischief
riday, after he allegedly fired on a coal
uck <!river during an early-morning
chase from Emma to Martin.
Palmer Crider, 31, of Endicott, said
Paul David DeRossett, 37, tried to kill
him as he pulled his tractor trailer out
of Cow Cree!. around 5:10a.m. He made
the same charge in a civil suit filed Monday in Floyd Circuit Court.
DeRossett's wife, Betty Foley
DeRossett, said her husband was at
home in bed at the time of the alleged
shooting.
Crider said he was hauling his first
ad for the day from the Cow Creek
Construction Co. mine to a Hueysville
tipple, when a 1975 Monte Carlo with two
men inside pulled over in front of him.
When the car's dome light came on, he
recognized DeRossett, who fired a rifle
shot, Crider said.
The shot shattered the cab window,
spraying him with glass, the truck
driver said. His assailants then pursued
,.ttim in the early mortling darkness along
1428 and old KY 80, firing shots
repeatedly, until he collided with their
vehicle in the parking lot of the Pic Pac
store at Martin, Crider said.
Linda Laudermilt, of Endicott; who is
the proprietor of Linda's Trucking Co.
and the truck's lessee, said at least nine
rtfle shots had hit the truck. A bullet was
recovered from the cab, it was said.
Buckshot pellets had also struck the rig.
Damage, including that done when the
truck and the Monte Carlo collided and
e truck hit a stanchion, could amount
o more than $8000, Mrs. Laudermilt
estimated. ''It's a mess. There's no
reason for this," she said.
Crider also claimed he ICnew of no
reason for the alleged attack on him but
DeRossett, who is married to Crider's
ex-wife, had previously threatened to
kill him and Mrs . Laudermilt. Crider
said. "It's a shame when you can't get
out and work without somebody waiting
o take a shot at you," he said.
DeRossett was booked at the Floyd
county jail and released Friday after
posting a $100,000 property b~nd. ~is
wife attributed the charge~ agamst h1m
Akers To Deliver
Petitions To Clerk
to a personal grudge on the part of
Crider. Because of a continuing dispute
over the distribution of marital proper·
ty since they were divor~ed two years
ago, Crider ''h(!s been swearing all sorts
of lies about me," his ex-wife said. On
Monday, DeRossett swore out a warrant
against Crider, charging him with wanton endangerment. Crider aimed a pistol
at him last May, DeRossett said.
In the civil suit filed on his behalf by
Paintsville attorney Lowell E . Spencer,
Crider asks for a court order restraining DeRossett from coming near him
and for $5000 in damages for lost
earnings.
Council Argues Role
Of Fire Department
CIVIL AIR PATROL Major Denzil Allen prepared the organization's Cessna
for a recent training flight. A volunteer, civilian adjunct to the U.S. Air Force,
the Civil Air Patrol was organized in 1942 to assist with the war effort and
now provides rescue and other emergency services. A local squadron was
formed here last year and is presently recruiting new members.
.The extent of their responsibility for
fire protection outside the city limits
again exercised members of the Prestonsburg city council this week, one
member proposing that a subscription
service be made available for out-oftown residents.
Under a plan proposed by Paul Hunt
Thompson, county homeowners and
merchants within five road miles of the
city's main fire station would be served
by one of the city's sri. ..Her units and a
limited frrefighting crew in return for an
annual fee.
Thompson said he took exception to a
recent council decision limiting out-oftown fire runs to hospitals and schools.
"We can't suddenly stop providing service to people who have been depending
on it for years," he said.
But Bill Ray Collins wanted to know
Population Growth
Of County May Add
Extra Rum Outlet
Writ Asks Arrest of Man
Free 6 Years after Trial
Because of growth in population,
Floyd county is entitled to another
package liquor store, Edward A. Farris,
commissioner of the state Department
of Alcoholic Beverage Control, announced this week. Applications for the new
license will be received for thirty days
from today (Wednesday), he said.
Meanwhile, two Prestonsburg
businessmen who were among the
original 21 selected by the Alcoholic
Beverage Control <ABC) board to
receive licenses in December, 1982, will
be asked this week to show cause why
their claim to a license should not be
withdrawn. James R McClung and
William L. Smith have never used their
license, although McClung bought a liquor store originally licensed to another.
Under ABC policy,license designees are
!See Storv "lo fi. Page 4l
A warrant-has been issued for the arrest of a former Drift man convicted of
robbery and assault here six years ago.
The warrant was signed after court officials learned that, through an apparent
oversight, the man never served his pen
sentence.
Gary Lee Castle, at the time a 31-yearold belt examiner for the Martin County Coal Co. in Warfield, was convicted
in April, 1978 of robbing and shooting a
gas station attendant on Katy Friend the
year before.
Prosecutors said that, on Jan. 14, 1977,
Castle held up Cletis Boyd, then 20, of
Dana, at the TCT Truck Stop on U.S. 23,
forced him to hand over about $200, and
then shot him through the neck and
chest. Castle, a Vietnam veteran, claimed he had a war-related mental disorder,
had taken a combination of drugs and
.y
MISTY SCENES were common along the banks of the Big Sandy and other area streams as
temperatures rose and the snow melted. Above photo was taken just downriver from the Cliff
Bridge.
alcohol that day to relieve the pain of a
back injury, and remembered nothing
of the robbery or shooting.
On the recommendation of a Floyd
Circuit Court jury, he received
sentences of 17 years for assault and 11
years for robbery, the two terms to run
concurrently, but remained free on bond
while the convictions were appealed.
In filing his appeal, Castle said his
defense attorney had performed so poorly as to make his trial "a farce and a
mockery." Moreover, the trial judge
had erred, he argued, in failing to tell
jurors they could find he acted "under
extreme emotional disturbance."
The Kentucky Court of -Appeals rejected Castle's complaint about .bj_s
lawyer, Prestonsburg attorney Burnis
Martin- although "the trial transcript
appears to indicate trial counsel did at
best a mediocre job," the court saidand upheld the circuit court's robbery
conviction. But the higher court directed
that Castle be tried again on the assault
charge, on account of Circuit Judge
Hollie Conley's failure to instruct the
jury on extreme emotional disturbance.
In fact, Castle was not tried again on
the assault charge and was never
brought in to serve his 11-year sentence
for the robbery conviction- facts that
might never have come to light except
for inquiries made here recently by an
Inez attorney.
Both Mac Preece, personnel manager
for the Martin County Coal Co., and John
R. Triplett, a lawyer said to be working
for the company, declined to comment
on the case. But the coal firm is reported
to be testing its legal obligation to pay
worker's compensation to a man who
apparently should be in the penitentiary.
Although there is no record of it in the
court file, Commonwealth's Attorney
James R. Allen said this week he thinks
he agreed not to re-try Castle on the
assault charge since a substantial
sentence had been given for the robbery
conviction. But the reason Castle never
served time for the robbery remained
hazy this week.
Allen thought an agreement may ha~e
been reached suspending the sentence,
but there is no court order to that effect
on file ; defense attorney Martin said he
knows nothing of such a deal; and Pikeville attorney Herman W. Lester, who
rSt-E' Storv No 'l. P<Jgt• 41
why Prestonsburg should be c_Q,P.Cerned
about residents who~have resisted attempts to incorporate them in the city.
" They can come into the city if they
want to," he said, adding, "They've
slapped down our annexation ventures."
(City ordinances annexing sections on
Katy Friend and at Lancer have been
challenged in court; a recent proposal
to annex a strip along the Auxier road
also ran into considerable public
opposition.)
Bobby Watson, arguing .against the
subscription plan, vowed he was "not going to sell the people of Prestonsburg
down the river. "We've got to draw the
line somewhere. The line is already
there. It's the city limit," he said.
But Mayor Harold Cooley said Prestonsburg benefits from the county and
may have some responsibility beyond its
own borders. Thompson's proposal is a
"well-thought-up ordinance" that merits
further consideration, he said.
Under the subscription plan,
homeowners would pay $24 a year and
businesses from $00'to-$750.d_~pending on
area. In· return, the city fire department
would respond to fire calls with the
260-gallon "mini-pumper" and a maximum of six firefighters for house fires,
10 for business fires. (City residents are
served by three 500-gallon fire trucks as
well as the mini-pumper.)
The section of old U.S. 23 in front of
Prestonsburg High School will be closed to all vehicles except buses between
7 and 8:45a.m. and 2:30 and 3:45p.m.,
according to a council decision. The
Board of Education sought the restriction in order to comply with a state
Department of Education regulation, it
was said.
A random audit will be made of 10
firms to see that they are collecting
enough occupational tax from their
employees and paying their fair share
of license fees, the council decided. The
rSee
St or~
No
:~.PagE'
4l
Broadform Bill
Gets Nod From
Senate Panel
Advocates of a bill that would limit application of Kentucky's broadform deeds
were heartened yesterday <Tuesday)
when a Senate committee voted
unanimously to send the bill on for a vote
in the full Senate chamber.
The bill, House Bill 32, cleared the
House by a 77-vote margin last week.
The Senate Judiciary-Civil Committee
approved it yesterday, 6-0.
Among those speaking on behaU of the
bill before the committee in Frankfort
were its sponsor, Rep. Greg Stumbo,
Floyd landowners Everett Akers, of
Martin, and Marion Taylor, of Printer,
and John Rosenberg, director of the Appalachian Research and Defense Fund.
Sen. Benny Ray Bailey will sponsor the
bill in the Senate, where coal industry
representatives are expected to mount
an effort to kill it or weaken it by amendments.
Kentucky Coal Association Vice President Bill Caylor urged the Senate committee to consider an alternative bill,
Senate Bill198, introduced recently by
Sen. Gus Sheehan, of Covington, which
would not permit landowners to block
stripmining on their property but would
allow them to s ue fol' damages done by
the mining operation.
�Wednesday, February 15, 1984
Carl Stephenson
Carl Stephenson, 83, of Prestonsburg,
•iJ ~January 20 at the Riverview Manor
Nursing Home, here, following an extended illness.
Born March 2, 1900 in Huntington, W.
Va., he was a retired miner and was a
member of the Highland Avenue Free
Will Baptist Church. His wife, Lueditha
Sammons Stephenson, preceded him in
death in 1981.
He is survived by one son, Leonard
Stephenson, of West Prestonsburg; five
daughters, Mrs. Mary Anna Harris,
Mrs. Alta Price, and Mrs. Rosa Lee
Campbell, all of Prestonsburg, Mrs.
Lida Mae Ousley, of West Prestonsburg,
and Mrs. Doris Simmons, of Gary, Ind.;
two sisters, Mrs. Mae Gray, of Kite, and
Mrs. Mable Frank, of Lexington, Mich.;
13 grandchildren, 18 great-grandchildren, and one great-great-grandchild.
Funeral services were conducted at 2
p.m., Sunday, January 22. at the
Highland Avenue Free Will Baptist
Church by the Rev. Clifford Austin, and
burial was made in Davidson Memorial
Gardens at Ivel under direction of the
Floyd Funeral Home.
Pallbearers were Carl Ed Price, Tornmy Harris, Charles R. Ousley, James C.
Ousley, Leonard Stephenson, Jr., Kelly
Mitchell Cecil, David Sammons, Rufus
Sammons, and Bryan Whitten.
Mrs. Lula Mae Goble
Mrs. Lula Mae Goble, 73, of Auxier,
died Saturday, February 4, at Highlands
Regional Medical Center.
Born December 12, 1910 in Johnson
county, she was a daughter of the late
dWius and Ethel Castle and was a
member Of the-Awd.er..f_ree Will Baptist
Church.
She is survived by her husband, Paris
Goble; two sons, Paul Eugene Lilly.·of
Brunswick, 0., and Jimmy Goble, of
Allen; two daughters, Mrs. Lauva Terrill, of Prestonsburg, and Mrs. Barbara
Wells, of Dayton, 0.; five sisters, Mrs.
Malta Watson, of Auxier, Mrs. Myrtle
Hinchman, of Barbarsville, W.Va., Mrs.
Mary Evelyn Henry, of Xenia, 0., Mrs.
Beulah LeMaster, of Hillsboro, 0., and
Mrs. Imogene Price, of Jacksonville,
Fla., and one brother, Andrew Castle. of
Green Cove, Spring, Florida.
Funeral services were c,2.PJ~ucted at 1
p.m. Monday, F~br.oory 6, at the Auxier Free Will Baptist Church by the
Revs. Doug Burkett and Bill Campbell.
Burial was made in the Collins cemetery
at Auxier under direction of the JonesPreston Funeral Horne.
Ermal Johnson
Erma! Johnson, 60, of Ft. Wayne, Ind.,
formerly of Teaberry, died Tuesday,
February 7, at the Lutheran Hospital in
Ft. Wayne following an extended illness.
Born December 8, 1923, he was a son
of the late Milford and Minnie Kiser
Johnson. His wife, Delma Martin
Johnson, preceded him in death in 1978.
He was a retired miner.
Surviving him are two sons, Robie
Johnson, of Galveston, and Foster
Johnson, of Ft. Wayne, Ind.; five
daughters, Mrs. Christine Newsome and
Mrs. Shelby Newsome, both of Ft.
Wayne, Ind., Mrs. Ovean Artz, Mrs.
Irene Compton, and Mrs. Evelyn
Reynolds, all of Albion, Mich.; three
brothers, Millard, Willard, and Kendrick
Johnson, all of Teaberry; five sisters,
Dilly Johnson, Dollie Akers, and Lizzie
Hamilton, all of Teaberry, Harnie
Hamilton, of Allen, and Vinetta Martin,
of Grethel; 17 grandchildren and one
great-grandchild.
Funeral services were conducted at 10
a.qJ.., Saturday, at the Samaria Regular
Baptist Church at Teaberry by Regular
Baptist ministers, and burial was made
in the Andy Hamilton cemetery, there,
under direction of the Hall Funeral
Home.
SANDY VALLEY
MONUMENT
1c BUILDING STONE CO., Inc.
874-2273 • ALLEN, KY.
"THE AREA'S OLDEST ESTABUSHED
MONUMENT FIRM."
BEST QUAUTY MEMORIALS
QUICK, EFFICIENT SERVICE
AND INSTALLATION
SEE OUR LARGE DISPLAY OF
COLORED 1r GRAY GRANITES
LOCATED ON OLD U.S. 23
IN NEW ALLEN
6-J.tf.
The Floyd County Times
Obituaries
Tom Carroll
Tom Carroll, 71, of Honaker, died last
Friday at the U.K. Medical Center in
Lexington after a short illness.
Born July 15, 1912, he was a son of the
late Nathaniel and Francis Elizabeth
Kidd Carroll and was a r~ired miner.
He was first married to Bertha Hall Carroll, who preceded hirain death in 1945,
and later married Lizzie Luster Carroll,
who survives him.
In addition to his wife, he is survived
by four sons, Richard and Sonny Carroll,
both of Honaker, Gary Wayne Carroll,
of Prestonsburg, and Raymond Lee Carroll. of Hi Hat: eight daughters, Mrs.
Rat Hall, of Wheelwright, Mrs. Nannie
Yates, of Weeksbury, Mrs. Mary Lou
Johnson, of Ft. Wayne, Ind., Mrs. Barbara Tackett and Mrs. McCoy Ann Parsons, both of Grethel, Mrs. Marie Sammons, of Prestonsburg, Mr. Martha Ann
Willard, of Wheelwright, and Mrs. Billie
Tucker, of Price; three brothers,
Nathan Carroll, of Grethel, George Carroll, of Honaker, and Joe Carroll, of
Richmond; two sisters, Mrs. Della Kidd,
of Honaker, and Mrs. Rosie Owens, of
New London, 0 .; 36 grandchildren and
three great-grandchildren.
Funeral services were conducted at 10
a.m., yesterday <Tuesday) at the Little
Dove Regular Baptist Church at
Honaker with Regular Baptist ministers
officiating. Burial was made in the family cemetery, there, under direction of
the Hall Funeral Horne.
Mrs. Bessie L. Boyd
Mrs. Bessie L. Boyd, 43, of Ivel, died
Tuesday, February 7, at Highlands
Regional Medical Center following a
long illness.
Born December 14, 1914 at Woods, she
was a daughter of Mrs. Susan Riddle
Burchett Gillespie, of Banner, and the
late John B. Burchett.
In addition to her mother, she is survived by her husband, J.B. Boyd; four
sons, James T., Jonah Ray, and Daniel
Boone Boyd, all of Ivel, and Andy Lee
Boyd, of Water Gap; one daughter,
Florence Regina Boyd, of Ivel; three
brothers, Flem and Pete Burchett, of
Dana, and Jack Burchett, of Banner;
two sisters, Mrs. Anna Mae Boyd, of
Betsy Layne, and Mrs. Dicie Ellen Hunt,
of Banner.
Funeral services were conducted at
the residence at 11 a.m., Friday, by the
Revs. Raymond Jarrell and Raymond
Wright. Burial was made in the Alex
Weddington cemetery at Banner under
direction of the Hall Funeral Horne.
Mrs. Rhoda Tackett Jones
Mrs. Rhoda Tackett Jones, 66, of
Bypro, died Friday at Our Lady of the
Way Hospital following a prolonged illness.
Born May 8, 1917, she was a daughter
of the late Henry and Cordellia
McClanahan Tackett and was married
to Willie Jones, who preceded her in
death in 1981. She had been a member
of the Little Laura Old Regular Baptist
Church at Owsley for 33 years.
Surviving are three sons, Hershel
Jones, of Garrett, Randall Jones, of
Clarksville, Ind., and Billy Ray Jones,
of Bypro; one daughter, Beulah Patrick,
of Bypro; three brothers, Tommy
Tackett, of Salyersville, Logan Tackett,
of Printer, and Andrew Tackett, of
Nova, Ohio. Sixteen grandchildren and
five great-grandchildren also survive.
Funeral services were conducted at 10
a.m., Monday, at the residence by
ministers of the Old Regular Baptist
Church, and burial was made in the
Buckingham cemetery under direction
of the Hall Funeral Home.
Mrs. Betty Miller
Mrs. Betty Miller, 69, of Ligon, died
Friday at Highlands Regional Medical
Center following a short illness.
Born July 29, 1914 at Ned, Ky., she was
a daughter of the late Johnny and Lissie
Bryant Caudill. Her husband, Odis
Miller, preceded her in death.
Surviving her are four sons, Curtis
Miller, of Detroit, Mich., Roy Miller, of
Melvin, Gary and Larry Miller, both of
Ligon; four daughters, Mrs. Janice
Flannery, Mrs. Linda Tucker, and Mrs.
Brenda Hall, all of Ligon, and Mrs. Doll
Wolfe, of Detroit; two brothers, Toy
Caudill, of Ligon, and Fhirow Miller, of
Lincoln Park, Mich.; 26 grandchildren
and eight great-grandchildren.
Funeral services were conducted at 10
a.m. Monday at the Little Nancy
Regular Baptist Church at Hi Hat by
Regular Baptist ministers, and burial
was made in the Newman cemetery at
Hi Hat under direction of the Hall
Funeral Home.
Andrew (Buddy) Ratliff
Andrew (Buddy) Ratliff, 45, of Harold,
died en route to the Pikeville Methodist
Hospital, Tuesday, February 7, after
suffering an apparent heart attack.
Born December 15, 1938 at Ivel, he was
the son of Mrs. Laura Dillon Ratliff, of
Stanville, and the late Floyd Ratliff. He
was a mechanic for the Peter Fork Mining Company in Pikeville.
In addition to his mother, he is survived by his wife, Mrs. Sarah Kathleen
Rhodes Ratliff; three daughters, Mrs.
Sandra Smith, of Stanville, Mrs.
Melissa Howe, of Ft. Wayne, Ind., and
Miss Renea Ratliff, at home; one sister,
Thomas (Tom) Fields
Thomas <Tom) Fields, 82, former Mrs. Mary Blevins, of Honaker, and
Prestonsburg resident, died last Tues- three grandchildren.
Funeral services were conducted at 11
day, February 7, at the home of his
sister in Lexington following an extend- a.m., Friday, at the Boldman Free Will
Baptist Church at Harold by the Rev.
ed illness.
Belmont
Johnson, and burial was made
Mr. Fields was well known here where
he was for many years associated with in the Bush cemetery at Harold under
the grocery business. He had been direction of the Hall Funeral Horne.
employed by the R.V. May Company
and the Curtis May Grocery. Born
Amy Dawn Allen
August 18, 1901, he was a son of the late
Amy Dawn Allen, four-month-old
Jefferson and Minnie Akers Fields and
was a veteran of World War II and was daughter of John and Mary Shepherd
a member of the First Christian Church. Allen, died last Wednesday en route to
He is survived by his wife, Mrs. Highlands Regional Medical Center.
She was born October 10, 1983, and in
Josephine Davidson Fields, and four
sisters, Mrs. Ada Adams, of Olive Hill, addition to her parents is survived by a
Jennie, Elva, and Ruby Fields, all of sister, Johnna Marie, at horne; grandparents, Mrs. Florence Nelson and
Lexington.
William
Shepherd, both of West PresFuneral services were conducted at 11
a.m ., Thursday, at the Hill and Dale tonsburg, and Tom and Mary Grace
Christian Church in Lexington with the Allen, of Abbott Creek.
Rev. Wendell Roberts officiating. Burial ' Funeral services were conducted at 11
was made under direction of the Carter a.m., Friday, at the First Assembly of
GOO Church in West Prestonsburg by the
Funeral Horne.
Rev. Wade Martin Hughes, and burial
was made in the McGuire cemetery on
the Big Branch of Abbott Creek under
Ruby Jane Stumbo West direction of the Floyd Funeral Horne.
Mrs. Ruby Jane Stumbo West, 69, of
Ellenton, Fla., formerly of McDowell,
died last Friday at the Manatee VA Nurse Scholarships
Memorial Hospital in Bradenton, Fla., Available For 1984-85
following a short illness.
The Veterans Administration is now
Born October 17, 1914, she was a accepting applications for its Health
daughter of the late Grover and Minnie Professional Scholarship Program
Stumbo. She had been a teacher in the which provides support for baccalauFloyd county school system, chiefly at reate and master's nursing students on
McDowell, for many years, and had a pay-back-in-service basis.
been employed as a computer operator
The VA scholarship provides tuition,
for the Chrysler Corporation in Detroit, educational expenses and a monthly stiMichigan.
pend for participants who agree to serve
She is survived by her husband, a minimum of two years as a full-time
Everett Carl West; four brothers, Glenn registered nurse in one of the VA 's 172
Stumbo, of Bradenton, Fla., James Ed- medical facilities.
ward, and Fred Stumbo, both of YpsilanApproximately $3.6 million dollars is
ti, Mich., Bill Stumbo, of Lexington; four available for scholarships for the 1984-85
sisters, Mrs. Beatrice Thomas and Mrs. school year. Awards are made to third
Rosemary Compton, both of Ypsilanti, and fourth-year baccalaureate nursing
Mich., Mrs. Ruth Musselman, of Day- students and to master's degree canton, 0., and Mrs. Sue Jane Beasley, of didates in specialties needed by the
Nashville, Tennessee.
Veterans Administration. These specialFuneral services were conducted at 11 ties are gerontology. medical/surgical.
a.m. yesterday <Tuesday) in the chapel adult psychiatric/mental health.
of the Hall Funeral Home by the Rev. rehabilitation. and nursing service adBob Martin. Burial was made in the ministration.
Stumbo cemetery at Minnie.
Information about the program is
a\·ailable from the VA Health Professtonal Scholarship Program. Office of
Academic Affairs. DM&S !l4Nl. 810
Vermont Ave. N.W .. Washington. D.C.
20-120. Requests for an application
package may be made to the Scholar·
ship Program Office between February
27 and May 11. 198-1. Completed applications must be received by the Scholarship Program Office no later than June
I. 198-1.
Honorary Pallbearers
At Rites For Dr. Hyden
CARTER FU-N.ERAL HOME
47 SOUTH LAKE DRIVE • PRESTONSBURG
Phone 886-2774.
Mrs. Mosley, Victim
In Car-Truck Crash
The name of Doug Stratton was inadvertently omitted from the list of active pallbearers for Dr. Joe Taylor
Hyden.
Honorary pallbearers were Neil Allen,
Jack Plummer, Don Taylor, Barkley
Sturgill, Dr. Jack Gross, Ed Clark,
Frank Branham, Harry Caudill, Ezra
Martin, Marvin Tackett, Jack Hyden.
Kimberly Dawn Steffey Mosley died
late Thursday evening when she attempted to enter the southbound lane of U.S.
23 near the Plantation Motel and drove
into the path of a northbound coal truck
driven by Richard Combs, of Hazard,
according to the state police. The accident occurred at about 11:30 p.m.
Mrs. Mosley, 26, of Rt. 3, Prestonsburg, was dead at the accident scene,
about 2112 miles north of Prestonsburg.
Born July 4, 1957, she was a daughter
of Mrs. Janelle Howard Steffey, of
Dwale, and James Steffey, of Tram. She
was a 1975 graduate of Prestonsburg
High School where she participated in
many school activities including gymnastics, Co-Ed Y, Pep Club, Mixed
Chorus. She was voted most popular by
her senior class, was a cheerleader for
four years and was voted most outstanding cheerleader. She was a member of
the football and basketball homecoming
courts, received a special medal in
chorus and was a cheerleader sponsor
for three years. She attended Prestonsburg Community College where she was
a member of Phi Beta Larnda and was
on the softball team.
Mrs. Mosley had been employed by
The Bank Josephine, and was employed
at the Arrow Printing Company at
Dwale.
In addition to her parents, she is survived by her husband, David Mosley;
one sister, Mrs. Bambi Boyd, of Auxier ;
two brothers, Tim Steffey, of Eastern,
and Jamie Steffey, of Richmond; her
grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Kermit
Howard, of Dwale, and Mrs. Annie Steffey, of Tram.
Funeral rites were conducted at 2
p.m., Sunday, at the Prestonsburg
Church of Christ with Benny Blankenship, the officiating minister. Burial was
made in the Mosley cemetery on Cow
Creek under direction of the Floyd
Funeral Home.
Pallbearers were Mike Click, Dwayne
Moore, Jack Goodman, Terry Kinzer,
Dennis Osborne, Steven Halbert, Jamie
Latta, Joe Berner, Steward Wright, Tim
Spurlock, and Mike Van Horn.
KHA Explains New
Medicare Rulings
Due to various new government
regulations, confusion has developed on
the part of some elderly Medicare patients regarding hospital admission and
whether their hospital stay will be paid
by Medicare.
The bulk of the confusion stems from
the requirement that Medicare patients
must be assigned an authorization code
number by the Kentucky Peer Review
Organization CKPRO) prior to any non- ,
emergency hospital admission.
KPRO, a federally funded organization, was established to review the
medical necessity of hospital admissions
of non-emergency Medicare and Medicaid patients.
Some patients have been confused and
have assumed they are required to obtain the authorization code number
when, in fact, it is the responsibility of
the patient's admitting physician to call
KPRO for approval.
Since patients are not able to get such
authorization from the KPRO and
because of the reluctance of a few physicians to call KPRO for a review of the
patient's condition, some patients have
refrained from visiting physicians. They
have assumed that they will not be admitted or that Medicare will not cover
their hospital charges.
However, should a physician determine this patient is in need of hospitalization, a hospital will not refuse to admit the patient simply because of the
lack of an authorization code.
This regulation for physicians applies
to all non-emergency Medicare/
Medicaid patients except admissions for
·alcoholism, drug dependency, rehabilitative psychiatric treatment, and
maternity care.
The process for obtaining an authorization code works like this. The admitting physician of any non-emergency
Medicare or Medicaid patient calls
KPRO and includes information about
the patient and reasons for the admission. Once the KPRO has the necessary
information, a determination is made
regarding the necessity for hospitalization.
The patient is not involved in this process and normally is unaware that this
process has ever taken place. If admission is approved, the physician is given
an authorization code which then will accompany the patient to the hospital.
The first collective bargaining agreement in the U.S. was obtained in 1795 by
Philadelphia printers, according to
"Labor Firsts in America," a publica
tion of the U.S. Department of Labor.
•
Section One, Page Two
* CAN:CER HOPELINE *,
This questions and answer column is
provided as a public service by the
McDowell Cancer Network. Questions
are answered by appropriate specialists
associated with the Network and represent some of the inquiries made by
callers who use our Hopeline.
The Cancer Hopeline is a toll free consultative telephone service available to
any Kentuckian who has a cancerrelated problem Qualified counselors
take calls Monday-Friday from 9-5 and
return recorded messages the next
working day. They do not diagnose
cancer, recommend treatment for individual cases, nor dispense money.
Counselors do provide consultations with
specialists as well as support and understanding. Because of its designation by
the National Cancer Institute as Kentucky's Cancer Information Service, the
Hopeline has rapid access to the latest
cancer information. All matters are
treated confidentially. Call the Cancer
Hopeline toll free at 1-800-4-CANCER, or
write us at McDowell Cancer Network,
915 South Limestone Street, Lexington,
Ky. 40536-0084.
_
Q. My doctor has found that I have
lung cancer, and he has referred me to
a thoracic surgeon. What is a thoracic
surgeon, and why do I need one? He's
Board certified too. What does this
mean?
A thoracic surgeon specializes in
surgery of the organs in the chest area.
To be certified by the American Board
of Thoracic Surgery, a physician first
must have been certified by the
American Board of Surgery, have two
additional years of training in thoracic
surgery, and have successfully completed written and oral examinations.
Each type of cancer grows and
spreads differently, so it is vital that a
surgeon performing cancer surgery be
experienced in treating the particular
form of cancer. Your family physician
doubtless referred you to a thoracic
surgeon because he believes that your
particular t:ase should be handled by a
specialist. This is frequently done and is
in your best interests.
In addition, the thoracic surgeon is in
a position to consult with other
specialists in the treatment of lung
cancer. You might ask him/her about
doing so if it is not suggested. Examples
of consultants are a medical oncologist
who is expert in the use of chemotherapy
drugs and a radiation oncologist whose
skill is in the use of radiation therapy.
Such consultations. among physicians in
various disciplines provides added
assurance that your cancer is being well
handled, for then the best single therapy
or combination can be applied to your
particular case.
Generally, your family physician will
be kept abreast of your progress and will
cooperate with the surgeon in the
management of your case. If you have
questions about these procedures, don't
hestitate to contact your famillilt.
physician.
•
Trained counselors at the Cancer
Hopeline are available to help with your
cancer-related
questions.
Call
1-800-4-CANCER weekdays from 9-5, or
write us at McDowell Cancer Network,
915 South Limestone Street, Lexington,
Ky. 40536-0084.
Spring Retreat
At Slade, March 30
A spring retreat for Christian wornerl
will be held at Natural Bridge State
Park at Slade, March 30-April 1. The
sponsoring group is "Victorious
Women", an organization of Christian
women.
Keynote speakers for the weekend are
Ethel Anderson and Fran Dickinson, cochairman of a retreat in Warsaw, Indiana. Both are pastors' wives, and Mrs.
Dickinson was named Indiana "Mothe
of the Year." A testimony of Mr .
Anderson's life has been written up in
"Power for Living" Sunday School
magazine.
For additional information and
registration forms, those interested may
write to Victorious Women, Box 1563,
Hazard, Ky. 41701.
ANNOUNCE BIRTH
Mr. and Mrs. William F. May, of Ail-,
bott Road, Prestonsbutt, are anrioun
ing the birth of their second daughter,
Allison Elizabeth, February 4, at Pikeville Methodist Hospital. Maternal
grandparents are Mr. and Mrs. Oscar
Spears, of Banner, and paternal grandparents are Mr. and Mrs. T.C. May, of
Langley.
CARD OF THANKS
It
The family of Kimberly Steffey t
Mosley would like to express our
deepest appreciation and thanks to
the Floyd Funeral Home, Evangelist Bennie Blankenship, Evangelist
Earl Scalf, Brother James Ed
Webb, The Church of Christ, The
boys from Middle Creek, The
Springwater Band, all our friends
and neighbors who sent the beautiful
flowers, the food and to those who
helped with their comforting words
and love. Words cannot express our II.
1
Jove to each and everyone of you. II'
We love you as she loved you.
May God Bless each and
everyone of you.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~11
REVIVAL IN PROGRESS
'
!l
Church of God at Goodloe .!
.
.
PREACHER: WILLARD HOLIDAY
7 PM, MON.-SAT. • 6 PM, SUNDAY
PASTOR: MALCOM SLONE
Everyone Welcome
'
~~~~~~~~~~
IN MEMORIAM
In memory of Linda Sue Hale who passed away ten
years ago on February 18, 1974.
Time is like an endless sea,
Which carries grief away.
The healing process is slow-indeed,
For unbearable loneliness brings empty days.
"My friend, I walk through a valley and weep,
For the wounds of grief are painful to bear."
When time seemed to be as endless as shared dreams,
Thoughts linger to past days.
But, the gracious Providence of God is a great healer,
Through trusting, grief gradually flows away.
The sunlight of healing lends,
Precious memories of a friend who went away.
Of a friend who was kind, faithful and dear.
And one with a smile on her face.
Of a friend whose life was brief,
And one with a generous and caring heart.
Written in Loving Memory by
DeLois DeRossett Calhoun
Sidney, Ohio
�The Floyd County Times
Wednesday, February 15. 1984
CHURCH GHOt'P :\IEETS
The Anlii \Jh:n c ndt> of the F irst
Baptist Church met at the honw of !\II s
Ora Bussey, Monday. ~>vening, J:i eb. ti ,
with Mrs. Docia Wootls as co-hostess In
the absence of the president, Mrs. Huby
Garrett, the vice-president, Mr:, . Path
Minns, presided during the business ses.
n. Mrs. Minns presented the program, "I Spell Missions AM E R I CA."
Assisting her were, Mrs. Eva Collins and
Mrs. Zelia Archer. A Jist of missionanes
observing their birthdays at that time
was read by the Prayer chairman, Mrs.
Vivian Fraley, and Mrs. Patsy Evans
Jed the group in prayer for those so
remembered. Mrs. Rebecca Rasnick
spoke briefly.
It was announced that revival services
be conducted at the Irene Cole
Baptist Church, April1-6, by
Rev. Robert D. Hopkins, pastor of
the First Baptist Church in Brooksville,
Ohio, and the father of the Rev. Steve
Hopkins, pastor of the local church. The
Baptist Enterprise Associational
meeting is scheduled to be held here on
March 29.
The hostesses served refreshments in
keeping with the Valentine season to
~esdames Patti Minns, Rebecca
• asnick, Pc:.tsy Evans, Zella Archer,
Eva Colins, Vivian Fraley, Dorothy
Osborne, Myrtle Allen, Dolly Pettrey,
and Lillia Mae Price.
The next meeting will be Monday
evening, March 5, at 7 p.m.
The first panel quiz show on radio was
Information Please, aired May 17, 1938.
Section One, Page Three
Miss Floyd Co. Pageant
To Be Chosen April 28
The Prestonsburg Junior Woman's
Club will again sponsor the Miss Floyd
County Pageant this year.
Winner of the county pageant will
enter the Kentucky State Pageant held
to select the state queen, who will compete for the crown of Miss America m
the national competition.
The club is again serving as sponsor
of the pageant this year because its
members believe it provides a valuable
contribution to the community and to the
young ladies who will enter the competition. It also serves the commumty in
focusing attention on the high calibre of
young women who are residents of our
area and serves them well in providing
the opportunity for them to gain added
poise through public appearance and
added maturity through participation in
a community program such as the Floyd
County Pageant. Most importantly, it
provides the opportunity for the girl who
is winner to seek scholarship award'S at
the Kentucky State Pageant, which will
aid her in obtaining an education at the
college of her choice.
To qualify a young woman must be
between the ages of 17 and 26 on the
Labor Day holiday, must be a high
school graduate by Labor Day and must
never have been married. Personality,
poise, beauty, and talent are the major
requirements. Interested young ladies
or organizations who wish to sponsor
contestants are urged to contact Betty
Slone at 886-8286 after 5 p.m., Peggy
Kidd at 886-6262, or any other club
member. Entry Deadline is March 3,
1984. The pageant will be held Saturday,
April28, but the time and place have not
yet been scheduled. This will be a community endeavor and the club will be requesting the community and its organizations to sponsor contestants, to attend
the pageant, and to support it
financially.
Nation Salutes
Hospitalized Vets
The nation salutes its hospitalized
veterans during the week of February
14 and the Veterans Administration is inviting citizens nationwide to visit the
nearly 90,000 patients in its medical
facilities.
The VA, which administers veterans
medical andbe.t:!~fits programs, has also
mounted an ef'f(l'rl ·-to encourage
Americans of all ages to serve as
hospital volunteers year-round.
Over 50 national volunteer groups and
veterans organizations have joined in
the effort.
With the First Lady as honorary
patron and Harry Morgan, star of AfterMASH, as honorary chairman, the program's theme is "Nothing hurts like being forgotten-Nothing helps like being
remembered."
Morgan, who plays the Chief of Staff
at a fictional VA hospital in the AfterMASH show, is featured on radio and
television spot announcements.
World War II Navy veteran John
Chuchola, in a wheelchair, personifies
the salute on the informational printed
material urging participation.
''In addition to honoring our veterans
and volunteers," said VA Administrator
Harry N. Walters, "this is an opportunity for us to share with the public the professional excellence of the VA's health
care system which is the nation's
largest."
The system includes 172 medical
centers, 16 domiciliaries and 99 nursing
home care units throughout the country.
Walters noted that "volunteerism is
critical to the quality of care provided
those who have served their country in
time of need."
During Fiscal Year 1983, 79,000
volunteers provided 11.9 million hours of
service to hospitalized veterans. The
value of their participation, based on the
generally accepted average value of
$6.50 per hour, would be $77.2 million.
Volunteers also generated $10 million
dollars in donations.
Volunteers are involved in everything
from patient care and recreation to administration and transportation
assistance.
Examples of volunteer services range
from helping in home re,babilitation of
stroke patients to supervised youth
groups from pre-school through junior
high schooL. in one-to-one "adopted
grandparent" activity.
Because of the rising age level of the
veteran population, there is a growing
emphasis on geriatrics and services for
the terminally ill and their families.
The groups supporting the drive to get
more volunteers are members of the VA
Voluntary Service's National Advisory
Committee. In addition to major
veterans groups they include organizations such as the Red Cross, the
American Association of Retired Persons, the ELKS and the Salvation Army.
About 60 percent of all VA volunteers
are affiliated with a group or organization, ranging from very large national
ones to local clubs and churches. Those
without organizational affiliation are
recruited by VA staff members.
If you want to join in the salute to
veterans, or volunteer on a longer-term
basis, call the VA medical facility
nearest you.
Having you to think about
And plan for every day
Is something that means more to me
Than I can ever say
For knowing you are happy
Is my greatest joy in life
And Honey, it's really wonderful
To be your loving wife.
Happy Anniversary, Johnny
Love, Becky
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�Wednesday, February 15, 1984
The Floyd County Times
[qr l~lny~ \ltnunty [imrs
Published Every Wednesday by
Our Yesterdays
Prestonsburg Publishing Company
(Items taken from The Floyd County
Times, 10, 20, 30, 40 a~d 50 years ago.)
NORMAN ALLEN Editor
Subscription Rates Per Year:
In Floyd County, $8.00
Elsewhere in Kentucky, $10.00
Outside Kentucky, $12.50
Entered as second class matter June 18,
1927, at the postoffice at Prestonsburg,
Kentucky, under the act of March 3, 1879.
Our Turn To Be Heard
If there is any immediate hope of relief from the brutally
high bills natural gas consumers are facing these days it may
lie in a bill now under Congressional consideration.
This bill, known as the National Gas Consumer Relief Act,
would lower gas prices to their January, 1982 levels, extend
price controls for two years and require that pipeline suppliers
of natural gas buy their gas at the lowest cost available.
If such relief is not afforded by the Congress, the law now
in effect will continue to permit gas rates to rise by the month
and most of the nation's natural gas supply will be decontrolled next January 1.
There are those who will tell the long-suffering public that
removing price controls will bring down the cost to the consumer, but most of those who argue that decontrolled gas will
be cheaper are the big corporate producers and suppliers of
the fuel, and their track record should not be very convincing
to the consumer who this very month is hard-pressed to meet
his bills.
These are the companies which two years ago or longer were
operating at a profit while charging only a fraction of today's
prices for the gas they produced. Yet they have convinced
government and its regulatory commissions that they must
be permitted to skyrocket their rates.
These are the same companies which not long ago were
warning-and convincing many of us-that there was a shortage c: natural gas.
They also declared they needed more money and less regulation in order to justify exploration (drilling) for new gas.
What happened when the price rose'? There was no visible
gas shortage. And what happened to drilling for new gas'? The
independent producer in this part of Kentucky now finds it difficult to sell his gas to the two or three major companies that
enjoy a virtual monopoly on the market.
The "facts" that the consumer swallowed were downright
deceptive.
The utilities, municipal and private, which sell this gas to
the consumer must raise their prices as the producers and
pipeline companies go merrily along, raising rates almost at
will. These major suppliers are in interstate commerce.
Federal law must give whatever relief that is given. And that's
why it is most important that the consumer should let his or
her Representative and Senators in Congress know they can
help the citizen back home by enacting this Natural Gas Consumer Relief Act.
The opposition is already busy. Now it's our turn.
What Can Kentucky Learn from New Hampshire?
(An editorial in The Lexington Herald-Leader)
This session of the Kentucky General Assembly is likely to be remembered
as the "education legislature." The legislature, under the guidance of its own
leaders and the urging of Gov. Martha Layne Collins, is moving toward higher
taxes to provide for a major increase in funding of state schools. And rightly
so. Schools need the money for a variety of programs, like mandatory
kindergarten and increased remedial education, that offer us some hope of
turning the state education system around.
The danger, of course, is that the state will throw a ton of money at the problem and then promptly forget it. That won't help. Money alone is not a solution. If it were, then the major increase in education funding during the term
of former Gov. Julian Carroll would have produced something other than a
continued decline in student test scores.
Just as money can't buy happiness, neither can it buy a good education.
All it can buy are the tools and {esources that make a good education possible. Taking advantage of those tools and resources is entirely another matter.
The definitive example of taking advantage of available resources rna)' well
be the state of New Hampshire. For the lOth time in 10 years, New Hampshire students who take the Scholastic Aptitude Test, one of the two widely
used college entrance examinations, have bested their counterparts in the
other 49 states. It is also a state where 56.2 percent of high school seniors take
the SAT, compared to a national average of 38 percent.
New Hampshire's success is impressive, particularly in light of the state's
spending on schools. New Hampshire is dead last in the nation in state funding for education. New Hampshire ranks 40th nationally in spending per pupil,
only two notches above Kentucky. New Hampshire ranks 48th in the nation
in teachers' salaries; Kentucky ranks 31st.
·Obviously, New Hampshire taxpayers are getting more for their money than
Kentucky taxpayers are. So what makes New Hampshire's schools so
effective?
Are New Hampshire's teachers and administrators better and more
dedicated? Are its school boards more interested in education than in politics?
Are New Hampshire parents more interested in the education their children
receive? Is it a matter of attitude or tradition?
We don't claim to know, but we are inclined to believe that it would be worth
the time and effort for Kentucky education officials to find out.
Kentucky is a state of limited financial resources. We will never approach
the top of the heap in spending on education. The state is simply too poor.
So even though we will add some money to school treasuries this year, our
main concern must always be getting the most out of each dollar. To turn our
education system around, we must first educate ourselves-state officials,
local school officials and the public-on what it takes in addition to money
to give our children the best education possible.
Something or somebody in New Hampshire obviously has what it takes to
make schools successful without a great deal of money. Let's find out how
they do it up there. It may be time to put some of that Yankee ingenuity to
work in Kentucky.
--- I ---
--- 2 ---
<C'ont inued from Page OnE' I
Dwayne Moore vs. Elaine Watkins
Moore: Hylton Homes Inc. vs. John
Ferrell: Palmer Crider vs. Paul David
DeRossett; Opal Johnson vs. Mal en J.
Mitchell : Nancy Perry vs. James K.
Harris: Annetta Jean Dingus vs. Marvin Dingus; Citicorp Acceptance Corp.
vs. Billy H. and Lorena Lawson : Ezra
Jones vs. Pioneer Distributing Co.
(Continued from Page One 1
handled the appeal, said no such agreement was made.
A deputy in the Circuit Court Clerk's
office said she remembers preparing a
bench warrant after the appeals court
decision was handed down, although
there is no record of that either. In any
event, another warrant was issued
February 1, and will be served as soon
as Castle's whereabouts are known, said
Circuit Court Clerk Frank DeRossett.
One report listed Castle's present address as Sandy Hook.
--- 6 --<Continued from Pagt> Ont> 1
given about a year either to use or to surrender their claims.
According to state law, the ABC board
consults the Urban Studies Center at the
University of Louisville each January
for an update on county population
statistics. One package liquor license
may be issued for every 2300 county
residents. An additional license was
issued here last year on account of
population growth.
Ten Years Ago
(February 1:1. 197-tl
Dynamiting of the Harris Brothers Construction Company on South
Lake Drive here during the early morning hours Monday caused damage
to the firm and neighboring businesses and residences which may run as
high as $50.000. it was said later... The Floyd fiscal court moved again last
week toward the issuance of franchises to television cable systems in the
county. and. as in the first such attempt last August. a legal battle
looms ...The gasoline shortage and restricted shortage of foodstuffs which
clouded the pictured a week ago brightened with the weather this
week ... One of the three private clubs in the county which were closed last
December and later reopened by special agreement, will again be shut
down this week after a raid Saturday night resulted in the issuance of
threewarrants ... Born: to Mr. and Mrs. John Richard Porter. of Prestonsburg, a son. John Martin Porter. II. February 2 at Methodist Hospital,
Pikeville ... There died: Glenda! Tackett. 38, of Weeksbury. last Tuesday
at Pikeville: Mrs. Mary Ann Vance, 82, of Teaberry. Saturday at Martin:
Mrs. Jacqueline Tackett. 36. of Drift, January 30at McDowell: Mrs. Fannie Robinson. 80. of Martin. Saturday at Martin: Mrs. Della A. Owens. 88.
last Wednesday at her home at Hindman: Malon Johnson. 82. last
Wednesday at his home at Melvin: Mrs. Margaret Frasure. 85. Saturday
.at her home at East McDowell: Ishmael Hall. 56. January 29 at home at
Topmost: William <Bill l Symon. 50. formerly of this county. February 5
at his home in Demopolis. Alabama : Clifford G. Slone. 45. of Buckingham. Saturday at McDowell.
Twenty Years Ago
(February 20. 1964 >
Circuit Judge Hollie Conley will.empanel a special grand jury next
Wednesday morning to investigate the Floyd county bootlegging situation
from all angles ...Construction of the Tourist Information Center here at
the junction of the Mountain Parkway with U. S. 23 will be started as soon
as possible said architect George Lee Shannon ... Congressman Carl D.
Perkins notified Mayor George P. Archer Tuesday afternoon that the
Housing and Home Finance Agency had approved two federal grants to
cover three-fourths the cost of Prestonsburg's two urban renewal pro. jects ... Burl Spurlock, Prestonsburg banker, has been named head of the
annual Floyd County Red Cross fund drive, it was announced this
week ... Mayor John H. Roberts of Martin said this week that the contract
for the low-rent public housing project located at the "Y" at Martin has
been approved and that work should begin soon ... First step toward actual
construction of the Floyd County Library building here was taken Friday
by Meade & Kendrick, Prestonsburg contractors ...The Floyd County
Committee of 500, organized here several months ago to combat boot!egg. ing. paid a reward Saturday to Samuel Reed, of Wayland. for swearing
out a search warrant resulting in the confiscation of intoxicants allegedly
held for purpose of sale ... Mrs. May Ford Hyden received an award from
James E . Goble. superintendent of the Sunday School of the First
Presbyterian Church here, after she had concluded her 26th year of
perfect attendance .. .There died: Mrs. Lydia Roberts, 29, of Amba, Feb. 8
at Pikeville; Mrs. Jennie Bailey, 72, of Hueysville, Saturday at her home:
Eli Johnson, 92, of Weeksbury, last Wednesday at the home of a son at
Weeksbury: Delbert Webb, 48, of Wayland. last Thursday at Martin.
Thirty Years Ago
(February I!!, 1954)
The U. S. Public Health Service has given final approval of the old
Prestonsburg General Hospital building at West Prestonsburg as the
center from which it will do an area-wide survey of intestinal-borne
diseases ... Floyd county apparently is getting into strawberry production,
it was said Monday after 20 farmers agreed to grow 11 acres of
berries... County Judge Henry Stumbo this week named County
Superintendent V. 0. Turner, Lon C. Hill and the Rev. Orville Pearson to
a permanent Floyd County Library Development Board to direct the
operation of a Bookmobile in the county ... Fred R. Cottrell this week purchased from Mr. and Mrs. J. 0. Webb the stock and fixtures of the I. Richmond Company here ...Smith F. Bradley, of Prestonsburg, will appear
tonight <Thursday) on the television show, "This Is Your Life." the central figure of which will be his sister, famed Army nurse Lt. Col. Ruby
Bradley ... There died: Mrs. Martha Jane Clarke, 87, Sunday at the home
of a daughter on the Auxier road; Mrs. Betty McGuire Ward, 29, formerly
of this county, Friday at Roanoke, Virginia: Patrick Hayes, 82, native of
Langley, February 7 at Wheelersburg, Ohio.
Forty Years Ago
<February 17, 1944)
Town Hall, chairman of the county's fourth War Loan drive. announced
this week that Floyd county had surpassed its $725,000 War Bond quota by
$25,000 ...Leonard Norris. 14. one of eight passengers in a car which was
hit Sunday by a train at Mid~s. was fatally injured. The other seven
escaped with minor hurts ... C. R. Halstead, of Martin, opened a shoe shop
today <Thursday) near the bus station ... Andrew J. Workman. 39, motorman in a Wayland mine, was killed last Thursday night when dragged
more than 600feet beneath the wheels of his motor ... Curtis Lee Sizemore,
23, son of Russell Sizemore, of Prestonsburg, is reported killed in the
· southwest Pacific theatre of war... Mrs. California Harris Branham. last
Kentucky woman whose grandfather was a veteran of the Revolutionary
War, died February 10 in Tulsa, Oklahoma at the age of 94. She was a
native of this county ... Married: Sgt. William R. Callihan. of Prestonsburg, and Lt. Shirley Benton. Army nurse at Enid Station hospital. Enid.
Oklahoma. December 25 ... There died: John Barney. 77. former Floyd
coal operator. Saturday at an Erie. Pennsylvania hospital: Britton
Tackett. 58. West Garrett miner, found dead Monday and believed frozen
to death: E. L. <Tuey > Cline, 60, Saturday at his home on Johns Creek:
Mrs. Emma J. King. 49, last Thursday at Garrett.
Fifty Years Ago
(February 16. t9:14l
Frank Derossett. 40. was killed a~d Clyde Goble. 35. suffered a broken
leg when they were struck by an auto at Brandy Keg Saturday. Occupants
of the auto. Coet Conley. 35. and Pete Chaffin. 40. were injured ... Terms of
some schools have been cut by the Floyd County Board of Education
because of a lack of funds. The Board voted to seek a $10,000 loan from the
Public Works Administration to finance construction of an addition to the
Betsy Layne school building ... Rewards totalling $600 have been posted by
Jailer B. L. Sturgill for the arrest of Harrison Frazier and Lonnie Robinson. who escaped the county jail, Sunday morning ... The new law firm of
Bond & Bond-Oscar P. Bond and his brother. J.D. Bond-has opened its
office in the Odd Fellows building here ... Wesley Pritchard. 13. of Garrett.
is the new Floyd county schoolboy spelling champion. Madge Boyd. 12, of
Prestonsburg was runner-up ... There died: S. W. McGuire. 83. prominent
Johns Creek landowner. at i1is home Wednesday: Troy Prater. :~5. last .
week at his home on Brush Creek. near Hippo: Mrs. Elvira Salyers. R7~
Saturday at Lackey: the 18-month-{)ld son of Mr. and Mrs. D. B. Arnet~.
Friday at Cliff.
~)
l('ontinued from Page OnE'l
state's evidence in return for a
guarantee of immunity.
Special Judge C.R. Luker denied the
two defendants bond after a hearing in
' London last Wednesday at which
McFarland testified. It was Marshall's
seconct unsuccessful bail bid.
Granted at the same hearing was a
defense request to question jurors individually about th~ir attitude toward
HERE FROM OHIO
Mrs. Anne B. Gunnell, Carolyn the death penalty. Thirty jurors will be
Dunaway, Frank D. Gunnell, all of Col- qualified for the trial, of which 14 had
umbus, 0., were here for a week visiting been seated Tuesday. When all 30 are
14-including
two
Mrs. Maggie Gunnell, Mrs. Linda . qualified,
Spradlin and Lea, Mrs. Gladie M. Gun- alternates-will be chosen to hear the
nell, Mr. and Mrs. Glen Wood, Mr. and case against Marshall.
Opening arguments in the case could
Mrs. Shellie Woods, Walter Gunnell,
Mrs. MaryleeG. Woods, and Mrs. Joda begin as early as today <Wednesday), it
was said.
B. Gunnell.
First Cliff Access
Road Work Slated
Contractors said yesterday (Tuesday)
that they expect to start clearing next
month in preparation for construction of
the Cliff access road, scheduled to begin
Aprill.
The construction firm, H. and S.
Equipment, of Flemingsburg, has six
months to complete the road, which will
eliminate two railroad crossings for Cliff
residents. Cost of the project is put at
more than $800,000.
·
City Manager David Evans, who met
with the contractors in Pikeville Tuesday, said right-of-way must still be obtained from the C. and 0. railroad.
Evans said he expects the necessary
easement to be secured in time to begin
construction of ~he road on schedule.
Section One, Page Four
Stumbo Sa,ys His Bill
Target of Mine Closure
A state surface mining inspector last
week shut down a Minnie stripmine
operating in the names of Floyd District
Judge Harold Stumbo and his son, state
Rep. Greg Stumbo.
The shutdown prompted a charge by
the legislator that coal industry officials
were trying to scuttle the broadform
deed bill he sponsored in the current
legislative session.
(The bill, House Bill 32, cleared the
House by a wide margin last week and
was unanimously voted out by the
Senate Judiciary-Civil Committee
yesterday.)
Inspector John Ross, of the Department of Surface Mining, cited the Minnie Development Corporation Friday for
violations at its small strip job off
Sizemore Branch. The two Stumbos are
listed as stockholders in the firm and the
mine, which started operating around
Jan. 10 under a special permit for stripmines of less than two acres, is on property owned by the elder Stumbo.
Mining operations have extended
beyond the 1.98 acres specified on the
permit and closer than 300 feet to a
house occupied by Sam Martin, Jr., the
inspector reported. The operators have
failed to channel all surface drainage
through an approved silt structure, to set
aside sufficient topsoil for reclamation
purposes, or to properly monitor surface
and ground water, he said.
--- :J --<Continued from Page One I
annual license fee for soft drink vending
machines was raised from $2.50 to $10.
Purchase of a gasoline pump that
would record who was using the gas was
considered and tabled for further study.
Purchase of the $2121 pump was proposed as a wa'j of curbing unauthorized use
of city gasoline. "We're getting stole
blind," explained Councilman Collins.
Attendance at city council meetings
was made mandatory for heads of city
fire, police, streets and parks departments. An earlier motion to dock the pay
of department heads who failed to attend
council meetings was defeated.
City Attorney Larry Brown was named Alcoholic Beverage Control Administrator at a rate of $50 an hour.
Council members voted to put their $3-ameeting expense fee into a special fund
to be used for some charitable or public
purpose. Councilman George C. Brown
said he would admonish a forklift
operator employed by Brown Foodservice whom a neighbor said operated the
machine in a noisy manner all night.
--- ~ ---
<Continued from Page Onel
mechanic John P. Wells, who maintains
the Cessna and is one of the squadron's
four pilots, recalled World War II stories
of CAP aircraft, with small bombs
aboard, tracking German submarines
off the Atlantic coast. The civilian patrol
spott~ 173 enemy subs, dropped bombs
on 57 of them, and was credited with
sinking or seriously damaging two, he
noted.
But the organization now exists chiefly
for search and rescue work and for
disaster relief, Allen said, and measures
its efficiency in lives saved-it listed 140
rescued last year-rather than ships
sunk.
What turned out to be a false alarm
just before Christmas gave the Dewey
Lake and Pikeville squadrons a chance
to test their readiness for a real
emergency.
On Dec. 20, word came of a radio
signal being picked up at Olive Hill.
Because it was the kind transmitted by
aircraft and activated by impact, it sug' gested a downed plane. But when local
CAP units, unable to take off from here
on account of freezing rain, drove to the
source of the signal, it turned out to be
a faulty transmitter in a plane parked
at the Olive Hill airport.
It all amounted to a bone-chilling night
on the road for nothing-but
demonstrated, CAP members said, that
they can be and will be on the job when
they're needed.
Since 1948, Civil Air Patrol has been
by federal law a permanent civilian auxiliary of the U.S. Air Force. That entitles
it to a small slice of the huge Defense
Department appropriation and to
surplus Air Force uniforms and equipment. In Kentucky, the organization also
draws $10,000 annually in state funds.
Members are not paid but local units
are reimbursed for expenses incurred on
rescue and relief missions. A lot of
voluntary effort, including use of private
planes, goes into maintaining a CAP
squadron, Allen said. But its official
status and modest governmental funding may give the organization an edge
over similar groups, like the Red Cross,
which are wholly dependent on private
contributions.
Shepard-Craft Wed Friday
Miss Betty Shepard, of David, and Mr.
Donald Craft, or'Southpoint, Ohio, were
united in marriage last Friday evening
at 6 p.m. at the home of his mother, Mrs.
Ermalee Craft, of Highland Avenue. The
Rev. L.P. Tussey performed the
ceremony.
The couple will reside in Orlando,
Florida, where they are both employed
by the Sharpe Construction Company.
Health Department
Closed Monday
The Floyd County Health Department
will be closed on Monday, February 20,
in observance of President's Day
Holiday.
Minnie Development Corp. was
ordered to stop all coal removal and
begin reclamation immediately. Before
they can resume work at the site, they
will have to obtain a regular stripmine
permit and obtain waivers from
homeowners living within 300 feet, the
operators were told.
The only homes within 300 feet are
said to be those of the elder Stumbo and
Martin, whose property adjoins Stumbo's. Martin and E.P. Grigsby, Jr.,
another neighbor of Stumbo's, filed complaints against the operators and asked
the Dept. of Surface Mining on Feb. 3 to
conduct a pre-blasting survey on their
properties.
In the complaint filed on their behalf
by Prestonsburg attorney Janet Stumbo, the homeowners charged that the
mining operation was "outside the permit area in stripping behind Mr .
Grigsby's residence." Grigsby said he
tried for several weeks to stop blasting
operations, which he claimed have
damaged his swimming pool.
Stumbo last week denied responsibility for the violations, noting that the mining is being done by a contractor, the
Pine Tree Coal Co., owned by Randy and
Ray Combs of Letcher county. Randy
Combs, who was on the job Friday,
refused to sign the stripmine inspector's
report.
LETTERS
To the Editor
The views expressed here are those of the
writer, and not necessarily those of this
newspaper. No unsigned contributions wUI
be published.
A Well-Picked Goose
It is a fact, I have wondered all of my
life how some people could take so very
little and turn it into so very much. The
public has been hearing about Floyd
County Board of Education favoring a
3 percent tax increase on utilities. The
previous week, we read that the Prestonsburg City Council voted to reduce
the tax on whisky 3 percent.
This hurts the ones on a fixed income
to have to pay the tax on their utility bills
when they can't hardly pay them as they
are.
It has taken me all of my life to figure
out just one thing; that the world is a
goose, it is either pick or get picked in
this present world. And I have been picked until I don't have a feather on me.
Well! let's sum up the facts involved
concerning the tax matter.
It simply boils down to the fact that it's
going to cost less in the future to get
stoned and it will cost more in the future
to cook the beans and to keep from freezing to death.
CANTON LAFFERTY
Dwale, Ky.
Enforce Support Law
I have had custody of my two children
for the past seven years. My ex-wife and
I separated when the boy was four and
my girl was five. I have never received
any help or child support from my eJt- .
wife. I know how hard it is to be both
mother and father plus somehow manage the expenses alone! Child support
laws should be fairly enforced.
WAYNE LYON
Sitka, Ky.
Against HB 30
It is inconceivable that the General
Assembly would knowingly vote against •
the safety of Kentucky motorists. Yet, ·
House Bill 30, an amendment to KRS
189.150, section 1, will do just that unless
motorists contact their legislators and
voice their disapproval.
The current Iaw, KRS 189.150, states:
"No vehicle shall be operated upon any
public highway for a distance of over one
(1) mile whose load is susceptible to shifting or spillage unless said load is
covered with a device suitable for prevention of spillage." House Bill 30, if
passed, will amend this to read: "No
vehicle shall be operated upon any highway unless it is so constructed as to prevent its contents from escaping."
The subtle word changes in the new
amendment would leave the law virtually unenforceable in that a police officer
must actually see an object fly from a
truck before a citation can be written.
The present law requiring covers, however, provides an enforceable standard
while protecting the motorists at all •
times.
Anyone who has traveled some of our
highways, particularly in the coal
regioos of eastern and western Kentucky, can recognize the hazards of having to swerve to miss an object in the
road that can cause front-end damage
to a car. Likewise, anyone who has ever
driven behind an uncovered gravel or
rock truck knows the constantly
threatening probability of objects flying
out and cracking windshields and chip•
ping paint.
Clearly, the present law requiring
covers on trucks carrying loose loads is
vital to the safety of all motorists.
The three AAA clubs of Kentucky,
which represent more than 300,000 members in the Commonwealth's strongly
oppose House Bil130 and urge you to contact your legislators and voice your concern. You can call them in Frankfort
toll-free at 1-800-372-2985. As a motorist,
you, too, deserve to drive on safe high- •
ways.
ROBERT C. OWEN,
Blue Grass Automobile Club
�Wednesdety, February 15. 1984
The Floyd County Times
Riverview Manor
To Be Represented
At Lexington Event
Ky. Horses To Air
On KET, March 6
Riverview Manor, with 24 other nursing homes from Eastern Kentucky will
participate, February 17, at the ~xing
a mMall in the Kentucky Association of
~ealth Care Facilities' Rock N' Roll
Jamboree to raise funds for the
American Heart Association. These
area facilities have been successful in
the past in raising over $4,000 and are
reaching for even higher totals this year.
Among dignitaries accepting invitations to make a personal appearance at
the function are Gov. Martha Layne Collins. This year's function will receive
ews coverage, Channel 27, Channel 36
nd Channel 62 television stations.
Riverview Manor's representative,
Juliar. Murrill, will be manning his rocking chair at the Lexington Mall. This
week a pep rally was held by residents
encouraging Murrill to "Rock Around
the Clock" or at least from 10 a.m. to 3
p.m. on February 17. The 75-year-old
resident says he "feels excited and
privileged to participate in such a good
cause and looks forward to the trip."
.ponsors and donations are being
solicited now for him in this rock-a-thon.
Those who wish to sponsor Mr. Murrill
or make a donation, may contact Sherry
Hall or Gwen Wheeler at 886-9178. All
contributions go to the American Heart
Association.
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The duo-piano team, Jeffry and Ronald Marlow, will perform Thursday, February 16, 8 p.m., Pike Auditorium , Prestonsburg Community College. The concert is sponsored by the
Eastern Kentucky Concert Series.
The Marlowes have been featured pianists with the Philadelphia Orchestra, the New York Philharmonic, the Pittsburgh Symphony and the Dallas Symphony Orchestra. In addition, they have made appearances on the Mike Douglas
Show, Johnny Carson's " Tonight Show" and NBC's
distingu~shed "Recital Hall" series.
Today, these outstanding performers stand among the elite
in duo-piano artistry.
Shepherd Completes
Reeruit Training
Reg. to 11.95
•
Duo-Pianists To Perform Here, Thursday
On Tuesday, March 6, at 8:00p.m.,
KET encores a NOV\ segment of
special interest to Kentuckians. "A
Magic Way of Going : The Story of
Thoroughbreds," at 9:00p.m., KET will
air an ''American Playhouse" special of.
particular interest of older Amencans,
"The Gin Game."
"A Magic Way of Going," filmed in
Canada, the U.S., England and Ireland,
examines the poetry of running horses
with slow-motion footage of Northern
Dancer, Secretariat (at stud on
Claiborne Farm in Paris, Ky.), and
others. Also shown are scenes from the
Keeneland Horse Sales. Horsemen
discuss the ''black art" of predicting
winners from yearlings. And NOVA
cameras capture the thrill of the turf,
with a kaleidoscope of views of the
horse-racing world from the backstretch
at dawn to the finish line.
Following NOVA is the "American
Playhouse" drama, "The Gin Game."
This D.L. Coburn Pulitzer Prize-winning
play stars Hume Cronyn and Jessica
Tandy. It is the moving story of an older
man and woman, hidden away in a nursing home, whose gin game becomes a
catalyst for unleashing years of hidden
pain and emotions. "The Gin Game"
premiered at Actors Theatre of
Louisville as part of the first Festival of
New American Plays .
• WASHinCiTOfiMSAI ~
BIRTHDAY ...-•
1.~
OR
Section One, Page Five
Marine Pvt. Dennis E . Shepherd, a
1983 graduate of Prestonsburg High
School, has completed recruit training
at the Marine Corps Recruit Depot, Parris Island, S.C.
During the 11-week training cycle, he
learned the basics of b~ttlefield survival. He was introduced to the typical
daily routine that he will experience during his enlistment and studied the personal and professional standards traditionally exhibited by Marines .
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JUMBO ROLL BOUNTY
Paper Towels
c
�Wednesday, February 15, 1984
The Floyd Count)' Times
(Photo by Betty Hyden)
<Photo by Betty Hyden)
• GIRLS' ACTION in the John M. Stumbo vs. Maytown game
played Saturday night in the Floyd County Grade School
Tournament. John M. Stumbo, with a record of 24-0, won the
contest, 36-27.
A HAROLD DAREDEVIL fires a jumper during the Floyd
County Grade School Tournament action, Saturday night at
the Allen Central gym. Harold downed the Osborne Eagles,
49-38 to make to the tourney finals.
PHS Downs Tough
Daredevil Team
(Photo by Betty Hyden l
AN ALLEN CENTRAL Rebel gets off a shot despite the
defensive effort of an M. C. Napier defender in a game over
the past week at Allen Central. The Rebels lost the contest to
the Perry countians, 60-55.
John M. Stumbo,
Harold, Make It
To Net Finals
B.Y BETTY HYDEN
Facing a fired-up McDowell
Daredevil team, the powerful
Prestonsburg Blackcats found the going a bit rough on the Daredevils' home
court. fighting off a second half
"move" by McDowell to win 7!Hi0.
The 'Cats led most of the game
posting a halftime lead of 4~28 and it
appeared the Daredevils might be
'"blown away" until the third quarter
when McDowell came back from a
12-point deficit to narrow Prestonsburg's lead to four
PHS fought off the attack by using
'their full court press causing
McDowell to cough up three straight
.turnovers. Excellent free-throw
shooting dunng the last few minutes of
play secured the victory for Prestonsburg.
The victory also confirmed Prestonsburg. with only one loss in conference
play. as conference champions
Leading scorers for the Blackcats
were Tony Whitaker and Marty Minix.
each with 17 points. Others who contributed were Todd Nairn 14. Gordie
·~tliff 11. Kelly Cecil 9. and Doug
Green with 2.
"' McDowell's Tim Newsome led the
DaredeviiS$ith 15 points with David
Pack connecttng.~ for 12 Anthony
Mullins had 10. Do·u~·-11~11 8. Jackie
Lawson 6. Greg Slone 5. ahd Ji.I!JmY
Slone 4
P-burg Downs Trojans,
Tigers In Week's Play
<Photo by Betty Hyden>
A!\'THONY MULLINS shoots from outIn addition to sneaking past the side for McDowell during last WednesMcDowell Daredevils. last Wednesday
day night's game with Prestonsburg.
night. thereby winning 1heir con- Despite a strong second half comeback,
fer en c e tit 1e. 1he Prest on s burg __th_e_D_a_re_d_e_v_il_s_l_os_t_t_o_P_-_b_u_rg_._7_.O-G_o_._
Blackcats also downed Wheelwright
and Paintsville in a fairly busy week.
In their win. last Tuesday night over
Wheelwright. 8~59. high scorer for the
'Cats was Tony Whitaker with 20. Todd
Nairn had 12. ·Marty Minix 9. and GorMorehead State Universitv's basketdie Ratliff !1.
ball team is on top of the-OVC. One
Friday night . the Blackcats won O\'er reason is the Eagles' magic man and
the Paintsville Tigers. 72-61 High ·crowd pleaser. Arthur "Pee Wee"
scorer for the 'Cats was Cecil w1th a Sll1livan _The 5'9 semor guard from
whopping total of :Jo. Also in double Shelbyville is an"eX41mple of how hustle
figures was Minix with 15 and Nairn and determination can behefit a walkwllh 11
on who refused to give up. He is now a
scholarship player who displays courage
in the face of many obstacles. Even
P-burg Downs Trojans,
against big schools like Louisville, KanTigers In Week's Play
sas. and Marshall. he will stand up to
seven footers and take a brutal charge
Bv LA liRA COOLEY
In addiiion to sneaking past the that can turn a game around
Even though Morehead has played top
McDowell Daredevils. last Wednesday
"night. thereby winning their con- 20 teams, Sullivan believes the games
ference title. the Prestonsburg against teams like Eastern. Tennessee
Blackcats also downed Wheelwright Tech. and Youngstown are the most important. Those three games have given
and Paintsville in a fairly busv week:
In their win, last Tuesday nfght over the Eagles a school record nine-game
Wheelwright. ~59. high scorer for the winning streak which makes them
'Cats was Tony Whitaker with 20. Todd favorites to win the conference. Sullivan
Nairn had 12. Marty Minix 9. and Gor- is looking forward to the March 2 game
with Eastern. a fierce rival. In that final
•die.Ratliff 8.
• Friday night. the Blackcats won over game of the MSU season. EKU could
.the Painlc;ville Tigers. 72-61. High play the spoiler role in the Eagles' bid
for the conference crown . Sulhvan hopes
scorer for the 'Cats was Cecil with a
whoppmg total of :10. Also in double to play better m that game than he did
figures was Minix with 15 and Nairn when MSU met EKLT on Feb 4. 1\lSU
won ()5-60 .
with 11.
Ry LAl'R:\ ('()()Un·
Morehead Hopes
For NCAA Crown
By BETTY HYDEN
In Floyd County Grade School Tournament play last week, the Harold Red
Devils boys team and John M. Stumbo
Mustang girls came out winners.
assuring themselves a berth in the
finals this week.
In Harold's game against the
Osborne Eagles Saturday night. the
Red Devils brought their season record
to 17-6 by defeating Osborne. 49-38.
With the lead changing hands
several times during the first two
quarters. both teams went into
halftime deadlocked at 22 all. Continuing to play hard. the score stayed close
through the third and mid-fourth
quarters with Harold finally easing
ahead. largely through foul shooting.
Dale Spurlock led the Red Devils
with 17 points. Micky Stapleton had 12
points and 15 rebounds. Mike Carroll7.
Mac Conn 6. John Bush 5. and Willie
Watson with 2.
·Lea,Q.ing scorer for Osborne was
Steve Cole with 13 points and 7 rebounds. followed by Tony Isaac 8.
Jason Cook and Tommy Jones with 6
each. Bobby Hood 3. and Todd Bailey
with 2.
John M. Stumbo's Lady Mustangs
found Maytown a tough competitor
Saturday night at the Allen Central
gym but came out on top in the end.
:36-27. The girls have compiled a
perfect 24-() for the season.
Sheila Newsome was leading scorer
for the Mustangs with 12 points. Sandy
Flanery had 10. Tammy Hall 7. Tracey
Hall 3. and Kim Newsome 2.
Becky Rice led Maytown with 16
points followed by Kim Mynhier with 6.
Tonya Brown . Heather Bailey and
Cvrena Rice . each with 2. and Tabby
Hensley with one point.
The finals of the grade school tournament will continue tonight !Wednesday l at Allen Central
Cheerleading Competition
To Be Held Here, Saturday
Fifty-seventh and 58th girl's and boy's
varsity district KAPOS cheerleading
competition will be held Saturday,
February 18, at the Prestonsburg High
School gym. The 57th competition will
begin at 10 a.m. and the 58th competition will begin at 1 p.m.
Winner and runner-up from each
dtstrict will advance to the regional
KAPOS competition to be held at
Pikeville at 10 a m , Saturday, February
25. Admission will be charged.
PHS Homecoming
Slated Friday
Prestonsburg High School Basketball
Homecoming will be held Friday,
February 17, at the Prestonsburg High
School gym. Festivities will begin
following the junior varsity game with
Magoffin County and preceeding the
varsity game. Last year's Basketball
Homecoming Queen, Miss Stephanie
Branham, will crown the new queen.
<Photo by Mike Sellards >
BETSY LAYNE'S HOMECOMING QUEEN, Missy Johnson (seated), is pictured with escort
Brett Meade and other members of her court who included Kim Tackett, Cathy Watson, Kim
Johnson, Jeannie Castle, Julia Waugh and Michelle Robinette. The new queen was crowned
during halftime ceremonies of the Betsy Layne vs. Elkhorn City game, Saturday night.
Bobcats Collect
Two More Victories
cStats b~· Mal eta Campbell l
Winning two games over the past
week . the Coach Junior Newsome 's
Betsy Layne Bobcats became the first
team in the 15th region to win 20
games . !The Bobcats have lost only
four l
Last Tuesday mght the Bobcats
trounced the Paintsville Tigers. 66-:35
at Betsy Layne. A number of the Betsy
Layne boys saw action during the night
wiih Duran Hall picking up most points
with 11. Lester Newsome had 10. Jeff
Campbell 9. Levi Hamilton. Jimmy
Parsons and Mike Conn 6 each . Brett
Meade 8. Davy Mitchell :~. Dwayne
Kidd. Chris Conn and Darren Daniels 2
each. and Terry Boyd 1.
During Betsy Layne's Homecoming
game. Saturday night. Elkhorn Ci t ~·
pro\'ed to be no problem as the Bobcats
won. 7:3-47. Jeff Campbell was high
scorer w1th 20 points. Lester Newsome
had 1:3. Levi Hamilton 12. Rrett Meade
and Duran Hall6 each. Dwa~r ne Kidd 4.
Chris Conn. Mike Conn. Da\'y Mitehell
and ('had Collins 2 each
FLOYD HOLDS LEAD
IN MAGOFFIN LEAGUE
Floyd county holds the lead in the
Magoffin County Men's Basketball
League The league, consisting of nine
teams, competes at the Magoffin Com munity Center.
The Floyd county team is sponsored
by the Dairy Cheer and has an
umblemished 6-0 record for the second
half of the season.
Team members are Don Hurt, Carl
Hall, Jeff Burchett, Grady Stephens ,
Wayne Scarberry. noy Conn , Danny
Brown, Tim Shepherd, and Raymond
Elliott
cPhoto
by Bettv H:vden l
A SATISFYING win for the Wheelwright Trojan's came 'o ver
the past week in a 61-55 victory over the Pikeville Panthers.
•
�Wednesday, February 15, 1984
The Floyd County Times
Section One, Page Seven
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Learning Mathematical
Concepts In The Kitchen
''HEY-THERE
OUGHTA BE A LAW:'
Children begin to learn mathematical
concepts long before they go to school.
They gain this knowledge through
everyday activities, according to Growing Child, the monthly child development newsletter.
Early number awareness comes from
simple activities:
*Determining the difference between
these things and those things.
*Sorting objects which belong
The 1984 General Assembly Is under way and
the Issues have clearly emerged.
Below are some questions that 1would like to
know your views on. It takes a llnle time and effort but II helps me decide on how to vote. I appreciate hearing from you, the people of the 95th
District, because I just work for you.
togeth~r.
*Ordering objects in space.
Ordering objects in space
An example of how children order
things in space happened when Jennie
was helping her mother put away the
dishes, flatware, and pots and pans in
the kitchen.
In the beginning Jennie, who is three
years old, would push the pots and pans
into the cupboard any old way. She
discovered, however, that when she did
this, the door wouldn't close.
Then her mother suggested, "Why not
try to put the cookie sheets in first? I
always put the trays on the bottom."
When Jennie accepted that advice, it
didn't take too long before she got the
door closed. There was really no
mystery: she used her knowledge of how
parts fit together. Children develop a
mathematical sense when they must arrange or share space, food, or other
materials.
Learning by cooking
Cooking and baking are rich experiences for language enrichment and
mathematical challenges, too.
With sugar, flour, eggs, salt, and
water to measure, mix, sift, and stir, a
child can work through abstract mathematical concepts long before starting
school.
Think about all the concepts involved
with cooking tasks: "heavy," "light,"
"long," "short," "more," "less," "a little bit," "a lot," "spoonful," "cupful,"
"hot," "cold," "cool." They proceed to
the complex ''more than but not as much
as," and comparatives such as "long,"
"medium," "short."
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Learning from water
Water play can be very enriching, too,
if a child has a place to play; understands the rules for water play, and has
the proper materials- old raincoat,
washtub, plastic bottles, funnel, straws,
sieve, sponges, soapsuds, egg beater.
Bathtime can be a time for experimentation : "What floats? What doesn't
float? Why?" A variety of common
materials can be used in the tubsponge, soap, paper, plastic cup, wooden
spoon.
The Growing Child newsletter follows
a child's development month-by-month.
For more information and a free sam·
pie newsletter, write to Growing Child,
P.O. Box 620N, Lafayette, Indiana 47902.
Include child's birthdate when writing.
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HONORED BY AVON ... Local Avon representative Rita Howell, of Banner,
enjoyed the beauty of the Bahamas during a recent four-day all-expense cruise
to Nassau for 700 top sales achievers from Avon. Highlight of the cruise was
a gala reception and dinner in Miami where the representatives were recognized by James F. Preston, president of the Avon Division, and entertained by
singer Jack Jones.
Robinson Forest Display
To Be Unveiled At UK
The University of Kentucky Student
Government Association and the
students to Save Robinson Forest will
conduct a dedication ceremony of a
Robinson Forest display at 11 a.m., Feb.
15, in Room 230 of the Student Center
addition. ~
The display is intended to acquaint the
public with the value, purpose, history
and use of Robinson Forest.
The 14,000-acre forest owned by UK in
Breathitt, Knott and Perry counties was
the center of controversy in 1982 when
the UK Board of Trustees consideredthen rejected- a proposal to mine coal
in the forest.
Dedication ceremony speakers will be
Dr. Art Gallaher, chancellor of the UK
Lexington campus, who will accept the
gift on behalf of the university ; Dr.
Charles Barnhart, dean of the UK College of Agriculture; Tom FitzGerald, attorney for the Appalachian Research
and Defense Fund Inc., and Ann Phillippi, past president of Students to Save
Robinson Forest.
The exhibit includes pictures of wildlife and flowers found in Robinson
Forest such as the arrow darter, yellow
lady's slipper, partridge-berry, the gray
fox, cinnamon fern and the goldenseal.
The exhibit will be on display on the
first level floor of the Student Center
during April and then w1ll be housed in
the lobby of the Agriculture Science
Center-North at Limestone Street and
Cooper Drive.
The dedication ceremony is free and
open to the public.
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<1 .> Do you believe that education is the most
YES
NO
important issue facing the 1984 General Assembly? . D ..... D
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D ..... D
<3.> Do you favor competency testing for teachers? .... D ..... D
C4J would you support a tax raise for education? ...... D .. : .. D
<SJ Do you support a tax on unmined minerals? ....... D ..... D
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Clerk's Notice Of
Filing Fiduciary's
Final Settlement
1
COMMONWEALTH OF KENTUCKY
COURT OF JUSTICE
FLOYD DISTRICT COURT
PROBATE DIVISION
Case No. : 82-P-37
IN RE: The Estate of Roscoe Lynn,
deceased, late of East point, Kentucky.
Ten (10) days NOTICE, pursuant to
Chapter 424, Kentucky Revised Statutes,
is hereby given that:
Ollie Lyon, as Executrix of the last
will and testament of Roscoe Lyon,
deceased, late of East Point, Kentucky,
has filed her first and final accounting
and settlement as said fiduciary; that a
hearing thereon will be held at 10:00
a.m. on the 28th day of February, 1984,
in the District Courtroom of the Floyd
County Courthouse, First Floor, Third
Avenue, Prestonsburg, Kentucky.
Any interested person desiring to file
exception thereto must file the same
within ten ( 10) days immediately
preceeding said date when the Clerk of
Courts, Second F loor of the Floyd County Courthouse, Prestonsburg, Kentucky.
and by sending a copy of the said exception to the Fiduciary's attorney,
Honorable Cassie J. Allen, P .O. Box No.
722, Prestonsburg, Kentucky .
Of a ll of which all interested persons
will hereby take due notice.
FRANK DEROSSETT
Clerk of Courts of F loyd
County, Kentucky
By : R. Yvonne Watts, D.C.
ltpd.
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<6.> would you still support such a tax if it would
create more unemployment and raise utility rates?.
1
D ..... D II
....................... D ..... D :
<7J Do you support a lottery?
<8J Do you believe coal trucks should continue
to use tarps? .. ........................... .. . ... D
<9.> Do you believe coal trucks should pay
additional money for hauling overweight? . ... ... . D
<10.> Do you believe coal operators should pay
additional money tor allowing overweight hauling? D
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MAIL TO: STATE REP. GREGORY STUMBO, CAPITAL ANNEX,
FRANKFORT KY.
I
IF YOU WOULD LIKE TO CALL ME, THE TOLL FREE NUMBER TO FRANKFORT IS 1-800-372-7181. 1will be home
or at my oftlceln Manln, Ky. on weekends. Those numbers are: 886-9953, Home, and 285-9228, Office. Senator
Bally and I have held one public meeting and are planning more. Everyone Is Invited to anend.
Thank you for taking the time to answer these questions, the results will be published In two weeks. If 1
may be of any assistance feel free to call or write.
GREG STUMBO
2-15·2t.
�The Floyd County Times
Wednesday, February 15, 1984
Vaughan-Howard Vows Said
Sec:tion One, Page Eight
Honored on Birthday
Court Sees Rash
Of
DUI Cases
Four drunk-driving cases this week-
including one of a driver facing his third
charge in Jess than a year-were only
the latest in what district court officials
described as a recent ''rash" cf such
cases.
A jury trial was scheduled March 13
for Willis Ray Akers, 34, of Dana, who •
was cited by state police in November
for drunk driving, driving on a suspended license, attempting to elude police,
having no registration plates and an expired insurance sticker.
A little more than a month earlier,
Akers pleaded guilty to charges of drunk
driving-he recorded .31 percent on the
breathalyser-and driving on a suspended "license. He received a month's probation and paid $200 in fines and court
Miss Joan Gail Akers, daughter of Mr.
costs.
Forrest Akers, of Dema, and the late
After a drunk-driving conviction last
Mrs. Eunice Akers, was honored on her
SHATTERED WINDOW in this coal truck cab resulted from a rifle shot fired
April, he was fined $137.50 and referred
37th birthday, Saturday, Feb. 11, with a
at her driver, Palmer Crider, during a Friday morning chase from Cow Creek
to state-run classes for alcoholic drivers.
party at the Akers' residence where she
to Martin, claims Linda Laudermilt (pictured). Following the incident, Crider
Court records list similar convictions in
lives with her father, and her grand1978 and 1979.
swore out a warrant accusing Paul David DeRossett of attempted murder.
mother, Mrs. Jossie Slone, who is 89
DeRossett denies he was involved.
Under state law, drunk driving convicyears old. Absent from the party was
tions have a cumulative effect for five
Mrs. Laudermilt, of Endicott, is proprietor of Linda's Trucking Co., and
her sister, Mrs. AnnaT. Abercrombie,
leases the tractor-trailer from Columbus Ousley, of Blue River. More than
years. Conviction on the present charge
of Fairborn, Ohio, who sent her birthday
$8000 in damage was done to the rig during its early-morning flight, she
could result in Akers receiving a jail
wishes also.
estimated.
sentence of up to one year and a $500
fine.
FLORAL OFFERINGS
Clifford Ousley, of Drift, and Edward Prestonsburg Man Elected
Flowers were on the altar of the First
Young, Jr., of Hager Hill, were conUnited
Methodist Church at the Sunday
victed of drunk driving in their absence President of UK Alumni
morning services, in honor of Mrs.
yesterday (Tuesday). Young will forfeit
Josephine Fietds, on her birthday; for
a $200 cash bond. Ousley, who was also
Alan Kyle Moore, on his birthday, by his
found guilty of driving on a suspended
Grandmother Smith, and in memory of
license and without insurance, was
Homer Salisbury, by Mrs. Marion Salissentenced by District Judge Harold
bury, Marion and Terrill Hall, Charlotte
Stumbo to 30 days in jail and ordered to
WASHINGTON, D.C.-The House of and Frank Thompson and family, and
pay $297.50 in fine and court costs. A
Representatives has passed H.R. 1961, Miss Maurine Mayo.
bench warrant was issued for his arrest.
the Agent Orange and Atomic Veterans
Trial of Paul Halbert, of Printer, on
Relief Act, of which Congressman Carl
a drunk driving charge was continued to
FOR SALE-1980 ATC
D. Perkins is an original co-sponsor.
March 1, as the state police witness was
This legislation seeks to provide serviceunable to be present Tuesday.
110 3-WHEELER
connected disability benefits to veterans
Meanwhile, the driver licensing diviIN GOOD CONDITION.
of Vietnam who were exposed to Agent
sion of the state. Bureau of Vehicle
Orange and. those veterans who parPHONE 886-1012
i.a
Regulation moved recently to revoke the
ticipated in the occupation of Hiroshima
license of Timothy Paul Caudill, 23, of
and Nagasaki as well as the atmospher'the Goble Roberts Addition. According
ic tests of nuclear devices which ended
to court records, Caudill owes $247.50 in
in 1963.
fines stemming from convictions last
Congressman Perkins said, "I strongApril on charges of drunk driving, racly support this legislation, but I just wish
ing, reckless driving, and driving on a
it went much further."
learner's permit without a licensed
In a letter dated April 25, 1983, and
driver present.
signed by the Administrator of the
In four earlier arrests on drunk drivVeterans Administration the Adminiing charges, Caudill was twice constration stated, "We oppose the enactvicted, was once found guilty of a lesser
ment of H R. 1961 ". "The 'Administracharge, and had one count dismissed.
William G. Francis, of Prestonsburg, tion's position is inhumane in my opiOthers sentenced this week in district and Julia Kurtz Tackett, of Lexington, nion," Perkins said.
court, following guilty pleas or verdicts, recently were elected president and
Agent Orange contains dioxin, one of
were:
president-elect respectively of the the most highly toxic substances known
Dee Mart Music, Garrett, speeding, University of Kentucky National Alum- to $Cience. Agent Orange is believed to
residents need to help
fined $67.50; Jimmy Hall, Topmost, ni Association.
increase the likelihood of three types of
identify homes In aerial
reckless driving, attempt to elude police,
Officers in the UK Alumni Association disease: soft-tissue sarcoma, a form of
30 days' probation, $97.50; George Crisp,
are elected from a 57-member board of cancer; porphyria cutanea tarda , a liver
pictures for water line
Drift, cold check, 30 days' jail, $97.50, to directors, who are elected by alumni condition known as PCT; and cloracne,
project.
make restitution to Pic-Pac; Inez Smith, members in mail balloting. Board a skin condition. The legislation covers
David, cold check, $62.50; Shirley members serve to three-year terms and threse three diseasl:t. In addition, a
Meet at Prater School
Osborne, Topmost, cold check, 30 days'
officers are elected to one-year terms. number of other diseases are suspected
Thursday, Feb. 16, at 7
jail, $97.50, restitution to Pic-Pac ; Dean
There are about 22,5000 memberl1 of to be caused by Agent Orange. There
Coleman, Lookout, shoplifting, 30 days,
the UK Alumni Association. Member- has been some indication in then edical
p.m.
$97.50, plus $50 restitution to Pic-Pac.
ship is open to anyone who has 12 credit literature that Agent Orange may result
Prater Creek Water District
hours at the university.
in genetic alteration.
D.A.R. GROUP MEETS
Francis received a bachelor's degree
Numerous veterans of Vietnam has
The executive offices of John Graham in political science from the university applied for service-connected disability
Chapter, Daughters of the American in 1968 and the doctorate of jurisprud- for various diseases which they contendRevolution, held a called meeting at ence degree from the UK College of Law · ed was the result of Agent Orange. The
May Lodge last week for the purpose of in 1973. While at UK, he was a member Veterans Administration has denied an
EXPERIENCED QUILTERS
electing delegates and alternates for the of Omicron Delta Kappa and Alpha overwhelMing number of these claims.
AND SEWERS ARE NEEDED
national and state D.A.R. conferences. Epsilon.
As a result of the growing scientific
Mrs. Ray Collins was elected as alter·
TO BEGIN WORK IMFrancis is a partner in the law firm of evidence it has become necessary fo:nate, to represent the chapter at the 93rd Francis, Kazee and Francis and is presi- Congressional action as a result of the
MEDIATELY.
Continental Congress in Washington, dent of the Jenny Wiley Drama Associ- Administration's intransigence.
D.C., April 15. Mrs. Collins will be ac- ation.
CALL FOR INFORMATION
"Personally, I think the section concompanied by her aunt, Mrs. Sally HumHe is married to the former Linda cerning Agent Orange should be much
OR APPOINTM~NT:
phrey, a member of the local chapter Sadler <UK '68 & '69) . They have one broader. From the scientific evidence to
who now resides in Florida. Delegates child.
date, it appears that dioxin is a chemical
elected to the state D.A.R. conference,
Mrs. Tackett is a judge in the Fayette time bomb and more diseases may
2-15-2t-pd.
to be held at the Marriott Inn , in Lex- District Court. She graduated from the result from this exposure," Perkins
ington, March 6-8, were Mrs. Frances university in 1968 with a degree in said.
Brackett, regent, and Mrs. Norma economics and earned a law degree in
A second portion of this legislation
Stepp, secretary of John Graham Chap- 1971.
Solid Cedar Beauty
concerns those veterans who served in
ter. Alternates selected for the state conAt UK, Tackett was a member of the the occupation of Hiroshima or
vention are Mesdames Olga Preston, Student Government Association, was Nagasaki or who participated in the
Opal May, Mae Kendrick, and Margaret named Outstanding Junior Woman and testing of nuclear devices . A number of
989 Sq.-Fl.
Alley. ::\irs. Virginia Goble, past regent was tapped for Mortar Board, an veterans who suffered this exposure
Precut Log Kit
and director of the 6th District, D.A. R., academic honor society.
$14,500.00
subsequently developed various forms
will represent the district at the State
She is married to John Tackett and of cancer. When they applied for
AFFORDABLE RUSTIC ELEGANCE
Assembly.
they have two children.
service-connected disability from the
WHY CEDARDALE?
Board merr¥>ers present at the called
..-NORTHERN
WHITE CEDAR NO ROT NO TERMITES
Veterans Administration, many were
..-FINEST TONGUE&. GROVE LOG5-NO AIR
meeting were. Mesdames Elinor Horn,
denied.
INFilTRATION
..-POST&. BEAM CONSTRUCT ION STRONGEST
Frances Brackett, Virginia Goble, Opal Southern States Reps
Just a few years ago, a veteran from
KNOWN TOMAN
May, and Norma Stepp.
.-MODERN MANUFACTUR ING FAC ILITY lLQAX.
Eastern Kentucky who participated in
DELIVERY
To Meet at May Lodge
nuclear tests in 1957 was denied benefits
..-ENERGY EFFICieNT HIGHEST R FACTOR OF ALL
ENJOYS BIRTHDAY
Members of Southern States unjustly by the Veterans Administra...~AND ING DEAL ER OPPORTUN IT I ES
Mrs. Lula Wallen, of Green Acres, en- Cooperative's local boards and commit- tion, Perkins said. Under this legislation
SOli D CEDAR BEAUTY pr ovides SOliD INCOMES
joyed celebrating her birthday with tees, agricultural workers and retail benefits would be available to these
Send for complete
members of her family recently. Join- managers will attend a night regional veterans or their survivors if a veteran
information .
ing her at her home for the occasion board meeting to be held by the suffered from cancer of the thyroid,
were her son and daughter-in-law, Mr.
cooperative at Jenny Wiley State Park, polycythemia vera, or leukem ia. "Acand Mrs. Woodrow Wallen, of Hender- Feb. 20. Invited to attend from this area cording to my investigation, I believe
son, Ky., and another son and daughter- · are the elected representatives of Pres- that this section should be a bit broader
in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Curtis Wallen, of tonsburg Farm & Home Store.
but it does not appear possible to get a
Stanville, all of whom entertained her to
Guests attending the session will in- broader bill passed at this time as a
P.O. Box 422 Middlesboro, Ky. 4098!5
dinner at Pikeville. After returning from clude a number of guest young farmers result of the Administration's opposiPikeville, Mrs. Wallen placed a con- from this area.
808-248-4932 or
tion," Perkins said.
248·8217
ference call to other members of the
Jere L. Cannon, of Flemingsburg, a
REAlTOR
family, Mr. and Mrs. Roy Marler, in member of the cooperative's 15-man
Boise, Idaho, and Mr. and Mrs. Sam
1 0 PERSONAL HOME
I
IN MEMORIAM
board of directors, will preside at the
Wallen, in Spring Valley, California.
session. Registration for the meeting
0
FLOOR
PLANS-$5.00
I
ln memory of Rhoda Brown Jarvis.
On Sunday, while members of her will begin at 6 p.m.
To the one who bears the sweetest name
I
0 DEALERSHIP INFORMATION I
family were here, they all attended
Featured at the session will be a
I NAME
I
<Rhoda Jarvis)
church services, after which they en- presentation entitled "Outlook for 1984
And adds a luster to the same
:
ADDRESS
JOyed a lunch at Jerry's Restaurant.
and Beyond." R.W. Bryan, vice- Long life to her for there's no other
I PHONE
I
Following the meal, Mrs. Wallen, was
president, of the cooperative, will take Who takes the place of our mother.
presented a decorated birthday cake a look at what the future holds for
THE FAMILY
and many gifts.
agriculture.
The local board and committee
Join the Daughters of the American members also will view a videotape
Revolution in celebrating February as discussion by members of Southern
American History Month all across our States' senior management team on how
Nation. As citizens we should know the farmers and their cooperative can best
Library of Congress is believed to be the meet the tough challenges ahead .
(Catering Service)
greatest reservoir of orga~iz~d
knowledge in the history of learmng m
America. It was founded in 1800 and its Development Club
• We make property checks • Make appointprime function is to furnish such books
ments for you • Do private duty nursing • Pick
as may be necessary for the use of Con- To Hold Board Election
The Cow CreE:k Area Development
gress. All are allowed in the Library of
up your mail • Do shopping • 24-hour wake-up
Congress where you will find 18 million Club will hold their regular meeting,
calls • Message delivery • Chauffering
books and pamphlets, more than 46 Feb. 20, at 7 p.m .
This is a very important meeting due
million manuscripts, maps, prints,
• Anything that's legal.
photographs, and other examples of to board of directors election. An open
invitation 1s extended to all residents to
man's graphic expression through the
attend this meeting.
ages.
House Passes
Agent Orange
Vets' Benefits
An altar covered in white, with brass candlebra holding lighted tapers and
entwined with lilies-of-the-valley was the setting at the East Point Church of
Christ on January 14 for the wedding of Miss Sandra Lea Vaughan to Mr.
Gregory Kirk Howard.
The bride is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Jack Vaughan, of Auxier Heights,
and the bridegroom is the son of Mrs. Carlotta Howard, of Salyersville.
The double-ring ceremony was performed at 6:30p.m. by minister, Dave
Flanery. A program of nuptial selections presented by Miss Debbie Rowe,
pianist, and Mrs. Kathy Sparks, vocalist, included "Endless Love," "Ice Castle" and "Whither Thou Goest."
The bride honored the mothers by presenting them with a red rose.
Given in marriage by her father, the bride wore a traditional white gown
that featured a chapel-length train edged in wedgewood lace. Her gown had
a V neckline with a ruffled flounce of chantily lace and a bodice of sheer point
d'esprit. A Juliette cap secured her lace-edged fingertip veil of illusion. She
carried a cascade bouquet of white silk lace roses, white orchtds and
stephanotis with ivy.
Miss Pamela Jo Wilson, maid of honor, was attired in a wine taffeta gown.
Bow trim accented the shoulder. She carried a silk wine rose with matching
streamers and matching headpiece.
Bridesmaids were Miss Lisa Vaughan, sister of the bride and Miss Judy
Helton. Their matching gowns were of rose taffeta with modified melon shaped
sleeves. Each carried a silk cream rose with matching streamers and matching headpiece.
Wilford Keaton served Mr. Howard as best man, and ushers were Michael
Howard and William Howard, brothers of the groom.
The wedding party also included Miss Melanie Leann Combs and Miss Melinda Lynette Thompson, cousins of the bride, flower girls, and Master Timothy
Jason Kestner, nephew of the bride, ringbearer.
The ceremony was following by a reception in the church fellowship room.
The bride's mother received guests in a mauve quiana gown with matching
accessories and a corsage of silk cream carnations. The groom's mother wore
a pink crepe gown with asymmetric skirt and matching accessories. Her corsage was of silk brown-and-rust carnations.
The bride's cake was served by Mrs. Yvonne Hyden. Mrs. Frances Howard
presided at the punch bowl. Mrs. Debbie Kestner, sister of the bride, attended the register table
Following a wedding trip to Lexington, Ky., the newlyweds are residing at
Highland Apartments, Auxier road.
The bride is a graduate of Prestonsburg High School and Morehead State
University. She is employed as a teacher at Porter Elementary School.
Mr. Howard is a graduate of Salyersville High School and Morehead State
University. He is employed by the London Bridge Company.
The wedding cake was baked by Mrs. Connie Scarberry, of Paintsville. The
wedding was directed by Mrs. Clayton Holland. The reception was catered
by Mrs. Holland and Mrs. Rose Collins, assisted by Mrs. Mary Lou Rose and
Mrs. Debbie Webb.
Post-nuptial events honoring the bride included a household shower given
by the Ladies Fellowship of the East Point Church of Christ
~~~~~~·
PRATER CREEK
WANTED
886-9411
Jean's Bedspread Outlet
~
On Middle Creek Road
Big Sale
On
Spreads
R.R. 1, Box 313, Prestonsburg
Open 10 to 5 Monday-Saturday
Phone 886-6708
11.
PERMANENT HAIR REMOVAL
SAFE, EFFECTIVE, PAINLESS
TACKETT ELECTROLYSIS
LOCATED ACROSS FROM HALL'S IGA, VIRGIE
McCLETHA TACKEn, Certified by State-Licensed School
Mon.·Tues.·Thurs.-5 p.m. to 9 p.m. Fri.-Sat.-By appointment only
BISCEGLIA
REALTY &
AUCTION CO.
m
r----------------
I
FREE CONSULTATIONS
Phone 639-2051
I
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MUSIC-CARTER-HUGHES IS
HAPPY TO ANNOUNCE THAT
JIM NECESSARY HAS RE·
JOINED OUR SALES STAFF.
Errands Unlimited
JIM INVITES HIS MANY FRIENDS AND
CUSTOMERS TO STOP IN AND SAY
HELLO. HE WILL ALSO ENJOY SHOWING
YOU OUR WIDE SELECTION OF NEW AND
USED CARS.
MUSIC-CARTER-HUGHES
CHEVROLET·BUICK ~~~~K~ :~~~~ESTONSBURG
8
Call 358-9451
�Wednesday,Februa~15,1984 . ___________________________________________T_he
__
A_o~y_d_
C_o_u_n~~T_I~
__s_________________________________________________s_e_ct_io_n_O_n_e._,_P_a_g_e_N_In_e
•
•
GARTH AREA VOCATIONAL EDUCATION CENTER
IS PROUD TO ANNOUNCE
N.ATIONAL VOCATIONAL
EDUCATION WEEK
FEBRUARY 13-17, 1984
WHAT IS NATIONAL VOCATIONAL EDUCATION WEEK?
Each year one week is designated to focus national attention toward the importance of
Vocational Education. Vocational Education is the segment of education charged with
preparing people for work. It is the backbone of the employment-related education and
training program. Vocational Education draws its strength from the fact that it is an integral part of this nation's public educational system, representing a joint federal, state,
and local partnership effort to meet our nation' s need for skilled workers. The week of
February 13th through the 17th is National Vocational Education Week. This is an appropriate time to think about the importance of vocational education to our community
and to our nation.
WHAT IS THE THEME FOR NATIONAL VOCATIONAL
EDUCATION WEEK FOR THIS YEAR?
The theme this year is Vocational Education: Creating Partnerships for Excellence. This
theme clearly communicates the ideal link that should exist between vocational education and the community. Vocational education is charged with preparing people for work
and achieves its goal of excellence through partnerships with students, community agencies, trade associations, business and industry.
DO YOU REALIZE THERE IS A -VOCATIONAL SCHOOL IN
YOUR AREAl
Yes, Garth Area Vocational Education Center located on Route 122, Martin, Kentucky.
WHO DOES IT SERVE?
Garth Area Vocational Education Center serves the students of the five Floyd County
High Schools: Allen Central, Betsy Layne, McDowell, Prestonsburg, and Wheelwright. .
WHAT PROGRAMS ARE OFFERED?
The programs offered are Auto Mechanics, Business and Office, Carpentry, Electricity,
Health Careers, Machine Shop, and Mining Mechanics, and Welding.
ARE ALL PROGRAMS OPEN
FEMALE?
TO
BOTH
MALE AND
Yes, we encourage our students to enroll in non-traditional programs.
AUTO MECHANICS
The automotive mechanics course is purposely designed to
develop the needed skills and attitudes, and to familiarize
the student with the basic fundamental principles and
operational procedures necessary for the maintenance and
repair of cars, trucks, and buses. Students are taught the
proper use and care of tools, tool room procedures, shop
safety, and shop maintenance. High school classes in
mathematics, science and physics would be helpful to the
student training in this program.
HEALTH SERVICES
INDUSTRIAL ELECTRICITY
The secondary vocational education health occupations
program is an attempt to meet present and predicted
needs for health workers within the diverse occupations in
the health field. Students that take this course can get a
start on professional training. For those who want to do
something to help people, this course can provide
guidance and direction by "hands-on" experiences. In the
classroom situation students study basic health subjects
and after an acceptable level of performance they may
participate in selected activities in clinical facilities under
the close supervision of the vocational instructor.
The industrial electricity course is designed to provide
educational experience which will enable the students to
acquire an understanding of electrical theory, bell and
signal circuits, small construction wiring, A.C. and D.C.
motors, transformers, motor controls and electronic controls. Basic knowledge in mathematics, algebra and
science would be helpful to anyone seeking a career in
electricity.
WELDING
Welding is a very popular skill in Floyd County and the surrounding area. Starting with the basic fundamentals the
student learns to identify and use the various types of
welding equipment, the characteristics of the welding
flame, the different welding techniques, safety on the job
and other related subjects.
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f
MACHINE SHOP
BUSINESS AND OFFICE EDUCATION
The future of American business is the future of America.
The vocational business and office programs are designed
to give the student theory and prac~ice in additi~n. to
selected learning experiences. In the f1rst year of trammg
specific courses are selected to develop sk_ill_s f_or
secretarial or clerical careers. The last year of trammg mvolves the application of these skills to that of a simulated
office with equipment and facilities similar to those in a
modern office.
WHEN CAN YOU VISIT THE GARTH
CENTER?
We encourage everyone to visit anyt1me, but we
especially invite everyone to visit during National Vocational Education Week 13-17, between 8:30-3:45 p.m.
The Machine Shop program is designed to provide a course
of instruction which will enable the student to acquire a
fundamental knowledge of machines and their functions
as applied to industry. The student receives basic training
on the use of precision measuring instruments, shaping,
grinding and other machine tools . Also, that student
receives instruction in blueprint reading, machine trades,
safety, and shop math.
CARPENTRY
The course offered in Carpentry is designed to provide
training in use of tool and machine skills. The beginning
student makes some small projects to learn about the
basic fundamentals of hand tools and power tools . Instruction is given in site layout and framing techniques that pertain to building a house. Scale models and some full size
framing members are used in the fabrication procedures.
Competency Based Vocational Education Modules are used to aid students in individual instruction on different
phases of the carpentry program .
j
~
MINING MECHANICS
,
The purpose of this program is to help the student acquire
a basic knowledge of mine mechanics and related industries. The development of skills in hydraulics, electricity, welding and the related subject~ of math and science
theory are emphasized . Students are assigned practical
hands-on projects to complement the theory and technical
information of their training.
HOW DO YOU
GARTH CENTER?
ENROLL
IN
THE
Students who are interested should contact their high
school counselor, principal, or Mrs. Ruth Blanton,
Regional Counselor, Region Eleven, Bi"g Sandy Vocational
Education Program, Paintsville, Kentucky, [606] 789-5321 .
'I
'•
~
•'
::
lj
�The Floyd County Times
Wednesday, Febn.ary 15, 1984
Va ied Courses Being
Offered at PCC
Elementary Heating \nd
Air Conditioning
Elementary Heating and Air Conditioning taught by Larry Short will be offered again this spring starting Thursday, February 2, at 6:30p.m. This class
is designed to teach the process of
installing and servicing gas and electrical systems. The class is open to the
home builder as well as electricians,
plumbers, and sales people. Call Continuing Education at 886-3863, ext. 215.
Financial Planning
The popular Financial Planning class
taught by Homer Forster, at PCC is filling fast. Here is your chance to make
sense out of all the ways you invest your
money; willingly, or otherwise. The
class covers taxes, insurance, real
estate, stocKs & bonds and estate planning Learn how to ask the right
questions!
Dance & Theater
A new class has been added to the
popular dance program. Now you can
learn to square dance. Georgia Muncy
teaches the ever popular dance form
which begins Tuesday, February 2 at
6:30. The class is designed for singles
and couples. Here is your chance to
learn figures from the Appalachian Big
BIFOCAL
CONTACT LENSES
ancl
EXTENDED WEAR
CONTACTS
Our specially
Marcus Minix
Optical
522 Collage street
Paintsville, Ky.
789·6000
Member of
Contact Lens society
of Amenca
Subscription
Rates Per Year
In Floyd CotJnty, $8.00
Elsewhere In Kentucky, $10
Outside Kentucky, $12.50
Please note explr•tlon date
~pc)slte your .name on wrapper er on your copy of The
Times. Because of lncreaseil
malllha· costs, notices of
subscription expiration are
no
lonaei'
mailed
to
Slfbscrlbers.
Subscriptions m1y be m1iled to:
The Floyd County Times
Box 391
Prestonsbura, Ky. 41653
Set. Space still remains in ballet, tap, &
jazz classes.
.
Childrens Theater, tauglij. by Cynthia
Manuel, begins on Wednesday,
February 1 at 5:00 p.tl. This is an excellent way to learn stage presence,
voice projection and the fun of amateur
theatricals.
Hatha Yoga taught by Clay Goebeler
begins on Wednesday, February 1, at
6:30p.m. This ever popular class is a
good way to improve your physical well
being and mental attitude.
Cooking & Textiles
The Cooking & '!'extiles section of Continuing Education 2t PCC has four different classes beginni.1g the last week in
January. SPECIALTY SEWING taught
by Helen Wells, begihs Monday,
January 30, at6:00 p.m. Stuffed animals
for your grandchild, placemats, and
pillow covers as well as wall hangings
will be featured. DRAPERY CONSTRUCTION, taught by Helen Burchett
starts Wednesday, February 1 at 6:30.
This is your chance to learn to make
pinch pleat draperies and brightens your
home for spring. NEEDLEPOINT and
BEGINNING SEWING start on Thursday, February 2, at 6:30p.m. Needlepoint is taught by Ann Charles. Students
will learn basic stitches complete a
pillow and begin a belt. Beginning Sewing is taught by Shelba Phillips. Students
will learn to follow a pattern, set a sleeve
and collar and complete a garment.
Arts & Crafts
Continuing Education at PCC has expanded the Arts & Crafts offerings this
spring with several new classes.
STAINED GLASS, taught by Bobby
Price, starts Wednesday, February 1.
This class should be of interest to anyone
who likes tiffany lamps or art glass
forms. This is your chance to make
beautiful art glass objects for your
Seven Years Old
•
110:\0HED ON BlRTHDA Y
Aaron Bond was honored Sunde>v at
his home on Riverside Drive in celebration of his seventh birthday. A combination of birthday and Valentine decorations was used. Family members and
friends who attended were his mother,
Mrs. Jane Bond, his sisters, Miss Hollie
Bond, his grandparents, Mr. and Mrs.
Ernest Osborne, Douglas Osborne, Mr.
and Mrs. J.Y. <Sonny) Goble, Mrs.
Paula Ousley, little Miss Heather
Ousley, Shawna Osborne, Nat Osborne,
Mrs Carolyn Ford and children, Winn
and Kelli, and another daughter of Mrs.
Fo:d's, Mrs. Leslie Fannin, and little
daughter, Jenna Fannin; Susanne
Dawson, Micha Stephens, and Chris
Stephens Decorated birthday cake, baked by his grandmother, Mrs. Ernest
Osborne, was served with other refreshments, and the little honoree was
presented many gifts.
ERNEST C. HOLBROOK, M.D. FACS
announces the opening of his office
THE PAINTSVILLE CLINIC BUILDING
111 Main Street, Paintsville, Kentucky
for the practice of
UROLOGY
Telephone (606) 789-7584
MONDAY-WEDNESDAY-FRIDAY
10:00 AM until 4:30PM
(Betsy Layne office closed February 1l
2-8-fil.
Jessica Lee Collins, daughter of Ritchie and Carol Jo Collins. of Stanville,
celebrated her seventh birthday.
January 26, w1lh a party at her home.
Grandparents. aunts, uncles, and
cousins were served a "Cake Bear"
birthday cake and ice cream.
The following night, Jessica and some
of her friends were treated to a party at
the Station Alpha Pizza Arcade at Pikeville. The children played video games,
watched the Digger Band perform, and
were served pizza, cake, and ice cream.
Jessica received many nice gifts and'
tended her thanks to Margo B"':l.nham,
Brooke Smith, Lisa 1\leh.:m, Salina
Ruckett, Leslie Mitchell,' Renee Akers,
Kim Akers, Brandice Blankenship,
Ashla Stanley, Kelli Stanley, and Terri
Lynn Kinzer.
Jessica 1s the granddaughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Joe Clark, of Allen, and Mr.
and Mrs. Hassel Collins, of Stanville.
You can always count on Jerry's for
value . Like our Husky Breakfast ...
21arge eggs, cooked to order, 3 sizzling
bacon slices, 2 pantakes, syrup and
chilled juice-all at a great price. Come
in and see for yourself how at Jerry's,
value is one more way .. .
ex
A cold spot-Mount Washington in New
Hampshire clocked winds at 231 miles
per hour one hour one Apri I day in 1934.
FL:f=RIDA
1-11-81.
hom~.
CERAMICS classes, taught by Gwen
Heffner, potter in residence, start in
February. Also, a new day time section
for beginners has been scheduled for
Thursdays at 12:30 p m. The evening·
beginners class is scheduled for Thursday evening at 6:00p.m. Students will
experiment with hand building with clay
and throwing on the Potters Wheel. The
advanced class and Potters guild will
meet Tuesday, at 6:00p.m. This is the
spring to learn to make beautiful bowls,
mugs, and vases for your own use.
BEGINNING PHOTOGRAPHY,
taught by David Gardner, starts
Wednesday, February 1, at 7:00p.m.
This popular class is filling quickly so
call soon to learn how to use that new
Christmas camera.
Music & Arts
The ART GUILD welcomes new
members. Coordinated by Tom
Whitaker, this organization which will
meet Thursday evenings at 7:00p.m.,
provides an opportunity for persons in·
terested in painting to share ideas,
techniques and opportunities.
CALLIGRAPHY is a new spring offering at PCC starting February 1. If you
have to design and letter posters this
class is meant for you. You will learn to
write the pen lettered Italic Alphabet as
well as proper letter and numeral formation. Instructor is Shelby Barrentine.
BANJO, taught by Sharon Blankenship, begins Wednesday, February 1 for
both beginner and advanced. This is a
good way to pull out the family banjo
and begin to strum.
To register for any of these classes,
please call Continuing Education, at
Prestonsburg Community College, at
886-3863, Ext. 215. On limited classes,
priority will be given to those who pay
their fees first!
PIKEVILLE: 9:30·9 Dally; 12·6 Sunday
SOUTH SIDE: IC>-9 Dally; 12·6 Sunday ·
PAINTSVILLE: 9·9 Dally; 12-6 Sunday
SALE ENDS SUNDAY, FEB. 19, 1984
11
$518
What can we find for you?
People who know their business go to
H&R BLOCK
-
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"'-~~
rm
DIICRtPYION
Prestonsburg
Martin
886·3685
28'5·9879
Open 9 AM-9 PM Weekdays, 9·5 S;.t. .
Consult your Yellow Pages for the office nearest you.
MasterCard and Visa accepted at most area locattons
•
PACIC
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24.00 9.48
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March 15, 1984
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March 15 And
March 18, 1984
FEMININE PRODUCTS
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G NEW FREEDOM, MAXI, 30 CT.
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24.00 10.32 • ~~~·:Case
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Addr.u
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:: U.S. 119
_ ForP~tHUII<Pntltr.kv-4 1527
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Earned At No Charge
BIG SANDY VILLAGE
JJ.S: 23 - North Mayo Trail
Ptke vtlle.KentL.;ckv4 150 1
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DIAPERS
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Main Street
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In a recent survey of customers who got refunds, we found 3 out
of 4 believed H&R Block got them bigger refunds than if they'd
prepared their own taxes. 3 out of 4. Are you one of them?
88 Richmond Plaza
7
HEREIS
BLOC~
Found
Karon Muzzall
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p:.l.
5"41:JEL~~~~~~T~~1~~l~~u~~~~~~~H~m•s
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Most babies begin to recognize their
mother or father at the age of three
months.
Stock Up!
Save Up To
34%
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Section One, Page Ten
D
SUB-TOTAL
Cases
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GRAND
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VILLAGE PLAZA
Route 40 East
o0 , ~!~vH!e . Ke ~!uckv412!10 .
�Wednesday, February 15, 1984
The Floyd County Times
ENTERTAIN TO DINNER
Dr. and Mrs. Palmer L. Hall, formerly
of Prestonsburg, presently of Morehead,
who were here for a few days last week,
entertained to dinner at the Western
Steak House, Thursday evening, Mrs.
Robert Wallace, and Mrs. Carl Woods.
The occasion was Mrs. Woods' birthday .
On the following day, she was remembered by some of her longtime friends
and former neighbors, with a dinner at
the home of Mr. and Mrs. Gale Music on
the Abbott road. Others attending were
Mesdames Grace Conley, Andrew
Frasure, Edgar Osborne, Myrtle Allen,
and Wayne Ratliff, Sr.
.PCC Announces
:Fall Dean's List
Sixty-three students from Floyd coun. ty have been named to the Dean's List
·. at Prestonsburg Community College for
..liilf.he 1983 fall semester.
• To be named to the Dean's List a stu. dent must obtain a grade point average
: of 3.5 or better and must be a full-time
student.
: The students from Floyd county are
Jamie Honeycutt Adams, Melissa A.
,Adams, Ramona B. Aiken, all of Pres,' tonsburg, Sandra J. Akers, Grethel;
·.Ellen L. Allen, Prestonsburg; Lisa A.
·~ Anderson, Halo; Elissa L. Bailey, Bet-~ sy Layne; Lolita L. Baldridge, Martin;
jarita L. Bentley, Wayland; Elizabeth
:F. Billiter, Prestonsburg; Vickie L .
. Boyd, Allen; Linda C. Brown, Langley;
·Veneta S. Brown, Langley; Connie S.
Bryant, Prestonsburg; Charlene L. Carrell, Dana; Charles R. Combs, Minnie;
Hassell H. Craft, Allen; Shelia K. Duff,
Hueysville; Claudia L. Frady, Wayland;
Pamela Frasure, Hueysville; Frank H.
Gainer, Prestonsburg; Judith L. Gunter,
Prestonsburg; Billie J. Hall, Banner;
a;arolyn S. Hall, Bevinsville; Diana S.
-tlall, Grethel; L. Daniel Hall, Harold;
Sherry H. Hall, Martin; Ruth A. Hamilton, Minnie; Barrie B. Handshoe,
Hueysville; Cheryl R. Hansford, Martin; Jonni L. Harris, Prestonsburg;
Maria L. Hicks, Prestonsburg; Janice
B. Hinkle, Langley; Mercedith T. Hoffman, Drift; Bert M. Johnson, Wheelwright; Dorothy J. Johnson, Ligon;
Karen A. Jones, Price; Jack Kendrick,
.,wheelwright; Barry K. Martin, Halo;
.,irginia A. Martin, McDowell; Alesia
Meade, Printer; Katie A. Meyer, Prestonsburg; Brenda Joyce Moore, Garrett; Amber R. Moscrip, Weeksbury;
Tia R. Music, Prestonsburg; Paula S.
Ousley, Prestonsburg; Anita J. Perry,
McDowell; James F. Porter, Allen;
Pamela S. Prater, Langley; Toni A.
Reid, Prestonsburg; Naomi S. Sargent,
Martin; Treva L. Slone, Bevinsville;
Brenda J. Stapleton, Emma; Barbara
. Stephens, Banner; Jolene Stewart,
Betsy Layne; Anita J. Stumbo,
McDowell; Vida M. Tackett, Allen;
Katrina R. Walters, Prestonsburg;
Mark A. Wells, Auxier; James J.
Whited, Betsy Layne; Kimberly Ann
Wiley, Estill; James H. Williamson,
Prestonsburg; and Denise Watkins Cline
of Auxier.
PUBLIC NOTICE
Pursuant to 405 KAR 8:010, Section
(4) (b), the following is a summary of
permitting decisions made by the
Department for Surface Mining Reclamation and Enforcement, Division of
Permits with respect to applications to
conduct surface coal mining and
reclamation operations in Floyd county.
Homer Short Co., 836-0061, Issued,
1/25/84; Branham & Baker Coal Co.,
836-()()23, Issued, 1/25/84.
lt.
Section One, Page Eleven
ltimate Wave Styling Salon
1220 SO. LAKE DR IVE, PRESTONSBURG, KY.
OPEN TUES.-FRI. 9-5
SATURDAY 10-3
CALL 886-1556 FOR APPOINTMENT
WALK-INS WELCOME
FOR YOUR ONE-STOP STYLING SALO
SPECIALIZING IN PRECISION CUTS, PERMS,
CREATIVE COLORING, BASKET WEAVING, BRAIDS,
MANICURES AND FACIALS
c===~-=
~~-=~
20-0Z.
SLUSH PUPPY DRINK
Baryshnikov Soars
In New Production
The American Ballet Theatre Company and Mikhail Baryshnikov present
the Spanish classic by Miguel de Cervantes, "Don Quixote," on "Great Performances: Dance in America,'' to air
Monday, March 5, at 9 p.m. during KET
TeleFund '84. Baryshnikov's performance in Cervantes' classic tale of "Don
Quixote" features ballet fireworks combined with lavish production elements in
this tale of romance and marriage.
Traditionaly the central figure of this
story has been ''The Knight of the Rueful
Countenance" and his ever-faithful
page, Sancho Panza. In this ''Great Performances" presentation, the focus is on
Kitri's wedding, from the second volume
of Cervantes' novel.
"Great Performances" "Don Quixote" is a National Video Corporation
Production in association with
WNET/New York.
Prior to "Don Quixote," dive into the
depths of the Sea of Cortez and discover
"Secrets of a Desert Sea," also to air
Monday, March 5. The special begins at
8:00p.m. (ET), 7:00p.m. (CT), during
KET TeleFund '84. The breeding ground
for a variety of sea life and birds, as well
as the refuge and home of numerous
species, is concealed in the depths of this
unique body of water located off the
coast of Western Mexico.
"Secrets of a Desert Sea" is produC'ed by KQED/San Francisco.
sse
ONLY
DURING A SIMULATED HOSPITAL SITUATION in the competency nursing laboratory at Pikeville College, nursing instructors demonstrated the proper positioning and alignment for a patient who may be confined to bed. Lisa
Hall, of Wheelwright, volunteered to serve as the patient while Barbara Kelly Cleft), nursing instructor, and Mary Rado (right), assistant professor of
nursing, explained the proper procedure to Julie Johnson, of Speight, Anita
Blackburn, of Meta, Lorraine Shattuck, of Pikeville, and other nursing
students.
COKE, TAB, SPRITE
$15 g·
8-16-0z.
T COKE ...... ...... Returnables
Florence Henderson
Stars On KET Show
99
The works of four great American
lyricists-Dorothy Fields, Johnny
Mercer, Howard Dietz and Ira
Gershwin-formed a pop Golden Age.
The lyrics of these celebrated personalities will be featured in "I Feel a
Song Comin' On!," Friday, March 9, at
9 p.m. during the KET TeleFund '84,
when "The Stars Shine Bright on Your
Kentucky Network."
This star-filled song and dance tribute
is a gala event taped at New York City's
Savoy Theatre and featuring many of
the classics of the four lyricists. It is performed by some of today's finest stylists
including host Anthony New ley ,
Maureen McGovern, Billy Eckstine,
Florence Henderson, Rex Smith, Greg
Burge, Roberta Flack, Ann Reinking,
Larry Kert and the Grover Dale
Dancers.
Singer and actress Florence Henderson, who grew up in Owensboro, has appeared in a number of prestigious
musicals. She starred as Maria in " The
Sound of Music" in the national company, and on Broadway in "The Girl
Who Came to Supper." She also was
featured in her own television situation
comedy, "The Brady Bunch."
With such a stellar lineup, each of the
four acts of "I Feel a Song Comin' On! "
explodes into sparkling performances of
music and dance with full-chorus productions and vibrant solos.
"I Feel a Song Comin' On!" is produced by Erizoe Productions.
$18 9
PEPSI, DIET PEPSI
MOUNTAIN DEW, 8-16-0z.
PEPSI FREE ...... .... Returnables
"WE'RE HERE TO SERVE YOU MORE IN '84!
Will social security still be in effect
when you retire?
Will your pension provide for all
your needs in retirement?
Do you have enough in savings to
see you through your retirement
years?
Ask your accountant about an Individual Retirement Account. If
the advice is to open one, come
see us at First commonwealth
Bank. we will see that you get a
good return on your retirement
fund and a timely income when
you retire.
i
f
Substantial Penalty for Early Withdrawal
{....-·,
"just Think What We Can Do Together! "-·-. ---{_
First
.-
...
.. : .~ :
··~\ ~ ~-- ~
,-._
Commonwealt
+,'iT/~ Bank
;~;
'
.
·- ---::~~:~ ·
h\
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. __
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Member FDIC
Martin • Betsy Layne • Two Locations In Prestonsburg
·....!
.
�Section One, Page Twelve
The Floyd County Times
Wednesday, February 15, 1984
•
(Reproduced below is page 4 of the 21st issue of The Floyd County Times
published Nov. 4, 1927)
-. ~GEPOUR
.FLOYD 'COUNT'i' 'l'ldS
FLOYD COUNTY T.f M E s LETI'ERS TO
PRESTONSBURG, KENTUCKY
.
THE EDITOR
Published Every Friday by
FLOYD PUBLISHING COMPANY
Incorporated
..
Get a Ust of 'the candl~s for
omce, and, before It's too late, study
1
and investigate their characters. Lay
~ide all political prejudices, be honest
with yourself and your neighbor. Vote
[for the men who will enforce the law
and protect your boys and girls.
A VOTER.
- - -- --
~ns.
E. P. Arnold & Co.
·AS
SATISFIED?
"V!ce is a monster of so frightful a 1
NOR~IAN .ALLE~ --·-·--···-· -·--·--·--··--·--·--------·----·-- ·-·--·----- ·---- Editor
mien,
MRS. HOBSON HONORED
H. L. GOBLE ..
Business ::.\1anager
To be hated is but to be seen;
WITH PRETTY SHOWER
But seen too oft familiar with its face,
SUBSCRIPTION RATES
We first endure, then pity, then emOne Year----·- ---------·---------·--------..-· _____ ..... _.... _________ -· ..-·---··--..---·-- $1.50
brace:·
Mrs. J. 0. Webb, Mrs. Wm. J. May
Six Months·--·--..--..·----------..·-··-·---------····---· ·-----.. ··---··-·----..-----··-..·----$1. 00
. .
..
and Miss Josephine Cooley were joint
Cash in advance
Th1s 1s the .co~d1t10n of our town and I ~ostesses last Thursday evening at a .
county at thiS time.
. 1 beautiful shower given in honor of Mrs.
Ehtered as second-class matter June 18, 1927, at tbe postoffice
There was a tune when we hated v1ce Joseph Hobson, formerly Miss Iner.
at Prestonsburg, Kentucky, under the Act of March 3, 1879.
in any form, but, as the poet says, "If I Cottrell, at the lovely home of Mr. and
seen too oft~~ we endure, we p1ty, then 1 Mrs. David Richmond.
, we em~race.. It beco:nes one of us .. We I The guests we 1·e received at the C:J.)r
~biC:(:;,
R '\..."'"
Iare satisfied, self-satiSfied to cond1tlons by little Misses Ina May Ricim;:-n:i,
around us.
. .
cousin of the bride, and Lillian Rea"' L.uin~slk RlprtsmtatitJI
Our moonshmer comes to town, therford, receiving the numerous and
brmgs hlS mcely wrapped box as handsome gifts which more than filled
:::=======~:;;::_:;;;;;;;::;~::;~;;;;::;;;;:;;;:;;;;::;:~======== though
he had but made a purchase at a very large basket. The receiving line
FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 4, 1927
j one of our ~tares, places it on the steps which stood just ins;oe the door was
~
ar hangs h1s saddle pockets on the formed by Mrs. H:lbs.:a~. the bride.
! .1
A STEP FORWARD
i fence. seemin~ly all ~nconcerned. He Misses Nell Alle:1. Jos::J;;:J~e Cooley and
· ~
'
proceeds to mmgle Wlth the crowd for Mrs. Wm. J. ~hy, C::lC:l han:'s:!;)e;y
. .
Recently, in Paintsville, the Epworth League took a stand buyers of his wares. After finding his gowned in even 'n~ ctre5$es. Th~ L1·:de ·
.which evokes admiration from every person who has a wholesome man, they go to some convenient build- was unusually lo-;·c·y in an imported
re1Jpeet for law and order.
1ing to dispose of lt. "Satisfied."
gown of transparent veivet. The bc:.:JTilis _stand was taken with a resolution condemning crime in
But not all our moonshiners are tiful home was teaatifuliy ~tnd att~·ac Johnson county and asking the county officials to become more from out of town; we have them in our tively decorated w:tl; a profus:on of f~.:1
active in suppressing crime.
midst. Young men, men of good fam- flowers. The dining ro:m was c:;pec:al, ' Th~ Paintsville Herald at that time praised the courage and ilies, starting out in life; men, whose 1y pretty, and, t.ore r!1e:· wi<h the beautlie clean thinking of those young people for their action, and we fathers and mothers would be 8.$hamed tiful wall tapestrjes. ·.·;s.s 2 lovely scene
,8dd
tribute now. Johnson county has the promise of real men 'i to own that they have raised boys who for a bridal shower. P.a!io'\ve·en c:ec~ women for the future.
had fallen so far below the moral stan- orations added muc!1 beauty to the set'
Every 'Organization wields a certain amount of influence, of-~ dard of a man. These are they who ting .
.teD wields more influence than is realized. If, then, the church' ask your boy to brink and see that he The guests, on entering the dining
~zations; lnd the CjViC clubs WOUld take a stand similar to gets it. Knowing they are pulling your I room, found the bride seated at one
: ~ aJBUDled by these courageous young people, only good .could boy down to their level, they, too, are end of a lovely table covered with a
~.·. Such action .would go to mold public opinion. The move- I satisfied to know one more has fallen I handsome maderia and filet· banquet
-~ would,acl as a contagion-as a mild contagion, perhaps, but a victim to their wile3.
. cloth, a lovely bouquet of autumn flow~in that others would take up the fight.
Oftlcers? Yes, we J!ave some. Some, I ers forming an exquisite center piece,
unty needs an epidemic of such a spirit. Leadership perhaps, would like to live up to their Isurrounded by four lighted candles,
must be furniShed. There is no immediate success duty-bound oath, others who know that which shed a soft light over the entire
no brilliant, sweeping victory to be won; but, when all this lawlessness ls going on. They room.
'
~ to those waging such a fight, it will be glorious. are satisfied to see our youth going to
The large basket containing the pres• '·
destruction and traveling leisurely ents was then brought in. The bride
-.
along with them, they see and-don't in- was the recipient of many beao.1tiful
WORSHIP WHILE YOU 1\IA Y
terfere with our moonshiner. He'll one I,and handsom!! gifts, and In a most
The beauti~·s of every season are the material things from of their number.
charming manner thanked the donors.
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.
Our streets reek with rubbish and I Sh
_
wh1ch those sp1ntual creations known as poems grow, and for th1s
j e was assisted bY Mrs• w m. J · ...
Dl....,y
t'
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d
tilth. There was a time when our dlf- and Mrs Pearl Allen
.
d
f
reason we h ave re f rame
rom commen mg m c1·u e prose upon (erent clubs would tak thin in h d
·
·
the glory of the autumn now growing to a close. But we would
e
gs
an
A delicious salad course was served,
•
but they, too, seem to be sattsfted.
and beautiful Hallowe'en favors were
.ask you
•
We used to hear the epithet "Bloody
ted to
h
t
Have you reveled in the hazy beauty of Indian Summer·
•
presen
eac gues · Mrs. Hobson
feasted your eyes upon the wonderful mosaic of color presented Breathitt." But could it ~at justly be is the only daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
by these forests of ours· stopped to admire the myriad colors of said "Bloody Floyd?" Our killings, if Fred H. Cottrell, a grand-daughter of
.
.'
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they were not so tragic might be com- th 1 te d 1
ted Is
Ri hm d
the tree-covered hills with their green and scarlet brown and gol'
e a an amen
aac c on .
'
pared to the childhood story of the Lit- l is w 11 and f o bl 1m wn to th citden cloaks of leaves? Have you sensed a sort of awe a.s _YOU l.tle Tailor who killed seven fiies at one l·zense of the avBirga Syandoy valley e Mr
watched the sun stream between the branches and then smkmg
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' streke and thereby became famous We 1 Hobson is the son of Judge Hoibson of
leave all hushed m sohtude and a warm sort of gloom?
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J killed S* at one stroke one week and Frankfort Ky
and 1's a law partner of
If you hav missed all this, there 1s another season commg-1t
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•
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is almost here-which, despite, and because of, all its grim, cold j five another w.eek.
Mr. B. M. James. Mr. and Mrs. Hobson
beauty will bring to vou keen appreciation of the warm !oYeline~s
Fathers, matha-s, are you · satis!l~ w~ll in.the ne~r futu:e be at home to
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m Prestonsburg
1 for your sons and daughters to grow up their many !nends
now passmg or pas •
in ~~h a community? Won't you take who ~· them a life of much joy and
1
that permit away from your sons and 1 hAppiness.
1
stop them from becoming habitues of 1
A MAN AND HIS JL'DGES
! ~he pool ~ooms, where not only pool is iTO WHOM IT MAY CO~CERN:
0
A young man, whose body wa~ hroug-ht here this '' ,.;.;;<, had : mdulged m. Take that boy or girl and 1 There will be a public lecture by a
died shortly after being released fom the Pike county .i:~il.
bave a heart-to-heart talk with him or· distinguished speaker, at the RosenI
Some judge in Pike county had ~ent him to jail fo1· a~1 ad un- her and show them where they are Wl\ld colored school, and dinner on th~
known to us. The man's life was darkem'd by ~uch. it is ,ai<l. The drifting. Go to church with them. It ground, at Tram, Ky., Saturday, Nojudge of the kangaroo coUl-t collected hi~ fee of h\·o dolla r·,.;.
will do you all good and brings mem- vember 5. Let everybody come that
Then, perh&ps twQ rnonths later, the prisone1· \\ ailiecl unt-a aries of childhood and of mother and will come and hear the wonderfullecfree man. And met death,
It!Jat old, forgotten piece so dear to our 1turer, and share your part of the dinHe has faced his la!:>t judge-!;:a\·e (Jiw.
Ichildhood:
ner, and see the crowd. All it will cost
1you is to come. You will be treated
EST~;p
"Backward, turn backward, 0 Time in with the greatest of hospitality that
J.:.
thy flight,
can be shown, and will be assured of a
i Miss Hazel Litz and Mr. John Porter' i\Iake me a child again just for tonight; nice time. We are looking for you.
were married at Paintsville, Ky., Sat-, Mother, come back from that echoless 1
MRS. M. C. SUGG, Teacher
84 B
! urda~, October 28. and will go to house :
shore,
j
MRS. JAMES LACKEY,
keepmg at Van Lear, where Mr. Porter Take me again in your arms :-.: :f .
WALTER GARDNER,
I
yore."
I.
Members of the Committee.
Garrett, Ky .. Nov. 2 1Spl.I-Mr~. \'.'. has a position with the Consolidation I.
1
1
H. Arnold and Miss Edith Estep cmc•·- Coal Company.
1
B.
H.
Wells
and
Dr.
A.
J.
Davidson
Oh,
what
memories!
Then
and
there
Dr. and Mrs. E. E. Archer and Jam- - Pohtlca! Adv.
tained Saturday afternoon m honor oi
at
Paintsvllle
Friday.
make
a
resolve
that
you
can
and
will
ily, of Paintsville, were guests Sunday
attended
court
~·Grandma" <Mrs. Mary 1 Estep·s 84lh
Mrs. John Adk'ins and son, John Har- stand for the right; that you will no of Dr. Archer's parents, Mr. and Mrs.
birthday anniversary. The p:u ty wa~ <:.
complete surprise to ;\<Irs. Estc}J. She vey Adkins, of Ashland, who spent the l:lnger be satisfied with present condi- 1 George P. Archer.
1s the oldest citizen or Oanei.t. and b last few d&ys here visiting friends and
still active in church ·.•.ark c.nd dona~cct relatives, returned home Sunday eventhe lot for the nc\·; :\IeihOdi~l Chmc:1 ing.
Born to Mr. and Mrs. E. B. Claggett
which has just been completed llN•'·
She llps seve1 al great-gnmdch.tdr-:; 1 a fine boy, Jimmie, October 20.
and several great-great-!1-rancl<:\lildren.
Those attending this pleasant affair
SUFFERS BROKEN LEG
were: Rev. 0. P. Smith. of Landey:
Ellis Morrison sut!ered a broken leg
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Wright. of ::\Ii- from a slate fall in the North-East
das; Mrs. Gypsie Vinson. of Wa\'lanct· Coal Company's mines here and was
Mrs. Escom l\1urray. M:·s. H. H. H•J:·n~ rushed to the PaintsYille hospital. His
by; Mrs. T. E. Sullinm. ~Irs. Florence r.ondition is reported favorable.
Allen, Mrs. Jack Allen. i\Irs. Le<:k Martin, Mrs. Ellis Martln. M•·~. OL:-, KJSTUDENTS VACCIS.o\TED
burn, Mrs. John Berry. ~·.Ir-<. \Y<:'~lr~
Floyd county health clinic ccnsistMoore, Mt·s. o:lie Estl'p. :\Irs. F. F ing of Drs. Martin and Richmond, and
Williams, Mrs. Loch;e Scott. :\.1•·:;. R"- two nurses were here Friday vacdnadolph Spencer. Mr~. RobPn Hison. ::\i'" ting the school and all others who
Cassie Russell. Miss Amncll Cook;.-. would take the serum for diphtheria
Alpha Morgan, Marguerite Ri~;cn J~u:- nnd. typhoid.
queline Moore, Duley Bel<:hcr. \'J: ~in!:\ ,
CHILD IN JURED
Alice Hornsby,
1
At the close of the party ctclic'ou~ :·(- ~ Alvas Music, little son of Mr. and
freshments were sen·cct by the ho:;tcs.-; , Mrs. George Music, sut!ered a Yery
serious injury about the skull last SatEdith and Bartee Esto p spClil till' urday evening at dusk while he was out
week-end at weeksbury. guest:; of Mr. j playi~g with other children near t~e
and Mrs. Frank Rasnick They attend- coal tipple, where some bridge matenal
was stacked. Some one scared hlm, and
ed the Hallowe'en daucc there.
Mr. and Mrs. wm. Petrey haw rc- he ran Into a very sharp piece of this
turned tQ their home at Ptkc·;illc <1fler bridge steel. almost scalping the. boy.
Nine stitches were required.
a few days' vtsit here.
Mr. and Mrs. Leek Martin \\'C't·• llw
dinner guests sunday of Mrs. \'tnsmt
Mr. Rines, plano repairman, was in
at wayland.
, town Thursday, Friday and Saturday,
Mrs. H. H. Hughes and children :eft j repairing ~me player pianos for the
Saturday to visit her parent.; at Cat-. theater managed by T. E. Moran.
lettsburg.
The Rev. H. K. Moore held services
Mr. and Mrs. Kelly Patton anci Mrs. in the Methodist Church here ~unday
Rush Collins were the wet'k-cnd gues's I night.
'
of Mr. and Mrs. T. E. Sulli\·an.
1-- Ershel Horn is reported very Ill with
Several people from Martm attencted. pneumonia. He is an employe of the'!
the Hallowe'en dance here Monday ! North-Ea.st Coal Company, but lives at
rught.
illlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll..ll..llllllll. .r
1Bay~Branch,Ky.
I
I
Caskets FUNER.~L DIRECTORS
License No. 1i61
Steel
CALL DAY OR NIGHT_ Will take .verVaults :::on nl charge and ha\'e b o d y p repared acS:11its
Drcsse§
I
I
" ·-
I
!10cn l'nring f o r ~·our dead for the past
I
l!f~<'ton ~· em·s.
A ex
·1 ·
1
(0r,il ng to your wishes. Emb alming
donG by an ex perienced man. I have
.
PRICES RIGHT.
E. P. ARNOLD, Undertaker
L. Allen
our
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CANDIDATE
FO~
Representative
T rrhe Great Common People of Floyd County·
'GRANDMA'
CELEBRATES HER
t h IRTHDAY
AUXIER
· •·
was born and reared among you; you knowmy life. I\Iy '\Vife, the mother of my seven. child-·.
ren, now lies buried on a hill-side on Beaver Creek•.
Like Paul of old, I have been compelled to labor·
with my hands to earn bread for my family, and'
to enable me to preach the gospel of the Humble'
K azarene, of whom I am not ashamed. If you believe that I can and will be your friend at Frank-~
fort, want you to go to the polls and vote for me
November 8, 1927.
:
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DAN HEFNER
1
JEWELER AND WATCHMAKER
I Have A Complete Line Of
Jewelry
..
Watches, Clocks, Rings,
Fountain Pens, Glass &Silverware
I
I
The semce you will receive in my repair department is the hest. Don't faa to call around
when in need of anything in my line.
First National Bank
Prestonsburg, Ky.
•
�•
Wednesday, February 15, 1984
Because their eyes are on the sides of
the' r heads, m ost birds have excellent
fields of vision
INCOME TAX ·
PREPARATION
LOCATED ACROSS FROM
MARTIN GRADE SCHOOL
IN THE OLD WESTERN
AUTO BUILDING.
REASONABLE RATES
CHARLOTTE KEATHLEY
285-3955
2-13!.
The Floyd County Times
HO~ORED
ON BIRTHDAY
Mrs Rhomer Osborne, of Eastern,
was surprised with a birthday dinner at
her home Saturday. She received many
gifts . Those present were the guest of
honor, her husband, Rhomer Osborne,
Cecil Osborne, Gary Osborne, Mr. and
Mrs. Bill Osborne, Mr. and Mrs. Larry
Osborne, Romie Gene Osborne, Don
McGary and Derrick, Mrs. Hershell
Osborne and Katie, Mrs. Mable Timmons, Mr. and Mrs. Johnny Milton
Osborne, Mr. and Mrs. Stanton Osborne
and James Michael, all Q(.Easterri; Mrs.
Don Halbert and-Don, Jr., Lexington;
Mrs. Billy Barnett, Angie, Kim, and
Chris, Martin, Mr. and Mrs. Edgar
Osborne, and Letha Pitts, of Prestonsburg.
Valentine Giveaway Winner
Section One, Paae Thirteen
Discover-.. . Yiliif~Watural Bealltr!
..,
.
'' ..
~ -'
•' ·
~
''
... -· ·...
.
(;errr & : lt~t1J::~;-~~:f!;~~~~::·'[.()(~a~t·d 1(:!. mih·
north of Prt;sltin~p·ur~• .·Ky. JW l ..~. :!.'1,
welc·omes ·.rin1 .· "to ···;:disc:tj~;(•r
· .rour ll<ll !inll
.
.
~
'
bl'auty through color.
Introducing color consultant Pelt /~'mm(•t t
of Lexington, Ky. ·_ ·,.
• First 10 ctppoinlm('nts FUEl-.'
Call todny: 88li-::y:::! J'or your free :l ppuintment as ;1/J seats will be resern•d.
• . \ppoinlmt'nl dn/(•s (//'(' Ft·hnwry :!:J and
:!1.-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
SIPP CINEMA
MAIN ST., PAINTSVILLE, KY. • 789-4500
Starts Fri., Feb. 17
Exclusive Area Showing
Showtimes 7:15 and 9:15
DEBRA Wlt\IGER SHIRLEYMACLAINE
RON LAWSON, Broker
JACK NICHOLSON
Phone 886-9100 • Pikeville 432-0194
Cleda Lawson <right>. of the Auxier Road, is pictured Friday accepting
the ~lb. box of Valentine candy given away by the Prestonsburg Sundry
Store as part of a special drawing. Maxine Branham, manager of the store,
inade the presentation to Mrs. Lawson, director of the Day Care Center on
Arnold Avenue here. Children at the center enjoyed the candy during a
,Valentine Day party yesterday.
MRS. SPURLOCK MEMORIALIZED
During services at the First United
Methodist Church Sunday morning,
Mrs. Phyllis Ranier, who teaches the
Wesley Bible Sunday School class,
presented to the church, on behalf of her
class a memorial plaque in memory of
Mrs_ Peggy Wells Spurlock, who
organized the class approximately 30
years ago. During the presentation, Mrs.
Ranier spoke of how much Mrs. Spurlock had meant to the class and the
church. Members of Mrs. Spurlocks'
family atten~~ the services.
A five year-old house that looks brand new. Has 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, living
room, dinin& room, deck, and carport. A weiJ.maintainecl home re.ty for JOUr irt-
s,.ction.
HERE'S YOUR OPPORTUNITY to finish the 1500-sq. ft. of lower level while living
in the 1500-14- ft. •stairs. 3 De4rooms, 2 baths, living room, •n1111 room and
dedi sitting on a flat lot ppnx. 100x165. Asking $55,000.
----
IF YOU LIKE COUNTRY UVING within 5 miles of Prestonsburg, here's your chance.
This farm has approx. 30 acres with 1 uni-..ely different 3-bedroom house with lots
and lots of extras. Call for details.
The first convict labor law was passed in Virginia in 1642, according to
"Labor Firsts in America," a publication of the U.S . Department of Labor.
-·-·{$}. ·-tt • ·~ ••••f#.
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FESTIVAL BOARD TO MEET
Mrs. E.L. Bierman, director of the
Jenny Wiley Festival, reminds board
members of the meeting to be held
Thursday, Feb. 23, at 4 p.m. at the Prestonsburg Municipal building. She adds
that a meeting for everyone interested
in the festival will be held at the same
location on that same day at 5 p.m.
CARD OF THANKS
We, the family of Amy Dawn Allen,
wish to thank everyone for their support,
kindness, and sympathy during our time
of need. We would especially thank the
First Assembly of God Church for their
kindness.
Again, thank you all.
THE FAMILY
PARAMOUNT PICTURES PRESENTS A FILM BY JAMES L. BROOKS
DEBRA WiNGER· SHIRLEY MN:LAINE ·TERMS OF ENDEARMENT
CO-SfARRING JACK NICHOLSON· DANNY DE VITO AND JOHN LITHGOW
MUSIC BY MICHAEL GORE- SCREENPLAY BY JAMES L. BROOKS
PRODUCED AND DIRECTED BY JAMES L BROOKS
'"'
jPG=j...._=--=;;-;;-=.-,
A P~~~~~._T_PI£!:~
-~.
..,._,...,.~
•
... ~.._.._ · ~. "' = )
·ft·.
!-----......
: .>~ •••••••••••••. tl. ··~). . . . ~
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CAMPBELL PRESENTS
LIVE IN CONCERT MARCH 3, 1984 AT VIKING HALL IN BRISTOL, TN.
TICKETS ARE ON SALE NOW AT ANY CAMPBELL FORD LOCATION FOR ONLY $6.00 EACH
HURRY! THEY'RE GOING FAST.
1984
RANGER4x4's
Over 100 to choose from
1984 TEMPOS
Over 100 avai:a.le from
$6888
ON THE SPOT FINANCING
NO PAY ME
TIL APRIL
(WITH APPROVED CREDIT)
1984 ESCORTS
Over 100 to seled from
�Wednesday, February 15, 1984
The Floyd County Times
Section One, Page Fourteen
Miss Goble, Mr. Charles Wed
D.OCIA B. WOOQ$J SOCIETY EDITOR
TO :\IEET TllliRSDA Y
The Prestonsburg Junior Woman's
Club will be holding its regular monthly
mt>eting. Thursday, February 16. All
members should be at the library at 6:30
p.m. This month 's meeting will include
a special program on car seats, a tea for
new members, and reports on the progress of the Miss Floyd County Pageant.
Miss Lona Kaye Goble and Mr. Larry D. Charles were united in marriage,
October 22, at the Irene Cole Memorial Baptist Church, here, in an impressive
double-ring ceremony solemnized by the Rev. W.D. Jaggers.
Preceding the ceremony, selections of nuptial music were presented by Mrs.
Alice G. Buchanan, organist, and Mrs. DeeDee Callis, soloist.
The bride is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Fred L. Goble, of Prestonsburg,
and was given in marriage by her father.
The groom is the son of Mr. Harry Charles, Jr., of Paintsville, and Mrs.
Mary Laura Pinson, of Houston, Texas.
Miss Paula Goble, sister of the bride, of Prestonsburg, was maid of honor,
and Mrs. Donna G. Schenck, sister of the bride, was matron of honor.
Bridesmaids were Jena Gray, of Middletown, Ohio, cousin of the bride, Debbie Wood, of Prestonsburg, and Diane Tardy, of Ashland, Ky.
Mr. Eric Charles, of Paintsville, brother of the groom, was best man, and
groomsmen were Robert C. Meade, Jr. , of Louisville, Calhoune Salyer, and
Jerry Clark, both of Paintsville, and Steve Schenck, brother-in-law, of the
bride, of Columbia, S.C.
Miss Wendy Meece, of Prestonsburg, presided at the guest-register.
A reception was held at the Paintsville Country Club.
Mr. and Mrs. Charles are now residing in Cullman, Alabama.
ANNOUNCES MEETING
Mrs. Garnett Fairchild, president of
the Prestonsburg Kiwaniannes, announces that the monthly luncheonmeeting will be held at May Lodge,
Thursday, Feb. 23, at 12:30 p.m. She
urges all members to be present.
RETURNS HOME
Leonard Grant has returned to his
home here following a business trip. of
several days, during which time he conducted gift shows at merchandise marts
in Atlanta, Los Angeles, and at the
McCormick Place in Chicago.
A new hairstyle is exciting and good for your self-image and overall
appearance.
.
Here at the Hairport my main concern is finding a sty le best swted for
you and a style that is equally easy to maintain.
.
For the latest in hair cutting and permanents, call the Ha1rport for your
appointment today. Together we'll find the look for you in '84.
Tues. thru Sat.
OWNED AND OPERATED BY
MIKE BRANHAM
BY APPOINTMENT ONLY
116-6344
2+3t.
EXECUTIVE BOARD MEETS
The executive board of the Jenny
Wiley Chapter, American Association of
Retired Persons <A.A.R.P.), met Friday
evening at the Prestonsburg Municipal
Building, with the president, Jack
Freed, presiding. During the business
session it was announced that the
membership of the local A.A.R.P. is now
99. Mr. Freed told the group that the
biennual convention of the national
A.A.R.P. will meet in St. Louis, April
24-27.
A pot-luck dinner meeting is scheduled by the local Chapter for Friday evening, Feb. 24, at 6 o'clock at St. James
Episcopal Church here. Monroe Wicker,
formerly of Floyd county, now of Morehead, who serves as chairman of the
Kentucky A.A.R.P. Legislative committee, will be the guest speaker.
VISIT IN NORTH CAROLINA
Mr. and Mrs. Carl Watson have
returned from Charlotte, N.C., where
they visited their daughter and son-inlaw, Mr. and Mrs. Rick Heedick, the
Heedicks' baby daughter, Laura Ann,
who was born Jan. 26, and their son,
Christopher, who celebrated his second
birthday during the time the Watsons
were there. They also spent some time
visiting Mr. Heedick's parents, Mr. and
Mrs. Ralph Fletcher Heedick, in
Charlotte. Mr. and Mrs. Watson made
the trip by plane.
ATTEND PRAYER BREAKFAST
Mrs. Phyllis Ranier, of Prestonsburg,
and her daughter-in-law, Mrs. Harry H.
Ranier, of Midway, were guests of
President Ronald Regan at the President's National Prayer Breakfast, held
at the Washington-Hilton Hotel, Washington, D.C. Feb. 2, Approximately 4000
guests, representmg more than 150 countries, attended this event, and all of them
joined hands in fellowship. Mrs. Ranier
and her daughter-in-law remained in
Washington to attend meetings of the
Prison Fellowship, which is under the
direction of Charles (Chuck) Colson,
author of "Life Sentence," and other
publications.
IN LEXINGTON HOSPITAL
Mrs. Henry Conley, formerly of Prestonsburg, who, with her husband and
two daughters, now resides in Lexington, is a patient at the Humana Hospital
there. For the last several years that
Mr. and Mrs. Conley lived in Prestonsburg, she was secretary at the Irene
Cole Memorial (First) Baptist Church.
HERE FHOM PIKEVILLE
Mrs. Sue Herron and Miss Lena T.
Porter, of Pikeville, were here Sunday
for a visit with their sister, Mrs.
Margaret P. Alley.
VISITS FAMILY
Mrs. Kay Anne Wilborn, o{ Shelbyville, was here for a few days last week,
visiting her father, Chalmer H. Frazier,
her grandmother, Mrs. Earl A. Stumbo,
her sister, Miss Elizabeth Frazier, and
her niece, little Miss Lynon Frazier and
with her mother, Mrs. Chalmer H.
Frazier, who is a patient at the
Highlands Regional Medical Center.
Mrs. Wilborn is a teacher in the Shelbyville schools.
OCCUPIES PULPIT
Bringing the message at the Community United Methodist Church last
Sunday was the Rev. Charles Elswick,
assistant pastor of the Pikeville
Methodist Church.
BANQUET SCHEDULED
The Sweetheart banquet at the First
United Methodist Church will be Friday
evening, Feb. 17.
CHliRCHWOMEN TO MEET
Mrs. Eva Collins, president of the
Local churchwomen's organization,
reminds members and prospective
.]llembers that there will be a meeting
Friday morning, Feb. 17, at the First
Presbyterian Church, here. Women
from churches throughout this area are
urged to attend.
RETURN FROM FLORIDA
Mr. and Mrs. Camden Garrett, of
Prestonsburg, and Mr. and Mrs. Erman
Ratliff, of Stanville, have returned to
their homes after a vacation of about
two weeks, in Florida. While there they
visited several relatives and friends, including Walter Hall, Mrs. Green Conn,
Mr. and Mrs. Bruce Spradlin, and points
of interest in Tarpon Springs, Tampa
and Orlando. En route to Florida, they
stopped for a visit with Mr. and Mrs.
Glenn McMahn, in Knoxville, Tennessee.
HOME AFTER SURGERY
Mrs. Opal Goodman would like to
thank her many friends and relatives for
the cards, letters, flowers, telephone
calls, and visits following recent major
surgery at the Ephraim McDowell Hospital in Danville. After leaving the
hospital, she was the guest of her sons
and daughters-in-law, Dr. and Mrs.
Robert I. Goodman, Dr. and Mrs.
Richard Goodman and Mr. and Mrs.
Larry Goodman in Harrodsburg. Mrs.
Gordon is now getting along nicely at her
home here.
HERE LAST WEEK
Dr. Palmer L. Hall, former superintendent of Floyd county schools, and
Mrs. Hall, who now reside in Morehead,
spent a few days last week at the home
of Mrs. Hall's late parents, Mr. and Mrs.
Clabe Bingham, on Riverside Drive,
while they transacted business matters
here. Dr. Hall has retired from the faculty of Morehead State University, and
Mrs. Hall from the University Training
School there.
SUFFERS HEART ATTACK
Mrs. Chalmer H. Frazier suffered a
heart attack at her home here, Feb. 6,
and was taken to the Highlands Regional
Medical Center, where she was in intensive care for several days. For the past
few days, she has shown enough improvement to be moved to a private
room there. Mrs. Frazier is active in
community affairs, and is organist at
the First United Methodist Church here.
MARK BIRTHDAYS
Arthur W. Haywood joined his
daughter, Miss Rebecca Haywood, at
her home in Falmouth last weekend, and
they observed their birthdays during
that time . Miss Haywood is a teacher of
music in the Falmouth schools.
IN HOSPITAL HERE
Mrs. Denny Whitten is a patient at the
Highlands Regional Medical Center,
where her condition is satisfactory.
VISIT IN ASHLAND
Miss Betty Rowland, accompanied by
Mrs. Edith James, spent Sunday in Ashland with Miss Rowland's mother, Mrs.
Hattie Rowland, her family and friends.
DR. WOOD HERE
Dr. Robert Wood, of Ashland,
Methodist district superintendent, was
at the Community United Methodist
Church here, Feb. 6 for consultation with
members of this and other Methodist
churches in his district.
1984
1934
In honour of the
Fiftieth Wedding Anniversary of
Mr. and Mrs. Bradie Shepherd
VISITORS HERE
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Dudley Moore,
and son, Chip, of Charleston, W. Va.,
were here recently for a visit with her
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Camden Garrett.
their children and grandchildren
request the pleasure of your company
at an Open House
REMINDER
Mrs. Frances Pitts, Floyd county
home economist, advises that all Homemakers' club members who have participated in the Ovarian Cancer drive,
should turn in the money collected for
this cause at their next Homemakers'
meetings.
on Saturday, February twenty-fifth
Nineteen hundred and eighty-four
from two to five
VISIT MRS. COLLINS·Mrs. Scott Collins had members of her
family with her at her home here during the weekend. They were her daughter, Miss Chrystal Collins, a law student
at the University of Louisvile, and her
brother and sister-in-law, Mr. and Mrs.
Adam Martin, and some friends of theirs
from Dry Ridge, Kentucky.
Fitzpatrick First Baptist Church
Middle Creek Road
2-15-2t.
..
WASHINGTON'S BIRTHDAY SPECIAL
!76hof7ieom@Pinstripes
in Dacrolf Polyester
·
andWool
The vested pinstripe suit is a classic
look, and Palm Beach· does it up in
a truly elegant manner. It is tailored
to perfection in a wrinkle-resistant blend
A Friendly
Place to Shop
SAVE UP TO 50% ON
MANY UNADVERTISED
ITEMS THROUGHOUT OUR STORE.
HURRYI SALE ENDS MONDAY.
of Dacron ' polyester and wooL so it will
a lways keep its handsome look, too.
Come in today to see the look that
never goes out of style.
USE YOUR:
ALL SPRING AND SUMMER
PALM BEACH SUITS AND
SPORTCOATS REDUCED
FOR 10 DAYS. (Feb. 15-25)
*
--
----
- ---- -- - -- -
----
*
$1450
-
- --- ------ -------·--.
------ -- ------- - - - -- -- - - --
Men god Boys
Ready-To-Wear
$750
DONKENNY-Reg. 18.00
$900
9
~~ot ~~riRT JACKETS .$4 750
BLOUSES ........... ·.. .
Reg. $28.00
$1400 CORDUROY
Reg. 28.00
$1400
SWEATERS ......... ..
SLACKS ....
Reg. $85.00
$4250 SWEATERS
Reg. $22.00
$1100
WOOL BLAZERS .......
.......... .
Reg. $28.00
$1400 ~i~s$-1~ ..5~ .......... _. . . $675
WOOL SKIRTS ........
$81.00
$4Q50
Reg. $27.00
$1350 Reg.
RUSS BLOUSES ...... .
SUBURBAN COATS .....
BOY'S-Reg. $17.00
$8 •50
Reg. $25.00
$1250 CORDUROY
JEANS ....
RUSS SKIRTS .... . ... .
LEE-Reg. $29.00
CORDUROY JEANS .....
GOWNS AND ROBES
25%
- - ----·-
----· - - --- --------- ---
Reg. $15.00
FLANNEL SHIRTS ... . . .. .
SELECTED JEWELRY
EXTRA SIZES
50% OFF
50% oFF
CASH ONLY!
CAMISOLES
ALTERATIONS FREE
50% oFF
WARM ROBES
AND SLEEPWEAR
CHILDREN'S
KNEE SOCKS
50% oFF
LADIES' HANDBAGS
Y3
50% oFF
Housewares
Children's
Ree. $300
$}250 TWIN SHEETS ...... -· s1.oo
..
Reg. $350
Rec.
$650 SHOWER CURTAINS ... s1.oo
..
PAJAMAS ......... S12.99... .
Reg.
$850 SONORA LUGGAGE ... . :::s $62 50
Rec.
KIDDIE THROWS ... $24.99 ••
IZOD SHIRTS ...... s11.oo ... .
Reg.
$288
Re&.
$875
CRIB SHEETS ..... ss.1s ....
OPEN FRIDAY NIGHTS
TILL 7
'qnnnci.A
PRESTONSBURG
*
CURTAINS OR
Rec. $ 00
SWAG VALANCE .... . .... . $7.99 . .
4
2·PC. OUTFITS .... s11.so ....
Res. 79~
WASH CLOTHS ........ s2.oo
•
Rec.
$}300
JACKETS ......... S26.oo ..
SPREADS (Twin-Size) .. ~;~$19 50
CORDUROY
Reg.
$goo
SKIRTS AND JUMPERS $18.00 .....
Reg.
KNIFE SETS ......... $15.99 .
COURT STREET AND ARNOLD AVENUE
PRESTONSBURG, KY.
OPEN DAILY, 9:00 TO 5:00
$599
OFF
•
�'·
Wednesday, February 15, 1984
Section One, P age Fifteen ·
The Floyd County Times
• South Side Mall - So. Williamson
:;:
Mon.-Sat. 10 'til9, Sunday 1 'til6
;::
·-
15TH THRU MON., FEB. 20TH ~fi
•
~!
'•
1
PRESIDENTS DAYS S
4.88-15.88
orig. 9. 99-32.00
entire selection of
nten's and yourig nten's
winter sweaters
save 25%
special group of men's
fleece activewear by
Nike, Adidas, others
now 6. 74 to 21.74
reg. 8.99-28.99
ZJIII
Now Thru
Monday Only!
Take An
EXTRA
25%0FF
selected
Health-tex and
Carter's co-ords
fo.r children
2 88 9 88
3.48-6.88
3 99 16 99
6.99
reg. 8.99
Wrangler
.Jerseys
Football st yle jerseys
in soft poly/cotton
knit. In assorted
solids with t hreequarter sleeves.
S ,M,L,XL (8-18).
infants and toddlers,
orig. 5.50-19.25
boys' 4-7*,
orig. 7.00-13.00
girls' 4-14,
orig. 5. 99-25.99
•
•
•
•
•
Wednesday Thru Monday, Watson's
Cashiers Will Take An Extra 25% Off
The Above Redlined Sale Items.
outstanding
•
savtngs
on
fall and winter
junior jackets
12.88
all our missy
fall and winter
coats in
assorted style
. 19.88-39.88
orig. 68.00-138.00
orig. 44.00-75.00
Monte Carlo pillows
Fluffy bed pillows filled with non-allergenic Trevira8
polyeste r in a white on white poly/ cotton tick.
queen, reg. 12.00
king,
Sale Includes:
Men's Fashions
Men's Suits
Boys' Fashions
Children's Items
Girls' Fashions
reg. 10.00
•
*Health-tex only
ALREADY REDLINED SALE ITEMS
6.99 std.
reg. 14.00
Bates
Old Salem
heirloom cotton
bedspread in
antique or
snow white
29.99 any size
reg. 39.99
Sorry-No Layaways-Sales Final!
50%
save
Marsh Landing
classic junior
sportswear
Classic winter collect·
abies including shirts,
pants, sweaters,
5-13. Limited
quantities. Spring
styles not included.
orig. 10.0G-24.00
5.00-12.00
7•99
8.99
D.P. Pacer 200
exercise bike
to help you
shape up now
for spring
62.88
reg. 79:00
.
19.88
reg. 24.99
D.P. Challenger VII
barbell/ dum bell set
44.88
With 10 discs in 3 different sizes so you can select
the we ight you want . With 66N steel barbell bar
p lus two 18H dumbell bars and instruction
bookle t. 50 kilos (110 lbs .).
reg. 54.99
D.P. leg lift
incline bench
Featuring a unique leg lift/ curl a ttachment,
adjustable back with 4 inclined positions and flat
position fo r presses, vinyl cove red foa m padding
and flared rear legs for stability.
6.88
reg. 8.99
D.P. ankle/wrist weights
O ne pair of 2~ lb. each weights in heavy-duty
nylo n that fasten securely with self-adhesive
closures .
�WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO UMIT QUANTITIES. TO CORRECT ANY PRINTING ERRORS. FEDERAL FOOD STAMPS WELCOME.
•
\
Buy Georgethese are the
best food buys
around - Honest!
U.S.D.A. CHOI
RIB-HALF
Chac
Pork
Loi
11 OZ. ASSORTED
Banquet
D loners
e
·CHICKEN
•MtAnOA~
•SAUSBlJRY
.. •TURKEY
... . ... .. . ..
79f/;
ARMOUR$1
VERIBEST
LB.
Roa
SJBLADE
LB.
SLICED
FREE
CUT
FRESH & LEAN
~h':a';~~
FISCHER'S
12 OZ. PKG.
..... .LB.s I
:::ak. .. . ....LB.$2
U.S.D.A. CHOICE
69
Hot
Do
99
:::!v~~~. . . . . .LB.s I 99 9
139
FRESH AND LEAN
$
U .S.D.A. CHOICE
10 CT. SIX PACK ASSORTED
s1 ~
&\~:~~:!~
Shoulder Roast ............ . ... LB.
U.S.D.A. CHOICE
English Roast .
.
LB.
B~i~s~~~~~~~~~ .( ~.c~~ -~~~-~> ............... S 179
CLAUSSEN
THE CHILL
9
e
Dill Pickles ........ .P~!--.~ .. . ..... QT . 9
s139
ARMOUR VEIRBEST LOIN
HOLLY FARMS FRESH
1
p~~k L~~~~ ......... ...................... s 149 Fryer Thighs.. .. .. . ............... LB.
LB .
16 OZ. FISCHER MELLWOOD
Sliced Bacon......... .......................
s
,
1
s11,
FROZEN
Whiting Fish . ss2~89x ............ LB.59~
WHITE ALL PURPOSE
~:~~~.;!~~ . . $139
3
C
Bananas
99
Golden Ripe
lbs.
TARTJUICY
Honey
Tanserlnea
I
Strawberries
1
PT.si 39
.
6/99e
FRESH
ThoMpson's ·
White Seedless
Grapes ····LB.s l 19
FRESH CALIFORNIA
Broeeoll
suNcu99e
CRISP CALIFORNIA
~~!;,:!~~ . 49~
._f_,__B_A_K_E_-A_-_c_H_E_RR_Y-_P_IE_-_sA_L_E_I_..Jf
. 8169
20 OZ. THANK YOU REGULAR OR LITE
Cherry Pie Filling
. 79~
79~
11 OZ. BETTY CROCKER
Pie Crust Mix
2 COUNT PACKAGE PET RITZ REGULAR
Pie Shells .
26 OZ. PACKAGE MRS SMITH'S FROZEN
Cherry Pie ........ .
........... '199
. 89~
9 OZ. KRAFT · GREAT FOR DESSERTS
LaCreme Topping
3/'1
'169
······ .... '159
. .. .. . . '159
3 OZ. ASSORTED
15 OZ. ARMOUR
~~.\ !ans . . ....7 9f/;
1
TWO POUND BOWL REGULAR OR CORN OIL
SJ29
Shedd's Spread
•CHEDDAR
•MOZZA RFIIA
•COLBY
Shredded Cheese
SJ39
59~
8 OZ. BREAKSTONE
Sour Cream
12 OZ. LIGHT 'N LIVELY SMALL CURD
Cottage Cheese
2 POUNDS ORE IDA
ALSO · 20 OZ
CRISPf'RS
79~
SJ19
Ice Milk ... ..........~¢~~~~~-· -· · · ···· .... 99e
Pies .......... .
A_LSO. 16
HALF GALLON INDIAN SUMMER
Apple Juice ...... ..
Apple Sauce.... .. ...
15 OZ. CHEF BOY·AR-DEE
Ravioli Dinners
• MINCE
•PUMPKIN
• APPLE
•......
CHERRY
SIZ9
oz.-: <?RAPE NUTS
79~
•MINI
• CilFFSr
•B ~ H
32 OZ. UNCLE BEN'S
Converted Rice
175 COUNT ASSORTED
Kleenex Tissue
100 COUNt BOUTIQUE
. "' ...
80 COUNT GLAD
HALF-GAL. VIVA
26-0Z.
LLOYD J. HARRIS
18 OZ. HONEY NUT RAISIN BRAN OR
Post sugar Crisp
50 OZ. INDIAN SUMMER
8 OZ. COUNTY LINE
Hash Browns
Jello Gelatin ... .
Sandwich Bags . ...
NEW BREED
8 Lb. Dog Food
56 OZ. CHEF'S BLEND
Dry Cat Food ....
.'169
7
•
9~
. 69~
.. . . ...'4"
. . . . •2•
CRISP CALIFORNIA
l~~~:.~~
HEAD
49e
�~ednesday, February 15, 1984
AT
MUSIC-CARTER-HUGHES
STICKER PRICES ON DEMOS AND ALL OTHER '83 MODELS HAVE BEEN
REDUCED THOU$AND$ OF DOLLAR$!
SAVE ON:
*PARK AVENUES
*ELECTRA LIMITED * REGALS
*CENTURY *CELEBRITY *S-10 PICKUPS·AND
*FREE RUSTPROOFING ON ALL REDUCED MODELS-VALUE $17995
*FREE MECHANI.CAL INSURANCE, TOOl
"
.
COME IN TODA AND $AVE!!
e P'burg FFA Joins Nationwide Campaign
Sweetheart Special
The Kentucky Garden Journal
By Bonnie Lee Appleton
State Urban Garden & Home Horticulture Specialist
COOPERATIVE EXTENSION PROGRAM
KENTUCKY STATE UNIVERSITY
1984, 2 Bedroom, All Electric, Mobile Home
Payments of
•
Members of the Prestonsburg FFA Chapter are currently gearing up to join
nearly one-half million other FFA members across the country for the 1984
nationwide FFA public relations campaign.
This three-part campaign will culminate around the theme, Keeping
America on the Grow. The campaign's three components highlight newly
developed public service announcements featuring actor Eddie Albert, funded by the General Fund of the FFA; a National FFA Week celebration,
February 18-25, with the design, development and promotion funded by Estech,
Inc., and an annual theme show audio-visual, sponsored by The Wrangler
Brand. The purpose of the campaign is to solicit support for the Vocational
.
Agriculture and FFA program.
Chapter President, James Little, reports that the Prestonsburg FFA Chapter
is preparing to take the necessary steps to make the campaign a success. Little
also adds, "Our chapter is planning to hold a meeting and a 15-minute radio
program."
Shown above, from left to right, seated area Greg Prater, Dewey E.
Stephens, Danny Hitchcock, James Little, Steve Hopkins, and Mark Greene.
Standing, from left to right, are Rodney Ousley, Alan Moore, Keith Hackworth,
Junior Dotson ken Epperson, Arthur Stanley, Willus Slone, Tony Whita.ker,
Randall Slone: Konme Slone, and Paul Marsillett.
ADDED TO CHURCH
A Welcomed into the fellowship of Irene
~ole
Memorial (First) Baptist Church
last Sunday morning was Miss Randi
Lynn Polk, daughter of Mr. and Mrs .
Randy Polk.
The Pentagon is the world's largest office building. With an area of 6,500,000
square feet, the Pentagon has a Main
Street lined with shops, restaurants, a
bus depot and a post office.
Miss Shamrock
Beauty Pageant
Sunday, March 4
Allen Central High School
Eastern, Ky.
ENTRY DEADLINE-FEB. 25 ·
Age Divisions- 9 months to 2 yrs.
• 3 yrs. to 5 yrs. • 6 yrs. to 9 yrs.
10 yrs. to 13 yrs. • 14 yrs. to 17 yrs.
For more information, call
Pat Hall, 447-2155
2·
Are you prone to make New Year's
resolutions? You will go on a diet and
lose a bit of your bulging holiday cheer?
Well sure, if the food was going to
waste, it might as well go to your waist,
right? That's probably the most common New Year's resolution, but for
those of us who garden, be our thumbs
green or brown, may I propose a few
New Year's resolutions for the
gardener.
I will undertake a new gardening project in 1984 for the improvement of my
landscape, my environment or my community. <Does you town or county have
a community garden? Perhaps you
could help organize a place for cooperative growing and fellowship. )
I will be more considerate of my environment. I will work the soil when it
is ready, not merely at my convenience.
I will test the soil and fertilize only as
needed. I will view my water supply as
a preciollS limited resource and manage
its application more carefully.
I will learn the needs of the plants I
grow and live amongst. I will water, fertilize and harvest on their schedule, not
mine.
I will respect the beneficial inhabitats
of my garden- the "good" bugs, the
toads, the earthworms, the insect-eating
birds. I will learn to identify them and
avoid practices that will harm them.
I will select my plants carefully to
maximize yield and beauty and to minimize loss to cold, drought and pest
problems.
I will avoid polluting my environment.
I will use chemicals sparingly and on a
when-needed basis, be they fertilizers or
pesticides.
I will recycle whatever and whenever
possible. Weeds will be pulled when
young and composted. "Clean" _garden
and landscape debris will be composed.
Household throw-aways will be recycled~newspaper and old carpet for
mulch, milk jugs for hot caps, pantyhose
for garden ties.
I will share my gardening with a
friend by offering information or labor,
or by giving a bouquet of flowers or a
bag of beans.
I will enjoy my gardening activities
for the enrichment of my body and soul.
I will view a weed not as a nuisance to
pull but as future organic fertilizer. I will
view a bumper crop of beans or zucchini
not as hours of labor canning or freezing but as good-will to be shared with
those less fortunate.
I will take pride in my garden and my
state because 'my green thumb grows
in Kentucky.'
A Happy and Productive 1984 to All
Kentucky Gardeners!
Timely Tip: Have you heard the warning for years-poinsettias are poisonous? 'Well, now that Christmas is over,
go ahead andeatitifyou want, says Dr.
Shumach, of Auburn University.
Seriously, though not very palatable or
tasty, if a child eats a few colored leaves,
it won't be fatal.
Call
'14797
Larry Keene for O.faflsl
(606) 437-_4078
Doublewide Clearance!
Jenny Wiley No. 3528 AARP
To Have Dinner Meeting
We Will Not 8e Undersoldl
Jenny Wiley Chapter No. 3528 AARP
will hold its chapter meeting, Friday,
Feb. 24, 6 p.m., at the Episcopal Church,
Prestonsburg, with a covered dish dinner. The speaker will be Monroe Wicker,
Morehead, chairman of the AARPNRTA Legislative Committee. He will
bring us up-to-date on Legislative Action. Phone reservations to Mrs. Jean
Hickman 886-3078.
1984 24x44 Home
All Electric -
3 Bedrooms -
2 Baths • Completely Furnished!
'21 ,99500
"Buy Today And I Will Give You A FRrE Woodburning Fireplace"
CaiiLarryKQene
I
THURS. IS BUCK Nl
Feb. 17
(606} 437-4078
STRAND 11
ALL SEATS $1.00
Starts Fri., Feb. 17
lfigll Scbool
Honor Student
byct.y.
THIS ISTHESTORY
OF A SMALL TOWN
THAT LOSTITS DREAMS,
AND A BIG-CITY KID
WHO BROUGHT
THEM BACK.
~
is on his side.
Her- two worlds a re a bout to collide.
Jtls her ch o lc~. Her chance . Ht>r Ufe .
,t-.\\ \\ t*LI• I'tc.Tl ·tn.:-. ~"' \11\;\1' \I'I'U ~11_ \llll\11'\\\ l'r·~• ..
l,-..-\:--:1•\ 110\\.\HIII'f{("'' \
~ \(,t-. L '14rTIIUi l liH lollf<W\'\ "I'\\
I
I
J111\
•
J)t<l<t-.1.1. 1•11..)\"11 \ \\'\ kl•IH \ \Uitll "\
.u.dllo'l\q\\lli\E'll• .·\ n~o.'o·lf-. u,uu\0 J'J,• ...b.,r~\HI. I'J.\kl. .•uiiiii\IHI\
l'rtdkt--db. It(I\ \\ .\ri'-!U•IIlH\ \(.Ill' Hot<l..lll-. ~'
\\nl!rnb\ 1(()111-. ln \ l\\t.\111\t.ll. <\.. )lr-.t-.1'11 \1 \\1 \
\l\.lt-.\111\JJI
:\1-!~ \\(~-~ ~~~cn'R~~' R .:z:r~.~
l l,n ·li1.·MI\
I~OHHII
I
.
Showtlmes 7:15-9:30-Sunday Matinee Open 1:00 Start1:30 ~over 3:.1'5
�WedneMiay.
Febn~ary
15. 1984
.The
CONCLUDE VISIT
Mr. ano Mrs. Fred Sievers have
returned to their home in Evansville,
Ind., following a visit ,;f several days
here with father, Lennie M"":-o.
CHIU AND SOUP
DINNER
(SPECIAL SINGING)
MARCH 2
5 p.m. to 8 p.m.
rnt Clwcll of God
UnlwersJty Drive
Prestonsbura
2-1:>-Jtpd
Health Seminar Set
At PCC, February 21
Dr. Allen Halbert, Dr. Lowell D. Martin and Dr. Kamaljeet Vidwan will lead
a seminar at Prestonsburg Community
College, February 21. They will discuss
muscle pain and general health in both
adults and children.
Dr. Allan Halbert is in family practice
in Martin. He is a graduate of Berea, the
University of Louisville and completed
hil> residency in family practice at the
University of Kentucky. He is a member
of the American Board of Family Practice and is on the staff of Our Lady of the
Way HospitaL
Dr. Martin is a general practioner and
is also on the staff at Our Lady of the
Way Hospital. He is a University of
Louisville graduate, is married and has
two children. He has done a great deal
of work with black lung cases.
Dr. Vidwan is a pediatrician
associated with both the Paintsville
Hospital and Highlands Regional
Hospital. He is boar<.i · LC;:-tified in
pediatrics.
REVIVAL
HONORED ON BIRTHDAY
W.J . Wills was honored by his children
with a surprise birthday party, Saturday, February 11, at his home on the
Auxier Road.
Guests were Mr and Mrs. Wills,
Ashley and Jay, of Winston Salem, N.C.:
Mr. and Mrs. Curt Church of Thomasville, N.C.: Mr. and Mrs . Billy Wills, of
Marshall Mich.; Mr. and Mrs. Melvin
Wells, Jr.. Mr. and Mrs_Dennie Warrix,
Mr. and Mrs. Kent R. Dingus, Mr. and
Mrs. Dallas Sammons, Mrs . Lula
Wallen, Mrs. Willia Mae Branham, all
of Prestonsburg; Goldie Calhoun, of
Water Gap ; Hammie Warrix, of Hager
Hill, Mr. and Mrs. Donald Stroder and
Megan, Mr. and Mrs. Howard Church,
Sunny Dawn Church, Mr. and Mrs . Doug
Floyd and Jonathon, all of Thomasville,
N.C.; Doug Wills, of Auxier; Lois Kazee,
Elvan and Ethel Sammons, and Mr. and
Mrs. Benton Ousley, all of Prestonsburg ; Steve Crump, of Louisville, and
Mary Lou Lavender, of Paintsville.
SINGING AND
PREACHING
SALISBURY
METHODIST CHURCH
Feb. 18 at 7 p.m.
EMMANUEL BAPTIST CHURCH
DWALE, KY.
FRIDAY, FEBURARY 17 THRU FEB. 19
with Rev. Green Boyd,
The Born Free Singers
and Rita and Rick
7 p.m. Nightly
EVERYONE WELCOME.
Guest speaker, Joe Wells, from Midwest Baptist
College, Pontiac, Michigan.
The Redemptions
will be at the
North Lake Drive
Church School 10:00 a.m.
Morning Worship 11:15 a.m.
SUNDAY, FEBRUARY19
Starting at 7:00 p.m.
EVERYONE WELCOME
2-IH t
FIRST ASSEMBLY
OF GOD
West PrestoiiSIMrg, Ky.
'
WADE MARTIN HUGHES
Pastor
Sunday School .
. .. 9:45a .m
Morning Worship .
11 a .m.
Evening Worship _
7p.m .
Wednesday Prayer Study 7 p.m .
12-14-_tf.
Southern
B1ptlst
I
4-t,~F
.-
I
·.
FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH
McDowell, Ky.
Sunday School. . .. _. 9·45 a .m.
.... 11 a .m.
Morning Worship
Evening Worship ......... 7 p.m .
Wednesday
Prayer Meeting _. . . 7 p.m .
H. Bailey Sadler. Pastor
Visitors Expected
Hl·tf
Location:
Prestonsburg
Christian Acaaemy
Riverside Drive
Prestonsburg, Ky.
Everyone Welcome
Pastor Rev. D. Curry
FlnPATRICK
FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH
With-
Anchorman Quartet, from Ashland, Ky.
Deliverance, True Believers
EVERYONE WELCOME!
WEYMAN McGUIRE, Pastor
R.R. #5
ll.
I
West Prestonsburg. Ky.
Across From Cla rk School
Sunday School
. 10:00 a.m .
Morning Worship .
. . 11 a.m.
Sun . Eve ning Worship .6: 00p.m .
<except when school 1s out l 7: 00 p .m .
Wed . Bible Study
7: 00p.m .
Youth Church for ages 5-10
during Sunday Morning Worship
•NURSERY PROVIDED•
REV. JOHN WOODS. Pastor
REVIVAL
S ERVICES
Sunday S.hool . . .
. .••..•. 18 :00 a .m.
! Classes for all ages I
Sunday Mor ning Worship Srrvlc~ . ll :00 a.m .
Sunday Evening Srrvlre .
. .... 7: 10p.m.
Wednesday- Pray~r and Blbl~ Study7: 10 p.m .
'
Beginning
Sunday, February 26
~\f.G.
e:,'\'fl.~
-tOG~
PHIUPPIANS 2: 16
"HOLDING t'ORT H T HE WORD OF.
I.IFE .. :·
Dan Heintzelman-Pastor
Box 1150. Martin. Ky. 41649
Parsonage Phone·28S-:W44
··A Christ Centered Church
Built On Lovt>"
ACTS 2:1-47
SAL£
It C~
PRESTONSBURG
rf.tc/f
CHURCH
OF CHRIST
SOUTH LAKE DRIVE
LORD'S DAY
BIBLE CLASS .... .. .. . ............. 10:00 A.M.
WORSHIP ..............•.......... 10:45 A.M.
EVENING WORSHIP . .. .......... 6 P.M. STD. TIME
7 P.M. D.S.T. TIME
WEDNESDAY
BIBLE STUDY .......................... 7 P.M.
at 7 p.m.
Evangelist, Dick Vanhoose
Special singing every night
REV. CLIFFORD AUSTIN, Pastor
2-15-21.
SPECIAL SINGING
SERVICE
AUXIER FREE WILL
BAPTIST CHURCH
SATURDAY, FEB. 18
Sunday School. ... . . .. 10 a .m.
Morning Worship . . 11 a.m .
Evening Worship .
7 p.m.
Wednesday Worship . . . . 7 p.m .
Taylor L. Biggs, Pastor
Phone: 886-11087
SUNDAY
Sunday School .. . ..... . . . 10 a.m.
Worship Service .... . .... 11 a .m.
Evening Service .......... 6 p.m.
WEDNESDAY
Prayer Meeting . . ....... 7 p.m.
CLIFFORD H. AUSTIN, Pastor
ZION
DELIVERANCE
TABERNACLE
~ .~..--
FIRST
UNITED
METHODIST
CHURCH
eo So. Arnold Ave .• Prlltonsburg
Dr. Ted Nicholas, Minister
Sunday School ...... .. .. 9:45
Morning Worship .... .. 11:00
Junior and Senior UMYF2:30
Rhythmic Choir .. ... ... . 4:30
Wesley Bell Choir ....... 5:15
Evening Service . . ...... 7:00
WAYLAND, KENTUCKY
Sunday School 11 a .m.
Evening Worship 7 p.m.
Wednesday Prayer Service 7 p.m .
Saturday Evening Worship 7 p.m.
Ada Mosley, Pastor
Everyone Welcome.
A CHRISTIAN WELCOME
AWAITS YOU.
All The EarUI Shall Worthlp Tbee. 12: 14-tf.
SUN., WDOC AM-11:00 · EPISCOPAL
~
COME
WORSHIP
WITH US
\v
The First Church of God
Uniwenity Dr., PrestHsMr&, llJ.
KEVIN COLLINS. Pastor
AT
CHURCH_
fll.jam66
SUNDAY:
Sunday School . .
Morning Worship
Evening Service
TUESDAY:
Prayer Encounter
WEDNESDAY: ·
Prayer Service
~
CEPISCOPAU
PRESTONSBURG. KENTUCKY 41653
Still BUS
t.45 •.•. - Cillrcl
Sclllll 1111 li..t Cl•s
11 u .-JIIIy C..lllliN
.9:45p.m .
10:45 a .m .
.6:00 p.m .
I•
.7: 00a.m .
. 7: 00p.m .
WDOC-AM
2:00p.m. Sundays
CATHOLIC CHURCHES
Of Floyd County
Welcome You
CHURCH
St. Theodore, Prestonsburg
7 p.m .. Sat : 11 a .m. Sun .
St. Juliana . Martin
5 p.m. Sat.: 9 a .m . Sun.
RADIO PROGRAMS
A church with a message
for children of all ages.
Sunday School.;.
9:45a .m .
Morning Worshrp
11 a .m .
<Nursery Provided l
Sun.-WMDJ Marlin
ll :Ui a.m
Sun.-WDOC-FM Prestonsburg 11 :oo a.m .
Wed - WDOC Prestonsburg .
10:55 am.
Fri.- WRLV Salyer.;viUe
7:50a.m.
Come and grow with us!
Pastor: Father Ralph Beiting
285-3254
WEYMAN McGUIRE. Pastor
:lSR-4419
!E VE R YONE IS ALWAYS WE J.C"OME!
:t\\U TO BE LIKE TH£ JERIJ.
HIGHLAND AVENUE
FREE WILL BAPTIST CHURCH
PROCLAIMING .
NEW TESTAMENT
CHRISTIANITY
MAYTOWN
UNITED
METHODIST
CHURCH
The growing church for
the growing Christian.
FIRST CHRISTIAN CHURCH
429 No. Arnold Avt>.
Prestonsburg
Morning Worship .... 9:30 a.m.
Sunday School . ...... 11:00 a.m.
Youth Group .... . ..... .5:00p.m.
Evening Worship ....... 6:30p.m .
Sunday School
Morning Wor ship
Evening Worship
Wed. Bible Study .
Com e and g row with us!
Weyman McGuire, Pastor
358-4419
._____...,.____.+_t..
. 10 a. m.
. . . 11 a .m.
6 p.m.
. . . 7 p.m.
Walt Staude. Preacht>r
886-8773
---------·0-2-8-t..f
f ... : . . .
FIRST ASSEMBLY OF GOD
Lorie Vannucci, Pastor
Phone 285-3051
Martin, Ky.
"Come Let Us Reason Together" Isaiah 1:18
Evangelist Bennie Blankenship 886-3379, 886-6223
Sunday S~ool. ... . ..... _.10 a.m .
Childreu's Church
. _ .. 11 a.m .
Morning Worship . . . _.. 11 a .m .
Youth Worship .. . .. ........ .6p .m .
Evangelistic Service .. _.... .. 7 p.m .
Wednesday, 7 p.m . ... Family Night
LOOKING FOR SOMETHING DIFFERENT?
[1]
No Book but the Bible .
No Creed but Christ.
No Name but Christian .
RADIO BROADCAST
WPRT MONDAY thru FRIDAY 9:30A.M.
WMDJ SUNDAY 9 A.M.
Attend Services At The
FIRST CHURCH OF GOD
For Transportation call 285-3051 or 285-9114
(Little Paint) lf2 mile off Route 1428
Between Prestonsburg & East Point, Where
"THE DIFFERENCE IS WORTH THE DISTANCE"
SUNDAY SCHOOL . ...... 10:00 a.m .
MORNING WORSHIP . . . Hl :.t.'\ a .m .
YOUTH SERVICE ........ fi :OO p.m.
EVENING WORSHIP ..... fi::IOp.m.
RIBLE STUDY <WED. l. . . 7:00p.m.
6 P.M.
ALL SINGERS WELCOME.
<NURSERY PROVIDED>
REFRESHMENTS WILL BE SERVED
IN THE: FELLOWSHIP HALL
EVERYONE WELCOME.
~putlcck Bib~ e~utc~
Prestonsburg, Kentucky 41653
Spurlock Fork of Middle Creek
7:00 p.m.
Highland Avenue
Freewill Baptist
Church
METHODIST
-
-~
2+3t.:l!!!:
Saturday, February 18
"The Church Where Exciting
Things Are Happening"
Pastor
WAYLAND
UNITED
886-1688
WAYLAND UNITED
METHODIST CHURCH
SUNDAY SCHOOL
EVERYONE WELCOME
For mor e information
GOSPEL.SINGING
710 l.tle Ave.,
Prtstllllllui'J, Ky.
10:45 A.M.
Sponsored by Rock of
Revelation Church
Wayland, Ky.
CHURCH
8:30A.M.
REV. TIMOTHY D. JESSEN
Pastor
I
Each Thursday Evening 7 p.m.
Teaching by Rev. Mike Manual
METHODIST
WORSHIP
II
I Cor. Chapters 12, 13, and 14
Zion Deliverance Church
First Presbyterian Ch rch
Pastor, Elder Douglas Burkett
Asst. Pastor Clyde Bowling
Special Teaching Classes
on :
Baptism of Holy Ghost
Spiritual Gifts
COMMUNITY
UNITED
To the
Sunday School ... 10:00 a.m.
Morning Worship .... 11 a .m.
Evening Worship .. 6:00p.m.
Prayer Meeting
·Thursday ..... .. 6:30p.m.
AnENTIONI
Everyone Welcome.
You Are Invited
Auxier Freewill
Baptist Church
at the
At the
•
Section Two, Paae Two
RADIO BROADCAST
WQHY-FM 95.5
MON .-FRI., 8-8 : 15 A.M.
ROY L. TJJ',;CHJo: R. Pasto r
Bible Study • • . 9:45 a.m.
Morn1ng WoJShip. . .11 a.m.
Enning Worship 5:30 p.m.
Mid·Week Pr1ytr Service7 p.m.
FIRST AVENUE, DOWNTOWN PRESTONSBURG
· NURSERY PROVIDED OD Pl£N1Y OF PUKING
REV. SltVE HOPKINS, PASTOR. MttiiSTEROF MUSIC, GUS KALOS.
Mor ning
service broadcast
live•, II : 15. WQH Y F M 95.5
�Section Two, Page Three
The Floyd County Times
Wednesday, February 15, 1984
.
.
...
69
$
PEPSI, DIET PEPSI,
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GALA
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~;J
5-LB. BAG
GOLD MEDAL
~FLOU"R
BUmRMILK OR
99
$239
c f[~~~ . . . .sl
F-ij\l
~~~~sc~~ON
ORANGE
JUICE.......
\~ 25-LB. BAG
48-0Z. JAR
89
c
99
BREAD ..........
$
~6f;rEs~~2/79c
39
1
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~~PILLSBURY $12 9
BISCUITS ".
CRISCO
SHORTENING
15-0Z.-COLE
GARLIC
6-PAK
4-ROLL
CORONET
BATH TISSUE....
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BUNCH
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WIENERS .............. "''· 99
FISCHER'S
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1 Lb
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99 C
89 C
SAUSAGE .............. i ..,·
WILSON'S CORN KING
CHUNK BOLOGNA .... .. .
Lb.
OFISCHER'S
$17 9
FiscHER·s WHOLE BONELESS
$
MELLWOOD BACON ~~-
FESTIVAL HAM..........
U.S.D.A. CHOICE BONELESS
&9
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RUMP ROAST . .. . .. .. ... .
U.S.D.A. CHOICE BONELESS
ROUND STEAK.. . .. .. .. ..
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FREE QUALITY STAMPS
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,,.,..~~ FREE
1-16-0Z. BOX
JACK INSTANT POTA
2-16-0Z. BOXES
ZEST A SALTINES
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GRADE A LARGE EGGS
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DAY!!
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DEBBIE'S CAKES
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WITH THIS COUPON AND PURCHASE Of
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WEDNESDAl
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MP
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l
CALIFORNIA
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CAULIFLOWER ..$1
4
!Ao ~~
�Wednesday, February 15, 1984
NOTICE OF
BLASTING SCHEDULE
Name of Company, Minnie Development Corp., Address 1111 River Side
Drive, Prestonsburg, Ky. 41653, Application No. 836-0075.
MINE LOCATION
Located on Sizemore Branch near intersection of state Route 1088 & 122.
Latitude 'R" 28' 30" ,longitude 82" 45' 24".
Daily Blasting Schedule will be as
follows: Monday thru Saturday from
10:00 a.m. to 12:00 noon and from 3:00
p.m. to 5:00p.m.
The roadway will be barricaded and
signs will be placed on the roads going
to the blasting area.
There will be 2 short and 1 long burst
with a siren when the shot is ready to
fire.
All clear signal shall be a prolonged
siren blast.
In emergency situations where rain,
lightning and other atmospheric conditions, or operator or public· safety requires unscheduled detonation, notification will be made as required by State
and Federal agencies. All residents
within a 12 mile radius of the blasting
area shall receive a copy of this notice
before any detonation occurs. State and
Federal agencies shall be notified before
detonation occurs.
lt.
NOTICE OF
INTENTION TO MINE
Pursuant to Application
Number 836-5028
In accordance with the provisions of
KRS 350.055, notice is hereby given that
Powell Branch Coal Company, P.O.
Drawer 367, Harold, Ky., has filed an application for a permit for a underground
mining operation. The proposed operation will affect a surface disturbance of
10.28 acres located 1.2 mile southwest of
Tram in Floyd county. The mine will
underlie an additional 198.49 acres
located 1,2 mile southwest from KY 80
junction with Tram Bridge and located
12 miles southwest of Tram. The latitude
is 37' 33' 55". The longitude is 82" 38' 55".
The proposed operation is located on
the Harold U.S.G.S. 7h minute quadrangle map. The surface area to be disturbed is owned by Emmett Lawson and
G.C. Blair. The operation will underlie
land owned by Emmett Lawson, S
Thurman Harvel, and G.C. Blair.
The application has been filed for
public inspection at the Department for
Surface Mining Reclamation and
Enforcement's Prestonsburg Regional
Office, Prestonsburg, Ky. 41653. Written
comments, objections, or requests for a
permit conference must be filed with the
Director of the Division of Permits, 6th
Floor, Capital Plaza Tower, Frankfort,
Kentucky 40601.
2-15-3t.
•
The Floyd County Times
PUBLIC NOTICE
An application for a place of entertainment license has been filed by Jeff
Mullins and Archer D. Boyd, of Stanville, Kentucky 41659. The nature of the
business will be a restaurant and serve
beer by drink.
The County Attorney's Office is required to file a written report to the
County Judge Executive's office reflec- ,
ting if the person applying is "not of good .
moral character or who will not, in the
judgment of the Court, <County Judge
Executive) obey the laws of the state in'
the carrying on of the business".
Any interested citizen having information relative to said applicant's lack of
"good moral character" or willingness
to obey the laws of the state in the carrying on of the business is requested to
file the same in writing, with the County Attorney's office. Said written information shall be signed, dated, and
reflect the current address of said
citizen, and must be delivered to the
County Attorney's office no later than
the 23rd day of February, 1984.
ARNOLD TURNER, JR.
Floyd County Attorney
2-15-2t.
Surprise Drill Tests Response
PRE-SPRING SAL.E!
Super ~avings o
SINGER*
~ ~
•
1
NOTICE
Under the Land and Water Conservation Fund Act of 1965 <Public Law
88-578 l, citizens are afforded the opportunity to express their views concerning
the recreational needs of their community. To provide a forum for discussion, an
open meeting is being held on February
'n, 1984, at 6:00p.m . at City Hall Meeting
Room, in Prestonsburg sponsored by
Prestonsburg City Council. The specific
purpose of this meeting is to discuss funding for renovation of Archer Park.
Anyone with a significant supporting
or opposing view is invited to voice that
opinion at this meeting or in writing to:
Land and Water Conservation Fund Program, Department of Local Government, 2nd Floor, Capital Plaza Tower,
Frankfort, Kentucky 40601 within two
weeks of the date of the meeting.
2-15-2t.
MASTER COMMISSIONER'S
SALE
FLOYD CIRCUIT COURT
82-CI-823
Grayson financial Services, Inc .. Pif.
VS: NOTICE OF SALE
Leslie Trucking Company, Inc. and
Branham & Baker Coal Company, Inc.
................................................ Defts.
By virtue of a judgment and order of
sale of the Floyd Circuit Court rendered
at the January 13 term, 1984, in the
above-styled cause I shall proceed to offer for sale at the equipment lot located
at Harold, Kentucky, adjacent to The
Bank Josephine Branch on U.S. 23, to the
NOTICE OF
highest and best bidder, at public aucINTENTION TO MINE
tion, on the 1st day of March, 1984, at
Pursuant to Application
10:30 o'clock a .m ., same being a day of
Number 436-0123
the regular term of the Floyd Circuit
( 1l In accordance with the provisions
Court, for cash or the purchaser shall
of KRS 350.055, notice is hereby given
pay 10% of the purchase price in cash,
that Omni Natural Resources, Inc., Rt.
cashier's check or certified check on the
6, Box 11-G, Manchester, Kentucky,
day of sale and may fill bond for there40962, has filed an application for a permainder of the purchase price due and
mit for a surface coal mining and
payable six (6 ) months from the date of
reclamation of approximately 16.2 acres
sale, the following described equipment:
located 1 mile northeast of Hippo in
1 Joy llRU Cutter 2-613 Mach. No.
Floyd county.
17221 ; 1 Joy 6SC Shuttle Car 6S C 5PF-2
(2) The proposed operation is approxSIN FT 5666 ; 1 Joy Loader; 1 Galis 300
imately 11 2 miles north from state Route
Roof Bolter; 1 Power Center; 1 Porter
850's junction with Prater Fork County
Wagon Drill; 1 Click 6' Fan; 1 Switch
Road and located at the head of Prater
Box.
Fork of Brush Creek. The latitude is 37'
The amount of money to be raised by
32' 27". The longitude is 82" 50' 48" . The
this sale shall be in the principal sum of
surface area is owned by Morton Allen
$121,676.16 with interest thereon @ 12%
heirs (mining and haul road) and
annually from the 13 day of January,
Gladys S. Allen, Akfred G. Allen, Volney
1984 until satisfied and the costs of this
Allen and Denneth F . Allen (haul road
action, including costs of advertising of
only).
this sale and the fees and commissions
(3) The proposed operation is located
for con(lucting this sale
on the Martin U.S.G.S. 71.-2 minute quadFor the purchase price the purchaser
rangle map. The operation will use the
must execute bond with approved sure·contour and auger method of mining. . ty or sureties, bearing legal interest
The application also includes a proposfrom the day of sale until paid and haved land use change from the
ing the force the effect of a judgment
undeveloped land premining land use to
with a lien retained upon saiu property
a hayland or pasture post-mining land
as a further security. Bidders will be
use.
prepared to comply with these terms.
(4) The application has been filed for
Given under my hand, this 2nd day of
public inspection at the Department for
February, 1984.
Surface Mining Reclamation and
MARSHALL DAVIDSON
Enforcement's Prestonsburg Regional
Master Commissioner
Office, 431 South Lake Drive, Prestons2-15-3t.
burg, Kentucky 41653. Written comments, objections, or requests for a permit conference must be filed with the
Director of the Division of Permits, 6th
NOTICE OF
Floor, Capital Plaza Tower, Frankfort,
INTENTION
TO MINE
Kentucky 40601.
2-15-3t.
Pursuant to Application
Number 836-0088
1. In accordance with the provisions
NOTICE OF
of KRS 350.055, notice is hereby given
BLASTING SCHEDULE
that Rita Daniels, Minnie, Ky. , has filName of Company, Lucky Collett, Ad- ed an application for a permit f()r a surdress Route 2, Box 60, Garnett, Ky. face coal mining and reclamation opera41630, Application N&. ~·
tion of approximately 2 acres located
1.00 miles west Q.tFrasure Br. School in
MINE LOCATION
Located on Muddy Branch near Mar- Floyd county...-2. The proposed operation is approxtin, Ky. Latitude 'R' 34' 10", longitude 82"
46' 35".
imately 1.2 miles northwest from Ky. 680
Daily Blasting Schedule will be as junction with Ky. 979 and located 1.00
follows: Monday thru Saturday from miles west of Mud Creek. The latitude
10:00 a.m. to 12:00 noon and from 3:00 is 37" 28' 35". The longitude is 82" 40' 19".
p.m. to 5:00p.m.
The surface area is owned by Grille
The roadway will be barricaded and Newsome.
signs will be placed on the roads going
3. The proposed operation is located on
to the blasting area.
the McDowell U.S. G .S. 7.5 minute quadThere will be 2 short and 1 long burst rangle map. The operation will use the
with a siren when the shot is ready to contour method of mining.
4. The application has been filed for
fire.
All clear signal shall be a prolonged public inspection at the Department for
siren blast.
Surface Mining Reclamation and EnIn emergency situations where rain, forcement's Prestonsburg Regional Oflightning and other atmospheric condi- fice, Prestonsburg, Ky. Written comtions, or operator or public safety re- ments, objections, or requests for a perquires unscheduled detonation, notifica- mit conference must be filed with the
tion will be made as required by State Regional Administrator of the Prestonsand Federal agencies. All residents burg Regional Office, Prestonsburg, Ky.
within a 112 mile radius of the blasting
5. This is the final advertisement of
area shall receive a copy of this notice this application; all comments, objec·
before any detonation occurs. State and
lions, or requests for a permit conFederal agencies shall be notified before ference must be received within thirty
(30) days ot ~..;day's date.
lt.
detonation occurs.
lt.
Deluxe Free-Arm
Machine Model 6136
14 built-in stitches • Solid state
speed control maintains an even
speed over heavy seams • Built-in
SAVE$10
<Photo by Ronnie Burke)
A member of Prestonsburg's emergency dive ~earn probes the murky
waters of Middle Creek.
Mock disaster exercises and drills have become a regular part of
preparedness training for various emergency response groups, but the one
staged Sunday at Archer Park here to test Prestonsburg personnel was
somewhat different.
Unlike other such exercises, Sunday's came as a complete surprise to
most of the participants. In fact, only Fire Chief Tom Blackburn and a couple of other firemen knew anything about it.
"It was kind of out of the ordinary, " said Blackburn, " but it's really the only way to get an accurate picture of the ability of the men."
With the scenario arranged by Blackburn, a call went out at 12:16 p.m. ,
Sunday that an explosion had occurred at Archer Park, a car with an injured
occupant was visible, and there was a reported drowning. "Since no one had
been told of the drill, an emergency really existed as far as anyone knew,"
Blackburn explained.
Response of emergency personnel could hardly have been better. At 12:17
the first fireman arrived, at 12:18 the first police car. A minute later the fire
deparbnent's truck No. 5 pulled in. "Between 12:19 and 12:22 13 trained
workers were on the scene," Blackburn commented. The city's emergency
Squad 6 arrived at 12:26, a detachment of the Floyd County Emergency &
Rescue Squad at 12:28, and city gas and water personnel at 12:29. By 12:34
members of the police and fire department's dive team (a unit almost unique among the state's smaller cities) were in the frigid waters of Middle
Creek.
When units arrived they found an old car on fire, and smoke was issuing
from the racquetball court at the park. The men soon discovered that the
situation was, indeed, a drill, but the "emergency" was soon in hand.
BIRTH ANNOUNCEMENT
Tee and Sharon Watkins, of Little
Paint, announce the birth of a daughter,
Telah Kay, Sunday, February 5, at
Methodist Hospital, Pikeville. Maternal
grandparents are Russell and Malta
Rice, of Little Paint, and paternal
grandparents are Oscar and Dorthy
Watkins, of Jellico, Tennessee.
ANNOUNCE BIRTH
Dr. and Mrs. Carl E. Wright, of Redwood City, Ca., announce the birth of a
daughter, Amy Akiko, recently in California . Amy is Mr. and Mrs. Wright's second daughter and the grandparents are
Mr. and Mrs . Frank Bennett, of Prestonsburg and Mrs . Tamiyo Kinoshita, of
Kobe, Japan.
Flip &Sew•
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25 stitches including speed baste
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CUSTOM DRAPES By Carole Fabrics, SPREADS
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BIG SPRING CARPET SALE!
• WE SPECIALIZE IN COLOR COORDINATING YOUR CARPET,
WALLPAPER AND DRAPERY.
• SHOP FROM 9 TO 5, WEEKDAYS, OR CALL FOR AN
APPOINTMENT: 886·6219
SOUTH LAKE DRIVE • PRESTONSBURG
LOCATED NEXT TO RUSSELL MAY ART GALLERY
(606) 886-6219
FOR SALE
RATLIFF & LENOX REAL ESTATE
WE HAVE HOMES-BOTH BRICK AND FRAME-THAT WILL
QUALIFY FOR THE NEW FLOYD-JOHNSON COUNTY BOND
MONEY. WE ALSO HAVE LO~WOODED, SECLUDED AND
CLOSE TO TOWN-AND WE WILL HELP YOU WITH
PRELIMINARY PLANNING. CALL FOF FURTHER INFORMATION.
Farm-A quiet and secluded farm on a blacktop road . Just the place to
relax after a hard day's work on 78 acres. Buildings include 2-3 bedrooms, living room, kitchen and bathroom and best of all-FREE GAS.
The smaller houses are unimproved but could be brought into shape.
The barn is large enough to take care of any horses or cattle you might
want to keep. Good gardening area and plenty of developing timber. If
you would like to get away from it all, but be 5 minutes from four-lane ..
call us for an appointment. Better hurry-this type of property doesn't
last.
Neat three-bedroom starter home that is an extra special opportunity if
you qualify for Farmers Home Financing. Living room, kitchen-dining.
three bedrooms: with masonite siding, shingle roof and concrete
driveway. City water and sewer. Located at David.
Almost new brick ranch with carport on a country size lot close to four
. lane 80. There is a large living room with picture window, kitchenfamily area with utility room, three bedrooms. one and one half baths,
low gas rates and city water is available. This home has been well cared
for and FLqYD <;.'OUNTl' BOND MONEY financing is available.
Two story home in Martin on big creekbank lot-room for garden. Living room with fireplace, dining room. den, eat-in kitchen, utility room.
three bedrooms, 21 2 baths. Partial basement. Forced air furnace, concrete block double garage, downtown location. Great family home.
·one of the largest and most beautifully built and decorated homes it has
been our pleasure to ofrer this year. Built of white stone <brick l from.
North Carolina, with privacy <10 acres> . yet within three miles of
Prestonsburg. Approximately 3200-sq. ft. of living space. plus oversize
garage of 750-sq. ft. and 100' patio in rear give great spread-out room for
family or parties. Space for pool if desired. Old bond R 7/R% partial
:assumable mortgage available. Shown by appointment.
Owner transferred . Bruncy-built ranch home on Abbott Creek with
oversize lot and special decorating. Entr.v foyer. long living-dining
room with sliders to patio and above-ground pool. equipped kitchen with
GE appliances. an abundance of cabinets and counter space and an eatin area. Family room panelled, with woodburning fireplace, three
bedrooms. two full baths. and an attached two-car garage. Storage
building to sta_v. Lovel.v area of well-kept homes. Old R 7/R% bond
mone.v assumable loan available.
Charming three-bedroom, two-story home with front porch, two baths,
kitchen with appliances and a fireplace in the living room. Remodeled,
with new carpeting and wallpaper, washer and dryer and window airconditioner to stay. Outside storage building with utilities.
Prestonsburg city water and gas. Located just below Sugarloaf on a
tree-shaded lot.
Modified A-frame with wrap-around deck: lots of windows and light, 2,
beautiful stone fireplaces, one is two-storv height. Fo.ver. li\'ing-diningkitchen <great room> area. three bedrooms, plus lower le\'el rec room
and unfinished basement <utility, storage. workshop areal . Central
heat and air. Good buy with Floyd Count~· Bond money financing
available. Adjoining lot could be added. Owner financing also possible.
New brick home ready for occupanc~' in a lovel~· area just outside
Prestonsburg. Front porch, living room with picture window and fireplace wall, dining room, eat-in kitchen with GE appliances. slid~rs _to
patio, master bedroom suite. two other bedrooms, two ceramiC tile
baths, utility area and two-c:ar garage. Central heat and air, fully insulated for energy efficiency. The fireplace has blowers and the roof is
pitched steep with pull-down stairway for extra overhead storage. Cit~·
water, cable T\'. Value priced . Flovd ('ount.v Hond 1\lone~· or let us help
with financing .
Small frame three-bedroom starter or retirement home in a real country setting. Present owners have given this four year old home excellent
care, thermopane windows, fully insulated, back patio. Possible
Farmers Home Administration fif'!ancing. Priced und~r $40,~.00.
Un Daniels Creek we have a modular on 260 front feet, wedge shaped to
the top of the hill. Extra ins.ulation and double-pane windows and a fireplace in the family room make this three-bedroom, two-bath home with
beamed cathedral ceiling in living and dining room a real energy saver.
Special General Electric kitchen with side-by-side refrigerator, selfclean range, pot scnabber dishwasher, compactor and disposal, is open
to panelled family room. Central heat and air, deck area, utility
building to stay.
Buffalo Creek acreage-approximately one acre of bottom land·fs included in this twelve-acre tract near Pike Co. line:Located on blacktop road
and priced to s,ell.
Three-bedroom older home at an affordable price in Paintsville. Living
room. family room. kitchen dining combined, newer roof, new furnace
last year. Three-room apartment in back. Priced to sell at $45.000.
Close to Prestonsburg we have a 1~ x 70 Windsor mobile on a veri
private lot with garden area :o~i ~ty of parking. Living room with
skylights, wood-burning t:•~(\~V oom with built-in buffet, equipped kitchen with applianct:
asher-dryer to stay. Two bedrooms
and an extra unfinished an ..,n, carport and a storage building. make
.this a very good buy at $20,000..
N ..
We again have Kentucky Housing money available for new homes in'
Jenkins. Old-time interest rates for a few lucky buyers. Call for details."
Commercial Prestof!sburg lot contaiAing approximate1y one level acn
at intersection of Porter and University Drive. Adjoining Highland
Plaza Shopping Center. ExceUent location in a growing and busy area.
Two lots on May's Branch in Village Estates. City utUities; our contractor, your plans.
High. dry building ground within walking distance to hospl"l. C...W be
two home sites or professional or business office. 112' f~t xlSI' deep.
City water available.
Rarely available-wooded, secluded lots witla acreage; also IOta with-.,
acreage. May Branch, Prestonsburg locatioll.
REDUCED
Brick home-three bedrooms, two baths, tull basement. t;q-.apped k}t-.
chen, nice carpeting. Deck with built-in seating, central beat ana ••
Two-c:ar garage. Professionally landscaped lot is 100'x20t'. Terrific
space for the money.
A-frame for rent or lease purchase. Call for details .
We will help you sell what yoll hhe to sell-and try to find wbat yoa
want to buy. Apprai.-ls and counseling. You may be seUing too low an•
buying too hlgh.
OFFICE PHONE: 8"-'138
We Invite You To Call Us.
Office Hours: 9 a.m.-3:30 p.m. or By Appointment
PltYWS RATUFF LENOX, Real Estate Broker
Phone 886-8689 after 7 p.m.
WAYNE W. RATLIFF, JR., Salesman, Phone: Home 874-2720 Wter 6 p.m.
JOYCE LYNN BLACKBl!RN, Sales Representative, Day 1-478-9450
ALTA JEAN GIBSON, Slles Representative, Phone 285-3797
VIRCil. 0. TURNER, Sales Representative, Phone 432-3367 after 4 p.m.
CUS KAU!S, Slles Representative, Phone 1-789-1707 after 6
UNDA UNOX, Sales Representative, Phone 816-8689
JEWEL REED, Slles Representative, Phone 297-6424
CAROL McCARTY, Sales Representative, Phone 297-3168
•
�•
Wednesday, February 15, 1984
Me 0
•
Section Two, Page Five
The Floyd County Times
AP AL
EGIONAL HOSPITAL
• Appalachian Regional Hospital is a not for profit health care system with hospital, primary care centers and other related facilities and services in
Hazard, Whitesburg, Harlan, Middlesboro, West Liberty, McDowell, and ~outh Williamson, In Kentucky; Beckley and Man in West Virginia; and Wise, VIrginia.
• McDowell Appalachian Regional Hospital Is fully accredited by the Joint Commission on Accreditation of Hospitals.
McDOWELL APPALACHIAN REGIONAL HOSPITAL-BIG ENOUGH TO HELP, AND SMALL ENOUGH TO CARE.
PREPARING TO FLY A PATIENT TO
JEWI~H HOSPITAL
• McDoweli ARH is one of the 10 Appalachian Regional Hospitals
located throughout Appalachia. As
part of a systc:--, they maintain state
of the art equipment and expert staff
in every field of health care from administration to surgery.
• This 60 bed, acute care facility,
located on Route 123 in Floyd Co.,
McDowell, Kentucky has served
e
Medical Laboratory, radiologic, and pharmacy services are maintained with the
most technically advanced equipment.
These are provided 2.4 hours a day, 365
days a year. Staffing in these departments
includes a radiologist, pathologist, 3
registered pharmacists and 16 technicians. These services are provided after
hours on an on-call basis in conjunction
with the Emergency Room which is staffed with a physician and auxiliary
personnel.
• RIGHT PATIENT WING
Eastern Kentucky since 1956. First
as Miners Memorial Hospital, then
in 1963 converted to Appalachian
Regional Hospitals. Since 1956 the
purpose of this facility has been providing adequate, quality health care,
appropriate to the needs of area
residents. In the endeavor to continue providing needed services,
McDowell ARH has advanced in
• MEDICAL LABORATORY
• COMPUTER TERMINALS
• SONOGRAPHY EQUIPMENT'
t~chnology,
equipment and person- performed by computer, resulting in
nel. Because of its size this facility faster more efficient service for the
can focus on individual needs then average patient.
plan accordingly.
• New services include SONOGRA• During the past 2 years a·computer PHY (ultra sound) one of the most
system has been installed, the sophisticated diagnostic devices usmaster unit (brain) is located in the ed to study internal body organs
Corporate Office in Lexington. which produces no radiation or
Gradually all functions of accoun- harmful effects.
ting, purchasing, and staffing will be
• EMERGENCY ROOM
• PHARMACY
Other new equipment includes a new dictating/transcribing system, nursing call
system, & electronic IV controllers. A
sizable-amount of patient care quipment has
been purchased by the volunteer Hospital
Auxiliary. They also completely furnished
the lounge on the second floor.
~ NURSING CALL SYSTEM
This system allows every patient to be instantly
in communication with a nurse, even in case of
an emergency situation.
! -ICCU
Technical advancement is apparent in the Intensive/ Coronary Care Unit, complete with cardiac monitors, closed circuit T.V., and new cenlral monitcring unit with constant EKG
displays.
The Respiratory Therapy Department is f ully equipped. Area resident donat ions contributed to t he purchase of t he MA-l l respirator, which assi'sts patients
who are having respiratory difficu lt ies or cannot
breathe. This equipment is vital in t his area where
lung diseases are prevalent.
REGIONAL MEDICAL CENTER, McDowell, Kentucky
LOWELL PARKER, ADMINISTRATOR
The Regional Medical Center is
physically located in the hospital
building. It is the newest addition to
the structure. The decor is colorful and
modern, appropriate for physician's
offices, diagnostic testing and treatment areas.
!MEMBERS OF THE VOLUNTEER
HOSPITAL AUXILIARY. Seated: Helen Sturn·
bo, Violet Hall, Celia Little, Catherine Youmans. STAND·
lNG: Alma Mosley, Brooksie Gayheart, Nannie Hall, Lola
Tackett, Nadine Springer. 2ND ROW STANDING: Linda Hughes, Dean Moore, lma Jean Moore.
! PHYSICAL THERAPY-A fully equipped
Physical Therapy Department, staffed with a registered
physical therapist. Physical Therapy is offered not only
to in & out hospital patients, but to home bound patients
in their homes in conjunction to Home Health, which is
another service provided by A .R.H.
The Medical Staff consists of the physicians practicing in the Regional Medical Center, our
radiologist, pathologist, several consulting and
courtesy members.
Specialties available are:
Dr . Mary Hall, Family Practice
Dr. John Fairchild, Pediatrics
Dr . Ricardo Ocampo, General Practice
Dr. Ruben Singayao, Surgeon
Dr. Francisco Rivera, Surgeon
Dr. Clarita Vicher, Internal Medicine
Dr . Ray T. de Guzman, General Surgeon
The Clinic area is equipped with stress testing equipment, out-patient respiratory therapy, pulmonary
function testing equipment, and dudiometric and tympanometric testing for early detection of hearing
problems.
i OPERATING ROOM-The oper at ing r oom has
maintained a ll r egulatory standar ds and presently is being util ized by three very qualified surgeons.
i
RESIDUAL CHEMICAL DEPENDENCY
TR EATM E NT-Alcohol and drug abuse was identified as a health problem in this area. Recognizing the
need for treating these patients, McDowell ARH adopted
a residential chemical dependency treatment program.
The only one of it's type in the immediate area, the program is conducted by trained, educated, qualified
counselors under a physician's direction with auxiliary
medic;_al assistance.
A NEW "CRASH CA.RT"-AND DEF I BRI L·
LATOR USED I N CA RD IAC A ND/ or respirator y arrest,
or oi her emergencies, demonstrated here by nur ses.
• ·
�The Floyd County Times
Wednesday, February 15, 1984
Section Two, Page Six
•
Family Farms Said
To Be On Decline
Family farms. may soon become a
thing of the past. according to Kendall
Seaton, state director of the Farmers
Home Administration.
"Only 3111 percent of the people in the
U.S. today live on a farm," Seaton said
to a group of Morehead State University agriculture students in a recent lecture. "The farmer is ready for a change
and a balance ootween production and
agriculture is the future of farming."
In America, production agriculture
has made tremendous strides since the
soy and corn bumper crop of 1973 and
the equity financing which took place in
1977-1980. The .greatest strides in the
future of agriculture are the farmer's
knowledge of financial management,
cash flow projections and computers,
according to Seaton.
1 The FmHA works with farmers and
NOTICE OF
INTENTION TO MINE
Pursuant to Application
Number 498-0168
In ~ccordance with the provisions of
KRS 350.055, notice is hereby given that:
Hawkeye Coal Company, 1200 First
Security Plaza, Lexington, Ky. 40507,
has filed an application for a permit for
a surface mining and reclamation
operation of approximately 207 acres
located SE of Endicott in Pike County
and Floyd County.
The proposed operation is approximately 5 miles SE from State Route
194's junction with Buffalo Creek Road.
The latitude is :n•, 39', 30". The longitude
is 82°, 36', 06". The surface area is owned by Wanda Spears, Sellard Heirs,
Hawkeye Coal Company, Roscoe
Blackburn, Ray Taylor and Georgia
Blackburn.
The proposed operation is located on
the Thomas U.S.G.S. 7Ih. minute quadrangle map. The operation will use the
mountaintop removal and contour mining methods with associated hollow fills.
The application has been filed for
public inspection at the Department for
Surface Mining Reclamation and Enforcement's Pikeville Regional Office,
P.O. 2289, Pikeville, Ky. 41501. Written
comments, objections, or requests for a
permit conference must be filed with the
Director of the Division of Permits, 6th
Floor, Capital Plaza Tower, Frankfort,
Ky. 40601.
2-15-3t.
NOTICE OF
INTENTION TO MINE
Pursuant to Application
Number 636-5055
I C1l In accordance with the provision
of KRS 350.055, notice is hereby given
that B J & L Coal Company, Inc.,
Craynor, Kentucky 41614, has filed an
application for a permit for an underground mining operation. The proposed
operation will affect a surface distur:.
bance of 1.72 acres a-nd will underlie an
additional192.60 acres locat&l"o.s miles
southwest of C~r in Floyd county.
(2) The pPO{SOsed operation is approximately 1.50 miles southwest from Mink
·Branch Road junction with Ky. 979 and
located 1.50 miles in Mink Branch. The
latitude is :n• 25' 54". The longitude is 82°
40' 29".
C3l Theproposedoperation is located
on the McDowell U.S.G.S. 7 1 z minute
quadrangle map. The surface area to be
disturbed is owned by: Chester Newsome, Teaberry, Ky. The operation will
underlie land owned by: Chester Newsome, Teaberry, Ky.; Blaine Slone,
Craynor, Ky.; Joseph Mining Co., Inc.,
McDowell, Ky.; Sie Hall, Craynor, Ky.;
John Hall, Craynor, Ky.; Donna Terry,
Teaberry, Ky.
· (4) The application has been filed for
public inspection at the Department for
Surface Mining Reclamation and Enforcement's Prestonsburg Regional Of. fice, 431 South Lake Drive, Prestons. burg, Ky. 41653. Written comments, objections, or requests for a permit conference must be filed with the Director
of the Division of Permits, 6th Floor,
Capital Plaza Tower, Frankfort, Kentucky 40601.
2-15-3t.
the rural population who are unable to
attain credit from a comm~ciallender,
such as a bank, and tries to establish
financial planning alm-.with terms they
can meet'.
County offices are located in 70 of 120
counties in Kentucky for farmer's loans.
There are also seven district offices to
process community loans. In 115 counties, emergency loans of $20,000 or less
are available. Any farmer who wants to
apply for a loan should contact his county office and complete a financial and
personal history form .
"They <the agency) are going to want
to know your credit rating and assets
and liability," said Walter Lacey, an
MSU alumnus from West Liberty and
representative of the FmHA Lexington
office
"Make sure you know this before you
·go in. It will help more than anything
else," Lacey said.
"We are supplementary credit, not
competitive," added Seaton. "People
get in trouble with other lenders and
they send them to Farmer's Home."
Although debts do continue to increase
due to inflation, 50 percent of all farmers
in the U.S. are debt free. FmHA extends
11 percent of the total operating credit
to rural farmers in the U.S. Last year
alone, $110 million was loaned by the
agency to rural families to finance a
house and one acre with interest rates
as low as one percent, according to
Seaton.
"We can be tough on problems,"
Seaton said. "We cracked down on delinquency rates and have it down to 11 percent. In Kentucky we have a six percent
delinquency rate compared to 53 percent
in Texas and 36 percent in Mississippi.''
This is due in part to Kentucky's wide
variety of agriculture and stable tobacco crop.
"We are fortunate to have worked
with farmers. Farm families are the
cream of the crop," Seaton concluded.
piggly wiggly
SALE DATES:
Pricea
Febraa~ 12
C:
·• Quantity Rights Reserved
D.A. GradE}d Choice Whole
u.Rib Eyes
tb.
•
TopRoun
Roast
Direct Deposit For
Social Security Checks
From: JIM KELLY
Social Security District Director
For the Big Sandy Area
Prestonsburg, Kentucky 41653
People in the Big Sandy Area that
receive Social Security or Black Lung
should consider direct deposit, according to Jim Kelly, Social Security
District Director for the Big Sandy Area.
Direct deposit means having the monthly Social Security check sent directly
to a financial institution-a checking or
savings account in a bank, savings and
loan association, or similar institution,
or to a Federal-or State-chartered credit
union. There are many advantages in
having direct deposit, Kelly said.
The first advantage is obvious: A person who has direct deposit doesn't have
to worry about having a check lost or
stolen. If away from home on vacation
or for any other reason, the person
doesn't have to worry about a check remaining in the mail box for days at a
time.
In addition, a person who has direct
deposit doesn't have to stand in line to
cash or deposit a check since it goes
directly into an account.
Anyone wishing to arrange for direct
deposit should contact the financial
organization of his or her choice and
they will assist you in completing the
form, Kelly said.
Moreover, people who later change
their mind about direct deposit can arrange to have their checks mailed to
their home once more. People may also
change the financial institution to which
their checks are sent.
Additional information about direct
deposit can be obtained from your local
bank or the Social Security office. The
Big Sandy Area Social Security office is
located on U.S. 23 between Prestonsburg
and :Paintsville. The telephone number
is listed in your local telephone directory
under U.S. Government.
62"!
Flavorich
Lucky Leaf Cherry
Banquet
Pie Filling Ice Cream
S 119
Pies
s'l49
Regular or Lite
20 oz. can
Dr. H.G. Salisbury
RICHMOND PWA,
PRESTONSBURG
PHONE 886-2676
ORTHODONTICS FOR ADULTS
Q. Is there a difference between the amount of time required for orthodontic work for young people and for
adults?
A. Orthodontics--straightening teeth and correcting any
disharmony in the mouth--usually takes more time for
adults.
As a person grows older, the jawbone becomes more
calcified and dense, so it takes longer to move teeth along
the jaw. This extra time is essential, since moving them
too fast may result in dissolving of the roots. Great care
must be taken in moving teeth where there is minor gum
disease, and this, too, calls for time and patience.
Since the teeth and jaws of grown-ups offer special problems, they may need the services of other professionals-a restorative dentist, a ~riodontist, a prosthodonist, or
an oral surgeon--when mouth rehabilitation is required.
These needs may arise because adults can no longer rely on the growth and developmental forces of youth to help
correct mouth irregularities and disharmony.
99~
Blueberry
or Cherry
20 oz. _pkg.
Country Crock
Flavorich Regular or light
Cottage
~ Shedd's
9 Spread
Cheese
&;u;;~uk 99~ Gouda
Cheese.
12oz.ct0.6
8159
48 oz. c:to.
Kraft Casino Baby
8119
7oz.pkg.
Kraft Cracker Barrel 4 Stick
Variety Pack
Cheese4,2
8
1 49
oz. •tick.
Kraft Cracker Barrel Portwine
DENTAL TIPS
we welcome
FOOD STAMP
SHOPPE
Kraft Crown Swiss
Cheese Spread or Sharp
Kraft Elkhorn Round
Kraft Midget Horn Red Wax
24oz. can
9
Cheddar
Guyere
Cheese •...••.. 89~ Cheese .. soz.99~ ~~~...=::::;
Muenster 8169 Cheddar
Cheese .•. 8229
Cheese
b. pkg.
12 oz. pkg.
Thompson Seedless Red or White
Grapes ....
$ 129lb.
c;;;iiii~;er6 1 29
All-Purpose
California Fresh Green
20 lb. bag
69
Broccoli . 7 9~
Oranges . 6
9~
M;;J:;~;;;;·s6 1 19
Onions . . . ~ch 8 1
bunch
Florida Temple
/7
New Green
•. /
oz.
can
�•
Wednesday, February 15, 1984.
The Floyd C ounty Times
'
..
Section Two, Page Seven
'These Troubled Waters' ·
Dupont Award Finalist ·
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.
~ Ckied'leK'GFi&tt Fe6fiooe
This Saturday, February 18, at
Strand Theatre, Prestonsburg
g,Ky.
S~Uig
~Drive
BeJJObj
will show at 12 noon
.
FREE Admission!
..
Wirh 2 La b~ls frurn >l!iecled Piy4lv Wigglv pr.. d<i<h
Get complete details a t your nearby Piggly Wiggly!
&•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ~ •••••• •• •••••••••••••••••••• ~ •••••••:
-
Valleydale Chicken Bologna
Sandwich
Baddiesuoz.pkg.5
9
~
Valleydale Chicken Franks
Fun
~
Buddies oz. pkg. 59
12
ti;t
Dogs
• • 24
oz. pk•.8
Valleydale
Chili •
.
• •
16
oz. rolls
Valleydale Pork
Sausage
79
1
1 49
16 oz. roll
9~
Piggly Wiggly
Eggs
•.
-
WLEX-TV's documentary program
"These Troubled Waters" has been
selected as a finalist in national competition for the prestigious Alfred I.
DuPont-Columbia University Award in
Broadcast Journalism.
"These Troubled Waters" is one of
four journalistic efforts selected as
finalists among the entries from television stations in markets of comparable
size across the country. The award winners will be announced on Wednesday,
February 8, and highlights from the winners will be shown in a 90-minute telecast, beginning at 10:00 p.m. , on the
Public Broadcasting Service.
The WLEX-TV documentary started
as a five-part series on water pollution
on 18 Action News, and developed into
an 18-part report on all aspects of the
water problem facing Kentucky. The
series evolved into the one-hour program that is now under consideration for
what is perhaps the nation's most prestigious award for broadcast journalism.
It was the foul taste of Lexington's
drinking water that prompted WLEXTV to begin asking local water company
officials, "Why?"
A lack of satisfactory answers to the
question led to further research and ad·
ditional questions. After two months of
pursuing the issue, it became apparent
that there is more to Kentucky's water
problem than a foul taste.
The conclusions were that (1) more
than half of the state's drinking water
is unsatisfactory, (2) the Kentucky
River is one of America's more abused
rivers , and (3) very little is being done
about it.
"These Troubled Waters" was produced for WLEX-TV by 18 Action News
anchorman Greg Gerlach, who also narrated the documentary.
The Alfred I. DuPont-Columbia Uni·versity Awards program was established in 1942 to recognize excellence in
broadcast journalism. The program has
been administered for the past 16 years
PCC Schedules Series
Of Seven Seminars
Prestonsburg Community College announces a series of seven seminars for
small businesses which will begin Thursday, March 1 at 7 p.m. in Pike Auditorium .
The seminars have been designed for
owners and managerial personnel.
Topics were chosen by business people
in Pikeville, Prestonsburg and Paintsville. Each seminar is designed to offer
specific help in a practical, informal
way. Speakers have been selected on the
basis of proven business experience as
well as academic credentials. All are
familiar with the Eastern Kentucky
business climate.
The topics and speakers are:
How to Take More Money Out of Your
Business, Homer Forster and Associates, March I ; Cost Controls, Fringe
Benefits, Insurance and Pensions ,
Homer Forster, March 8; Cash Flow
Management, Paul Campbell, CPA,
March I5; Tax Reporting Requirements, Federal and State, Bill Bottoms,
CPA, March 22; Marketing Tips &
Techniques, Marion Maddox, March 29;
Collections and Bankruptcy Proceeding,
Mike Waltrip, Commercial Collections,
Inc. , and Holly Currol, bankruptcy
trustee for Eastern Ky. District, April
5; Media, Publicity and Advertising
Techniques, panel composed of Marty
Bacus, Appalachian News Express,
Gorman Collins, WDOC, David Gardner, photography instructor, Keith
Caudill, Channels, Aprill2; moderator,
Bud Perry, Paintsville Herald.
To register, call Continuing Education
at PCC.
Valleydale Sliced
Ba co
s 29
12 oz. pkg .
§Z AMERICNS CHOICE
Save All Numbers. Match and Win!
Details at your nearby Piggly Wiggly.
Miss Newsom Named
To MSU Dean's List
Spaghetti
7oz. 3
.6
oz. can
2 /79~
89~
eet Salad Cubes
Jes
12
oz.
Jar
s 29
:.:l~J"
shroom ,
Iron
Oat •
Oyster
8 99 Crackers1o
18oz.
1
•
• • •
oz.
bos9 9
~
Sunshine
$
Hartz Mountain Cat
Litter .. 2s ab.
169
bag
Graham
Crackers.6 oz.
~
.......
....
~
... . . ... ,.
bos99
~
,:
......
I
I
I
Kozy Kitten
Fleecy White Liquid
Sea Sweet or Country
Bleach
Cat
Food
4 lb. bagS
1
19
NOTICE OF
INTENTION TO MINE
Pursuant to Application
Number 636-5040
I (I ) In accordance with the provisions
of KRS 350.055, notice is hereby given
that T & N Coal Co. , Inc., Grethel, Ky.
41631, has filed an application for a permit for an underground mining operation. The proposed operation will affect
a surface disturbance of 0.76 acres and
will underlie an additional 73.87 acres
located 0.5 miles south of Craynor, Ky.
in Floyd county.
(2) The proposed operation is approximately 1.50 miles southwest from Mink
Branch Road junction with Ky. 979 and
located 1.50 miles in Mink Branch. The
latitude is 37• 25' 54". The longitude is 82°
40' 29".
(3) The proposed operation is located
on the McDowell U.S.G.S. 7 1,'2 minute
quadrangle map. The surface area to be
disturbed is owned by: Blaine Slone,
Craynor, Ky. The operation will underlie
land owned by: Blaine Slone, Craynor.
Ky.; David Adkins, McDowell, Ky
Chester Newsome, Craynor, Ky.
Joseph Mining Co., McDowell, Ky.
(4) The application has been filed for
public inspection at the Department for
Surface Mining Reclamation and Enforcement's Prestonsburg Regional Office, 431 South Lake Drive, Prestonsburg, Ky. 41653. Written comments, objections, or requests for a permit conference must be filed with the Director
of the Division of Permits, 6th Floor,
Capital Plaza Tower, Frankfort, Kentucky 40601.
2-15-3t.
6 9~
9
USED CARS BARGAINS
From Jenny WileyUThe Bargain Champion"
1982 !~o~~J~. ~~~~~~ .~~~~-. ~~.~~.~ .. 5 6495
5 6495
1981 !~!.~1,~ be!~,1n~~~~~Ts.ooo
1983 T~ru~~~o~:~,~~ .~!, .. ... _. .._....58995
1983 t~r.~ra~.~~~~c~ .~!......... .... 510,250
5 9995
1981 !,~!~!~.~~w~~~~~~
1982 ~::~!~~~~:{~~~~~~~~ .P.k~
s9995
•. ....... . . _. _.
~~ i
Chicken
Pursuant to Application
Number: 860-5023
In accordance with the provisions of
KRS 350.055, notice is hereby given that
National Mines Corporation, Box 12022,
101 East Vine Street, Lexington, Ken-.
tucky 40579, has filed an application for
a permit for an underground mining
operation. The proposed operation will
affect a surface disturbance of 3.13 acres
and will underlie an additional 135.49
acres located 2.7 miles southwest of Garrett in Knott county.
The proposed operation is approximately 2.0 miles southwest from Route
·55o junction with Route 7 and Ioeated0.7
miles southeast of Jones Fork. The latitude is 37• 26' 37". The longitude is 82°
50' 05".
The proposed operation is located on
the Wayland U.S.G.S. 7112 minute quadrangle map. The surface area to be
disturbe~ is owned by Glen Click. The
operation will underlie land owned by
Glen Click, Barbara Conley, Gordon
Howard, Arnold Fitch, National Mines
Corporation, Charles and Juanita
Thornsburg, James and Francis Allen.
This application also includes a proposed land use change from the forest land
pre-mining land use to a pasture land
post-mining land use. The operation will
affect an area within 100 feet of public
road Triplett Branch. The operation will
not involve relocation of the public road.
The application has been filed for public inspection at the Department for Surface Mi~ng Reclamation and Enforcement, Jackson Regional Office, Howell
Heights Building, Route 2, Box 500,
Jackson, Kentucky 4I339. Written comments, objections, or requests for a per·
mit conference must be filed with the
Director of the Division of Permits, 6th
Floor, Capital Plaza Tower, Frankfors
Kentucky 40601.
2-15-3t.·
mnes . . . ....
Jh.~ Ii JUvs
. ., - '·"·
en
NOTICE OF
INTENTION TO MINE
S unshine Che ez-its or
Rust and Stain Remo ve r
.:
Cheer
32 oz . jar
fSl
Vegetables
One Floyd countian is among those
recognized for superior academic
achievement on the 1983 fall semester
President's List at Morehead State University.
Students named to the President's List
must be enrolled on a full-time basis and
achieve a 4.0 (A) grade point average.
The list includes Wanda Jean Newsom, of Prestonsburg.
Laundry Detergent
Ronco Thin
by the Columbia University Graduate
School of Journalism.
'
The awards to the winners are inscribed with Edward R. Murrow's observation on broadcasting's capabilities"This instrument can teach, it can illuminate. Yes, it can even inspire. But
it can do so only to the extent that
humans are determined to use it to those
ends. Otherwise, it is merely lights and
wires in a box."
"These Troubled Waters", in reaching
for the highest ideals expressed in Murrow's observation, certainly is morea lot more-than lights and wires in a
box. And on February 8, it may be recognized for that.
Luvs
Diapers
s 79
48 ct. Medium or
32 ct. Large
Vour Choice
7
•.. . .. . , ..
AND MANY OTHERS
JENNY WILEY TOYOTA
U.S. 23, PRESTONSBURG • PH: 886·3.861
�Wednesday, February 15, 1984
NOTICE OF
INTENTION TO MINE
Pursuant to Application
Number 836-0085
In accordance w1th the provision of
KRS 350.055, notice is hereby given that
Renegade Mining, Inc. 2885, Pikeville,
Ky. 41501, has filed an application for a
permit for an underground mining operation. The proposed operation will affect a surface disturbance of 16.37 acres
and will underlie an additional 64.85
acres located 1.50 miles southeast of
Osborn in Floyd county.
The proposed operation is approximately 1.0 miles northeast from State
Route 1426 junction with Bush Branch .
and located 0.25 miles northeast of Bush'
Branch. The latitude is 37' 28' 22". The
longitude is 82' 35· 41"
The proposed operation is located on
the Pikeville USGS 7 1 ~ minute quadrangle map. The surface area to be disturbed is owned by Osborn heirs. The operation will underlie land owned by Osborn
heirs, Estill Salisbury, L & J McClanahan, Ruth & Green Tackett.
The application has been filed for
public inspection at the Department for
Surface Mining Reclamation and Enforcement's Prestonsburg Regional Office, 50~ South Lake Drive, Prestonsburg, Ky. 41653. Written comments, objections, or requests for a permit conference mlli>t have attached a copy of
the newspaper clipping and must be
filed with the Regional Administrator of
the Prestonsburg Regional Office, 503
South Lake Drive, Prestonsburg, Ky.
41653.
2-1-3t.
The Floyd County Times
NOTICE OF
INTE'ITIO~ TO MI!\!E
Pursuant to Application
~umber
631i-50:ll
I< 1l In accordance wtth the provision
of KRS 350.055, nohce is hereby given
that J & J Coal Company, Inc., Box 21-A,
Harold, Ky. 41635, has filed an application for a permit for an underground
mining operation. The proposed opera·
tion will affect a surface disturbance of
0.65 acres and will underlie an additional
140.87 acres located 0.5 miles west of
Craynor in Floyd county.
<2l The proposed operation is approximately 1.5 miles southeast from Mmk
Branch Road junction with Ky . 929 and
located 0.5 miles west of Mink Branch.
The latitude is 37' 26' 12". The longitude
is 82' 40' 28"
<3l The proposed operation is located
on the McDowell V.S.G.S. 7 1 2 minute
quadrangle map. The surface area to be
disturbed is owned by:~ & N Coal Com·
pany, Inc., Craynor, Ky. The operation
will underlie land owned by: Joseph
Mining Company, Inc. McDowell, Ky.;
Mary Howell, Craynor, Ky.; David
Akers, McDowell, Ky.
<4l The application has been filed for
public inspection at the Dept for Surface
Mining Reclamation and Enforcement's
Prestonsburg Office, 431 South Lake
Drive, Prest('nsburg, Kentucky 41653.
Written comments, objections, or requests for a permit conference must be
filed with the Director of the Division of
Permits, 6th Floor, Capital Plaza
Tower, Frankfort, Kentucky 40601.
2-15-3t.
SHERIFF'S SALE
FLOYD DISTRICT COURT
ACTION NO. 83-C-180
Citizens Fidelity Bank and Trust Company ....................................Plaintiff
VS:
Robert W. Roberts Lola T. Roberts ...
Defendants
I, Henry C. Hale, Sheriff of Floyd
County Kentucky 'will offer for sale in
front of the Courthouse in Prestonsburg,
Kentucky on Feb. 17th 1984 at the hour
oflO: 00 o'clock A.M. to satisfy judgment
on behalf of Plaintiff entered on August
29, 1983 against the defendant Robert W.
Roberts, in the amount of $977.86 plus interest & court cost. There is a mortgage
of approximately Forty Thousand
($40,000.00) owing to the Bank Josephine
of Prestonsburg, Ky. Following described property to-wit:
A certain tract or parcel of land lying
in Floyd County, Ky. on Branham's
Creek and being part of the same land
conveyed to first parties by Kenas
Tackett and Lue Creasie Tackett, his
wife by deed bearing date Sept. 30, 1971,
which is duly recorded in Deed book 206,
page 321, Floyd County Clerk's office
containing 2 acres more or less. Bounded and described as follows: Beginning
on the right-hand side as you go up
Branham's Creek at a culvert at the
road; thence straight across the bottom
with the ditch line to the center of the
Creek; thence down the creek as it
meanders to John Martin's line, Lot No.
7; then crossing the bottom with Martin's lot No. 7, to an iron stake at the
Branham's Creek Road; thence up
Branhams Creek road to the place of
beginning.
HENRY C. HALE
Sheriff of Floyd County, Ky.
2-1-3t.
NOTICE OF
INTENTION TO MINE
Pursuant to Application
Number 436-5101
In accordance with the provisions of
KRS 350.055, notice is hereby given that
Metana Coal Company, Drift, Kentucky
· 41619, has filed an application for a permit for an underground mining operation. The proposed operation will affect
a surface disturbance of 1 acre and will
underlie an additional 49 acres located
:.5 miles northeast of Drift in Floyd
county.
The proposed operation is approximately 2 miles northeast of State Route
I 22's junction with Kentucky Route 1022
and located on the south side of
Stonecoal Branch. The latitude is
37°·29'-41". The longitude is 82°·44'-20".
The proposed operatwn is located on
the McDowell U.S.G.S. 71 2 minute quadrangle map. The surface area to be
disturbed is owned by Harry and Reba
Martin. The operation will underlie land
owned by Harry and Reba Martin.
The operation will affect an area
within 100 feet of public road, Stone Coal
Branch Road. The operation will not involve relocation of the public road.
The application has been filed for
public inspection at the Department for
Surface Mining Reclamation and Enforcement's Prestonsburg Regional Office, South Lake Drive, Prestonsburg,
Kentucky 41653. Written comments, objections, or requests for a permit conference must be filed with the Director
of the Division of Permits, 6th Floor.
Capital Plaza Tower, Frankfort, Kentucky 40601.
2-8-4t.
NOTICE OF PUBLIC SALE
A public sale will be held by The Bank
Josephine on the 17th day of February,
1984 at The Bank Josephine's Harold
Branch. Time of sale 10:00 a.m.
Sale is for the purpose of disposing of
a 1981 J-10 Jeep Pickup Truck bearing
serial No. 1JTCM26N5BT042888 and a
1978 Ford F-250 Ser. No. F26BNBH4092
to satisfy a Commercial Loan Agreement dated the 16th day of February,
1983.
The Bank Josephine reserves the right
to bid.
'Terms of sale: CASH.
2+3t.
--L.---------
In addition to silversmithing, Paul
Revere practiced dentistry in colonial
Boston.
NOTICE OF
INTENTION TO MINE
Pursuant to Application
Number 436-5148
I< 1 >In accordance with the provision
of KRS 350.055, notice is hereby given
that Mink Branch Coal Company, Inc.,
Rt. 2, Box 40, Craynor, Ky., has filed an
application for a permit for an underground mining operation. The proposed
opera don will affect a surface disturbance of 3.8 acres and will underlie an additional 252.0 acres located 0.50 miles
east of Craynor in Floyd county.
<2> The proposed operation is approximately 1.0 miles south from Mink
Branch Road junction with Ky. 979 and
located 0.5 miles east of Mink Branch.
The latitude is 37• 26' 14". The longitude
is 82° 39' 47".
(3) The proposed oi>eration is located
on the McDowell U.S.G.S. 7 •2 minute
quadrangle map. The surface area to be
disturbed is owned by : Mink Branch
Coal Company, Inc., Craynor, Ky.; Jay
E. Evans, Craynor, Ky.; Cephus McKinney, Craynor, Ky. The operation will
underlie land owned by: Mink Branch
Coal Co., Inc., Craynor, Ky.; Jay E.
Evans, Craynor, Ky.; John B. Evans,
Craynor, Ky., Kelly Hamilton, Craynor,
Ky.; Cephus McKinney, Craynor, Ky.;
Walker Tackett, Craynor, Ky.; Gary
Newsome, Craynor, Ky.; Blaine Slone,
Craynor, Ky.; Pearl Gillispie, Craynor,
Ky.; Bob Mitchell, Craynor, Ky.
(4) The application has been filed for
public inspection at the Department for
Surface Mining Reclamation and Enforcement's Prestonsburg Regional Office, 431 South Lake Drive, Prestonsburg, Ky 41653. Written comments, objections, or requests for a permit conference must be filed with the Director
of the Division of Permits, 6th Floor,
Capital Plaza Tower, Frankfort, Kentucky 40601.
2-15-3t.
FLOYD CIRCUIT COURT
83-CI-728
The First Commonwealth Bank of Prestonsburg, Ky ............................... Piff.
VS: :'\;OTICE OF SALE
Theda L. Johnson, Rt. 1, Prestonsburg,
Ky. 41653.................................... Deft.
By virtue of a judgment and order of
sale of the Floyd Circuit Court rendered
at the November 22 term, 1983, in the
above-styled cause I shall proceed to offer for sale at the Courthouse door in
Prestonsburg, Kentucky, to the highest
and best bidder, at public auction, on the
23 day of February, 1984, at 10:00 o'clock
a.m., same being a day of the regular
term of the Floyd Circuit Court. for cash
or upon a credit of six months, the
following described property, to-wit:
That certain tract or parcel of land, lying and being on the waters of Middle
Creek in Floyd County, Kentucky. and
being the same property conveyed to
Theda L. Johnson by deed from Frank
Adams and Susie Adams, his wife, dated
June 5, 1962, recorded in Deed Book 180,
page 51, Floyd County Clerk's Office,
which is more particularly described as
follows .
Beginning on an elm near the State
Road Fork Creek; thence running with
A.E. Vaughn's line to the top of the hill;
thence with Woodrow Whitaker's line
down the ridge with George Spradlin's
line; thence with Spradlin's line to Ben
Parker's line; thence with Parker's line
to the creek, thence with the creek back
to the place of beginning.
The amount of money to be raised by
thts sale shall be in the principal sum of
$14,378.03 subject to a rebate in interest
for payment prior to maturity on July
14, 1987, and the costs of this action, including costs of advertising of this sale
and the fees and commissions for conducting this sale.
For the purchase price the purchaser
must execute bond with approved surety or sureties, bearing legal interest
from the day of sale until paid and having the force the effect of a judgment
with a lien retained upon said property
as a further security Bidders will be
prepared to comply with these terms ..
Given under my hand, this 6 day of
February, 1984
MARSHALL DAVIDSON.
Master Commissioner
2 ll :lt
NOTICE OF
IJ 'TENTI01 ' TO MI~E
Section Two, Page Eight
NOTICE OF
IN TEN fiON 10 MINE
Pursuant to Application
Pursuant to Application
Number 8:16-0080
Number 836-5032
I > In accordance with the provisions
In accordance with the provisions of
of KRS 350.055, notice is hereby given KRS 350.055, notice 1s hereby given that
that Blackhawk Mining Company, Inc., Raschella Coal Company, Rt. 4, Box
P.O. Box 150, Prestonsburg, Ky. 41653, 962-Y, Pikeville, Ky. 41501 , has filed an
has filed an application for a permit for application for a permit for a surface
an underground mining operation. The coal mining and reclamation operation
proposed operation will affect a surface 'of approximately 64.88 acres located 4.1
disturbance of 3 acres and will underlie miles south of Grethel, in Floyd county.
an additional 90 acres located 1 mile
The proposed operation is approxnortheast of Drift in Floyd county.
imately 1/8 miles east from State Route
2> The proposed operation is approx- 979 junction with Akers Branch Road
and located 1 z miles west of Branham
imately 1 mile east from State Route
!22's junction with Stonecoal Branch Creek. The latitude is 37' 27' 41". The
Road and located on the north side of longitude is 83' 31' 21". The surface area
Stonecoal Branch. The latitude is ,is owned by Russell Clark, Akers heirs,
37°-30'-41" The longitude is 82°-44'-15".' 'B. & M. Coal Company, Cline Mitchell,
3) The proposed operation is located Foster Mitchell and Henry Martin.
The proposed operation is located on
on the McDowell U.S.G.S. 7.5 minute
quadrangle map. The surface area to be the McDowell U.S.G.S. 71 z minute quaddisturbed is owned by Harry and Reba
rangle map. The operation will use the
Martin. The operation will underlie land mountain top removal method of
mining.
owned by Harry and Reba Martin.
The application has been filed for
4) The application has been filed for
public inspection at the Department for public inspection at the Department for
Surface Mining Reclamation and En- Surface Mining Reclamation and Enforcement's Prestonsburg Regional Of- forcement's Prestonsburg Regional Office, at 431 South Lake Drive, Prestonsfice, South Lake Drive, Prestonsburg,
burg, Ky. 41653. Written comments, ob·
Kentucky 41653. Written comments, objections, or requests for a permit conjections, or requests for a permit conference must be filed with the Director ference must be filed with the Director
of the Division oi Permits, 6th Floor,
of the Division of Permits, 6th Floor,
Capital Plaza Tower, Frankfort, KenCapital Plaza Tower, Frankfort, Kentucky 40601.
1·25·3t.
tucky 40601.
2-1-3t.
This is the final advertisement of this
application; all comments, objections,
NOTICE OF
or requests for a permit conference
INTENTION TO MINE
must be received within thirty (30) days
Pursuant to Application
of toaay's date.
lt.
Number 836-0025
In accordance with the provisions of
KRS 350.055, notice is hereby given that
PUBLIC NOTICE
Brashae Coal Co., Inc., P .O. Box 628,
The City of Prestonsburg, PrestonsHindman, Ky. 41653, has filed an ap- burg Park Commission will accept bids
plication for a permit for a surface coal until February 24, 1984 at 2:00p.m. for
mining and reclamation operation of ap- the repair of the lighting system on
proximately 391.34 acres located 1.0 various ballfields in Archer Park. This
miles southeast of Risner, in Floyd project will consist of replacing and
county.
repairing all lights on the Men's,
The proposed operation ~ approx- Women's, and Little League Fields. Bid
imately 0.57 miles northeast from
specifications may be obtained by conWolfpen Branch's junction with KY 1210 tacting the Park Administrator at
and located 0.2 miles east of Wolfpen 886-6390 or by stopping in the Archer
Branch. The latitude is 37' 34' 22"N. The Park Office. Bids will be opened
longitude is 83° 48' 25"W. The surfa-ce February 24, 1984at2:00 p.m., at which
'a rea is owned by Solomon Caudill,
time they will be opened publicly and
Ronald and Betty Chaffin, John Click,
read aloud. The City of Prestonsburg
Narcie Qiek, Whits Click, Ellen Cooper,
reserves the right to change or alter any
Bill, Carl; and Lois Dudley, Herschel
bid specification or to waive any inforFlanery, Virgil Flanery, Vernon Flanmality in the bidding process. The City
nery, Frazier Catalog Agency, Ernest of Prestonsburg observes Equal OpporGibson, Clyde Hale, David Hale, Joe
tunity Purchasing Practices. Mail bids
Hughes, McArthur Jacobs, John Justice,
to City Administrator, P .O. Box 31, PresSandy and Polly Justice, Laura and Bill
tonsburg, Ky. 41653. Mark " Park
Kilburn, Albert Marshall, Mullins heirs,
Lighting Repair" plainly on the outside
Bessie Ousley, Wade Ousley, R.E. Pitts,
of the envelope.
Frank Skeans, Johnny Skeans, Mae
DAVID EVANS
Skeans, Myrtle Skeans, S.C. Stevens,
City Administrator
Glen and Bessie Wards .
2-15-2t.
The proposed operation is iocated on
the Martin U.S.G.S. 71h minutt quadran- Some 98 percent of American house·
gle map. The operation will use the conholds contain at least one television set.
tour, area, combination method of mining. The application also includes a proposed land use change from the
forestland pre-mining land use to a
pastureland post-mining land use.
The application has been filed fol'
public inspection at the Department for
Surface Mi.nirig Reclamation and Enforcement's Prestonsburg Regional Office, 5b3 South Lake Drive, Prestonsburg, Ky. 41653. Written comments, objections, or requests for a permit conference must be filed with the Director
of the Division of Permits, 6th Floor,
Capital Plaza Tower, Frankfort, Ken-~
tucky 40601.
1·25-3t.
This is the final advertisement of this
application; all comments, objections,
or requests for a permit conference
must be received within thirty (30) days
of today's date.
lt.
A man named Gabriel Daniel
Fahrenheit developed the
temperature scale that bears
his name, He was born
in Germany in 1686.
NOTICE OF
lNTE1 'TION TO MINE
Pursuant to Application
~umber 836-5031
( 1\ In accordance with the provisions
of KRS 350.055, notice is hereby given
that Apollo Coal Co., Inc ., P.O. Box 9,
Wayland, Ky. 41666, has filed an application for a permit for an underground and
contour/auger method mining operation. The proposed operation will affect
a surface disturbance of 10.51 acres and
will underlie an additional 36.57 acres
located .45 miles southwest of Demain
Floyd county.
(2) The proposed operation is approximately .2 miles south from Bradley
Branch Road's junction with KY 7 and
located on Bradley Branch. The latitude
is 37' 24' 57"N. The longitude is 82' 48'
40"W.
C3 J The proposed operation is located
on the Wayland .U.S.G.S. 71, 2 minute
quadrangle map. The surface area to be
disturbed is owned by Gliden and Rosa
Bradley and Lena Bradley Hopkins. A
brief description of the kind of mining
activity proposed is: underground and
contour/auger method of mining.
(4) The application has been filed for
public inspection at the Department for
Surface Mining Reclamation and En·
'forcement's Prestonsburg Regional Office, 503 South Lake Drive, Prestonsburg, Ky 41653. Written comments, objections, or requests for a permit conference must be filed with the Director
of the Division of Permits, 6th Floor,
Capital Plaza Tower, Frankfort, Kentucky 40601.
1·25-3t.
This is the final advertisement of this
application; all comments, objections,
or requests for a permit conference
must be received within thirty (30) days
of today's date.
lt.
Pursuant t{) Application
Number lil6-003J
( 1) In accordance w1th the provisions
of KRS 350.055, notice is hereby given
that Energy ElKhorn Coal, Inc., P.O.
Box 1178, Paintsville, Kentucky 41240
has filed an appiication for a surface and
underground mining operation. The proposed operation will affect a surface
disturbance of 29.15 acres and will
underlie an additional 51.06 acres
located 1.3 miles southeast of Osborn in
Floyd county.
· (2) The proposed operation is approximately 0.2 miles east from KY 1426's
junction with Keathley Branch Road
and located 0.06 miles northeast of Toler
Creek. The latitude is N 37° 27' 29". The
longitude is W 82' 36' 12" The surface
area to be disturbed is owned by the E.L.
Osborn heirs.
(3)1The proposed operation is located
on the Pikeville U.S.G.S. 7112 minute
quadrangle map. The operation shall
use the contour-strip method of mining
for the surface disturbanct-. The operation will be owned by E .L. Osborn heirs.
(4) The application has been filed for
public im:pection at the Department for
Surface Mining Reclamation and
Enforcement's Prestonsburg Regional
Office, 431 South Lake Drive, Prestonsburg, Ky. 41653. Written comments, objections, or requests for permit conference must be filed with the Director
of the Division of Permits, 6th Fioor,
Capital Plaza Tower, Frankfort, Kentucky 40601.
2-l-3t.
PUBLIC NOTICE
An application for a place of entertainment license has been filed by Thelma
McAskill, of P.O. Box 69, Garrett, Kentucky. The nature of the business will be
a drive-in restaurant.
The County Attorney's Office is required to file a written report to the
County Judge Executive's office reflecting if the person applying is "not of good
moral character or who will not, in the
judgment of the Court, <County Judge
Executive) obey the laws of the state in
the carrying on of the business."
Any interested citizen having information relative to said applicant's lack of
"good moral character" or willingness
to obey the laws of the state in the carrying on of the business is requested to
file the same in writing, with the County Attorney's office. Said written informatioi1 shall be signed, dated, and
reflect the current address of said
citizen, and must be delivered to the
County Attorney's office no later than
the 16th day of February, 1984.
ARNOLD TURNER, JR.
Floyd County Attorney
2-8-21.
PUBLIC NOTICE
The City of Prestonsburg, Prestonsburg Park Commil:>sion will accept bids
until February 24, 1984, at 2 p.m. for
various items of playground recreational equipment. This project will consist of the development of a playground
area for children in Archer Park. Bid
Specifications may be obtained by contacting the Park Administrator at
886-6390 or by stopping in the Archer
Park Office. Bids will be opened
February 24, 1984 at2:00p.m., at which
time they will be opened publicly and
read aloud. The City of Prestonsburg
reserves the right to change or alter any
bid specifications or to waive any informality in the bidding process. The City
of Prestonsburg observes Equal Opportunity Purchasing Practices. Mail bids
to City Administrator, P.O. Box 31, Prestonsburg, Ky. 41653. Mark "Recreation
Equipment Bid" plainly on the outside
of the envelope.
DAVID EVANS
City Administrator
4-15-2t.
Good cooking is good chemistry, too.
For instance, the February Reader's
Digest notes, you can overcook boiling
water by driving all the air out of it.
That's why all instructions for coffee and
tea say to start with freshly drawn cold
water.
• KENAMETAL DRILL • DRILL STEM ADAPTORS
• DRILL SHAFTS • 3 POLE BREAKERS
NOTICE OF
INTENTION TO MINE
Pursuant to Application
Number 636-5039
I (I> In accordance with the provision
of KRS 350.055, notice is hereby given
that T & N Coal Company, Inc., Grethel,
Ky ., has filed an application for a permit for an underground mining operation . The proposed operation will affect
a surface disturbance of 1.91 acres and
will underlie an additional132.94 acres
located .5 miles southwest of Craynor in
Floyd county.
<2> The proposed operation is approximately 1.5 miles south from Mink
Branch Road junction with Ky. 979 and
located 1.5 miles in Mink Branch. The
latitude is 37° 25' 54" The longitude is a2•
40' 29".
<3> The proposed operation is located
on the McDowell U.S.G.S. 7 1 2 minute
quadrangle map. The surface area to be
disturbed is owned by: Blaine Slone,
Craynor, Ky. ; Dennis Reynolds,
Craynor, Ky.; Jack Hamilton, Craynor,
Ky. The operation will underlie land
owned by: Blaine Slone, Craynor, Ky .;
Hazel Hamilton, Craynor, Ky.; Dennis
Reynolds, Craynor, Ky.; Jack Hamilton,
Craynor, Ky.; Joseph Mining Company,
Inc., McDowell, Ky. ; T & N Coal Company, Inc., Grethel, Ky.; David Akers,
McDowell. Ky The operation will effect
an area within 100 feet of public road
Mink Branch. The operation will not involve relocation of the public road.
(4) The applicahon has been filed for
public inspection at the Department for
Surface Mining Reclamation and Enforcement's Prestonsburg Regional Office. 431 South Lake Drive, Prestonsburg. Ky. Written comments, objections, or requests for a permit conference must be filed with the Director
of the Division of Permits, 6th Floor,
Capital Plaza Tower, Frankfort, Kentucky 40601.
2-15·3t.
NOTICE OF
INTENTION TO MINE
• COMPLETE
LINE OF
REX PILLOW
BLOCK
BEARING
• POLY AIR
AND PVC
BRAniCE
CLOTH
1 1/4"
THRU
• COMPLETE
LINE OF
DIFFERINTIALS FOR
S&S,
ELKHORN,
AND S&H
SCOOPS.
4 7 /16'!
• ALL PARTS
FOR S&H
' SCOOP LINE.
PICTURED: 5 FOOT EXHAUST FAN.
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Wednesday,
Febnaary 15, 1984Tuesday,
Febnaary 21, 1984
«wednesday))
«thursday»
2/15/84
2!16/84
ID MOVIE: 'Tammy
and the Bachelor'
9:00
ID
MOVIE:
Outsider'
'The
om o CIJ m m
ID Andy Griffith
f1) Cil MacNeil/lehrer
7:00
7:30
Newshour
@)@Dr. Who
0 (]) (!D (2) NBC
News
Ill Cil CBS News
G) (!)ABC News
ID Carol Burnett
@)
@
Business
Report
0 (])PM Magazine
Ill Cil Wheel of
Fortune
G)(!) People's Court
ID Hogan's Heroes
fB Cil Kentucky
General Assembly
@) <ID MacNeil/lehrer
Newshour
(!D Cil Switch
0
(]) Rockefeller
Political
Ill Cil Family Feud
(!) Jeffersons
1D Sanford and Son
0 (]) (!fj (2) Real
People
Ill (I) MOVIE: 'Gone
with the Wind' Part 2
G) (!) XIV Winter
Olympic Games
ID MOVIE: 'Aicatraz:
The Whole Shocking
Story' Part 1
fB
rn
<ID
Smithsonian
World
0 (]) (!D (2) Facts of
Ufe
·
fB rn· Profits in Risk
@)
@
MOVIE:
'Goliath Awaits Part
m
8:00
m
9:00
3'
o m m rn Night
Court
1 o:oo o m m rn st.
9:3o
Elsewhere
ID TBS
News
fB
Cil
Evening
Business
Report
@)
@
MOVIE:
'Goliath Awaits Part
4'
10:30 f1) Cil Tony Brown's
Journal
11:oo
CIJ
(!fj Cil News
ID Woman Watch
@) @ Not the Nine
O'Clock News
11 :30 0 (]) (!D (2) Tonight
Show
Ill Cil Police Story
'Officer Needs Help.·
G) (!) XIV Winter
Olympic Games
om o
ID Catlins
SCHEDULE
ID MOVIE: 'The Great
Sioux Massacre'
mm
@)
CID latenight
America
12:00 G) (!) Nightline
ID MOVIE: 'Hell's
Angels On Wheels'
12:30 0 (])late Night with
David letterman
Ill Cil MOVIE: 'Triple
Play I' This film pre- ,
sents three one-act comedies.
Bill
Daily,
Donna Mills,
G) (!) Andy Griffith
1 :00 G) (!) Bionic Woman
2:00 ID MOVIE: 'Mutiny at
Fort Sharp' Cavalrymen rebel against a tyrannicalleader in the old
West. Broderick Crawford. 1965.
4:00 ID Rat Patrol
4:30 I& Open Up
6:oo
o mo
®
(!D Cil News
mm
ID Andy Griffith
fB (I) MacNeil/lehrer
News hour
@)@Dr. Who
6:30 0
(]) (!fj Cil NBC
News
Ill (I) CBS News
G) (!) ABC News
ID Carol Burnett
@)
@
Business
Report
7:00 0 (])PM Magazine
Ill Cil Wheel of
Fortune
G) (!) People's Court .
ID Hogan's Heroes
fB Cil Kentucky
General Assembly
@) CID MacNeil/lehrer
Newshour
(!D Cil Appalachian
Encounters
7:30 0 (]) Tic Tac Dough
Ill (]) Family Feud
G) (!) XIV Winter
Olympic Games
ID Sanford and Son
(!D Cillorne Greene's
Wilderness
8:00 0 (]) (!D (2) Gimme a
Break First of 2 parts.
Ill Cil Magnum P.l.
ID MOVIE: 'Alcatraz:
The Whole Shocking
Story' Part 2
fB
Cil
People's
Business
@) <ID Sneak Previews
8:30 0 (]) (!fj Cil Family
Ties Alex courts disaster when he winds up
with two dates for the
prom.
@) @ Good Neighbors
9:00 0 Cil (!D (2) Cheers
Ill Cil Simon & Simon
fB (I) Scholastic
Challenge
@)@Mystery! 'Reilly:
Ace of Spies.·
9:30 0 (I) (!fj (2) Buffalo
Bill Bill and Jo-Jo become embroiled in their
own romantic cold war.
1 o:oo
Hill
Street Blues
Ill (]) Knots landing
ID TBS Evening
News
fB
Cil Business
Report
@) @ Superviews
10:30 f1) Cil Tony Brown's
Journal
'longest
Struggle: NAACP in
Historical Perspective.'
11 :oo
f1) Cil (!fj (2) News
ID All In the Family
@) @ Not the Nine
O'Clock News
11 :30 0 (I) (!fj Cil Tonight
Show
Ill Cil Trapper John,
M.D. A 17-year-old
o m m rn
o m o rn m rn
G) (!) XIV Winter
Olympic Games Tonight's program features highlights of the
day· s activities at the
Winter Olympics from
Sarajevo, Yugoslavia.
1D Catlins
@)
@
latenight
America
12:00 G) (!) Nightline
I& MOVIE: 'Pride of
the Marines' A mar-
m
CHECK LISTINGS FOR EXACT TIME
@)1984 Compulog
ine, blinded by a grenade after killing 200
Japanese, tries to adjust. John Garfield,
12:30
(Cfrid~
0
(])late Night with
David letterman
Ill (I) MOVIE: 'The
Deadly Triangle'
G) (!) Andy Griffith
1 :00 G) (!) Bionic Woman
2:45 1D MOVIE: 'Spitfire'
A young mountain girl
falls in love with a
young engineer who is
already married. Katharine Hepburn, Robert
Young,
Ralph
Bellamy. 1934.
4:30 ID World/large
MORNING
9:00
1D
MOVIE:
'The
Maltese Falcon'
-Movie Week·
SUNDAY
(CBS) SUNDAY NIGHT MOVIE
"MASTER OF THE GAME" ( 1984) Dyan Cannon. Harry
Hamlin. Cliff De Young. The (irs! of a three-part. nine-hour tale
about the Blackwell family, spanning 100 years and three
, continents. which takes the family from the diamond fields of
19th-century South Africa through their troubled reign as one of
• the world's most powerful families.
MONDAY
(CBS) MONDAY NIGHT MOVIE
"MASTER . OF THE GAME" ( 1984) Dyan Cannon. Harry
t Hamlin, Cliff De Young. Kate Blackwell turns Kruger-Brent. Ltd.
. 1·into one "of the world's mightiest corporate empires. but her
, · attempt to turn the Blackwells into a family dynasty leads to tragic circumstances.
(ABC) MONDAY NIGHT MOVIE
"SUPERMAN II" (1982) Christopher Reeve. Margot Kidder. The
Man of Steel plans to marry - but it means having to give up his
• superpowers just when his deadliest enemies in the universe are
landing on Earth.
TUESDAY
(CBS) TUESDAY NIGHT MOVIE
"MASTER OF THE GAME" (1984) Dyan Cannon. Harry
Hamlin, Cliff De Young. One of Kate's two granddaughters is
disinherited and she concocts a murderous plot. with the help of a
continental charmer. to destroy her rival.
WEDNESDAY
(CBS) WEDNESDAY NIGHT MOVIE
"TAPS" (1981) Timothy Hutton. George C. Scott, Ronny Cox,
Sean Penn. Tom Cruise. A group of military academy cadets fight
to save their school after they learn it is scheduled to be closed.
SATURDAY
(CBS) SATURDAY NIGHT MOVIE
"SHARKY'S MACHINE" ( 1983) B\)rt Reynolds. Brian Keith,
Rachel Ward. Bernie Casey, Vittorio Gassman, Charles Durning,
Henry Silva. A cop is determined to flush out the kingpin controlling crime and corruption in Atlanta.
@)1884 Compulog
f1) Cil New Shapes in
Education
EVENING
6:oo
o m o CIJ m rn
m (2) News
ID Andy Griffith
ID MOVIE: 'Double
Indemnity'
Murder
and life insurance enter
into the picture when a
blond woman plans an
'accident .' Fred MacMurray, Barbara Stanwyck,
Edward
G.
Robinson. 1944.
AFTERNOON
1 :00
3:30
f1) Cil MacNeil/lehrer
Newshour
@) <ID Dr. Who
6:3o
10:30 f1) Cil International
Edition Journalist Ford
Rowan hosts this look
at important trends and
news events as they
are reported by foreign
journalists.
11:oo
fB Cil
(2) News
ID All In the Family
@) @ Not the Nine
O'Clock News
11:30 0 (I)
(2) Tonight
Show
Ill (]) MOVIE: 'Diary
of a Teenage Hitchhiker'
G) (!) XIV Winter
Olympic Games Tonight' s program features highlights of the
day's activities at the
Winter Olympics from
Sarajevo, Yugoslavia.
CD Catlins
@) @ MOVIE: To Be
Announced
12:00 G) (!) Nightline
ID Night Tracks
12:30 0 (I)
Cl) Friday
Night Videos
G) (!) Andy Griffith
1 :00 G)
@
Pentecost
Today
1 :30 G) (!) Bionic Woman
2:00 0 (I) News
om o rn m m
m
James Brown
soul
music's "Mr. Dynamite" - is
one of the featured performers
on "Super Night of Rock 'n'
Roll," airing MONDAY, FEB.
20 on NBC. Also appearing
are Chuck Berry, Martha
Reeves, Ronnie Spector and
Frankie Valli.
EVENING
(!D (2) News
6:30
TV
MR. DYNAMITE
ID MOVIE: 'That Kind
AFTERNOON
1 :00
EVENING
6:oo
atnunty <Eimrs
of Woman'
AFTERNOON
1 :00
(
MORNING
MORNING
9:00
(
(
(
(
o m m rn
m
«saturday))
NBc
2!18/84
News
Ill Cil
CBS News
G) (!) XIV Winter
Olympic Games
ID Carol Burnett
@)
<ID Business
Report
7:00 0 (I) PM Magazine
Ill Cil Wheel of
Fortune
ID Hogan's Heroes
f1)
Cil Enterprise
@) @ MacNeil/lehrer
News hour
(I) Goins Brothers
7:30 0 (I) Tic Tac Dough
Ill Cil Family Feud
ID Sanford and Son
fB Cil Comment on
Kentucky
00 This Week in
Country Music
8:00 0 (I)
legmen
Jack and David are sus·pected of aiding and
abetting a prisoner
when a man hides in
their car trunk during a
jail break. (60 min.)
Ill Cil Dukes of
Hazzard Boss Hogg's
nephew tries to ruin
Uncle Jesse. (60 min.)
ID NCAA Basketball:
lSU at Alabama
m
MORNING
5:00
5:30
6:00
6:15
6:30
7:00
m
mm
m
rn
m
®
Washington
Week/
Review Paul Duke is
joined by top Washington journalists analyzing the week's news.
8:30
® wall
Street Week Louis Aukeyser analyzes the
'80s with a weekly review of economic and
investment matters.
9:00 0 (I)
Cil Master
When
a
Senator's
daughter is kidnapped
by terrorists, the Master joins forces with an
old enemy to storm the
abductors·
fortress.
0 Cil Dallas
f1)
Cil Kentucky
General Assembly
@) CID Session '84
9:30 @)
@
Enterprise
10:00
(I) fiB 00 New
Show
Ill (]) Falcon Crest
ID TBS Evening
News
fB
Cil
Business
Report
@) @ Austin City
limits
m rn m
m
o·
7:30
8:oo
ID
Night
Tracks
Cont'd
G)C!)Rev.PeteRowe
G) (!) Farm Digest
ID TBS Morning
News
G) (!) Forum 19
0
(I)
Saturday
Report
Ill 00 T.V. Classroom
G)(!) Town Crier
0
(I)
Joy
of
Gardening
Ill
Cil
Captain
Kangaroo
G) (!) Andy Griffith
ID Between the Lines
@) ®
Market to
Market
0 (I) Young Peoples
Special
G) (!) ABC Weekend
Special
ID Romper Room and
Friends
@) <ID Great Chefs/
San Francisco
o
m
m
rn
Flintstone Funnies
Ill Cil Charlie Brown
& Snoopy
G) (!) Monchhichis/
little Rascals/Richie
Rich
ID Starcade
@) ® Two Ronnies
8:3o
Shirt
Tales
Ill
Cil
Saturday
Supercade
ID MOVIE: 'The Man
From laramie' A man
sets out to avenge his
brother's death and
runs up against a gang
running guns to the
Indians.
@)@ Fawlty Towers
9:00 0 (I)
Cl) Smurfs
G) (!) New Scooby/
Scrappy Doo
@) CID Good Neighbors
9:30 Ill Cil D.mgeons and
Dragons
G)(!) Pac-Man/Rubik
Cube Hour
@) CID Dave Allen at
large
10.: 00 Ill Cil Tarzan: lord of
the Jungle
@) CID Dad's Army
10:30 0 (]) 6B Cl) Alvin 8t
the Chipmunks
Ill Cil Bugs Bunny
o m m rn
m
�m (!) Littles
«sunctay))
CD
MOVIE: 'Thunder
Bay' Oil prospectors
battle shrimp fishermen
when off-shore dri:Jing
interferes with the fishmg community. James
Stewart, Joanne Dru,
Gilbert Roland. 1953.
Cil Social Problems/Ciassrm.
@) CID House For All
Seasons
11:00 0 (1) GD Cil Mr. T
6) (!) Puppy/Scooby
Doo Show
Cil Bits and Bytes
@) ® All New This
Old House
11 :30 0 (]) GD (2) Amazing
Spiderman/lncredible
Hulk
Cil
Business
Management
@) ® MU Report
AFTERNOON
2/19/84
BLEEPS & BLUNDERS
Steve Lawrence (I.) and
Don Rickles are co-hosts of
ABC's "Foul-ups, Bleeps and
Blunders," a collection of
uncensored outtakes trom
movies, TV and commercials,
airing TUESDAY, FEB. 21.
m
m
CHECK LISTINGS
FOR EXACT TIME
@1984 Compulog
m
0 (I) Biskitts
6) (!) America's Top
Ten
Cil
Business
Management
3:30
@) ®
Washington
Week/Review
Paul
Duke is joined by top
Washington journalists
analyzing the week's
news .
12:30 0
(]) All Star
Wrestling
0 (I) Benji/Zax/Aiien
Prince
6) (!) XIV Winter
Olympic Games Today 's program features
women ' s free program
4:00
figure
skating,
90
meter ski jumping ,
men's 10,000 meter
speed skating, fourman bobsled and women· s
cross-country
skiing. (3 hrs.)
ffi Here's to Your
Health
4:30
@) ®
Wall Street
5:00
Week Louis Rukeyser
analyzes the '80s with
a weekly review of
et::onomic and investment matters.
GD Cil Thundarr
12:45 CD MOVIE: 'Strike
Force' A New Yotk
City police detective
teams up with a Federal
agent and a state
trooper to crack a narcotics ring . Richard
5:30
Gere, Cliff Gorman,
Donald Blakely . 1975.
1:00 0 (U Let's Go To The
Races
Cil Here's to Your
Health
@) ® Family Portrait
GD Cil MOVIE: 'Elvis:
That's the Way It !s'
An investigation of the
6 :00
phenomenon that is Elvis, capturing the ups
and downs he experienced putting his act
together. Elvis Presley.
1970.
1 :30 0 ill NCAA Basketball: Bowling Green at
6:30
Ohio
0 (]) Fishing w/
Roland Martin
(1) Focus on
7:00
Society
@) ® Family Portrait
2:00 0 ® NCAA Basketball:
Virginia
at
Houston
00 Focus on
Society
@) ®
Making It
Count
2 :15 CD
MOVIE:
'The
Unforgiven' Two families feud with savage
Kiowa Indians over the
7:30
adopted daughter of
one of the families. Audrey Hepburn, Burt
Lancaster, Lillian Gish .
2:30
ffi American Gov't
Survey
@) ®
Making It
Count
8:00
3:00
(1) American Gov't
Survey
@) ® Vietnam: A
.·, .:te~'=-~~!>!1.~!~-.-.· ..~.•.• • .,.
12:00
m
m
m
m
m
m
m
GD Cil Fishing Championships
0 (]) NCAA Basketball:
Louisville
at
Memphis State
6) @ Professional
Bowlers Tour Today's
program features the
$125,000 True Value
Open from the La'ldmark Recreation Plaza,
Peoria, IL. (90 min.)
fB Cil Another Page
GD Cil NCAA Basketball: Teams to be
Announced
0 ® Los Angeles
Open Golf Coverage of
the third round is presented from the Riviera
Country Club, Pacific
Palisades, CA. (2 hrs.)
00 GED Series
@) ® All Creatures
Great and Small
fB (1) GED Series
a @ Wide World of
Sports
CD Fishin' w/Orlando
Wilson
fB 00 Firing Line
@) ®
Masterpiece
Theatre
'The
Irish
R.M. · Sally Knox arrives at the Horse Fair
on the arm of Bernard
Shute and Flurry sells
Bernard his dangerous
mare Juno . (60 min.)
(Closed Captioned)
0 ill That Nashville
Music
CD Motorweek Illustrated
0) (2) Ronald McDonald House of Lexington
EVENING
m
OCil O(l) News
CD World Championship Wrestling
(I) Matinee at the
Bijou 'Mystery Plane.·
88
CID Undersea
World of Jacques
Cousteau
0 (1) 0) Cil NBC
News
0 (]) Concern
a @ Dance Fever
0 (1) Dance Fever
0 (]) Hee Haw
6) (!) XIV Winter
Olympic Games Tonight's program features women's free
program speed skating, ski jumping, men's
10,000 meter speed
skating, four-man bobsled and cross-country
skiing. (4 hrs.)
88 CID Dr. Who Movie
Cil Jamboree
0 (l)Courage
(1) Sneak Previews Co-hosts Neal
Gabler
and
Jeffrey
Lyons take a look at
what's happening at
the movies.
0 (1) 0) Cil Diff'rent
Strokes Mr. Drummond catches up with
Maggie and they decide
to get.mar.ri.estwbile Ar-
m
m
m
nold meets his new little brother.
0 (]) Whiz Kids
CD MOVIE: 'Behold a
Pale Horse' Two men
who had fought on opposite sides during the
Spanish Civil War continu their conflict after
the war's end. Gregory
Peck, Anthony Quinn,
Omar Sharif. 1964.
ffi Nature 'Living
Tonight's
Together.'
program explores the
relationships between
the behavior of animals
and the kinds of communities in which they
live. (R) (60 min.)
(Closed Captioned)
0 (1) GD Cil Silver
Spoons When Grandfather Stratton and
Ricky go deerhunting,
Ricky finds out that it's
depressing to kill an animal.
@) ® Bernie Schuler
at Home
m
8:30
0 ill GD (I) We Got It
Made Mickey discovers a baby left on her ·
doorstep.
0 (]) Airwolf
00 All Creatures
Great and Small
@) ® World War I
9:30 0 (]) GD Cil Mama's
Family Mama runs for
mayor.
@) ® Swinging the
Blues
10:00 0 (]) GD Cil Yellow
Rose Chance, Roy and
Quisto come to the rescue after they discover
that L.C. Champion has
been kidnapped. (60
min.)
0 (]) Mickey Spillane's Mike Hammer
fB ill Myste,.Y! 'Reilly:
Ace of Spies.' After
having his wife desert
him, Reilly is unexpectedly confronted by his
mysterious past. (60
min.) [Closed
Captioned)
81) CID NCAA Basketball:
Citadel
at
Marshall
10:30 CD
TBS
Evening
News
1 1 :00 0 (1) 0 (]) News
6) (!) ABC News
CD Unknown War
ffi Austin City
Limits 'The Whites/
The New Grass Revival.'
GD (I) Music Magazine
1 1 :1 5 6) (!) News
11 :30 0 (1) GD Cil Saturday
Night Live
0 (]) News That
Rocked '83
a
(!) XIV Winter
Olympic Games Tonight' s program features highlights of the
day's activities at the
Winter Olympics from
Sarajevo, Yugoslavia.
12:00 a @ NCAA Basket·
ball: Mississippi at
Mississippi State
CD Night Tracks
8l
CID Rockin' &
Rollin'
with
Phil
Spector
1:00 0 (1) MOVIE: 'And
Now Tomorrow' A
young doctor from the
wrong side of the
tracks and a beautiful
but deaf rich girl fall in
love. Susan Hayward,
Loretta Young, Alan
Ladd. 1944
2:00 CD
Night
Tracks
Cont'd
MORNING
5:00
6:00
a@ Rev. Pete Rowe
a(!) Omni
CD News
6:15 CD Week/Review
6:30 OCilTVChapel
0 (]) Better Way
a @ What Does the
Bible Say7
CD TBS Morning
News
7:00 0 (1) Music and the
Spoken Word
() (]) Jerry Falwell
6) @ Roger Sparks
Religion
CD World Tomorrow
@) CID MOVIE: 'Dr.
Kildare's
Wedding
Day' Tragedy interrupts Dr. Kildare's wedding day, making him
question whether or
not he really wants to
be a doctor. Lew
Ayres, Lionell Barrymore, Laraine Day .
1941
fiB Cil Time for
Refreshing
7:30 0 (1) Fountain of Life
a (!) James Robison
CD It Is Written
8:00 0 (1) Hour of Power
0
(]) Day of
Discovery
a (!) Jerry Falwell
CD Cartoon Carnival
fB ffi Sesame Street
[Closed Captioned)
0)
Cil
Gateway
Gospel
~@(ff(fjfl)
rt@):f)ffJV!IIY
9:00
m
m
T.G. Sheppard and Clint
Eastwood have teamed on a
new single, " Make My Day."
The title is the catch phrase
from Eastwood's current film,
"Sudden Impact." The song.
produced by Jim Ed Norman.
was rushed into release. The
song marks Sheppard's second duet (first was 1982's
"Faking Love" with Karen
Brooks) and Eastwood's third
(he cut "Barroom Buddies"
with Merle Haggard and
"Beers to You" with Ray
Charles) .
•
The Arthritis Foundation will
hold its third annual national
telethon on April 29, live from
the Gaslight Studio inside
Opryland USA in Nashville.
The eight-hour extravaganza
will feature Mickey Gilley as
celebrity host and Lee Greenwood as celebrity anchor.
Nashville radio and TV personality Ralph Emery will be master of ceremonies. They will be
JOined by entertainers including Charly McClain and John·
ny Lee.
Forty-four markets have
already committed to carry the
telethon. with other markets
currently
undergoing
clearance. This will give the
telethon. which will be distributed live via the Westar satellite. a potential viewing audience
of
37.2
million
households. Last year's
telethon. which also originated
from Opryland, raised more
than $1.3 million in contributions and pledges.
•
Don Williams has three new
albums out. or coming out.
within the first four months of
1984. "Don Williams." a
Heartland album sold via TV,
includes 18 of his past hits
Mickey Gilley
MCA shipped Williams' "Best
of Volume Ill" LP th1s month. a
collection of 10 hit singles. In
early spring. Williams' sixteenth new-material album for
MCA will be released.
•
At the request of the owners
of the Minnesota North Stars
hockey team. Lee Greenwood sang the national
anthem prior to a recent North
Stars-Toronto Maple Leafs
game at the Met Center in
Bloomington. MN. The owners
returned the favor the next
night by catching Greenwood's show at the Carlton
Theater in Bloomington.
•
Following his West Coast
concert tour, David Frizzell is
back in the studio starting
work on his third solo album
for Viva Records. The disc.
containing several songs
penned by Frizzell, is scheduled for an early summef
release
•
·m
0
Oral Roberts
and You
0 (]) Christ for the
World
CD Starcade
@) CID Wild America
0) Cil Biblical Viewpoint
9:00 0 (1) Rex Humbard
0 (]) Sunday Morning
6)
@
Kenneth
Cope1and
CD Leave It to Beaver
ffi Sesame Street
[Closed Captioned)
@) ® Smithsonian
World 'Crossing the
Distance.' · Tonight's
program looks at the
ingenuity, daring and
imagination man brings
to the challenge of getting from point A to
point B as directly as
possible (60 min.)
[Closed Captioned)
0) Cil Sunday School
9:30 0
(1)
Kenneth
Copeland
CD Andy Griffith
0) Cil Rev. R.A. West
1 0:00 a(!) Rev. R.A. West
CD Good News
fB (l) Mr. Rogers'
Neighborhood
88 CID Nova 'China's
Only Child.' Tonight's
program looks at the
People's Republic of
China's efforts to control their population
problems. (60 min.)
[Closed Captioned)
tB Cil Big Creek
Baptist
10:30 0 (1) Dr. D. James
Kennedy
0 (]) Ernest Angley
G) @ Jimmy Swaggart
I& MOVIE: 'EI Cid'
The legendary Spanish
hero fights to free his
country from foreign invaders and win the love
of his lady fair. Charlton
Heston, Sophia Loren.
Raf Valone_. 1962.
fiB
(I)
Electric
Company
11 :00 tB (I) Sesame Street
[Closed Captioned)
81) ®Six-Gun Heroes
0) Cil Leonard Repass
(1) Bill Dance
11 :30 0
Outdoors
0 (]) Fishing Report
a @World Tomorrow
fiB Cil Rev. R.A. West
AFTERNOON
8:30
m
12:00
0
0
(1) At Issue
(]) Daytona 500
Coverage of the 26th
running of the NASCAR
Daytona 500 is presented from the Daytona
International
Speedway,
Daytona
Beach. FL. (3 hrs .. 45
min.)
G) (!) XIV Winter
Olympic Games To-
�4:30 f.B (I) Social Prob-
HOTEL HIJINKS
Robert Stack and Dina Merrill guest star as parents
watching their daughter march
down the aisle, but they face a
crisis in their own marriage
when it is discovered that he is
involved in an affair. " The
Wedding" episode of "Hotel"
airs WEDNESDAY, FEB. 22
on ABC.
CHECK LISTINGS FOR EXACT TIME
lems/Ciassrm.
Ol
®
To
Be
Announced
5:00 0 (!) NCAA Basketball:
Kentucky
at
Vanderbilt
f.B (I) All New This
Old House
Ol ® Two Ronnies
5:30 f.B (I) Woodwright's
Shop
g)® To the Mar.or
Born
EVENING
6:00
6:30
1:00
SIMON & SIMON
Jameson· Parker (1.) and
Gerald McRaney star as a pair
of private-eye brothers on
"Simon & Simon," airing
THURSDAY, FEB. 23 on
CBS.
0 (I) 0 (l) News
G) (!) Star Search
lfj Portrait of America: New Jersey
f.B (I) Motorweek
g) ® Dad's Army
(!D
(})
To
Btt
Announced
0 ([) (!D (}) NBC
CHECK LISTINGS FOR EXACT TIME
@)1984 Compulog
5:00 lfj Varied Programs
5:30 G)(!)Rev.PeteRowe
6:00 0 (I) NBC News at
NP.WS
day's program features
men's slalom Alpine
skiing, ice hockey playoffs, figure skating,
men's cross-country
skiing and the closing
ceremonies. (5 hrs.)
f.B
(I)
Working
Women
g) ® Sesame Street
[Closed Captioned)
(!D (l) Old Time
Gospel
12:30 0 (I) Meet the Press
f.B (]) Comment on
Kentucky
1 :00 0 (I) Bowling
f.B (]) Capitol Connection
g) ® Victory Garden
(!D (2) Meet the Press
1 :30 f.B (I) Business of
Management
g)
®
Working
Women
2:00 0 (I) NCAA Basketball:
Maryland
at
North Carolina
f.B (I) Business of
Management
Ol ®MOVIE: 'Love
Finds Andy Harrty'
Troubles of the heart
beset
Andy Hardy
when his girl returns
unexpectedly from a
vacation trip . Mickey
Rooney, Judy Garland,
Lana Turner. 1938.
(!D (2) NCAA Basketball: Teams to be
Announced
2:15 lfj
MOVIE:
'The
Amazing
Howard
Hughes' This biographical drama depicts the life and career
of one of the world 's riwho
chest
men
pioneered in the rise of
aviat1on and eventually
fell victim to his own
eccentricities. Tommy
Lee Jones, Ed Flanders,
Tovah Feldshuh. 1977.
2:30 fB (I) Focus on
Society
3:00 f.B (I) Focus on
Society
3:30 fB (I) Making It
Count
g)
®
Barbara's
Horses & Ponies
3:45 0 (l) Los Angeles
Open Golf Coverage of
the final round i:; presented from the Riviera
Country Club. Pacific
Palisades, CA.
4:00 0 (I) Country Gold
f.B (I) Making It
Count
g) ® Inside Story
'Good
Copy ... Bad
Medicine?' Tonight's
program looks at how
medical breakthroughs
and stories of major
medical problems in the
U.S. are reported.
liB (}) SportsWorld
Today's program features professional boxing, 'The Dream Mile'
and sumo wrestling.
(l) CBS News
f1j (I) Great Chefs/
San Francisco
g)® Fawlty Towers
7:00 0 (I) CiB (l) First
Camera
0 (l) 60 Minutes
G) (!) XIV Winter
Olympic Games Today's program features
men's slalom Alpine
skiing, ice hockey playoffs, figure skating,
men's cross-country
skiing and the closing
ceremonies. (4 hrs.)
I& Best of World
Championship Wrestling
fB (I) Nature 'Osprey.' Tonight's profollows
the
gram
osprey's progress from
its hatching, through
migration to its breeding grounds. (60 min.)
(Closed Captioned)
6J) ® Tony Brown's
Journal
'Longest
Struggle: NAACP in
Historical Perspective.·
7:30 Ol ® Lawmakers
8:00
Knight
Rider
o rn m m
INN£11
By Joan Crosby
((daytirne))
MORNING
0
@) 1118<4 Compulog
3:15
victim. Ro yn M1llan,
Derek Francis, Anne
Rutter. 1975
G)(!) Star Search
lfj MOVIE: 'Magic
Town'
A
pollster
causes trouble for a
small town's mild way
of life. James Stewart.
Jane Wyman. Kent
Smith. 194 7.
lfj MOVIE: 'Value for
Money' A young man
lives it up after inheriting his father's fortune .
John Gregson, Diana
Dors, Donald Pleasance. 1957 .
FUB£
FUTURE PLANS - Santa Barbara, that paradise of old
money and quiet elegance about 90 minutes up the .
· coast from Los Angeles, will become the site of a new
NBC soap opera. Jerome and Bridget Dobson are
developing the serial, which will be filmed in Santa Barbara and in a new studio under construction at NBCBurbank. They will also be its head writers and co-executive producers. The Dobsons have been head writers
on soaps like "General Hospital," "Guiding Light" and
"As the World Turns." The series begins production this
summer.
HEMINGWAY TO TV NBC is tur,ling Ernest
Hemingway's novel. "The Sun Also Rises," into a fourhour miniseries. The famous story of American expatriates in Europe after World War I will be filmed in London
and Spain. A 1957 movie based on the book starred
Tyrone Power, Ava Gardner, Errol Flynn, Eddie
Albert and Mel Ferrer.
EVERGREEN BLOOMS - Another . NBC miniseries
scheduled to air next year is "Evergreen," based on Belva Plain's best-seller depicting an immigrant Jewish girl
who rises to the status of wealthy matriarch. It begins
filming in New York in April.
NEW ADDITION- Alexis Smith, who won a Tony in
1972 for "Follies," is joining the cast of "Dallas." She
will play Lady Jessica Montford, sister of Clayton Farlow
(Howard Keel).
Alexis Smith
after escaping prison,
resurrects Goliath, the
invincible semi-truck,
and vows to destroy
Michael and K.I.T.T. (2
hrs.)
0 (l) Master of the
Game Part 1 First of 3
parts. This drama.
based on Sidney Sheldon's
best-selling
novel, chronicles the
lives of the Blackwell
family from their beginnings in the diamond
fields of South Africa
through their reign as
one of the world's
most powerful families.
(3 hrs.)
lfj MOVIE: 'Back to
Bataan'
A
colonel
forms a guerilla army to
lead a raid on the Japanese in order to help
Americans landing on
Leyte. John Wayne,
Anthony Quinn, Beulah
Bondi. 1945.
f.B (I) Pallisers
g)® Nature 'Jet Set
Wildlife.'
Tonight's
program looks at mil-·
lions of plants and animals that, over the
years, have come to
Florida and created sericus implications for re(60
sident wildlife.
min.) (Closed Captioned)
9:oo eB
m
m
CID
Masterpiece Theatre
'The Irish A.M.' The
Major's cousin arrives
for a visit and the Major
is snared by a nest of
illegal liquor sellers. (60
min.) [Closed Captioned)
10:00 0
(I)
CiB
(l) TV's
Greatest
Commercials #5 Ed McMahon
and Joyce DeWitt host
this presentation of
some of the most memorable TV commercials. (60 min.)
l i Sports Page
~ f.B (J) Bits and Bytes
g) (fi) Dupont Columbia Awards
10:30 1i Oral Roberts
f.B (J) New Tech
Times
11 :00 0 (I) 0 (]) • (l)
News
8) C!J ABC News
• Jerry Falwell
11 :15 0 (!) Forum 19
11 :30 0 (I) MOVIE: 'Million
Dollar Legs' A college
makes a comeback
through the efforts of a
college chi&eler and a
horse race. Betty Grable, Donald O'Connor,
Jackie Coogan. 1939
0 (l) This Week in
Country Music
G)
(!)
Pentecost
Today
g) ® Monty Python
Flying Circus
1B (l) MOVIE: 'The
Swarm' Millions of African killer bees bring
death and destruction
to North America. Richard Widmark, Michael Caine, Katherine
Ross. 1978.
12:00 0 (!) Face the Nation
G C!l Jim Bakker
lfj
People
Who
Fish ... America
6J) ® Dave Allen at
Large
12:30 0
(!)
MOVIE:
'Murder Motel' After
her fiance is slain, the
woman
traces
his
steps to a motel where
she is soon registered
as the next intended
6:15
6:30
6:45
7:00
Sunrise
0 (]) G) (!) Jimmy
Swaggart
lfj
TBS
Morning
News
6J) ® Varied Programs
0 (I) News
0
(l) CBS Early
Morning News
G
(!)
Assembly
Echoes
G)(!) ABC News This
Morning
Ol®Weather
0 (I) CiD (l) Today
0 (]) CBS Morning
News
G) (!) Good Morning
America
Ask Kate
-Liza's marriages
By Kate Woods
One of my friends
says that Liza Minnelli
was married to Jack
Haley's son, which
would mean that the
daughter of Dorothy
(Judy Garland) married
the Tin Man's son. K.S.A.
Miss Minnelli and Jack
Haley Jr. were marned,
but are now divorced.
Liza is now married to
Mark Gero, whose father
and mother had nothing
to do with "The Wizard of
Oz."
PAGING ROGERS Where can I write to
Kenny Rogers? I'm one
of his big fans. - H.B.
You can write to Rogers in care of Kragen &
Company, 112 North
Sherbourne Dr.. Los
Angeles. CA 90069.
MASTERWORKS I
have been a student of
various martial arts for
several years and
would be interested In
writing to the person
who puts the martial
arts sequences together on "The Master." F.l.
Sho Kosugi is the fight
coordinator for the new
NBC series. You can
write him in care of the
show at Viacom Productions, 4024 Radford St.,
Studio City, CA 91604.
2001 UPDATE - DurIng a recent television
special about the movie
Liza Minnelli
"200 1:
A
Space
Odyssey," Kelr Dullea
said he would like to be
In "2010," the sequel.
Has he been asked yet?
-G.T.
Peter Hyams, who is
producing, writing and
directing the sequel to
Stanley Kubrick's "2001:
A Space Odyssey," has
signed Dullea to repeat
his role as astronaut
Bowman. Douglas Rain
will again provide the
voice of HAL. The stars
of the film, however, will
be Roy Scl)eider, John
Lithgow and Bob Balaban as the scientists
trying to figure out just
what happened during
the Discovery's mission.
Send your letters to
Kate Woods, United Feature Syndicate, 200 Park
Ave., Room 602, New
York,
N.Y.
10166.
Because of the volume of
mail, we cannot make
persona(replies.
�mC..
. .perStation Funtime
@) ® Varied Programs
7:30 CD I Dream of Jeannie
8:00 CD Bewitched
@!) Cil Weather
@) ® Sesame Street
[Closed Captioned]
8 :15 @!) Cil Instructional
Programs
8:30 CD I Love Lucy
9:00 II Cil Braun and
Company
0 Cil Andy Griffith
6) (!) Jim Bakker
CD Movie
@) ®
Instructional
Programs
m rn 100 Club
9:30 0 Cil Here's Lucy
10:00 II Cil Facts of Life
0 Cil New $25.000
Pyramid
6t (!) 700 Club
m
ill
Diff'rent
Strokes
10:30 II Cil Sale of the
Century
0 Cil Press Your
Luck
m
ill
Morning
Stretch
11 :00 II Cil m ill Wheel of
Fortune
0 00 Price Is Right
6t (!)Benson
CD Catlins
11 :30 II Cil m ill Dream
House
6) (!)Loving
CD Texas
AFTERNOON
12:00
(
1 :00
1 :30
2 :00
2:30
3 :00
3:30
4:00
4:30
5:00
II ®
0 00
Hot Potato
m ill News
6) (!) Family Feud
CD Perry Mason
12:30 II Cil News
0 00 Young and the
Restless
6) (!)Ryan' s Hope
m
Cl) Search For
Tomorrow
5 :30
-=1 Cil
~anday»
Days of Our
Lives
6) (!) All My Children
CD Movie
m (}) Sale of the
Century
0 Cil As the World
7:30
Turns
·
m (}) Days of Our
9:00
Lives
II (]) Another World
6t (!) One Life to Live
@) ® 3-2-1. Contact
0 Cil Capitol
@) ®
Instructional
Programs
m ill Another World
II Cil Match Game/
Hollywood
Squares
Hour
fll Cil Guiding Light
1 :00
6t
(!)
General
Hospital
CD Flintstones
@) ® Varied Programs
CD Battle of the
Planets
@!) Cil Varied Programs
m Cl) Match Game/
Hollywood
Squares
II Cil Mr. Cartoon
0 Cil Hour Magazine
6) (!) Rockford Files
CD Munsters
@!) (]) Sesame Street
[Closed Captioned]
6:30
@) ® 3-2-1, Contact
CD Leave It to Beaver
@) ® Mr. Rogers'
Neighborhood
m (}) Hot Potato
II Cil B.J./Lobo Show
fl1 Cil Hawaii Five-0 7:00
6t (!) Superfriends
CD Little House on the
Prairie
@!) (]) Mr. Rogers'
Neighborhood
@) ® Sesame Street
[Closed Captioned]
m (I) PTLCiub
6) (!)Tic Tac Dough
fB (]) 3-2-1, Contact 7:30
(
2/20/84
MORNING
@) ® Sesame Street
(Closed Captioned]
CD MOVIE: 'The
Unguarded Moment'
A high school music
teacher receives mash
notes, which almost
ruin her life . Esther Williams, George Nader,
Les Tremayne . 1956.
PHIL'S WEDDING
Phil Drummond (Conrad
Bain) weds Maggie McKinney
(Dixie Carter) on "Diff'rent
Strokes," airing SATURDAY,
FEB. 25 on NBC.
CHECK LISTINGS FOR EXACT TIME
AFTERNOON
@1984 Compulog
Ui MOVIE: 'Kiss Me
Deadly'
Private-eye
Mike Hammer picks up
an asylum escapee and
becomes involved in
murder and intrigue.
Ralph Meeker. Albert
Dekker, Cloris Leachman . 1955 .
EVENING
6:oo 11 rn o
0 Cil
Cil m rn
mffiNews
CD Andy Griffith
@!) Cil MacNeil/lehrer
Newshour
@)®Dr. Who
II Cil m (I) NBC
News
0 Cil CBS News
6) (!)ABC News
CD Carol Burnett
@)
®
Business
Report
II(]) PM Magazine
fll Cil Wheel of
Fortune
6t (!)People's Court
CD Hogan's HerQes
@!) Cil Bond of Iron
@) ® MacNeil/Lehrer
Newshour
m (I) How the West
Was Won
II Cil Tic Tac Dough
Family Feud
AFTERNOON
m (!) Jeffersons
8 :00
m Sanford and Son
m (I) TV's
II Cil
Bloopers and Practical Jokes
0 Cil Master of the
Game Part 2 Second
of 3 parts. (3 hrs.)
6t
(!)
MOVIE:
'Superman II'
CD MOVIE: 'The Blue
Knight' A policeman
tries to solve a murder
case in the last four
days before he retires
from the force . William
Holden, Jamie Farr. Lee
Remick . 1973 .
@!) Cil @) ® Frontline
'Bread. Butter & Politics.'
9:00 II Cil m (l) Super
Night of Rock 'N' Roll
m m ·m
<ID
Shakespeare
Plays
'The Comedy of Errors .'
1 0 :15 CD
TBS
Evening
News
11
11 rn o ® m rn
mill News
CD All In the Family
11 :30 II Cil m (I) Decision
:oo
'84
0
Cil Hart to Hart
6) (!) Nightline
CD Catlins
<ID Latenight
America
11 :45 II Cil m (l) Tonight
Show
12:00 CD MOVIE: 'Countdown'
12:30 0 Cil Columbo ·A
Deadly State of Mind.'
iE) C!J NCAA Basketball: LSU at Mississippi State
12:45 II Cil Late Night with
David Letterman
,2 :15 CD MOVIE: 'City For
Conquest'
4 :15 CD MOVIE: 'Sabaka'
A young man, an elephant and a tiger join
forces to oppose a cult
of fire walkers in India,
Boris Karloff, Victor
Jory, Reginald Denny.
m
1955.
((tuesday»
2/21/84
MORNING
9:00 CD
MOVIE: 'Strangers: The Story of a
Mother and Daughter' A bitter woman's
estranged daughter returns home after a
twenty-year absence.
Bette Davis, Gena Rowlands, Ford Rainey .
MASTER OF THE GAME-On her 90th birthday, Kate Blackwell
(Oyan Cannon} poses with her son (Harry Hamlin, 1.} and her
longtime adviser' ( Cliff DeYoung} in "Master of the Game," a threepart miniseries based on Sidney Sheldon's novel. CBS airs the drama
Feb. 19, 20 and 21.
1979.
11:00
0
Cil America's
Bake-Off Bob Barker
hosts this baking competition which features
$130,000 in cash
prizes.
1:00 CD MOVIE: 'Pillars of
the Sky' A hard drinking, womanizing sergeant is forced to fight
an Indian attack with
men he does not like .
Jeff Chandler, Dorothy
Maone, Ward Bond.
1956.
EVENING
6:oo 11 rn o
®
m rn
. fiD(l) News
Andy Griffith
@!) Cil MacNeil/Lehrer
News hour
@)®Dr. Who
6 :30 II Cil m (}) NBC
News
0 Cil CBS News
6) (!)ABC News
CD Carol Burnett
@)
®
Business
Report
7:00 II Cil PM Magazine
0
Cil Wheel of
Fortune
6) (!) People's Court
CD Hogan's Heroes
@!)
00 Kentucky
General Assembly
@) @ MacNeil/Lehrer
News hour
m (}) At The Movies
7 :30 II Cil Tic Tac Dough
0 Cil Family Feud
(!) Jeffersons
CD Sanford and Son
fB (]) Play Bridge
m
m
8:00
m (}) Headwaters
II Cil m (}) A Team
The A Team tangles
w ith a terrorist group
that has kidnapped an
heiress. (60 min.)
0 Cil Master of the
Game Part 3 Conclusion . (3 hrs .) .
6)
(!)
Foul-ups/
Bleeps/Blunders
CD MOVIE: 'Murderer's Row' Secret agent
Matt Helm is called in
when a scientist is kidnapped by a supervillain . Dean Martin, AnnMargret, Karl Malden .
1966.
@!)(§)@)®Nova 'It's
About Time.' Dudley
Moore hosts this look
at the concept of time.
(R) (60 min.) [Closed
Captioned]
8:30 6) (!) Ripleys Believe
It or Not
9:00 II Cil m (}) Riptide
Cody and Nick try to
rescue Boz and an airline stewardess who
are held captive by a
man who wants some
diamonds. (60 min .)
6)
(!)
Three's
Company Jack gets
asked to bare all in his
art instructor's figure
drawing class . (Closed
Captioned]
@!)
OJ CID American
Playhouse 'The Cafeteria.' Bob Dishy and
Zohra Lampert star in
Isaac Bashevis Singer's
m
9:30
story
about
a
European-born writer
and a woman who are
survivors of the holocaust. (60 min .) [Closed
Captioned]
6) (!) Oh Madeline
1o:oo 11
rn
m
:oo
o
m
m
Remington
Steele
Laura and Remington
are given one hour to
live when Major Descolin pays a return visit
to their office. (60 min .)
6) (!) Hart to Hart The
Harts
become
ensnared in the smuggling
of ancient Greek artifacts. (60 min.) (Closed
Captioned]
@!)
Cil
Business
Report
@) ® Firing Line
10:15 CD
TBS
Evening
News
10:30 @!) Cil Inside Story
'Black
Pols/White
Press.· Black mayors
talk about political coverage from a largely
white press.
11 rn
Cil
rn
11
m (})News
@) ® Not the Nine
O'Clock News
11 :30 II CIJ m ill Tonight
Show
0 Cil Magnum P.l. A
woman seeks Magnum's help after her
husband is kidnapped.
6) (!) Nightline
Catlins
<ID Latenight
America
12:00 6)
(!)
Eye
on
Hollywood
CD MOVIE: 'The
Execution of Private
Slovik' This is the true
story of Eddie Slovik,
the only American soldier executed for desertion since the Civil
War. Martin Sheen.
Ned Beatty, Mariclare
Costello. Gary Busey.
12:30 II Cil Late Night with
David Letterman
0 Cil McCloud 'The
42nd Street Cavalry.'
McCloud becomes involved with a beautiful
police trainee and a
murder investigation.
(R) (90 min.)
6t (!) Andy Gdffith
1 :00 6) (!) Bionic Woman
2:30 CD
MOVIE:
'The
Naked Maja'
m
m
Sherbet has a high level of sugar- about twice
as much as ice cream.
It must contain one to
two percent milkfat to
qualify as "sherbet."
�'
Boswell Supports
Current Farm Bills
•
State Agriculture Commissioner
David E. Boswell has given his support
to two pieces of agricultural-related
legislation being considered by the 1984
General Assembly meeting in Frankfort.
''These bills address one of the most
crucial issues facing agriculture
today-the loss of prime farmland,"
Boswell said.
From 1969-1979, 250,000 acres of prime
ai{entucky farmland were irretrievably
--rost, Boswell said, citing a report by the
Governor's Agricultural Land Study and
Policy Committee. In addition to each
acre lost directly, at least one more acre
was lost indirectly to agricultural use
through a "leap-frogging effect," he
added.
The farmland conversion problem is
so serious that some agricultural experts believe that if conversion continues at its present rate, Kentucky's
gricultural production capacity may be
severely reduced, the Commissioner
• said.
"What we are looking at is Kentucky
having to import food rather than exporting it as a major source of revenue,"
Boswell said. "House Bills 34 and 35 are
efforts to protect our future as an
agricultural state."
HB 34 requires any state agency planning to take more than 50 acres out of
rmland to report to an in~r-agencyl
task force. Although the task force cannot stop the project, it can·work with the
agency to minimize the adverse impact
on agriculture.
HB 35 is basically an amendment to
an agricultural districting bill passed
during the 1982 General Assembly.
The 1982 bill permitted land owners to
form agricultural districts which could
not be annexed. An exception was made
.w>r any land falling within a federal201
'1115lanning district. That land could be
annexed.
A 201 district is a result of a city's
deciding the direction of its growth and
determining where it plans to annex
land. Legislators felt that cities which
had already invested time and money in
such planning might fee1 unfairly
treated if they were then prohibited
from annexing the land 'as planned.
HB 35 eliminates the 201 planning
district exemption .
• "We found out' " Boswell said ' "That
more land than expected fell in a 201
planning district. All of Fayette county
is in a 201 district. The state received
five agricultural districting requests
from Fayette county and had to reject
them out of hand.
"Twenty other requests also had to be
rejected," he added.
Section Two, Paae Eleven
The Floyd County Time• .
edne!lday, February 15, 1984
Boswell said he feels the HB 35 is
especially important to central Kentucky because most of the land now in
agricultural districts <about 17,000
acres) is in the western part of the state.
The cities are still protected, Boswell
said, because HB 35 also provides that
agricultural districts can be reviewed
every five years by the government with
jurisdiction over the land.
If the review indicates that the land
should be annexed or provides the only
feasible direction of growth, the state
could be asked to make a ruling to that
effect.
"The main thing here is that the needs
of agriculture will have to be addressed before annexation can take place,"
Boswell said. "For that reason, if no
other, these bills are very important to
the future of
"
Named To Dean's List
At Pikeville College
Certificates have been awarded tq,
students at Pikeville College being named to the fall, 1983 Dean's List. To be
eligible for the Dean's Ljst, a full-time
student must complete 12 semester
hours with no failure and earn a
minimum average of 3.50 for that
semester.
Students named to the Dean's List
from Floyd county are Sylvia L. Marshall, Allen; Janice L. Vanover, Auxier;
Teresa J. Frazier, Betsy Layne; Bonnie
D. Johnson, Kathern L. Johnson, Bypro;
Michelle E. Moore, Audreyetta Moore,
Drift; Faye D. Wiley, Estill; Angelia C.
Stephens, George A. Case, Harold;
Vickie R. King, Hueysville; Kitty R.
Frazier, Robert I. Comstock, Martin ;
Drema K. Hunt, Darrell Prater, Jennifer M. Martin, Prestonsburg; Lisa
Hall, Sherri L. Osborne, Wheelwright;
from Johnson county: Amelia L.
McKenzie, Paintsville; Knott county :
Charles B. Childers, Hindman; Lloyd
Campbell, Mousie; Magoffin county :
William C. Banks, Salyersville.
IN MEMORIAM
In loving memory of Walter S. and
Reginald G. Lazar, who passed away
August 15, 1983.
Memories of yesterday flood through
our minds
When fate would have been a little more
kind
Fate as it has taken you both from us
But one thing fate could not take, is the
memories with us you've intrusted.
You helped us through when things were
bad
You helped us laugh though times were
sad
You kept good times going as only you
knew how
To you both with appreciation and honor
our thoughts we bow
These things and more are just such little parts
To the memories you both left us of your
smiles and faces
Which hold warm feelings in our hearts ..
Sadly missed by
your families
RAL H'S
TIRE SERVICE
U.S. 23 No~. Prestonsburg • 888-8808
• Computer Wheel Balancing
• New Tires (Steel It Gloss Belted It Polyttter)
• Recaps-Regular It Radial All Season,
4·Wheel Drive 10 It 11x15
• New Banerles-36 mo. $39.95 Installed
plus exchange
• Rebuilt Banerles-90-day warranty $25.00
plus exchange
• Shocks-Lifetime warranty $19.95 each Installed
lt-pd.
IT'S ANOTHER
I
II
FROM THE "BARGAIN CHAMPION;'
JENNY WILEY TOYOTA .•.
HELP US REACH
OUR GOAL/
30 LEASES BY
MARCH 15TH.
FEBRUARY 15™ MARCH 15TH
IT'S JENNY WILEY'S FIRST
DAYS
*WE WERE
GE's
LARGEST
DEALER
-0-
LEASING
IN KENTUCKY IN
'83-HELP US
STAY NO. 111
.()pry_ Stars, Willie Nelson
'nd Friends 01_1 KET
A night of musical specials will air
Saturday, March 10, during KET TeleFund '84. At 8 p.m., "Best of Live From
the Grand Ole Opry" features top Opry
performers such as Bill Monroe, Minnie
Pearl, Porter Wagoner and Roy Acuff.
The program also offers a special
tribute to the late Marty Robbins and
takes viewers on a tour of facilities at
Opryland, U.S.A., home of the new Opry
all.
Then at 9:30p.m., a blue-ribbon cast
of music performers appears on "Country Memories With Willie Nelson."
Nelson hosts 90 minutes of foot-stomping
highlights from the public television
series, "Austin City Limits," with appearances by Merle Haggard, Roy Orbison, B.B. King, the Ricky Skaggs
Band, Emmylou Harris and Alabama,
among others.
Earlier in the evening KET presents
e special, "WOody Guthrie: Hard
Travelin'." The story of the life and
works of the legendary folksinger airs
at 6:30p.m. KET closes out the soundfilled night with an encore presentation
of "The Kingston Trio and Friends:
Reunion," airing at 1l p.m. Tommy
Smothers and Louisvillian Mary
·Travers appear, along with past and
present members of the singing group.
"Best of Live From the Grand Ole
Opry" is a production of The Nashville
•etwork for Opryland, U.S.A. "Country
•emories With Willie Nelson" is produced by KLRN/San Antonio and
KLRU/Austin. "Woody Guthrie: Hard
Travelin' "is produced by The Ginger
Group and "Kingston Trio and Friends:
Reunion" is co-produced by John Musilli
and Charles K. Simon.
SPECIALI
S
· BLACK
OR RED
SEVERAL '82'S & 83'S
IN STOCK
WILL SELL
• CELICAS
BELOW
• COROLLAS
• PICKUPS
BOOK
• CRESSIDAS
VALUE
• 4X4'S
(CASH)
ANY PICKUP!
BECAUSE JENNY WILEY PAYS YOUR
1ST PAYMENT!
4-SPEED
SHORTBED
"COME AND GET 'EM"
5
195°
0
4X4
STANDARD BED
48-MO. LEASE
• SOME RETURNED
ON LEASE
(GREAT
CONDITION)
PER MO.
48-MO.
COMMONWEALTH OF KENTUCKY
COURT OF JUSTICE
~OYD DISTRICT COURT
~OBATE DIVISION
ADMINISTRATRIX'S NOTICE
TO CREDITORS TO
PRESENT CLAIMS
NOTICE TO CREDITORS
INRE : THEESTATEOFREYNOLD
D. NELSON, late of Dwale, Kentucky.
Letters of administration has been
granted by the Probate Division of Floyd
District Court upon the following estate:
L Reynold D. Nelson, deceased.
. 2. Sally M~>: Nels?n, has been ap~inted Admmtstratrtx.
All creditors having claims against
said estate are notified to present them
to the Administratrix verified according
to law, not later than six (6) months
after the date of this notice, or to
Honorable Cassie J. Allen, P.O. Box 722,
Prestonsburg, Kentucky 41653, the At. torney for said Estate.
SALLY MAY NELSON, Administratrix
of the Estate of Reynold
Nelson, Deceased
P .O. Box 135
Dwale, Kentucky 41621
256 50oeuveRs
ALL LEASES
AVAILABLE
WITH 4-YEAR
EXTENDED
SERVICE
ARRANTYI'
• YES, · WE CAN LEASE GM PRODUCTS TOOl
*USED CAR
SPECIALS TOO!
*A FREE GIFT
WITH EVERY
LEASE!
CALL THE
LEASING CHAMPION:
APPROX. F.ORTY TO
CHOOSE FROM.
• OPEN TILL 6 P.M.
U.S. 23, PRESTONSBURG
l'
886-3861
�W._~n_e~~ay~,F-ebr_ua~~~~S,_198_4_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
TM_F~Ioyd~C~oun~~-Tim_es_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _~~~ti~~T~wo~,P~a~_Tw_elv_e
PRICES
IN EFFECT
FIELDALE
•
WEDIESDAY
FEB. 15
THIU SUNDAY
FEB. 19
CHICKEN
BREAST
•
$. 29"·. ' .'
•
WE GLADLY
ACCEPT U.S.D.A.
FOOD STAMPS.
Louis Rich
SPECIALS .
69c
lu.RKEY HAM.s1 29 iOioGNA ......
8-0Z. CHOPP£D
· $1 09
CHUNK
$149
TURKEY HAM .
TURKEY HAM
Lb.
8-0Z. CHICKEN
$129 8-0Z. TURKEY
$129
BREAST . .... .. .
BREAST .. .. .. .. ·
MiRSHMAi.Lows 21s1
OVEN ROASTED DQ OR HICKORY SMOKED
BONELESS TURKEY BREAST.... .. .....
3-LB. BOWL BLUE BONNET'
MARGARINE ...
$14 9
Oscar Mayer
SPECIALS
9
9
C
BATH TISSUE ...
4-ROLL PKG. WHIT£ CLOUD
22-0Z. PALMOLIVE
DISH LIQUID ....
$1 0 9
CHERRYAPIECKY LEAF
$
FILLING. .. ... . .. .. .. .. ,
~
CHiLIARMOUR
WITH BEANS.
1-LB. PKG.
$159
12-0Z. PKG.
$16 9
1-LB. PKG. CHEESE OR
$15 9
REG. OR BEEF WIENERS ........... .
VARETYPAK ......................... .
29
1
NACHO CHEESE WIENERS ......... .
99 c iEffOR
·PORK BBQ ....
~
$1 09
79c
Hi•·N·z
$119 MizciRONriNo 4/Sl
SJSl KRAFT $149
liiCH(srEISHIRE 69c CHEESr··s $149
SAUCE .. .. .. ..
;o·RToN HousEage iNSTANiWHITE
BEEF STEW...
POTATOES ....
CATSUP........
CHEESE DINNER.
STRAINED
BABY FOOD
GRAPE JELLY....
$12
9
REG. OR BEEF BOLOGNA ........... .
· 12-0Z. PKG.
89
C
COTTO SALAMI ....................... .
8-0Z. PKG.
$1 69
29
cOOKEDHAM .......................... $1
aAcoN ................................... $1 99.
$13
9
LEAN 'N TASTY ....................... .
HAMPKSltAKS ..........................
12-0Z. PKG. BEEF
.
SINGLES .......
WISK
$259 TiSit-0-SEA $149
FROZEN PERCH.
DETERGENT.
s139
c·oKE, TAa, ggc
SANDWICHES ...
OR SPRITE ....
iCEKirREAM
·FUDGE.c&
$119 ABNGELO's
DOODLES .....
FRENCH FRIES ...
69c
. iiOTNDOG 3/$1 LiSTERINE $329
SAUCE ........
"'
ANTISEPTIC
$269
RUSSET
POTATOES ...... ~~~b:
$169
2/$1
LETTUCE.......
.
HE4D
rr~1......-:
Lb.
�Wednesday, February 15, 1984
Has Art Exhibit, Here
Cynthia Roth Manuel, local artist, will
exhibit her work, chiefly pastel chalks
and pencil drawings, at the Floyd County Library, beginning Friday, February
17, through l''riday, March 2.
A graduate of Alice Uoyd College with
a Bachelor of Science degree, she
teaches children's drama in the Community Services Program at Prestonsburg Community College. Mrs. Manuel
is the daughter of Walter and Helen
Roth, of Goble-Roberts Addition, and is
married to Terry Manuel. They reside
on the Middle Creek Road.
Scholars Program
Deadline Is Feb. 22
•
Local school officials have only until
Wednesday, Feb 22, to submit their
nominations of outstanding high school
juniors for the 1984 Governor's Scholars
Program.
Last year's program for 250 selected
students at Centre College was so successful that the program will expand to
600 this year on two campuses, Centre
College and Eastern Kentucky University.
Noting the enthusiasqt for the program by last year's Scholars, Governor
Martha Layne Collins called on school
officials and students to submit their
nominations and applications by the
deadline.
"This program for Kentucky's brightest high school juniors is included in my
plan for education," she said. "It offers
students an exceptional opportunity for
academic and personal growth."
The number of Scholars accepted
from each school district is based on the
-size of the junior class. Additional
nominations are offered to districts
where 16 percent or more scored above
the 89th percentile in the ~tatewide
achievement tests taken in the sophomore year.
Nominations and completed student
applications should be mailed to Governor's Scholars Program, Post Office Box
496, Frankfort, Kentucky 40602.
The Floyd County Times
Section Three, Page One
State Plans To Avert
Avian Flu Outbreak
Kentucky agriculture officials and
poultry industry leaders have agreed on
some critical planning steps to avert an
outbreak of the avian influenza which
has decimated chicken and turkey flocks
in Pennsylvania, Maryland, Virginia
and New Jersey. The planning is also
calculated to isolate the disease should
there be signs of it in flocks in Kentucky.
"It's important that we know, step by
step, the procedures we must follow and
the resources we can bring to bear
should the worst happen and Kentucky
suffer an outbreak of this industrycrippling d1sease," said Kentucky Agriculture Commissioner David Boswell.
"Of course, we are determined to see
that this doesn't happen, but we are going to be prepared for any eventuality."
Avian influenza has been the cause of
the destruction of ten and one-half
million birds in the affected states, at an
industry cost of 27 million dollars. The
United States Departwent of Agriculture has indeminified $20.7 million of
that cost to the owners of the depopulated flocks.
An eleven-person group now comprises the new Kentucky Avian Influenza Task Force. The task force will be
responsible for every phase of planning
to stem any outbreak of the poultry
disease in Kentucky, including: developing a surveilance system to watch for
the illness; creating a communications
NEW ARRIVALS AT ...
OUR LADY OF THE WAY
A daughter, Maranda Dawn, born
January 14 to Jack and Martha Holthouse, of Hueysville; a son, Daniel, born
January 17 to Bruce and Rena Ratliff,
Hueysville; a daughter, Jaclyn, born
January 18 to Jackie and Mazie Mullins,
of Topmost; a daughter, Jaclyn Sue,
born January 20 to Gorman and Camilee
Brown, of Langley; a daughter,
Subarina, born January 20 to Edgar and
Wanda Hall, ·or Galveston; a daughter,
Phylis Marie, born January 23 to Phillip
and Mary Amburgey, of Pinetop; a son,
Joshua Matthew, born January 26 to
Lonnie and Cheryl Goad, of Betsy
Layne; a daughter, Kimberly Nicole,
born January 26 to John and Juanikki
Frasure, of Langley; a son, Cory
Jonathan, born January 26 to Hillard
and Anna Mae Hall, of Pinetop; a son,
Christopher O'Neal, born January 28 to
Ollie and Judy Goble, of Hippo; a
daughter, Stacey Ann, born January 29
to Charles and Vickie Collins, of Melvin;
a son, James Anthony Ray, born
January 29 to James and Sharlene Burchett, of Martin.
•
system for notification of key in·
dividuals, should an outbreak occur;
pre-selecting disposal methods and sites
in concurrance with EPA guidelines for
public safety; the diagnostic training of
veterinarians who have probably had little exposure to this disease; the
dissemination of information to industry
service personnel so that they can
recognize the disease; Arranging
laboratory support, and spreading information about emergency steps such as
indeminification procedures to industry
representatives.
Among other steps that will be taken
is the identification and location of
poultry flocks throughout the Commonwealth, also processing plants, hatcheries, feed mills, rendering plants and
the general density of the poultry
population in Kentucky.
It will be necessary to list and
locate veterinarians, poultry health
specialists, animal health officers and
law enforcement people likely to be
brought into an infestation situation.
The task force will also oversee the
identification of the kinds of disinfectants necessary to use in areas where an
outbreak hits, along with heavy equipment necessary for burial and cleanup.
"The work involved in preparing for
an all-out isolation effort is manyfaceted, and is a job whose results we
sincerely hope we'll never have to put
to use," Commissioner Boswell pointed
out. "But we'll be much worse off
without a plan of action, and we know
it."
The Avian Influenza Task Force
members are Jack Graves, Keith
Rogers and Bob Armstrong, representing poultry growers, Dr. John Tuttle,
University of Kentucky, Dr. Robert
Hail, State Veterinarian, Dr. Pat Tuttle,
Lexington Pathologist, Ed Bryant, Glasgow poultry processor, Dr. Don Labflre,
UK veterinarian, Dr. Presley Winner,
USDA Veterinarian, Ellis Carter, Kentucky Department of Fish and Wildlife,
and John Fretwell, of Corydon,
Kentucky.
Commissioner Boswell points out that
there is no known drug or vaccine for
avian flu. "That is why the only
economically feasible form of treatment
and control at this time is the destruction of any flock found to be infected,"
he said. Though highly infectious among
birds, avian flu does not threaten people and in that regard does not pose a
public health danger, the commissioner
added.
Boswell says that the current outbreak of the disease in other states is a
real national emergency because it not
only disrupts poultry supplies to
domestic markets, but if uncher..ked. will
affect American poultry exports .
CR~sc0
~(8$~269
PRICES EFFECTIVE FEB. 15 THRU FEB. 19.
WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO· LIMIT QUANTITIES
AND CORRECT PRINTING ERRORS.
$29 9
96-0Z. DOWNY
FABRIC SOFTENER ...... .
2
79
CHUNK DOG FOOD ... .... .
79C
ZESTA CRACKERS ........
$1
09
ARMOUR TREET .......... .
$15
9
FISCHER'S BOLOGNA ....
$
25-LBS. GENERIC
2/89C
99
C
DISH LIQUID ................ .
S.OZ. CAN
ARMOUR VIENNA ....
22-0Z. LUX
1-LB. BOX
KING SIZE BREEZE
12-0Z. CAN
16-0Z. DELMONICO
16-0Z. THICK-SUCED
16-0Z. DELMONICO
8-LB. CAN ARMOUR
CHOPPED HAM.........
8-CT. HEAVY DUTY
$119 9
BES PAK TRASH BAGS ..
.
$119
99
BARBEQUED BEEF ........ .
89C
NACHO CHEESE TWIST ..
C
10-0Z. CASnEBERRY'S
8-0Z. KEEBLER
.
$399
LAUNDRY DETERGENT
59C
THIN SPAGHETTI ..........
59
ELBOW MACARONI ...... .
10-LB. BAG
C
MARTHA WHITE MEAL ..
$2 59
7
9
TV DINNER .................. .
ll·OZ. BANQUET
C
2-LBS. SEA PAK
ONION RINGS .............. $159
1·LB. BUZ
BEEF PATTIES ............. $159
MAXI THINS
PANTy
SHIELDS
$1.29
12-CT•
•
ALLEN, KY.
MON. TIIRIJ SA.'J\ 8 TO a;· SUN. -to TO •
�Section Three, Pace Two
Wednesdny, February 15, 1984
Water Well
KIRBY SWEEPERS
sgg & UP
Drilling
CALL 478-2882 -u
\-'!.'Y
COMPLETE
ELECTRICAL SERVICES
by licensed Electrician
Call 946-2226
or 946·2677 z
REPO CLEANERS
Only 3 I ft. Latest model. New
,.year warranty.
Call 478-9407
An equal opportunity employer.
'
·11-2-U.
FOR R NT-3-bedroom brick
house plus in-ground, fenced
swimming pool.
$500.00 PER MONTH.
PHONE 874-2873
4'x 8' fhu
__
2 1S."'
r Road lgns.
:S pc!lnted, an, size. Car,
c decalS. slickers.
CALL
ard A. Farris, C airman
Ke tucky Alcoholic Beverage
Control BoDrd
123 Walnut Street
ro kfort, Ke tucky 40601
874-2347.
PEDAL STEEL GUllAR-
2
·
·~-41-nd
UNITED SERVICE CO.
285-9550
~~\'f. CONst
~ AUXI~~K~~4160~ ~
APPLIANCE REPAIR
PHONE(606)~9551
FrH &tlmar.•
Don't senle For less
2-8-2t.
Anentlonl Career Opportunity!
2_1:;. 221_pd_
WE CAN
.
FIX IT!!
11.
MUST LOWER INVENTORY
TO MAlE ROOM
FOR SHOW COACHES
.. 0..,..,
............... . . . --kit-
2 1lDIOOMS-N- wWewt & . _ . " - ' wlft
........ .., ....... tnot.hll ...........
_. 4Mrl, tetll electric. A"-• _,_ ...W M
fiNitll t. ..,., ~ . . . . . . . - . - $13,901,
MODERN HYDRAUUC
JACKING SYSTEM
.... $11,500.
'D'AIIDOS- o.ly !left ill rteckl 6" .W. ... o61ed ilotMtlow, fiNplece, 3 ~•• 2 t.IM1b,
_,.,, ..... wtllty - · . . . - · 21126',$21,900., . . $17,900.
I 25% ~=:' I
ca,et.......... flreploce, frMt ...... , _ ,
prime,..,... . . . .-, tml electric.
trl 0. ef tile Mst flew ,._. • letl W•
A..__
$u.toe.. 11ew m.m.
(808) 248-4174
14 WIDI-IIIt'-riH froet kltdtee, !.y .....
•it./......,. ..... ..,_.., COf7d, . . . .
'·
•Free estimates •Insured
tW,tmleMtric,..,. ......... Aa-tyiW.
$11,900., .... $15,900.
14 W101- 2 . . . _ , I ft.~. _,.t, .....
4- witt! st- U., ~. tete! electric,
..... My wfft ~-'""' .... ,. ..... -...,...
....... w.. $13,900., New $10,900.
CALL 358-4520
or ,358-9348
"If , .. r..y .......... .._ 0114 ..,., ceMi4er
prices 0114 ~...,.,, yM'I .... _ , , ..
a...,•,
FREE II
lalph O'Quinn
300 MILt DUIVEIY AND SET UP ON FOUNDATION.
PATM£Jm TO SUIT TOUI NUDS.
0 - SAL
OPEN 7 DAYS- After cllurdl en Sundays
11 MI. EAST OF MT. ST£RUNG, 54 ACRES
MIL MODERN 3-BEDRM. HOME. FIVE
BENT TOBACCO BARN WITH STRIPPING ROOM. SILO, CORN CRIB, TOOLSHED,
CEllAR, BIG GARAGE, SADDLE ROOM, GOOD ORCHARD, FOUR PONDS, TOBAcCO BASE NEAR 2500 LIS. REAL NICE LmLE FARM. •as.OOO.
CHEAP'S
MOBILE HOUSING, INC.
FlelflintaMrg, "'.
2·1S-4t
• UCEfltSED • BONDED • INSURED
• 18 YEARS SECURITY EXPERIENCE •
• 24-HOUR GUARD SERVICE •
JESSIE COLLINS, Pr...dent
PRATER'S FARM EQUIPMENT
10 MILES WEST OF PRESTONSBURG ON MOUNTAIN PARKWAY
• GOOD SELECTION OF USED TRACTORS
ALSO NEW AND USED EQUIPMENT AND PARTS
Phone 886-6921
2-15-2t-od
CAREER OPPORTUNITY
Lexington-based manufacturer has Immediate opening for rwo people who
are Interested In a future with management oppontnlfiN. The position
will Include training In sales and management with rapid advancement
for those who desire to succeed. Salary •3o,ooo-peus. Person must be
well-drened, able to meet public, have serviceable automobile, and be
not afraid of long hourt. H you are looking to fill out your unemployment
Insurance card, don't waste your time or ours.
CALL GREG OR DAVE-874-1171
...
o.ly 60 ....,.. ~· .............. Lo........
606-145-2261
ATTENTION!
AUCTION-DEALER
FLEA MARKET-JOBBERS
GROCERS-MERCHANTS••.
BURTON DIST. WHOLESALE
Is now open In Somerset; tools,
furniture, jewelry, housewares,
electronics, much, much
more-..prlces you will not believe!
Bring your tax no. and come
on ln. Burton Dlst. 2600 So.
Hwy. 27, Somerset, Ky.
(606) 679-8678.
HITCHCOC.K
REPAIR SERVICE
Emergency Service
• Heating • Refrigeration
• ~aundry If Cooking
Equipment
_...
-~
.PARTS
AVAILABLE
· PHONE:
471 9246
886·6900
NEW
TOWNHOUSES
FOR RENT
OR
886·1473
HEN WE BUILT IT, YOU GET MORE
BUILDING FOR YOUR MONEY.
Goble Townhouses. Two-bedroom,
unfurnished, total electric. $350 per
month, plus deposit. Couples only.
PHONE 874-9281 874-2318 after 5. ~
POSITION
AVAILABLE
Taking applications for full
and part-time employment.
For appointment call:
874·904l
E.O.E.
1±1L
FOR RENT
OFFICE
SPACE
in Prestonsburg
Phone 886-1312
ENVIRONMINTAL MONITORING
SERVICE, INC.
SAMPUIIG AIID AIIALYSIS Of
WATER AIID WASTE WATER
• lacterielocical Aulysis tl Da. .tic l Will
s.pp5es • c.,letiol " Qllltblfy
N.P.D.LS. FOlliS As R•iretl 1J Sbb l Era
• EIJnuttlllbl I pact StatHMIIb l
wmr
Assess~~ ettts
....., •• AST • ' ne llatitlal EIYirwltftt
leiltll lssec:idi._ lAIOU1111Y Em ALL
STATI OSI l EPA llmlAnOIIS.
PHONE 789-3258
~.s. 23
tf.
S.., hbohwllft
DAN'S
APPLIANCE REPAIR
We repair all brandswashers, dryers and stoves.
• Guaranteed parts and work•
• Same day service.
• Discount to dealers.
• Fast dependable service.
CALL 358-9892 ANYTIME
2-l-5l.
IIERE'S WHY:
The Sandy Valley Senior Citizens, Inc.,
Is now accepting applications for a
clerk/typist. Responslblllflealnclude accurate typing skills, filing, and completion of computer forms. Two years experience preferred. Salary negotiable.
Applications may be obtained at the
SVSC office. 2nd Floor Munlclpol
Building, Prestonsburg, 8·4 p.m., Mon.Fri. Deadline February 17, 11184.
Equal Opportunity Employer.
~..IJ-21.
scon
New 11114. 3 led, 2 loftl, Solid ConstrucHon, Gorden Tub, Total Electric,
Wood Siding. Shingle Roof. Caftttclral
Ceiling. Stan. Frost FrH Refrigerator,
HouH Doors 6 Windows, Carpet
Delivered 6 Set-Up. ONLY $18,1111!5.00.
SH fttls home at !537 New Circle Rd..
Lexington, Ky. Phone (808) 2U-1801.
We custom-desrgn and construct
buildings to fit your precise
needs-without cost penalties or
added construction time. Industrial, commercial, w:trehouses,
agricultural, recreational and institutional. Durable, attractive
apd. energy efficient.
te
YARCO-PRUDEN AUIHORIIED BUILDER
f. E. E., Inc.
606-886-8852
~.ly.41653
WHEN YOU KNOW WHO WE ARE,
Y@ WON'T BUilD ~Nv"'OTHER WAY,
$15,995.00
TWO NEW
DOUBLEWIDE
SPECIALS
New 11184, 3 Bed, 2 Both, Gorden Tub,
Total Electric, Wood-Siding, Shingle
Roof, Cathedral Ceilings, leoma, Stove,
Refrlg.. House Doors 6 Windows,
Carpet, Delivered anywhere and set.
You choose colors. Veterans no down
payment. Others pay $1700.00 down
and t217.00 per month. Fireplaces
available. TREBfAVEN HOMES. Office In
Clubhouse by swimming pool. BetwHn •
Exlf 187 and Exit 1114 off 1-84. Win·
chester. Ky. Phone (808) 744-7782.
BEAUTIFUL BUILDING STONE
Sandy Valley Monument
and
Building Stone Co.
{Inc.)
Phone 874-2273-AUen, Ky.
2:Ht
BIPHIOIP LQCAJJOI:
New Roor Plan, 11184 24x80, 1344 Sq.
Ft., 3 Bed, 2 Boftt, Gorden Tub, UHIIty
Room, Total Electric, Walk·ln CloHt,
Cofttedral Ceiling. Wood Siding. Shingle
Roof. Roof Dormer, Froat Free
Refrigerator, Stove, Other deluxe opHans. ~LY $20,H!5.00 dellnred ond
set-up.
ThlrtHn other doublewlde models on
display. All models can be saki •
delivered as soon as weather permits.
FHA 6 VA Loons-20 RepoSHIHd 6
over 50 Used Homes on lot.
See at
GREAT AMERICAN HOMES
1·7!5, Exit 117, halfway between
Lexington A Richmond.
Phone (806) 824-0200
2 15 11
,
47e .,4.
NOTICE-NOW HIRING
'We &tid.~.
DOUBLEWIDE
lQIII'IO! LOCAJJOII:
(606) 886-9867 OR 886-3665
l l N•r-oltl Ky-
HD,.,ES
U \ l l Horoiii~K y
We do: • Dozer and Loader worK
• Sewage Systems lnllalltcl • Mobile
Home Moving • Furnace Rtpblrs
. REASONABLE RATES.
U VIIM-2.-.-. hll!.y....._, ..... ._,,
,:RCH
COLLINS SECURITY SERVICE
be-;;.
ClntgiDIL
CHEAP'S
ANNUAL
CLEA"RANCE SALE
.,. ....... llt. . . .l
CALL 498-2122 before 5, or 498-5512 after 5.
New! Limited time offer, so hurry out
NELSON'S
CONSTRUCTION CO.
886·2993 or 886-8549
U \
24-Hour
to:
~-
2 if>-41.
2-8-21
PHOt.E (606) 928-4197
OR (806) 928-8169 lt~-;_
Coli Jed Nelson, Jr.
2-I-4t
REPO HOMES ONLY $100.00
DOWN AND TAKE OVER
PAYMENTS!
. . . ,....,~. _,.t ........... A·"....t, 1Mb •• • ~. - $12,m, . . ,
$1HS.
IUimfUL-3·..._, 14' .W., _,.t, . , _
349-3110 or 886-8546
Sectional homes now on
display! The most beautiful
homes you've sHn in years!
With 111 the options! From
$16,900.00 & up. See us today!
CALL 874-2246
from 8 a.m. to 10 a.m.
or 6 p.m. to 10 p.m.
$100.00
DOWN!!
EAST KENTUCKY
MOBIL£ HOME PARTS
AND SERVICE INC.
606-874-9400
Allen, Ky.
MOBILE HOME
MOVING SERVICE
Needed In these areas;
Tram, Harold, Mullins, Mud·creek, etc., or near your own
home. AVON.
Call us It:
We He.,.~ ....., 31 Skw Ceedoet Direct
"'- s..tlt ..,_Mellie"- Sloow Te Arm• 54ft·
(808) 241-0350
MAKE MONEY, MEET PEOPLE,
• BE YOUR OWN BOSSI
Plenty of parts in stock for your
mobile home! Special orders invited! Do-it-yourselfers save
money, OR we will come to you!
RICHARD ERINI8r ASSOCIATES
Big Sandy Health Care, a
federally funded, non-profit corporation dedicated to quality
health care, thru the Magottln
and Mud Creek Clinics, has
several op nlngs on the board
of trust es.
Be a memb r of a team that
cares. Invest a few hours each
month harlng In your community's future.
CALL
ANY TYPE
~
DOZER
~ ·-~ OR BACKHOE
~~~ WORK ANYWHERE.
~ .
PROMPT SERVICE.
BOLEN'S
Itt.
BEAUTIFUL!
AfP.ft_
1-25-ftpd.
,..
Call 886-3544
• • •fREE ESTIMATES* • •
Ponable Welding
118 Francis St.. Prestonsburg
. • 22,000 GAL. PORCELAIN
LINED TANK
• 800 GAL. WATER TANK
• MYERS DEEP WELL PUMP
Coli Hubert At:
Ph. 358-9817
2-15-31.
CALL
886-1640 ·
--
Von Lear, Ky.
24 HOUR SERVICE
THE PAPERBACK BOOK
EXCHANGE STORE
FOR SALE
FREE ESTIMATES
Phone collect 789-5521l~\
CERTIFIED WELDERS
24-Hours A Day
Dozers • Backhoes
• Dump Trucks
• STORAGE ILDGS.
• ETC.
ROSIE'S SEW It VAC CENTER
SEILING AT WINTER PRICE: 1981
Honda Silver Wing GL-500. Fully dressed, AM-FM cassette, cruise, 2 helmets.
and detachable trunks and rear seat.
Must see! $1995. Call Jim Clarke.
478-2614.
2-15-4t.
744-1918 or 744....384 nights
••
Alltn, Ky.
Box 282, Prestonsburg, Ky.
•,ROOFING
• FENCES
• We service Electrolux. Kirby,
Compact Filter Quttn.
• Boga, Belts, parts In stock.
"Weld It"
•
• DICKS
SALES ON ALL BRANDS OF SEW·
lNG MACHINES AND VACUUM
CLEANERS.
Keep America Strong-
874-8166
HOME llt\PROVEMENTS
IIMODIUNG
PAINTING
DRYWALL
TIXTUIING
~LL PAriiiNG
5-25-lf.
Contact Rick Johnson at 452·4237
Repairs on Washers • Dryers • SfoYes
lla S.rvlce Charg.Pay only If we fix If. eo-Day Warranty
on Portt. to-Day Warranty on Labor.
CAll
day by Rotary Machine.
BOB WHITE
CONSTRUCTION
101 AU ra.1 IIOMI fMIIK.f-r IIUIIS,
REAL ESTATE FOR SALE· Commerrial property, up to ten acres or more.
Parallel to l-75. bound by Stuckey's,
McDonalds. For Mall, Steak House,
motel, etc. Berea, Kentucky,
60&-986-4863after 7 p.m.
2-15-3tpd.
• Turn left off Third Street
between court House & catholic Church
•
•
•
•
•
12 21-tf.
classes now forming for Ellfh basic to
Intermediate lessons to begin In early
March. Must have your own guitar.
TELEPHONES. JACKS ACCESSORIES: We sell. install and service. All
work guaranteed. Service contract ·
$15 a year residential. $20 commercial
We now have Satellite receivers : Five
year warranty on dish. two year on all
else. R&R Telephone. Beside Martin
Police Station. Call 285-3825 or 285-3727
anytime.
2-8-4tpd
FOR SALE: Specialize in limited edition prints. Over 300 artists. Bret
Johnson's first coal prints, Hampton.
etc. Ship daily. We discount Campbellsville Cherry and reproduction Victorian furniture. Teresa's Antiques &
Gallery, Berea, Ky .. 606-986-9147.
2-15-3tpd.
&
Auto, fire. homeowners, hospitalization,
life. Wlftt o-25" savings. Call Darby and
Allen Insurance Agency,
WINCHESTER. KY.
Colby-Hill spacious (3300
sq. ft.) 4-bedoom ranch, stepdown dlnln room, sunken livIng room with fireplace, 2V2
baths, kitchen-family room
with fireplace, central air, gas
forced-air heat, loads of
storag , all on 1¥2 acres and
very best location.
·Asking $150,000.
RAY HOWELL BUILDING
FOR ALL YOUR INSURANCE-
CLAUDETT HALL- HAIRSTYLIST
Is now working at Philatina. next door
to Gerry & Jerry's. Her working days
are Monday. Wednesday and Saturday. Other days by appointment only.
Business phone: 886-9175. Home
phone : 377·2804.
2·15-31.
FOR SALE· 25 acres. 2-bedroom
frame house. 22x46 frame outbuilding.
Free gas 478-5205
2-15-4tpd.
Most wells drilled In hllf a
Kinzer Drilling Co.
NEW 3-BEDROOM HOME for sale
near Clark School in Woodland Hills
Subdivision. 1440 sq. ft brick. 3 bedrooms, 2 full baths. living room with
fireplace. large built-in kitchen, dining
room and utility room with lots of
cabinet space Central heat and air
conditioning. fully carpeted Concrete
patio, beautifully landscaped. Ready
for immediate occupancy. Call
377-6405, Nathan Wright.
2-15-3t
•
2·15-31
POSITION
AVAILABLE
The Sandy Volley Senior Citizens, Inc.
Is now seeking applicants for a full time
RN and a part time RN or Social Worker
wlftt Bachelor's Degree. Rtsponslblllfles
Include dtYtlopmenr of a Care Pion tor
In-home service delivery, monitoring
and supervision of Homemaker/Home
Health Aides. Salary negotiable.
Submit application and resume by
February 17. 11184. Appllcotlons may bt
obtained al the SVSC office. 2nd Floor
Municipal Building. Prestonsburg. 8·4
p.m., Mon.-Fri.
Equal Opportunity Employer.
2-8 2t
• UMESTON£ VDIEIRING
• MARBLE LANDSCAPE CHIPS
• PORTAlli CONCRETE STEPS
• VERMONT SLATt
Located On Old U.S. 23
In New Allen
TROY'S
CABINET
CENTER
US 23, lvel, Ky.
Stock or Custom-Built Cabinets
Kitchen Cabinets, Vanities
Thermador Appliances
on Display
Free Estintes
Discount Prices
1~
Call 478-5344
FOR SALE
• 1978 Ford Thunderbird Town
Landau 2-door hardtop. Navy
blue, landau roof, AM-FM
with a-track, interior luxury
group, 6-way power seats,
power windows, power door
locks, wire wheel covers,
speed control, ti It steering,
air-conditioning, built-in C. B.,
power antenna, power moon
roof, electronic rear defroster,
sports decor group, 78,000
miles. Excellent condition.
$3,500.
• 1979 Dodge Challenger 2-door
Coupe. 4·cylinder, fan, AMFM with cassette, reclining
bucket seats, overhead console group, 5-speed transmission, aluminum wheels, 48,000
miles. Excellent condition.
$3,100.
• 1981 Dodge Ram lSO-V2·Ton
Pickup. Yellow/white, AMFM, 6-cylinder, 3-speed transmission with overdrive, 49,000
miles. Needs tires, otherwise
excellent condition. $4,500.
For further details, call
Doug Woody or John Woods at
The Bank Josephine
886-9101 ext. 243 or 244
2·8-4t
�•
The Floyd County Times
Wednesday, February 15, 1984
Sec:Uon Three, Pqe Three
FOR SALE: 1968 Chrysler in good condition . Call Walter Banks. 874-2352 .
2-8-2t.
ALL NEW OFFICE SPACE for lease:
Consisting of reception - library and
• four (4) connecting offices, with five (5)
assigned parking spaces. ' Located on
Third Avenue near the Courthouse,
downtown banks, postoffice, town center
parking lot, and the Floyd County Times
building. Ideal for physicians, attorneys,
accountants, realtors, and other
businesses and professions. Immediate
occupancy. Jim Hammond, 886-2376.
L
10-19-tf.
APARTMENT FOR RENT- One
. bedroom, furnished kitchen, central air
and heat. All utilities furnished . Mountain Parkway, near Prestonsburg. $300
month. Cleo DeRossett, ~. day, or
886-1368, night.
1-11-tf.
DAN'S APPLIANCE REPAIR : We
repair washers, dryers and stoves. We
will make service calls. All work and
parts guaranteed. 358-9892 anytime.
2-1-5t.
MACK HARVEY'S GARAGE located
one mile up Buck's Branch off new Ky.
80 at Martin. All types mechanic work.
Free estimates. Call285-3928. 1-25-4t.
NOW BUYING: Used wast.ers, dryers,·
ranges, refrigerators. Working or nonworking condition. Phone 358-9617.
11:!_6-12tpd.;
SELLING AT WINTER PRICE : 1981
Honda Silver Wing GL-500. Fully dressed, AM-FM cassette, cruise, 2 helmets,
and detachable trunks and rear seat.
Must see! $1995. Call Jim Clarke,
478-2614.
1-25-4t.
FOR SALE: 1978 Cherokee 4x4, 36,000
miles, $3500. Call after 4, 478-9912,
Larry Kimbler.
1-25-4t.
DESPERATE?? Looki·ng for a
specialist who is trained and equipped
to repair your wrecked Toyota, Datsun, Volkswagen, or other foreign or
unitized bodied car? Call Custom
Coach Building for an appointment at
874-2802.
1-25-41.
CARPENTRY-CONCRETE WORK:
Sidewalks, patios, driveways, etc. Also
Coronado stove. Seven years' experience. Free estimates. Laryl Branham, 452-2403 or 452-2368.
1-25-4tpd.
•
HAULING/MOVING: Commercial or
residential, local or long distance. Big
2G-foot enclosed trailer. Low, low rates.
Prices negotiable. Phone 789-4545.
1-25-4tpd.
FOR RENT : Two bedroom trailer,
$300 monthly, partially furnished ,
carpeted, air conditioner, washer and
dryer and garden space available.
Phone 874-9302.
1-25-4tpd.
.
JAPANESE SWORDS WANTED: Paying $300 minimum ea. Write Winter,
824 Patton, Springfield, Dl. 62702. (217)
544-7611,523-8729.
1-25-4tpd.
SALES AGENT WANTED: Nationally
known calendar manufacturer and
specialty advertising company offers
an opportunity for an industrious selfstarter for full or part-time work. We
need a sales oriented person to present
our exclusive calendars, business gifts
and extensive advertising specialty
assortment to firms within the
business community. The Thos. D.
Murphy Co. is a pioneer in the advertising field since 1888, so you know we're
here to stay. If you can organize your
own time and determine your own success, write: Pat Murphy, The Thos. D.
Murphy Co., P .O. Box 382, Red Oak,
Iowa 51566, or call712-623-2591, Ext. 51.
1-25-4t.
TOP DOLLAR paid for u<>ed washers,
dryers, gas and electric ranges, working or non-workiug conditi<~n. We pay
more. Phone 358-9617 or 358-4009.
1-18-12tpd.
.
All c:lassHied ads ~~c:heduled
for only one week, must be
paid In advance. All c:li.sslilled ads with only telephotte
'numbers must be paid In ad,VBJI~,
CLASSIFIED
ADVERTISING RATES
lOc Per word, If paid In advance
15c Per word on charae account
($2.50 minimum)
Dt..,lay daalllfled advertlalna
$3.00 per c:olumn Inch.
' _!)eadllne for ada: 4 p.m. Monday~
FOR ALL YOUR INSURANCE-Auto,
fire, homeowners, hospitalization, life.
With G-25% savings. Call Darby and
Allen Insurance Agency, 874-2347.
12-28-tf.
FOR SALE: Two-story, 11-room apartment building, $40,000. At Twin Bridges,
Martin, on 100x50 corner lot. Call J.R.
Samons, 285-3914.
12-14-tf.
CLEAN FURNACE FILTERS save
energy dollars and service call costs.
Sandy Valley Hardware S&T at Allen is
your one-stop furnace filter headquarters.
ll-30-tf.
FOR SALE GR TRADE: Cardox auger,
conveyor, 24-inch steel. Phone 874-9033.
11-24-tf.
3-BEDROOM HOME FOR SALE near
school in Maytown. L<>cated on three
lots. Central heat, full basement.
Adjoining building, 16'x24' with full
basement. Good neighborhood,
beautifully landscaped. Complete
fence. In the mid-30's. Call 285-3494.
l-18-6tpd.
USED FURNITURE. GUARANTEED
APPLIANCES. Moore's Discount Furniture. Located about 3 miles from
Martin on Rt. 122. Low prices. Call
285-9354.
1-11-atpd.
HORTICULTURE POSITION : Background in sales and retail experience
required. Apply at K-Mart. Pikeville.
Ky . Equal Opportunity Employer .
2-15-lt.
ONE BEDROOM APA..RTMENT for
rent: $250 month, $250 deposit required. 478-9593 or 874-9033, Hylton
Homes.
2-1-tf.
FOR SALE : Registered Doberman
pups, very large breeding. Excellent
disposition . To good homes only . Call
297-3897, Rhonda Nelson .
2-1-tf
FOR RENT : Furnished trailer, near
college. Security deposit and lease required. No pets, please. Carlos E .
2-1-tf.
Neeley, 886-8565.
___,.
.-~-----"":"-----------~~1101111.....,~"'!!'"'~""""'"'""!!"'
CLASSIFIED ADVERTISERS
PLEASE NOTE!
Classified ads will no longer be accepted after
12 noon, Mondays. For the coming week, these ads
are also accepted on Thursday, Fridays, and
Saturdays.
We trust this will not unduly Inconvenience you,
and we will greatly appreciate your cooperation.
FARM FOR SALE: 375 acres, 6-room
modern house, 4 barns, two silos, 6
ponds. large stocked lake, all cleared,
15,000 pounds tobacco base, many additional improvements, $800 per acre.
Other farms in 100-acre range available. Tom Goebel & Co., 141 S. Main
St.. Winchester, Ky., 40391. 744-3637.
2-15-3t.
FOR SALE: Four white. 8-spoke. Ford
truck rims. $80: 4 Mustang TRX mag
wheels. $115 : F&W pool table, $60 : one
female Bluetick. C:>ll358-9106. 2-8-2tpd.
HOUSE FOR SALE : 3-bedroom, 1-1 / 2
baths, garage, central heat and cooling, kitchen cabinets and appliances,
. carpeting. On half-acre lot. $61,000.
Eligible for bond financing . Maplewood Village Call 432-1517. -Dack D.
Deskins.
2-15-4t.
TREATED utility poles, 18ft. 20ft. and
25ft. lengths. Also fence posts at GOBLE
LUMBER CO., phone 874-9281. 4-11-tf.
LEXINGTON TOWN HOUSE FOR
SALE : Opera House Square, two
blocks from Rupp Arena. priced below
market at $99,500. Must sell. Owner :
, Arthur Rouse, 134 N. Limestone, Lexington. Ky. 40507. (606) 252-7796.
2-15-4tpd.
FOR SALE : 3-bedroom mobile home.
Plywood floors, new furnace and water
heater. Also 1970 F-700 Ford, 18' box, 4
new tires , new motor and battery.
Phone 358-9617.
2-15-4tpd.
FOR SALE : Three bedroom brick
home located near Drift, Ky. Attached
garage, 5 years old, $35,000. Call First
Guaranty Bank, 285-9281, ask for Mr.
Hall.
2-15-4t.
FOR SALE: 1980 Harley Davidson Low
Rider, 80 cu. in., 1340 cc, black, lots of
chrome. Buy now and save. $3900firm.
606-437-4556.
2-15-2tpd.
FOR SALE: Nice, extra-large lot in
BUILDING MATERIALS POSITION : Woodland Hills, country setting, about
Need individual with knowledge of 1-1/2 acres, 200-ft. road frontage, has
building materials and retail sales. Ex- ' electricity, water and sewer already on
perience required. Apply at K-Mart . property. Five minutes from PrestonsPikeville. Ky. Equal Opportunity burg . About one acre of lot level, plenty
Employer.
2-15-lt. of room for swimming pool. tennis
court or garden. Suitable for A-Frame,
FOR SALE: 300x500 lot near Printer brick ranch or modular home. Close to
post office, on KY 122. Call 285-9526. Clark Elementary School. Price reducltpd . ed to $15,000 firm . Call 886-8658 after 6
p.m., or 437-4556.
2-15-6tpd.
FOR SALE BY OWNER: Brick colonial with split foyer, four bedrooms, FREE! FREE! FREE! Get your
large family room with fireplace, for- washer, dryer, gas or electric stove
mal dining, three baths, attached repaired free. Bring it to Bolen's Apgarage, free gas. North of Pikeville on pliance Repair, old Rt. 80, Eastern. No
new four-lane. Upper price range. service charge. No labor charge. You
Serious inquiries only. 432-2249. ltpd. pay for parts only. For appointment.
phone 358-9617.
2-15-12tpd.
WANT TO DO TREE TRIMMING and
cutting. hillside clearing. 25 years' ex- ATTENTION: HYLTON HOMES Serperience. Call 886-1631 after 3 p.m . vice Dept. now has parts for Whirlpool.
ltpd . Kenmore, G.E. and Hotpoint washers
FOR RENT: 4-room apartment near and dryers. Also parts for Magic Chef
clinic and college. 886-3154, T.E. Neeley. and Brown stoves. Also buying 30" gas
11-9-tf. and electric stoves and good
refrigerators . Phone 478-9594 or
2-15-12t.
FOR GLASS REPLACEMENT, bring 874-9033.
your window frames to Sandy Valley
Hardware at Allen. We specialize in BOLEN'S MOVING & DELIVERY
Plexiglas, cut to size.
11-9-tf. SERVICE: We move a house full or
deliver one piece - anywhere. Phone
358-9617.
2-15-12tpd.
NOW PAYING TOP DOLLAR for
mobile home wheels and axels. Ask for
FOR SALE : Reconditioned washers.
Patty Wright, 639-4772.
12-7-tf.
dryers. gas and electric ranges, fur1982 LINCOLN: Best deal in town. This niture. new and used parts for all
one has it all! Call Patty Wright, makes and models. Refrigeration
639-4772.
12-7-tf. parts ordered for you. All guaranteed
60 days. For cheap appliances and
1984 MOBILE HOME: 2 bedroom, 12' parts. plus a good guarantee. call us.
2-15·12tpd.
wide, front kitchen, double windows. 358-9617.
Furnished. Total electric. Only $8,995.
PHARMACIST POSITION: Part-time
Call John Wright, 432-1401.
12-7-tf.
or full-time, Registered Pharmacist
position open at K-Mart, Pikeville. Ky.
·PAYMENTS LESS THAN RENT:
14-wide mobile home. Only $10,995. Call Apply in person . Equal Opportunity
Employer
2-15-tf
John Wright, 432·1401
12-7-tf.
INTERIOR AND EXTERIOR Porter
Paint. 1,000 colors to choose from. BEN
FRANKLIN STORE, phone 886-2169,
Prestonsburg.
5-16-tf.
GRAVEL FOR SALE : $8.75 per ton,
plus delivery charge. ~ll 886-3425, JIM
cox.
6-23-tf.
LIGHT FIXTURES: lf.! price at GOBLE
LUMBER COMPANY, phone 874-9281.
4-11-tf.
WATCH REPAIR: If you want the best
job, bring watch repairs and jewelry
repairs
to
WRIGHT
BROS.
JEWELERS.
11-12-tf.
PERMA-8HIELD Anderson windows.
All styles, 20 percent off regular price
at GOBLE LUMBER CO., phone
874-9281.
4-11-tf.
FOR SALE OR RENT-1979 2 bedroom
Fairmont trailer. 2 miles up Daniels
Creek at Banner. Call 874-9572. Dallas
Justice.
1-lHit.
SALISBURY USED FURNITURE. Two
miles up Arkansas. 285-3549. 1-11-St.
FARM HOUSE FOR RENT near Prestonsburg. Call 886-3466 after 5 p.m.
ltpd.
FOR SALE : 7-piece living room set.
$250. If interested. call 886-1841. ltpd .
FOR SALE: One male, one female
Beagle. Call 874-9955.
ltpd.
HOUSE FOR SALE: Full basement,
forced air, na~ural gas. Call after 4,
886-3860, Ann Slone. .
9-14-tf.
FOR SALE: 1975 Mercedes-Benz 45(}-SL,
excellent condition. Metalic green. New
top. Price $20,500. Call .!l86-8506.
tf.
FOR RENT : Trailer. fully furnished .
city water and gas Privately owned
lot. Located on new U.S 23. Ka tv
Fric.nd. · Water Gap Road. Phon~
886-8964, D.A. Wallen.
2-8-2t .
FOR SALE : Block house at mouth of
Hunter's Branch of Left Beaver Creek .
rail after five. 285-9819 or 377-2202.
Freddie Osborne.
1-8-2t .
HOUSE POR RENT : Downtown Prestonsburg, convenient to shops, schools.
library and churches. 3 bedrooms. 2
baths. Refererces and deposit required $350 per •month Contact
Frances or Scott a t Benchmark Realty, 886-9100.
2-8-2t .
FOR SALE: 1979 Honda Odyssey wi th
roll cage and new rear tires and built
motor . 886-3489, call after 5 :00 .
2-8-2tpd.
.886-99,5.£.
GOOD 8x40 TRAILER FOR SALE:
$1800 includes delivery: 8x35 1979
trailer. 886-9683, Don's Mobile Home
Salvage.
2-8-2t.
FOR RENT: 2-bedroom trailer, one
miLe ·front Martin'. ~ rn6nth . $100
deposit. Call~920after 5. 2-8-2tpd.
i-11-12t.
ROBERT I. GOODMAN D.M.D.- W. FU D.M.D.
ALLEN
DENTAL CENTER
AT 80 , ALLEN KY
DENTURES
$129
$169
-8-2tpd.
STANDARD
.
DENTURES. . . . . .
PER UPPER
OR LOWER
CHARACTERIZED
DENTURES. . . . . .
PER UPPER
OR LOWER
ALL INSURANCE PLANS ACCEPTED
V"
V"
V"
V"
V"
V"
PARTIALS
DENTURE RELINES
DENTURE REPAIRS
EXTRACTIONS
Clt:ANING
FILLINGS
MEMBER
OF
Deltvenng A ftordable Dent•str y . Inc
FOR SALE: Three bedroom home. 2
full-size baths. With extra-large lot.
886-3394.
2-8-2tpd .
FOR SALE OR RENT: Furnished
trailer, 12x65. Washer and dryer. all
utilities paid. $300 month . Will accept
one small child. Phone 886-8724. Edith
Stumbo.
2-8-2t.
FOR SALE: 1971 Ford Ranger XIT
pickup, 360 automatic . Good shape.
285-9149.
2-8-2tpd .
FOR RENT : One bedroom furnished
trailer. One or two people only. No
children, no pets . 886-2145.
2-8-2tpd.
FOR IMMEDIATE SALE : 1982 14x58
2-bedroom mobile home. Owner transferred . Selling for payoff. $8.967.
478-9798 or 478-9337, Vicky King. 2-1-2t.
FOR SALE : Black Tennessee Walking
Horse. with papers. Paid $2500 for
horse, will sell for feed bill due. Call
285-3959 between 9:30 and 5:00 for information. J. Hall .
2-8-2t.
FOR SALE: Two racing go~arts . One
has 100cc McCiough engine with two
5-gal. aluminum fuel tanks, one on
each side, also wide tires grooved for
dirt track, priced $450. Second cart has
wide tires grooved for dirt track .
equipped with 5 h .p. Tucumse engine.
governor has been removed. has
straight out exhaust. will run. $250.
377-671 '3. Don Fraley. Jr.
2-8-2t.
C OLLINS FURNITURE & APPLIANCES on Cow Creek . Appliances
$150 each with a 30-day warranty on
parts and labor. Beds. chests. dressers
and baby items priced to fit your
budget. open 9 a.m . till 5 p.m . Phone
R74-2058. Perlinda Collins.
2-8-2t.
FOR SALE: Maytag washer. dryer
set. Westinghouse refrigerator . frost
free. equipped for an ice maker. been '
used 6 mo:1ths. Cost was $2400. will sell
for $1200. Call Downtowner Beauty
Salon after 12 noon. 285-9087. Jennifer
Tackett .
2-8-2t.
NOW HIRING: Offshore Oil Drilling.
Overseas & Domestic. Will train .
$25,000 - $35,000 plus possible. Call
Petrol,eum Drilling Service at (219)
931-2199, Ext. 1857. Also open evenings.
ltpd .
FOR RENT: 4-room unfurnished apartment, $200 rent, $150 deposit. Couples only, no pets. Call .Jeanette Hubbard.
886-2557
5-18-tf.
437-4131
2
FOR RENT : Rooms, weekly, monthly,
nightly . Also waterbeds availablP
886-2385, 886-9310, Sandy Valley Motel,
N. Lake Drive.
1-5-tf.
CARPENTRY WORK: Home building
and remodeling. Complete interior and
exterior. Mas1,mry and concrete work,
all types interior and exterior painting.
Also have spray equipment to spray
barns and metal buildings. Free
estimates. Will furnish references. 15
. years' experience. Call 886-8896,
anytime. Robie Johnson, Jr.
9-21-tf.
DanTax
112 West Court St.
Prestonsburg, Ky.
4-ROOM FURNISHED APARTMENT: No children. No pets. 886-6239.
2-8-2tpd .
FOR SALE: 14x70 mobile home . Call
WANTED: Quality homemade crafts.
New gift shop will feature wide variety
of crafts on consignment basis. For
more information, call 377-2069 or
377-6800. Erma Johnson .
2-8-2t.
Choice
DanTax
Coal Run Village
Pikeville, Ky.
WANTED TO DO : Machine quilting
with zig-zag stitch. Experienced . $10
per quilt. Phone 874-2902.
2-8-2tpd.
5
S86-006 .
People~s
The
WITH 20 OFFICES t hroughout the tri -state area,
DanTax is becom ing a force to be reckoned w ith.
With high ly trained tax preparers and fees that
start at $7.50 for both a Federal and St ate return,
more and more people are choosing DanTax as
the firm to assist them in f ili ng their Income Tax
Returns. Thousands of taxpayers in Kentucky,
West Vi r ginia and Oh io have enjoyed the plea·
sant, professional atmosphere of a DanTax office.
Do yourself e favor. This year give DanTax a try.
DARKROOM EQUIPMENT FOR
SALE : Omega color enlarger with all
accessories." Pelfect condition. $400 .
Call 447-2669 after 6 p.m.
2-8-2tpd.
7-ROOM HOUSE FOR RENT at
Harold. Call478-9170.
ltpd.
DAMRON NEW & USED FURNITURE: Living room suites starting at
$159. A-1 appliances. Rt. 122, Drift, Ky.
Phone 377-2071.
5-25-tf.
Dan Tax.
FOR RENT : Two bedroom mobile
home in Au.>.ier. No children or pets.
$175 monthly. $100 deposit . Call
886-9846.
2·8 2t pd.
HEY LOOK! We repair washers,
dryers, rangeS, all types appliances.
Parts ordered for you. Call 358-4009 or
358-9617.
11-3-tfpd.
FOR SALE : Cabin at Cave Run Lake.
Three bedrooms, air conditioned, all
new carpet. Reasonable price. Call
784-7250 or 784-9203, J .C. SPENCER.
5-25-tf.
Income Tax by
FOR SALE: Honda 250 XL, 1978 model.
First $450 rides it home. 285-3575. ltpd.
GOOD FIRE WOOD & HAY for sale.
Call after 3 p.m .. 886-2200.
It pd.
FHA AND VA
FINANCING!
Cnly 10 days left to take 1dwantace of
these low, low r1tes! No dosing costs
or hidden chlrces to pay!
HilTy! some of your friends are already
livinc in their new homes they bought
from:
U \
23 Herold Ky
471 914•
We're·glad
you asked!
John
c. Hczll
Founder
Hall Funeral Home
DO WIDOWERS NEED
HEL~
A respected minister we know quotes scripture IPPf'OPriately to make his point.
Borrowinc 1 Pile from his text, the followinc passqe ef Genesis COllies to mind:
"It is not coocl that the ~nan should be alone••••" So, too, after • nn loses his
life's mate, his dearly..lovecl COIIIpamon, he should not be left alone. No, we do not
mean that he should hastily ,..marry. We mean that his friends should not forstke
him because his status has chiiiJHi because he is now 1 widower.
In our eoupl•oriented society, the widower is disedwantiJecl by his sinplarity.
M1ke him weleoi!N as before. Share your hospitality with him as you did before. Go
out "' your WI) I little to seek his comp..y, his conversation. Help make his pieY.
inc euler by sharinc with him your presence and urine, as we know you do.
This "reachinc out" by you will be important to him immediately lifter the funeral
and for 1111ny months to come.
HALL FUNERAL HOME
Near J111etion of Ky. 80 aad Ky. 122, larti1
Phones 285-9261 OR 285-9262
�State Helps Search
For Iron Table Bases
SElL_ IT RIST.I
BIN II: INfJIIT.I
FOH SALE: PrnpPrl\' on Man• Creek
For furthPr information. call 4711·5260.
.John G. Hatliff
2-11-:~t.
FOR SALE · 1982 Kawasaki 750 Spectre
motorcycle. low mileage. Call 447-2933.
A&CCarry-Out.
2-1-4t .
FOR RENT: New house located on Abbott Mountain . Fireplace. 2 baths and
basement. Phone 886-6900.
2-15-tt
TRA ILEH FOH RI<:NT 111 All('n :\o
pets. no C'hildren. Deposit required
Nicl'. e)('an court. Call 874-2141 AftN .1.
call 1174·2114 Akers Trader C'ourt.
2-H-:Jt.
NEED MONEY? Pawn it. don't sell it.
We loan money on almost anything
Hock Shop. N. Lake Drive. 24 hours a
day. 886-2367.
2-1-4t.
FOR SALE : 1975 Ford Granada. fully
equipped. 302 V-R. good tires. $1200.
Call 886-3084.
ttpd.
ROATS FOR SALE 19114 Fish & Ski
ha ss boat. 17-ft. 5-i nches. never been m
wat('r. save $2500. 19114 Glassport
V-hull. 120 h p OM(' mboard. outboard
t'ngin<'. san· $2600. Hl!\:J Somerset 1!1-ft.
7-inchE's. :r11 VII t>nginE' with boval outdri\·e Rna! is deep V-hull. Excellent
('ondit ion all ract iYP pricP Phone
2115-91192 or 21l5·9RIIIl. Christian Appalachian Projpct
2-H-:Jt.
1981 HOI'\DA XL'iOO. ExcPIIent conrlition. l:JSO mil('s . Onlv rodP on street
and dirt roads Nen•r hill climbed or
trail ridden. $12:10. 601l-ll52-4?:J!l.
2-ll-:Jtpd
REAl..'TWUL QUARTER HORSE for
salt• Good saddle horse for kids or can
h(' worked Has worked in tobacco Call
fi06-6!l2-471!l anvt im<'
2-1\-:Jtpd
WALLEN'S TRADING POST & TIRE
SALES. Retails and wholesales. New
and used tires. wheels. caps. lugs.
wheel covers. batteries. tubes. auto
parts, stereos and boosters. tubes and
much more. We trade for most anything of value. 874-2289.
2·1·5tpd.
FOR SALE : Unfurnished 12x70
Marlett mobile home. 2 bedrooms.
$7500. New carpet. lots of extras. 2
dc>cks Call fi()fl.fl52-47:JS anytimE'.
2-8-4tprl
COR"\ FOR SALE·
J<~ar
ll74-22:~H
or shelled
2-8-6tpd.
WANTED: TREE TRIMMING of any
kind . 25 years' experience. Light hauling. Call886·3771.
ltpd.
UNFURNISHED APARTMENT &
HOUSE for rent in Prestonsburg. For
more information. call 886-2094. After
5. call886·2132.
ltpd.
FOR RENT Two 2-bedroom mobile
homes. one furnished. one unfurnished.
C.all Ted Nelson. 886-2993.
ltpd.
FOR SALE: Items just off pawn.
Franklin mint coin collection. man's
t-t/2 carat diamond solitaire. 14-Kt.
gold chains. ladies diamond cluster.
Many more items . Hock Shop. 422 N.
Lake Dr.. 886-2367.
ltpd.
YARD SALE: Thursday. Friday. Feb.
16 & 17. Ron's Bargain Barn. Mountain
Parkway.
10-5
Clothes.
miscellaneous.
ltpd .
Census Bureau To Take
Employment Survey Here
Local representatives of the Bureau of
the Census will conduct a survey of
employment in this area during the
week of February 21-25, JosephS. Harris, Director of the Bureau's Regional
Office in Charlotte, announced today.
The survey is conducted for the U.S.
Department of Labor in a scitntifically ·
designed sample of approximately
71,000 households throughout the United
States. Employment and unemployment
statistics based on results of this survey
are used to provide a continuing
measure of the economic health of the
nation.
For example, in December 1983 the
survey indicated that of the 112.1 million
men and women in the civilian labor
force, 102.9 million were employed. The
nation's unemployment rate was 8.2 percent, 0.2 percent lower than reported in
November.
Information supplied by individuals
participating in the survey is kept strictly confidential by law and the results are
used only to compile statistical totals.
~OTICE
INTE~TION
OF
TO MINE
Pursuant to Application
1'\umber 436-5231
In accordance with the provisions of
KAR 350.055, notice is hereby given that
Buck Coal, Inc., Route 2, Branham
Village, Prestonsburg, Kentucky, 41653,
has filed an application for a permit for
an underground mining operation. The
proposed operation will affect a surface
disturbance of 5.0 acres and will underlie
an additional81.0 acres located 1.1 miles
north of Hunter in Floyd county.
The proposed operation is approx·
imately 0.5 miles west from State Route
l22's junction with Akers Branch Road
and located 0.25 miles west of Akers
Branch The latitude is 37' 31' 18". The
longitude is 82° 45' 45"
The proposed operation is located on
the Martin U.S.G.S. 7 1/5 minute quad·
rangle map. The surface area to be
disturbed is owned by Jake Bates and
Orphie Akers. The operation will underlie land owned by Claube Webb, Bud
Hayes, Mander Moore, Virgil Moore.
and James Slone.
The application has been filed for
public inspection at the Department for
Surface Mining Reclamation and Enforcement's Prestonsburg Regional Office, 503 South Lake Drive, Prestonsburg, Ky. 41653. Written comments, objections, or requests for a permit con·
ference must have attached a copy of
the newspaper clipping and must be filed with the Regional Administrator of
the Prestonsburg Regional Office, 503
South Lake Drive, Prestonsburg, Ky.
41653.
2-8-3t.
•
Section Three, Page Four
The Floyd County Times
Wednesday, February 15, 1984
HAVE YOU UPDATED YOUR PERSONAL insurance to meet today's
needs? If not, ca II us. we can insure the
entire family from 0 to 80. Call Sam
Wallen Insurance Agency. I have been
serving the insurance needs of Ky. for
over thirty years . Phone 874-2289.
2-1-5tpd
FOR RENT: New trailer, 14x70. 3 bedrooms. 2 baths. furnished. Phone
358-9748 or 358-9207. Debbie Martin.
2-1-Jt.
3-BEDROOM BRICK HOUSE with 6
acres land, 4 tillable and 2 in timber.
Pond and good well. 25 miles from
Somerset and Lake Cumberland.
$29,000. 379-2158. Charles Tackett.
2-1-Jt.
FOR SALE· AKC registered Doberman pups Wormed. have tails cut.
come from attack trained guard dogs.
Have good bloodlines. Call 285-5140,
Tim Ward.
2-1-Jt.
FOR SALE: New Age encyclopedia
and others. unused. Phone 874·2556.
2-1-Jtpd.
FOR SALE: Two bedroom house in city. Low 30's . Assumable loan with
s'mall down payment. Call 886-6458 between 5 and 7 p.m.
ltpd.
FOR SALE· TV TOO guitar. black with
rosewood neck. custom pickup with
hardshell case. TV artist amp with
15-inch Black Widow speaker. two-cord
MXR phase box. $600. Call after 7 p.m ..
285-9546.
ltpd.
LARGEST DOUBLE WIDE DEALER
in state of Kentucky for the last three
years. REASON- Double wides as low
as $14.900. direct from our factories to
you. Only at Clayton Mobile Homes at
Richmond. Ky . 606-623-9404.
2-1~21
FOR SALE: Model 2.000 Ford diesel
tractor. grader blade. mower. scoop.
turning plow and disc. Call886-3444. G.
Smith .
2-1~21.
PUPPIES FOR SALE: Mother. fullstock Collie. Have been wormed. $25
each. Call 377-1164. Katie Mullins.
2·15-21.
RUMMAGE FOR SALE: Clothes.
shoes. coats. Sold by the box . Also two
broken-down washing machines
Phone 478-2614. Jim Clarke.
2-15-2t .
FOR RENT: Three bedroom trailer on
private Jot. Furnished. newly carpeted.
References required. No pets. Couples
or with one child. Call 886-9583 after 5
p.m.
2-15-2tpd.
WANTED:
EXPERIENCED
QUILTERS & sewers are needed to
begin work immediately. Call for information or appointment. 886-9411.
2-15-21pd.
HANDMADE QUILTING FRAMES.
For more information. call 285-3679.
Glenn Slone .
2-15-21.
BASSETT CRIB. MATTRESS &
stroller for sale. Excellent condition.
886-8101.
2·15·21pd.
FOR SALE: Trailer and lot located at
Stratton Branch. 3 rooms. Phone
886-3766.
ltpd.
GARY LILLY. of Auxier. Ky .. stands
for BETTER GOVERNMENT.
2-15-2tpd.
FOR SALE: Two Hummel figurines.
"Farm Boy". Stylized Bee. for $125.
"We Congratulate". 3 Line Mark. for
$85. Phone 886-8755.
ltpd.
FOR RENT: 2-bedroom. unfurnished
apartment. located at Town Branch.
Prestonsburg. All electric heat. TV
cable. city water. Call 886-6366.
2-15-2tpd.
FOR SALE: 1975 Chevy pickup. low
mileage. one owner. runs great. $1700.
Call 886-8687.
ltpd.
FOR SALE: Firewood- Oak. Phone
886-9460
ltpd.
TRAILER FOR RENT: 2-1/2 miles up
Prater Creek at Banner Phone
874-9277.
ltpd.
FOR SALE: 1982 Dodge Aries, one
owner. 17.000 actual miles. A.C.. P.S.,
P.B. automatic transmission. Call
886-9583after 5p.m.
2-15-21pd.
FOR RENT: One 3-bedroom unfurnished house. Also two trailers. Husband and wife or with one child. No
pets. 874-2225 .
2-15-2tpd.
FOR SALE: Console 25-inch color TV.
Excellent condition. $200. Call377-6881.
Kermit
Newsome.
2·15-2t.
FOR SALE : 1981 Honda CM 400. Phone
358-4804 after 5 p.m.
2-15-2tpd.
FOR SALE OR WILL TRADE for a
tractor trailer. two DM-800 Mack
trucks. 21-ft. coal beds. 65 rears. Phone
606·286-5851. Ray Porter
2-15-2t.
TRAILER FOR SALE: Two bedroom.
gas heat. Excellent condition Partly
furnished. On trailer park. Pike County. 285-3867. Eunice Samons.
2-15-21.
FOR SALE : 1980 Ski Boat. with 1980 55
h.p . motor. Only 50 hrs. on motor. Must
sell. foreclosure. Phone 81!6-9914 .
2-15-2tpd .
FOR SALE: Must sell 3-year-old stud
located at West Liberty. Price $300.
Phone 725-4652. Harold Niece. 2-15-21.
FOR RENT: TRAILER. Call 886-3184.
Donna Stumbo.
2-15·2t
FOR SALE: 3-bedroom home with
laundry. one bath Call 886-8076. John
Henry Meadows.
2·15-21 .
FOR SALE: 1979 Jeep CJ7. Excellent
condition Special rims and tires. Extra sharp. $4500. Phone 886-1773. Shep's
Truck Stop.
2-15-21.
FOR SALE: 1982 Z28 Camaro Pace
Car. Has 35,000 miles Selling for the
payoff. $10.200 Phone 789·5190 or
78!H972. Perry Endicott.
2-15-21.
FOR SALE: Monark boat. aluminum.
14-ft. long. with Sears 7 h.p. motor.
Phone 886-6419. Tony Travis
2-15-2t
WILL DO HOUSEKEEPING. Five
vears' experience Will furnish
~eferences. Call 478-5087. Dixie Belle
Salisbury.
2·15-21.
AUDITOR AND INSPECTOR for
casualty insurance work . Area to be
worked. will be within a 75 mile radius
of Prestonsburg . Send resume to: At·
well. Vogel & Sterling. Inc .. 1066 Starks
Bldg Louisville. Ky. 40202.
2·15-21.
MurphqS MART
T ! l VING PORTRAIT PACKAGE
a super value-only $12.88
*NEW!. .Bonus 8x10 with parents or grandparents
20 portrait package contains:
2-8x10's, 3-5x7's, 15 wallet size
88¢ deposit at sitting, balance on delivery. Groups $1.00
each extra person this package, limit 5 subjects.
COMPARE-if we are not yo~u portrait company,
you may be paying way too much. COME see why
young families are turning to us for portraits.
BUSINESS CARDS
Thursday thru Sunday, Febmary 16 thru 19
THURS: lOAM· 6 PM Fill. a SAT: 10 AM· 8 PM
(RAISED PRINTING)
$21.50 per 1,000, up to 7 lines (P.Pd.)
LUIICH IIOUII: 1 PM • 2 PM
PHONE 358·3075, 10 a.m.-11 p.m.
WILLIAMS!...Wayland, Ky. 41888 lt-pd.
FOR SALE: 12x54 mobile home.
Package heating and cooling unit.
Underpinning blocks and steps. electric pole and service. 9x10 outbuilding.
new carpet. $6000. Phone 874·2879.
2-15-21pd.
FOR SALE: House in Martin. $30,000.
Call358-9764. Jerry Martin.
2-15-2t.
FOR SALE: 1980 KAWKLX 200. Runs
good. Also. 1982 Honda CR80R. Call
886-6043. Ervin Spears.
2-15-2t.
1111 small sto11 wltfl big sa'llngs
-OPEN 11·5 EXCEPT SUNDAYSU.S. 23 NORTH-NEXT TO JERRY • GERRYS SHOE STORE
(BEHIND THE PHILATINA BEAUTY SALON)
Weddington Pllza, U.S. Rl 23N
SUN:' 1 PM • 5
PM
Appletree Plaza, U.S. 23N
Pikeville
FOR SALE: Used model 310 New Idea
corn picker. Good working condition.
$1500. Phone 886-6907.
2-15-21pd.
FOR SALE: 1980 3-bedroom trailer and
7 acres of land . 1978 Ford truck. Also
firewood Phone 358·9746.
2-15-2tpd .
LOUISVILLE SHOW WINNERS!
Come to Clayton Mobile Homes of
Richmond and see the 1984 model
homes that have been show winners in
Louisville. We have a large selection of
these show winners at low prices at
Clayton Mobile Homes of Richmond.
623-9404 .
2·15-21.
• CHILDREN'S THINGS, NEWBORN TO &X, FANCY DRESSES, DRESSY COVER-ALLS,
NIGHTIES, JOGGING SUITS, CABBAGE PATCH SHIRTS, WINTER COATS &X THRU 12.
• BEDSPREADS-LOTS OF COLORS AND DESIGNS IN FULL, QUEEN AND KING, SHEET
SETS, TOWELS, CURTAINS, AND MORE.
FOR SALE: Diesel International farm
tractor. $3000 . Phone 874-2879.
2-15-2tpd.
FOR SALE: Wedding dress. size 7.
candlelight white. $75. Excellent condition. Call Kim. 886-1551. after 5:30p.m.
only.
2-15-2t.
DOUBLE WIDES: One of the largest
selections in state. Price from $14,900.
delivery and set-up FREE. Only at
Clayton Mobile Homes. Richmond.
Ky .. 606-623-9404.
2-15-21.
The Cabinet lor Human Resources is
assisting the U.S. Nuclear Regulatory
Commission in locating and testing
some iron table bases that may be contaminated with low-level radioactivity.
According to an NRC letter sent this
week to the cabinet's Radiation and Consumer Product Safety Branch, the table
bases were cast in Mexico-using scrap
iron apparently ('{)htaminated with
cobalt-60 from a medical therapy
device. The bases were made between
Dec. 10 and Jan. 25 and shipped to a
wholesale distributor of restaurant furniture, Falcon Products, St. Louis. NRC
has halted the company's distribution of
the bases and is asking states for help
in locating those that were shipped to
customers before the problem was
discovered.
Branch manager Edsel Moore said his
office has received a list of Falcon's
shipments and has already started
testing table bases sent to Kentucky.
Low levels of radioactivity have been
measured in bases received recently by
a company in central Kentucky, and arrangements are being made to return
them to Falcon Products. NRC reports
indicate that as many as 398 bases have
been shipped to Kentucky during the
past few months.
"We will check each one of the units
and follow up as appropriate," said
Moore. "Falcon has agreed to pick up
any radioactive bases , return them to
the Mexican foundry and replace them
with pedestals that are not contaminated."
Don Hughes , supervisor of the
branch's Radiation Control Section, said
the bases pose no immediate health
hazard. "The situation certainly is not
life-threatening," he said, "but it does
expose the public to unnecessary
amounts of radiation. Every base contaminated with cobalt-60 will be
replaced."
Hughes said the radioactive cobalt
contamination is fixed in the met.al and
cannot be spread beyond the t.able base.
According to the NRC, Falcon Products sells only to commercial, in·
dustrial and institutional customers. Its
products are not sold to retail outlets for
residential use. Representatives of companies that have purchased iron items
from Falcon Products may contact the
state's Radiation Control Section at
502/564-3700 for assistance or additional
information.
We're Open! - Big Savings!
BEDSPREADS & CHILDREN'S CLOTHES
FOR RENT: Sleeping rooms in private
home for single lady or gentleman
Siamese kittens for sale. Call 886·9636.
2-15-2! .
FOR RENT on Arnold Avenue,
2-bedroom house. $200 per month plus
$100 security deposit. Also basement
~rtment with outside entrance. furnished- and utilities paid. $225 per
month. $100 security deposit. Call
886-3744.
~ .
2-15-21.
FOR SALE: Registered Brittney.
14-months-old. some hunting experience. 4x8 heavy-duty utility trailer.
extra set of rims and tires. 886-6386
after 5 p.m.
2·15-21pd.
BOATS FOR SALE: 1984 Fish & Ski
bass boat. 17-ft. 5-inches. never been in
water. save $2500. 1984 Glassport
V-hull. 120h.p. OMC inboard. outboard
engine, save $2600. 1983 Somerset 19-ft.
7-inches, 351 V8 engine with Volvo outdrive. Boat is deep V-hull. Excellent
condition. attractive price. Phone
285-9892 or 285-3790. Christian Appalachian Project.
2-8-31.
FOR SALE· King-size bed. good shape.
$125. 700 Ford dump . $1500. Call
285-3423after7p.m .
2·15-Jtpd
ALTERATIONS: Get ready for Spring.
Call886-8398
2·15·3tpd.
GERMAN SHEPHERD PUPPIES for
sale: $50 each Garnis Martin. 358·9178.
2-15-31.
t{}-15 ACRES FOR SALE: Beautiful
building s1tes. Located two miles north
of Prestonsburg on Jane Brown
Branch. exit 3/l(}.mile of U.S. 23 by
Plantation Motel. Possible land contract. Call or write Jim Bingham. 1182
Booth. Howell. Mich 4BB43 . <5171
54&-6635
2-1~3tpd.
Break away to a
seafood adventure
at Long John Silver's with
these money-saving offers.
••••••••••••••••WITHCOO~N••••••••••••••••
!
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
Fish & More® Dinner $1.99
Dinner includes 2 fish rillets, fryes, slaw & 2 hushpuppies. (Good up to 2 offers)
Valid thru: February 29, 1984
Only at: U.S. 23 North,
Prestonsburg
!
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
••••••••••••••••WITH COUPON••••••••••••••••
I 2 Fish & Chicken Dinners $3.99 I
I
Each dinner includes a fish fillet, 2 whitemeat Chicken Planks; fryes. & slaw.
1
I
1
Valid thru: February 29, 1984
Only at: U.S. 23 North,
Prestonsburg
I
I
I
1
I
1
I
I
I
••••••••••••••WITH COUPON••••••••••••••••I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
Breaded Shrimp Platter $2.99
More than
i/4
lb. of lightly breaded shrimp, fryes, slaw & 2 hushpuppies.
(Good up to 4 offers)
Valid thru: February 29, 1984
Only at: U.S. 23 North,
Prestonsburg
I
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•
�Section Three, Page Five
The Floyd County Tlmea
Mu f Bank holding
Said People Issue
-Photo by Charles Manion
U.S. CONGRESSMAN CARROLL HUBBARD, of Mayfield, and Carol Brown
Howard, of Somerset, chose Muhlenberg county to procure the marriage
license for their wedding last Sunday (Feb. 12) at First Baptist Church in
Whitesburg. The bride-to-be is a native of Harlan, grew up in Whitesburg,
graduated from Eastern Kentucky University, is a former Miss Kentucky,
and has been a teacher at Hopkins Elementary School in Somerset the past
17 1.~ years. Muhlenberg County Court Clerk Malcolm West (at right) is the
youngest (age 27) county court clerk in Kentucky and has served several times
as Hubbard's district youth chairman.
Happy Valentine Day
•
To my three wonderful children and
my brother, Kelly Clemons, in Breathitt
Co., and all my friends and neighbors.
A smile goes a long way, please try it
some time. Ever notice how someone's
smile really brightens up a day.
Somehow a smile says so much more
than words could ever say. A smile can
make you welcome no matter where you
go, and in crowds of strangers, a smile
can say hello. A smile can help to cheer
you when you are feeling kind of sad; or
even sooth your anger if you happen to
be mad. A smile can give a feeling of
warmth and pleasure too, for there is
happiness in knowing a smile is meant
for you. I will be thinking of you all on
Valentine day, so please don't forget to
smile.
God bless you all,
LEE ESTER OSBORNE
lt.
Buckingham, Ky.
•
NOTICE OF
INTENTION TO MINE
Pursuant to Application
Number 436-5193
In accordance with the provisions of
KAR 350.055, notice is hereby given that
Big "D" Excavating, Inc., P.O. Box 34,
Betsy Layne, Kentucky, 41605, has filed
an application for a permit for an underground mining operation. The proposed
operation will affect a surface disturbance of 9.88 acres and will underlie an
additional 62.50 acres located 1.0 miles
southwest of Allen in Floyd county.
The proposed operation is approximately 0.5 miles northwest from
Oklahoma Road's junction with Eel's
Branch Road and located 1.5 miles north
of Martin. The latitude is 37' 35' 47' '. The
longitude is 82' 44' 58".
The proposed operation is located on
the Harold U.S.G.S. 71/5 minute quadrangle map. The surface area to be
disturbed is owned by Robert Ousley
heirs. The operation will underlie land
owned by Robert Ousley heirs.
The application has been filed for
public inspection at the Department for
Surface Mining Reclamation and Enforcement's Prestonsburg Regional Office, 503 South Lake Drive, Prestonsburg, Ky. 41653. Written comments, objections, or requests for a permit conference must have attached a copy of
the newspaper clipping and must be filed with the Regional Administrator of
the Prestonsburg Regional Office, 503
South Lake Drive, Prestonsburg, Ky.
41653.
2-8-3t.
Students Must Apply
Early For Loan Aid
It's financial aid application time
again, for anyone either attending or
planning to attend college in fall, 1984.
An April 1 priority filing date looms
ahead for those who need to file a Kentucky Financial Aid Form (KFAF). By
filing a KFAF, a student, or potential
student, applies for Pell Grant, Supplemental Educational Opportunity
Grants, National Direct Student Loan,
College Work Study and Kentucky State
Grant.
As a Kentucky resident, full-time
students have access to money set aside
by the State Legislature. This Kentucky
State Grant money means a Pikeville
College student can qualify for up to
$1,400 in grant money, an amount actually made up of two parts. The State
Student Incentive Grant (SSIG) provides a maximum of $400 for students
who attend any college in the state of
Kentucky and the Kentucky Tuition
Grant (KTG) provides up to $1,000 (in
addition to the SSIG portion) for
students attending an independent
(private) college within the state.
To receive full consideration it is important to apply early. Money is awarded on a first-come, first-served basis according to financial need. "With an increase in grant amot.:nts, the available
money will be exhausted earlier this
year", says Bobby Price, Director of
Financial Aid at Pikeville College.
The Pikeville College Financial Aid
Office is currently conducting workshops at area high schools to help
students complete their financial aid
forms before the April 1 priority
deadline. Anyone wishing to arrange
such a workshop for parents and/or
students, or anyone needing individual
assistance completing the forms, contact the Pikeville College Financial Aid
Office at 432-9305 or 432-9322 between the
hours of 8:30 and 4: 30, Monday through
Friday.
Airman Jeffrey A. Clark, son of John
A. and Helen Clark, of Prestonsburg,
has been assigned to Sheppard Air
Force Base, Texas, after completing Air
Force basic training.
He will now receive specialized instruction in the civil engineering field.
He is a 1982 graduate of Prestonsburg
High School.
·650%
•
-.
"We submit to you," he said, "that the
bank's customers, the consumers if you
pleas~, will pay dearly through higher.
interest rates and service charges."
charges."
·
Bennett said studies done by both the
University of Kentucky and Western
Kentucky University both pointed out
that higher interest rates and higher service charges prevail when multi-bank
holding companies operate local banks, i
as contrasted with the rates and charges
of-community banks doing business in
the same area.
1 Bennett also hit hard at the concentra:tion of economic power that could resUlt
by having many banks owned by a central h~ld_ing company.
"The lobbying efforts," Bennett said,
"of the big money center banks on a national level, and the metropolitan area
banks in Kentucky would bring about an
even larger threat to our governmental
and economic affairs as they gain control of the money supply in our state and
nation."
Bennett pointed to another basic iss\ie
as "the responsiveness of the immediate
community needs when addressed by
banks waose headquarters may be in
• Bank
Financing
.Available
USTOM ANTENNA
MARTIN, KY. • 285-3984
(~eros~
the creek from Garth Vocatiqnal School
Enjoy our delidous casserole that combines
Paramount Olili with Beans and Beef Tamales.
It's easy to fix It's economical. And it will
become a family favorite. Stock up on Paramount Olili with Beans and Beef Tamales and
try this great "Oli-males" casserole.
Paramount's "Oli-males" Casserole
2 ( 20 oz.) cans Paramount Beef Tamales
1 (25 oz.) can Paramont Olili with Beans
11/3 cup cheddar cheese, grated
11/3 cup sour cream
4 green onions, thinly sliced
Place one can unwrapped tamales in a large
casserole. Spoon 1/2 can chili over tamales
and sprinkle on haJf of cheese. ~t. Cover.
Bake: 350° 20 minutes. To serve, spoon on sour
cream and sprinkle with onions. Serves eight.
.Its
.Paramount .
winnlng the hearts
of chill lovers.
----------------------
Childbirth Class Slated
A Prepared Childbirth class sponsored by the Big Sandy Family and
Childbirth Education Association is
scheduled to meet Tuesday evenings
from February 21 to March 27. These
classes are for prospective parents with
April due dates. The class will meet
from 7 to 9 p.m. on the Prestonsburg
Community College CampuS in 1the
Magoffin Complex Building A-1. For
more information or to register, contact
Ann Slone at 886-3863.
When bill paying
is a problem,
this Columbia customer
helps us all.
Kathy McKean is a Columbia Customer Ser·
vice Representative, someone customers
come to when they have problems. And with
Kathy, they're coming to someone who is a·
Columbia Gas customer like they are.
She has the same concerns about rising
costs and the effects that higher gas bills can
have on a budget. So she does whatever she
can to help work.out a payment plan with each
person.
Not only does it help the customer, but it
helps everyone Who gets a Columbia bill. Every
bill that goes unpaid Is an added cost for all
Columbia customers, even as we're trying to
keep our bills as tow as possible.
So when Kathy helps someone work out an
answer to a bill paymg problem, she's also
helping everyone who is a Columbia customer.
Through her efforts, and the efforts of thousan~s of ot~er Columbia employees, Colum·
bia ts workmg to hold down the rising costs
which affect us all.
SALE
~~
Referring to a statement made earlier
by the Kentucky Bankers Association in
support of multi-bank holding company
legislation, Bennett asked, "Who, in the
final analysis, pays for these higher acquisition costs?"
distant cities of the Commonwealth, or
even other states."
"We would ask this question," Bennett
said. Do you think that financial
managers of large multi-bank holding
companies located in Louisville, Lexington or even New York City would be
more responsive to the community
needs of smaller businesses, farmers
and smaller consumers than officers
and directors of community banks, who
live in and work in local communities
throughout this state?"
The Independent Community Bankers
Association of Kentucky represents
more than 150 community banks in Kentucky. ICBAK was formed in 1982 and
has consistently opposed multi-bank
holding companies.
NEWS
SPORTS
MOVIES
RELIGION
Assigned to Texas Base
TRADE-IN RING
•
Charles D. Bennett, president of the
Independent Community Bankers Association of Kentucky, told a crowded
public hearing Wednesday, Jan. 25,
that a proposal for multi-bank holding
companies in Kentucky is a "people
issue," rather than a "big bank bill."
Bennett, president of the Farmers
Bank, of Hardinsburg, was one of
several Kentucky leaders who presented
testimony opposing the Multi-Bank
Holding Company Bill (House Bill67).
The public hearing was conducted in
the chambers of the Kentucky House of
Representatives. It was interrupted a
number of times by supporting applause
from the crowd of spectators on the floor
and in the chamber gallery.
Bennett presented his testimony
before several members of the Banking
and Insurance Committee of the House
of Representatives, conducted by Rep.
Jerry Lundergan, D-Lexington, Rep.
Hoover Dawahare, D-Whitesburg,
assisted by Rep. Ward "Butch" Burnett,
D-Fulton.
"We submit to ycu," Bennett said,
"that the troubled "Butcher' Banks in
Tennessee were closed quickly and the
big bank holding companies were allowed to take over with substantial losses
to the shareholders of those banks."
"It is our opinion," Bennett said, "that
the same situation that brought on the
troubled banks in Kentucky would have
resulted in banks being closed if multibank holding companies had been permitted at that time in this state."
SATELLITE TELEVIS
OFF
'f:_-.:~9-k:'.
·~(~::·
c~
~-·
..
*FREE RING SIZING WHILE YOU WAIT
•
CLYDE BURCHETT
JEWELER
PHONE 886-2734
PRESTONSBURG
,.
2·1·5l.
�Wednesday, February 15, 1984
The Floyd County Times
Section Three, Page Six
•
Junior Dream Girl
The Kentucky Garden Journal
By Bonnie Lee Appleton
State Urban Garden & Home Horticulture Specialist
COOPERATIVE EXTENSION PROGRAM
KENTUCKY STATE UNIVERSITY
Toni Lee Wells, 14-year-old daughter
of George and Jerry Slone, of Allen, and
the late Larry Wells, of Auxier, was
crowned 1984 Eastern Ky. Junior Miss
Dream Girl. She also was first runnerup
in sportswear.
She is the maternal granddaughter of
Christina Johnson, of Allen, and the late
Palmer Compton. Her paternal grandparents are Ruby Wells, of Auxier, and
the late Orville Wells.
To Alice Lloyd,
Caney Alumni
The Floyd County Chapter of the Alice
Lloyd Alumni Association is in the process of updating its membership files.
People on the up-date committee are
Adrian Hall, Anna Sue Stumbo, Woodrow Allen, Ruby Akers, Omah Elkins,
Mr. and Mrs. Arnold Lowe, Opal May,
Sylvia Newman, Dorothy Howell Newman, Edna Mae Davis, and Nadine
Hicks. If you are not already active in
the association, we urge you to make
contact with your nearest committee
member, or with me by. letter at the address given below.
The association recognizes as alumni
all people who are graduates of Caney
Grade School and those who have attended and earned credit in Caney High
School, Caney Junior College, or Alice
Lloyd College. It also recognizes those
who, financially or otherwise, actively
support the school. Thus, you may be
eligible for memberships without being
aware of it.
It has frequently been noted that a
special bond exists among Alice Lloyd
people that is seldom, if ever, found
among alumni of other schools. We feel
this to be true. It is this Caney spirit, this
distinct relationship, that we wish
.especially to preserve, to see grow and
flourish Inactive members can help by
joining us in ow· work. The school needs
you, the Association needS~nd the
Floyd County Chapter needs you~ too.
Therefore, please do call or write us at
an early date.
POLLY ANNA WILEY
Class of '35
P.O. Box 122
Prestonsburg, Ky. 41653
A lobster's "claws" are not equal in
size; If the right claw is larger, it means
the lobster Is "right·handed."
INCOME TAX
PREPARATION
Federal and State
********
Vernon Slone
Call 886-6060
or
886-9007
HHf
Most people have come to realize that
the biggest is not always the best. Big
cars get poorer gas mileage than small
cars. Big helpings at the dinner table
make you size up faster than small helpings. Big lawns Pike longer to mow on
a hot summer day when you'd rather be
...... (Your choice-fill in the blank!)
The same can be said of the vegetable
and flower (bedding) plants we will be
buying for our spring and summer
gardens. The bigger tomato transplants
may actually produce smaller fruit, the
tallest zinnia plants fewer flowers.
Spend a few extra minutes this year
checking the quality of the transplants
you buy. Start with the potting soil and
root system. Is the soil moist? If the
whole soil ball is dry and '-as shrunk
away from the container, the plants may
be receiving poor care and the roots
may have died.
Pull a plant or two from its pot or container and examine the roots-healthy
roots should be white in color, firm, well
branched and should fill the soil ball. If
the roots are brown and soft and
especially if the soil ball has a foul
smell-not the pleasant smell of
"dirt"-don't buy the transplants. The
roots have been damaged by overwatering, by a disease or both.
Now look at the stem right at soil
.level. Is it strong and the characteristic
color for the plant or are there brown to
·black sunken areas? If the latter is true,
a fungal disease called "damping off"
is killing the transplants.
For transplants with upright stems,
·look at the quality and size of the stem
and the space between the leaves. Stems
'Too Good To Be True?
You May Be Right!
The offer that promises you riches for
very little output, the outfit that offers
you instant credit or easy
financing-consumer beware!
Rip-offs are on the rise again, making
it very easy for the uncautious to fall
prey to the unscrupulous. The Reader's
Digest, in its February issue, describes
some of them that are currently being
practiced:
-"Jobs! Jobs! Jobs! Send for our
listing of high-paying opportunities."
The listing (almost always from a fardistant cityl will cost from $10 to $20 and
may well have been lifted from the
classified ads. Most reputable employment agencies charge either the
employer or applicant a fee, but never
before the job has been filed.
"Earn big money right in your own
home! Get $1{)00-$3000 monthly for stuffing envelopes." Again, you're asked for
up-front money, and what you receive is
an offer of an instruction manual for
·even more money. Karl Lauby of the
New York Better Business Bureau says,
"Whenever you're asked to buy anything in order to work at home, don't do
it. If they claim you can make more
money than sounds reasonable, investigate. We advise people to write to the
company and ask for names and addresses of others who are making the
advertised sum of money."
-"Get the best in TV with our special
introductory offer!" Some sharp operators canvas a neighborhood not yet
scheduled for cable, claiming they're
representing a cable company and asking for a $25 deposit and $25 installation
fee. Legitimate cable companies will
usually notify you that a representative
will call on you, and that person will
have a valid I.D. If in doubt, check with
City Hall to see what's really going on
in cable in your area.
There are many other scans. The
name of the game is to get your money
without giving you anything in return.
Keep that fact in mind, and you should
be able to resist most of the traps set by
rip-off artists.
PUBLIC AUCTION IN OHIO
FARM EQUIPMENT
Located 15 miles south of Dayton, 30 miles north of Cincinnati, 2 miles northwest of Lebanon, 4 miles east of Interstate 75, 4 miles west of Interstate 71, on State Route
122 and Hart Rd.
PRESIDENT'S DAY
MONDAY, FEBRUARY 20, 1984 at 9:00
TRACTORS: J D 8630·4640·4620-4440·4430-4240·4230·4030-4020·4010·3020
301D-2840-26«>·2440·2240·2010-1530·1520·1020-73tH30·530-430-70-50 R A
I H C 1566· 1206-1066-986-966-674·656-574 -560-454-444-424·400·354-8275-185
140- & 130 w/cult.-Super A & C's w/cult.-C's w/cult., MF 1135·1085
275-265-255-245·230-175-165-150-135-65-50·35-30. FORD TW 20-8600·6600-4600
4500-4000-391D-J600.3400-3000-2600-1900-800-600-8 N 's-9 N's-J ubliees. Case
2670-1816-1290·1210-1200-107D-990-970-930-885·570·530·430-CC 1936. White 2
150-2·105-2-70·1855-1650-1550-G-1000 MM·850 MM·550. A.C. 7080 81
C&A&Duals·7o6o 81 C&A&Duals·190-185·175·16D-D 17- 0 14-G' w/cult. WD·
WD4S.
Ford 4000 tractor w/pix all green bean picker; 25 50·HP and less tractors w/loaders; 15 1 & 2-row cultivating tractors; 10 lawn and garden
tractors; 15 salvage tractors.
Over 600 pieces of farm equipment Including Industrial equipment and
combines with corn heads and grain tables.
should be firm and thick. If stems are
overly flexible and thin-what we call
spindly-the seedings were probably
pushed to grow too fast, were grown
under too low a light intensity, or are too
closely spaced for their size <should
have been marketed smaller) and have
shaded each other.
, You can tell the above has happened
by also looking at the length of stem bet, ween where leaves are attached-the internodes. If leaves are spaced quite far
apart, again shading or accelerated
growth has occurred.
Examine the leaves. Are they a good
green color or are they pale? If they are
pale they probably are either being kept
where the light is too dim or the plants
have run out of fertilizer. Good green
color is a must if the plants are to projduce food for their own growth. If you
buy pale plants, give them plenty of sun
and fertilizer.
Now check the top of stems, the buds,
and the leaves (especially the underside) for pest problems. Spots on leaves
may indicate disease problems as can
dried up, brown buds. Early transplants
such as broccoli and cabbage may harbor small worms, and aphids always
.seem to have the uncanny ability to
locate a nice young juicy plant to sip sap
from. Don't start off your gardening
season with problemed plants. And don't
be fooled by the little round objects that
may be on or in the potting soil; most
likely they are an encapsulated slow
release fertilizer, not bug eggs!
Lastly, don't buy tomato transplants
already covered with flowers Cor even
small fruit). Research has shown that
young transplants-around five weeks
old-will give you larger fruit than older
plants.
Timely Tips: Organic mulches such as
straw, shredded leaves, bark and compost should be removed from or tilled into soil areas that you want to warm up
quickly, but leave winter mulch or
strawberries until the air warms up. If
you start yo~ own transplants and use
sphagnum moss in your potting mix, be
aware that a fungal disease called
sporotrichosis can be contracted by
handling the sphagnum. The fungus
enter through cuts and scratches, initially causing small painless blisters, but
eventually problems can develop even
in lymph vessels, bones and abdominal
organs. Be aware also that sphagnum
moss is often used as a packing material
round l)a~e root fruit trees, roses and
perennials. If you must handle sphagum
moss be sure to frequently wash your
hands and treat and cover skin injuries.
HALE'S FARM EQUIPMENT
3099 Hart Rd., Lebanon, Ohio 45036
Ph. 1·(513)932-4925
NOT RESPONSIBLE FOR ACCIDENTS • LUNCH SERVED 2 8 .
CENTER CUT
PORK
CHOPS ........ .
PRICES
EFFECT
WED., FEB. 15
THRU TUES., FEB. 21
• QUANTITY RIGHTS
RESERVED
• NOT RESPONSIBLE
U.S.D.A. CHOICE
RIB EYE
STEAKS
FRESH
GR~f~~- . . . . $11!
99,~. ~~~~~ . . . . . . $16!
12-0Z. PKG.-FISCHER'S '
SKINLESS OR BEEF
WIENERS
BONELESS
END CUT
PORK
CHOPS
. . . . . . s1.l!
p.·N.•rTNEY's
$17 9
99
$159
$1 09
SALMON.......
14-0Z. BOX-KRAFT
CAN
~
DELUXE MACARONI
AND CHEESE DINNER .
PLATTER
$119
. 99c ~~:~i~~~-·-~. .
3-LB.-SHEDD'S
COUNTRY CROCK
BACON...........
1-LB. PKG.
ARMOUR
SAUS
LB.
MARGARINE ..... .
11.5-0Z.-KEEBLER
...-
• SEE THE GOLDEN VALUE MARKETS AD ELSEWHERE IN THIS
•
ElectrieThenual Storage
works aiglds so you can
saveon~ar
....
heating bills
all daylong.
Electric Thermal Storage, ETS, stores
enough heat at night to heat your home for the
rest of the day. And because ETS stores heat,
it saves on your heating bills all winter long.
Heating coils inside the ETS furnace heat
the special bricks throughout the night. The
bricks then store heat which the furnace draws
from at night, and the rest of the day.
Y?u save ~use you heat with electricity at night, when the cost ofelectricity is less, under
· special rates available to ETS customers. So you pay lower electric rates for heating. And for
all other electricity you use at night.
What's more, the same lower electric rates apply all weekend - for ETS heating and all
other electric uses.
ETS heats your water, too. And individual room heaters are a~ailable, which let you comfort control any room.
For complete information. about the energy-saving and money-saving advantages of Electric
Thermal Storage, send us this couJX)n. It could be one of the best investments you ever make.
rI ------0
I
1
I
L
CLIPANDMAIL•------,
Please send me further information about the ETS program.
Please check your principal heating fuel:
TRUC:KS: Road Tractors, tandem grain trucks and grain trailers.
Airports, motels, restaurants and shopping malls within 60 minutes. For
complete sale listings and other details call or write.
•
0 Oil
0 LP Gas
lJ Natural Gas
0 Electricity
N~e
Address--------------------------------------------------------------~------
City
Telephone
State
Zip
Account Number
Mail coupon to: Marketing/Customer Services Dept. • Kentucky Power Company
P.O. Box 1428 • Ashland, Kentucky 41101
--
i
1
I
I1
--------------~
We give it our best.
KENTUCKY POWER COMPANY
•
�The Floyd County Times
Poultry, Eggs, Pace
Leap In Food Prices
If 1983 was the year of drought, 1984
may be starting out as the year of the
chicken. A whopping 4.3 percent jump
in retail food prices for January can be
traced, in part, to the hen house door.
The price increase was documented
by Kentucky Farm Bureau's first
marketbasket food price survey for the
year. Jumps in cost for poultry cuts and
eggs, combined with smaller increases
for beef, pork, fruits and vegetables,
raised the average value of 40 selected
food items in Kentucky stores to $60.28,
up from $57.51 for December.
Although some two-thirds of the
marketbasket selections increased in
Georgia Ann Slone, five-year-old price during the month, eggs and poultry
daughter of George and Jerry Slone, of raced ahead of the pace with a 15.5 perAllen, was chosen Wee-Miss Eastern, cent hike in 30 days. This uncharacterisKy. Dream Girl. She also was first run- tic volatility pushed the average price
nerup in photogenic. She also was of a dozen large eggs from 91 cents to
A 1osen most beautiful at the pageant $1.26 and kicked up the tab for whole
""'leld Feb. 4 at the Holiday Inn in fryers from 76 to 86 cents a pound. Extra large eggs went to $1.33 a dozen, on
Pikeville, Ky.
average, while chicken breasts vau1ted
to $1.75 a pound.
Getting the blame for the increases
were last summer's hot weather, which
caused high mortality among laying
The first of 9,600 questionnaires were flocks in Southern states, combined with
mailed this week to Kentucky drivers to a severe outbreak of avian influenza in
find out what they think of the state's the Northeast. Bitterly cold weather also
transportation systems and services.
contributed, analysts say, by cutting
The mail survey is being directed by down on hens' productivity and broilers'
Jerry G. Pigman and Kenneth R. Agent, ·gain rates.'
research engineers with the Kentucky
Prior to this recent surge, egg prices
Transportation Research Program at had been relatively stable for three to
the University of Kentucky. It is fund- four years, according to Dave Williamed by a grant of $30,000 from the Ken- son, with the Kentucky Crop and Livetucky Department of Highways through stock Reporting Service. At retail, large
the University of Kentucky Research eggs had moved generally in the 75 to
Foundation.
85-cent range since 1980. That translated
The UK researchers developed their into prices in the 40's for farmers.
questionnaire in consultation with
Williamson said many egg producers
- hway department officials. Some
had
felt their prices were not keeping
~estions in the two-page survey are the
same as those asked on a similar 1980 in- pace with the rest of the farm sector durquiry and will allow researchers to ing that period. He noted that his office's
latest survey had pegged farm-level egg
measure opinion shifts.
prices
at better than 81 cents a dozen, up
Respondents will be asked questions
about bumpy and uncomfortable roads, almost 70 percent from a year ago, when
problems with traffic signs and pave- producers were receiving 48 cents.
ment markings, attitudes about carIn other sectors of the January
pools, and their opinions about whether marketbasket, beef and pork prices
and how much the state should increase, moved higher by 4 and 3 percent respecor decrease, expenditures for such items tively, while dairy products actually
as road maintenance, repair of rough decreased in price and grain-based
ilroad crossings, snow and ice foods held steady.
removal on roads and public transporFruits and vegetables were 11 percent
tation.
Questionnaires will be mailed in the higher, paced by potatoes and saladnext two weeks to a random group of 800 type items. Much of those increases
registered drivers in each of the state's were seasonal in nature, including the
12 highway districts. Respondents are 44-cent jump for potatoes and hikes of
asked to return their marked question- 10 cents for green bell peppers and 20
cents for a head of iceberg lettuce.
.naires in postage-free envelopes.
The researchers expect to have
results tallied and a report filed to the
· hway department by the end of June
84.
Ask Driver Opinion
Of State Transport
Pearl Bailey Show
At Centre on KET
NEW CHURCH MEMBERS
Donna Bartley a nd her daughter, Lisa
joined the fellowship of the Prestonsburg
Seventh Day Adventist Church,
February 4. A baptismal service for the
two new members was conducted by
Pastor Paul Hoover.
Subscription
Rates Per Yea.r
In FIO)!CI'County~ $8.00
Elsewftereln Kt~~~tucky, $JO
Oublde Kttntucky, $l2.50
Please ,p1ote. expb;atlon date
Ill..
j ..
oppoalte yciur nan,~ _
ori wrap·
p~ or on yQUr ~PY: of The'
Times, ~auM.of lncreatMI!,d·
mall'lnc cost•, ~otlces., .o.f
subscription~; ~ration
no .. lorf&.,- ·· ~iilled
are
to
subscribers•
Subscript!~ may be mailed to:
The Floyd .C ounty Times
Box391
Prestonsburc, Ky. 41653
The inimitable Pearl Bailey will star
in a special tribute to American music
that was recorded live at Centre College
in Danville. "Pearl and Friends at Centre Stage" will air at 8 p.m., Thursday,
March 8. Performing to a background of
Louie Bellson's Big Band Explosion,
Pearl Bailey is joined by friends Tony
Bennett, Sarah Vaughn and tap-dancer
Honi Coles in a special all Kentuckians
will want to watch.
"Pearl & Friends at Centre Stage" is
a co-production of Golden Gate Productions and Pearl Bailey Productions.
As part of KET TeleFund '84's starstudded lineup of programming, a dazzling one-man show featuring the late
Henry Fonda as the great defense
lawyer and humanitarian, Clarence
Darrow, follows the Pearl Bailey
special. "Clarence Darrow Starring
Henry Fonda" will air on KET at 9:30
p.m. Fonda's portrayal of the wit and intelligence Darrow displayed in his cases
and writing is a tribute not only to
Clarence Darrow, but to an actor who
became am American institution.
"Clarence Darrow Starring Henry
Fonda" was produced by Dome
Productions.
Wiln~Lti
HOMEMADE PIUA - SPAGHETTI - SUBMARINE SANDWICHES
ALL INGREDIENTS MADE FRESH DAILY
WE USE FRESH PIZZA DOUGH • Not Frozen • Not Pr•Bflad • No Substitutes
I
OPEN lOAM-lAM
9AM-IAM lUES-SAT
.
SUNDAY-CLOSED MONDAY..
CRISP FLAVORFUL PIZZAS
CUSTOM MADE IN
10"- 12"- 14" - 17" SIZES
DEliCIOUS GONDOLA I STEAK
SANDWICHES
YOU liNG...WE IRING
FOI PROMPT CAllY OUT Qlll
886-8118.
OA
886-81,1 9
HOBERT'S
PIZZARIA
LANCER KY ·
I
Morehead checked in with the lowest
local marketbasket average for the
month of January, while Louisville
showed the highest figures. Overall,
volunteer surveyors working through
Kentucky Farm Bureau Women canvassed grocery prices in 21 Kentucky
communities.
Those local figures are Morehead,
52.15 ; Greensburg, 55.11; Campbellsville, 56.98; Scottsville, 57.73; Salyersville, 58.18; Hopkinsville, 58.23 ;
Elizabethtown, 58.83; Wilmore, 59.08.
Glasgow, 59.20; Brandenburg, 59.44 ;
London, 59.91; Shelbyville, 60.57 ;
Madisonville, 60.90; Henderson, 61.22 ;
Jackson, 62.17; Owensboro and Lexington, 62.64; Georgetown, 63.08; Cynthiana, 63.30; Greenup, 65.94; and Louisville, 67.62.
IN -\PPRECIATION
The family of Reynold Nelson wishes
to take this opportunity to thank everyone who helped in any way during our
father's illness and death. To the relatives, freinds, and neighbors for food
flowers and cards, the F loyd Funeral
Home for its kind and efficient serviCe,
Dr. Larry Leslie and nurses a t Highlands Regional Medical Center. Also
thanks to Bro. Claude Goble and Bro.
Elmer Davis for their comforting words,
and a special thanks to the singers for
their beautiful songs.
THE FAMILY
Section Three, Pace Seven
G&G COMPUTER SALES
East Point. KY 41216
Dealers of quality ha rdware
and softwar e.
We have softwar e for most computer systems :
I BM PC , Commodor e, Apple, Radio Shack,
Victor, NEC, TeleVideo, and many mor e.
We also have COLECO'S ADAM--more computer
for t he money t han any ot her
Don' t make the m ista ke of buying a computer
before you call us for the answers t o your
com puter questions.
Over 1.4 years of experience in the computer field .
Call Day or Night:
GIVE SOMEONE A LIFT
.1END A BOUQUET OF BALLOONS
ALL OCCASIONS- DELIVERED
886-3667 or 789-6285
�•
The Floyd County Times
Wednesday, February 15, 1984
Section Three, Page Eight
Wood Is Goo<} Fuel,
But Presents Hazards
Anthony Stiltner, a local Floyd county resident, has enlisted in the United
States Marine Corps.
Stiltner will report to Marine Corps
Recruit Depot, Parris Island, South
Carolina August 29 for training.
A senior at Wheelwright High School,
he is the son of Mrs. Evelyn Stiltner, of
Melvin.
For more information on Marine
Corps opportunities contact Sgt. Ken
Anderson at 432-2175/2176 in Pikeville,
and please call collect.
Benefit Recipients May
Be Entitled To Increase
Kentuckians receiving social security or railroad retirement pension
payments who have received reduced
employment insurance benefits may be
entitled to more compensation, and
those who have been denied compensation may be eligible for it, according to
Human Resources officials.
"If a person retired from a job with
one employer and received these pension payments, then began working for
another employer and was laid off, our
staff may have reduced unemployment
compensation by the amount of social
security or railroad retirement payments,'' said Mae Girkey, director of the
cabinet's Division of Unemployment
Insurance.
"We have tried to notify by mail each
person to whom this happened," she
said. "But even those who didn't receive
notices from us who feel they fit the
criteria should contact one of our local
Unemployment Insurance offices, even
if they were told earlier they weren't
eligible for benefits or were eligible only for reduced benefits.'' About 5,500 people were affected, she said.
·INCOME TAX ·
PREPARATION. ·.
.
LOCATED ACROSS FROM
MARTIN GRADE SCHOOL
IN THE OLD WESTERN
AUTO BUILDING.
REASONABLE RATES
CHARLOM KEATHL!f2-1.3t.
newspaper
a.,vertis1ng done
effeCTively! and inexpensively! We'll
help you do rhe enrire
job from rh~e ro copy
rt> artwork ... for rhe cosr
offf1e od space alone!
lllt-Jfed? Call .len Peters lit
Ull-1506 .M he'll call on ycul
Th' Floyd County nmes
~;
k
a~,
Each year, more and more people are
turning to wood to heat their homes,
either to supplement their home heating
system or even to use as a primary fuel
source.
While burning wood offers some real
cost savings for some homeownersespecially those with their own timber
or inexpensive source of firewood- it
also poses hazards.
The sharp incre<~se in residential wood
burning has caused concern about some
health and safety iss•1es, according to
Extension forestry specialists in the
University of Kentucky College of Agriculture.
John Shelly explains some of the risks
that go along with the economic advantages of burning wood.
Homeowners with wood burners also
may notice creosote in a liquid form that
runs down exterior walls of a metal
chimney or stovepipe, seeps from the
cracks of joints and elbows, or accumulates in the bottom of the heater
To reduce the amount of creosote
deposits in your woodburning system,
McLaren advises following these tips:
Burn dry wood, either pine or hardwood that has been cut, split, and stacked for drying at least three months
before burning. Six months of seasoning
are better, and a year is best. The reason
for seasoning is that about half the
weight of fresh-cut or green firewood is
water.
"The water must be evaporated from
the wood as steam when the wod starts
burning," said McLaren. "This robs
Chimney emissions. When wood is heat from the fire and living area and
burned, the emissions (smoke) produc- causes the cooler smoke to condense on
ed contain components which include the flue as creosote."
fine particulates (as much as 50 percent
Build each fire so that it quickly starts
may be respirable), carbon monoxide, · burning when you light it. Put crumpland various volatile hydrocarbons. ed newspapers on the bottom, then small
Other compounds, some of which are kindling, then several small pieces of
known health hazards, are produced in firewood. Place a crumpled newspaper
small quantities.
on top of the wood and light it before
''The health risk of these emissions is lighting the fire. The heat from the burnnot clearly established," said Shelly, . ing paper will help the chimney draw the
''but recent evidence indicates it may be smoke faster, McLaren explained.
a potential major threat to public health
in concentrated residential areas."
He added that the health hazard associated with wood emissions is increased dramatically when preservativetreated wood is burned, adding toxic and
sometimes carcinogenic compounds into
the air.
Indoor pollution. Health hazards in side a hpme can be traced to wood emissions and the ash remaining after combustion. Improperly installed wood burning equipment may often result in combustion products being emitted into the
room, said Shelly.
·
MAKE RESERVATIONS TO HAVE
YOUR CHILD'S BEST BIRTHDAY' PARTY. THIS YEARII
Be sure not to load the stove so full
that the air supply is closed off. You'll
have a slow-burning, smoldering fire
that causes the largest amount of
creosote deposits. Instead, use a smaller
amount of wood and keep the heater
drafts open more in order to burn a hotter fire, McLaren recommended. Or at
least open the stove drafts and damper
for 30 minutes a day so the fire burns
hot.
To minimize the potential health and
safety risks of burning wood in your
home, Shelly and McLaren offer these
recommendations:
Make sure your equipment is installed properly. Stove manufacturers are
required by the Consumer Product Safety Commission to attach specifications
to each new stove to describe safe
installation.
Do not burn chemically treated wood.
Clean the chimney. The buildup of
creosote can be reduced by routine
cleaning.
Ensure proper damping. Supply
enough air to the combustion box to keep
the fire from smoldering or smoking;
this reduces particulate emissions.
Inspect stovepipe connections to ensur€' a tight fit, which will minimize indoor pollution.
*
*
*
PARTY PLAN
~#1 . .
PARTY PLAN
OR
.
#2
.
The easiest and safest party
you'll ever have.
"ATIENDANTS ON DUTY AT ALL TIMES"
.
•
.
·<-
~
.~...-~
• . '.
CONTACT: .. ·-~':
..
THE . PLA Y.HOUSE. ·- R·E:StAURANT .
. · AND ·. ARCADE:-: .. · , ·. -·
F_i~st
Ave., Prestonsburg : · . P~·bne
. ·.
.
8~~-174:4 : .
. ·,'
.
.
-
~ ~
.
_.
Wickes Lumber
Wood emissions insi<!e a closed house
pose a more serious threat than do the
emissions from the chimney because the
air breathed by occupants inside has
such a higher concentration of the emissions. Shelly pointed out that indoor
emissions from burning preservativetreated wood can be extremely harmful.
Wood ash is generally not considered
a health hazard, he noted, except when
there are large quantities of airborne
ash. "But the ash from wood treated
with preservative salts is extremely
hazardous because of a high concentration of arsenic compounds," he said.
Fire risks. Accidental fires in houses
caused by using woodburning equipment are on the rise, Shelly said. "Most
of these fires result from improper installation, carelessness, or not maintaining the chimney adequately. Since woodburning stoves and fireplaces can reach
very high temperatures, combustible
materials need to be kept at a safe
distance.''
Creosote problems. Creosote is the
main cause of chimney fires. That's the
highly combustible fuel carried in the
smoke from a wood fire, explained Doug
McLaren, UK area Extension forestry
specialist headquartered at the Robinson Substation in Quicksand, Ky.
Creosote condenses and is deposited
on the walls of the chimney. It also accumulates on the stovepipe walls- the
section of metal pipe that connects the
heater to the chimney- and inside the
wood heater.
There are several forms of creosote,
McLaren noted. It may be lightweight,
fluffy, and ash-like, and this type can be
easily removed by wire brushing.
·Another type is a black, hard, crusty
buildup that forms on the flue and
stovepipe walls and which is l>lard to get
off.
But the most difficult creosote to
remove is a glazed or enamel-like
coating on the walls of a wOod heating
system. "Professional chimney sweeps
can this third-degree creosote," said
McLaren. "Wirebrushing won't get it off
very easily, but it has been successfully removed by sandblasting."
r
Pharmacy .
r;ootnotes
I
PRICES GOOD
THRU SATURDAY
FEBRUARY 18th
5' Starter
Kitch~n
• The attractive dark oak finish looks
beautiful in any kitchen
• Includes a 60" base cabinet, two
12"x 30" wall cabinets with valance
• Easy to assemble
• Cuts wood, plastic tubing,
compositions and metal extrusions
• 9" blade, 45° mitre
99~~ 144~~
Terrace
Walnut
Paneling
• Enhance your
room with the real
look of walnut
• Rich, deep
woodgrain finish
8!~
9?.!
Ceiling Panels
Honeycomb White
• Top quality No. 2
boards!
• Make any project
look professional!
• 1"x4"
Latex Semi-Gloss Latex Flat
o Luster Plus Latex Semi- Gloss
• Use Satin Plus Latex Flat
creates a beautiful enamel
finish lor walls and woodwork
lor beautrlul walls and
Uo.F<
Spruce or Pine
1"x6" Boards
Standard
Water
Heaters
•
•
•
•
30 Gal. Nat. Gas or
40 Gal. Electric
Un. Ft.
0
• Both models feature a
set-and-forget
thermostat
• 5 -year limited
warranty
7/16"
40 Gal. Ele<:trk:
Each
• Last number
redial
• Mute button for
pnvate
conversalrons
CertainTeed 1:-4
• On/off nnger
SWitCh
22~
"The higher
the A -value.
the greater th9
<OSUia""!'po.O<
Asl<lo<
me R·'o'atue
fact sheet
Details at
Wickes
Lumber
4'x8' Piece
• Smooth surface
one side
• Use for shelves.
Siding or lrtm
• Top
quality'
A-Bundle
Rebate
Offer
Save $1 00 per
package on Unlaced
Certa>nTeed
tnsulatton'
6
44
1"x12" Western
Cedar
Fiberglass Insulation
61;4" R-19* Unfaced ~B~u...,.ck--.....,
• Great for reinsulating attics and floors
• Simply place over existing insulation
Wafe~board
• Ideal lor many
construct>on uses
• Building code
approved
• Replaces
plywood almost
anytim e
30Gai.Net.Gaaor
Ultra Slim
Wall
Telephone
9
Gallon
Wood
Louvered
Bifold Doors
Perfect for c losets
Provide excellent ventilation
Easy installation
Many other sizes to c hoose
from
49
7
'"""9'
1-
1
0888
~:m
• Econom>cal 2'x4'
lay-in panel
• Textured surface
makes for a styl1sh
room
By HAROLD COOLEY Vaccination was first used in the late eighteenth
century by Dr. Edward Jenner. Dr. Jenner noticed that
milkmaids, who frequently came down with cowpox,
seemed protected against smallpox, a similar but much
more devastating disease. Jenner concluded that exposure to cowpox somehow shielded the women against
the more serious disease. He tested his theory by making the· first vaccine. The substance that he used came
from the cowpox ulcers on the milkmaids' hands. The
process took its name from the Latin word for cow,
"vacca." People innoculated with this substance did not
get smallpox. Since 1980 smallpox has been declared
"eradicated."
All prescription items and over the counter
remedies are available at COOLEY APOTHECARY.
Join your many friends and neighbors who already are
familiar with us. We are located in No.2 Town Center
Bldg., 886-8106. Keep in mind that our prices are very
competitive. Open: Mon.-Fri., 9-5 :30, Sat., 9-5.
HANDY HINT:
Consult your doctor about vaccinations if you are
pregnant.
Power
Mitre Saw
79
STORE HOURS
Mon.-Friday
8:00-5:30
Saturday
8:00-4:00
874-9602
'¥ PIMEVIll£
432-3241
ALLEN, KY.
200-84
Wickes
Lumber
l
�Wednesday, February 15, 1984
Section Three, Paae Nine
The Floyd County Times
Because the largest percentage of a bank's expenses are
incurred in processing checking account transactions, most
banks charge a nominal fee for this service.
Like you, we have always felt that charges can become
burdensome. That's why WE base our checking account
charges on AVERAGE balances rather than minimum
balances, like. our competitors.
-DAY
THE BANK JOSEPHINE
BANK Y
BANK Z
Balance
Potential
Charge
Balance
Pot.
Charge
Balance
Pot.
Charge
1
$350
-0-
$350
$4.00
$350
-0-
2
$250
-0-
$250
$5.00
$250
$3.00
3
$300
-0-
$1,000
---
$1,000
---
TOTALS
$900
-0-
$1,600
$5.00
$1,600
$3.00
As you can see, our checking accounts
really DO cost less. In our example your total
balance is divided by 3. And even though your
balance at 'The Bank Josephine dropped
below $300 for one day during the period,
you pay NO service charge since your
AVERAGE balance was $300. Banks Y and z
charge on MINIMUM balances. And even
though your average balance with them was
higher, you will still pay their HIGHEST charge
j_ust because your balance dropped below the
minimum for only one day!
AND TALK ABOUT CONVENIENCE!! We have six full-service locations.
Bank Y has four: Bank Z has only one.
You'll find a Bank Josephine location on every maior highway in Floyd
County. And our combined locations offer a total of 102 more banking hours
per week than Bank Y and 208 more than Bank Z. And NONE of OUR locations close for an hour in the middle of a busy Friday.
AND EASTERN KENTUCKY TOO!
•
•
•
•
•
Prestonsburg • Garrett • Harold • Allen • Wheelwright
Member F.D.I.C.
�The
15 Years Old
Attain Dean's List
At Transylvania
Officials at Transylvania University
m Lexington have announced that the
following students from Prestonsburg
area have been named to the Dean's List
for the fall term.
Renee Maria Vannucci, daughter of
Rev. and Mrs. Lorie Vannucci, of Martin, a junior, Nancy Carol Godsey,
d:mghter of Dr. and Mrs. Garland D.
Godsey, of Prestonsburg, John D. Pitts,
·on of Mr. and Mrs. John K. Pitts, of
Prestonsburg, George C. Stephens, son
of Mr. and Mrs. Danny Stephens, of
Pre tonsburg, all seniors.
1
To be eligible for the Dean's List,
"tudents must achieve a B plus average
for the semester
INDIVIDUAL
GARAGE-R-STORAGE
-STOR-IT
-LOCK-IT
-POCKET THE KEY
U
MONTHLY RATES
10X10
10X20
10X30
20X30
...... $25
...... $55
...... $65
..... $100
(808)888-2734 or 88'3·2412
ClYDE I . IUICifM
Coun sr., Prellonlburg, Ky 41853
Citing the world trend toward auto·
mated '11anufacturing, Morehead State
University President Morris L. Norfleet
welcomed 21 employees of Emerson
Manufacturing Co.'s Browning
Manufacturing plant to the first of a
semester-long series of robotics and
computerized manufacturing classes.
"Our job at the University is to help
the people of this region,'' said Dr.
Norfleet. "We hope this training is just
the beginning of our relationship
because we learn along with you."
Dr. Norfleet talked to the Rowan county employees of the Maysville-based
firm Tuesday at the beginning of their
twice-weekly, three-hour class in MSU's
Department of Industrial Education and
Technology. Dr. Robert Newton, head of
the department, said the co-operative
training is a pioneering effort.
"Right now, this training is the only
one of its type in the state," he said.
The class is funded by a $90.000 Job
Training Partnership Act grant from the
Kentucky Cabine~ for Human Resources. The training will prepare
employees for operating computerized
machines and robots that Browning,
Rowan county's largest industrial
employer, will begin using by mid-year.
"This type of joint training is a good
example of the intent of the JTPA," said
Employment Services Commissioner
James Daniels in a prepared statement.
"While it won't increase the number of
jobs at the Browning Manufacturing
plant, it will prevent displacement or
unemployment of current employees as
a result of the company's switch to high
technology equipment."
The workers to be retrained will attend either a day or night class twice a
DO SOMETHING WILD!
Kentuckians can now participate in the protection and preservation of our rich natural heritage. On Line 21 a, you can
designate all oro portion of your Kentucky tax refund to help.
wildlife.
week. According to Gary Koch, plant
manager, 30 of Browning's 150
employees will be trained by the grant.
All will be learn;ng on company time.
Browning Manufacturing makes
power transmission parts, including
gears, sprockets, bearing units,
bushings and gear reducers. Five new
robots will be on-line by mid-June, according to Koch. They will load and
unload parts into computerized
machinery.
Your tax deductible contribution will support non·game species
protection programs by the Department oi Fish and Wildlife
Resources and the purchase a nd maintenance of natural areas
by the Kentllcky Nature Preserves Commission. These programs
have no other sources of funding.
Wildlife needs your help - Mo amount Is too small, your contribution Is Important!
PARTS
and
PICTURE
Ct:HTER MODEL J2574AO
Some· Assets Allowed
Beneficiaries of SSI
SHOWSTOPPER • VIDEO
An individual or married couple can
own some property and still be eligible
for Supplemental Security Income (SSIJ
payments, Jim Kelly, Social Security
district director for the Big Sandy area,
said recently.
"A single person can have assets
worth up to $1,500 and a couple can have
assets worth up to $2,250," Kelly said.
"Moreover, in figuring the value of the
assets, the cost of a home the person occupies is not counted.
"Other items that might not count,
depending upon their value, include personal property, household goods, insurance policies, a car, and burial plots
and burial funds.
"An individual or couple should not
hesitate to apply for SSI payments simply because they own property or other
assets,' Kelly said. "Rather, they should
contact any Social Security office to see
if they qualify and to file an application.'.'
"Anyone planning to file should bring
a list of other income they have as well
as papers to show property and vehicle
ownership," Kelly said. "Of course
anyone that has a disability should contact their doctor before contacting the
Social Security office."
C~SSErn
•
LABOR
and
•
•
SERVICE
• Wo•ed Four·Functon ~t Cont•ol
• Metaltc Gold Ftnosll
Curtis
Mathes
HOME ENTERTAINMENT Ct::NTER,
339 MAIN STREEf
HAZARD
439-4769
886-8381 • HIGHLANDS PLAZA • PRESTONSBURG
.---------,
<Hou,.. #. Do• 11. Apfi mull be tr.clude-d)
C•rv
Store
Ar<"O Code (
Telephone No
) Number_ _
__ _
______ _
(Of"'Clit'N,.Oft<OI.....,.bmondi"'''flwftlO"'f"UK"tnbOif'rOtr'oU"trol
<:.:':,~~!\~~~~~~=
Colt" f'I'1Cllll'' Non eo., c.~ Comaror.' Hor Coo;uo ""'• ""... Or...oO.Vf)oo;)rood
c...... """.. "''tloo;l'ood _.,tloo;l.CanMOOooo'ooo
,. fM~urt' ..._.,. c~ COl JOOCI Orono J • ~ o1oor1 a.:• of OCJOf'f
1I
.._
..J
~,......._t'I0'9'4'olonvon.of.....,.obc ..•predut""(lnd~-""~
bm
(M...,-.rtl~pO"'~IIOkY••If\o(lr'l~~~ 19... 0'\d ~·~
.:"OOIQr•rlti<J".t..pfoi
t~
06-f DPw•ro•rQdoiiQif~oOif\Ht
I
:• tro~
~.:~ T-.o
Soud·Stat.
1~
~
.a eonv..-. Sde C..ryong O.e>&
•
~ed w~ Wood·~~tl"'l$h
355 SOUTH MAIN
HARLAN
573-7111
PRESTONSBURG STORE ONLY: CPEN 10 TO 8, MON.-FRI., 10 TO 7, FRI., 10-3, SAT., CLOSED SUNDAYS
P US, CARNATION WILL CONTRIBUTE $50,000 TO TtE 1984 U.S. OlYMPIC TEAM•
Add•ess
COHlROL COlOR TABLE ..xlEl.
OWNED AND OPERATED BY SHAFFER TELEYISION
(UJ
Pteow pnru (do not rype)
Programmable T.,..,.r
Cuet~>e>w. Frame Advance/Slow Moton
Pausa/St•l on SLP MOde
1, .. DIAGOHAlAEMOTE
~H11151RW
Rent a Curtis Mathes - Rent applies to ownership ...
No down payment ... Just pay the first month's rent, we deliver
set. After 24 payments, it belongs to you ·... No finance
company involved.
=lludgd=
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
Table Mc:lOel Elegance
• Soii·Toucll funaon Controls
• 12 Pos.l.on Elec:tronc r..,ng System
• 82 Cro.t>ne~ Tunong Capaboioty
• Tickets for two to various Olympic • Hotel accommodations for two,
for one week.
events, for one week.
rent o cor
• Free use of o
• Round trip airfare for two on
Uncoln Town Cor, for one week
uniTED AIRLinEs to Los Angeles.
(official rental cars of the Olympics).
• $2,000 spending money.
CARNATION ~suPPORT-OUR-
RECORDER
TABL£ MODEL JV721
Winning couples will each receive:
I
U.S. OLYMPIC-TEAM..
SWEEPSTAKES ENTRY FOP.M
I
(ro purcrose necessary)
I MAIL TO: OLYMPIC
SWEEPSTAKES
PO 130X300
I
131\EA CALIFORNIA 92621
I
I
I
----z;;;--I
I
TUBE
25.. DIAGOHAL "BIIOTE
,
CClHTAOC. HOME IEHTERTAHotEHr
2+t!
Nome
Section Three, Page Ten
MSU Robotics Classes
First of Kind in State
Miss Beth Nunnery, daughter of
James H. Nunnery, Jr., of Betsy Lay~·
and Anita Faherty, celebrated beri5th
birthday, January 14. She is)he granddaughter of Mrs. Sylvia Putdy, of Portsmouth, 0., and the 'late James H.
Nunnery.
•
•
•
•
County Times
We'll send you this original lithograph
Olympic poster free when you send
us specified proofs-of-purchase of
(amotion products.
Carnation will
~f L' : • :"\. contribute $5.00 to
• •
_,the U.S. Olympic
Committee for every poster ordered.
-. J
U"
· ACiuO )t!e 20" x 27V2"
Posrer5 wtrh brushed olurrun~.>m frames and
clear cry..rol sry•e"e -::ove~ ore ouot able 01 cosr
Get Your Olympic Poster
Order Form and Offer Details at Participating Stores.
1
•
�Wednesday, February 15, 1984
The Floyd County Times
Public Hearing
Set on Fishtrap
Miss Krystal Dawn Deaton celebrated
her first birthday at her home in Hueys~e. January 28. Krystal's brother, Jar~d, age 6, and her parents, Jad and
Alherta, planned a festive occasion in
recognition of this date.
Krystal Dawn's first birthday celebration was accentuated by a Strawberry
Shortcake cake, plenty of ice cream,
many gifts, and shared fellowship with
friends and relatives. Those making this
day more festive were paternal grandparents, Julian and Nellie Deaton, of
..l!.ypro; maternal grandparents, Willis
. d Melba Sexton, of Hueysville, aunts,
Sherri Dusina, Pat Slone and Roberta
Adkins; uncles, Rev. Glen Dusina, Danny Slone, and Donald Adkins; cousins,
Leigh Erica Dusina, Jami Dusina, Carrie Summer Slone, and LaDonna
Adkins ; friends, Bud Coburn, Loveda
Snyder, Coburn, Ann Snyder, Clifford,
Deloris and Barry Conley, Roger,
Catherine, and Jeremy Wireman, and
Phyllis and Ashley Hall.
Al{rystal Dawn extends a very special,
~iated happy birthday to her Sissy
Veet, who shares the same birth date.
S1,1bscription
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In Floyd County, $8.00
Elsewhere ln .Kentuc:ky, $10
Outside Ket;ttuc"y, $12.50
Please 1\0te e:x.pl~tlon da\e
opposite yo.ur:..n a'!'e,on wrap·
per or on YO'fr eopy of The
I'
!f'lmes. Becau. . Of Increased
Congressman Carl D. Perkins announced last week that he has arranged a public meeting which will be held
Sunday, February 19, 1984 at 1:30 p.m.
at the Pikeville High School to discuss
the future development of Fishtrap
Reservoir and its adjoining lands as
might be affected by a proposal of the
Kentland Coal Company to mine its Elk
Foot properties in the Fishtrap drainage
basin, by the strip method of mountain
top removal.
Perkins said that a number of factors
make this meeting important to all
citizens of Pike County, citing the
following:
1. The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers,
in acquiring lands for the Fishtrap project, did not condemn all the land in fee
simple but, instead, acquired for the
most part title to the surface, plus varying restrictions on the mineral rights of
the private owners of the land. Kentland
Coal Company is the owner of coal and
other minerals but riot the surface of
lands bordering Fishtrap Reservoir, including the so-called Elk Foot properties. In acquiring the surface rights, the
U.S. Army Corps of Engineers also obtained restrictions on how the land could
be mined.
2. Kentland Coal Company, through an
affiliate, owns properties in West
Virginia along the New River which are
now being sought by the National Park
Service for development as a part of the
New River Gorge National Area. Kentland Coal Company proposes to donate
the West Virginia properties to the National Park Service if, in turn, the
Department of the Interior will give it
the surface rights to its Fishtrap Reservoir Property along with the U.S. Army
Corps of Engineers' approval to strip
mine the Fishtrap properties by the
mountain top removal process.
3. Exchanges of property as proposed
by Kentland Coal Company require the
approval of Congress by legislation.
4. Proposals are before the State
Legislature in Frankfort for the state to
acquire Fishtrap properties for park
development.
Perkins said that the February 19
meeting is important and should bring
together Pike county officials and
citizens, representatives of the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, the State Park
services and the Department of Natural
Resources, in order that all of the expertise and public thinking can be brought
to bear on the future development of the
Fishtrap Reservoir area.
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p.m., Peggy Kidd at 886-6264, or any
other member of the Prestonsburg
Junior Woman's Club. Entry deadline is
March 3.
subscribers.
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Sliced ADDles 811"
Blackberries 511" IOF
Black Rasoberries 511"" IOF
Cultivated Blueberries 201f"'
Wild Blueberries 1511"
Dark Sweet Cherries 3011"
Dark Sweet Cherries 511"" IOF
Red Tart Cherries 301f"
Red Tart Cherries 511" IOF
Mixed Fruit 201'" IOF
N.W. Fruit MedleY 12/11f"" IOF
Sliced Peaches 3011"
Sliced Peaches 511"" IOF
PineaPOie Chunks 2/511"" IOF
Red Rasoberries 511""
Laroe Whole Strawberries 201f"" IOF
Calif. Sl. Strawberries 3011'
Galif. Sl. Strawberries 6'hll"
Apple Juice 24/12 oz."
Cranberry Juice 24/12 oz.•
Grapefruit Juice 24/12 oz.••
Grape Juice 24/12 oz.'
Lemonade 24/12 oz.•
Oranae Juice 24/6 oz.••
Oranae Juice 24/12 oz.••
Asparagus Cuts & Tips 101110F
Cut Green Beans 12/2'hll
Babv Lima Beans 12/2'hll
Fordhook Lima Beans 12/2'hll
Broccoli Cuts 12/211
Broccoli Soears 12/211
Brussel Sorouts 12/21f
Sliced Carrots 12/211
Cauliflower 12/211
Cob Corn 12/4 ct.
Whole Kernal Corn 1212'hll
Breaded Mushrooms 2/511
Fancv SL Mushrooms 2/511
Garden Peas 12/2'hll
Whole Leaf Spinach 12/31f
Mixed Veaetables 12/2'hll
Lenders Baaels 24/6
Sarah Lee Pound Cake 12/12 oz.
French Fries 12/211
Shoestring French Fries 12/20 oz.
Potato Puffs 12/211
Thomas' English Muffins 12/12
Breaded Ortlon Rina•. 8/211
Piua Slices Cheese 80/3 oz.
French Bread Piua, 24/5 oz.
Soft Pretzels 100/2'11 oz.
Reaular Waffles 12/19 oz.
32.40
8.10
19.20
19.38
20.10
5.20
10.55
5.85
24.30
27.85
725
18.50
29.30
14.95
18.70
12.35
12.60.
IUD.
17.85
16.95
22.55
27.50
14.70
19.00
18.00
13.30
19.00
13.00
20.20
14.45
13.50
20.70
16.30
19.35
15.60
15.85
13.10
10.45
14.05
18.20
15.50
14.85
12.90
11.35
1325
TOTAL AMOU•T
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�W~~-ne_~_a~y,_F_eb_ru_a~~15~,_19_M
=
~----------~----------_!!h~~~~~~~~------------------------------~~~~~~~~·
e
________
Section
oyd County Tlrnes
Thr~.
Page Twelve
BUYONE-G TONE FREE
25-0Z.-LUCKY LEAF
iNoS.TANTY JAcK
9
$16
::.aE _ _ ....... _s 199
POTATOES ........ .
64-0Z.-LUCKY LEAF
. . . . . . .$93c
::c~i
10-CT. GLAD TALL
~~~:~~ ..1~~-'.''""lE'.
25
1
PRICES IN EFFECT THRU SUN., FEB. 19.
U.S.D.A. CHOICE
· BONELESS
CHUCK ROAST
We Reserve The Right to limit Quantities and Correct Printing Errors.
FRESH
GROUND BEEF
U.S.D.A. CHOICE
0
BEEFNESTEw. . . .$_1__~----
59
FRESH
$
22-0Z.
DOVE
LIQUID
FRYER BREAST
89
$13~
LB.
$17
9
CHUCK STEAK.........
$12
9
BEEF PAniES ........ .
9
Ft.SCHER'S WIENERS $1°
69
$16
9
FtSCHER'S
BOLOGNA
$1
ENGLISH CHUCK ROAST. ..
U.S.D.A. CHOICE
14-0Z. PKC.
BONELESS
KINGSFORD
Lb.
24-0Z.
STOKELY
U.S.D.A. CHOICE
~~.t~~
BONELESS
16-0Z.-STOKELY
ARMOUR
~=:.~~~~
BEEF STEW
Lb.
. . 3/$119
. . . .3/$119
16-0Z.-STOKELY
~=~~~y-
10-LB. ROAST
CHUCK$
5• LB •STEAK
5• LB• GROUND
BEEF
5-LB. STEW
3999
PLATTER BACON CHUCK
STEAKS . . . .
SIRLOIN
TIP STEAKS .
PORK STEAKS
LIBBY'S
$12~.
$169
Lb.
$279
Lb.
$1390
BEEF
PATTIES10-Lb.
IDAHO
POTATOES
49-0Z.
GAIN
l~LB. $189
LAUNDRY DETERGENT
17-0Z. CAN
STOKELY
17-0Z.
WHOLE KERNEL
STOKELY
APPLESAUCE
CORN
2/89
CORN ........ .
17-0Z. STOKELY
3/$109
YEUOW DELICIOUS
APPLES
APPLES
89
~·
FRESH
RA::Es
YAMS
BATH TISSUE
4-Ron
SINGLE ROLL
BOUNTY
~~:~ATION
3/$119
~=:r=~ .. 3/$119
·COFFEEMATE ....... .
MIXED
VEGETABLES .
15-0Z.-TWIN
PET
REG.
OR BEEF
PRESTONSBURG DELl --- 2-15-84 THRU 2-21-84 ~=
4-ROLL
PAK
GENERIC
16-0Z.-STOKELY
.
.
WEDNESDAY
HOMEMADE CHIU, BEEF STEW
STEAK AND GRAVY, FRIED'
CHICKEN, GREEN BEANS, CORN,
PEAS, MASHED POTATOES.
CORN BREAD, ROLLS, CHERRY
COBBLER, HOT DOGS.
I
.
79 c
DOG FOOD ........ ..
GENERIC
PAPER TOWELS ...
a~tte~itk
B1scu1ts
6-Pak
•
$17 9
4/$1
2/$1
75c
17-0Z. STOKELY
ggc
f/Z)
-
TOWELS .............. .
GREEN BEANS
CAULIFLOWER GRAPES
4:.::s1 5~./s1
WHITE
CLOUD
STOKELY
~:·age
FRESH
CREAM STYLE
14-0Z. CAN
Bag
RED DEUCIOUS
3
c
3-Lb.
•
•
.....
•
••
0
......
..
s1~~ 79~
TROPICANA
Gr~pefruit $12 9
Ju1ce
64-0z. Carton •..•••...
.
Kraft
Freezer Queen
Velveeta
Cook-In
Bags
1 lb.
Package
BATH TISSUE ........ .
THURSDAY
FRIDAY
SATURDAY
CHICKEN AND DUMPLINGS,
MEAT LOAF, STEAK AND GRAVY,
HOT DOGS, HAMBURGERS, BAKED BEANS, CORN, OVEN BROWN
POTATOES, GREEN BEANS,
PEAS, MUSTARD GREENS,
BROWN BEANS.
TURKEY AND DRESSING, FRIED
CHICKEN, STEAK AND GRAVY,
MEAT LOAF, GREEN BEANS,
CORN, MASHED POTATOES,
PEAS, BROWN BEANS, GREENS,
HOT DOGS, CORN BREAD,
ROLLS, STRAWBERRY COBBLER.
FRIED CHICKEN, KRAUT AND
WIENERS, FRIED CHICKEN
LIVERS, STEAK AND GRAVY
HOT DOGS, GREEN BEANS,
CORN,
PEAS,
MASHED
POTATOES, BROWN BEANS,
CORN BREAD, ROLLS, BANANA
PUDDING.
I
SUNDAY
MONDAY
STEAK AND GRAVY, BEEF AND
NOODLES, MEAT LOAF, HOT
DOGS, GREEN BEANS, CORN,
PEAS, MASHED POTATOES,
GREENS, BROWN BEANS, ROLLS,
BLACKBERRY COBBLER.
FISH . AND HUSH PUPPIES,
SPAGHETTI AND MEAT BALLS,
FRIED CHICKEI'I, CABBAGE
ROLLS, HOT DOGS, KRAUT AND
WIENERS, GREEN BEANS, CORN,
PEAS, MASHED POTATOES,
MUSTARD GREENS, BROWN
BEANS, CORN BREAD, ROLLS,
CHERRY COBBLER.
TUESDAY
FRIED CHICKEN, LIVER AND
ONIONS, STEAK AND GRAVY
HOT DOGS, LASAGNA, GREEN
BEANS, CORN, PEAS, MASHED
POTATOES, MUSTARD GREENS,
BROWN BEANS, CORN BREAD,
ROLLS, StRAWBERRY COBBLER.
�
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Floyd County Times 1984
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Floyd County Times February 15, 1984
-
http://history.fclib.org/files/original/41/3327/02-22-1984.pdf
e697164d531527e8cca261e34dc75b01
PDF Text
Text
r JJrlnyb <!tnunty Mimrs
Speaking of
•
and for
Floyd County
PRESTONSBURG,
KENTUCKY 41653
Read Each Week by More Than. 12,500 Famil.ies.
Traffic Control
• Demand Follows
Accidents Here
A traffic accident that injured a Prestonsburg High School freshman near the
unemployment office here last week
brought renewed calls for stepped-up
traffic control on the city's northern
approach.
James J. Carter III, 14, suffered a
broken leg around 5 p.m. Wednesday
when he was struck by an auto as he
crossed U.S. 23. A member of the high
school football squad, he was reportedly going for a soda after a weightlifting
session at the school when he stepped in
front of a car driven by Diane Blankenship. No citations were issued.
Prestonsburg Police Chief Dick
Campbell said the mishap was one of
three in the same general area last
week. Of the two dozen vehicle accidents
handled by city police in an average
month, as many as half occur on the congested stretch between the Bert Combs
bridge and Prestonsburg Community
College, he estimated.
Laura Baldridge, of Little Paint, was
one of several parents who called city
and state officials last week to complain
of the hazards their children face getting
to and from school. A traffic light should
be installed in {ront of the high school or
a police officer assigned to help students
CSee Story No. 2, Page 4)
•
•
•
•
In the wake of a petition to force the
issue to a referendum , it remained
unclear this week whether the Board of
Education will pursue its bid to levy a
utilities tax to finance county schools.
But, whatever its decision, the Board
will reach it without the help of the task
force which first re(;ommended the levy .
Members of the panel, following the
lead of Chairman Ralph O'Quinn, decided Monday to back the Board's decision
but not to suggest what that decision
should be.
Superintendent E.P. Grigsby, Jr. said
that, assuming the petition is validated
by the county court clerk, the Board has
three options. It may conduct a special
election at its own expense within 60 to
90 days. It may have the issue put to the
voters at the general election in N9vember. Or, Grigsby maintains, it may call
the whole thing off.
FORMER STATE REPRESENTATIVE EVERETT AKERS and County Court Clerk Carla Boyd
examine one of the more than 9,000 petitions which Mr. Akers delivered to the clerk's office last
Wednesday. Looking on are Mrs. Otela Smiley and Jack Freed, who were on hand as representatives of the local A.A.R.P.
The state Board of Education will continue to monitor Floyd schools and
school officials here will be asked to
report by June 30 on what they have
done to resolve problems voiced by a
citizens' group.
Kathy Hatfield, of Drift, chairperson
of the Floyd County Citizens' Education
Council, told the panel last Tuesday that
improvements seen here in recent
months came about only because of the
intervention of state officials. The only
way Floyd school officials can be made
accountable is by dismissing the present
superintendent and board members, she
said, repeating a request the group first
made last June.
"If your action is not strong enough to
convey a message ... that you do intend
'to make changes, there may never be
another citizen from eastern Kentucky
who is willing to accept the consequences of speaking out," Mrs. Hatfield
said.
Robert E. Spillman, assistant for me; namely, a brain transfusion.
·
·
superintendent for local services in the
---Department of Education, said Floyd MONTH AT ITS LONGEST
Clyde Douglas Marshall, 31, of
school officials have been cooperating to
Although February this Leap Year
correct deficiencies in the system. And has, as usual on Leap Years, an extra McDowell, on trial in Fayette Circuit
Superintendent E.P. Grigsby, Jr. said day, it remains the shortest month of the Court the past week on a charge of plotlocal officials were doing the best they lot. YetithasasmanyWednesdaypubli- ting the murder of his wife, Glenda
could with the funds available.
cation dates for us this year as the Sharon Marshall, last June 20, took the
Although public opposition made it longest month of the calendar. Ttl. stand in his own defense yesterday
doubtful whether the measure would month came in of a Wednesday and ends <Tuesday).
By day's end, all evidence had been
stick, the Floyd Board of Education on one, so we have five of them, this time
recently adopted a utilities tax which around. If the sands in the hourglass presented in the case. After instructions
could raise $700,000 annually in school don't run out, another such February by the court and closing arguments by
funds, Grigsby said.
will come again-when, I do not know, the prosecutor and defense counsel, the
The state panel voted unanimously to and the mere thought of trying to find case is expected to go to the jury today
for a verdict. Fourteen jurors, seven
continue to monitor the situation here. · out makes me tired.
men and seven women, have heard the
A state official will attend and report on
---case; two of them are alternates.
meetings of the local board, it was said. WHEN IT HURTS
Since the prosecution is seeking the
In a seven-page letter addressed to NOT TO LAUGH
state Superintendent of Public Ins trueEver try to keep a straight face and death penalty, a guilty verdict would
tion Alice McDonald and read to the refrain from at least a: giggle upon see- mean the case would then enter a second
state board, the Floyd citizens' group ing an acquaintance do an adagio on an phase to determine the penalty.
Mrs. Marshall, 35, was found dead in
decried the county's "alarming" unsuspected icy spot and wind up
dropout rate. "Almost half our students spread-eagled thereon? Or express no a burned-out car at the foot of Sizemore
who begin high school never receive a more than sympathy when a fishirig bud- Mountain, near Minnie. She and Mardiploma" and Floyd officials show few dy displaces a ton or so of water by fall- shall had been married little more than
a year when she died. At the time of her
signs that they are prepared to deal with ing into the drink?
the problem, the group said. Last year,
I recall an occasion when my eldest death, she had a month-old baby; she
SUITS FILED
44.5 percent of those who began high son, then a mere youngster, exercised was also the mother of a 9-year-old boy
py a previous marriage.
fSee Story No. 5, Page 4)
Pikeville National Bank vs. Etta J. school four years previously were sa1d
Horn et al; Danetta Gay Fannin vs. to have dropped out.
---------~-------------------Mike E. Fannin; John C. Wells vs.
The citizens' council called for tougher
County Pays Loan...
Ralph Moore et al; Johnny Johnson vs. action against principals who allow
Ruben Hall et al; Austin Powder Co. --athletics to intrude on daily instructional
vs. Stanton Coal Co. Inc. et al; Willard time, a closer watch on internal accoun-·
Scott and Isabell Fugate Scott vs. Ew- ting procedures, and more involvement
ing and Sallie Scott; Beverly Ann of parents in school affairs.
Carter vs. Thomas L. Carter; John C.
The group asked why parents are not
Wells vs. Carl E. Robinson et al; Sonya included in the textbook selection and
Denise McCoy vs. George Russell Me- Chapter I advisory committees, why
Coy, Sr.; Thomas H. Dawson, Jr. vs. parent input was not solicited by a state
Virginia Lee Dawson; Commercial accreditation team, why the system
Credit Corp. vs. Buell Spears, Jr.; plans no regular parent-teacher conIn a dizzying series of fund transfers, simply have postponed for two months
Glenn and Anna Spradlin vs. Coal Mac, ferences, and why parent-teacher the fiscal court last · week scraped a fiscal crunch threatened by sharp cuts
Inc.; John C. Wells et al vs. Curtis organizations do not exist even where together the money needed to pay off this year in two key revenue sources.
Of the principal borrowed in August,
Stumbo et al; Donie Eugene Keeton vs. parents have asked for them.
$202,500 it borrowed from the Bank
the bulk-$150,()()()-was paid back out of
Janet Louise Keeton.
They wanted someone to take the Josephine last August.
c_s_ee__s_to_r~y_N_o_._4_._P_a~g~e_4_>____________r_s_ee__
s_to_r_y_N_o_._6_._P_a_g_e_4_>__________
B_u_t_th_e_r_e_w_e_r_e_s_ig_·n_s_t_he__c_ou_n_t_y_m_a_y_ property taxes turned over by Sheriff
Henry Hale in January. The other
$52,000 was wrung out of the county's
revenue-sharing account, a federal
allocation that Floyd officials recently
learned would amount his year to about
half of what they had anticipated. And
the interest payment of $8606 was
squeezed from coal severance taxes
already badly shrunken on account of
the lackluster coal market.
The decline in revenue-the county
budget fell from $2.9 million last year to
$1.7 million this year-does not
necessarily mean that bills will not be
paid. Strict monitoring of the county by
Finance Cabinet officials last !'ear was
designed to see that the fiscal court did
not again run up bills it couldn't pay.
Instead, the revenue shortfall means
for the most part that costly services are
simply not being provided. There is
neither money for blacktop nor workers
to spread it.
Since the end of December, when 20
road workers were laid off, the entire
county road crew consists of a
mechanic, a foreman, a timekeeper and
four grader operators--one for each
magisterial district. That's one worker
in each district to grade the roads, haul
the gravel, and dig the ditchlines. And
neither the laid-off workers nor the
citizens who crowded the fiscal court
Friday to complain about the condition
of their roads were given any reason to
hope the situation would improve before
July 1, the start of a new fiscal year.
ALONG WITH BIRDS ON THE WING, crocus and cabin fever, golfers on the fairway at Jenny
But if the. economic squeeze will
Wiley State Park are also one of the first signs of spring. These took advantage of last weekend's
<See Story No. 1. Pagf' 4 \
previ.ew of days to come.
-
41 ______
•
4t
•
2 5¢
.
No Decision Reached
On Tax Referendum
He would have no recommendation to
make until he knew h9w m_any petition
signatures were verified and had an opportunity to "analyze" them, Grigsby
said. Even assuming that most of the
9000-plus names filed last Wednesday
were held to be bona fide petitioners,
some of them could be expected to support the tax, he said.
State To _Continue ~..~Marshall Trial
••
School Board Watch io~~~~~~o:~~~~~~o~~~~~!h~o~~~ Jury DeCISIOD
•
Vol~':~VII
WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 22, 1984
I'vebeen~ee~nghavefailed?fwriti~g
the
prescnpbon that would fill the btll
•
USPS-2027-0000
But Court May Face
Money Crunch Later
'
Two prosecution witensses testified
last Thursday that Marshall masterminded a plot to kill his wife to collect
her insurance, which prosecutors said
would total about $133,000.
Bobby Gene McGuffey, Marshall's
biological brother who was adopted by
a foster family as a child, told the jury
that Marshall hired him and two other
men-Carl McFarland and Edward
Dill 'Repeaters'
Get Jail Terms
Three men were sentenced to jail
terms after conviction on drunk driving
(DUI) charges in Floyd District Court
last Thursday. All were repeat
offenders.
Calvin Dean Ousley, 40, of Martin,
who was tried in his absence, was
sentenced by District Judge Harold
Stumbo to 90 days and ordered to pay .
$247.50 in fine and costs on each of two
drunk driving charges dating from last
September and October.
They were his fifth and sixth DUI convictions in four years. Another DUI
charge is still pending.
Clifford Ousley, 33, of Drift, was
ordered to._spend weekends in jail for a
total of 30 days and to pay $197.50, after
pleading guilty to charges of drunk driving, driving on a suspended license, and
failing to carry insurance.
He was previously convicted of DUI in
1980, 1981 and 1982.
Hardy Kilburn, of Arkansas Creek, ,
was sentenced to 30 days on the same
charge and fined $100. It was his second
DUI conviction.
cSee Story No. 7. Page 4l
County Clerk Carla Boyd said Tuesday she had been waiting to see whether
the Board intended to withdraw its
tax-an option she thinks they havebefore beginning the arduous task of
checking the petitions. She said later she
would start verifying the signatures today (Wednesday).
Some organizers of the petition argue
that the Board has no right to withdraw
the tax at this stage. " It was not a petition for them to drop it, but to put it on
the ballot," said one.
Board members were surprised by the
number of petitioners and their hopes
for the tax were obviously dimmer this
week. But several said they favored putting the question to the voters in
November .
"From the petition, it looks as if the
public is not wanting it," said Ray
"Shag" Campbell, of Banner. With the
odds against passage, the Board could
not justify spending the estim~ted
$25,000-$30,000 it would take to hold a
special election, but ''we should let the
public speak in November," Campbell
said.
James A. Duff, of Hueysville, and Dr . .
J.D. Adams, of Prestonsburg, also
favored a November ballot, although
rSee Story No. l , Page 4>
Up For
TOday
.
.
Wright-to come to Floyd county to kill
his wife.
McGuffey, 30, of Lafayette, Tenn. said
Marshall instructed them on how to
carry out the killing, telling them to
"make it look like an accident."
The next day Marshall sent his wife to
the Spurlock Creek road near Printer on
a pretext of delivering mining supplies
to two men there, McGuffey said. The
Marshalls had opened a mining supply
business a few months previously.
McGuff~y said McFarland and Wright
struck Mrs. Marshall with a large
wrench, strapped her body in the front
seat of her car, stuffed gasoline-soaked
rags around the body, drove the car to
Sizemore Mountain, ignited the rags,
and pushed the car over the side.
McFarlapd, 58, of Glasgow, Ky., told
a similar story ; but he said it was
McGuffey and Wright who did the killing. Defense Attorney Ned Pillersdorf
tried to discredit McFarland's
testimony, focussing attention on his
lengthly criminal record.
As the trial opened last week, McGuffey, who was also facing a charge of
complicity to murder, pleaded guilty
and agreed to testify for the prosecution.
Commonwealth's Attorney James Allen
recommended that he be given <: life
sentence. McFarland had earlier been
granted immunity in exchange for his
testimony. Wright is now dead.
As the trial continued this week, seven
insurance agents testified that Marshall
stood to collect large sums of money
·when his wife died. Billy Ward, of
Paintsville, also said that Marshall
owed him a $35,000 gambling debt.
Also testifying Monday was Mrs. Marshall's son, Donald Brent Morgan, who
said he saw Marshall put something in
rSee Story No. R. Page 4l
Bridge·Collapses At Hi Hat
Photo by Katie Newsome
An early morning delivery, Monday, of mortar ended just short of its goal
~hen a woode~ bridge spanning Left Beaver Creek at Hi Hat, collapsed, plungmg a truck drtven by James Robinson, of Prestonsburg, about 20 feet down
to the water. The truck, owned by F.S. VanHoose Lumber Company landed
on the driver's side, but Robinson is said to! .ave suffered only minor injuries.
The four families whose members have been provided access to Ky 122 via
the bridge for the past 20 years, can still reach the other side of the creek,
but not by car .
�Wednesd111y, February 22, 1984
KET Hopes To Double
Membership During
Upcoming Telefund
KET embarks on its annual on-air
fund-raising effort, TeleFund '84, March
3·18. While the campaign theme prcr
mises a lineup of stellar performances
("The Stars Shine Bright On Your Kentucky Network"), the purpose of the
fund raiser is strictly down-to-earth, a c. cording to Membership Director
Marilyn Hankins.
"Our goal is to double our support in
the Friends of KET, currently 18,000
members strong, and to work toward
·replacing the $1 million in federal support KET has lost since 1981," says
Hankins.
Hankins thinks the fund raiser also
will point out the uniqueness of the Kentucky Network. "We're different in that
most stations have three or four on-air
fund raisers each year and we have only one. Our TeleFund also emphasizes
a wealth of Kentucky talent with prcr
grams featuring Florence Henderson,
Rosemary Clooney, the Everly
Brothers, Ricky Skaggs, Loretta Lynn
and Bill Monroe, and a play, 'The Gin
Game,' that had its world premiere at
Actors Theatre of Louisville.
··nuring TeleFund '84 we'll be offering special membership gifts such as the
1984 Kentucky Derby poster, and items
in our Anniversary Auction to be held
March 16 will have a definite Kentucky
flavor such as a first edition of author
James Still's 'River of Earth.' "
Another source of pride for TeleFund
'84, says Hankins, is its broad-based support throughout the state. "This year we
have such groups as the Kentucky
Federation of Women's Clubs, the Kentucky Broadcasters and Kentucky Press
, Associations and Kentucky Thoroughbred Owners and Breeders Inc., lending
us a hand to help us reach our goals, as
well as our Friends of KET and county
coordinators who will be canvassing
their local areas for support the last
week of February."
"We're looking for continued support
from the business community as well,"
says Hankins, ''in the areas of major
• donations and challenge grants."
·'KET is very dependent on private
support to maintain quality evening and
weekend programming,'' says Hankins,
"and it has been this unique partnership
between Kentuckians and the network
· that has enabled KET to maintain a
tradition of excellence in its 15-year
broadcast history. We hope everyone
will join us for outstanding programming during TeleFund '84 and be a part of
KET and its tradition of excellence in
the next 15 years."
FOR SALE-Maytag dryer.
Works but does not kick
off-t50. Antique stereo. Works
falr-$25.
874-2346
The Floyd County Times
American Electric Elects Directors
Section One, Pllp Two
Stumbo To Serve
On Nat'l Panel
James G. Saltz
William W. Zoellers
James G. Saltz, of Ashland, and William W. Zoellers, of Pikeville, were
elected last week to the board of directors of the American Electric Power
Service Corporation at its annual meeting in Columbus, Ohio.
Saltz is vice president and ZOellers is Pikeville Division manager of Kentucky Power Company. The Service Corporation is the management, professional, and technical services subsidiary of American Electric Power Company, Inc., of which Kentucky Power is one of eight operating companies.
This brings to three the number of Kentucky Power representatives on the
Services Corporation's board. Robert E. Matthews, president, is already a
board member.
Saltz joined the AEP System in 1958 as an auditor in Roanoke, Virginia, and
came to Kentucky Power in 1960 in the accounting department. He has been
a~inistrative assistant to the president, Ashland Division manager, and executive assistant, and was named vice president in July 1982.
Zoellers joined Kentucky Power in 1951 as an engineer trainee, and held
a number of engineering posts before being named customer services manager
in 1966. He was named Hazard Division manager in 19TI and Pikeville Division manager in 1978.
HAROLD NEWS
HAROLD HOMEMAKERS MEET
The Harold Homemakers Club met
Feb. 15 at the Freewill Baptist Church.
Yearly dues were collected. The club
had continued collecting for the Ovarian
Cancer Fund.
Mrs. Pitts gave a report on the increase in membership in Floyd county.
She reported Floyd county has 533
members, the largest membership in
the Northeast Area.
The February lesson on ''Consumer
Product Safety" was given by Carma
Sturgill.
Members present at the meeting were
Molly Stapelton, Linda Bartley, Debbie
Gibson, Carma Sturgill, Bernice Mason,
Lillian Sturgill, Regina Daniels,
Elizabeth Little, Janie Stuart, Sylvia
Allen, Teresa· Fugate, Frances Pitts.
Mrs. Areolas Allen was welcomed to
the club as a member-at-large.
House Speaker Bobby H. Richardson
has appointed Rep. Greg Stumbo
<D·Prestonsburg l to serve as Kentucky's representative on a national
legislative panel.
Stumbo, a second-term legislator, will
serve on the Commerce, Labor and
Economic Development Committee
organized under the auspices of the National Conference of State Legislatures
<NCSL l Assembly on the Legislature.
"Greg's experience in our legislature,
coupled with his interest in the areas
falling within the committee's jurisdiction, will put him in good stead to prove
a valuable addition to the national panel.
I am confident he will represent the interest of Kentucky and represent them
well," Richardson said in announcing
the appointment.
Stumbo had previously served on the
NCSL Regulatory Improvement
Committee.
In the state legislature, he serves on
its Energy; Natural Resources and Environment ; and Judicary-Ci vii
Committees.
In addition, he serves on the Administrative Regulations Review
Subcommittee.
1934
1984
In honour of the
Fiftieth Wedding Anniversary of
Mr. and Mrs. Bradie Shepherd
their children and grandchildren
request the pleasure of your company
at an Open House
on Saturday, February twenty-fifth
Nineteen hundred and eighty-four
from two to five
Fitzpatrick First Baptist Church
Middle Creek Road
2-1S.2t.
ATTENTION
ALL MEMBERS OF DISTRICT 30UNITED MINE WORKERS OF AMERICA
• MASS MEETING OF DISTRICT 30 MEMBERSHIP
Mullins High School-Pikeville, Kentucky
(Just North of Weddington Plaza Shopping Center)
U.S. 23 North
SATURDAY. FEBRUARY 25TH
10:00 AM
• Information relative to 2v2% Strike Fund
Foods and Beverages Class
Foods and Beverages International,
taught by Ron Hayden and Janece Cook,
will start at 7 p.m . Feb. 28 in Room 216
of the Pike Technology Building, Prestonsburg Community College. Mr. Hayden has taught a wine class at Transylvania University for several years.
Mrs. Cook is a graduate of the Greenbrier Cooking School. The menu is
Italian and features cannelloni. Pasta
making will be demonstrated. Tips and
hints on total meal preparation will be
included. Call Continuing Education at
886-3863 to register.
KERS: International VIce President Robens
International Secretary-Treasurer Banovlc
ALL UMWA DISTRICT 30 MEMBERS
ARE URGED TO ATTENDI
AEROBICS CLASSES
AT PIKE COLLEGE
Aerobics classes are being offered at
Pikeville College through the dance prcr
gram. All interested persons should
meet. Tuesdays and Thursdays from
7:30.8:30 p.m. in room 212, Administration Building. For additional information call 432-5373.
Ernie Justice, District 30 President
2-21-ll
Will social security still be in effect
when you retire?
Will your pension provide for all
your needs in retirement?
Do you have enough in savings to
see you through your retirement
years?
Ask your accountant about an Individual Retirement Account. If
the advice is to open one, come
see us at First commonwealth
Bank. we will see that you get a
good return on your retirement
fund and a timely income when
you retire.
;
;
!
}
Substantial Penalty for Early Withdrawal
"Just Think What We Can Do Together!
First
L.
Commonwealt
+.~T~~ Bank
:!I;
Member FDIC
l~·
"'i
'
..
.
~~- -
-
.
-~
~-~ · t :_.§~a
_,''
-~
·- __::~ ~
..
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Martin • Betsy Layne • Two locations In Prestonsburg
~·. ."'"·=-···
~
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~
•
�•
Wednesday, February 22, 1984
The Floyd County Times
Ky. Conservation Club
Recognized by NWF
•
•
Section One, Paae Three
Medical Seminar Series Continues
Kentucky's Blue Grass Sportsmen's
League, The League of Kentucky Sportsmen, Inc. is one of 16 community conservatijon clubs selected by the National
Wildlife Federation to receive the
Federation's 1983 President's Award for
exceptional achievement during the last
year.
All the clubs belong to a state affiliate
of the National.Wildlife Federation, the
nation's largest conservation organization with over four million members and
supporters.
The winners, chosen by NWF President Benjamin C. Dysart from 6,000
eligible clubs in 51 state and territorial
affiliates, were cite<:! for accomplishments in effective conservation
action and environmental education programs, and for their contribution to their
state affiliate.
The 16 clubs were congratulated by
Dysart for their "collective efforts
which have served to emphasize the importance of an alert, active and aggressive community club as the essential ingredient of an efficient and effective state federation."
Other winners and their NWF affiliates include club's in Arizona
Florida, Louisiana, Maine, Minnesota:
New Hampshire, New Jersey, New
York, North Carolina, Ohio, Oregon,
South Carolina, Tennessee, Texas, and
Wisconsin.
•
VILLAGE CHEVROLET-OLDSMOBILE, INC.
is proud to announce that Eddie Meade has now joined the
Dealership. Eddie Meade has a good knowledge of sales,
with 10 years experience. Eddie invites all his friends and
former customers to stop in and see the new line of
Chevrolets and Oldsmobiles.
Dr. William B. Cook
Prestonsburg Community College's medical seminar series will continue
Feb. 28 with presentations by two well-known surgeons on the topic of cancer,
its detection and treatment.
Leading the seminar will be Dr. William B. Cook, chief of surgery at
Highlands Regional Medical Center, and Dr. Nabil Basha, a surgeon in private
practice who is associated with Highlands, Paintsville,and Our Lady of the
Way hospitals.
Dr. Cook is well-known for his work in the field of cancer. He has many
papers, presentations and teaching appointments to his credit. After
graduating from Tufts University School of Medicine in Boston, he did a stint
in Korea, followed by a residency at Memorial Hospital for Cancer and A1lied
Diseases in New York. Dr. Cook is a clinical instructor for the Department
of Community Medicine at the University of Kentucky. He has received the
AMA Physicians Recognition award four times, the most recent being in 1981.
Dr. Basha is a graduate of Damascus University Medical School in Syria
and completed an internship at Wheeling (W. Va.) Hospital and a surgical
residency at Providence Hospital, Southfield, Michigan.
The seminar will offer the public an opportunity to learn and ask questions
about cancer. To register for the seminar, call Continuing Education at
Prestonsburg Community College at 886-3863, ext. 215.
• CAMARO
• 98 OLDSMOBILE
• DELTA 88
• CUTLASS
• CUTLASS CIERA
• OMEGA
• FIRENZA
• Z28
• CAPRICE ClASSIC
• CElEBRITY
• MONTE CARlO
• CAVAliER
GIVE SOMEONE A LIFT
.1END A BOUQUET OF BALLOONS
ALL OCCASIONS -DELIVERED
e r-----~~----~
Bailey
ELECTROLYSIS
' Permanent Hair Removal
Certified by
State License.
EYEBROW
* FREE
CONSULTATION
•
UNDERARMS
LEGS
e-----~--NO. LAKE DR., PRESTOJIS~Jl.G
Thurs. • Fri., 10 a.m. to 4:30 p.m.
AHer 4:30 • Sat. by appointment
2.4 HtS. PHONE
IRYICE
886-8924
2·22·2t·pd .
Artists, Photographers Plan
Weekend Show at May Lodge
Artists and photographers will gather
to demonstrate their work at Jenny
Wiley State Park this weekend. The
Winter Weekend sponsored by the Kentucke Society and hosted by Prestonsburg artist Russell May will begin Friday afternoon and run through Sunday
morning.
The weekend will include demonstrations or ledures by Kentucky Heritage
artists Jack May, Doug Adams, Donna
Richardson and Russell May and
photographers Robert Powell and Bill
Tipple.
Art and photography will be judged
Saturday afternoon and awards
presented at 7:30 that night.
The complete program:
Friday, Feb. 24, 4-8 p.m., registration;
•
7:30p.m., Jack May, Danville artist, on
perspective ; 9:00, slide presentation.
Saturday, Feb. 25, 8-noon, registration;
9:00, watercolor workshop, Lexington
artist Bill Zappone ; 10:30, drawing from
life, by Doug Adams; 1 p.m., Russell
M~y . landscape oil painting ; 3:00,
photographic presentation by Robert
Powell and Bill Tipple; 4:30, presentation by Donna Richardson ; 7: 30,
awards ; 8:30, program by Joe Petro.
Sunday, Feb. 26, 9:00, watercolor
demonstration by Doug Adams; 10:20
critique session by A. .Jack May.
OPEN 9 AM to 6 PM
MONDAY~~iiiiiilii~ SATURDAY
*TEST DRIVE
A NEW
OLDSMOBILE/
VILLAGE CHEVROLET-OLDSMOBILE, INC.
Eastern, Kentucky
Phone: 358-9214 or 358-9215
• LOCAL BANK FINANCING •
Registration for entries in competition
closes at noon, Saturday. Exhibit area
will be closed for judging between 4 and
6 p.m., Saturcay.
111M
S4 OZ. ·50< OFF 1iL
Your Food Dollar
Buys more at •••• .
BESTWAY!
PRICES GOQD T
Fresh . tart. . . ... . . . .... . -.-..-1188011
ASSOmDTI
11081... . . ...1111
COUNT
14.5 OZ. AU'O DOG FOOD
Baal ChUJIIS. . ·:·~aUII
=···· ..
U SUNDAY, FEB. 26, WHILE QUANTITIES LAST.
·-c
S2 oz. rtUSIUIY
fficahMII. .
24 OZ. HYDE PAIK PANCAKE OR
Willie Syrup
IlliG. I Cheese ..
14 OL DAFT DllUXE DINNER
24 OZ. CAll AR. .R
6.5 OZ. SlARKISI
Chunk Tuna
hill w/Baans
•
__.___,/ $109
•
GUARI IOnLE DEL ...-rE
$189
s2•1
~~~o~r. ~~~ . . . . . ~s2•'
Fischer's
..... 99c
Wieners
U.S.D.A. CHOICE IOIIELESS
U.S.D.A. CHOIC! IOIIELESS
Beef
Liver.
WHOU~EDHc)
SmoKed
Picnic
11-0%.
RSCIIWS
Rolled
Rump Roast ... ...Ll.
u.s.D.A.
CHOICE
L8.
PIESH SUCBI
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..... ~69c
...... ~age
............. s1
19
omato catsup
$109 ......
aiiriili'Sue
99c
•WI
Ll.
)i
REGULAR OR LITE 17 OZ. DEL MONTE
Fruit
11 OZ. POST CEREAL
~~r::.•,• cocktan79
BISCUitS
P DUCE
, a tii:vonron
SIX PAK PILlSBURY
99c
•
5/89C
W~SHINC TON STATE
•
D'ID)OU Pears
1oLb. Baa Potatoes
U.S.NO. I ALL rUWI'05E
ac
L•.
8189
oz. TABLE-TREAT
nm~ks
c
7
I OZ. KRAFT THINLY SLICED
SWISS Cheese
12 OZ. SEALTEST SMALL OR lARGE CURD
Collage Cheese.
Drape Juice
12 OZ. WELCH'S
oz. FAMILY SIZED ASSOWTED
. 12•
79C
Dill SOlD. . . . . . . ·-~~ ......
oz.
f) lllftC
lined Milk..... . . &~ilil
c
HYDI PAliK EVAPOIATED
21
9
Orange Juice ........ .
ggc
Pet Sherbet .. ......... .
HYDE PARK-GALLON JUG
$
QUART-ALL FLAVORS
KEEBLER DELUX GRAHAMS
F~dge Stripe Cookies
16 OZ. HUNIRY JACK
PILLSBURY INSTANt
Potatoes
89c
$11 9
�The Floyd County nmes
[qr Ylnyb Otnunty i!rimrs
Published Every W~dnesday by
Our Yesterdays
Prestonsburg Publishing Company
(Items tak.en from The Floyd County
Times, 10, 20, 30, 40 and 50 years ago.)
NORMAN ALLEN Editor
Subscription Rates Per Year:
In Floyd County, $8.00
Elsewhere in Kentucky. SIO.OO
Outside Kentucky, $12.50
Entered as second class matter June 18
1927, at the postoffice at Prestonsburg:
Kentucky, under the act of March 3, 1879.
The 'Broad Form' Deed
The injustice imposed on hundreds of Kentucky--mostly,
Eastern Kentucky--landowners for almost a hundred years by
the so-called "broad form" deed has finally so impinged itself
on the consciences of the state's lawmakers that they have
done something about it.
And congratulations for this apparent victory must go to two
Floyd county legislators. It was Representative Greg Stumbo
who introduced corrective legislation and led the House fight
for it through three sessions of the General Assembly, and in
~ the Senate it was Senator Benny Ray Bailey in the same role.
Few of us who recognized and opposed the violation of landowners' rights through the provisions of this old deed had any
firm hope that corrective legislation had any real chance of
success at the current legislative session. But it did, thanks
to this legislative leadership and the support of their efforts
by one or two organized groups and a limited number of
individuals.
The new act awaiting Governor Collins' signature--and,
, almost certainly a test in the courts--is not intended to destroy
, the coal industry. It simply states that coal mining methods
that were unknown at the time the deeds to the coal were executed cannot be used without the consent of the landowner.
· (Most responsible coal operators have in recent years satisfied
owners of the land by paying them a royalty on strip-mined
coal and by complying with environmental regulations.)
At least three other major coal-producing states--West
Virginia, Tennessee and Pennsylvania--already have laws appying to the broad form deed that are similar to the one now
belatedly adopted by Kentudky. And the consequences of the
law in those states have not been destructive to the industry.
The Times has an idea that no sane resident of Eastern Kentucky, a region whose economy is inescapably bound to coal,
wants to damage the industry. But the individual, the owner
of the surface, has rights that cried out for recognition, and
now, at long last, they are recognized.
--- 1 ---
f Continued
from Page One J
Duff predicted voters would reject the
tax.
Campbell and Duff said supporters
would need to work hard to "sell" the
tax between now and November. "If
people could see what this would mean,
say five years down the road, in the way
of new and renovated buildings, they
would be in favor of it," said Duff. "We
need to make them aware of what it will
mean. Then, if they want it, good; if not,
it's their decision."
Campbell said the petition was not a
reflection on the Board but a reaction to
the idea of a tax, a reaction heightened
by Gov. Martha Layne Collins' call,
within days of tile Board's decision, for
increased state taxes to finance her
education program. "The word 'tax'
tears people all to pieces," he said.
Grigsby agreed. "I was glad to see it,"
he said of the governor's proposal, "but
it hurt us."
"It was being said prior to that that we
wouldn't be getting any help from the
state until next year. Governor Collins
said she would not be putting on new
~xes," the superintendent recalled.
"We felt like we were doing the right
thing, that local residents might come
through on a tax at this time."
In explanation of harsh criticism of
Everett Akers, which was attributed to
Grigsby in a news story published in the
Ashland Daily-Independent last Saturday, the school official said he felt that
a "personal attack" had been made on
him. Grigsby reportedly described
Akers, a former state representative, as
"a political has-been, an unscrupulous
person, and a slanderous individual." An
outspoken critic of the school system,
Akers was a leader of the petition drive.
Grigsby said Monday that the tax
issue is too important to be decided on
the basis of personal animosity. "I'm not
angry at anybody," he said.
"Derogatory language is out of place in
an issue of this nature."
--- 7 ---
f Continued
from Page One J
Also sentenced, following guilty pleas
or verdicts, were:
Bobby L. Minix, Salyersville, drunk
driving, no insurance, $187.50; Jim
Smith, Emma, reckless driving, $87.50;
and Shirley Osborne, Topmost, cold
check, 30 days' probation, $97.50, restitution to be made to Heck's store.
CARD OF THANKS
The family of Arnell Kidd takes this
opportunity to thank everyone for their
help upon the Joss of our loved one. We
thank those who sent food and flowers,
those who prepared the grave, and the
ministers of the Church of Christ, who
so helped in preaching the word of God
when we needed it. We deeply appreciate you all. Most of all, we thank
God for you the good members of the Little Dove Church for letting us use the
church in our time of sorrow. Also,
t~anks to the ministers of the Regular
Baptist Church for their comforting
words. We thank God for you good
friends who gave so generously. We also
want to thank the Hall Funeral Home for
being so good and understanding.
THE KIDD FAMILY,
KATHY KIDD AND DAUGHTER
--- 2 --<Continued from Page One J
cross the highway safely, she said.
Kirby Ison, chief. district engineer at
the state Highways Department's Pikeville office, said a survey would be conducted this week to see whether an additional traffic control device appears
warranted. The highways department
recently installed flashing lights warning motorists to slow down to 25 m.p.h.
while school is in session, he noted.
City officials asked the state nearly
two years ago for a traffic light in front
of the high school but·highways officials
concluded it was not warranted at that
time, said City Manager David Evans.
Excessive speed is the cause of many
of the accidents in that section, said
Police Chief Campbeli. "Everybody, it
seems like, is in a hurry," he said. A
radar-equipped cruiser is routinely
assigned there during peak traffic
periods, he said.
From the standpoint of the engineer,
traffic control is clearly not as simple a
problem as it may to appear to ordinary
citizens. "I understand their concern
and I've tried to be responsive," said
Ison, of those who called his office last
week. And he insisted that the highways
department does not count cost when it
comes to safety.
But other factors do count.
For one thing, there is a federal rule
book called the Uniform Traffic Control
Manual that sets out guidelines for the
installation of traffic signals and signs.
It specifies the factors-like traffic density and direction, duration of peak
periods, and driver visibility-that must
be taken into account before adding to
the existing clutter of signs. It tries to
strike a balance between pedestrian
safety, motorist safety, and smooth traffic flow.
For another thing, there is a question
of how much cooperation, on the part of
pedestrians and motorists, one can
reasonably expect in" a relatively noncoercive society. "We created a school
zone, but then the kids cross somewhere
else," Ison said. If motorists ignore the
existing signs, will adding another make
any difference?
It will if it's a stop light, activated by
students wishing to cross the highway,
some parents argue.
If it falls within the guidelines, a light
will be installed, Ison said. "But imagine
what it would be like driving to Florida
if they put in a light everywhere a citizen
asked for it,'' he said. ''You'd never get
there."
--- 4 --<Continued from Page One l
MARRIAGE LICENSES
Michael Ray Ratliff, 23, of Pikeville,
and Janelle Jean Samons, 19, of Banner; Linzie Joe Harman, 22, and
Marlena Reynolds, 23, both of
Prestonsburg; Frank Gates Simpson
Ill, and Janice Kay Martin, 22, both of
Prestonsburg; Larry Kent Daniels, 42,
and Peggy Ann Mullins, 30, both of
Stanville.
November 21st' is known as Compact
Day. This year is the 364th anniversary
of the signing of the Mayflower Compact. This document was the first
charter of a government of the people,
by the people in our history. The
Daughters of the American Revolution
urge you to join in their observance of
February as American History 1\Ionth.
Ten Years Ago
(February 20. 1974)
Area service station operators were less than optimistic this week as
problems of inadequate gasoline supplies lingered despite the return to
near-normal truck traffic ...County Judge Henry Stumbo listed solid
waste disposal as the most pressing of this county's problems at a
meeting Monday night of the Big Sandy Area Development Council at
May Lodge...The gunshot death last Tuesday night of a Wayland man
may have resulted from his playing "Russian roulette," officials said
following an investigation ... The Prestonsburg Area Chamber of Commerce last week elected Ronald H. Frasure, Prestonsburg businessman,
as its president, succeeding Robert V. May, Jr.... Born: to Mr. and Mrs.
Gorman Shepherd, of Hueysville, a son, Ryan Ellis, Jan. 2 at Methodist
Hospital, Pikeville... There died: Henry Pratt, native of Garrett, Feb. 2 at
Cynthiana; Isaac N. Hall, Jr., 48, formerly of Banner. Monday at Lexington; John Fannin, 57, of Martin, Sunday at Martin: Miah Spradlin, 60,
of Ivel, Friday at Pikeville; Noah Hopper, formerly of this county. Sunday at Hanging Rock, Ohio.
Twenty Years Ago
<February 27, 1964)
The Princess Elkhorn Division of Princess Coals. In,. . ;.,ay be nearing
the end of its stay at David because of dwinrlling coal reserves but several
years are being added to the company's operation there by installation of
new machinery and acquisition of added coal acreage.. .The American
Red Cross during fiscal year 1963 spent $2,710,978 to aid disaster victims
in Kentucky, and $369,000 of that total was spent in Floyd county ...Strip
mining was described in Frankfort Tuesday as murdering the Eastern
Kentucky mountains and destroying Western Kentucky agricultural
counties ... Paul R. Jordan, native of Wayland, who was a special assistant
in _public relations in state government during the last administration,
this week was named director of information and education for the
Department of Conservation ... Latest of a long series of breaks in this
county was last Wednesday night's entrance of the new Garth Vocational
School... There died: Mrs. Mary Alice Hall, 66, of Galveston, Sunday at
Methodist Hospital, Pikeville; Joe Todd, 66, co-owner of Opal & Joe's,
well-known Ivel restaurant, Wednesday at Our Lady of the Way Hospital.
Martin; Mrs. Emma Akers Sizemore, 83, of Prestonsburg, Tuesday, at
home; Mrs. Beatrice Williams, 62, of Wheelwright, Sunday at the
Beckley, W. Va. Appalachian Regional Hospital; Ora Hamilton, 63, of
Galveston, Sunday at home; Mrs. Stella Chapman, 71, of Hite, Tuesday at
the Beaver Valley Hospital.
Thirty Years Ago
<February 25, 1954)
The U.S. Corps of Engineers announced this week that bids on cabin
sites at Dewey Lake will be received till March 22 ...State Senator Doug
Hays has introduced a bill in the State Senate to change the official name
of the valley's largest stream from the Levisa to the Big Sandy
River ...Deputy Sheriffs and State Police are patrolling the road to David
which was blocked Monday to out-of-county workers ... Voters of the
Prestonsburg independent school district will be given the opportunity
soon to decide if a 35-cent levy on each $100 worth of taxable property
shall be made to finance construction of a gymnasium here ...James
Wine, Pikeville attorney, last Friday announced he will seek the
Democratic nomination for Congress from the Seventh district. ..Sgt.
John J. Bentley, formerly of McDowell, remains unconscious in Camp
Campbell hospital after suffering a brain injury two weeks ago in his 46th
jump as a paratrooper...Born: to Mr. and Mrs. Gordon Fox Homes at
Louisville, February 20, a. daughter-Roxanne ... There died: Dr. W. J .
Fitzpatrick, 77, Prestonsburg dentist, Friday at the Prestonsburg
General Hospital; Melvin Slone, probably the area's oldest man, at
Printer Wednesday at the age of 103; John R. "Chick" Kelly, 59, formerly
of Prestonsburg, killed by an auto in Detroit, February 11; Mrs. Bethany
Hale, 73,last Thursday at Estill; Jerry Hall, 72, Friday at Banner ; Mrs.
Ethel Hamilton, 46, of Honaker, Saturday at a Martin hospital; Mrs. Minnie Goble Sturgill, 39, Sunday on Little Paint Creek.
Forty Years Ago
<February 24, 1944)
Sgt. Euian C. Mills, of Wayland, recently listed as missing is now
known to be a German prisoner of war... Alben W. Barkley tendered his
resignation as Senate majority leader Wednesday after President
Roosevelt had vetoed the tax bill voted by Congress ...Tom Raney, UMW
district president, told The Times this week that if the mine workers fail
to negotiate a satisfactory contract with the Tug River-Big Sandy
Hospital Association, the UMW may buy or build a hospital for their exclusive use ... Born: to Mr. and Mrs. Ray Howard, of Cow Creek, a son,
James Franklin, February 17; to Pvt. and Mrs. Hershell Tackett, a son.
Carl Edmund, Monday at the Paintsville Hospital; to Cpl. and Mrs. Willie
Hicks, of Alphoretta, a daughter, Judith Carol, February 10...There died:
Glenn Roberts, 16, Tuesday on Johns Creek; Beulah Napier, 17, last
Thursday at Garrett; Denver Skaggs, 38, of Garrett, Monday at Martin;
Luther Sturgill, 53, February 11 at Auxier; Mrs. Susan Turner, 89, Tuesday at Wayland; Mrs. Cassie Mae Keathiey, 58, Wednesday at Amba.
Fifty Years Ago
<February 23. 1934)
Floyd Post No. 129 here went on record Saturday in alleging irregularities in the conduct of the Civil Works Administration in this county .. .Irvin Hall, 24, was fatally injured last Thursday when struck on his
head with a stove bolt in a fight at a Mud Creek mill ...John Hale, W. B.
Boyd, John Williams and Grover Lowe last week drilled in a gas well in
Martin county which is reported as having a volume of 1,600 cubic
feet...Homes of Jake Akers at Salisbury and Harve Jarrell at Martin
were destroyed by fire this week ... Raymond Rickman, 25, was fatally
crushed at Betsy Layne Friday when he was thrown from the mine motor
on which he was brakeman .. .Dr. W. L. Stumbo, of Martin has reported
receiving extortion notes demanding of him $50,000 ... There died: Mrs.
Millie Terry. 86, Saturday at Lackey.
Broad Form Deed Act Waits
Signature of Gov. Collins
The broadform deed bill, a measure
that has attracted the interest and support of eastern Kentuckians like few
other bills this legislative session, was
passed by the Senate last Friday without
a dissenting vote.
House Bill 32, which restricts the ability of coal companies to strip mine coal
without the landowner's permission,
cleared the Senate by a 34-o margin and
now awaits the signature of Gov. Martha Layne Collins.
Prestonsburg Rep. Greg Stumbo,
sponsor of the bill, was "elated" by its
passage and praised the role played by
Senate colleague Benny Ray Bailey,
who managed the bill in that chamber.
Much of the support for the measure,
and for a similar bill that failed in the
last legislative session, was organized
here by the Kentucky Fair Tax Coalition, which is now focusing its attention
on a bill that would tax unmined coal.
Winning approval of that bill, HB 92, will
likely prove an even greater challenge
than passage of HB 32, said Billy Arms,
a member of the Coalition, Monday.
The lack of open Senate opposition to
the broadform deed bill has led some
supporters to conclude that its coal industry opponents are saving their
energies for a court challenge. A 1974
law requiring coal operators to get permission from surface owners before applying for a mining permit was held unconstitutional by .the Kentucky Court of
Appeals the following year, the judges
ruling that it violated valid contracts.
Supporters of the present bill predict
it will survive a court challenge because
of its focus on the intent of those signing the turn-of-the-century deeds. Under
HB 32, mining methods not commonly
in use at that time could not be used
without the surface owner's consent
unless there is clear evidence the signers
of the deeds intended that such methods
be used.
While there was little debate about the
bill on the Senate floor last week, coal
industry officials criticized it as unjust
and unnecessary. Bill Cryder, an attorney for Sierra Coal Co., predicted HB
32 would result in widespread land
speculation by people wanting to use
surface holdings to take advantage of
coal companies.
Section One, Page Four .
--- a ---
( C'ont inued from Page One l
generally mean simply that services will
not be provided, there is at least one bill
that may not be paid, and failure to pay
it could scuttle the county's foundering
solid waste system.
Of the $202,500 paid back to the bank
last week, $52,500 had been borrowed to
meet a bond payment on the solid waste
system last October. That sum was
repaid Friday. But it was paid with
$52,500 set aside in the revenue-sharing
account to meet the solid waste system's
next bond payment in April.
Last June, when the revenue-sharing
budget was being prepared, state financial advisor AI Howell, who was then
ma_naging the county's fiscal affairs,
estimated that funds allocated to Floyd
county from the U.S. Treasury this year
would amount to around $400,000, more
than enough to allow the county to help
out the shaky garbage system. In fact,
over half the revenue-sharing budget
was earmarked for Floyd County Solid
Waste, Inc., the quasi-independent agency that runs the system.
When coal severance funds dwindled
-from $511,000 last year to $107,00 this
year-it came as no surprise. But the cut
in revenue-sharing funds-which are
distributed according to a formula
which takes into account population, income and local tax effort-was an unexpected blow.
Federal officials first reckoned
Floyd's revenue share at $301,000 and
later-halfway through the fiscal
year-revised it down to $178,243. The
reason for the revision, the feds explained, was a clerical error made in 1980
which resulted in this county's being
overpaid the next two years.
By drawing on its depleted revenuesharing account to help pay off its bank
note last week, the fiscal court in effect
paid Paul by robbing Peter. Peter will
have to be paid back in April-with
$52,500 in funds the county doesn't have.
--- 5 --(Continued from Page One)
almost superhuman self-control while I
held center stage in such an act.
In those days when Dewey Lake was
barely impounded we kept our flatbottom boat tied up where Stratton
Branch runs into the lake. The
21-'z-horsepower outboard motor we took
home with us.
At the conclusion of one our jaunts on
the brand-new lake the son had tied the
boat to a small tree atop the steep bank
and watched while I staggered the
length of the rocking boat, carrying the
motor. I finally stood on the flat space
at the brow of the boat and raised a foot
to step ashore.
But the youngster hadn't tied the boat
snugly. As I stood with my right foot
poised above solid ground and the left
still waterborne, the boat, like a balky
horse, shied backward the foot or so of
slack rope. I did the well-known split and
a moment later stood in water up to my
withers, still holding the motor.
There stood I like bold Cortez when
first he gazed on Darien. And that boya consummate actor, I declare to this
day-cracked not a grin as I gained the
mainland and squashed away, still
hanging on to that precious motor, the
while making several pointed comments
about fate, fortune and my luck, in
particular.
Only the other day I was reminded of
the occasion when Lenna Moore was
showing me the length of splinter that
had been removed from his hand, and
Jewel Fitzpatrick declared he saw termites and suggested we call Orkin.
--- 6 ---
(Continued from Page One )
blame for waste reported by state inspectors last year in the school transportation department, claimed some
students are suspended without due process, complained of continuing textbook
shortages, and sought a probe into the
reasons that deteriorating buildings
have been "ignored" for years.
Other questions put by the council :
-Why is there apparently no
systematic approach in the Floyd school
district to ensure quality education?
Why do practical arts courses take time
that should be spent on " the basics"?
Why are art and music units cut before
coaches?
-Could the central office be better
organized? Were school monies used for
.the campaign five years ago of Dr.
James B. Graham when he was running
for state auditor? In 1982, how did Supt.
Grigsby's daughter come to charge
gasoline to the Floyd Board of Education? What was the reason for the
superintendent's lending a school bus
engine to District 3 Magistrate Ed
Caudill in October, 1982?
State Supt. McDonald said county
school officials will be required to
answer the council's questions, because
"at every turn, when we have looked
where (the council l told us to look, it has
turned out to be true. ·'
The "incompetence and neglect" of
which the council accused Floyd school
officials last June are a problem of attitude, not lack of money, Mrs. Hatfield
said. "It will take an outside force to
break this cycle and change old habits,"
she added.
E~rlier, Sen. Nelson Allen, D-Ashland,
cha1rman of the Senate Education Commit~ee. asked the state board to support
a bill to make local school officials
"more accountable. " SB202 would require the state board to intervene in
school districts that fail to meet the
'"tate's academic standards.
Out of 180 Kentucky school districts
Floyd county recently placed 176th o~
student achievement tests. said James
Ratcliffe, vice-chairman of the state
board.
--- 8 --<C'ont mued from Page One l
the trunk of his mother's car as he and
his mother were leaving a Martin dentist's office. McGuffey and McFarland
earlier testified that Marshall, in instructing them on the murder, told
them, "Everything you'll need will be in
her trunk."
•
Taking the stand yesterday in his own
defense, Marshall said he intended to
buy a bulldozer from McGuffey,
McFarland and Wright but that the deal
turned sour. Bent on revenge, the men
came to Floyd county looking for him
and, when they could not find him,
killed his wife instead, he said.
Marshall testified for about 45 minutes
before undergoing about four hours of
cross-examination.
Four inmates who had associated with
him in Floyd and Pike county prisons
testified that McFarland had told them
that Marshall was not involved in his
wife's death.
LETTERS
To the Editor
The views expressed here are those of the
writer, and not necessarily those of this
newspaper. No unsigned contributions will
be published.
•
Applauds State Supt.
A new era in education has begun. A
fresh and welcome breeze is blowing
through the offices of the Kentucky
Department of Education. Open
meetings are being held at state level
and it certainly is a refreshing change.
Superintendent Alice McDonald is to
be applauded and thanked by the people
all over the Commonwealth. If this is
any indication of the direction we can expect education to take in the future, we
are on the right course.
Citizens must help Superintendent
McDonald, the board members and her
staff continue in this direction. We must
get involved with our children's education; join citizens groups and let our
voices be heard.
Alice McDonald has given people in
Floyd County a renewed vigor to continue our pursuit toward equality and excellence in education. She has kept her
campaign promises and has shown us,
through her open administration, that
parents, citizens and administrators
TOGETHER "can make a difference."
JOYCE EVERLY
.
Prestonsburg
Burned Up
It burns me more than one way to
think of the way the City Council is
limiting five department runs.
The country people pay taxes and
deserve to be treated equally. We spend
our money in the city and if we work
there we pay city taxes. The federal
grants that the city gets for fire departments don't come only from city
residents' taxes; they come from everyone, including us country folks. When
the fire department needs volunteers.
they don't limit it to city residents only.
'f}ley've got several country boys on the
list. I don't ~hink they should be asked
to fight for the city-people and then be
turned down when they need help.
I think all the county people outside
the city should get together and boycott
the city. Show them what the county
means to them.
City residents are welcome if they
want to help us . We'd appreciate it.
SUSIE <MORRISON) EMANUEL
Rt. 1, Prestonsburg, Ky.
Has Different Idea
Let's face the fact about the Prestonsburg Fire Department not going out in
the county. First I would like to thank
Mayor Cooley for the quote he made at
the--last Council meeting, where he
stated the city benefited from the county . How true this is. Every time the city
gets a federal grant, this is some of the.
county people's tax money, and lhe
county boys do volunteer firefighting.
Also the coupty people pay the occupational tax to work in the city, and most
of all, what if the county people didn't
take their business into their own home
town. I think the members of the Council who want to draw a line between the
city and county should stop and think
that everyone can't live in the city ; some
people like living in the country, but I
think if one life could be saved from a
fire it would be a great honor.
NORMA DANIELS
Box 59, Prestonsburg, Ky. 41653
A Beautiful Sight?
I want to thank two members of the City Council who showed interest in voting
to let the Prestonsburg Fire Department
continue to serve the county. These two
were Ranier and Goebel. It's a beautifUl
sight to see all the city fire hydrants setting out in the county just for looks.
I understand one member of the City
Council is seriously thinking of being a
candidate for a county office. Well, I
think the county people can already see
how this member feels toward the people in the county. I would also like to
thank Mayor Cooley for stating that the
city benefited from the county.
RANDY BURCHETI'
Prestonsburg, Ky. 41653
Named ICA Representative
•
Darby & Allen Insurance Agency has
been appointed an agent for Insurance
Corporation of America, an underwriter
of professional liability insurance for
physicians, it is announced by Dr. Doyle
N. Rogers, ICA's chairman, president
and chief executive officer from the
company's headquarters in Houston.
Rogers said Darby & Allen received the
appointment after meeting the rigid •
standards set by ICA for independent insurance agencies representing the
company.
�Wednesday, February 22, 1 984
Prestonsburg Man
'Claimed In Crash
A single-car accident in Magoffin
county claimed the life Thursday afternoon of 20-year~ld Charles Newsome,
of ~resto~sburg, and resulted in in• junes to his brother.
The accident occurred around 4 p.m.
on KY 7 on Mason Creek, according to
police, when the car, driven by the victim's brother, Curtis, went om of control, ran off the road and struck a utility pole. Newsome died at 6:35p.m. at
Highlands Regional Medical Center
and his brother was transported to a
Lexington hospital.
The victim, who was an employee of
Thompson's IGA here, was born
December 2, 1963, a son of Johnny and
Loretta Newsome.
Other survivors include his wife,
Lisa Faye Burchett Newsome; five
other brothers. Ronnie, Johnny Lee,
Frank and Damon Newsome, all of
Prestonsburg, and Donald Newsome,
of Allen, and four sisters, Thelma
Hicks, Dolly Whitaker and Ruth ~n
Jones, all of Prestonsburg, and Sadie
• Prater, of Martin.
Funeral services were conducted
Sunday at 1 p.m. at the Floyd Funeral
Home with the Rev. Kenneth Prater.
Jr. the officiating minister Burial w&s
made in Davidson Memorial Gardens at
I vel.
r~~WS
By JACK M. FRIAR,
Co. Ext. Agent
for 4-H
4-H CLUB
COUNTY AND AREA 4-H
PROJECT CHAMPIONS
.
Thirty-one Floyd County 4-H Club
members were selected recently as
County Project Champions for the 1983
club year. These records were ente~ed
in the area competition with 20 be10g
selected as area champions.
The Senior Area Champions were
Shawn Johnson, crafts and geology;
Robbie Mayton, automobile; Marcella
Wright, home management and food
preservation.
_
Floyd County 4-H members winning
Junior Area Championships were:
Michelle Stratton, careers, conse~ation
and home management; Michelle
Ratliff, dairy foods; Michael Hale, bicycle and wood work; Derek Hale, dogs;
Jada Lackey, food preservation and
crocheting; Pamela Wright, forestry,
knitting and speech; Tammy John~on,
health and birds, and Jackalene Kidd,
garden.
Other Floyd County Project Champions were Robin Trim~le, bread~;
Kimberly Hall, clothmg; David
Hamilton, electricity; Daneque Branson, geology; Sabrina Robinson,_horse,
Jamie Smith, small engines; L?n Conn,
rabbits; Roy Ballard, yard Improvement, and Cynthia Carroll, poultry.
The Floyd County Times
Celebrates 81st Birthday
Flossie Slone celebrated her 81st birthday, Sunday, February 5, at the home
of her daughter, Mrs. Thelma Shepher~,
of Blue River. Shown with Mrs. Slone 10
the photo above is her sister, Mrs. M~r
tha Nelson, of David. Many family
members and friends attended.
Knox Co. Brothers
Face Mine Charges
Two Knox county brothers were arrested Friday for operating underground mines without a min~ng ~rmi~,
officials of the special investigative urut
of the state Department for Surface Minin~ Reclamation and Enforcement announced.
The brothers, Curtis Mills, ~r., and
Paul S. Mills both of Flat Lick 10 Knox
county, were charged with opera~ing
two illegal deep mines near Flat L1ck.
The mines were located on the property of their parents, Mr. and Mrs. C.A.
Mills, Sr.
.
.
The mines had been under surveillance for several days when the arrests
were made, investigators said. "Over
the past year several hundred tons of
coal far in excess of the 250 tons allowed by state law, were removed from the
site. We have traced some of the coal to
a tipple in Tennessee," s~id J?oug S~oul
ders, head of the inveshgahve urut.
"Our investigations uncovered
cancelled checks totaling more than
$200,000 from the sale of c?al mined at
these sites," Shoulders sa1d.
.
The brothers turned themselves m to
state officials at the Barbourville courthouse. They were released on thei~ own
recognizance. Additional arrests m the
case are expected to be made this week.
The arrests were the result of investigative work by Special Investigators
Judge 0. Sullivan and Tom Spellman.
Mining without a permit is a Class D
felony and may result in a j_ail term of
from one to five years or a fme of up to
$10,000.
Rock Fall Claims
Miner at Justen
Arnell Kidd, 33, of Harold, died around
8:35p.m. Tuesday, last week, in a rock
fall in a deep mine at Justen.
Kidd was said to have worked only two
days in the mine, which is operated by
the Somerset Coal Co. A raof bolter, he
was reportedly killed about 6000 feet
underground when he walked under part
of the mine roof that had not yet been
supported.
.
It was the seventh Kentucky m10e
death this year and the second in four
days. A Pike county miner was killed th~
previous Friday in a machinery accident.
Kidd was born Jan. 11, 1951, the son of
Carmel and Draxie Elliott Kidd, of
Printer. He also leaves a wife, Kathy
Jean Collins Kidd; a daughter, Rosechelia Artina Kidd, at home; four
brothers Vincent Kidd, of Hammond,
Ind., Ricky and Patrick Kidd, of Printer,
and Granville Kidd, of Honaker; and
three sisters, Diana and Noralene
Howell, of Lake Stratton, Ind., and
Christy Stewart, of Honaker.
Funeral services were held at 11 a.m.
Saturday at the Little Dove Regular
Baptist Church at Honake~ •. ~ith
Regular Baptist ministers offiCiating.
Burial was in the Kidd family cemetery
at Printer, under <lirection of the Hall
Funeral Home.
Section One, Pa&e Five
USAA Award Winner
The United States Achievement
Academy announced today that Kristi
Elizabeth Hall has been named a 1984
United States National Award winner in
science and mathematics.
Miss Hall, who attends McDowell
Elementary School, was nominated for
this National Award by Freda Burke for
mathematics and Joan Caldwell for
science, teachers at the school.
Her name and biography will appear
in the United States Achievement
Academy Official Yearbook, published
nationally.
She is the daughter of Troy and Eula
D. Hall, of McDowell, and granddaughter of Barzell and Versa Brown,
of McDowell, and Eula Hall, of Honaker,
nnd the late McKinley Hall.
In 1886, New York became the first
state to create a permanent agency to
mediate labor disputes, according to
"Labor Firsts in America," a publication of the U.S. Department of Labor.
The first representative assembly in America convened
at Jamestown, Virginia, July
30, 1619.
More than $40,000 in grant funds are
available to Kentucky's rural fire
departments to help them improve their
firefighting capabilities, state Forestry
Director Donald A. Hamm has
announced.
" These funds are available to
communities with Jess than 10,000 inhabitants," he said. "Grants are awarded on a matching basis, with each dollar
awarded being equally matched by local
communities," Hamm explained.
Forestry officials said the grants were
developed to help rural communities
conduct fire protection programs and to
help upgrade firefighting equipment or
training. In 1982, the last year the grants
were available, 112 rural fire departments received grants totaling $40,130.
Nine Floyd county residents are
among those recognized for superior
academic achievment on the 1983 fall
semester Dean's List at Morehead State
University.
Students included on the Dean's List
must be enrolled on a full-time basis and
achieve at least a 3.4 grade point
average on a 4.0 (A) scale.
Included are:
Wende Lee Buchanan, 3.6; Patsy
Hammonds, 3.58; Wanda Jean Newsom,
4.0, all of Prestonsburg; Jill A. Coburn,
3.56, of Martin; Jane Elizabeth Webb
Jones 3.75, of Wayland; James E.
Nybe~g, 3.6; Kevin Douglas Sturgill, 3.4,
both of Auxier ; Samuel Douglas
Salisbury, 3.73, of Wheelwright, and
Taunya Shelton, 3.5, of McDowell.
For additional information on the
grants and the application process, contact the Kentucky Division of Forestry,
627 Comanche Trail, Frankfort, Ky.
40601, telephone (502) 564-4496.
In early Egyptian history, silver was
more valued than gold because silver
was less often found in nugget form.
SPRING PAINT SALE!
.S PECIAL VALUES on quality paint~
Thank You
Riverview Manor extends a hea~y
"thank you" to the following for their
support during our fund-raising Rock &
Roll Jamboree for the American Heart
Association:
Calvary Baptist Church, Sharon
MaKintosh and the GA's, Barbara
Watts Dairy 'Cheer, Dairy Queen,
Jerry:s, IGA, Pic Pac, Piggly Wiggl~.
New Beginnings Bookstore, Founta10
Komer, Ray Howard Furniture, May's
Wallpaper & Gallery. Sundry Store.
It.
Floyd Students Named
To MSU Dean's List
Grant Funds Available
To Rural Fire Depts.
-
• FLAT WALL ......... GAL. 9.95
• DELUXE WALL
. GAL. 12.95
• SEMI-GLOSS
.. GAL. 12.95
A paint for every need ...
1400 COLORS
ro choose rroml
• LATEX WHITE
HOUSE ...
2 GALS.
~1.95
• LATEX (CO[OtS) '
HOUSE .......... ~GAL. 13.88
• ALSO ON SALE...
LADDERS, BRUSHES
. AND ROLLERS.
Sandy Valley .Hardware:
-
874-9218
Allen,
Allen Says He Was Not
Responsible for Delay
In Castle Imprisonment
Commenting on the Times story last
week of Gary Lee Castle's having been
convicted of robbery but never imprisoned, Commonwealth's Attorney
James R. Allen pointed out that he was
not responsible for the issuance of a
bench warrant for the defendant, and
that this was a duty of other court
officials.
"I prosecuted this case as hard as any
I have been involved in and got a good
verdict. I do not feel that I am in any
way to blame for what developed later,"
he said.
A warrant for Castle's arrest was
issued recently after court officials
learned that through an apparent oversight he had never served any of his
lntere,ted? call .len Peters at
186·1506 and he'll call on you!
Th~
Floyd County
Tim~s
tt~::::::::::::::::::::::::~--~-1~-y_e_a_r_s_en_t_e_nc_e_o_n__a_r_o~bbe~r=y=c=o=un=t==.
~!M9t2!l!Y 8
.,
We have a $12,563 car
that, in today's market,
could olitely
be cal ed "a steal:'
THE FABULOUS GEM$
Will be on display
Fri., Sat., & Sun., Feb. 24, 25, & 26
• Martin Store Only •
MOntER- RIM;
With 3 Stones
Sterling or
Cold Fined'
~~·9;~
l~dtes'
25 Stone
Ruby Cluster
'19.99
!4K Gold or Sterlmg Silver
FLOATING HEART
$12.99
Cluster Rings. •
'19 99
•
2-4.99
® & (f
,
~
•
So1ilaire •
Solitaire D••mond
Bndal Set'
1
'12.99
~,,_,.
c7"21.9~
Ring..
•
Olnndng
$
2A 99
•
LIFETIME WARRANTY
'SIMULATED
B~ D
"For my money," writes one magazine about the
Peugeot 505, "... one of the great bargain buys
in the world of cars. It even has a body, designed
b Pininfarina, that's so pretty I've had pedestrians
s;op me on the street to say, 'That's the most
·
gorgeous car I've ever seen.'
"It is also a genuine luxury car,
with all the finesse and appointments
you'd expect from a Mercedes or
Jaguar, but at a much lower price:'
~
PEUGEOT
1 2-4.99
Other Style
aandsAval!abte
Pikeville , Kentucky
�The Floyd County Times
Section One, P ace Six
~~!ed~~n~e~sd~a!Y~·~F!e~b~r~ua~ry~~2~2~,~1~9~84==----------------------------------------------------~~~~~====~~~~-----------------------------------------------------------:~~::~
Lack of Funds
Cited As Work
On Roads Asked
Three Years Old
The fiscal court was peppered Friday
with complaints about the state of the
county roads. But citizens who told of
ruts that can age a new car long before
its ttme, dit( hlines so full of mud they
serve no purpose, and children trudging
through mud to get to school were told
that little could be done until the county
has more money.
The coal slump, and the resulting falloff in coal severance taxes, was blamed for the lack of road funds and County Attorney Arnold Turner, Jr. unleashed a bitter attack on the 1980 law that
altered the formula by which severance
tax receipts are distributed among the
Helena Mae Conn, daughter of Mr.
counties.
John and Helen Newsome, who com- and Mrs. D.J. Conn, of Banner,
plained of coal sludge fouling their Clear celebrated her third birthday, February
Creek road, got a promise from Judge- 18, and received an adopted doll.
She is the granddaughter of Mr. and
Executive John M. Stumbo and District
3 Magistrate Ed Caudill that they would Mrs. Hubert Conn, of Sanner, and Mr.
inspect the problem and try to persuade and Mrs. Smith Hughes, of Abbott
officials of the Turner Elkhorn Mining Creek.
Co., which operates a nearby tipple, to
correct it.
But delegations led by Martha Garrison, of Calf Creek, and Guy W.
Preston, of Bear Hollow, were told that
little could be done for them without
more road workers and the means to
pay them. The county currently employs
only one grader operator for each
magisterial district.
While Trial Commissioner Thomas
County Attorney Turner accused Lafferty, Sr., 51, is docketed to appear
former Gov. John Y. Brown, Jr. of in district court tomorrow (Thursday)
cynically manipulating the coal to face charges that he assaulted and
severance tax formula in 1980 to ensure harassed a news reporter last March,
that coal counties, not the state, bore the postponement of the case appears likely.
brunt of the economic recession. BetThe special prosecutor assigned to the
ween the 1982-'83 and 1983-'84 budget case did not receive notification of the
years, coal severance taxes returned to trial date until two days beforehand and
this county fell from $511,309 to $106,751. apparently·no special judge has yet been
"I feel that the Brown administration assigned to try the case.
saw the hard times coming. They took
The charges stem from an alleged
money out of the counties' pockets to put altercation between Lafferty, who was
it in their own pockets. They absolutely then deputy judge-executive, and Ralph
gutted the coal-producing counties," he Dunlop, of the Louisville Couriersaid.
Journal's Hazard office, in the courtUnder the 1980 formula, which ad- house parking lot here.
vocates said would see much more of the
Both District Judge Harold Stumbo
tax revenue returned to the counties in and County Attorney Arnold Turner, Jr.
the long run, the first $177 million rais- have declined to take part in the trial,
ed in severence taxes goes to the state; the judge because of his official relationhalf of any monies collected over and ship with Lafferty, Turner because he
above that is returned to counties pro- may be called as a witness.
ducing coal or through which coal is
Johnson County Attorney J . Scott
transported.
Preston, who has been appointed special
The county will not pay for last prosecutor in the case, said he received
November's general election until it is a letter from the Floyd County Atresolved which of two claimants should torney's office only Tuesday informing
be paid for the service. Mrs. Ruth him of Thursday's trial. Neither the proDeRossett said her Coal Bit Company secutor, the defendant, nor Judge Stumhad a contract with the county to store, bo had been notified Tuesday of the aptransport and program voting machines pointment of a trial judge.
for $7240. But a Lexington firm, Harp
Meanwhile, Dunlop last week filed a
Enterprises, has submitted a $16,400 bill $50,000 lawsuit against Lafferty in Floyd
for setting tip the machines. Harp claim- Circuit Court. The suit claims that
ed former County Clerk Thomas Laffer- Dunlop was talking to the late Jerry Lafty, Jr. hired them to do the work but Laf- ferty, Jr. , Thomas Lafferty's brother
ferty denied this, the court was told.
· and Floyd judge-executive at the time,
The court agreed to file applications when Thomas Lafferty approached and
for Economic Development Administra- began to "raise his voice, scream, curse
tion funds to extend water and sewer and threaten" him. Lafferty "forcefullines from Prestonsburg to a planned ly began to strike and beat" the
shopping center and motel on U.S. 23 at reporter, "while continuing to curse,"
Katy Friend and for a community the suit alleges.
Development Block Grant to renew and
Dunlop, who was working on a story
extend the Mud Creek water system. about Floyd county's financial affairs,
Also authorized was a bid advertisement alleges the assault was designed to infor water lines for the Ford Gap area.
timidate him and prevent him from
A contract for health insurance for carrying out his function as a reporter.
county employees was renewed with the
In the suit, the journalist asks for
Hatton and Allen Insurance Agency, $25,000 in compensatory damagesalthough magistrates warned Allen they $12,000 for his injuries, $13,000 for
might cancel the contract if he went damage to his reputation-and $25,000 in
ahead with a threatened rate hike. Blue punitive damages.
Cross-Blue Shield also competed for the
<Claims made in lawsuits represent
contract.
only one side of the issue in dispute.)
The court heard a complaint from
Sam Hale that the county had not properly closed out a landfill on his Blue New Book Features
River property and a request by Sheriff
Henry Hale for funds to assign a Kentucky Stories
separate radio frequency to sheriff's
A moonshine making college prodepartment vehicles. The court fessor, a pet rattlesnake named " Patauthorized the radio hook-up but provid- ton", and a motorcycle riding minister
ed no funds for the work.
are among the colorful characters in
Hale complained angrily that, since FIRE ON THE MOUNTAIN, a short
responsibility for collecting auto taxes story collection by Berea author Garry
was transferred from his to the county Barker.
Reviewers have praised the book's
clerk's office, he has Insufficient
revenues to run his department.
authentic dialect and lean, perceptive
storytelling, the uproarious humor and
moving, bittersweet emotions. Barker,
a 9th generation Eastern Kentuckian,
Miss Blevins Named
writes in a bare, crisp style not unlike
USSAA A ward Winner
the direct and uncluttered speaking patThe United States Achievement terns of rural people, and he creates
Academy announced today that Carla characters based on real life.
Diane Blevins has been named a 1984
Best selling novelist Stephen BirmUnited States National Award winner in ingham called FIRE ON THE MOUNStudent Council.
TAIN " ... a joy- the kind of stories one
Miss Blevins, who attends Johnson returns to again and again." Dr. W. GorCentral High was nominated for this Na- don Ross, in his review for The Berea
tional Award by Wava Lemaster, Citizen, praised the author's underEnglish teacher and student council stated, literary style, with particular adleader at the school. Her biography and miration for the accurate descriptions
photograph will appear in the United of mountain people and their emotions.
States Achievement Academy Official
"The Hunters", the story of a lifelong
Yearbook, published nationally.
hunter trying to teach his teenage son to
The Academy selects USAA winners. share his joy, is also the fiction feature
upon the exclusive recommendation of in the Fall, 1983, issue of Delta Scene
teachers, coaches, counselors or other magazine, published by Delta State Unischool sponsors and upon the Standards versity in Cleveland, Mississippi.
of Selection set forth by the Academy.
Garry Barker grew up in Elliott and
The criteria for selection are a student's Fleming counties in Eastern Kentucky,
academic performance, interest and graduated from Berea College in 1965,
aptitude, leadership qualities! respon- and worked as a craft administrator in
sibility, enthusiasm, motivation to learn North Carolina and Kentucky. He has
and improve, citizenship, attitude and written for Cavalier, Grit, Chevron USA,
cooperative spirit, dependability, and Michigan Living, and many other narecommendation from a teacher or tional magazines, and has contributed
director.
essays on Appalachia to the Louisville
Miss Blevins is the daughter of Bren- Courier-Journal and Southern Expoda Blevins, of Boonscamp, and Doug
sure.
Blevins, of Bypro. Her grandparents are
FIRE ON THE MOUNTAIN may be
Lois Preston, of Boonscamp, and the ordered from Garry Barker, P .O. Box
Jat'e Johnny Preston, formerly of 528, Berea, Ky. 40403.
Wheelwright, and Mr. and Mrs. Jimmy
Blevins, of Piney Flats, Tennessee.
.Official Whose
Trial Scheduled
Sued for $50,000
Ferdinand II, Grand Duke of Tuscany,
devised the, first sealed thermometer in
1654.
It was once believed that if a person
dreams of a river, it means that some·
thing stands between him and his
wishes
NEW 3 BEDROOM HOME for sale
near Clark School in Woodland Hills
Subdivision. 1440 sq. ft . brick. 3 bedrooms. 2 full baths. living room with
fireplace. large built-in kitchen. dining
room and utility room with I(Jts of
cabinet space. Central heat and air
conditioning. fully carpeted . Concrete
patio. beautifully landscaped. Ready
for immediate occupancy . Call
377-6405. Nathan Wright.
2-15-3t.
CLAUDETT HALL HAIRSTYLIST Is now working at Philatina. next door
to Gerry & Jerry's. Her working days
are Monday. Wednesday and Saturday . Other days by appointment only.
Business phone: 886-9175. Home
phone : 377-2804.
2-15-31.
TELEPHONES. JACKS. ACCESSORIES: We sell, install and service. All
work guaranteed. Service contract:
$15 a year residential. $20 commercial.
We now have Satellite receivers : Five
year warranty on dish, two year on all
else. R&R Telephone. Beside Martin
Police Station. Call 285-3825 or 285-3727
anytime.
2-8-4tpd.
Advises Feed Grain Growe ~R
u ·gn Up For '84 Program
To QI
Putting 10 percent of your feed grain
base in the 1984 acreage con. "rvation
reserve is a small premium for tne price
and income protection you get from the
feed grain program," according to J .P .
Hill, chairperson of the Floyd County
ASC Committee.
Sign-up for the 1984 program is currently underway at the' local
Agricultural Stabilization and Conservation Service offices.
In addition to the reduction in risks,
corn producers who participate in the
program can expect to make more
money per acre than nonparticipants, if
averagefarm prices are less than $3.00
per bushel. "In fact, if prices average
$2.75 a bushel, the farmer who par. ticipates in the program should realize
about $25.00 more per acre than the
average non-participant," Mrs. Hill
said.
Farmers who plant no more than 90
percent of their feed grain base are eligi-
ble for federal target prices of $3.03 per
bushel for corn. They are also eligible
for price support loans at $2.55 per
bushel.
" We are encouraging program participants to place tlteir more erosive
eligible croplar.Li in the acreage conservation reserve and by so doing, feed
grain producers can control over-supply
situations and at the same time, qualify
for special 90-percent cost-sharing for
long-term cover crops or forestation on
their idled acres."
Mr. Hill advised feed grain growers to
study the benefits of participating in the
1984 acreage reduction program and
take advantage of the unique opportunity to contribute to efforts to maintain a
reasonable level of carryover stocks by
placing 10 percent of their base in the
acreage conservation reserve. The program sign up period closes February 24.
"Whatever your advice, make it brief. "
•
CARD OF 1 HANKS
v: ... uckno~
gr< fltude lh"
ledge \/ith deepest
o'vC ,,, t1 l:Ompassion
sho.\noy l)rrJ •.l YUJ.'PlthcrtccnttJassing of our ioved one, Josephine Moore.
So many helprd us through kindly words
and deeds that we cannot list them all
individually. We would especially thank
the Rev. Timothy Jessen for his comfor- •
ting words, the choir of the F irst
Presbyterian Church, all who sent
flowers, provided food or any other help.
All meant so much to us .
L.B. MOORE, husband
BILLIE SIEVER, daughter
To Head Bike-a-Thons
Mr. and Mrs. Joe Hinchman, of Allen ;
and Mrs. Bonnie Crisp, of Martin; will
chair separate Bike-a-Thons this spring
for their communities on behalf of St.
J ude Children's Research Hospital.
St. Jude Children's Research Hospital,
founded by entertainer Danny Thomas,
opened its doors to the public in 1962 to
combat catastrophic diseases which afflict our children. St. Jude Hospital is
non-sectarian, non-discriminatory, and
provides medical care to over 4,200
patients.
LUMBER & HOME
FOR SALE: 25 acres. 2-bedroom
frame house. 22x46 frame outbuilding.
Free gas. 478-5205.
2-15-4tpd.
REAL ESTATE FOR SALE: Commercial property, up to ten acres or more.
Parallel to I-75, bound by Stuckey's.
McDonalds. For Mall, Steak House.
motel. etc . Berea, Kentucky,
606-986-4863after 7 p.m.
2-15-3tpd.
SELLING AT WINTER PRICE: 1981
Honda Silver Wing GL-500. Fully dressed. AM-FM cassette, cruise. 2 helmets,
and detachable trunks and rear seat.
Must see! $1995. Call Jim Clarke.
478-2614.
2-15-4t.
FOR SALE: Specialize in limited edition prints. Over 300 artists. Bret
Johnson's first coal prints, Hampton.
etc. Ship daily. We discount Campbellsville Cherry and reproduction Victorian furniture. Teresa's Antiques &
Gallery, Berea, Ky .. 606-986-9147.
2-15-3tpd.
55°/o e»FF
Income Averaging
Can Save Dollars
Many taxpayers whose incomes increased substantially in 1983 can save
tax when filing their federal tax returns
by using the income averaging method
to compute tax, the Internal Revenue
Service said.
Under the income averaging method,
part of an unusually large amount of
taxable income is taxed at a lower rate,
according to the IRS.
Taxpayers must have been U.S.
citizens or residentS for at least the last
five tax years to qualify. Taxpayers
usually must have provided more than
50 percent of their own support during
the four years prior to 1983 and have an
averageable income of more than $3,000
to be eligible for income averaging, the
IRS said. The easiest way to determine
averageable income is to complete
Schedule G, " Income Averaging."
Complete instructions on how to compute the tax by income averaging appear in IRS Publication 506, "Income
Averaging.'' Schedule G and Publication
'506 are available free from the IRS and
can be ordered by using the handy form
in the tax forms package, or by writing
the IRS at P .O. Box 6900, Florence, Ky.
41042.
Taxpayers who use the income
averaging method must have copies of
their tax returns for the four years prior
to 1983; the IRS noted.
Copies of prior year tax returns can
be ordered by completing Form 4506,
"Request for Copy of Tax Form or Individual Income Tax Account Information,'' available by calling or writing the
IRS.
Taxpayers will be charged $5 per
return for copies of prior year tax
returns. Payment must accompany the
order. Allow at least 45 days for receipt.
"Fashion is something that goes out of
style as soon as most people have one "
• Sylvia S. Bremer
72609
' · · · · • ' ••
26"x64"
Manufacturer's Usl Price
on All Stock
72616
• •· • · •• •
The beauty of classic light oa~tneh
furniture quality Famlly-proo lOIS
that will stay beautifUl for years I
The best cabinet value anywhere
72546
• · • · •• •••
18.84 each
' • •' •· • •·
20.84 each
35"x64"
72553
36"x64"
15.84 each
. 16.84 each
30"x64"
KITCHEN CABINETS
HOMEMAKERS MEETING
The Abbott Homemakers held their
monthly meeting Tuesday evening, Feb.
14 in the church annex building, with
Mrs. Sharon Sparks, president, in
charge. The devotionals, given by Mrs.
Ruby Frasure, were entitled, "Look on
the Bright Side."
The lesson, given by Mrs. Frances
Pitts and Mrs. Sharon Sparr, was on
"tennerife," better known as "chicken
scratching." Each member is to finish
the designs started during this meeting,
by the club's next meeting date.
Two new members, Mrs. Kathy Marshall and M~. Bessie Marshall, were
welcomed.
The hostesses, Mrs. Cynthia Frasure
and Mrs. Ruby Frasure, served Valentine cake and other refreshments to
members, Mesdames Frances Pitts,
Eukie Merritt, Grace Conley, Christine
Ross, Mary Creed, Grace Greer, Joyce
Campbell, Sharon Fugate, Mary Lynn
Crisp, Kathy Marshall, Bessie Marshall,
Sharon Sparr, and Mary Ann Adkins,
and guests, Melissa Justice and Deanne
Campbell.
It was announced that members-atlarge, recruited by Mrs. Sharon Sparr,
were Mrs. Kathryn Poe, Mrs. Lillie
Parker and Mrs. Susie Poe, and those
recruited by Mrs. Ethel Ratliff were
Mrs. Phyllis Lenox and Mrs. Sonja
Ratliff.
The next meeting will be held March
13, with Mrs. Eukie Merritt and Mrs.
Sharon Sparr as co-hostesses.
72602
24"x64"
·'' '· · · · • 21.84 each
56108
52" Marco Polo
CBUNGFAN
With Light Antique Brass
With Cane Blades
4~allon
2'x4' Lay-In
33990
CEIUNG TILE
84 Interior
White Flat
1!1
WALL PAINT
331 76
46701
2 Gallon
Interior I Exteri or
Terra
~
47606
Sculptured .... . .. .. ..... .:;.each
building supplies ~~~~~l·a·t···· ·· ··· ·· ··11~h
FRAMING
LUMBER
2"x4"
Slza
10'
12' .
14'
16'
4'x8' Pre-Finished
PANEUNG
3!!t
1.89
2.29
2.58
2.89
TREATED
LUMBER
2"x4"
Size
8'
10'
12'
1.89
2.59
3.24
20492-01
2"x4" Pre-Cut
STUDS..... . . .. .. ..
59208
5/32" Mushroom Hickory
59222
'lc'' New Cut Cedar. . . . . . . .
Redl MIX
5~
JOINT
COMPOUND . . .
each
1....
'lc'' Birch Firelight . . . . . . .:;.each
59201
4!1
133
each
649s
gallon
00123
Southern Yellow Pine 1/2"x4'x8'
PLYWOOD
SHEATHING. . . . . . . .
699
sheet
~A Certi1jed
h--=--....
~
3'-4' White
DO&WOOD
5'-6'
(75344) Whlll Dogwood. (75375) Red
Maple. (75380) Red Delicious Apple.
(75378) Alberta Peach
~
•
YOUR CHOICE •••••••••••••• Viach
75351
Bradford Pear • . • • • • • • • • • •
#215 Whi te Fiberglass
ROOFING SHINGLES
00885
Fibered
FOUNDATION &
ft84
ROOF COATING .. . .... . D! g"allon
24" Interior Lauan
Pre-Hung
DOORS
54885
38!14,...
Bored with casing.
54920
30".......
'eact~
1182 Bright Brass
Tubular
448
1130 Bright Brass
Tubular
484
PRIVACY LOCK .. . . .. . .. •
1...
Vlach
0
WILLIAMSON, W.VA.
0
PAINTSVILLE, KY.
U.S. 52 and ChaHaroy Rd.
(304) 235-3884
Rt. 23 South at Hagerhill Exit
i606) 789·8084
Wnkdaya 7:00a.m. ta 8:00 p.m.
Saturdaya 8:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m.
Sundays t.OO a.m. ta 5:00 p.m.
Wa re11rve the right ta II mil quantltlaa.
each
each
itl)'LU'Wi'B'Eif& HOME CENTER
WAREHOUSE/SHOWROOMS
•
Celotex
PASSAGE LATCH . . . . . . . . .
15'-6'
•
LOGAI
�Wednesday, February 22, 1!)8.4
The Floyd County Times
Section One, Page Seven
PIICES
IN EFFECT
WEDNESDAY
JAN. 22
THRU SUNDAY
JAN. 26
SELECl
QUARTER
PORK LOIN
$ 19.
**************~***
-·-·- ! 4 LOCATIONS! t
* • PIKEVILLE • ZEBULON ie
: BETSY LAYNE • ELKHORN CITY .t
! OPEN 1 DAYS A :WEEK ·.~
* 8 A.M. TO JJ . P.M~ .
WE GLADLY
~* *_
* *_
* *_
* *_
* *_
* *_
* *.._.
* *.......
1( ic
U.S.D.A.
_
.,
. ACCEPT
FOOD STAMPS.
• WE RESERVE THE RIGHTTO LIMIT QUANTITIES
I
• WE ARE NOT RESPONSIBLE
FOR PRINTER'S ERRORS
..
ss
g
·
9
~~z.
MASTER BLEND COFFEE
FISCHER FESTIVAL
3
BONELESS
HAM......
•
ggc
an.
Lb.
FIELDALE IONELESS
DOVE DISH .LIQUID
22-0Z.
$1 .4 9
.
CHICKEN BREAST ...........
.
49
49 C
LB.
·
FIELDALE FlESH
CHICKEN LIVERS...............
2 ·
LB.
$19 9
GALA TOWELS CHOICE
SIRLOIN TIP ROAST ......
SINGLE
ROLL
59c
lB.
$12 9
HOLLYWOOD STYLE
PORK SPARE-RIBS ..........
LB.
BAcoN . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
99
99C
2-LB.PKG.$2
VALLEYDALE
BOLOGNA .........................
12-0I.PKG.
s219 iL'f:o. . . . . S159 HOTDoGS. . . . . . . . . . . . . tv~Las.$1
ICE CREAM...
GROUND BEEF
c
s
15
9
COOKIES.. PINTOS ......... 39
99 c
s
159
59c
SUGAR . . ·
MARGARINE ...
6
9
c
$119
PRESERVES..
BLEACH .......
89C
ONIONS ......
sgc
$159
jUiCE .... . ~oz. 10W40 OIL .....
s319
$199
DETERGENT..
PATTIES...
r
~
69
FLAYORICH
RICH & CREAMY
~!~
EXTRA LEAN
~
30~SIZE
NABISCO
LUCK'S
CHIPS AHOY
:;.~~·
1
~STICK
PARKAY
*BETSY LAYNE
STORE ONLY
S.LB. BAG
~
KRAFT
STRAWBERRY
GAL.SIZE
GENERIC
l~o;·
I'
QT.SaE
VALVOLINE
KRAFT
147-0Z. FAMILY SIZE
MORTON
CHICKEN
"'
TREND
l~c,o;-
BOX
""""
YELLOW
~~;:
LB.
�Section One, Paae Eight
The Floyd County Times
Wednesday, February 22, 1984
•
(Rep1·oduced below is page 5 of the 21st issue of The Floyd County Times
published Nov. 4, 1927)
•
• Mrs. Sallie Marshall. of W~. was
'LOOK
OUT
LOCAL
NfW~
·a visitor in Prestonsburg Wednesday.
+
,
I M~. ~laine
ret~rfled
Smith
Sunday
, , to Wheelwright after a visit here with
•
;·::!r mother, l\lrs. Anna SteplJ,ens.
: .,:I :.1
M:rs. Frank Layne, of Harold, and
Mrs. Ed Merritt, of Sugar Loaf, attend; 'Phone ne-a·s i~ms to 128_ Reports ed the funerlfll here. Monday of the inon any bit of news will be appreciated. 1 fant of Mr. and MIS. Belcher.
I
PRESTONSBURG UNDERTAKING CO.
I·
!
Ambulance Service
i
. . The Only Exclusive
UNDERTAKING AND EMBALMING -BUSINESS
I
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~!
Prof. H. W. Crick, of Hellier, spent :
Sam Gearheart was a business visitor Saturday and ·sunday in Prestonsburg. '
here from HueysviJ;e this week.
Prof. Crick was formerly teacher in the
Prestonsburg High School. ·
Adus Yates is much improved after
, suffering a relap~e with typhoid.
Mr. and Mrs. John R. cfarke, of:
'•
In The Big Sandy Valley, With Motor Equipment.
I
Another Car Of
G. D. RYAN, Manager.
J. D. Fitzpatrick, of H'Jeysville, spent Charleston. W. Va., spent the week-end I
WE CARRY A LARGE STOCK OF EVERYTHING THAT IS NEEDED .FOR THE
Tuesday in Prestonsburg.
here as guests ~f Mrs. Clarke's parents, ;
Mr. and Mrs. C. Y. Ligon.
; •l>
PREPARATION AND DISPOSITION OF YOUR LOVED ONES
1
John Stumbo, of Harold, was a visitor
t
PROMPT SHIPMENTS
DAY PHONE: 198 W. NIGQT PHONE: 198 J.
here Tuesday.
i Mr. and Mrs. Joe Hobson are visiting~~: ·
in Frankfort this week as guests of Mr. :;:
Mrs. Luther Shire!, of Harold, vlsitctl Hobson's parents, Judge and Mrs. Hob- +
An Mt has been established by the General Assembly of the Commonwealth of Kentucky to es~
here this week with her parents, Mr. son.
a State Board of emballming, defining the duties thereof, to provide for the better protection of Ufe and health, · ·
and Mrs. S. P. Davidson.
•!•
•!•
and to prevent the spread of contagious diseases, to regulate the practice of Embalming a..'1d Undertaking 1n
Squire Emmett Hamilton, of Harold, ·:·
Mrs. Lavinia Ford was the gc1est lu~t was operated upon at the Pikeville has- ~·
connection with the c;1.re and disposition of the dead, and to provide a penalty for the violation thereof.
·:·
week In Paintsville cf Mr. and Mrs. W. pita! last week for appendicitis. His •!•
•l>
o. Martin.
condition has been reported as serious, ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++•·+~~~+·~~·{~•+4~~~··..~~~~..~
Mrs. B. F. combs returned 12 st week but he is now improviug.
'··~_..::.·....
from Hazard, where she visited rei- I' · Mr~and Mrs. G. R. Fannin and fam- county, where they have been visiting
WHEN BETTER AUTOMOBILES ARE BUILT, BUICit 'WILl. BUILD 1'8111
atives.
ily have moved from Newlyn, W. Va., friends and relatives.
Mrs. Alice Kidd is very ill.
MisS Emma Alice wells who is at- to West Prestonsburg, where Mr. FanMrs. Adrian Conn, of Ashland, Ky.,
t€nding. the University of 'Kentucky at nin may be engaged in the mercantile
was visiting homefolk& at this place reLexington, spent the week-end here. business.
cEmtly.
with her mother, Mrs. W. S. Wells.
1
Mrs. James Stanisford, her daughter,
Rev. Isaac Stl'atton held church ser. Mr. and Mrs. Waid Cross and little Mrs. Joe Launsdale, and sons, Tom and vices at Lackey Sunday.
daughter, Ethel Salisbury, returned Ballard Stanisford, of Tulsa, Okla., ar. last week from e. visit with relatlves in rived F'riday for a visit with Mr. and
Ohio.
Mrs. Malcolm Harris and other rel1
at.ives.
:ulian Harlowe, who is teaching in I
_ . .
the Betsy Layne school, came down
Mrs. E. H. Sowards, 01 P1kev1lle, Mrs .
1
Friday for a short visit with his pal'· John Blackburn, of Ashland, and Mr.
ents Mr. and Mrs. A. c. Barlowe.
an~ _Mrs. Jo M. Dav1dson were guests
'
1to dmner Wednesday of Mr. and Mrs.
,·
:!:
FURN.ITURE
. has arrived for sale at bargain prices. Another car is
on the road.
,.
We . must sell to make
'Come and bring
·your wago.~ and team, for
we wm trade when you get
here.. We'have everything
to n;tal\e a home
.'Mlmtl~ete., and you do not
mucl1 money to buy it,
j., -our prices , are so low
lhat you witt be surprised.
'
'
roo:m.
l.
'
.
~--
COME AND SEE FOR
YOURSELVES
I
Power
.most
I
Furniture Store
West Prestonsburg,
Ky.
Get it at Walters' Shoe Shop,
1 , Mrs. T. J. May a"ld daughter Betty E. P. A:-nold.
I
1
Jean left several d&ys ago for MadisonPearl Allen was taken Monday to the
·
·
· ·t·
h
!l.nd save your s •· 0es·•
v ille, Obio, w h ere s h e lS v1s1 mg er , Marting hospital, Ironton, Ohio, where
1
: parents, Mr. and Mrs. R. C. Minix.
Ihe submitted to an operation for ap- 1 Our shop ha::. ·modern equip.
1
1
•
Ml
d
Ma
b
h
pendicitis. He is doing nicely. His
.
Mrs. !l'an a
rrs ad a~ er brother, Taggett Allen, is recovering in ment which in:;ures the .best
her daughter
.
. .
.
'
, guests last Thursday
.
' the same hosp1tal for :.1. snmlar opera- , quality
work at reasonable!'
I• lo4rs. Eugene Daniel,
and Mrs. Charles t'1on.
·
·
I
,
•• '
Wells and little daughter, cf Paints- 1
, prices.
.
,1
1
'
1
Howard
--
ASTITCH IN TIME
' ville.
1
I
BANNER
.1
I1
. guarant eed . G'1ve I'
AI1 work 1s
I
Mrs. Oeorge P. Archer returned last
week from an extended visit with .reiMrs. Eli Scalf has returned from \. yo or old shoes a cnance and us a '
atives- in the West. Accompanied by Johnson county, where she has been chance to do your. work rlght. .
Mrs. W. S. Harkins, she 'Tisited Mrs. visiting her sister.
I
·
1
1
1
• Ernest Robinson, In Texas, and George
Melvin Woods, of Betsy Layne, was PRESSING WHILE YOU WAIT' i
' B. Archer, in Kansas City, Mo. Mrs. here Sunday visiting homefolks.
·'
I
Harkins stopped In Lexington last weeki Miss K&therine Stratton spent the
·II
for the grand chapter, Order of Eastern week-end at Auxier with Mr. and Mrs·.
Star. and also \'isited Mr. and Mrs. Iley: W. N. Stratton.
B. Browning, of ~shland, and Dr. ~ I Mr. and Mrs. Tom Scalf_ and. daug~;
'[
1\lt;a. G. t... lioward, of Huntington. ·· 1ter Evelyn. have returned from Martin
'
I
i
·U·.' s·. W'IlLI TI:D(!
lr.d\i,J
'
'\.,..JTHEN the task to be accom~
VV plished is difficult-when
stamina, dep~ndability and~unfaillng
power are essential-the advice 6£
those who kt\bw is, "Buy a Buick!''·
D.rive one today ancl find ouf why.
SeC:ans !1195 toS1995 •Coupes *1195 to tts~o
Sport Models $1195 to 11525 .
.
-(l.'i fJnctl f o. b. Flirtt, Mich., govtmmmll<tJt lq lu .JN.~
1h• G. M • .A. C•.finarwngp/4•, sbe mo•t.Usirllh!•,is IJV~
BUICKJOrf928
JACK CARTER
Prestonsburg~ J{y..
HY NOT A CHANG·E ?------------------------...------------------··-'
I Have Never Held An Oflice
GEO. T. ROBERTs··
•
For Circuit Court
CLERK
Of·Floyd County
~.TOU SHOULD VOTE FOR ME FOR CLERK OF THE FLOYD CIRCUIT COURT:
11 Whe~ the
to.csin of war was sounded, and Kentucky arid Floyd county boys were called, I was
...-.: tkem. 1 went ready and willin'g to go across at the tap of the drum and the sound of martial mustc. Your boys went along--some never came back--some tattered and torn and
~84. f_~r life. 11 Before I went, I had a good position and was getting a nice. start in life. This was wiped out. I have nev~r fully recovered from the fi~ancialloss. 11 I feel that tll.en!
'hd i)f sympathy between your boys and myself, and the mothers and s1sters of the boys that went through t~ose trymg days of the war .and anxtety; They needed us then-ll
now-"Lest w~ forget." 11 What little money I have earned, has been earned through honest methods and mdustry, a!'d I have alw~ys tried to see the other fellow's side and h 1
Wbn needed help. When elected to this office, I will never turn from those wh.o need.help or those who have helped me. Ltve a~d Let L.Ive ~hall always be my motto. 1 have aeeuc:n~
no money more than a living. 11 If my past life has been such as to have gamed frtends, rest assured that when elected to thts office, 1t wdl be conducted in a business way a
~Y friend~;~hip and courtesy, and not for the sake of the emoluments of the office, but to l~ghten your bu.dens where I can do so. 111 will appreciate your support.
ccom.lli*Aft Adv,
Very respeetfully,
l
;r,;u
GEORGE T. ROBERTS
•
•
�'ednesday, February 22, 1984
The Floyd County Times
MSU Awards Degrees
To Five Floyd Students
Five Floyd countians were among
those receiving degrees at the close of
Morehead State University's 1983 fall
semester.
Receiving degrees were Kevin
Douglas Sturgill, BBA, of Auxi~r;
.hirley Ann Fugate, AAS, of Dnft;
Larry Edward Francis, MBA and
Teresa Renee Moore, BS, both of Garrett, and Jane Elizabeth Webb Jones,
AB, of Wayland.
ADVERTISEMENT FOR BIDS
The Floyd County Fiscal Court at its
reguJar meeting on February 17, 1984,
authorized the County Judge/Executive
to advertise for bid at the next election
o be held in 1984 for the Primary
(whether it be in May or August), the
printing of the ballots to be used in the
voting machines here in Floyd County.
All interested persons may contact the
County Judge/Executive for the necessary specs. The Court reserves the right
to reject any and all bids.
FLOYD COUNTY
JUDGE/EXECUTIVE
John M. Stumbo
2-22-3t.
•
ADVERTISEMENT FOR BIDS
The Floyd County Fiscal Court will accept bids on material items listed below.
To qualify, sealed bids must be received by the Office of the County Judge Executive on or before March 9th 1984.
Bids will be opened and read publicly
at the Floyd County Courthouse Annex
Conference Room as an item of the
.iscal Court meeting agenda that day.
7,900 Linear feet 4'' c1 160 PVC water
line pipe; 3,000 Linear feet 4" c1200 PVC
water line pipe; 500 Linear feet 4" SDR
11 PE water line pipe.
The Court reserves the right to reject
any and all bids for cause.
JOHN M. STUMBO
County Judge Executive
Floyd County, Kentucky
2-22-2t.
NOTICE OF
INTENTION TO MINE
Pursuant To Existing Permit
Number 036-0098
In accordance with the provisions of
KRS 350, notice is hereby given that
Lower Hurricane Mining Company,
Inc., Route 3, Box 44, Pikeville, Ky.
41501, intends to transfer its permit to
BX Corporation, P.O. Box 362, Betsy
Layne, Ky. 41605.
a The existing operation is approxWimately 0.50 miles southeast from KY
979 junction with KY 1426 and located
0.25 miles east of Toler Creek. The
latitude is 37' 31' 04" . The longitude is 82'
37' 23''. The surface area is owned by J.
Stewart, G. Wilborn, Bert Bush, Hattie
Ratliff, D. Blackburn, Cecil Damron,
Stella Daniels.
The existing operation is located on
the Broadbottom USGS 7lh minute
quadrangle map. The operation will use
.he contour, auger method of mining.
The application has been filed for
public inspection at the Department for
Surface Mining Reclamation and Enforcement's Prestonsburg Regional Office at 503 South Lake Drive, Prestonsburg, Ky. 41653. Written comments, objections, or requests for a permit conference must have attached a copy of
the newspaper clipping and must be filed with the Director, Division of Permit,
6th Floor, Capital Plaza Tower, FrankAfort, Kentucky 40601.
,..- All comments, objections, or request
for a permit conference must be filed
within fifteen (15) days of today's date.
Section One, Page Nine
Dr. Lafferty To Head New Center
From the day when Mark Lafferty,
Prestonsburg native, entered medical
school at the University of Kentucky his
interest has centered on emergency
medicine.
Next month, Dr. Mark Lafferty will
open in Lexington, S.C. his brand-new
Emergency Medical Center which, he
says, will be dedicated to the work of
"healing the sick at all hours."
Relatively new, such centers have had
a phenomenal growth across the country. The availability of trained professionals, the accessibility of such centers
and the relatively low cost involved account for much of their popularity.
"A majority of the people want care
when they want it," Dr. Lafferty says,
commenting on the popularity.of these
centers. "They get sick and can't get to
a family doctor or to a hospital emergency room. We're here for them."
Lafferty's new center will be open
seven days a week, and the public is promised that no patient will have to wait
longer than 30 minutes to get attention.
His center will have two fulltime physicians, one or two physicians on parttime duty; nurses, X-ray technicians and
a modern laboratory.
The son of James and Doris Spradlin
Lafferty, Dr. Lafferty, now 29, attended Prestonsburg schools before entering
medical school. After receiving his M.D.
degree he entered general surgery and
did his residency at Richland Memorial
Hospital, Columbia, South Carolina.
Barrow Show Slated
March 12 in Linville
With the Louisville Barrow Show fast
approaching, Manager Dennis 0. Liptrap has confirmed that deadline for entries event is February 25. The show will
be held at the Kentucky Fair and Exposition Center, Broadbent Arena,
March 12-13. Premium catalogs are now
available.
This year marks the silver anniversary of the Louisville Barrow Show.
Over the 25 years, the event has become
a nationally-respected showcase for
competition among top swine producers
in the United States. A major Barrow
Show, Carcass Contest, Purebred
Classes for eight breeds of swine, a
Grand Champion Barrow Drive and Sale
of Champions will highlight 1984
Louisville Barrow Show activities.
Youth activities have also become a
major feature at the Barrow Show, according to Dr. Liptrap. As the show has
matured during its 25-year history,
management has recognized the need to
include young people in meaningfuJ
competition in order to provide them
with an arena for training in the industry. The upcoming event will, as a
resuJt, include the National Junior
Showmanship Contest, National Junior
Barrow Show and a Junior Judging Contest. Young people between the ages of
9 and 18 will compete. More than $2,000
in prizes and scholarships will be awarded to young people, in addition to major
purses which will be won by established breeders in the open cQ.mpetitions.
Entry deadline for the Showmanship
and Junior Barrow Show is February 25.
No formal entry is necessary for the
Juding Contest.
.
Information for both breeders who
wish to exhibit and to others who wish
to attend the Louisville Batrow Show
can be obtained from: Dr. Dennis Liptrap, Animal Science Bldg., South,
University of Kentucky, Lexington, Ky.
40546, Phone: 606-257-7535.
~-~.~
.·..........,.............................. ,, ,
Apple lie Business System: 64K computer with extended 80 column card,
2 disk drives, monitor, and Apple
Dot Matrix Printer.
DR. MARK LAFFERTY
'Ingrid' To Be Seen
On KET, March 7
"Ingrid," a moving documentary
about one of the screen's most extraordinary actresses, will be aired during
KET TeleFund '84, on Wednesday,
March 7, at 9:00p.m.
Ingrid Bergman's screen quality was
one of complexity and elusiveness, reinforced in each film with brilliant,
critically-acclaimed performances,
such as "Intermezzo," which made her
a star. " Notorious," "Casablanca" and
'•Anastasia'' are shown, and •'Gaslight,''
for which she won an Academy Award
in 1944. "Ingrid" presents an overview
of Bergman's career, with an abundance of film clips. Also shown are
scenes from her private life. As a result
of her affair with film director Roberto
Rossellini, Bergman was viciously denounced on the floor of the U.S. Senate
and ostracized by Hollywood. Seven
years passed before Hollywood accepted
her back, and she rose to greater heights
of public acceptance and acclaim.
Also on March 7, preceding "Ingrid"
at 8:00 p.m., a "National Geographic
Special," " Return to Everest," will be
aired as part of KET TeleFund '84.
Richard Kelly narrates the accomplishments of Sir Edmound Hillary,
who conquered Mount Everest 30 years
ago and since has spent much of his life
serving the people who live in the
shadow of the great mountain. Hillary's
accomplishments on and off the mountain and his relationships with the Sherpas are recounted.
· "Ingrid" is produced by Wombat Pro-ductions; "Return to Everest" is produced by the National Geographic Society and WQED/ Pittsburgh.
Apple III Business System: 256K
computer with built-in disk drive,
ProFile™ hard disk drive with Catalyst~
monitor, 12 -month AppleCaresM
Cany-In Service Plan.
Save your business
abundle.
Introducing the Apple® lie and Apple III Business Systems.
Thev' re everything you and your small business need to do
financial planning, accounting, or word processing more
productively.
,
You can even lease with an option to buy or use Apples
convenient credit card.
Either way, you're in business.
Catalr.;t is a trademark of Quark, Inc. Apple, the Apple logo and ProFile are trademarks and AppleCare is a servicf
mark of Apple Computer Inc. © 1983 Apple Computer Inc.
Pre-register now for Computer WorkshopSaturday, February 25, Ages 12 thru 14.
AbAcus CoMpUTER SToRE, INc.
101 W. COURT STREET, PRESTONSBURG, KY. 41653
(606) 886-8447
.First Birthday
lt.
m
RON LAWSON, Broker
Phone 886-9100 • Pikeville 432-0194
County Bond Money will soon be gone! Take advantage of these low interest rates on the
following homes:
PRESTONSBURG • L1r1e comer lot in town. Nice home, great buy!
ABBOTT CREEK • Assumable 8.8% l01n.
BEFORE BUYING A
TRUCK TOPPER, SEE THE ALL NEW
CONVERTIBLE TRUCK TOPPER, TODAY•..
Now on display at
Conve'rtible Truck Toppers at Betsy Layne
Community Garden
To Open In Martin
PRESTONSBURG • Over 1300-sq. ft. on lot with room for garden.
PRESTONSBURG • Family home with fenced yard for the kids.
Jason Dwayne Hurd, son of Merrilyn
and Regina Hurd, celebrated his first
birthday, January 28, with a party at his
home at Banner.
Enjoying the occasion were Jeannette
Hurd, Chris Holbrook, Scotty Hall, Chad
Justice, Chris Justice, Adam Roberts,
and Jackie Roberts.
He is the grandson of Mr. and Mrs.
Martin Holbrook, of Banner, and Mr.
and Mrs. Issac Hurd, of Allen. He is also
the great-grandson of Mrs. Alice
Roberts, of Banner.
.
An E.T. cake and ice cream were
served. Jason received many nice gifts.
•
AUXIER • Recently remodeled! Priced under $60,000.
LimE PAINT • Brick home with plenty of privacy!
MIDDLE CREEK • 30 acres of land, 2,000-sq. fl house. $57,500.
W. PRESTONSBURG • Convenient to town • Good buy!
LITTLE PAINT • Over 1200-sq. ft., $39,500.
PRESTONSBURG • 1'/z acres, comfortable home in town.
DAVID • 2700-sq. ft. home on 1'/l acre, for only $59,000.
The Christian Appalachian Project
will be sponsoring a community gard~n
this year located on old north U.S. 80 m
Martin across from St. JuJiana's church.
All plots will be open and free to the
public. The plots will be plowed a~d participants are asked to supply the1r own
seed, fertilizer, and tools.
Since there is a limited amount of
space, plots will be given out on a fi~st
come, first serve basis. For further mformation, contact Rick Fairbanks at
285-3254 between 9 a.m. and 5 p.m.
AUXIER • 1500-sq. ft. plus basement on large lot.
DAVID • FmHA-approved home. Only $38,000.
DWALE • Four bedrooms, 1'lz baths. Very nice home.
PRESTONSBURG • Spacious brick home. Only $69,000.
U.S. 23 • Convenient to Paintsville or Prestonsburg.
PYRAMID ·. Country livinl with assumable 8.8% financing.
We have many more listings!
Call today for private showing of the house of your dreams!
TO OBSERVE
70TH BIRTHDAY
Elmer Castle, former resident of
McDowell, now living in Roanoke
Virginia, will celebrate his 70th birt~
day, February 23. A special dinner in h1s
honor is being planned by his daughter,
Janet Robinson, and grandchildren,
Missy, Sherry and Robby Robinson.
Also attending will be Chris Robinson
and Dwight Studebaker.
• ·BEFORE •
• AFTER •
*ONE PERSON CAN CONVERT IN ONE MINUTE I
COLORS: RED, WHITE, BLUE, BROWN, lr BLACK
ALL ALUMINUM, NYLON, lr VINYL • MAINTENANCE FREE!
CONVERTIBLE TRUCK TOPPERS, INC.
Phone 478-5941
U.S. 23, Betsy Layne, Ky.
• DEALER INQUIRIES INVITED •
�Wednesday, February 22, 1984
The Floyd C.Ounty Times
MAYTOWN NEWS
Children's Theatre
Performance at PCC
Two one-act plays will be presented at
Prestonsburg Community College by the
Children's Theatre Group, Friday,
February 24, at 7 p.m. and again on Sun·
day, February 26, at 3 p.m.
This is good family entertainment so
come and shiver at "Old Ghosts at
Home" and the "Transferred Ghosts."
"Old Ghosts at Home" stars Kathy
Craft, Jeanna Justice, Barclay Perry,
Sally Wonn, Michael Rosenberg, Marty,
R.B., and Jessica Summers, and Carole
Hodson. While David Stanford, Kathy
Craft, Tobin Wonn, Carole Hodson, and
Michael Rosenberg make up the cast of
the "Transferred Ghosts."
Admission is free.
CARD OJ<' THANKS
The family of Leonard Anderson,
would like to express its thanks to our
relatives, neighbors and friends for their
help upon the passing of our father.
Thanks to those who sent flowers, food,
money and who spoke comforting
words. A special thanks to the minister,
First Baptist Church, and Hall Funeral
Home.
Happy Birthday
Tracy Leigh
Bevins
FEBRUARY 26TH
2-22-lt~:
Happy Birthday
Ron!
I Love You,
Pard
LOOK!...
Take ad'lantage ot low winter
rat11, and ha'le your building
and remodeling done now.
Call:
CRASE HOME BUILDERS
tor free estimates,
358-9485.
2-15-2t
INCOME TAX . ·
PREPARATION
.
LOCATED ACROSS FROM
MARTIN GRADE SCHOOL
IN THE OLD WESTERN
AUTO BUILDING.
REASONABLE RATES
CHARLOTTE KEATHLEY
285-3959
lt·pd
Charles G <Chuckie) May, of Allen,
was honored on his 7th birthday with
a party at the home ol his aunt and uncle, Mr. and Mrs. Walker Prater, Saturday evening, Feb. 10. His Batman cake
was baked and decorated by his aunt,
Miss Patricia Webb. Those attending
and s.;nding gifts were Mr. and Mrs.
Charles G. May, of Allen; Mrs. Gertrude
Webb, Kari Lynn May, Mr. and Mrs.
Walker Prater, Tamyra and Pamela,
Keith Frasure, Patricia Webb, Keith
Webb, Merle, Kenny and Dean Webb,
Mrs. Edna Click and Mrs. Lula Webb.
Mrs. Don Meade is recuperating at
home after receiving treatment at Our
Lady of the Way Hospital.
Mr. and Mrs. G.B. Colvin, of Springfield, Ohio, stopped, on their way home
from a Florida vacation, for a brief visit
with Mr. and Mrs. Claud Webb, Saturday. Mrs. Rebecca Salisbury, Mrs. Colvin's mother, went home with them for
a short visit.
Our sympathy to the family of Willie
Bentley, who passed away Wednesday
at Highlands Medical Center following
an extended illness.
Mr. and Mrs. Paul Webb and Kalina,
of Springfield, Ohio, spent the weekend
here visiting his parents, Mr. and Mrs.
Claud Webb, and her parents, Mr. and
Mrs. Alex Howard, at Prestonsburg.
Mr. and Mrs. Alton Bentley and family, of Kansas City, Kansas, were here
last week to attend the funeral of his
father, Willie Bentley.
Mr. and Mrs. James E. Allen were the
overnight guests of Mr. and Mrs. Norvel
Fetty in Huntington, last week.
Bart Akers, of Hunter, was the weekend guest of his cousin, Keith Webb,
here.
Mrs. Flara Stephens is the guest of her
daughter, Mrs. George Estepp, and Mr.
Estepp. Mrs. Stephens has been ill.
Mrs. Don Patton has been confined to
her home with broken ribs received in
a fall at her home.
Mr. and Mrs. Norvel Fetty, of Huntington, are spending a week here with
her mother, Mrs. Homer Martin. They
are also visiting other relatives and
friends.
REBEKAH LODGE MEETS
Members of Miriam Rebekah Lodge No.
31 met in regular session Tuesday evening, February 7, with the !'lloble Grand,
Kelly Sue Moore, presiding.
Members who were sick were recorded, and cards to be sent to them were
signed. Other routine business was
conducted.
It was voted to give a monetary con'tribution to Big Sandy Family Planning
to help on their project to buy car seats
for infants.
Members present for this meeting
were Kelly Sue Moore, Nancy Duff,
Mable Jean Lemaster, Venelia
Rinehart, Sue Moore, Paulena Owens,
Rebecca Bingham, Lorena Wallen,
Hope Whitten, Theckly Short, Norma
Stepp, Nola Stepp and Helen Ormerod.
The next regular meeting will be held
Tuesday evening, February 21, at 7
o'clock, at the I.O.O.F. Hall this will be
our Valentine Party. The Noble Grand
invites all members to come, join in with
us refreshments will be served after the
meeting.
·
HONORED ON BIRTHDAYS
Flowers, in honor of Joe and Jennifer
Burchett, for their birthdays, were placed on the altar of the First United
Methodist Church, Sunday morning, by
members of their family.
Breastfeeding Meetings
Miss
Spring Blossom
at
Betsy Layne Grade School
March 11
Deadline March 8
Girls from all areas
may participate
For more Information
call
Patricia Hall
452·4534
A breastfeeding mothers support
group meeting will be held Feb. 28 at the
home here of Pat Hites at 10:30 a.m. The
meeting is open to women interested in
learning about breastfeeding and sharing experiences concerning breastfeeding. There is no fee. Anyone interested
or ~ing directions may call Pat Hites
at 886-8786. Another such meeting will be
held Match 5 at the Magoffin County
Clinic at 10 a.m.
CARD OF THANKS
The family of John F. Wallace would
like to take this opportunity to thank
everyone for their help during the illness
and death of our loved one-those who
sent food, flowers, or just spoke comforting words.
We deeply appreciate all of you,
especially the ministers and employees
of Columbia Gas Co.
Your kindness will never be forgotten.
B&K TRUCKING
DOZER AND BACKHOE WORK
• CRIB BLOCKS • HEADfRS • CAT BOARDS
28 -92
ERNEST C. HOLBROOK, M.D. FACS
announces the opening of his office
THE PAINTSVILLE CLINIC BUILDING
111 Main Street, Paintsville, Kentucky
for the practice of
UROLOGY
Telephone (606) 789-7584
MONDAY-WEDNESDAY-FRIDAY
10:00 AM until 4:30 PM
<Betsy Layne office closed February 1l
. .-l!mmmmmmrnEmmmmmmmmmmmWW':li1Z~~m;
Addresses D.A.R. Chapter
Charles C. Wells, Paintsville businessman and genealogist, was the guestspeaker for the meeting held last Tuesday afternoon by John Graham Chapter,
Daughters of the American Revolution
at the Emma Wells May Cultural
Center. Mr. Wells' book, entitled "An·
nals of Floyd County, 1800-1826," was
recently published, and may be purchas-·
ed locally.
The regent, Mrs. Ray Brackett, presided at the meeting. Mrs. OpalS. May,
Chaplam, conducted the ntuaJistic service. The National Defense program,
"Americanism is Our Responsibility,"
was given by Mrs. James Goble.
The chapter voted to send a monetary
gift to Duncan Tavern, Paris, Ky., in
memory of the late Mrs. W. Barlow, a
D.A.R. member, who served as recording secretary of the Kentucky Board of
Management, and did much work for
Duncan Tavern. Mrs. Barlow passed
away in January.
Mrs. Edith James reminded members
that she would need their assistance
with the planning of the Kentucky
Highlands Folk Festival, to be held this
fall, and that meetings for the formulation of festival plans are now being
conducted.
The regent announced that John
Graham Chapter plans participation in
the National D.A.R. Centennial, to be
held in 1990.
Mrs. Brackett distributed copies of
programs for the conference of the Kentucky Society, D.A.R., to be held at the
Marriott Hotel, Lexington, Ma!'ch 6-8,
and urged members to attend. Delegates and alternates elected to this conference are Mrs. Frances Brackett,
regent; Mrs. Norma Stepp, secretary,
Mesdames Opal May, Olga Preston,
Mae Kendrick and Margaret Alley.
Elected as an alternate to represent
the chapter at the 93rd NSDAR National
Convention, in Washington, D.C., April
15, was Mrs. Margaret D. Collins, who
will be accompanied by her aunt, Mrs.
Sally Humphreys, a member of this
chapter, who now resides in Florida.
The leader, Mrs . Eleant>r Horn,
presented the guestspeaker, her son-inlaw, Charles C. Wells, of Paintsville.
The hostess, Mrs. Virginia Goble, was
assisted by Mrs. Mae Kendridc in serving refreshments in keeping with the
Valentine season to guests, Charles C.
Wells, of Paintsville, and Mrs. Peachie
Howard, of Prestonsburg, and members, ·Mesdames Frances Brackett,
Virginia Goble, Eleanor Horn, Norma
Stepp, Olga Preston, Opal May, Edith
James, and Mae Kendrick.
RECUPERATING AT HOME
Mrs. Beatrice Collins, who was ill for
a few days, at her home in the Highland
Terrace apartments, is getting along
nicely now.
ANNOUNCE BIRTH
Mr. and Mrs. Ray Douglas Hall, of
Allen, announce the birth of a daughter,
Alice Michelle, Friday, February 3, at
Highlands Regional Hospital, Prestonsburg.
Mater11al grandparents are Mr. and
Mrs. Homer Howell, of McDowell, and
paternal grandparents are Mr. and Mrs.
James Riley Hall, of Allen.
Maternal great-grandparents are Mr.
and Mrs. Wilburn Elliott, of McDowell,
and Mrs. Polly Howell, of McDowell,
and the late Dee Howell, paternal greatgrandparents are Riley Hall of Allen,
and the Late Florence Hall, and Mr. and
Mrs. Estill Music, of the Abbott Road,
Prestonsburg.
BABIES PRESENTED
Baby-and-parent dedication services
were held at the Irene Cole Memorial
<First) Baptist Church Sunday morning
by the pastor, the Rev. Steve Hopkins.
Presented were: Courtney Dawn Collins
and parents, Donna and Charles Collins;
Bridget Lynn Bellamy and parents,
Saundra and Jerry Bellamy; Nicki Jean
Wilson and parents, Rick and Carolyn
Wilson, Timothy Ryan Martin and
parents, Tim and Jennifer Martin and
Nathan David Hall, and parents, Cara
and Eric Hall.
York Rite Festival
The George Washington statewide
011e-day York Rite Festivals of Kentucky
will be held Saturday, February 25.
Paintsville has been chosen as one of the
locations for holding one of the festivals.
Work will be at the Paintsville Masonic
Lodge Hall, beginning at 8 a.m.
Breakfast will be served from 7 to 8
a.m. A luncheon will be served at noon
and a pot luck dinner in the evening. All
York Rite Masons are invited to attend
this festival and be a part or the day's
activities.
Section One, Page Ten
W(l:\IA:\'S CLliH
TO MEET, Mt\RCH 1
Mrs. Elizabeth Ramey, president of
the Prestonsburg Woman's Club, announces that the next meeting of the club
will be Thursday evening, March 1, at
7:~0 at the Emma Wells May Cultural
Center. The program leader will be
Roberta Davis, and the topic will be
"Education." Hostesses will be Garnett
Fairchild, . Sarah Goble, Honey May,
Betty Francis, Lois George, Norcie Burchett, and Christine Spradlin. The club's
executive board will meet the same
evening, at 7 o'clock.
FOR SALE OR RENT-
SINGING COOKES SLATED
TO BE AT ESTILL CHURCH
The Singing Cookes will appear in concert at the Martin Branch Free Will
Bapllst Church at Estill, Saturday,
March 3.
CHURCHWOMEN MEET
The Local rilUrchwomen met Friday
morning at the First Presbyterian
Church, with the president, Mrs. Eva
Collins, presiding. The devotionals were
given by Mrs. Elma Jessen, who based
her discussion on the Gospel of St. Mark.
The Loaves and Fishes Food Pantry,
which is a special project of the Local
Churchwomen and the Prestonsburg
Ministerial Association, was discussed,
and it was announced that, due to food
requests bemg made by the needy of this
area, more food and money wculd be
welcomed.
Mrs. Mabel Donahoe discussed World
Day of Prayer. It was decided that the
local observance will be held Friday,
March 2, at the First United Methodist
Church, and that the church would be
open from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m., on that day
to those who may come during that time,
for prayer, worship and meditation. It
was also decided that Holy Week services will be held April16-22 at the same
church.
Members of the host church,
Mesdames Elma Jessen, Mary Lou
Layne and Drema Miller, served doughnuts, coffee and tea to members, Eva
Collins, Elma Jessen, Mabel Donahoe,
Fannie Runnels, Garnett Fairchild,
Vera Ford, Patti Hoover and baby son,
Philip, and Peggy Ousley, and to the
president of the Prestonsburg
Ministerial Association, the Rev.
Timothy Jessen.
The next meeting will follow the day's
events duritJg World Day of Prayer.
VISIT MR. BURCHETT
Mrs. Myrtle Allen and Mrs. Dorothy
Osborne visited Mrs. Allen's brother,
Glenn Burchett, at the home of his
daughter and son-in-law, Mr. and Mrs.
Kenneth Caldwell, at Sugar Loaf, Saturday. Both Mr. Burchett and Mr. Caldwell, who have been ill, are showing
improvement.
ANNOUNCE BIRTH
Retha and Michael Th\lmpson, of
Portland, Oregon, announce the birth of
their first son, Charles Howard. The
maternal grandparents are Mr. and
Mrs. Howard Weaver, of Portland,
fonnerly of Martin, and the great-grandparents are Mr. and Mrs. Edd Hunter,
of Martin.
BIRTH ANNOUNCED
Mr. and Mrs. James Arthur Hughes,
of Prestonsburg, wish to announce the
birth of their first child, a son, Tyler
James Hughes. He w~s born January 13
at the Highlands Regional Hospital and
weighed eight pounds.
Grandparents are Mrs. Fayetta
Hughes, of Lancer and the late Glyn Arthur Hughes, and Philip and Marlene
Scott, of Somerset.
2-BEDROOM TRAILER
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MUSIC-CARTER-HUGHES IS
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LADIES 5-10
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Store Hours: Mon.-Sat., 10·9, Sun., 1-6
TRADE-IN RING
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JEWELER
PHONE 886-2734
PRESTONSBURG
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MEN'S
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MEN'S
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MEN'S
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PANAMA JACK
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ON SALE
MEN'S
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0% OFF
ALL MEN'S SWEATERS
SUCH AS CATAUNA, CAMPUS,
VANDERBILT AND PURITAN
$1998 70%
Reg.
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s350
MEN'S
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$1498
SUITS
VALUES TO $130.00
Nowssooo
MEN'S
. LEE JEANS
$1698
2-1-St.
�Wednesday,
Febn~ary
The Floyd County nmes
22, 1984
VISITS MOTHER HERE
Pllul R. Jordan, of Lebanon, Ky., was
here last week, for a visit with his
mother, Mrs. Versa Morre, at her home
in the Highland Terrace Apartments.
VISIT GRANDMOTHER
Timmy and Wesley Collins, of Dana,
.pent Saturday night here with their
grandmother, Mrs. Scott Collins.
YOUTH NIGHT PLANNED
Youth Night will be observed next
Sunday night, following services at the
First Baptist Church, here, with volleyball and chili for the young people. A
special message entitled, "How to Select
a Mate," will be delivered by the pastor,
the Rev. Steve Hopkins.
.ATTEND U.K.~;;;
Mrs. Gorman Collins, Sr. and Miss
Jane Ann Kendrick attended the University of Kentucky-Florida basketball
game at Rupp Arena, Lexington, Saturday.
1\liss Heinze, Mr. Moyer
Exchange Vows, Feb.ll
Jenny Wiley No. 3528 AARP
To Have Dinner Meeting
Mr. and Mrs. John G. Heinze, of Prestonsburg, are announcing the marriage
of their daughter, Miss Gretchen Heinze,
to Mr. David M. Moyer, on Saturday,
February 11 , in Lemont, Pennsylvania.
Mr. Moyer is the son of Mr. and Mrs.
Richard Moyer, of Wilmington, Dela-ware. He is a graduate of the Maryland
Arts Institute and received the Master
of Fine Arts degree from Pennsylvania
State University.
Mrs. Moyer is a graduate of Madison
College, Harrisonburg, Va., and is
presently working toward an M.F.A.
degree at Pennsylvania State University.
Mr. and Mrs. Moyer are residing in
Lemont, Pennsylvania.
Jenny Wiley Chapter No. 3528 AARP
will hold its chapter meeting, Friday,
Feb. 24, 6 p.m., at the Episcopal Church.
Prestonsburg, with a covered dish dinner. The speaker will be Monroe Wicker,
Morehead, chairman of the AARPNRTA Legislative Committee. He will
bring us up-to-date on Legislative Action. Phone reservations to Mrs. Jean
. Hickman 886-3078.
SHOWER HONORS MRS. KNICELY
The Horn Chapel Methodist Church
was the scene of a miscellaneous
shower, Friday, Feb. 17, at 7 p.m.,
honoring Mrs. Andy B. Knicely, the
TO HAVE INITIATION
Adah Chapter No. 21, Order of the former Miss Barbara Lynn Crager,
Eastern Star will have an initiation Mon- formerly of Prestonsburg, now of Morea.daY evening, Feb. 'l:l, at 7 p.m. Refresh- head.
The serving table was covered with a
wtnents will be served at the close of the
pink
imported linen cloth, with an
mooting.
overlay of white lace, and had for its
centerprice a bouquet of pink and
ATTEND FUNERAL
cranberry silk flowers, . flanked by
Mrs. Mary Zemo and Mrs. Clara Harcandelabra holding tall, pink candles.
ris attended funeral services for Paul
Hostesses were Mesdames Annis
Scott Shockey at the First Presbyterian Banks, Patsy Evans, Kathleen Setser,
Church, Pikeville, Sunday.
Lorena Horne, Maggie Wright, Jeannie
Warrix, Ruby Sammons, Rose CampTO COMPILE DIRECTORY
bell, Judy Endicott, Mary L. Lavender,
Irene Cole Memorial Baptist Church Connie Ford and Debbie Dingus.
e s in the process of compiling church
Decorated cake, punch, mints and
directory. Pictures of members are to
other refreshments were served to the
be made March 4-6. It is asked that
members who have not received notices large number of relatives and friends
to have their photographs made during who called during the evening.
Mrs. Knicely is the daughter of Mrs.
that time, call the church office ·
Marietta Crager, of the Auxier road, and
(1186-8681) and make appointments to do
the late Woodrow Crager.
so.
CONDUCTS FIELDS RITES
Graveside services for Tom Fields,
who died Feb. 7, were held at Davidson
Memorial Gardens, Ivel, at 3 p.m.,
Thursday, Feb. 9. The Rev. Wendell
Roberts, of Olive Hill, conducted the services. Pallbearers were David Hereford,
David Hereford, II., Tommy Hereford,
III., Sammy Hatcher, Jimmy Garnett,
Marshall Davidson, Tom Oak McGuire,
Bill Arnold Spradlin, Jody Spradlin,
Oliver Webb, Jr., William James May,
L.B. Fairchild, Bill Tom Archer, Clyde
George, and S.R. (Buddy) Hatcher .
Happy
Birthday,
Margo
See you soon,
Mom
•
Section One, Pqe Eleven
OOCIA B. WOOQB,., .$0CIETY EDITOR
SECOND DAUGHTER BORN
Mr. and Mrs. John DeLafosse, of
Chesterfield, Mo., announce the birth of
their second daughter, Lindsey
Elizabeth, on Feb. 8. Mrs. DeLafosse is
the former Malissa Francis, daughter of
Fred Francis, of Prestonsburg.
CELEBRATES BIRTHDAY
Rhonda Burke, daughter of Ronnie
and Ella Burke, of West Prestonsburg,
celebrated her sixth birthday at the
home of her grandparents, Mr. and Mrs.
Doug Bm'ke, February 11. She received
many nice gifts, and cake and other
refreshments were served.
CALLED TO TENNESSEE
Mrs. Marie Harmon, of Bays Branch, GUEST OF DAUGHTER
returned Monday from Johnson City · Mrs. Emma Perry spent the week
Tenn., where she was called because of with her daughter, Mrs. Eleanor Howes,
the critical illness of her brother, Harold at Green Acres.
Lawing, who is a patient in the VA ,Hospital in Johnson City.
IN HOSPITAL
Mrs. Sally Hale is a patient at
FESTIVAL BOARD TO MEET
Highlands
Regional Medical Clinic.
Mrs. Maxine Bierman, director of the
~nny
Wiley Festival, reminds board
'members that there will be a meeting at
the Prestonsburg Muni('~l Building,
Thursday, Feb. 23, at 4 p.m. She adds
that a meeting for all others interested
in the festival will be held at 5 p.m., the
same day, same location.
VISIT .IN CAMPTON
Mr. and Mrs. James Donahoe spent
the weekend with her mother, Mrs. O.F.
Rogers, in Campton.
~
HERE FROM MOREHEAD
Mr. and Mrs. Andy Kniceley, of
Morehead, spent the weekend here with
her mother, Mrs. Marietta Crager, and
other relatives.
VISIT IN COUNTY
Mr. and Mrs. Bee Bailey and Miss
Rudy Collins, of Elizabethtown, Ky.,
spent a few days at Hueyf;ville last week,
guests of Mrs. May Turner.
a .
nomantzc
o
VISITS RELATIVES
The Rev. Wendell Roberts, of Olive
Hill, visited his aunt, Mrs. Luther Shive!,
and his cousin, Mrs. Mary Jo LaPointe,
here, Feb. 9. The Rev. Roberts was here
to conduct graveside services for Tom
Fields at the Davidson Memorial
Gardens.
ATTENDS BIRTHDAY PARTY
Mrs. Rose Collins attended a surprise
birthday party honoring Mrs. Tessie
Campbell at her home at Garrett,
Sunday.
AT HUDDLESTON FUND-RAISER
Attending the fund-raising reception
for U.S. Senator Dee Huddleston at the
Capitol Plaza Hotel in Frankfort last
Thursday night were Mrs. Rose Collins,
Mr. and Mrs. Paul Branham, Mrs. Mary
Zemo, Mr. and Mrs. Leo Roberts, Jan
Chaffin and Mrs. Carol Holland.
VISITOR Jo'ROM LEXL~GTON
Mrs . Joyce H~rr !s, of Lexington, was
here recently t'o. a itSJ t wi1h her mother,
Mrs. Rebecca l:Wsnick, and her aunt and
uncle , Mr. and Mrs. Bill Pettrey.
HERE FROM MARTIN
Mt's. Hazel Crisp, of Martin, was
visiting friends and relatives, and shopping here recently.
FRIENDS CALL
Mrs. Edith James was surprised by
several of her friends "dropping in" on
Valentine night, bearing a decorated
cake, candies and cards. Those calling
during the evening were Misses Kathy
Harris and Betty Rowland and Mrs. Patty McBride, of Prestonsburg, and.
Mesdames Mary Ann James, Ardena
Wheeler, and Edna Mathis, of Pikeville.
YOUNG LADIES
Interested In competing In the
MISS FLOYD COUNTY PAGEANT
should contact Betty Slone at
886-8286, after 5 p.m.; Peggy
Kldd at 886-6264, or any other
member of ths Prestonsburg
Junior Woman's Club.
Entry Deadline-March 3, 'IU
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PHOTOGRAPHY DAYS
Wednesday-Sunday - Feb. 22nd·Feb. 26th
PHOTOGRAPHY HOURS WedMtday .lotUfday 1o-1, 2·6
•
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Sunday 12·5
Lunch : 1·2
IIQ SANDY VILLAGE
PIKEVILLE
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Come in today-select your
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Complete line of hoops and crinolines.
Find great looking companion shoes
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Now thru Saturday
LAD 'N LASSIE SHOP
Phone 886-3142, Prestonsburg
Phone 285-3505, Martin
•
J\DN''A
PRESTONSBURG
OPEN
FRID~ Y
NITES TILL 8
ATTENTION, MEN! SEE OUR LARGE SELECTION OF TUXEDOS FOR RENT TO
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�Wednesday, Febru>ll")) 22,
19~
The Floyd County Times
Section One, Page Twelve
WE R[SER\'I:lHE RIGIIl TO li "'IT QUANTITII:.!> & TO CORRtCl ANY PRINTING f.RRO R!>
BUY ONEGET ONE •••
PRICES GOOD THRU SUN., FEB. 26, 1984.
SALE!
ESTdTE
Feature of the Week
Salad
Plate
89~
Hand Painted
Stoneware
ESH LEAN
ound
ef
With Eectt $5.00
Pure heM
ar,..I!W'fi!IPIM
t
9
3 LBS
O R MO RE
12 OZ. ARMOUR
Hot
ogs
99c
U .S.D .A .
BONELESS
Rib Eye Steak ................. .... LB .
$429
$239
Cube Steak . .. . . . . ........
$ 1"
Sliced Bacon ...................... .
$289
Cooked Ham ........................... .
U .S.D .A . CHOICE BONELESS
LB .
16 OZ. ARMOUR
12 OZ. ARMOUR
FROZEN OCEAN PERCH
Fish Fillets. ....... .. TA~~~ -~-·- ~~~.. lB.
SJ79
t:~~~s
............. s I
$.,.
HAWAIIAN
Pineapple .....
29
.a. 99
ea•
Pl~ms .... ......... ..s% 09
•J39e
Radishes ..... .,
6-oz.
CRISP CALIFORNIA
Leaf Lettuce LB.
Hl-OZ. PKG.
e
79e
Spinach ........ L B . 99
cu;.;::;;::IANT
the-Cob..................
s
1
1LB.CROCK MARGARINE
29
~=:;'~~ . . . ...
59t
j:yoTILE .
$
Dri-M.op
Paper To
els
2/89e ·
:t!f. ·
140Z.&OX
Minute
Rice.: ...........................
SJ29
SJ09
SJ99
12 OZ. BOTTLE
Mrs. Butterworth's Syrup
28 OZ. CHEF-BOY-AR-DEJ: MIXES
2 Cheese Pizzas .
30 OZ. CHEF-BOY-AR-DEE MIXES
2 Pepperoni Pizzas .
. .... .. . .. ..
16 OZ. VIASIC SWEET FRESH
PACKED SWEET BUTTER STICKS OR
Hamburger Dill Chips
Beef Stew
22 OZ. BETTY CROCKER
Brownie- Mix .
t::!i~~~ . . ... . . SJ 09
1
......... $219
Donkey Kong ..
40 OZ. CAN DINTY MOORE
Dish Liquid .....
39
89~
5 OZ. BETTY CROCKER ASSORTED
Potato Dishes
17 OZ. CEREAL
$2~
I
89""
~
.. .. .
................. $2"'
SJ39
•12 GAL. MEADOW GOLD
tC:eam . .......si 59
13-0Z. CAN
1~\\S:~'.'. ... ...z/sl 09
�•
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COME IN TODAY AND $AVE!!
SEE ONE OF THESE SALESMEN:
ED MUSIC, ESTILL LEE CARTER
PAUL HUGHES, NELSON B~LDRIDGE
BOBBY BURCHETT, CARL CASTLE
ROGER DeROSSETT, DAVE ESTEPP
TOM ~OSE, J!M NECESSA.IIY
• Beef Production
Seminars Offered
•
•
•
•
Kentucky's beef producers will be
able to attend a seminar on better beef
production in one of two locations, Lexington or Princeton.
Called "1984 Roundup of Highlights for
Better Beef Producers," the seminar
will be held February 28 in Lexington in
the Seay Auditorium on the University
of Kentucky campus, and on March 1 in
Princeton at the University of Kentucky
Research and Education Center.
The day-long conference, sponsored
by the UK College of Agriculture animal
sciences department, will feature
animal science researchers and Extension specialists.
Topics include Kentucky's beef production programs and potential, UK
research updates, performance testing
for genetic improvement, background.ing opportunities, packaging profitable
programs, enhancing growth, grazing
beef for efficient gains on pasture,
reducing calf losses, the fescue endophyte problem, and cattle protein
recommendations.
Registration for each seminar will be
at 8:30 a.m.local time, with the program
to begin at 8:45a.m. The sessions will
run until 4 p.m.
For more information, contact your
county Extension agent for agriculture,
or Dr. Curtis Absher, Animal Sciences
Department, Agricultural Science
Building-South, University of Kentucky, Lexington 40506-0215, phone
606-257-2854.
CARD OF THANKS
The family of tvlilton Conley would like
to express our warmest appreciation to
everyone who helped in any way in our
time of need. We are so grateful to those
who sent food, flowers and those who sat
with us. Thanks to our Lady of the Way
Hospital, the nurses, the ambulance
drtver. Special thanks to the singers, and
members of the Hueysville Church of
Christ and Brother Cecil Sherman you
all did so much to help us. Our love and
appreciation to all and the Hall Funeral
Home for its kind and efficient service.
CORDELIA AND CHILDREN
NOTICE
Prestonsburg Housing Authority presently has vacancies In
our elderly, one-bedroom apanments at Dixie. If you are elderly, disabled, or handicapped,
with Income between $6,450
and $11,000, you may qualify
for these apartments. If Interested, please come to our
Green Acres office or Call
886-2717 for more Information.
2-22-3t.
• KENAMETAL DRILL • DRILL STEM ADAPTORS
• DRILL SHAFTS • 3 POLE BREAKERS
• BEARCAT MINING TI-RES
Dawn Rowe
John Wohlford
Participating in a spelling match is an honor, contenders were told in the
Martin Elementary spelling arena. Demonstrating that spelling is not an archaic skill, eleven students, ranging from grades four through eight, vied for
the school championship in a spirited contest of fifty-one rounds. In the final
stage, correctly spelled words bounced back and forth between the two remaining contestants until John Wohlford tripped on the word 'videotape.' Dawn
Rowe then spelled both 'videotape' and 'newscast' to become the 1984 Martin
Ebmentary Spelling Champion.
Other contestants and their misspelled words were : Christy Kidd, 'carrying'; Melissa Howard, 'annoy'; William Wohlford, 'across'; Chris Kidd, 'approach'; Melanie Stokley, 'traffic'; Chuck Lafferty, 'you'd'; Ann Castle, 'Ave.';
Beverly Conley, 'grinned'; and Reva Hale, 'windy.'
The eighth-grader spelling champion, Dawn Rowe, is the daughter of James
and Judy Rowe, of Martin, and will represent the Martin Elementary School
in the county spelling match to be held later this month. The runner-up, seventh
grader John Wohlford, is the son of John and Rose Wohlford, also of Martin.
The spelling match was conducted by reading teachers Virginia Martin,
Bonita Compton, and Pam Wohlford.
Ball To Lead Revival
The Rev. Ronald L. Ball, the Prestonsburg native who heads the Ron Ball
Evangelistic Assn'n, Inc., of Fayetteville, Ga., will conduct a spring revival,
the first week of April, at the First Baptist Church, Cynthiana, Ky., of which the
Rev. W.O. Jaggers, formerly of Prestonsburg, is pastor.
In addition to his national evangelistic
work, the Reverend Ball is involved in
the In Touch Ministry, a television program, of the First Baptist Church in
Atlanta. He is the son of Mr. and Mrs.
Printess L. Ball, of Prestonsburg.
CARD OF THANKS
The family of John F. Wallace wishes
to express their appreciation and thanks
to all who sent food and flowers during
this time of sorrow. Thanks to the doctors and nurses at St. Mary's Hospital_
for their efficiency, to the ministers for
their comtortmg words, and to the Hall
Funeral Home for its kind and courteous
service.
ANNOUNCE BIRTH
Mr. and Mrs. Jeffrey G. Hall, of Allen,
announce the birth of a daughter,
Rachell Taryn, Tuesday, January 10, at
the Methodist Hospital in Pikeville.
Maternal grandparents are Mr. and
Mrs. Dalton Ray Conley, of Allen, and
paternal grandparents are Mr. and Mrs.
James Riley Hall, of Allen.
Maternal great-grandparents are Mr.
and Mrs. Bill Nelson, of Banner, and
Mrs. Minnie Conley, of Garrett, and the
late Crit Conley, paternal greatgrandparents are Riley Hall, of Allen
and the late Florence Hall, and Mr. and
Mrs. Estill Music, of the Abbott Road,
Prestosburg.
FOR SALE
CX500 MOTORCYCLE, UKE NEW; OE.
ELECTRIC DRYER; 26' TRAVEL TRAILER.
SELF-CONTAINED, WILL SACRIFICE.
874-2832
2-22-2!-pd.
• POLY AIR
AND PVC
BRAniCE
CLOTH
• COMPLETE
LINE OF
REX PILLOW
BLOCK
BEARING
1 1/4"
THRU
4 7/16'~
• COMPLETE
LINE OF
DIFFERINTIALS FOR
S&S,
ELKHORN,
AND S&H
SCOOPS.
• ALL PARTS
FOR S&H
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PICTURED: 5 FOOT EXHAUST FAN.
• DIST. FOR ALL CLICK'S WELDING .PRODUCTS • WE STOCK
FROM 5 HP TO 100 HP BALDOR MOTORS, FAN COOLED.
• EXHAUST FANS-4 n., 5 n., 6 n., 8 n. • POWDER CARS·
• UNDERGROUND STORAGES • MAN DOORS • ANCHOR PINS
• 500 GAL. WATER TANK • WATER CARS • ROCK DUSTER
• LINE-A-BED PRODUCTS • RUBBER QUEEN BED MATS
I
�Wednesday, February 22, 1984
Betty Mitchell Carroll
Mrs. Betty Mitchell Carroll, 72, of
Grethel, died Sah.u day at the home of
her daughter, Mrs. Cora Tussey, of Martin, e.ft< r an extended illness.
She was a daughter of the late Jim and
Martha Younce Mitchell, and was born
in Floyd county, June 11, 1911.
In addition to her daughter, she is survived by her husband, Joe Carroll; four
sons, Randy Carroll, of Teaberry,
Lowell (Tommy> Carroll, of Grethel,
Hesa Ray Carroll, of Clarksville, Ohio,
and Leonard Carroll, of Waverly, Oh.;
two additional daughters, Mrs. Lucille
Perry, Lorraine, Oh. and Mrs. Glenda
Thompson, of Grethel ; a brother, Ola
Mitchell, of Drift; a sister, Mrs. Goldia
Marie Mynhire, of Martin, and 15 grand
children
Funeral services were conducted
Tuesday at 1 p.m. at the Hall Funeral
Home Chapel with the Rev. L.P. Tussey
officiating. Burial was made in the Mitchell cemetery at Grethel.
Minnie Vanderpool Hall
Mrs. Minnie Vanderpool Hall, 82, of
McDowell, died Tuesday at the
McDowell Appalachian Regional
Hospital following a long illness.
Preceded in death by her husband,
Willie Hall, she wa s a daughter of the
late Jake and Nevada Vanderpool, and
was born November 19, 1901 at Hueysville.
Survtvors include two sons, William
Peco and Vernon Hall, bot h of
McDowell; two daughters, Vada Taylor,
of Ashland, and Ada Russo, of Louisville, five grandchildren, and three
great-grandchildren.
Regular Baptist ministers officiated
a t funeral services conducted at 11 a .m .
Friday at the Old Beaver Regular Baptist Chut·ch at Minnie. Burial was made
in the Lucy Hall cemetery at McDowe ll
under direction of the Hall Funeral
Home.
Mrs. Gilda Belle Crager
Mrs. Gilda Belle Crager, 46, of Wayland. died Friday at the McDowell Appalachian Regional Hospital following a
long illness.
A daughter of Mrs. Gladys Bentley
Gray, of Wayland, and the la te Josh
Gray, she was born April 15, 1936 at
Prestonsburg. She was preceded in
death by her husband, Garner Crager in
1981.
Survivors include her son, James
Garner Crager, of Wayland ; two
daughters, Terri Lynn J ohnson and
Tammy Gray Thornsbury, both of
Wayland; five brothers, J ack Gray, of
Monroe, Mich., Darwin Gray, of Dallas,
Tex., Buddy Gray, of Richmond, Va. ,
J osh Gray, J r ., of Estill, a nd Jimmy Joe
Gray, of Wayla nd ; a sister, Mrs. Stella
Wells, of Cardington, Ohio.
F uneral services were conducted Sunday at 11 a.m. at the Wayland United
Methodist Church with the Revs. Mabry
Holbrook and Weyman McGuire officiating. Burial was made in the Davidson Memorial Gardens under direction
of the Ha ll Funeral Home.
It takes the average person six-tenths
of a second to walk one pace.
The Floyd County Times
Obituaries
Willie Bentley
Willie Bentley, 77, of Langley, died
last Wednesday, February 15, at the
Highlands Regional Medical Center
following a long illness.
A retired miner, he was preceded in
death by his wife, Mrs. Nona Bradley
Bentley, and was born October 18, 1906
at Langley, a son of the late Starlin Gihson and Dulsena Bentley.
Surviving are four son:., J£arl Bentley,
of Martin, C::~rl and Lawrence Bentley,
both of Langley, and Alton Bentley, of
Kansas City, Kansas; two daughters,
Mrs. Helen Boyd, of Langley, and Mrs.
Ada Martin, of Hueysville, 17 grandchildren, and 15 great-grandchildren.
Funeral services were conducted at 11
a .m ., Friday, at the Hall Funeral Home
Chapel with Regular Baptist ministers
officiating. Burial was made in the family cemetery at Wilson Creek at Langley.
Robert Fraley
Robert Fraley, 71, of Ulysses, died
Monday at the Humana Hospital in
Louisa, following a long illness.
A son of the late Will and Laura Owens
Fraley, he was born February 2, 1913 in
Prestonsburg. A retired coal miner, he
was a member of the U.M.W.A. and also
a member of the Free Will Baptist
Church.
He is survived by his wife, Mrs. Susie
Shannon Fraley ; two daughters, Mrs.
Deloris Betsinger, of Ft. Worth, Texas,
and Mrs . Bobbie Hall, of Whitter,
California ; a brother, Jake Fraley, of
Drift ; four sisters, Mrs. Lora Preston,
Mrs. Edith Simpson, and Mrs. Verna
Price, all of Drift, and Mrs. Ethel Simpson, of Louisa, and seven grandchildren
Funeral services will be conducted at
1 p.m . Friday at the Drift Pentecostal
Church. Burial will be made in the Drift
cemetery under direction of the Hall
F uneral Home.
Vis itation may be made at the church
after 11 a .m . today (Wednesday).
Elmer Blankenship
Elmer Blankenship, 61, of Detroit ,
Michigan, formerly of Topmost, died
Friday at the Oakwood Hospital in Dearborn, Michigan, following a long illness.
He was born September 18, 1922 in
Jenkins, a son of Mrs. Betty Honeycutt
Blankenship, of Topmost, and the late
Bert Blankenship, and was a retired 'n
year employee of the Ford Motor
Company.
In addition to his mother, he is survived by his wife, Mrs. Reba Johnson
Blankenship; a son, Lester Blankenship,
of Belleville, Mich. ; three daughters,
Mrs. Wilma Coleman, Mrs. Carol Wyatt,
and Mrs. Brenda Kay Pace, all of
Detroit ; a brother, Daniel B. Blankenship, of Brighton, Michigan, and 13
grandchildren.
Funeral services were conducted at 10
a.m. Tuesday at the Providence Regular
Baptist Church at Dry Creek with
ministers, Andy Bates, and Bill Hall officiating. Burial was made in the Greasy
cemetery at Carr Creek under direction
of the Hall Funeral Home.
Mary Sparks Rose
SANDY VALLEY
MONUMENT
lr BUILDING STONE CO., Inc.
874-2273 • ALLEN, KY.
"THE AIIEA'S OLDEST ESTABUSHED_
I/IONUIIIENT RIII/I."
BEST QUAUTY MEMORIALS
QUICK, EFACIENT SERVICE
AND INSTAUAnON
SEE OUR LARGE DISPLAY OF
COLORED lr GRAY GRANITES
LOCATED ON OLD U.S. 23
IN NEW ALLEN
3-t!
Mrs. Mary Sparks Rose, 83, of Tekonsha, Mich., formerly of this county, died
last Thursday in Albion, Mich., following an extended illness.
Born in Magoffin county, June 14,
1900, she was a daughter of the late Handy and Jane Miller Holbrook. She was
twice married1 first to Millard Sparks,
and later to Ben Roe, who is also
deceased.
She is survived by two sons, Floyd
Sparks, of Portsmouth, 0 ., and Abe
Sparks, of Prestonsburg; three daughters, Mrs. Jane Prater, of Tekonsha,
Mich. , Mrs. Guree Prater and Mrs.
Zellere Dillion, both of Homer, Mich. ;
two sisters, Mrs. Gracie Adams, of Albion, Mich., and Mrs. Lucy Shepherd
Slone, of Litchfield, Michigan.
Funeral services were conducted
yesterday (Tuesday) at 11 a .m . at the
Chestnut Grove United Baptist Church
on the Middle Creek Road by Elders Don
Neeley, Delmer Stanley, and Wallace
Calhoun. Burial was made in the Chestnut Grove cemetery under direction of
the Floyd Funeral Home.
CARD OF THANKS
The famil y of James Allen Caldwell wishes to express our sincere thanks to our many friends, family and neighbors for the prayers, food, cards, flowers
and visits during the illness and death of our loved
one.
May God Bless you all.
Verna and Children
CARTER FUNERAL HOME
47 SOm LAIE DRIVE • PRESTONSBURG
I
Phone 886-2774
Paul Ross
Paul Ross, 69, of Prestonsburg, died
Thursday at the Highlands Regional
Medical Center following a long illness.
A retired miner with the Island Creek
Coal Company, he was a member of the
U. W.M.A. and the Church of God of Prophecy at Hi Hat. He was born December
26, 1914 in Van Lear and was a son of the
la te Levi and Daisy Spurlock Ross.
Survivors include his wife, Mrs.
Wilma Justice Ross ; three sons, J.C.
and Michael Ross, both of Plataka,
Florida, and Ledford Ross, of Hi Hat;
two daughters, Mrs. Stella Jones, of
Prestonsburg and Mrs. Betty Joe Riley,
of Arcadia, Fla.; a brother, -Bill Ross, of
Killeen, Texas; three sisters, Mrs.
Lorena Parker, and Mrs. Mary Marsh,
both of Hi Hat, and Mrs. Blanche
Honeycutt, of Phoenix, Arizona, and 13
grandchildren.
Rev. Don Fraley, Jr., officiated at
funeral services conducted at 1 p .m .
Sunday at the Church of God of Prophecy. Burial was made in the Newman
cemetery at Hi Hat under direction of
the Hall Funeral Home.
Norman Gearheart
Norman Gearheart, 45, of LaPorte, Indiana , formerly of Hueysville, died
February 14 at his home following an apparent heart attack.
Born September 24, 1938 at Hueysville,
he was a son of the late Will and Ada
Shipman Gearheart. He was a construction worker and a veteran of the United
States Army.
He is survived by his wife, Mrs. Evonda Lawson Gearheart; a son, Todd
Bradley Gearheart, of LaPorte; three
brothers, Edward and Roy Gearheart,
both of LaPorte, and Claude Gearheart,
of Hueysville ; two sisters, Mrs.
Katherine Howard, of Frankfort, and
Mrs. Sue Reffitt, of Hueysville.
The Rev. Cecil Sherman officiated at
funeral services conducted Saturday at
11 a.m. at the Hall Funeral Home
Chapel. Burial was made in the
Gearheart cemetery at Hueysville.
Section Two, Paae Two
Mrs. Polly Tackett
Funeral services were conducted at 11
a .m., Saturday, at the Clear Creek
United Baptist Church, at Hi Hat for
Mrs. Polly Tackett, 76, of Hi Hat. Mrs .
Tackett died Thursday at the Riverview
Manor Nursing Home following a short
illness.
She was born AprilS, 1907, a daughter
of the late Melvin and Rachel Reynolds
Slone, and was preceded in death by her
husband, William Jay Tackett.
She is survived by four half-sisters,
Mrs. Lucreasey Slone, of Ligon, Mrs .
Donna Fancher, of Columbus, Oh., Mrs.
Ary Caudill, of London, Ky., and Mrs.
Oma Fugate, of Louisa; a niece and two
nephews.
Ministers of the church officiated and
burial was made in the John Reynolds
cemetery at Hi Hat under direction of
the Hall Funeral Home.
DENTAL TIPS
Dr. H.G. Salisbury ·
RICHMOND PWA,
PRESTONSBURG
PHONE 888-2876
Q. What are the symptoms of periodontal disease?
A. Periodontal disease has four main stages of progression. Stage 11-plaque and calculus accumulate, causing
inflammation at the gum line. Stage 12-the inflammation or irritation causes gums to swell and bleed easily.
Either of these first two states is a "red alert" that something is not right; it's tim~ to see your dentist.
If you ignore these, Stage 13 is the heavy build-up of
calculus and plaque. Gums recede around the teeth still
further, periodontal pockets form between gums and
teeth, and the disease infects the bone. This is called
"periondontosis." Stage 114 (pyorrhea) occurs when most
of the bone support for the teeth is destroyed and the remaining teeth fall out or must be extracted.
James C. Stamper
Abe Shepherd
Norman A. Chrisman, Sr., who served as state purchasing commissioner
under Governor Ruby Laffoon from
1933-1937, died Wednesday, February 8,
at Mountain Manor Nursing Home in
Pikeville. He was 89 years old.
A lifelong Democrat, Chrisman served as Laffoon's Pike County campaign
chairman and was a Pike County delegate to four state Democratic conventions. He also served on Laffoon's commission to reorganize the executive
branch of state government and was a
member of the first personnel board of
the Kentucky State Police.
A native of Pottertown, Calloway
county, Chrisman was born November
17, 1894, a son of the late Newton L. and
Fannie Outland Chrisman. He was
preceded in death by his wife, Lorraine
Bowles Chrisman.
He attended Vanderbilt University
and worked with his father in the
timbering business in Calloway and
Marshall counties and became inspector of purchases for the state Board of
Control in 1915. A veteran of World War
I, Chrisman joined McKinney Steel
Company in Pike county after his
military service and later was named
manager and secretary-treasurer of
Pikeville Wholesale Grocery, a position
he held for 10 years.
He was a member of the Pikeville College board of trustees for 40 years, serving as college treasurer, chairman of
the board and, in 1937, acting president
of the institution. In recognition of his
long service, the college awarded him an
honorary Doctor of Humanities degree
in 1971.
Chrisman was also president emeritus
and a past director of the First National
Bank of Pikeville; a charter member
and third president of the Pikeville
Rofary"Club, and a member of the board
of directors of the Kentucky Mountain
Laurel Festival Association.
He was the fourth president and one
of the incorporators of the Kentucky
Chamber of Commerce and served for
a number of years on its budget and
finance committees. In addition, he was
president of the Pike County Chamber
of Commerce for three years.
In 193'1 he organized Chrisman Insurance Agency, Inc. in Pikeville. He
served as president of the Kentucky
Association of Insurance Agents and
was a member of the executive committee of the National Association of Insurance Agents.
He was a member of the First Presbyterian Church of Pikeville where he
served as elder, trustee and church
treasurer.
Survivors include two sons, Charles B.
Chrisman, of Pikeville, and Norman A.
Chrisman, Jr., of Lexington; a sister,
Mrs. Raymond Carter, of Mayfield;
three grandchildren and five
great-grandchildren.
Funeral services were conducted
Saturday, February 11, at the First
Presbyterian Church, Pikeville, with the
Rev. Eddie Grigsby officiating. Burial
was made in Johnson Memorial Park,
Yorktown, under direction of the J .W.
Call and Son Funeral Home.
Abe Shepherd, 89, of David, died Tuesday, February 14, at the Mountain
Manor Nursing Home in Pikeville
following an extended illness.
Born March 28, 1894 at Goodloe, he
was a son of the late Bryson and Nannie Moore Shepherd. He was a farmer
and was a veteran of World War I.
Surviving him are two brothers, Brice
and Dewey Shepherd, both of David, and
a sister, Mrs. Ora Lee Wireman, of Prestonsburg.
Revs. Ashland and Richmond Shepherd officiated at the funeral services
a nd Chapter 18, D.A.V., performed
graveside rites. Burial was made in the
Dewey Shepherd cemetery on the Open
Fork of Middle Creek under direction of
e Carter Funeral Home.
·~
WATCH FOR THESE SYMPTOMS
James C. Stamper, 87, of Pikeville,
died last Thursday at the Mountain
Manor Nursing Home, there.
A native of Knott county, he was born
December 30, 1896, a son of the late
Marion and Martha Ann Stewart Stamper. He was a retired carpenter and was
a member of the Regular Primitive Baptist Church. His wife, Ruthana Ritchie
Stamper, preceded him in death.
He is survived by four sons, Tom
Stamper, of Dearborn, Mich., Claude
Stamper, of Pikeville, James Stamper,
of Dayton, 0., and Jack Stamper, of
Louisville; four daughters, Marie Campbell, of Goshen, 0 ., Evi)ee Neeley, of
Prestonsburg, Jessie Gibson, of
LaGrange, and Marthana Combs, of
New Richmond, 0 ., and one brother,
Hiram Stamper, of Hindman. Thirtyfive grandchildren and six great-grandchildren also survive him.
Funeral services were conducted at 11
a.m., Sunday, at the J .W. Call & Son
Funeral Home in Pikeville, and burial
was made in the Stamper cemetery,
there.
Norman A. Chrisman, Sr.
CARD OF THANKS
Upon the death of our loved one, Bennie Lafferty, it is with heartfelt thanks
we wish to acknowledge the kindness of
all those who sent flowers and food, the
Allen United Methodist Church for the
·use of the church for the funeral services, Deliverance for their beautiful
message in song, Dr. C.T. Pinkston and
Rev. Phillip Robinson for their comforting messages, the pallbearers, Virgil
Conn for directing traffic, Hall f .meral
Home for its efficient services and all
who prayed for us! Sincerely, Wife,
Gretchen Lafferty; son, Bennie Lafferty and his family, and, sister, Tincy
Crisp.
•
NOTICE
-
The City of Prestonsburg Is considerIng Implementing an out-of-town fire subscription service for residents of the county within five (5) road miles of the main
fire station In Prestonsburg. This service
means that county residents would pay
a set fee bi-annually for fire protection
f.rom the City of Prestonsburg, with the
city mini-pumper. This, of course would
lower the fire Insurance rates of the
subscribers. If you are Interested In
subscribing to this proposed service,
please fill out the form below and mall
It to the City Administrator, P.O. Box 31,
Prestonsburg, Ky. 41853 by March 7,
1984.
.
.
:·-------~-----------------·
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SURVEY
:
I
IN APPRECIATION
The family of Leonard Anderson
wishes to thank all of those who were so
kind and considerate during our time of
grief. We want to thank those who sent
food, flowers, and those that gave donations. We especially want to thank the
First Baptist Church and all the stores
that donated and also the Hall Funeral
Home for being so kind. All your kindnesses were greatly appreciated.
THE ANDERSON FAMILY
America's first aerial photograph was
taken from a balloon over Boston in 1860.
Taken by J .W. Black, it was entitled
"Boston as the Eagle and the Wild Goose
See It."
I
I
I NAME
I
1
I
I ADDRESS
I
I
I
I PHONE
I
I I would be willing to pay $
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
per month for fire pro- I
: tectlon. Approximately how many miles do you live from the main I
1 fire station In Prestonsburg.
. ?
;
·--·----------------------·
ABSOLUTE AUaiON- MOBILE HOME PARK
SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 25, 1:30 P.M.
We have been Instructed to sell on
above date and time this choice
property located just off Highway
480 In Camargo, KY-Contalnlng
2.839 acres and better known as
the LECYNTO LODGE mobile home
park.
---------EStHL~e--------
--~---------------------
455.60'
Area 2.839 Acres
376.07'
G. Byrd
107.42 BobbY Ballard
This property fronts on Estes Lane 455.80 teet and at present time has 18 mobile
home spaces with hook ups. Once the new sewer system In the Camargo area Is operatlo.nal this property could be hooked on to It and by doing so would Increase unit spac·
lng from 18 to 24 units.
This choice mobile home park property has excellent accessibility and possible tor
future and other useages or this property Is unlimited.
With the forthcoming development of the oil shale Industry In Montgomery County
(near Means, KY) this mobile home park could become a "GOLD MINE".
We Invite your lnspectlon......Look It over...... and make arrangements to be at this
auction.
Excellent terms will be offered as follows:
Minimum 10" down payment-balance amortized over 30 years with balloon payment at end of 5 years-Interest on balance of 12%" with right to pay off balance In
lull at any time without added Interest or penalty.
To get to the auction take Highway 460 to Camargo at the Family Inn Restaurant
turn on Estes Lane approximate 100 teet to the property.
For further Information call the selling agent:
THIS AUCTION IS CONDUCTED BY J. 0. BRIGGS REAL ESTATE
AND KENTUCKY LAND AUCTION INC.
STANTON, KY., 40380.
(606) 883-2519.
J. 0. Brlggs-C.A.I. Auctioneer-Broker
Bill Patrick-Auctioneer-Broker
Pat Snyder-Auctioneer-Broker
�Wednesday, FebnJary 22, 1984
IN APPRECIATION'
The family of Susie Adkins wishes to
thank all of those who were so kind and
considerate during our time of grief. We
want to tllank those who sent flowers
and gifts of love. We especially want to
thank the Regular Baptist ministers and
the Hall Funeral Home for being so kind.
. . your kindnesses were greatly appreciated.
THE FAMILY
1st Church of God
Welcomes New Pastor
NOTICE OF
PUBLIC HEARING
Under the Land and Water Conservation Fund Act of 1965 (Public Law 88-578)
citizens are afforded the opportunity to
• xpress their views concerning the
recreational needs of their community.
To provide a forum for discussion, an
open meeting is being held on February
29, 1984, at 10:00 at the Floyd County
Courthouse Annex Conference, in Prestonsburg, Kentucky sponsored by the
Floyd County Fiscal court. The specific
purpose of this meeting is to discuss improvement of recreational facilities of
the Left Beaver District Park, at Min.nie, Kentucky.
Anyone with a significant supporting
or opposing view is invited to voice that
opinion at this meeting or in writing to:
Land and Water Conservation Fund Program, Department of Local Government, 2nd Floor, Capital Plaza Tower,
Frankfort, Kentucky 40601 within two
weeks of the date of the meeting.
lt.
•
NOTICE OF
INTENTION TO MINE
Pursuant to Two-Acre-or-Less
Application Number 836-0087
In accordance with the provisions of
KRS 360.055, notice is hereby given Goble Mining, Inc., P.O. Box 188, Hager
Hill, Kentucky 41222, has filed an application for a permit for a surface coal
mining and reclamation operation of approximately 2.0 acres located :Y4 miles
north of Banner, Kentucky in Floyd
county.
•
The proposed operation is approximately % miles north from Daniels
Creek Rd. junction with US 23 and
located lf4 miles north of Levisa Fork of
Big Sandy. The latitude is 37° 36' 48". The
longitude is 82° 42' 53". The surface area
is owned by Fitzpatrick Trust.
The proposed operation is located on
the Harold U.S.G.S. 71,2 minute quadrangle map. The operation will use the contour strip method of mining.
The application has been filed for
.public inspection at the Department for
Surface Mining Reclamation and Enforcement's Prestonsburg Regional Office, 503 South Lake Drive, Prestonsburg, Kentucky 41653. Written comments, objections, or requests for a permit conference must be filed with the
Regional Administrator of the Prestonsburg Regional Office, 503 South Lake
Drive, Prestonsburg, Ker.tucky 41653.
This is the final advertisement of the
. application; all comments, objections,
or request for a permit conference must
be received within thirty (30) days of today's date.
1t.
Subscription
Rates Per Year
In Floyd County, $8.00
Elsewhere ln .Kentucky, $10
Outside Kentuc\ty, $12.50
Please note expiration da\e
opposite your name on wrapper or on yo~r co.,Y of The
Tim... Becau. . of Increased
malllna cost•, notices ot
subscription 'expiration
no
lonaer
mailed
to
are
subacrlbera.
Subscriptions "'' be mailed to:
The F1oyd County Times
Box391
Preatonsbura, y. 41653
You Are Invited
The Rev. Kevin Collins and his wife,
Joyce, are being welcomed to the community, here, where he is the new pastor
of the First Church of God on University Drive. Both are natives of Greeneville, Tenn., and come here from
Houston, Texas.
A children's church has been initiated
at the church and a youth program is being planned. In addition, the Rev. Collins said, we are planning in the near
future to begin a bus ministry which will
benefit the church grea'tly. We are excited about the future growth of the
church and pleased to have the opportunity to be here in Prestonsburg.
DAY HOMEMAKERS MEET
Members of the Prestonsburg Day
Homemakers met last Tuesday afternoon at Fellowship Hall of the First
United Methodist Church, with the president, Mrs. Eleanor Horn, presiding. The
devotionals were given by Mrs. Lucy
Regan, who read a Bible passage for
each month of the year, and commented
~riefly on these passages.
It was announced that Mrs. Margaret
Alley, a member, and Mrs. Julia
Stephens, a former member, were ill
and would be remembered with cards
and telephone calls.
The program, "Consumer Protection," was presented by Mrs. Eleanor
Horn and Mrs. Mary Sue Moore, and
pamphlets on this topic were given to
members.
A report on the American Association
·of Retired Persons was given by Mrs.
Dorothy Osborne.
Following the meeting, Mesdames
May K. Roberts, Myrtle Allen and Docia
Woods served sweetheart salad, Valentine candies, coffee and tea to Frances
Pitts, Eleanor Horn, Dorothy Stover,
Mabel Donahoe, Alice Harris, Phyllis
Herrick, Hope Whitten, Judy Kittle,
Mary Sue Moore, Dolly Pettrey, Ellen
Messer, Mary Jane Brown, Rebecca
Vaughan, Minnie Grace Sutherland,
Fannie Runnels, Jane Wallace, Ann
Alley, Donna Culpepper, Barbara
Dawson, Gladys Blackburn, Clara Bradbury, Rebecca Rasnick, Lucy Regan,
Dorothy Osborne, Ruth Francis, Otela
Smiley, and Becky Short.
Hostesses for the next meeting, which
will be at the same place, March 13 at
1 p.m., will be Mesdames otelia Smiley,
Dorothy Stover and Barbara Dawson.
CARD OF THANKS
The family of Rhoda Jones would like
to take this opportunity to thank everyone for their help in the loss of our loved one: those who sent food and flowers,
all the neighbors of Lower Burton, or
those who just spoke comforting words.
We deeply appreciate you all. A special
thanks to the Regular Baptist ministers
and to the Hall Funeral Home for being
so kind.
THE FAMILY
CITY OF WHEELWRIGHT
PUBLIC NOTICE
Under the Land and Water Conservation Fund Act of 1965 <Public Law'
88-578), citizens are afforded the opportunity to express their views concerning
the recreational needs of their community. To provide a forum for discussion, an
open meeting is being held on February
29th, at 11 a .m . at City Hall, in Wheelwright, Ky. sponsored by City of Wheelwright. The specific purpose of this
meeting is to discuss proposed renova_tion of the Whetlwright Community
Center building.
Anyone with a significant supporting
or opposing view is invited to voice that
opinion at this meeting or in writing to:
Land and Water Conservation Fund Program, Department of Local Government, 2nd Floor, Capital Plaza Tower,
Frankfort, Kentucky 40601 within two
weeks of the date of this meeting. lt.
It wasn't until 1863 that Americans
started to take drugs in commercially
made pills. Jacob Dunton, a Philadelphia wholesale druggist, originated the
machine.
Ncrth Lake Drive
WORSHIP SERVICE
Church School 10:00 a.m.
Morning Worship 11:15 a.m.
FIRST ASSEMBLY
OF GOD
West Presto•'-&. Ky.
WADE MARTIN HUGHES
Pastor
Sunday School.
.9:45a.m .
II a.m .
Morning Wo;:ship
Evening Worship. . .
7 p.m .
Wednesday Prayer Study 7 p.m .
Martin United
Methodist Church
7 p.m., Sunday, Feb. 26
Pastor, Elder Douglas Burkett
Asst. Pastor Clyde Bowling
SINfJINfJ BY
The Deliverance
12·14-tf.
SPECIAL
SPEAKERS
Southem
I
I
ASSEMBLY OF Goo·
CHURCHES
• Martin
• Prestonsburg
• Pikeville
Sunday School. .
..
Morning Worship.. . .
Evening Worship .
.
Wednesday Worship . . . .
ZION
DELIVERANCE
TABERNACLE
10 a.m .
11 a.m.
7 p.m.
7 p.m.
Taylor L. Biggs. Pastor
Phont>: KS6-RO!I7
SUNDAY
Sunday School .... .. . .... 10 a.m.
Worship Service . ... ... .. 11 a.m.
Evening Service .. . ... . ... 6 p.m.
WEDNESDAY
Prayer Meeting . . ....... 7 p.m.
CLIFFORD H. AUSTIN, Pastor
....;,.~e · ~~-
FIRST
UNITED
METHODIST
CHURCH
60 So. Arnold Ave., Prestonsburg
WAYLAND, KENTUCKY
Sunday School 11 a.m.
Evening Worship 7 p.m.
Wednesday Prayer Service 7 p.m.
Saturday Evening Worship 7 p.m.
Ada Mosley, Pastor
Everyone Welcome.
Dr. Ted Nicholas, MinisterSunday School ... . . .. . .. 9:45
~orning Worship . ..... 11:00
Junior and Senior UMYF2:30
Rhythmic Choir . .. .. . ... 4: 30
Wesley Bell Choir .. . . . . 5:15
Evening Service . ..... . .7:00
A CHRISTIAN WELCOME
AWAITS YOU.
All The Earth Shall Worship Thee. 12•14-tf.
EPISCOPAL
.
lcDowell, Ky.
AT THE
Highland Avenue
Freewill Baptist
Church
SUN., WDOC AM-ll:OOs.zo:tt
r B•ptist
FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH
THIS SUNDAY
"The Church Where Exciting
Things Are Happening"
Pastor
REy. TIMOTHY D. JESSEN
Pastor
Sunday School ... 10:00 a.m.
Morning Worship .... 11 a.m.
Evening Worship .. 6:00 p.m.
Prayer Meeting
,Thursday ...... 6:30p.m.
COME TO
710 llllile An.,
Prestonsbur&, Ky.
SUNDAY SCHOOL
10:45 A.M.
Auxier Freewill
Baptist Church
SPECIAL MUSIC &
BLESSINGS FOR YOU
9:30A.M.
Sunday School
9:45a .m.
Morning Worship
. 11 a.m
Evening Worship ....... .. 1 p.m.
Wednesday
·
Prayer Meeting ........ 7 p.m.
H. Bailey Sadler. Pastor
Visitors Expected
7·21-tf.
J
\V
COME
WORSHIP
WITH US
The First Church of Gad
Ulliwenity Dr., PrestoiiSbwg, Ky.
KEVIN COU.INS. Pastor
AT
CHURCH
SUNDAY:
Sunday School
Morning Worship
Evening Service
TUESDAY :
Prayer Encounter
WEDNESDAY:
Prayer Service. .
fft.j~~
lt:PISC.'OP>\1.1
PRESTOII:SRl'R(;, KENTlTK\'
416.~:1
SUIIDAYS
9:45 u.-CIIIrck
SckMI ~ lillie Class
11 u.-IIDiy C...nit•
. . 9:45p.m.
10:45 a.m.
6:00p.m.
7:00a .m .
.7:00p.m.
WDOC-AM
2:00p.m. Sundays
EVERYONE WELCOME
James Ellis
WAYLAND
UNITED
METHODIST
CHURCH
Joseph Hordt
Wayne Hemphill
··-
~pu'Llock f?ib~
Cku'Lck
R.R.#5
~
2-22-lt
FITZPATRICK
FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH ·
West Prestonsburg. Ky.
Across From Clark School
Sunday School . . .10:00 a.m.
Morning Worship
. 11 a.m.
Sun. Evening Worship . 6:00p.m.
!except when school is oull 7:00 p.m.
Wed. BitleStudy.
7:00p.m.
Youth Cllurch for ages 5-10
during Sunday Morning Worship
•NURSERY PROVIDED•
REV. JOHN WOODS, Pastor
Prestonsburg. Kentucky 4165.1
Spurlock Fork of Middl~ Creek
SERVICK'i
Sunday School. . .. .. . . . .
. .. 10:00 a.m.
1 Ctass~s ror all ages 1
Sunday Morning Worship S.rvkt- . 11 : 00 a .m.
Sunday Enning Scrvic~. . . . . ... . 7:00p.m .
Wedntsda.v-Prayt'r and Rlbl~ Stud,v7:00 p.m .
Of Floyd County
Welcome You
St. Theodore. Prestonsburg
7 p.m .. Sat : 1l a .m. Sun.
St Juliana. Martin
5 p.m. Sat.: 9 a .m. Sun
RADIO PROGRAMS
A church with a message
for children of all ages.
Sunday School
9:45a.m
Morning Worship
II a .m
(Nursery Provided 1
Come and grow with us!
Sun.- WMDJ Martm
11 "16 am
Sun . WDOC FM Prestonsburg 11·00 a .m
Wed - wooc Prestonsburg
10:55 a .m
Fn - WRLV Salyersville
7· 50 a .m
Pastor: Fatht>r Ralph Rt>iting
WEYMAN McGUIRE, Pastor
285-3254
:l."i!l-4419
!t:Vt-.:RYONt: IS Al-WAYS WEU'OMt: !
PHII.IPPIANS l : lfi
"HOLDING t'ORTH THt: WORll OF
Dan Heintzelman-Pastor
Box KSO. Martin. Kv . .tlfi49
Parsonage Phone-lR.'i-:144-t
" A Christ Centered (llurch
Built On l..ovt>"
c~~~ tO BE LIKE THE lERIJ.
~OG~'"
·
S~t.t
~\·t,
ACTS 2:1-47
-, C~
PRESTONSBURG
ZfJPc~
CHURCH
OF CHRIST
SOUTH LAKE DRSVE
LORD'S DAY
BIBLE CLASS ......•....•.....•.... 10:00 A.M.
WORSHIP ......•.................. 10:45 A.M.
EVENING WORSHIP ............. 6 P.M. STD. Tl.
7 P.M. D.S.T. nME
WEDNESDAY
BIBLE STUDY .......................... 7 P.M.
RADIO BROADCASi
WPRT MONDAY thru FRIDAY 9:30A.M.
WMDJ SUNDAY 9 A.M.
"Come Let Us Reason Together" Isaiah 1:18
Evangelist Bennie Blankenship 886-3379, 886-6223
LOOKING FOR SOMETHING DIFFERENT?
· PROCLAIMING
NEW TESTAMENT
CHRISTIANITY
MAYTOWN
UNITED
METHODiST
CHURCH
LIFE..:'
1().28-tf.
~~~
CATHOLIC CHURCHES
The growing church for
the growing Christian.
Morning Worship . . 9:30a.m.
. 11:00 a .m.
Sunday School .
. .5:00p.m.
Youth Group .
6;.30p.m.
Evening Worship . .
[1]
No Book but the Bible
No Creed but Cllrist.
No Name but Christian
FIRST CHRISTIAN CHURCH
429 No. Arnold An.
Prestonsburg
Sunday School
Morning Worship
Evening Worship
Wed. Bible Study
Come and grow with us !
tO a .m.
II a .m.
6p .m.
7 p.m
Walt Staudt>. Prt>a<'ht>r
Weyman McGuirt-, Pastor
886-8773
35S-4419
10· 28-lf
i-4-tf.
FIRST .ASSEMBLY OF GOD
Lorie Vannucci, Pastor
Phone 285-3051
Martin, Ky.
Sunday School. . . . .. .. .. 10 a .m .
Children's Church ...... 11 a .m .
Morning Worship .. . . . .. .... 11 a .m .
Youth Worship . . . . . .6p.m .
Evangelistic Service
. 7 p.m .
Family Night
Wednesday. 7 p.m.
Attend Services At The
For Transportation call 285-3051 or 285-9114
(Little Paint) 1/z mile off Route 1428
Between Prestonsburg & East Point, Where
HIGHLAND AVENUE
FREE WILL BAPTIST CHURCH
"THE DIFFERENCE IS WORTH THE DISTANCE"
SUNDAY SCHOOL .. .... . 10:00 a.m.
MORNING WORSHIP . . . Hl:.t5 a .m.
YOUTH SERVICE . . . ..... 6:00p.m.
EVENING WORSHIP .. .. . 6::10 p.m.
BIBLE STliDY <WED.l . . . 7:00p.m.
Beginning
Sunday, February 26
at 7 p.m.
•
First Presbyterian Church
FIRST CHURCH OF GOD
REVIVAL
COMMUNITY
UNITED
METHODIST
CHURCH
To the
Older citizens are invited to use the
free service of tax counselors, sponsored
by the American Association of Retired
Persons, to prepare 1983 federal and
state tax returns. This service is
available at the Floyd County Library
in Prestonsburg, Tut-sdays and
Thursdays from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m., and
at the First Guaranty Bank in Martin,
Tuesdays and Thursdays from 10 a.m.
to 2 p.m.
You do not need to be a member of
AARP to use this service. Bring your
complete income inf<'rmation for 1983
and tax forms you have received from
federal and state plus copies of your 1982
returns. Councelors will explain and
complete your tax returns for 1983.
ADVERTISEMENT FOR BIDS.
The Floyd County Fi~cal Court at its
regular meeting on February 17, 1984,
authorized the County Judge/Executive
to advertise for bid the next election to
be held in 1984 for the Primary (whether
it be in May or August). Bids should in.lude the following: storing the
machines, transporting the machines to
and from the polls, election school for
precinct workers, setting-up machines,
and service/maintenance on the
machines.
Sealed bids will be received in the
County Judge/Executive's office in the
Courthouse Annex until9:00 a.m. on the
9th day of March 1984. The Court
reserves the right to reject any and all
.bids.
FLOYD COUNTY
JUDGE/EXECUTIVE
John M. Stumbo
2-22-3t.
Tax Filing Help
Open to Seniors
Three
Section Two,
.The Floyd County Times
(Nl JRSF.RY PROVIDF.I>l
Evangelist, Dick Vanhoose
Special singing every night
RADIO BROADCAST
WQHY-FM 95.5
MON.-FRI., 8-8:15 A.M.
ROY L. TIN('HER. Pastor
REV. CLIFFORD AUSTIN, Pastor
2-15·21
Bible Study . • •9:45 a.m.
Morninc Worship . .. 11 a.m.
Evening Worship .. 5:30 p.m.
Mid-Week Prayer Service7 p.m.
FIRST AVENUE, DOWNTOWN PRESTONSBURG
NURSERY PROVIDm AND PLENTY OF PARKING
. c~E
HOPKI"S, PASTOR. MINISTER OF MUSIC, GUS KALOS.
1\: ornlng
St'f'ICt' broadcast
lh·e , 11;15, WQHY F:\t 95.5
�•
The Floyd County Times
Wednesday, February 22, 1984
-Photo by Betty Hyden
-Photo by Betty Hyden
This Rebel shows a little of air superiority as he comes down
with the ball during the Allen Central-Johnson Central clash,
last week.
All for naught, a Harold player goes up for a short jumper
during championship game action against Martin, last Thursday night. Martin won the Floyd County Elementary Tournament final, 62-57.
Yarborough Powers
Ranier-Owned Car
To Daytona Win
I
Photo by Betty Hyden
A TENSE MOMENT was caught in the girls championship
game between the John M. Stumbo Lady Mustangs and the
Martin Purple Flash with both teams showing a lot of determination. The Lady Mustangs won the championship, with a
two-point victory over Martin, 41-39.
Betsy Layne Ups
Record To 22-4
<Stats by Maleta Campbell>
Seeing action last Tuesday and Friday nights, the Betsy Layne Bobcats
defeated McDowell and Pikeville to
bring their record to 22-4, best of all
county teams.
Levi Hamilton was Betsy Layne's
high scorer in the Bobcats' 7<H2 defeat
of McDowell. Tuesday with 13 points.
He was followed closely by Chris Conn
and Brett Meade, both with 12. Jeff
Campbell and Duran Hall had 10 each.
Dwayne Kidd 4, Lester Newsome 3.
and Jimmy Parsons, Patrick McGarey
and Darrin Daniels with 2 each.
For the McDowell Daredevils Jimmy Jones hit for 11 points. Tim
Newsome and Doug Hall 8 each. Bill
England 4, Kip Kidd 3, and David Pack
and Robin Tackett 2 each.
Playing at Pikeville Friday night.
the Bobcats pulled out a tough win.
downing Pikeville's Panthers, 57-55.
Betsy Layne's Levi Hamilton was high
scorer with 18, Jeff Campbell had 17.
Jimmy Parsons 8, Dural Hall and Brett
Meade 5 each, and Dwayne Kidd 4.
, · For Pikeville it was Mark Stumbo
. with 20, Butch Davis 18, Matt Coleman
16 and Jeff Akers 1.
The win at Pikeville was the 2ooth for
the Bobcats' highly successful coach
Junior Newsome and his players
honored him on the occasion with a plaque.
Betsy Layne will t>nd its regular
season play with a Tuesday night game
against Mullins at Mullins, and Friday.
another away game against Virgie.
PHS Avenges Loss
To Magoffin Co.
By BETTY HYDEN
Because it was Homecoming and
because Magoffin county had beaten
the Prestonsburg Blackcats earlier in
the season, P-burg's 86-76 win over the
Hornets was particularly sweet.
Outscoring the Hornets through the
first half. the Blackcats posted a 40-30
lead at halftime and upped their lead to
20 points in the third quarter. But with
an impressive rally, the Magoffin
countians closed the gap to only four
points by the fourth quarter.
The game was very physical as
evidenced by the fact that each team
went to the foul line more than 30
times. Prestonsburg shot 26 of 41 free
throws and Magoffin County had an
impressive 34 of 39. Only Prestonsburg's clutch free throw shooting during the last couple of minutes of play
saved the game from a determined
Homet team.
Kelly Cecil led the scoring for
Prestonsburg with 24 points. followed
by Todd Nairn with 19. Tony Whitaker
18. Marty Minix 12, Gordie Ratliff 9and
Doug Greene with 4 points.
For Magoffin County. Tony Salyers
led all scorers with 29 points Tony
Skaggs had 24. Morris Minix 13. Robbie
Russell 6, and G Conley and T. Reed
with 2 points each.
Prestonsburg 1s 18-5 for the season
while Magoffin County's record dropped to 16-13.
Calling his Hardees-sponsored
Chevy "the most dominating car I've
ever had," Cale Yarborough found
himself for the fourth time in the winner's circle of the prestigious Daytona
500, Sunday.
The car, owned by Prestonsburg
native Harry Hale Ranier and Central
Kentuckian J. T. Lundy, ran exceptionally strong the entire race thanks
to a superior engine courtesy of crew
chief Waddell Wilson , a legend in
NASCAR circles.
Although Owensboro resident Darrell Waltrip led the race as the white
flag fell for the final lap, Yarborough's
last-lap pass of Waltrip was predictable-actually inevitable considering
the awesome power of the Hardee's
Chevy. "A sitting duck," Yarborough
said of Waltrip.
"I knew what would happen," said
Waltrip. "I knew I couldn't pass Cale
from behind (which is why Waltrip
didn't try to get out of the lead
position). H I'm going to get smoked
off, I'm going to be in front when it happens."
Referring to the superiority of his
car, Yarborough said, "I just could run
'em down at any time. And that's very
unusual at a place like this."
Yarborough's dominance at Daytona
was reflected in the slats which saw
him lead 11 different times and a total
of 89 of the 200 laps (next best was
Waltrip. who led only 39-and most of
those simply because Yarborough
chose to remain behind him l.
From the 162nd lap until the 2ooth.
Waltrip led. But when the track went
green after the final caution of the day
on the 183rd lap, Yarborough was right
on his bumper. Given the strength of
the car, did Yarborough consider blowing past Waltrip to see if he could run
away from the entire field. which is
virtually unprecedented at Daytona?
"It was a temptation." Yarborough
said. "On the other hand. I felt like it
was a sure thing being in second. A
bird in the hand is worth two in the
bush."
Allen Central Loses
To Johnson Central
Although Johnson Central won, 71-64,
over Allen Central, the Rebels made
them earn every point in a well-matched
game. After being tied after the first
quarter of play, Johnson Central pulled
ahead at halftime, 36-31, only to have
Allen Central come on strong in the third
quarter, outscoring JCHS, 18-10, and
leading by as many as seven points.
Harry Meek and Roger Fairchild
zeroed in for Johnson Central in the
fourth quarter to tie the game, 50-50,
with six minutes to go. Game's end saw
the Eagles winning by seven-point
margin over a tough team of Rebels.
Harry Meek led both teams in scoring
with 24 points, and Dale Pack led the
Rebels with 18. Also scoring for Allen
Central were Tim Lawson, 14; Craig
Hall, 12; Fred Ridener, and Larry Gibson, 10 points each.
For Johnson Central, Morris Hall had
15 points, Roger Fairchild, Les Trimble,
each 12, and Mike Hall, 8.
-Photo by Laura Cooley
A Blackcat hangs on the rim after dunking one in last Tuesday night's 98-70 win over Pikeville.
ACHS Homecoming
-Photo by Sam Nelson
J .H. Allen Central High School held it's annual Homecoming festivities, January Zl, when a large crowd was in attendance to see the crowning of the Homecoming Queen and her attendants. The representatives were presented to the
audience, escorted by members of the Allen Central Rebel basketball team.
Pictured above are, seated, 1984 Homecoming Queen, Marla Conley, and from left, Fred Ridener, Pam Terry, Stanual
Mullins, Charlotte Patton, Mike Rister, Sha Stumbo, Craig Hall, 1983 Queen, Mary Click, Tim Lawson, Lisa Harris, Dale
Pack, Kelly Mullins, Dan Moore, Gina Slone, and David Green.
Admiral Dewey Boat
Fest Slated in May
•
Martin Boys, Stu·mbo Girls
Grade School Tourney Winners
A committee representing Floyd,
Johnson, Pike and Magoffin counties
Martin Grade School boys and Stummet this week at Martin to plan acbo
Elementa~y girls were winners, last
tivities for the First annual Admiral
Thursday evening, of the Floyd County
Dewey Boat Parade and Festival.
Elementary Basketball Tournament
The festival will be held at Jenny held at the Allen Central Gymnasium.
Wiley State Park, Friday, Saturday and Martin boys won over Harold, 62-57, but
Sunday, May 18, 19, and 20.
A giant parade of boats of all kinds their sister team lost by a nail-biting
will begin at Terry boat dock and pro- two-points to Stumbo, with the final
ceed to the state boat dock near May score 41-39.
Board member Orville Duff presented
Lodge. In addition to the boat parade,
which will be held on Sunday, races winners trophies to the Martin Purple
featuring all classes of boats will be held Flash boys and to the John M. Stumbo
Saturday. Exhibitions of skiing will also Lady Mustangs. Other trophies awardbe a part of the Saturday program. A ed are as follows:
Boys-Runnerup, Harold Red Devils,
special blessing of boats will take place
Semi-Finalists, Prater Creek Cougars
Sunday.
Open house will be held by all the
and Osborne Eagles ; Team free throw,
houseboat owners at the state dock and . Martin with 60%; Individual free throw,
Mike Adkins, of Prestonsburg, with
the public is invited to inspect the boats.
Besides the water activities, there will 77%; Cheerleading, Prestonsburg, first
be a large boat show featuring dealers place, and McDowell, second place.
Girls-Runnerup, Martin Lady Purple
and manufacturers from the Eastern
Kentucky and Lexington areas. New Flashes; Semi-finalists, Betsy Layne
boats, motors and trailers will be on ex- Lady Bobcats and Maytown Lady
hibit. Travel trailers, campers, and vans Wildcats ; Team free throw, Betsy
will also be displayed.
Layne, 52%; Individual free throw DonFishing exhibits and contests, archery na Robinson, of Martin, S4%;
demonstrations and old-fashioned Cheerleading, Clark Elementary, first
firearms will be a part of the festival.
place, and Prestonsburg Elementary,
There will be special entertainment second place.
each day, and contests and eopcerts by
Boys named to the All-Tournament
various groups will enliven the three-day Team were Darren Conn, Nathan
affair.
Shelton, Mike Mullins, Jeff Hughes,
Besides all of the above, there will be Robbie Click, all of Martin· Dale
craft booths and flea market stalls Spurlock, Mack Conn, Nick Sbpleton,
throughout the grounds. Antique cars of all of Harold ; Keith Parsons, and Kevin
all kinds will also be on display .
Spurlock both of Allen ; John Blackburn,
The public is, of course, invited. For of Prestonsburg ; Charles Akers and
additional information contact Mike Ricky Wallen, both of Prater Creek·
Sanders or Rodney Hutchinson at P.O. Stevie Cole and Tommy Jones, both of
Box 1119, Martin. Kentucky 41649 or call Osborne; Terry Howell, of McDowell,
and Todd Duff, of Wayland.
285-9888.
Named to the Girls' All-Tournament
were Michell Hamilton, Tracy
Hall, Sheila Newsome, Tammy Hall,
Sandy Flannery, all of John M. Stumbo;
Teresa Crum, Tammy Meade, and Jennifer Stephens, all of Martin; Evelyn
Case and Susan Jones, both of Betsy
Layne; Becky Rice and Cyrena Rice,
both of Maytown; Vickie Music, of
Clark; Gwen Stegal, of McDowell ; Billie
Johnson, of Osborne; Leslie Derossett,
of Prestonsburg.
T~am
Cats Down Pikeville;
Girls Lose One 55-30
By LAURA COOLEY
The Prestonsburg Black cats
defeated Pikeville last Tuesday night
in a convincing manner by the score of
98-70.
The high-scoring blowout included
three "slam dunks"-two by P-burg.
one by Pikeville to add to the game's
pace.
High scorer for Prestonsburg was
Kelly Cecil with 25. Todd Nairn and
Tony Whitaker were close behind with
22 each. and Marty Minix and Gordie
Ratliff connected for 10 each.
The Ladycats suffered a disappointing loss to Elkhorn ~ity over the past
week by a score of 5~30. Scoring for tht>
Prestonsburg girls were Jean a McKenzie with 12, Lucreasie Reed 8, Melinda
Deerfield 7 and Glenda Shepherd 3.
Camels were brought into Texas in
1856 to transport supplies· to army posts
in desert areas of the Southwest.
•
�•
Wednesday, February 22, 1984
The Floyd County Times
LEAN & MEATY
ORK
STEAKS.
•
$119
LB •
age
COUNTRY STYLE
OPEN 81o 10
EVERY DAY
•
•";
M"' .· .·.
t,.
¥'
..~
l
.-..::\:,;,
<:.
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f
5-Lb.
t
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SALTINES,
FLOUR
c
Bag
••
~· ··__:....
ZESTA
MARTHA WHITE
-..:, ·. <-
99
4-ROLL PKG. COTTONELLE
BATH T-~SUE ........... ..
79c
69
C
HOT CHILiw.rHBEANS.
~~:·
Plain or
Self-Rising
15-0Z. CAN ARMOUR
SCOOITPAPER TOWELS .....
69c
19
SPREAD SMARGARINE ...... $1
$119
MORTON-SAUS. STEAKJSUCED TURKEY/MEATLOAF
CAMPBELL'S
FROZEN DINNER.............
VEGETABLE BEEF SOUP
89c
3/$1
9-LIVES CAT FOOD ..
2l~~~z.
CHERRY PIE FILLING
3~~~z.
FRESH
DRESSED WHITING FISH ... La.
FRESH
PORK NECK BONES ........... :La.
COUNTRY STYLE
PORK SPARE RIBS ............. La.
FRESH
GROUND BEEF ..................... La.
POTATOES
98
79c
C
CHUCK STEAK
$1!Lb~
~1.59
Bag
19
•
•
•
•
$3.69
USAA Award Winner
89C
39c
USDA CHOICE BONELESS
KELLOGG'S CORN FLAKES
•
TREND
LAUNDRY DETERGENT~-
1~~..
,
29
$1 09
FRYING CHICKEN ........... ..... La.
NO. 1 IDAHO
$15 9
$1
$15 9
LB.
ROLLEso & TIED PORK ROAST ....·.La.$1
FRESH CUT UP
6'12-0Z. CAN ALL VARIETIES
21-0Z. CAN THANK YOU
PORK .
SAUSAGE .. .
PH: 478-52
HAROLD, KY.
PRICES EFFECTIVE THRU FEB. 26.
NOT RESPONSIBLE FOR PRINTER'S ERRORS
WE HAVE FEED FOR LIVESTOCK.
WE WELCOME FEDERAL FOOD STAMPS.
Eleventh Birthday
'RALPH'S
TIRE SERVICE
U.S. 23 No., Prestonsburg • 886-8806
Chad Hunter celebrated his eleventh
birthday with a skating party at Archer
Park. He is the son of Earmel and Barbara Hunter, of Honaker. Paternal
grandparents are Arnold and Dixie
Hunter, of Prestonsburg, and maternal
grandparents are Ellis and Goldie
Hunter, of Wellington, Ohio.
The United States Achievement
Academy announced today that Brad
Hall has been named a 1984 United
States National Award winner in
mathematics.
Hall, who attends McDowell High
School was nominated for this National
Award by Freda Burke, teacher. His
name and biography will appear in the
United States Achievement Academy
Official Yearbook, published nationally.
Hall is the son of George and Mary
Ann Hall and his grandparents are Mr.
and Mrs. Cecil Newsome, of Teaberry,
and Triplett Hall and the late Frona
Hall, of Hi Hat.
You Make Us Famous!
·105 North Lake Drive, Near the U.S. 23 Intersection
PHONE 886-1396 PRESTONSBURG
WED~ESDA Y
SPECIAL
Try Our Famous
3 Piece Dinner!
•
• Computer Wheel Balancing
• New Tires (Steel It Glass Belted It Polyester)
• Recaps-Regular lr Radial All Season,
4-Wheel Drive 10 It 11x15
• New BaHerles-36 mo. $39.95 Installed
plus excbange
• Rebuilt BaHerles-90-day warranty $25.00
plus exchange
• Shocks-Lifetime warranty $19.95 each Installed
STRAND I
STRAND It
HELD OVER
HELD OVER
Higll Sdlool
Honor Sllldent
by day.
THIS IS THE STORY
OF A SMALL TOWN
THAT LOST ITS DREAMS,
AND A BIG-CITY KID
WHO BROUGHT
THEM BACK.
Piano Auditions
At Marshall U.
3 pieces of golden brown Famous Recipe
Fried Chicken, mashed potatoes and gravy,
creamy cole slaw and one fresh, hot biscuit.
•
I
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:
~
I
1
•
I
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'' NO COUPON N EEDED"
COUPON
* FAMILY SPECIAL*
* FAMILY SPECIA L*
10-Piece Family Specal
$6!~!4tos
Regular or Mild Spicy
• 10 Pieces of delicious Lee's
Famous Recipe Fried Chicken • 2 Salads of your choice
OFFER EFFECnVE
UNn~ FEBRUARY 21, 1184
105 North Lake Dnve, Near the U.S. 23 Intersection
Prestonsburg
:
i
I
I
I
I
~-----------------------'
The Marshall University Department
of Music has announced auditions for
freshman piano scholarships totalling as
much as $3950 for the 1984-85 academic
year.
The auditions, to be held on the MU
campus Sunday, March 25, 1984, are
open to any high school senior applying
to MU for piano major programs in
either performance or music education.
The scholarships are provided as tuition
waivers for either in-state or out-<>f-state
residents, plus supplemental funds from
the Stella Krimsky Piano Scholarship
Endowment.
Interested persons should write to:
Dr. James Taggart, Department of
Music, Marshall University, Huntington,
WV 25701, or phone the music office at
304-696-3117 for further information or
application forms. Application deadline
is March 16, 1984.
Is on his side.
Her two wodd1 art' about to collidt-.
It's her choice. Her chanCf'. He,. life.
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Showtlmes 7:15-9:30-Sunda Matinee Open 1:00 Start 1:30 over 3:15
.I
�Wednesday,
Febn~ary
The Floyd County Times
22, 1984
Refund Discounting:
A Taxpayer Rip-Off
Each year during tax filing season.
tlwre are individuals. at vanous loca
tions throughout the state. who buy income tax refunds. These individuals are
called "refund discounters" or "refund
buyers" and they offer quick cash in
return for the taxpayer assigning his refund to them This may sound like a good
deal. but the terms are stiff. and there
are other adverse consequences for the
taxpayer who deals with a refund discounter.
Generally. this is the way the transaclwn works: A taxpayer whose tax return
shows that he is entitled to a refund of
say, $300 would have to wait six to eight
weeks to get his refund. dependmg on
when he flies his return with the IRS. So.
instead of waiting. he sells his refund to
a discounter for as little as $180 cash on
the spot.
As part of this deal the address at the
top of the taxpayer's return is changed
so that the refund check will go directly
to the buyer. Also. the taxpayer usually
gives the discounter a power of attorney
to cash the check. or simply signs it over
after the discounter receives it.
The difference between the amount of
the refund. in th1s case $300, and the
amount the discounter paid for it. $180.
JS all profit for the discounter. Discount
rates vary among those who buy refunds. but 40% to 50% is not unusual.
This is a very steep rate to pay for not
waiting the few weeks it takes to get the
full amount of refund
Not only does the taxpayer pay a stiff
price for selling his refund, but there are
adverse consequences from changing
the address on the return. Once the address is changed, all further correspondence from the IRS. including error or
deficiency notices. examination appoint- ·
ment letters. etc .. are sent to the discounter's address. Often this kind of corrspondence is not forwarded to the taxpayer. and he is often unaware of any
action until IRS Collection Division
tracks him down. If the discounter falsely alters the origmal return, the taxpayer is fully liable for any subsequent
deficiency in tax.
Taxpayers should be alert to the
potential problems that they face when
they sell their refunds. The quick cash
may result in tax problems later.
Piggly
SALE DATES:
Prices good February 19
thru February 25., 1984.
• Quantity Rights Reserved
... and to prove
everything you·
those special rE
this week at Pi!
North Lake Drive
Kraft Sharp Cheddar or Mozzarella
~
Shredded
Cheese4 oz. pkg.6 9
Kraft Natural Mild or Medium
Cheddar
Cheesesoz.pkg.612
AMERICAN
PASTEURIZED PROCESS
CHEESE FOOD
Kraft Individually Wrapped Single Sliced
U.S.D.A. Choice
Regular or Deluxe
American
~
Cheesesoz.pka.99
Northern 1-Piy Prints or Assorted Lunch,
13.5" x 6.5..
NapkinSuo pkg.6 9
e
ct.
Kraft Casino Chunk
Vietti
::!c'!~~.s -· • •SfS 1
Armour 3 <: OFF
Mozzarella 8129 P otted
Cheese . a oz. pkg.
Meat ... oz. can2 2
~
3
Deluxe Chocolate, Vanilla, Banana
MOON PIE brand
Ground
Chuck ..... 1 "!
Picnic • • ••• 79~
Turkeys • • • 69~
Valleydale Smoked
Gold Crest
... 811!
Bacon ... .. 811!
Marvel Smoked
Turkeys
Morrell Market Style Sliced
Luck's With Pork
~i:~·~.~~~~~~
Pinto
39 Beans . tsoz.can39~
Armour st
OFF
Whipped Margarine
Blue Bonnet
6 sticks, 1 lb. pkg .
79~
Vienna
Sausage
~~~~~~
5 oz. can
39~
Pet Ritz Deep Dish
Pie
Shells .
2 c:t.
pkg. 89
~
California
Lettuce
head
Liquid Detergent
Del Monte Tomato
'1.00 OFF
Catsup
Wisk
32 oz. bottle
1 gal!on jug
79~
•
(KRAFT)K o
Prestonsburg, Ky.
By THOMAS W. PAUKEN
IN APPRECIATION
The family of Ruby J. West would like
to express their thanks to all who helped
'during the passing of our loved one.
Thanks to all who sent food, flowers,
prayers, and words of comfort during
this time of sorrow. Thanks to the
ministers for their kind and comforting
words and to the Hall Funeral Home for
its kind And efficient service.
iggly an
piggly wiggly
The Good News Report
Director of ACTION
In California, a juvenile who has been
involved in delinquency or crime and
ends up in a court room is frequently
remanded to the California Youth
Authority (CYA l. The Authority's purpose is to try, through education, training and firm guidance, to turn the offender around before he or she crosses
over into becoming a hardened criminal.
The methods for achieving this are
often diverse and inventive, such as a
one-on-one relationship between the
young person and a member of the law
profession who volunteers his time to
counsel and befriend the juvenile. Whatever the method, an effective treatment
program is CYA's goal.
In seeking ways and means to bring
a positive influence to change a negative
outlook, ACTION's Foster Grandparent
Program has brought a rich source of
talent to CYA. Many older citizens have
a great affinity for young people, a way
of getting through to them that others
don't have. Conversely, young people
often are more open to listening to the
elderly; the chemistry is there. With
73-year-old Mrs. Lu Henderson, it is
there in a way both remarkable and unique. "Grandma Lu", as she is known by
her students, had never taught a day of
school in her life, but as a Foster Grandparent interested in the CYA program
in Stockton, she thought she'd like to
give it a try. Her nephew, a teacher, supplied her with some learning materials
and she sat down to it. That was three
years ago.
Some of her pupils were illiterate, unable to read or write. Others had given
up hope of ever making it, and still
others didn't give a damn. All were juvenile criminals on their way to nowhere,
with a tough "who cares?" attitude.
Grandma Lu not only showed them that
she cared, she also taught them how to
care about living, how to face a
challenge and not run from it.
When Robin first sat down with
Grandma Lu, he was reading at a sec.ond grade level. Three months later he'
wrote his first letter home. Eight months
after that, he earned his General
Equivalency Diploma and also his
parole.
Anthony had no idea of his capabilities
or talents until Grandma Lu opened the
world of books to him. Among the pupils
he became known as "the smart one."
. Grandma Lu's teaching methods and
results have been so successful that a
CYA psychiatrist has recommended
that juveniles considered by trained
educators to be "beyond help" be turned over to her care. In her ability to get
behind the exterior of the delinquent, she
has aided, encouraged and stimulated
her pupils so that often in less than a
year, they h.;ve earned high school
equivalency diplomas. Grandma Lu has
literally turned the world right side up
for more than a score of young people
who came to her filled with suspicion
and distrust, and after being her students for a while, took heart and inspiration from her caring and guidance.
Section Two, Page Six
ss99
'
Red Ripe Cut
Watermelon 3 3
~
,,
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lb.
.
�The Floyd County Times
Wednesday, February 22 1984
Section
Seven
Has Sixth Birthday
~
AMERJC.NS
.(
CHOICE
&IW/U'
This Saturday,
February 25, at
Strand Theatre,
Prestonsburg
T~
TWO
WAYS
CGU1Ulge Ob .Ctl63ie
to
will show at 12:00 p.m.
ipes on sale
y Wiggly!
FREE
.
Admission! ~
Get complete
details at your
nearby Piggly Wiggly! :
.
•
I'IIIZE
VALUf
$1 .000
100
10
1
IIIIIIIOOF
I'IIIZII
103
1,007
•.•~7
140,560
$
so
2 811.200
s
2~
29517600
$7379.400
TOTAlS 32 471.927
S9.l13.830
s
s
s
With 2 Labels from 5elected
Piggly Wiggly products
...
PLAY
TOTAl
VALUf
s
s
OOOS FOil 1
103",000
100.700
1 .. 315.329
1«124 . ~
111 2.481
1 '" J2.253
1 .. 295
1'" J 140
1 '"
231
1 ..
17
Oools lor <lriWIIIQiniS 1£111
Odds tor 11r...,;,g 1niS pnre
Oddslor<lriWIIIQ1niS1£kel
Oddstor<lr-lniSpnre
s ...sro
s
000S FOIIIJ OOOS FOIIZI
STOllE VISITS STOllE VISITS
STOllE VISIT
140.560
S1.4tY.>.600
1 '" 12.128
1 240
1 '"
1 '" "'1i7
1 .. '8'5
1'" 11
1 '" 8
1101
11nl
Beef
•
Consumer Alert
DISABILITY INCOME INSURANCE
"If you are younger than 65, the odds
5 \b. chub
Kraft Margarine
Squeeze
Parkay
lb.
lib. . . .
99
~
m
wewelcome
FOOD STAMP
SHOPPERS
U.S. Grade A Piggly Wiggly Frying Chicken
&utt
Leg
Quarters .. 4 9~
Breast
Quarters .. 89~
Steaks .... 8 1 2 !
rk
der
U.S. Grade A Piggly Wiggly Frying Chicken
Kraft
Grape or Apple
Jelly
Fresh Pork Shoulder
$
Fresh Select
Oysters .
plat eta.
3
99
Hefty Tall Kitchen
Martha White Complete Corn
1
Trash
Bags . . .
Martha White
Kleenex Assorted/ White
:::~ .~~.~~~4 fS 1
Facial
Tissue .
M~ffin
MIX ••• 7.5 oz. bOll
4/ 8
30 et.
250 ct.
8199
boll
bollS
Liquid Ivory
Comet
21 oz. can
Soap
9 oz. ctn.
69~
5
Luck's With Pork
Pinto Beans
6 oz.
s
ctn.8 9~
qt. p•IIS
3
15 oz. can
39t;
White Cloud
4.5"
X
White , Yellow & Blue, Pink & Green.
4.5"
Bathroom
Tissue
49
4roUpkg.
99
~
Pears . . . . . 4
Oranges ... 4fS1
99
Grapes . . . .
Plums. . . . . 99 1-..
3f$
1
vocados ..
9~
lb.
California Navel
Thompson Seedless
Red or White
~
lb.
Red Juicy
California
~
B&K
Royal Pink
Corned Beef
Salmon
12 oz. can
15 .5 oz. can
99t;
of your having a disability lasting three
months or longer are greater than your
odds of death," says Attorney General
David L. Armstrong. Approximately
80% of wage earners have some type of
disability income protection, usually
through their place of employment.
Many times t'"te coverage is short-term
with benefits payable for two years or
less. About 20% of those under 65 have
long-term disability insurance.
The value of a disability income policy
is based on the company's promise to
pay the policy holder in case of lost income resulting from injury or illness. If
considering this type of insurance, check
with several different companies to
compare benefits, prices and restrictions.
Ask the following questions:
How much? It is impossible to buy a
policy that pays as much as or more
than gross income. In most cases, a
company will not pay beyond 65 to 85%
of gross income. Your payment to the
company, or premium, is in direct proportion to the amount of the benefit
yielded by the policy. Benefits received
from disability insurance are usually not
affected by any benefits received from
other private or public disability programs, ·such as Social Security. Some
policies provide a specified level of income from the policy and Social Securi·
ty combined.
How soon? Most companies will begin
paying benefits after 30 days, 60 days,
90 days, six months or 12 months,
whichever you choose. The longer you
are willing to wait, the lower the
premium.
How long? The benefit period determines how long the benefits continue.
This period is chosen by the consumer.
Short periods will save expense, but may
leave open the possibility of a long-term
loss of income. Benefits exceeding age
65 usually make a policy prohibitively
expensive.
Under what circumstances? Every
disability income policy contains its own
definition of "disabled." It is the policy's
written definition, not any phrasing of it
by a 'salesperson, that determines what
benefits will or will not be paid. Insist on
reading a sample policy before committing yourself.
Before buying this, or any type or insurance, check to see that the company
is financially sound. Best's Insurance
Reports, published annually by the A.M.
Best Company, is a good source of information. This reference book is available
in most public libraries.
"Investigate and compare before
making a decision. Pay close attention
to provisions dealing with rehabilitation,
partial disability, and exclusion
clauses," advises Attorney General
Armstrong.
To register a consumer complaint,
contact the Office of The Attorney
General, Consumer Protection Division,
209 St. Clair Street, Frankfort, Kentucky
40601-1875, or call the Consumer Hotline
toll-free at 1-800-432-9257.
Miss Burke Returns
From Study in England
Fruits and Vegetables
for your Special Salads!
Washington State D'Anjou
9
te
.
Cleanser
6t OFF
gal.ctn.99~
Veronica Lynn Flannery celebrated
her sixth birthday Feb. 8 at the home of
her grandparents, Vernon and Doris
Flannery, on Buck's Branch at Martin.
She is the .daughter of William and Trill
Flannery and attends Mrs. Gray's
kindergarten class at Martin Grade
School. Ice cream and a Michael Jackson cake were served to Jennifer,
Amber, Krinda, Kristi, and Keesha
Flannery, Billy and Tommy Shepherd .
SJ49
Jennifer Burke, a junior at Centre College, participated in the college's offcampus FOgram in England.
Miss Burke is the daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Harry Burke, of Prestonsburg. At
. Centre, she is a member of the Delta
Delta Delta sorority.
The college's off-campus program in
England was led by Paul Cantrell, professor of English at Centre. Students in
the program participated in two courses
while in England : medieval literary
history, and an independent study. The
first course required the students to keep
a journal while visiting Chester,
Leicester, Salisbury and London.
The group left Jan. 5, and was set to
return last Tuesday, Feb. 6.
During the six-week winter term, Centre students and faculty members have
also traveled to France, the Bahamas
and Denmark as part of off-campus
programs.
The college's off-campus programs
are designed to give students the oppor·
tunity to gain knowledge and personal
experience outside the classroom.
�Section Two, Paae Eight
The Floyd County Times
Wednesday, February 22, 1984
NOTICE OF
L 'TEI'\TION TO MINE
REQUEST FOR
QUALIFICATIO, 'S
FROM CONSULTING
ENGINEERS
The Floyd County Fiscal Court, Floyd
County, Ky. is requesting qualifications
from Consulting Engineers for services
relating to the construction of water
system improvements and extensions in
the Mud Creek area of Floyd County,
Kentucky, under the Kentucky Community Development Block Grant 1984
program.
Minimum requirements include previous experience relating to Community
Development Block Grant Program ,
previous experience in Eastern Ky., and
the ability to provide the Fiscal Court a
performance bond, if requested. A proposal packet is available from J.M.
Stumbo, County Judge-Executive, Floyd
County Courthouse Annex, Prestonsburg, Ky. 41653, containing :
1. Minimum requirements, and 2.
Selection criteria for awarding and
engineering contract.
All interested persons and firms
should contact J .M. Stumbo, County
Judge-Executive, Floyd County Courthouse Annex, Prestonsburg, Ky. 41653.
Proposals must be received in the
above mentioned office by 11:00 a .m .,
March 9, 1984.
. The Floyd County Fiscal Court
reserves tne right to reject any and all
proposals not meeting this request for
consulting engineers services.
Floyd County Fiscal Court will afford
full opportunity for minority business
enterprises to submit a show of interest
and response to this invitation and will
not discriminate against any interested
firm or individual on the grounds of
race, creed, color, sex, age, handicap or
national origin in the contract award.
JOHN M. STUMBO, Judge-Executive
Floyd County, Ky.
lt.
NOTICE TO CUSTOMERS OF
AUXIER WATER COMPANY OF
PROPOSED RATE CHANGES TO
BE FILED WITH THE PUBLIC
SERVICE COMMISSION
FE~RUARY 29, 1984.
PROPOSED RATES PER THOUSAND
1st thousand
$8.50
2nd thousand
4.75
Next 6 thousand
4.00
Next 6 thousand
3.25
Over 14 thousand
2.50
Minimum charge
8.50
The rates contained in this notice are
the rates proposed by the Auxier Water
Company. However, the Public Service
Commission may order rates to be
changed that differ from these proposed rates. Such action may result in rates
for consumers other than the rates included in this notice. Any corporation,
association, body politic or person may
request leave to intervene by motion
within thirty (30) days after notice of the
proposed rate changes is given. The motion shall be submitted to the Public Service Commission, 730 Schenkel Lane,
P.O. Box 615, Frankfort, Kentucky,
40602, and shall set forth the grounds for
the request including the status and interest of the party; and that copies of the
application may be obtained by contacting the applicant at Auxier Water Company, P .O. Box 99, Auxier, Kentucky,
41602.
2-22-3t.
PUBLIC NOTICE
The City of Prestonsburg will accept
applications until March 1, 1984 at 3:00
p.m. for the position of Mechanic. The
successful applicant will perform
maintenance and mechanical repairs on
all city owned vehicles and equipment
and do related work as required. Considerable knowledge of the standard
practices, equipment, and tools used in
the automotive mechanic and equipment mechanic trade is necessary. Applicant should have knowledge of the
operation of gasoline and diesel engines.
Salary will be based on training, qualifications and experience. Applications
can be obtained by contacting the City
Administrator in the Municipal
Building.
DAVID EVANS
City Administrator
2-22-2t.
NOTICE OF
INTENTION TO MINE
Pursuant to Application
Number -136-5231
In accordance with the provisions of
KAR 350.055, notice is hereby given that
Buck Coal, Inc., Route 2, Branham
Village, Prestonsburg, Kentucky, 41653,
has filed an application for a permit for
an underground mining operation. The
proposed operation will affect a surface
disturbance of 5.Cacres and will underlie
an additional81 .0 acres located 1.1 miles
north of Hunter in Floyd county.
The proposed operation is approximately 0.5 miles west from State Route
122's junction with Akers Branch Road
and located 0.25 miles west of Akers
Branch. The latitude is 37' 31' 18". The
longitude is 82° 45' 45".
The proposed operation is located on
the Martin U S.G.S. 7 1/ 5 minute quadrangle map. The surface area to be
disturbed is owned by Jake Bates and
Orphie Akers. The operation will underlie land owned by Claube W.ebb, Bud
Hayes, Mander Moore, Virgil Moore.
and James Slone.
The application has been filed for
public inspection at the Department for
Surface Mining Reclamation and Enforcement's Prestonsburg Regional Office, ()03 South Lal.e Drive, Prestonsburg, Ky . 41653. Written comments, objections, or requests for a permit conference must have attached a copy of
the newspaper clipping and must be filed with the Regional Administrator of
the Prestonsburg Regional Office, 503
South Lake Drive, Prestonsburg, Ky .
41653
2·8-:U.
Pursuant to Application
Number: 860-5023
In accordance with the proviswns of
KRS 350.055, notice is hereby given that
National Mines Cor poration, Box 12022,
101 East Vine Street, Lexington, Kentucky 40579, has filed an application for
a permit for an underground mining
operation. The proposed operation w!ll
affect a surface disturbance of 3.13 acres
and will underlie an additional 13!)..49
acres located 2.7 miles southwest of Garrett in Knott county.
The proposed operation is approximately 2.0 miles southwest from Route
5So junction with Route 7 and located 0. 7
miles southeast of Jones Fork. The latitude is 37' 26' 37". The longitude is 82°
50' 05".
The proposed operation is located on
the Wayland U .S.G.S. 7 1 2 minute quadrangle map. The surface area to be
disturbed is owned by Glen Click. The
operation will underlie land owned by
Glen Click, Barbara Conley, Gordon
Howard. Arnold Fitch. National Mines
Corporation. Charles and Juanita
'l'hornsburg, James and Francis Allen.
This application also includes a proposed land u~e change from the forest land
pre-mining land use to a pasture land
post-mining land use. The operation will
affect an area within 100 feet of public
road Triplett Branch. The operation will
not involve relocation of the public road.
The application has been filed for public inspection at the Department for Surface Mining Reclamation and Enforcement, Jackson Regional Office, Howell
Heights Building, Route 2, Box 500,
Jackson, Kentucky 41339. Written comments, objections, or requests for a permit conference must be filed with the
Director of the Division of Permits, 6th
Floor, Capital Plaza Tower, FrankfortJ
Kentucky 40601.
2-15-3t.
~UBLIC
RESOLUTION NO. 1-84
WHEREAS ; The Prestonsburg High
School is encountering difficulty in
loading and unloading of school children; and,
WHEREAS: The State Board of Education has demanded a solution to the
bus problem; and,
WHEREAS : The City Council of the
City of Prestonsburg is keenly interested
in the safety and well-being of the school
children; and,
WHEREAS: The City desires to assist
the Floyd County Board of Education in
their problem; NOW,
THEREFORE BE IT RESOLVED by
the City Council of the City of Presto"!:
burg as follows:
_
Section 1: Thatthe City close old u.S.
23 to all through traffic except bus traffic between the hours of 7:00a.m. and
8:45a.m. and 2:30p.m. and 3:45p.m.
Section 2: That no parking of automobiles be allowed in front of the school
during the noted hours.
Section 3: That the City write the
District Highway Department and request that signs be erected to show the
traffic changes.
Section 4: That the City Police Department be present when possible to help
with traffic control.
Adopted this 13th day of February,
1984.
HAROLD W. COOLEY
Mayor
A'ITEST:
Sue Webb
City Clerk
lt.
RESOLUTION NO. 2-84
WHEREAS : The City Council of the
City of Prestonsburg is concerned with
the existing police of responding to outof-city fire runs; and,
WHEREAS: The residents of the City of Prestonsburg bear the responsibility of maintaining and paying for
improvements in all city services; and,
NOTICE OF
WHEREAS : The City could place
INTENTION TO MINE
themselves in a position of potential
Pursuant to Application
liability in responding to out-of-dty
Number 836-5030
·calls, both police and fire; and,
In accordance with the provisions of
WHEREAS : A solution to this proKRS 350.055, notice is hereby given that blem needs to be addressed, NOW,
Hayes, Inc., Box 159, Betsy Layne, KenTHEREFORE BE IT RESOLVED by
tucky 41605, has filed an application for the City Council of the City of Prestonsa permit for an underground mining burg, Kentucky:
operation. The proposed operation will
Section 1: All city vehicles are to reaffect a surface disturbance of 5.25 acres main in the city limits of Prestonsburg
and will underlie an additional 38 75 at all times. The City will respond only
acres located 2.25 miles southwest ' of to fires in the City Limits and will resGrethel in Floyd county.
pond to Highlands Regional Medical
The proposed operation is approxCenter and any school in the area. The
imately .25 miles southwest from Rt.
City Police Vehicles are not to go out of
2030 junction with Stonecoal Hollow Rd.
the City Limits unless it is an emergenand located 75 feet south of Little Mud
cy or unless called for by the State
Creek. The latitude is 37' 28' 06". The Police or other Mutual Aid. No City
Jongi tude is 82• 41 ' 26".
equipment is to be out of the City at any
The proposed operation is located on
time unless prior approval is given by
the McDowell U.S.G.S. 71 2 minute quadthe City Council.
rangle map. The surface area to be
Section 2: This resolution shall take efdisturbed is owned by Elkhorn Coal
feet immediately after passage.
Corp.
Adopted this 13th day of February,
The operation will underlie land own- 1984.
ed by Elkhorn Coal Corp. This operation
HAROLD W. COOLEY
will affect an area within 100 feet of
Mayor
public road Rt. 2030. The operation will
A'ITEST :
not involve relocation of the public road.
Sue Webb
The application has been filed for
City Clerk
public inspection at the Department for
lt.
Surface Mining Reclamation and Enforcement's Prestonsburg Regional OfBID REQUEST
fice, 502 South Lake Drive, PrestonsSealed bids will be received by the Big
burg, Kentucky 41653. Written comments, objections, or requests for a per- Sandy Area Development District, Prestonsburg, Kentucky until 4:00 p.m.,
mit conference must be filed with the
March 15, 1984, for the provision of OmDirector of the Di'Jision of Permits, 6th
budsman Services for the Big Sandy
Floor, Capital Plaza Tower, Frankfort,
Area Agency on Aging Ombudsman
Kentucky 40601.
2-22-3t.
Program, funded by Title III-B Older
Americans Act Funds for the period JuORDINANCE NO. 2-84
ly 1, 1984 through June 30, 1985.
Complete bid specifications may be
AN ORDINANCE OF THE CITY
COUNCIL OF THE CITY OF PRES- obtained by contacting Phyllis Stanley,
TONSBURG AMENDING THE Director of Aging Services, Municipal
LICENSE FEE RULES AND REGU- Building, 2nd Floor, Prestonsburg, KenLATIONS UNDER THE OCCUPA- tucky 41653.
The Area Agency on Aging reserves
TIONAL LICENSE ORDINANCE.
WHEREAS: The City Council of the the right to accept or reject any or all
City of Prestonsburg finds it in the best bids.
interest of the City to amend the Rules EQUAL OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYER
2-22-2t.
and Regulations of the City Occupational License Ordinance; NOW,
THEREFORE BE IT ORDAINED by
BID REQUEST
the City Council of the City of PrestonsSealed bids will be received by the Big
burg as follows:
Sandy Area Deyelopment District, PresSection 1: To Section Ul, Estimated
tonsburg, Kentucky until 4:00 p.m.,
and Minimum License Fees Subsection March 15, 1984, for the provisiQn ofconB a new category is hereby added which
gregate and home deltvered meals for
will be as follows.
the Big Sandy Area Agency on Aging
8. Video Machines or AmllSement Nutrition Program, funded by Title IIIMachines <per machine) $10.00.
C Older Americans Act Funds for the
Section lA: Soft drink machines shall period July 1, 1984 through June 30, 1986.
pay $10 per machine.
Complete bid specifications may be
SeCtion ·2: Ail ordinances or part of or- obtained by contacting Phylis Stanley,
dinances in conflict herein are repealed Director of Aging Services, Municipal
to me extent or sucn CO!lflict.
Building, 2nd Floor, Prestonsburg, KenSection 3: This ordinance shall be in
tucky 41653.
effect and carry the full force of Jaw
The Area Agency on Aging reserves
upon publication and adoption.
the right to accept or reject any or all
Adopted this 13th day of February,
bids.
1984.
EQUAL OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYER
HAROLD W. COOLEY
2-22-2t.
Mayor
ATTEST:
NOTICE OF
Sue Webb
PUBLIC
HEARING
City Clerk
Under the Land and Water Conservation Fund Act of 1965 (Public Law 88-578 l
NOTICE
citizens are afforded the opportunity to
Under the Land and Water Conserva- express their views concerning the
tion Fund Mt of 1965 <Public Law recreational needs of their community.
88-578) , citizens are afforded the oppor- To provide a forum for discussion, an
tunity to express their views concerning opening meeting is being held on
the recreational needs of their communi- February 29, 1984, at 10:30 a.m. at the
ty. To provide a forum for 'discussi?n, an Floyd County Courthouse Annex Conopen meeting is being held on February ference Room, in Prestonsburg, Kentucky sponsored by the Floyd County
27, 1984, at 6:00p.m . at City Hall Meeting
Room, in Prestonsburg sponsored by Fiscal court. The specific purpose of th1s
meeting is to discuss improvement of
Prestonsburg City Council. The specific
recreational facilities of the Mud Creek
purpose of this meeting is to discuss funMini Park, at Grethel, Kentucky .
ding for renovation of Archer Park
Anyone with a significant supporting
Anyone with a significant supporting
or opposing view is invited to voice that or opposing view 1s invited to voice that
opmion at this meeting or in writing to :
opinion at this meeting or in writing to :
Land and Water Ccnservation Fund Pro- Land and Water Conservation Fund Program, Department of Local Govern- gram. Department of Local Government , 2nd Floor. Capital Plaza Tower,
ment, 2nd Floor, Capital Plaza Tower.
J<,rankforl, Kentucky 40601 within two Frankfort, Kentucky 40601 within two
weeks of the date of the meeting.
weeks of the date of the meeting.
It.
2·15 2t.
NOTICE
Second Reading
The Floyd Counly Fiscal Court, at a
special meeting commencing at 10:00
a .m ., March 9, 1984, to be held at the
Floyd County Annex Conference Room,
Prestonsburg, Ky., will call for a second
reading and then consider same for
pc:tssage of the following ordinance:
SECTION ONE : The Annual budget
for the fiscal year 1983-1984 is amended
to :
(a) Increase receipts of the General
Fund by $3,325.00 to include l\nanticipated revenues from the Commonwealth of Kentucky.
(b) Increase budget expenditures account number 304-15 by $3,325.00.
SECTION TWO : The sum added to
budget expenditures in ·Section One is
appropriated for general governmental
purposes.
A copy of the full text of said ordinance above will be available for
public inspection in the Floyd County
Courthouse Annex, Prestonsburg, Ky.,
between the hours of 8:30a.m. and 4:00
p.m., Monday thru Friday.
The Fiscal Court herebv certifies that
the summary above is true and accurate
and written in a way calculated to inform the public of its contents.
FLOYD COUNTY FISCAL COURT
By: John M. Stumbo,
County Judge/Executive
2-22-2t.
PUBLIC NOTICE
Second Reading
The Floyd County Fiscal Court, at a
special meeting commencing at 10:00
a .m., March 9, 1984, to be held at the
Floyd County Annex Conference Room,
Prestonsburg, Ky., will call for a second
reading and then consider same for
passage of the following ordinance:
SECTION ONE: The Annual budget
for the fiscal year 1983-1984 is amended
to:
(a) Increase receipts of the Revenue
Sharing Fund by $3,4'/8.85 to include
unanticipated revenues from cash, voided check and interest income.
(b) Increase budget expenditures account number 408-3 by $3,478.85.
SECTION TWO: The sum added to
budget expenditures in Section One is
appropriated for general governmental )
purposes.
A copy of the full text of said ordinance above will be available for
public inspection in the Floyd County
Courthouse Annex, Prestonsburg, Ky.,
between the hours of 8:30a.m. and 4:00
p.m., Monday thru Friday.
The Fiscal Court hereby certifies that
the summary above is true and accurate
and written in a way calculated to inform the public of its contents.
FLOYD COUNTY FISCAL COURT
By: John M. Stumbo,
County Judge/Executive
2-22-2t.
PUBLIC NOTICE
Second Reading
The Floyd County Fiscal Court, at a
special meeting commencing at 10:00
a.m., March 9, 1984, to be held at the
Floyd County Annex Conference Room,
Prestonsburg, Ky., will call for a second
reading and then consider same for
passage of the following ordinance:
SECTION ONE: The Annual budget
for the fiscal year 1983-1984 is amended
to:
(a) Increase receipts of the Revenue
Sharing Fund by $7,315.35 to include
unanticipated revenues from the Commonwealth of Kentucky.
(b) Increase budget expenditures account number 416-4 by $7 ,315.35.
SECTION TWO: The sum added to
budget expenditures in Section One is
appropriated for general governmental
purposes.
A copy of the full text of said ordinance above will be available for
public inspection in the Floyd County
Courthouse Annex, Prestonsburg, Ky.,
between the hours of 8:30a.m . and 4:00
p.m., Monday thru Friday.
The Fiscal Court hereby certifies that
the summary above is true and accurate
and written in a way calculated to inform the public of its contents.
FLOYD COUNTY FISCAL COURT
By: John M. Stumbo,
County Judge/Executive
2-22-2t.
LIFELO~G LEAR!'IOING CLASSES
OPEN AT PIKE COLLEGE·
Spring classes through the Center for
Lifelong Learning at Pikeville College
begin Monday, February 20, a nd con·
tinue through Friday, April 20. Anyone
interested in enrolling in a class should
call the Center at 432-9201.
Jim's Tire Shop has
1100x22 tubes for $16.95 each,
1000x22 tubes for $14.95 each.
Estate Auction
Z60·fiC!IE MoJ~o~;-J co. FARM ~
SAT .• FEB. 25TH
fiT 1:30 P.M.
Located on Hwy. 213, 1112 miles out of Jefferson11ille, Ky.
From Mt. Sterling take Hwy. 460 south 8 miles to Jeffersonville, turn onto
Hwy. 213. Approximately 7 miles from Stanton, Ky. (farm lays on both sides
of road). Watch for signs. All tra<ts will be sold ot hocne on Trac:t 11.
* REAL ESTATE *
Selling In l Tracts and Will rt ot Be Groupedl
TRACT 1: 172 ecru <+ or -)on south stele of Hwy. 213. Road frontege approxlmetely 2700 H.
Approximately 75 acres cleared wllh excellent ridge top cropland tor com or soybeans. Hu bean taaall<l for
aoybttana lor put few years. Balance In woodland with aoma good aaw tl,.,b2r, t:u <lug well. 11113 BASIC
TOBACCO QUOTA OF 1734 LOS. Lois mora goodacr.... aaally cl11red up. Natural gas cro..ea property.
TRACT II: 89 acres, mora or lass, with 40·45 acraa of cleared land. Has approximately 35 acraa of
bottomland with balence In paatura and woodland. IMPROVEMeNTS: 8-room frame house with 3 porches, 1
good S·bant tobacco barn with attached stripping room, one 3-bant alock bern with attached aheda, 2 dug
walla, watered by pond and Sycamore Creak. 1983 BASIC TOBACCO QUOTA 1293 LBS. Thla property will
haYa 120-ft. rlght·of·way off Hwy. 213. Some saw timber, oak and poplar.
TRACT Ill: 18Y• acres<+ or-). Thlstractls all cleared and all bottomland. Fronting on Hwy. 213 fiN'
epproxlmataly 1730 II. Watered by Sycamore Creak and pond. 1983 BASIC TOBACCO QUOTA 508 LBS. Allot
thla bottomland has bean cropped with ~om or soybeans. City water available.
TEitMS: ZO% clown clay of sale, balance wl~h cleecl within 30 cleys.
Pos~esslon with
clm.
-OW"EltS-
Shlrley. Oliver. Gibson. Turner and
Manda Martin and Emma Bowles
---SALE CONDUCTED BY---
MCCORMICK
LAND & AUCTION Co. ' Inc.
ALLIE McCORMICK, Real Eat ate Broker Auctioneer, 491-2868
&
EOWJN 0 . BURDEN, Real Estate Broker & Auctioneer, 498-5330
MIKE ?HIPPS, Auction..r, 488-6448
flnnoancamtnll day af sale take precedence over printed RIGIter.
fill Tohcto flllotm•nts SabJett to Cllons• altd fiSts Determi~atlon altd flppronl.
"acnOIIIIItS' KOTI: II YN len ...._ leoklttt tor cer. ot , . , . . . . JioM ef fer • 100411 tiM ln'lfl~t Ws ,,.,..n, Wit M..,.
,.., loapo<-. Bl THllll TO lliTI
Tills Land Is Neat the Heart
or Proposed Shale Project and Is NOT Leased.
JOE D. WEDDINGTON.
REAL ESTATE
. Prestonsburg 874·9633 Pikeville 432-4721
REALTOR
RESIDENnAL:
PRESTONS.,RG AR£A-A be1utiful counti'J home, idell for 1 &rowin& f1mily. 12
well.kept 1cres with 1680-sq. ft. home-4 bdrms, 2 b1ths, f1mily rm with firepllc:e-veiJ tastefuly dec:orated. Qullflts for county ·bond money.
DANA-One acre m/1 with 1 651114 nearty new mobile home. 2 bdrms, 2 baths,
wood.b18'111"1 fireplace. Lots of roem for p•klnc..
.
AWN-A handyman's spec:ial offered at 1 price you won't want to pass up. Two
bedrooms, l•ge kitchen with cabinets, gas hut. Houn has been raised above
flood pJ.in doubling liYin&lrN. A bai'Jiin 1t $22,500- Owner will filllnct on LAND
CONTRACT.
-NEW AU.EN-Orer 2,~sq. ft. of living space in tlis 4-bdrlll. bridl home. Co~
crtte drlre Md patle, bad! yard fenced in. Conwenlently located to school, c:fl ....
clles •d shepping.
UTTL£ MUD CR£EX-L.-ge 2_.clrm . home on 1 1cre more or less. City water 1nd
ps, one J.I'Je bid&- now being used as 1 CI11JoOut store. Call for more info11111tion.
TRAM-10 acres more or less with three ellistinc houses. lots of room for more
dntlopment If dtslred. Only five minutes from U.S. 23.
PRESTONS.,RG-Spac:ious, 2_..m., 1Yz_.ath, town houses located in 1 most
dtslrtble nel..,orftood. Ideal for people with little time for upkeep. Patio, woodb..nlnl fireplace, central lir/heat, wash• •d dryer hook-up, superior insulation
and sounck41ntrol.
SAUSBURY-Five (5) tracts of l111d on left Ben• Ck. Can be sold in sep•ate
tracts or IS 1 whole. One tract is 10011800 with 1 1,000-sq. ft.. home 1nd 1 stora1e
bide- Call if interested in all or 1 part.
AWN AREA-llr&e, 3-bdtm., home located ne1r the Allen golf course. M1ny
Sl)edal feat ..es induding firepl1ce, dassic kitchen, dist.asher, and 150x3C)O.ft..
lot.
·VACATION PROPERTY in Myrtle Beach, S.C. 35-ft. permanently set-up trailer on
Oce1n llkn Park. Screened-In porch 1nd air-conditioning. Easily rented when not
in use by owner. Only $14,000.
JOHNSON C0. -70-Icre f•m just ~-111lle off new Hwy. 44i0, between Sal~sville
and P1lntsrllle, 10 acres bottomland with older house 1nd ban1.. All mineral rights
lnclucltd. Ideal for sub-diYklinc..
WAYLAND-3-bdrm. home on Front Street Blodl exterior. Modtr11tely priced .
BETSY LAYNE-Nut 2-bdrm. home in Pike-Floyd hollow. Reduced to $34,000.
PUBLIC NOTICE
Second Reading
The Floyd County Fiscal Court, at a
special meeting commencing at 10:00
a.m., March 9, 1984, to be held at the
Floyd County Annex Conference Room,
Prestonsburg, Ky., will call for a second
reading and then consider same for
passage of the following ordinance:
SECTION ONE : The Annual budget
for the fiscal year 1983-1984 is amended
to:
(a) Decrease receipts of the Revenue
Sharing Fund by $95,798.00 due to not
receiving anticipated revenues the U.S.
Treasury.
(b) Decrease budget expenditures account numbers: 404-4 by $52,546.00; 405-5
by 31.00; 408-3 by 12,767.34; 412-4 by
105.00; 414-4 by 3,000.00 ; 416-4 by
26,795.66; 430..4 by 553.00.
SECTION TWO: The swru taken from
the budget expenditures in Section One
was appropriated for general governmental purposes.
A copy of the full text of said ordinance above will be available for
public inspection in the Floyd County
Courthouse Annex, Prestonsburg, Ky .,
between the hours of 8:30a.m. and 4:00
p.m., Monday thru Friday.
The Fiscal Court hereby certifies that
the summary above is true and accurate
and written in a way calculated to inform the public of its contents.
FLOYD COUNTY FISCAL COURT
By : John M. Stumbo,
County Judge/Executive
2-22-2t.
•
INEZ-3-bedroom home on 2 1c:res m/1. Priced in mid-20's. SPECIAL FINANCING
AVAILABLL
ACR£AGE AND COMMERCIAL
PRESTON~BURG . AREA-3.4 acres lenllsli&htly rolli111 tr1ct in prime loCition.
ldul f~r stn&lelmulti-famlly development. Owner filllncing with low down payment
to qualified party.
~WER JOHNS CK . - 88 •cres unimproved l1nd. lOCited 011 Pinson Br., appro11. 7
mtlts from Johns Ck. school.
MARTIN AREA-35 lcrtS, 33 hilly woodland 1nd 2 1cres of level bottom lind,
located 3 miles west of Martin_
PRESTONSIURG-A good commll'dli lot fronting on U.S. 23 nelf' Higfllands
Hospital.
MARTIN-If you are interested in 1 thrivin1 business, let us show you one of the
most desirable properties in M1rtin. Three (3) very successful businesses
op«atlnl at present with •e• for one other. Also, 1 spadous 2-bdrm . 1pt.
upstairs. Call for specific details.
lltANDYKEG ESTATES- L. .e restricted resldentialbulldlnl lots ne• Jenny Wll.,
State Patti and just minutes from U. S.. 23 1nd Hwy. 80. $19,000 and up.
AUXER- Conreniently loc"ted residenti1l blllc.. lot. $12,000.
MAGOFflN C0.-10 acres on the Short Fork Ck. of B..nin1 Fork 1nd ldjoinin& Mt.
Partlw1y 1111r Salyersville.
PRATtR CR£EK-4 lll'le residentilll buildinl lots-ne with drilled Wlttr well.
FOR R E N T - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - BETSY LAYNE- 2..dtm. home in 1 nice nei&Ntorllood.
AUU- 2-IIdrm. home with full basement. Within walking dst•ce of school.
PRESTONSBURG- NEW TOWNHOUSE. 2
~dtm.,
1Yz bath.
JO£ D. WEDDINGTON, Broker 874-9633 or 432-4721
DOROTHY HARRIS, Broker-Salts 874-9633 or 874-2050
DOUG HICKS, Slits 478-2518- STEPHEN R. ALLEN, Salts 886-8040
SUZANNE REYNOLDS, S.les 874-9368-RANDALL STEWART, S1les 639-6950
fa
IJIIII"
�(_
(
Wednesday,
February 22, 1984'tuesday,
Fe.. ruary 28, 1984
«wednesday))
2/22/84
MORNING
9:00
16 MOVIE: 'Toy Tiger'·
AFTERNOON
1:00
6:00
6:30
7:00
7:30
16
MOVIE: 'China
Clipper' A man tries to
start an airline despite
dangers and romantic
problems. Pat O'Brien,
Humphrey
Bogart,
Marie Wilson. 1936.
EVENING
8@0([)0)@
liD® News
16 Andy Griffith
fB 00 MacNeil/Lehrer
Newshour
@)@ Dr. Who
0
® liD 00 NBC
News
0 ([) CBS News
&)@ABC News
16 Carol Burnett
@)@Business Report
0 ® PM Magazine
0
([) Wheel of
Fortune
0) @ People's Court
16 Ho~n·s Heroes
fB
CID
Kentucky
General Assembly
@)@ MacNeil/Lehrer
Newshour
CiD®Switcb
0 ® Tic Tac Dough
0 ([) Family Feud
@ Jefferson&
16 Sanford and Son
0
@ liD 00 Real
People
0
([) Bugs Bunny
Special 'Bugs Bunny:
All-American
Hero.'
When his little nephew Clyde asks for
some help in preparing for an American
history test. Bugs relates his version of
America 's past. (R)
0) @ Fall Guy Colt,
Howie and Jody try to
track down a bail jumper who is accused of
killing a Chinese national and stealing artifacts. (60 min .)
16 MOVIE: 'King
Creole' A delinquent
becomes a singing
star in New Orleans
and gets involved with
gangsters. Elvis Presley, Carolyn Jones,
Dean Ja99er. 1958.
fB 00 W @ Walk
Through
the
20th
Century
with
Bill
Moyers 'The
Reel
World of News.' Bill
Moyers takes a look at
the American newsreel. (60 min .) [Closed
Captioned]
0 ([) MOVIE: 'Taps'
0 @ liD 00 Facts of
Life Blair's fantasy
about marriage leads
the girls into similar
fantasies of their own .
[Closed Captioned]
0)@ Dynasty
fB 00 @) @ Mark
Russell Special Comedian Mark Russell
presents his own special brand of 'Washington' humor.
o
Night
Court
fB 00 Rockin' &
Rollin'
with
Phil
Spector Artists, writers, associates and
friends discuss record
producer Phil Spector
and his music. (60
min .)
@)@ Spaces 'The Architecture of Paul Rudolph .'
m
8:00
8:30
9:00
9:3o
mmm
TV
SCHEDULE
m m m
1o:ooo
st.
Elsewhere
A
skimasked rapist continues to terrorize St.
Eligius and Dr. Ehrlich
from
his
returns
honeymoon. (60 min.)
0) @ Arthur Hailey's
Hotel On the eve of a
regal wedding at the
hotel,
Mrs.
Cabot·
shares a secret with a
mystery woman and
the bride's parents endure the toughest test
of their own marriage.
(60 min.) [Closed Captioned]
@) @ Tribute to Alec
Wilder
Marian
Mc-Partland hosts this
special
tribute
to
American composer
Alec Wilder. (R) (60
· min.)
10:30 16 TBS Evening News
fB 00 Business R~!JWrt
11:00 0@0([)0)@
CiDCi:JNews
@) @ Not the Nine
O'Clock News
11:30 0 ®liD 00 Tonight
Show
0
([) Police Story
When a drug addict
accidently gets hold
of a gun, a policeman
is the victim and the
murderer gets away.
(R) (60 min .)
0) @ Nightline
16 Catlins
@)
@
Latenight
America
12:00 0)
@
Eye
on
Hollywood
16 MOVIE: 'The Proud
and the Profane' A
war widow meets and
falls for a tough marine colonel while serving in the Pacific
during WWII. William
Holden, Deborah Kerr,
Thelma Ritter. 1956.
12:30 0@ Late Night with
David Letterman
0
([) MOVIE: 'The
Beasts Are In the
Street' Animals escape from a wildlife
preserve
causing
havoc in a nearby
town. Carol Lynley,
Dale Robinette. 197 8.
0) @ Andy Griffith
1:00 0) @ Bionic Woman
2:30 16 MOVIE: '24 Hours
to Kill' Two pilots
forced to land in Lebanon find themselves in
the middle of an elaborate smuggling and
murder plot. Mickey
Rooney, Lex Barker,
Walter Slezak. 1965.
4:30 16 Candid Camera
((thursday»
2/23/84
STAR WARS
Robots C3PO and R2D2
battle evil forces in ·'Star
Wars," the fantasy-action film,
airing SUNDAY, FEB. 26 on
CBS.
CHECK LISTINGS FOR EXACT TIME
@)198• Compulog
Fortune
0)@ People's Court
(6 Ho~n·s Heroes
fB
CiJ · Kentucky
General Assembly
@) @ Silver-Haired
Legislature
liD 00 Appalachian
Encounters
7:30 0 ® Tic Tac Dough
0 ([) Family Feud
@ Jefferson&
16 Sanford and Son
@) @ NCAA Basketball: Western Carolina
8:00
m
at Marshall
liD 00 Lorna Greene's
Wilderness
O®CiD®Gimmea
Break
Conclusion.
While trying to get rid
of some drugs they accidentally
acquired,
Nell and Addy meet
Tony Randall who
helps them out of their
predicament.
0 ([)Magnum P.l.
0) @ Life's Most
Embarrassing
Mo-
-Movie WeekSUNDAY
(NBC) SUNDAY NIGHT MOVIE
"ORBAN COWBOY" ( 1980) John Travolta, Debra Winger, Scott
Glenn. A young Texas refinery laborer spends his free hours in a
Houston honky-tonk, where he finds both romance and rivalry.
(CBS) SUNDAY NIGHT MOVIE
"STAR WARS" (1977) Mark Hamill, Harrison Ford, Carrie
Fisher, Alec Guinness. Luke Skywalker leaves the arid planet of
Tatooine seeking the kidnapped Rebel Princess Leia from the
planet Alderaan. He and his traveling companions battle the evil
governor of the Imperial Outland regions. and Darth Vader, who
employs his powers to aid the governor in the destruction of the
rebellion against the Empire.
(ABC) SUNDAY NIGHT MOVIE
"LACE" (1984) Part I. Bess Armstrong, Brooke Adams. Steamy
tale based on Shirley Conran's best-selling novel.
MONDAY
(ABC) MONDAY NIGHT MOVIE
"LACE" (1984) Part II. Bess Armstrong. Brooke Adams.
WEDNESDAY
(CBS) WEDNESDAY NIGHT MOVIE
9:00
16 MOVIE: 'Mary Jane
Harper
Night'
Cried
Last
AFTERNOON
1:00
16 MOVIE: 'Tension at
Table Rock'
EVENING
6:00
0®0([)0)@
CiD(i)News
16 Andy Griffith
fB CID MacNeil/Lehrer
Newshour
@)@Dr. Who
6:3o o
NBc
News
0 ([) CBS News
&)@ABC News
16 Carol Burnett
@)@ Business Report
7:00 0 ® PM Magazine
0
([) Wheel of
mmm
John Travolta and Debra Winger co-star
Cowboy," airing Sunday, Feb. 26 on NBC.
2/24/84
ments
16 MOVIE: 'Prime Cut'
An underworld gang
uses a meat-packing
plant as a front for
dealings in drugs and
prostitution . Lee Marvin, Gene Hackman,
Sissy Spacek. 1972.
fB 00 People's Business
8:30 0 @ liD ® Family
Ties Elyse tries to revive her folk singing
career at a local night
club.
9:00 0 ® liD C2J Cheers
Norm believes that his
new boss is coming on
to him .
0 ([) Simon & Simon
0) @ Dom Deluise
and Friends Part 2
Dom's guests include
Dean Martin, Shelley
Winters and Rich Little. (60 min.) [Cio~ed
Captioned]
fB 00
Scholastic
Challenge
9:30 0
liD ® Buffalo
Bill An unlikely romantic interlude begins
when Jo-Jo invites her
boss to dinner.
@)@ MacNeil/Lehrer
Newshour
10:00 0 @ liD (2) Dean
Martin
Celebrity
Roast
0 ([) Knots Landing
Mack goes unde~
cover to break the
Wolfbridge organization . (60 min .)
0)@ 20/20
16 TBS Evening News
fB 00 Business Report
10:30 fB 00 Tony Brown's
Journal 'The Longest
Struggle: The '7 5 Year
March.'
@)@ Mysteryi'Reilly:
Ace of Spies.'
11 :oo
®
®
fBOOCiD® News
16 All In the Family
11:30 0 ®liD 00 Tonight
Show
0 ([) Trapper John,
M.D. Trapper's . exmother-in-law comes
to town bringing a
puzzling medical case
and a case of nerves
for Trapper's ex-wife.
(R) (60 min.)
0) @ Nightline
16 Catlins
@) @
League of
Women Voters' Democratic
Presidential
Candidates Debate
12:00 0)
@
Eye
on
Hollywood
16 MOVIE: 'What Ever
Happened to Baby
Jane?' Two former
stars live in a decaying
m
om o
MORNING
Hollywood
mansion
and the one confined
to a wheelchair is tormented by her demented sister. Bette
Davis, Joan Crawford,
Victor Buono. 1962.
12:30 0 ® Late Night with
David Letterman
0
([) MOVIE: 'If
Things Were Different' A woman struggles to hold herself
and her family together when her husband suffers a nervous breakdown. Suzanne Pleshette, Don
Murray, Tony Roberts.
1979.
0) @ Andy Griffith
1:00 0) @ Bionic Woman
2:45 16 MOVIE: 'Lonely
Hearts'
m
MORNING
9:00
16 MOVIE: 'Murder at
the
Mardi
Gras'
AFTERNOON
1:00
3:30
16
MOVIE:
'The
Uninvited' A timid
young girl, haunted by
her mother's ghost. is
helped by a handsome
young composer and
his sister. Features
song 'Stella by Starlight.' Ray Milland,
Gail Russell, Ruth Hussey. 1944.
fB 00 New Shapes in
Education
EVENING
6:00
0@0([)0)@
liD® News
(6 Andy Griffith
fB 00 MacNeil/Lehrer
Newshour
@) @ Dr. Who
6:30 0
@ liD ® NBC
News
0 ([) CBS News
&)@ABC News
16 Carol Burnett
@)@ Business Report
7:00. 0@ PM Magazine
0
([) Wheel
of
Fortune
0)@ People's Court
16 Hogan's Heroes
fB 00 Enterprise ·on
Key.' Ned Steinberger
talks about the problems he's faced with
his new successful
electric bass guitar.
[Closed Captioned]
@)@ MacNeil/Lehrer
Newshour
liD ® Goins Brothers
7:30 0 @ Tic Tac Dough
0 ([) Family Feud
@ Jefferson&
16 Sanford and Son
fB 00 Comment on
Kentucky
liD ® This Week in
Country Music
8:00 0 @ liD ® MOVIE:
'Blue Lagoon' A shipwrecked boy and girl
come of age on a tropical island . Brooke
Shields. Christopher
Atkins. 1980.
([) Dukes of
0
Hazzard A mobster is
furious when he finds
out Daisy has his 'little
black book' and he
can't get it back. (60
min .)
0)@ Benson Benson
and the governor help
Denise when her baby
decides to arrive while
she is stuck in an elevator. [Closed Captioned]
m
�(
C6 NCAA Basketball:
Florida at Mississippi
@) (fi) Ali Creatures
Great and Small
4:30 fa Cil GED Series
5:00 a) @ VVide VVorid of
m
m mVVeek/
@
VVashington
Review Paul Duke is
joined by top VVashington journalists analyzing
the
week's
news.
· 8:30 a)
@
VVebster
George becomes determined
to
keep
VVebster's Uncle Phillip out of VVebste:r's
life.
fB ® @) (ll) VVall
Street VVeek Louis Aukeyser analyzes the
'80s with a weekly review of economic and
investment matters.
9:00 0 ® Dallas Bobby
confronts
Jenna
about Charlie's parentage and discovers
that Jenna has led him
on. (60 min .)
a)@ Blue Thunder
fB ®
Kentucky
General Assembly
@) (ll) Session '84
9:30 @) (ll) Enterprise 'On
Key.' Ned Steinberger
talks about the problems he's faced with
his new successful
electric bass guitar.
[Closed Captioned]
10:00 0
(I) liB ~ TV's
Censored
Bloopers
Dick Clark hosts this
look at some goofs
that were never intended
for
public
viewing. (60 min.)
0 ® Falcon Crest
a) @ Matt Houston
Matt goes after a killer
who murdered Matt's
fiancee years ago. (60
min .) [Closed Captioned]
C6 TBS Evening News
fB® Business Report
@) (ll) Austin City
Limits
10:30 fB ®
International
Edition
11:000®0®al@
fB CID liB~ News
iC All In the Family
@) [1) Not the Nine
O'Clock News
11:30 0 (I) liB ® Tonight
Show
0 ® MOVIE: 'Pleasure Cove' A charming
rogue visits a posh island resort which is
the scene of wacky romantic
entanglements. Tom Jones,
Constance Forslund.
Joan Hackett. 1977.
a) @ Nightline
C6 Catlins
@) [1) MOVIE: Tillie
and Gus' A couple of
gamblers pose as missionaries to share in a
niece's
inheritance.
VV .C. Fields, Alison
Skipworth,
Baby
Leroy. 1933
12:00 a)
@
Eye
on
Hollywood
C6 Night Tracks
12:30 0 (I) liB ® Friday
Night Videos
a) @ Andy Griffith
1:00 a)
@
Pentecost
Today
1:30 &) @ Bionic VVoman
2:00 0(1) News
((saturday»
2/25/84
MORNING
5:00
C6
Night
Tracks
Cont'd
5:30 a)@ Rev. Pete Rowe
6:00 a) @ Farm Digest
C6TBS Morning News
6:15 a)@ Forvm 19
6:30 0 (I) Saturday Report
0 CIJ T.V. Classroom
Q)@ Town Crier
(I)
Joy
of
7:00 8
Gardening
liJ CIJ Captain Kangaroo
~orts
NBAACTION
Dick Stockton (pictured)
and Tom my Heinsohn are
courtside when CBS airs the
NBA game between the Los
Angeles Lakers and Philadelphia 76ers, from the Spectrum
in Philadelphia on SUNDAY,
FEB. 26.
CHECK LISTINGS FOR EXACT TIME
@)198<4 Compuloe
a) @ Andy Griffith
C6 Between the Lines
@) (ll) Market to
Market
7:30 0 (I) Bugs Bunny &
Friends
a) @ ABC VVeekend
Special
C6 Romper Room and
Friends
@) [1) Great Chefs/
San Francisco
8:00 0 (I) liB~ Flintstone
Funnies
0 ® Charlie Brown
&Snoopy
a) @ Monchhichis/
Little Rascals/Richie
Rich
C6 Starcade
@) (ll) Two Ronnies
8:3o
~ shirt
Tales
0
®
Saturday
Supercede
C6 MOVIE: 'VVhite
Commanche'
Twin
sons of an Indian
mother and a white
settler become opponents in the inevitable
Indian-white conflict.
Joseph Cotten, VVilliam Shatner. Perla
Crista I. 1967.
@) @ Fawlty Towers
9:00 0 @ liB® Smurfs
a) @ New Scooby/
Scrappy Ooo
@) [1) Good Neighbors
9:30 0 ® Dungeons and
o m m
Ora~ns
a) CAJ Pac-Man/Rubik
Cube Hour
@) [1) Dave Allen at
Large
10:00 0 ®Tarzan: lord of
the Jungle
@) [1) Dad's Army
10:30 0 (I) liB ~ Alvin &
the Chipmunks
0 ® Addams Family
a)@ Littles
C6
MOVIE:
'Dr.
Strangelove or: How I
learned
to
Stop
VVorrying and love
the Bomb' In this satire on cold war poli·
tics.
psychotic
General Jack D. Ripper initiates a nucl'ear
attack on Russia. Peter Sellers (3 roles).
George C. Scott, Sterling
Hayden, Slim
Pickens. 1964.
fB ® Dealing w/
Social Problems
@) [1) House For All
Seasons
11:000CI)Iifi~Mr.T
liJ ® let's Go To The
Races
a) @ Puppy/Scooby
Ooo Show
fB ® Bits and Bytes
@) <lll All New This
Old House
11 :30 0 (I) C!D (1) Amazing
Spidermen/lncredible
Hulk
Cl CIJ Fishing w/
Roland Martin
fa ([)
Business
Management
@) @ M U Report
AFTERNOON
12:00 0 ® USTA VVomen's
Indoor Tennis Championship Coverage of
this women's tennis
championship is presented from East Hanover, NJ. (2 hrs.)
a) @ NCAA Basketball: Vanderbilt at
Tennessee
fB 00
Business
Mana_g_ement
@) C!D VVashington
VVeek/Review
Paul
Duke is joined by top
VVashington journalists
analyzing
the
week's news.
12:30 0 (I) liB ~ Thundarr
C6
MOVIE: 'Short
VValk to Daylight' An
levels
earthquake
New York City and
traps eight subway
passengers
underground. James Brolin,
James McEachin, Abbey Lincoln. 1972.
fB 00 Here's to Your
Health
@) [1) VVall Street
VVeek Louis Rukeyser
analyzes the '80s with
a weekly review of
economic and investment matters.
@
All
Star
1:00 0
VVrestling
fB ® Here's to Your
Health
@) (ll) Family Portrait
liB (1) MOVIE: To Be
Announced
Focus on
1:30 fB ®
Society
@) [1) Family Portrait
2:00 0 (I) NCAA Basketball: Toledo at Ohio
0 ®NCAA Basketball: Teams to be
Announced
a) @ America's Top
Ten
C6 MOVIE: 'VVar Paint'
A cavalry detachment
experiences treachery
and danger when they
try to deliver a peace
treaty to an Indian
chief. Robert Stack,
Peter Graves, Charles
McGraw. 1953.
fB ® Focus on
Society
@) [1) Making It Count
2:30 a) @ love Connection
fB (J) American Gov't
Survey
@) (ll) Making It Count
3:00 a) @ Sportsbeat
fa([) American Gov't
Surv~
@) (lf) Vietnam: A
Television History
fB (2) Fishing Championships
3:30 a) @ Professional
Bowlers Tour Today's
program features the
$125,000
Meister
Brau Open from the
Buckeye Lanes, North
4:00
Olmstead, OH. (90
min.)
fB ® Another Page
0 (I) liB(]) NCAA
Basketball: Teams to
be Announced
0
®
CBS Sports
Saturday Today's program features a 15Light·
round
Heavyweight Championship
bout
between champion Michael
Spinks
and
Eddie Davis, the Men's
VVorld Speed Skating
Championship
and
the Great Pool Shootout. (2 hrs.)
C6 Portrait of America: New Jersey
fB (J) GED Series
5:30
6:00
ID Fishin' w/Orlando
VVilson
fa ([) Firing Line
@) (fi) Golden Gloves
Boxing
C6 Motorweek Illustrated
EVENING
OffiO®News
VVorld Championship VVrestling
fa 00 Matinee at the
~ou 'Torture Ship.'
tiD (1)
To
Be
Announced
(I) liB 00 NBC
6:30 0
News
I!J® Concern
a) @ Dance Fever
@) <lll last of One
Night Stands
7:00 0 (I) Dance Fever
I!J® Hee Haw
a)@ Solid Gold
@) (ll) Or. VVho Movie
liB (1) Jamboree
7:30 0 (]) Inside look
fa® Sneak Previews
Co-hosts Neal Gabler
and Jeffrey Lyons
take a look at the best
and worst films of
1983. (R)
8:00 0 (]) liB (]) Diff'rent
Strokes Mr. Drummond marries Maggie
and Sam becomes Arnold's little brother.
(60 min.)
0 ® VVhiz Kids
a)@ T.J. Hooker
C6 NBA Basketball:
Chicago at Atlanta
fa® Nature 'Osprey.'
Tonight's program follows the osprey's pro-
S6
Michael Jackson's night
By Andy Noble
Just as he dominated the recent American Music
Awards, Michael Jackson is expected to be the preeminent personality at the 26th annual Grammy Awards, airing Tuesday, Feb. 28 on CBS.
Jackson, the corkscrew-legged, 25-year-old superstar is
unquestionably the most popular entertainer today in the
world . Jackson received a record total of 12 Grammy
nominations and his LP. "Thriller" has sold 23 million
copies, which makes it the biggest selling solo LP of all
time. His singles, "Thriller" and "Say Say Say," a duet
with Paul McCartney, are the latest in a string of top-1 0
smashes. He is writing his memoirs with Jacqueline
Onassis as his editor and he will star in a new film version
of "Peter Pan" directed by Steven Spielberg.
"Thriller" is responsible for 1 1 of Jackson's nominations. including Record of the Year ("Beat It"), New Song
of the Year ("Beat It") and Album of the Year
("Thriller"). In the prestigious Album of the Year category, "Thriller" faces formidable competition: Billy Joel's
"An Innocent Man," the "Fiashdance" soundtrack, David
Bowie's "Let's Dance" and the Police's "Synchronicity."
"Thriller" also generated nominations for Producer of
the Year (Jackson and Quincy Jones); Best Pop Vocal
Performance, Male ("Billie Jean"); Best Rhythm and
Blues Vocal Performance, Male ("Billie Jean"); three for
Best New Rhythm and Blues song ("Billie Jean,"
"P.Y.T.," "Wanna Be Starlin' Somethin' "); Best Pop
Vocal Performance, duo or group ("The Girl Is Mine,"
with Paul McCartney) and "Best Engineered Recording."
Jackson's twelfth nomination is for Best Recording for
Children, for the "ET" album, which he narrated.
Jackson who is considered the frontrunner in eight categories. If he wins all eight, it would give him the biggest
one-year sweep in the history of the Grammys. The current record is five, shared by Henry Mancini ( 1961) , Roger Miller (1964, 1965), Paul Simon (1970), Stevie Wonder (1974, 1975, 1976), Christopher Cross (1980) and
Quincy Jones (1981). Jackson's lone previous Grammy
was for the 1979 single, "Don't Stop Till You Get
Enough."
However, Jackson's megabuck video "Thriller" wasn't
nominated for Best Video because it wasn't commercially
released by the eligibility cutoff date. "Thriller," however
may be nominated for a "Best Short Subject" Oscar.
gress from its hatching, through migration
to
its
breeding
grounds. (60 min.)
[Closed Captioned]
8:30 @) (ll) Blake Edwards
9:00 O@lifi(])WeGotlt
Made
0 (§) MOVIE: 'Sharkey's Machine' An Atlanta
vice
squad
sergeant encounters
pimps, crooked politicians and drug dealers in his everyday
working world. Burt
Ra.ynoids,
Rachel
VVard, Brian Keith.
1982.
a)@ love Boat
fB ® All Creatures
Great and Small
@) (ll) World VVar I
9:30 0 (]) liB (]) Merna's
Family After winning
the election for mayor,
Mama decides that
she's not cut out for
the job.
@) [1) Peter Batty
~ecial
10:00 U (I) liB(]) Yellow
Rose A woman feuds
with Chance when her
white stallion threatens the herds of the
Rose and other ranchers. (60 min.)
a) @ Fantasy Island
fB® Mysteryi'Reilly:
Ace of Spies.' Reilly
decides to become
friendly with Russia's
Minister of Marine
whose influence could
obtain for England a
big military contract.
(60 milo.) [Closed Captioned]
10:15 CD Unknown War
10:30@) (ll) MOVIE: 'Tunes
of Glory'
11:00 0 ®News
CE)@ABC News
fa
Austin City
limits
liB ~ Music Magazine
11:15 a)@ News
11:30 0 ® liB (]) Saturday
Night live
I!J®News
a)@ Solid Gold
11:45 C6 Night Tracks
12:00 1iJ ® MOVIE: 'Domino Principle' Two prisoners are offered an
immediate release by
an organization plotting to kill a nameless
victim. Gene Hackman, Candice Bergen,
Richard
Widmark.
1977.
12:30 a) @ Music Magazine
1:00 8 (I) MOVIE: 'Another Part of the
Forest'
at· @ Black Music
Ma@_zlne
1 :30
@ Rockford Files
2:00 •
Night
Tracks
Cont'd
rn
e
�Tod~
II) @ Jimmy Swag-
(
@) (11) Monty Python
Flying Circus
'iS® MOVIE: 'Girls of
the White Orchid' A
group of women, who
go to Hollywood in the
hopes of being movie
stars, sign up for some
acting assignments in
the Far East only to be
forced into prostitution when they get
there.
12:00 I!!® Face the Nation
II)@ Jim Bakker
CD
People
Who
Fish ... America
@) [1) Dave Allen at
~rt
CD
LACE
Brooke Adams is featured in
"Lace," a two-part "ABC
Novel for Television" adapted
from Shirley Conran's be!"tseller, airing SUNDAY, FEB.
26 and MONDAY, FEB. 27.
CHECK LISTINGS FOR EXACT TIME
@1984 Compulog
({sunday))
2/26/84
MORNING
5:00 II)@ Rev. Pete Rowe
6:00 II)@ Omni
CD News
6:15 CD Week/Review
6:30 IJ (J) TV Chapel
Ill (I) Better Way
II) @ What Does the
Bible Say? ·
CD TBS Morning News
7:00 IJ (J) Music and the
Spoken Word
Ill (I) Jerry Falwell
II) @ Roger Sparks
Religion
CD World Tomorrow
@) (IT) MOVIE: 'The
People vs. Dr. Kildare'
Sued for malpractice
by an ice skater. Dr.
Kildare is forced to
turn detective in order
to clear himself. Lew
Ayres. Lionel Barrymore. Red Skelton .
(lj 00
Time
for
Refreshing
7:30 IJ (J) Fountain of life
II) @ James Robison
CD It Is Written
8:00 IJ (J) Hour of Power
·g
(I)
Day
of
Discovery
II) @ Jerry Falwell
CD Cartoon Carnival
fB ® Sesame Street
[Closed Captioned]
(lj
00
Gateway
Gospel
8:30 IJ (J) Oral Roberts
and You
Ill (I) Christ for the
World
CD Starcade
@) (IT) Wild America
(lj 00 Biblical View·
point
9:00 IJ CU Rex Humbard
Ill (I) Sunday Morn-ing
II) @ Kenneth Copeland
CD leave It to Beaver
fB ® Sesame Street
[Closed Captioned]
@)
(fl)
Undersea
World
of Jacques
Cousteau
(lj 00 Sunday School
9:30 · IJ CU Kenneth Copeland
CD Andy Griffith
(lj (I) Rev. R.A. West
10:00 II)@ Rev. R.A. West
CD Good News
fB ®
Mr. Rogers'
Neig!lborhood
@)(![)Nova 'It's About
Time.' Dudley Moore
hosts this look at the
· concept of time. (R)
(60 min.) [Closed Cap~ned]
._. (I)
Baptist
10:30
G CU
Big
Creek
Dr. D. James
Kennedy
Ill ()) Ernest Angley
MOVIE: 'No Time
for Sergeants' A naive
Georgia boy who joins
the air force and
creates
mayhem.
Andy Griffith, Nick
Adams, Murray Hamilton . 1958. ·
fB 00 Electric Company
11:00 fB ® Sesame Street
[Closed Captioned]
@) (IT) Six-Gun Heroes
(lj 00 Leonard Repass
11 :30 IJ Cil Bill Dance
Outdoors
~ ® Viewpoint
II) @ World Tomorrow
(lj 00 Rev. R.A. West
AFTERNOON
12:00 IJ (J) At Issue
Ill Cl) N BA Basket·
ball: los Angeles at
Philadelphia
II)@ This Week with
David Brinkley
fB
®
Working
Women
@) (IT) Sesame Street
[Closed Captioned]
(lj 00 Old Time
Gospel
12:30 IJ (J) Meet the Press
fB ® Comment on
Kentucky
1:00 IJ (I) Bowling
II) @ Biblical Viewpoint
CD Richmond 400
Live flag-to-flag coverage of one of the major stock car races on
the NASCAR circuH is
presented. Commentary is provided by
Ken Squier. (3 hrs .• 30
min.)
fB ® Capitol Connec-
GRAMMY AWARDS
John Denver hosts "The
26th
Annual
Grammy
Awards," a three-hour special
from the Shrine Auditorium in
Los Angeles, which CBS airs
on TUESDAY, FEB. 28.
CHECK LISTINGS FOR EXACT TIME
tion
@) (IT) Victory Garden
(lj (I) China: Other
Voices Today's program looks at The
Centurymen. a choral
group, as they perform
during a 1983 tour of
China. (60 min.)
1:30 OJ @ Santana and
Heart
fB ® Business of
Management
@)
(IT)
Working
Women
2:00 IJ (J) (lj 00 NCAA
Basketball: Michigan
State at Indiana
II)
@
American
· Sportsman
Curt
Gowdy hosts this special that commemorates
'American
2:30
3:00
3:30
4:00
·4:30
UNFAITHFULLY YOURS. (PG-20th Century-Fox) Starring
Dudley Moore, Armand Assante and Nastassia Kinski
* * *
5:00
By J.T. YURKO
5:30
In his latest film, "Un1aithful·
ly Yours," Dudiey Moore plays
an orchestra leader, the same
profession he had in his first
film, "Foul Play." But this
orchestra leader, unlike the
gigolo of "Foul Play," is a
jealous husband, a comedic
Othello who believes his wife
may be cheatiAg en him. With
a nymphet of a wife (Nastassja Kinski) , most men might
not need an lago to spur them
on to these fits of"jealousy.
"Unfaithfully Yours" is a
remake of a 1948 film written
and directed by Preston
Sturges. Its director is veteran
Howard Zieff. whose . films
include "Hearts of the West,"
"House Calls" and "Private
Benjamin." Zieff is more than
. able to tackle film comedies.
He also knows a good one
when he sees one. "Unfaithful·
ly Yours" Is ripe with possibill·
!..ar~
@)1984 Compulog
t1es, most of which Z1eff
delivers in pleasant if not
uproanous style.
Zieff is also smart enough to
surround himself with the best
people. There are probably
few comic actors better than
Moore. and his talent for
delivenng a com1c line IS
matched by his ability !iJ perform slapstick in grand old
style. Albert Brooks IS superb
in a supporting role, and
Armand Assante is a f1ne foil
for Moore as the suspected
lover.
Good film comedies are
rare. "Unfaithfully Yours·· is
just a bit too thin on story line
and development to rate four
stars. The film has some of the
best names in the industry on
its credit list, and they make
the best out of a good. if not
great, situation.
............ _...................... *._.,.'!' ... ..
@) 1114 Compulog
Sportsman's' 20th anniversary.
fB ® Business of
Management
@)@MOVIE: 'Andy
Hardy Gets Spring
Fever' Andy falls for
an older woman and
plans to quit~chool to
support her. Mickey
Rooney, Lewis Stone.
Ann
Rutherford.
'
Ill ® NCAA Basketlouisville
at
ball:
DePaul
fB ®
Focus on
Society
fB ®
Focus on
Society
fB ® Making It Count
@)
@
Barbara's
Horses & Ponies
IJ (J) Ray Charles: A
Man and His Soul
II) @ NCAA Basketball:
Alabama
at
Mississippi State
fB ® Making It Count
@) @ Inside Story
(lj ®
SportsWorld
Today's program features a WBA junior
lightweight title bout
between
champion
Roger
Mayweather
and Rocky Lockridge
and road racing. (2
hr!.'.)
Ill (I) CBS Sports
Sunday Today's program features the
Men's World Speed
Skating
Championships, a World Figure
Skating
Championships Preview and
John Madden's Journeys. (90 min.)
CD Hi9h Chaparral
fB W Social Problems/Ciassrm.
@) @
New Tech
Times
fB ® All New This
Old House
@) [1) W.V. Regional
Golden Gloves Boxing
Championship
CD Cousteau Odyssey
fB ® Woodwrighfs
Shop
EVENING
IJ (J) Ill® News
II)@ Star Search
fB ill Motorweek
(lj 00 Bill Francis
Gardenini_
6:30 IJ (J) f!fJ ® NBC
News
Ill Cl) CBS News
CD Wild World of
Animals
fB ill Great Chefs/
San Francisco
7:00 IJ (J) (lj 00 First
Camera
Ill Cl) 60 Minutes
II)@ Ripley's Believe
It or Notl
CD Best of World
Championship Wrestllnll_
fiJrn Nature "Big Business in Bees.' Bee
cultivation, a giant in6:00
7:30
8:00
dustry of great importance to the United
States. is examined.
@)@Tony Brown's
Journal "The Longest
Struggle: The "7 5 Year
March.'
@)@Lawmakers
IJ (I) 4!D 00 MOVIE:
'Urban Cowboy' A
Texas refinery laborer.
who spends his free
hours in a Houston
honky-tonk, finds both
romance and rivalry.
John Travolta. Debra
Winger,
Madolyn
Smith. 1979.
Ill ® MOVIE: 'Star
Wars' An orphan, a renegade and a princess
battle the evil forces
controlling the Empire. Mark Hamill, Carrie Fisher, Harrison
Ford. 1978.
(F.)@ MOVIE: 'lace'
Part 1 An international sex-symbol uses
all her power and influence of her fame to
find and destroy the
mother
she
never
knew.
Bess
Armstrong. Brooke Adams.
Phoebe Cates. 1984.
C6 MOVIE: 'The
Cockeyed Cowboys of
Calico County' The local blacksmith's mail
order bride doesn't arrive so the townspeople plot to get him a
wife. Dan Blocker,
Mickey Rooney, Nanette Fabray. 1969.
fa® Pallisers
@) @ Nature 'The
Masterbuilders.'
Michael Richards examines a variety of bird
species during their
nestbuilding periods.
(60 min.) [Closed Captioned]
9:oo m
rn
m
®
Masterpiece Theatre
'The Irish R.M.' Sally
wants to buy Tom
Sheehy's colt and
Flurry
hatches
a
scheme to get Tom to
bring the colt's price
down. (60 min.)
[Closed Captioned]
10:00 CD Sports Page
fB (]) Bits and Bytes
@) (IT) Our Town
10:30 CD Oral Roberts
fB ®
New Tech
Times
11:00IJ®I!I® News
II) @ ABC News
C6 Jerry Falwell
(lj (I)
lfs
Your
Business
11: 15 II) @ Forum 19
11:30 IJ CU MOVIE: 'Red
Skies of Montana' Firefighters of the U.S.
Forestry Service are
caught in a blazing inferno .
Cl ()) This Week in
Count'I Music
IIJ (!) Pentecost
12:30 Ill 00 MOVIE: 'Spell of
Evil' When a man marries a woman with evil
powers, only his secretary's loyalty and
love can combat the
terror unleashed by
his wife.
1:00 II) @ Star Search
CD MOVIE: 'Marilyn'
The life of Marilyn
Monroe
is
told
through clips from her
famous movies, including
'Gentlemen
Prefer Blondes; "The
Seven-Year Itch' and
'Bus Stop.' Narrated
by
Rock
Hudson.
2:45 CD
MOVIE:
'The
Naked Street' A reporter sets out to expose a crime syndicate when the mob
leader frames an innocent man for murder
4:30 CD Candid Camera
«daytime))
MORNING
5:00 CD Varied Programs
5:30 &) @ Rev. Pete Rowe
6:00 IJ @ NBC News at
Sunrise
Ill 00 II) @ Jimmy
Swaggart
CD TBS Morning News
6:15 @) @ Varied Programs
6:30 IJ @ News
Ill 00 CBS Early
Mornif!9 News
II)
(!)
Assembly
Echoes
6:45 II)@ ABC News This
Morning
@~)@Weather
IJ (J) (lj ® Today
Ill ® CBS Morning
News
II) @ Good Morning
America
CD SuperStation Funtime
@) @ Varied Pro9.!:._ams
7:30 W I Dream of Jeannie
8:00 CD Bewitched
fB®Weather
@) (IT) Sesame Street
[Closed Captioned)
8:15 fB ®
Instructional
Programs
B:30 CD I love lucy
9:00 IJ (I) Braun and
7:00
Co~ny
Ill C§J Andy Griffith
II)@ Jim Bakker
CD Movie
@) (IT) Instructional
Pro9.!:._ams
(ljW 700 Club
9:30 C1 00 Here's lucy
10:00 IJ Cl) Facts of life
Cl Cil New $25,000
~ramid
DJ@700 Club
(lj
Cl)
Diff'rent
Strokes
10:30 IJ CU Sale of the
Century
I!ICil Press Your luck
(lj
Cl)
Morning
Stretch
11:00 U CU t!B Cl) Wheel of
Fortune
Ill ()) Price Is Right
tl)(!) Benson
• Catllns
11:30 8 CU • (f) Dream
House
�-~@Loving
( fB
I& Texas
AFTERNOON
12:00 0 (]) Hot Potato
O®l!D(]) News
em @ Family Feud
16 Perry Mason
12:30 0 (]) News
0 (§)Young and the
Restless
em @ Ryan's Hope
llD (]] Search For
Tomorrow
1:00 0 (]) Days of Our
Lives
em@ All My Children
16 Movie
llD (]] Sale of the
Century
1:30 0 ® As the World
Turns
llD (]) Days of Our
Lives
2:00 0 Cil Another World
em @ One Life to Live
@) liTl 3-2-1. Contact
2:30 0 ® Capitol
@) liTl Instructional
Proll!.ams
llD rn Another World
3:00 0 Cil Match Game/
Hollywood
Squares
Hour
0 ® Guiding Light
em @ General Hospital
16 Flintstones
@) liTl Varied Pro9.!_ams
3:30 W
Battle of the
Planets
(ID
Varied
Pro-
SECOND CHANCE - Eliz·
abeth Montgomery and
Barry Newman will star in
" Second Chance at Love,"
a CBS· TV movie about a
woman who has come to
terms with bl i ndnes s
through developing a sense
of independence and a
sense of humor . Miss Montgomery plays Alexandra,
wh o has been blind for 15
years. She handles her
handicap with humor and a
carefully controlled world
- consisting of her apartment , her job as an information receptionist at an
art museum and occasional
visits with her brother's
family. Newman plays a
man she meets at the
museum who falls in love
with her.
FATAL VISION- " Fatal
Vision ," the best-seller by
Joe McGinnis about the
sensational murder case
involv ing former Green
Beret
Dr .
Jeffrey
MacDonald, will become
an NBC miniseries during
th e 1985-86 season . MacDonald was convicted
nearly 10 years after the
murder of his pregnant wife
and two young daughters
in their Fort Bragg, N.C.,
home. MacDonald still
claims his family was slain
by " drug-crazed hippies."
is put on trial for the
murder of his wife.
Charles Boyer, Ann
Blyth, Jessica Tandy.
1948.
AFTERNOON
liD (]) Match Game/
Hollywood
Squares
Hour
4:00 0 (]) Mr. Cartoon
0 ® Hour Magazine
em @ Rockford Files
16 Munsters
fB (ID Sesame Street
[Closed Captioned]
@) liTl 3-2-1, Contact
4:30 16 Leave It to Beaver
@) (IT) Mr. Rogers'
Neighborhood
llD (]]
To
Be
Announced .
5:00 0 (]) B.J./Lobo Show
0 ([) Hawaii Five-0
em @ Superfriends
16 Little House on the
Prairie
fB (ID Mr. Rogers'
Neighborhood
@) liTl Sesame Street
[Closed Captioned]
liD(]] PTL Club
5:30 em @ Tic Tac Dough
fB ® 3-2-1, Contact
«monday))
2/27/84
MORNING
7:30
9:00
liTl Sesame Street
[Closed Captioned)
16 MOVIE: 'A Woman's Vengeance' A
philandering husband
@l
The teleplay will be written
by John Gay, whose credits include TV adaptations .
of " Ivanhoe" and " The
Hunchback of Notre
Dame."
Elizabeth · Montgom-ery
. (
Q!ams
PARADE
Preparations for the traditional
Fourth of July parade in a
small Kansas town form the
backdrop
for
" The
Parade," a drama involving
the lives of three generations of women . Michael
Learned and Frederic
Forrest star in. the CBS-TV
movie, which airs Wednesday, Feb. 29. Rosanna
Arquette, Maxwell Caul·
field, James Olson and
Geraldine Page are also
featured .
Carl
GAME FAME Reiner will host " Those
W onderful T V Game
Shows," an NBC special
airing Monday, Feb. 27.
The special presents the
funni est , most bizarre and
most memorable moments
from TV's quiz programs
during the past 35 years.
Among the segments will
be appearances by Clint
Eastwood and Mary Tyler
Moqre on " Stump the
Stars"
and
Robert
Mitchum on ' 'The Celebrity ·
Game."
Carl Reiner
1:00
c
FACTS OF LIFE
16
MOVIE:
'King
Solomon's Treasure' A
small crew ventures
into a heavily guarded
city in search of hidden treasure. David
McCallum, Britt Ekland, Patrick McNee.
1976.
EVENING
O®O®em®
(B(]) News
16 Andy Griffith
fB ® MacNeil/Lehrer
Newshour
@) (IT) Dr. Who
6:30 0
Cil llD (]) NBC
News
O®CBSNews
em® ABC News
16 Carol Burnett
@) liTl Business Report
7:00 0 Cil PM Magazine
0 ®
Wheel of
Fortune
em @ People's Court
16 Hogan's Heroes
fB ® Bond of Iron
@) liTl MacNeil/Lehrer
Newshour
llD (]] How the West
Was Won
7:30 0 Cil Tic Tac Dough
0 ® Family Feud ·
em @ Jefferson&
16 NHL Hockey:
Atlanta at New York
Knickss
8:00 0 (I) llD (]) TV's
Bloopers and Practical
Jokes Dick Clark and
Ed McMahon host this
look at material not intended to be S(;len by
an audience. (60 min .)
0 ®Scarecrow and
Mrs. King
em @ NCAA BasketKentucky
at
ball:
Tennessee
fB ® @l liTl Frontline
'The Campaign for
Page One.' Tonight's
program
examines
how the press shapes
the public view of
presidential
candidates and their platforms. (60 min.)
9:00 0
Cil llD (]) Bob
Hope's Wicki Wacky
Special From Waikiki
Bob Hope hosts this
special,
which
includes guests Mr. T,
Tom Selleck and Loni
Anderson, from the
Waikiki Sunset Shell
in Hawaii. (60 min.)
0 ([) AfterMASH Dr.
Boyer becomes angry
at the Veterans Admin istration
when
they prevent him from
obtaining a cooling
blanket for a patient.
fB ® @l liTl Great
Performances 'Ellington : The Music Lives
On.'
Cicely Tyson ·
hosts this special tribute to Duke Ellington's
genius
and
influence. (R) (90 min .)
9:30 0 ® Newhart Kirk
battles
'consciousness' as he prepares
to get married.
9:45 16 TBS Evening News
10:00 0 @ liD (]) Those
Wonderful TV Game
Shows Host Carl Re- ·
iner presents some of
the funniest, most bizarre and memorable
moments from TV
game shows during
the past 35 years. (60
min.)
0 ([) Emerald Point
N.A.S. The warm relationship between AdMallory and
miral
Maggie Farrell breaks
out into a full-scale
romance. (60 min .)
em@ MOVIE: 'Lace'
Part 2
Tootle (Kim Fields, r.) confronts her mother (played by
her real-life mother, Chip
Fields) who comes to Langley
to lecture In the "Mother and
Daughter" episode of NBC's
"Facts of Life, "
airing
WEDNESDAY, FEB. 29.
CHECK LISTINGS FOR EXACT TIME
6:00
@1984 Compulog
10:30
Bugsy Siegel. who testified at the Congressional hearings on
crime. Dyan Cannon,
Harvey Kietel, Robby
Benson. 197 4.
EVENING
fB ® Business Report
@) Clll Gotta Make
This Journey: Sweet
Honey in the Rock The
five woman activist
singing group, 'Sweet
Honey in the Rock; is
profiled . (60 min.)
[Closed Captioned]
6:00
oo m (])
11:ooo@ o
News
«D All In the Family
11:30 0 (]) llD (]) Tonight
Show
D · ® Hart to Hart
Jonathan's
life
is
plunged into darkness
when a man pours a
blinding chemical into
the Harts' swimming
pool. (R) (60 min.)
16 Catlins
@)
(IT)
Latenight
America
12:00 em @ News
16 Portrait of America: New Jersey
12:30 0
m
Late
Night
with · David
Letterman
0
®
Columbo
' Lovely But Lethal .'
When a chemist is
Columbo
murdered,
finds that there are a
number of people with
the motive to have
committed the crime.
(R) (90 min.)
em@ Nightline
1:00 em
@
Eye
on
Hollywood
16 MOVIE: 'First to
Fight' A WWII marine
hero loses his nerve
when he experilmces
problems.
marital
Chad Everett. Dean
Jagger, Claude Akins.
1967.
1 :30 em @ Andy Griffith
2:00 em
@
To
Be
m
6:30
7:00
m (])
7:30
8:00
Announc~d
3:00
16
MOVIE: 'Confessions of a Nazi Spy' A
G-man infiltrates a
Nazi spy ring in prewar America . Edward
G. Robinson, Francis
-Lederer, George Sanders. 1939.
«tuesday»
2/28/84
MORNING
9:00
16
1:00
16
MOVIE: 'Promise
Her
Anything'
A
young widow sets out
to catch a husband for
herself and a father for
her
baby.
Warren
Beatty, Leslie Caron,
Robert
Cummings.
1966.
AFTERNOON
MOVIE:
'The
Virginia Hill Story'
This is the biography
of the girlriend of the
notorious
gangster.
omo®em®
(B(]) News
Andy Griffith
fB ® MacNeil/Lehrer
Newshour
@) (j]) Dr. Who
0
Cil llD (]] NBC
News
O®CBS News
em®ABC News
16 Carol Burnett
@)(IT) Business Report
0 ® PM Magazine
0 Cil Wheel of
Fortune
em@ People's Court
16 Ho~n·s Heroes
fB (ID
Kentucky
General Assembly
@)(IT) MacNeil/Lehrer
Newshour
(lD (]) At The Movies
0 (]) Tic Tao Dough
0 ® Family Feud
em @ Jeffersons
16 Sanford and Son
llD (]) Headwaters
0 @ llD (]) A Team
Hannibal and Tawnia
try to free The Face,
B.A. and Murdock
from a dairy farm held
by commandos. (60
min.)
0 Cil 26th Annual
Grammy
Awards
Show John Denver
hosts the 26th annual
Grammy Awards pre- .
sentation from the
Shrine
Auditorium,
Los Angeles, CA. (3
hrs.)
em
@
Foul-ups/
Bleeps/Blunders
16 MOVIE: 'Charley
Varrick' · A small-town
crook
accidentally
steals Mafia funds
during a bank robbery. WaJter Matthau;
Joe Don Baker, Felicia
Farr. 1973.
fB Cil @) (fi) Nova
'Will I Walk Again?'
Tonight's program explores the chances for
cures to paralyzing
spinal . injuries. (60
min.) [Closed Captioned]
em@ Rlpleys Believe
It or Not
o m
® Riptide
Cody, Nick and Boz
help a woman who is
suspected of killing a
lawyer. (60 min.)
em @ Three's Company Jack feigns amnesia in an effort to
escape Janet's wrath
when he wrecks Janet's new car. [Closed
Captioned]
fB ®@) Clll American
Playhouse
'Refuge.'
When four people are
thrown together on a
8:30
9:00
m
remote island, their
unexpected
stay
creates a situation of
confrontations and revenge. (90 min.)
9:30 . em @ Oh Madeline
Madeline
disguises
herself as a famous
author in order to appear on a talk show
with a sex goddess
who is really a man.
1o:ooo
Remington Steele A
missing-persons case
brings Laura and Remington into a small
town that shares a
deadly secret. (60
min.)
em @ Hart to Hart
Jonathan tries to save
Jennifer from a deadly
scheme concocted by
a man from her past.
(60 min.) [Closed Captioned]
10:30 16 TBS Evening News
fB ® Business Report
·
@) (IT) Firi'!S Line
11:000CIDOOOem@
(B(]) News
11:30 0 (]) llD (]] Decision
'84
0 ([) CBS Special
Report
em® Nightline
Catlins
@)
Clll
Latenight
America
11:45 0 (]) llD (]] Tonight
Show
12:00 0 ®Magnum P.l. A
request to act as a
bodyguard for a famous ballerina leads
to a puzzling situation
for Magnum. (R) (60
min.)
16 MOVIE: 'Benyon' A
tough 1930s private
eye can hardly keep
up with the killings after a hood is released
from prison. Robert
Forster, Darren McGavin, Jose Ferrer. 1971.
12:30 em @ Andy Griffith
12:45 0 Cil Late Night with
David Letterman
1:00 0
®
McCloud 'A
Cowboy in Paradise.'
A nightclub singer is
involved in a scheme
to frame McCloud's
boss in a murder. (R)
(90 min.)
·
em
@
To
Be
Announced
2:00 16 MOVIE: 'Romance
On the High Seas' A
singer gets involved
with a marital mix-up
during a South American cruise. Doris Day
(film debut), Jack Carson,
Janis
Paige.
1948.
4:00 16 MOVIE: 'Shield For
Murder' A crooked
cop. involved in a
theft-murder, tries to
keep his loot and
avoid capture. Edmond O' Brien, John
Agar, Marla English.
m m m
m
�•
Section Two, Pase Eleven
Beshear, Legislators
•Urge Utilities Curb
Lieutenant Governor Steve Beshear
with the support of over 30 legislators
last week announced 10 legislative
recommendations designed to prevent
unwarranted utility rate increases.
Beshear warned that soaring utility
rates have rapidly become one of the
~ost serious issues confronting
Kentucky.
"Many citizens suffering through an
already difficult economic period have
watched in amazement as utility costs
continue to rise," he said. "During the
past two years alone, the major electric
and gas utility companies in Kentucky
have requested rate increases exceeding
$420 million."
In the fall of 1983, several of the
~argest telephone companies in Ken~ucky filed for rate increases which were
unprecedented in their magnitude. Since
the summer of 1971, residential oneparty inonthfy phone bills have increased dramatically for a number of Kentucky communities, rising approximately 151% in Bardstown, 135% in Bowling
Green, 132% in Lexington and 99% in
Frankfort.
The Lt. Governor said he feels the
utility increases represent a serious
.urden to all Kentuckians, especially
those on limited and fixed incomes such
as the elderly and disabled. "This
legislaive package has been written
from the perspective of the people instead of the utility compay. "We have
put together a package which will address the weaknesses in our present law
Teen Miss Valentine
Miss Nicole Dawn Weinstein, daugheer of Connie and Ron Cooley, and
granddaughter of Buster and Delphi
Patton, all of Prestonsburg, was crowned Teen Miss Valentine, Sunday, Feb.
12. She received trophies and banners in
sportswear and beauty. The pageant
was held at the Allen Central High
School gym. Nicole was sponsored by
her sister, Mrs. Margo Barber.
Abbott Development Club
fio Discuss Fire Protection
The Abbott Creek Development Club
will hold a special meeting at 7 p.m .,
Thursday, February 23, at Bonanza.
Purpose of the meeting is to discuss fire
protection for Abbott Creek residents.
NOTICE OF
PUBLIC HEARING
Under the Land and Water Conservaation Fund Act of 1965 (Public Law 88-578)
~itizens are afforded the opportunity to
express their views concerning the
recreational needs of their community.
To provide a forum for discussion, an
open meeting is being held on February
29, 1984, at 10:15 a .m. at the Floyd County Courthouse Annex Conference Room,
in Prestonsburg, Kentucky sponsored by
the Floyd County Fiscal Court. The
specific purpose of this meeting is to
discuss improvement of recreational
facilities of the Right Beaver Mini Park,
. t Garrett, Kentucky.
Anyone with a significant supporting
or opposing view is invited to voice that
opinion at this meeting or in writing to :
Land and Water Conservation Fund Program, Department of Local Government, 2nd Floor, Capital Plaza Tower,
Frankfort, Kentucky 40601 within two
weeks of the date of the meeting.
It.
and will ultimately help control unnecessary and unwarranted utility rate
increases".
The legislative recommendations
include:
l. Construction Work in Progress
Under present Commission policy,
investor-owned electric utilities actually have an incentive to continue questionable building programs since they
are allowed to earn a cash return on
their construction costs before the
facilities produce a single kilowatt hour
of electricity. The costs involved in the
construction and operation of utility
plants are immediately borne by the
present consumer, not the stockholder,
as a type of forced investment. These
"future costs" can be immediately passed on to the consumer before any benefit
is derived. In addition, there are
regulatory incentives to invest in capacity beyond the needs of the service area
because construction costs increase the
rate base, and stockholders are allowed to earn a return on the total rate base.
In other words, the bigger the rate base,
the bigger the profit. If we ar-e to have
any .s uccess in holding utility rates
down, this overbuilding must stop. Our
proposal would prohibit the inclusion of
construction work in progress costs in a
utility's rate base except under extraor,d inary circumstances, thereby removing the incentive for over-construction
among Investor-owned electric utilities.
2. Management Audits
Inefficient management operations by
a utility can dramatically affect the
costs passed on to consumers. Information concerning the internal operations
of utility companies is necessary to a
fair decision in rate cases, and regular
management audits are, therefore, an
essential component of our utility
package. I am endorsing Senator Ed
O'Daniel's management audit bill, SB
14, presently before the General
Assembly.
3. Quality of Service
Many utilities argue that the Commission should grant them higher rates to
enable them to improve services or that
rates and services are separate issues.
We maintain that the primary duty of a
public utility is to render quality service
at reasonable rates and, therefore,
should not be rewarded for poor service.
Our proposal, SB 253, which was recently introduced by Senator David Karem,
provides that the Commission may take
quality of service, efficiency of operations and quality of management into
consideration in setting rates.,..-an option
not now available. It would allow the
Commission.to penalize companies offering poor service or being
mismanaged.
4. Statewide Planning
This bill would require the Public Service Commission to design and conduct
periodic statewide studies of the load
and energy forecasting methods, power
needs, generation and transmission
planning and conservation methods of
the electric generating utilities subject
to its jurisdiction. The objective of this
measure would be to ensure the most efficient and economic provision of electric service to Kentucky ratepayers.
One of the major problems in the electric industry is that of excess capacity.
The reduced growth and demand for
electricity and the poor load forecasting
by utilities have resulted in a situation
where numerous electric utilities in the
state possess excess capacity. The reluctance to share generating capacity by
major utility companies has created an
unfair economic burden on the
ratepayer, and utilities should be forc-ed to share excess electricity and
:generating capacity. Our proposal will
require that one considel'atipp in certification and rate pr~eedings be
whether the study indicates a lower cost
alternative to providing power to consumers through sharing power rather
than the construction of new facilities.
5. Anti-Monopoly
Present law prohibits municipallyowned electric systems from buying or
selling excess power to each other. Present law also prohibits sales by rural
electric cooperatives to municipallyowned systems. This monopolistic situation established by the investor-owned
utilities artifically inflates ratepayer
costs. Our proposal would amend. present law to permit rural electric
cooperatives and municipal systems to
purchase the cheapest electricity
available from any source.
6. Natural Gas Pricing and Affiliated
Transactions
Natural gas pricing is one of the most
serious issues now facing Kentucky consumers. Numerous unregulated purchasing practices of gas companies encourage unfair pricing. Of particular
significance are affiliated transactions
between parent companies and their
wholly-owned subsidiaries. While most
of the wholesale pricing policies are set
at the federal level by the Federal
Energy Regulatory Commission, there
are certain steps that the state can take
to regulate and control these costs.
House Bills 57,214 and 215, sponsored
by Representative Terry Mann and
Representative Ken Harper, will greatly
help to control many of these unnecessary costs and would correct a purchasing system that offers few incentives for minimizing price. House Bill 57
would grant the Public Service Commission the authority to scrutinize gas sales
transactions between subsidiaries and
parent companies. House Bills 214 and
215 would promote and encourage gas
distribution companies to obtain the
least expensive gas by requiring intrastate natural gas pipelines and distribution companies to transport natural gas
for other customers. Also, the Public
Service Commission would be allowed
to review natural gas utility purchasing
practices when considering rates and
purchase gas adjustment requests.
7. Telecommunications
Kentuckians already suffering from
some of the highest telephone costs in
the country are obviously concerned
over the possible events emanating from
the breakup of the Bell Telephone
System and a series of decisions by the
Federal Communications Commission.
Divestiture and recent actions by the
FCC will result in a number of changes
in the industry. However, it is our position that these events should not be used to blindly justify unnecessary increases in the cost of basic telephone
service. In this respect, we offer two
specific proposals:
1. We are proposing a new section of
KRS Chapter 278 which would prohibit
end user access charges for intrastate
long distance service in Kentucky, except under specifically demonstrated•
extraordinary circumstances. This bill,
SB 254, was recently introduced by
Senator David Karem.
2. We propose a resolution stating that
it is the sense of the General Assembly
that the Public Service Commission
should maintain a policy of universal
service for all customers by assuring
that rates for basic service and intrastate toll service for rural telephone
customers are maintained at a
reasonable level. Recent proposals by
the major telephone companies may be
devastating to the elderly and disabled
who often rely on the telephone as their
primary link to the outside world but
who may simply not be able to afford
higher telephone rates. This particular
resolution would again reinforce our
position that achieving universal affordable telephone service should be the
policy of the Commonwealth of
Kentucky.
Beshear complimented the Public Service Commission on its efforts in beginning to implement a number of the
recommendations outlined. But, stressing the importance of the legislation to
ensure that the actions continue in the
years ahead, they made a plea to
citizens to contact their representatives
and senators and let them know their
feelings about utility rates, and to urge
passage of this legislation.
WWII Bomb Group
Plans Pilgrimage
PUBLIC NOTICE
The 397th Bomb Group with its 596th,
597th, 598th, 599th Bomb Squadrons is
sponsoring " A Return To The E. T .0 . ",
June 4 to June 18. This pilgrimage to
Europe includes a visit to the Normandy beaches on June 6, the forty-year
commemoration of the D-Day invasion.
There will also be tours in England and
France where 397th was stationed,
sites of .the ground battles, areas of
general historic nature, and sightseeing
places. An invitation is also being extended to other Air Corps veterans,
ground troops, and private individuals,
family and friends. A travel brochure
and itinerary will be mailed upon
request.
Advance planning is also underway
for the 7th reunion of the 397th Bomb
Group, scheduled for the fall of 1985 in
southern California.
Former members of this WW2 9th Air
Force B-26 Marauder group, and other
interested persons, are asked to contact
the 397th Bomb Group Association,
Nevin F . Price, Secretary ; P.O. Box
1786, Rockville, Maryland 20850. Phone:
301 460-4488.
The last B-26 group to go overseas during World War 2, the 397th soon became
known as the "Bridge Busters" for combat missions which began on April 20,
1944. At the peak of its combat history
the 397th struck the enemy's communications during the Battle of the Bulge
<Dec. 1944-Jan. 1945) and received a
Distinguished Unit Citation for a mission
on 23 December 1944 when the group
withstood heavy flak and fighter attack
to sever a railway bridge at Eller, Germany, a vital link in the enemy's supply line across the Moselle River. This
mission cost the group many planes and
men.
Last Chance doing business a t Route
122, Melvin, Ky., by Janet Hall, P .O. Box
288, Melvin, Ky., hereby declares her intention to apply for a license as a retail
package liquor dealer under the state
lt-pd.
law. ·
B.&M.
TEL LITE
·Ham~ilton's Discount Furniture
Phone: 377-2897, Price, Ky.
.t:tome. phone: 587-2816~ or_587-~775, Beaver, ~Y·
WILL NOT BE UNDERSOLD. ON ANY
SATELLITE
.
.
.SYSTEM.
.
• All Major brands avalla~Je·
• 8CHtay free service
!_3~Y~9r warranty on mounts
.Bank Financing
CHILl DOG
SPECIAL!
3/Sl oo
CHOICE oF 4FLAvoa .
TOMS CHIPS...8-0z.
99-C
EA.
iATiiiiit
$ 74 9
LITE BEER ..
CASE
s·1s9
PEPSI, DIET PEPSI
MOUNTAIN DEW, 8-l&-OL
PEPSI FREE ...... .... Retun~~bles
"WE'RE HERE TO SERVE YOU MORE IN '84! /~
An····
AIR COIIIIAND
FURNACE
WILl SAVE
YOU MONEY.
If your home heating
: system Is getting old and
uses more than its share
of your budget. maybe it's
time to replace it w ith an
efficient new Amana Air
Command Furnace.
Enjoy these quality
Amana features:
• Efficient Heating
• Durable Components
• Easy-to-add Central Air
Conditi oning
· • Automatic Controls
• Amana Electro-coated
Finish
• Qu iet Turbo-Bladed
Blower
• Every one factory test
run
Betsy Layne Me
BETSY LAYNE, KENTUCKY 41605
The Betsy Layne United Methodist Women's Society has just published their 2nd edition of their favorite recipes. To order a copy, please
fill out the order form, or contact Mrs. G. H. Blackburn at (606) 478-5410.
The cost is $5.00, plus $1.00 postage and handling.
Name ______________________________________
SANDY VALLEY
HARDWARE
~!J
AT ALLEN ON OLD ROUTE 80'
PHONE 874-9218
STORE HOUIS: 7:30-5, WEEKDAYS
7:30.3, SATURDAY
Enjoy even greater
savings with a thrifty
energy saving Air
Command gas fur·
nace with direct spark
ignition. There's no
pilot to light or relight,
and no wasted gas.
If you're In the mar ket for
a new furnace, now' s the
time to act...
Call us for a no-obligation
home heating survey and
Amctna estimate.
DO INSTALLATION YOURSELF AND SAVEIRING YOUR FLOOR PLAN IY AND LARRY WILL
HELP YOU PLAN THE lEST SYSTEM FOR YOU ...
OR, IF YOU PREFER, INSTALLATION CAN II!
ARRANGED.
NOW is the time
to get a new dependable
Address _____________________________________
City & State________________ __. hone No. _____ _
Send order form to:
Betsy Layne United Methodis£ Church Women
%Mrs. G. H. Blackburn
Rt. 1, Box 1
Betsy Layne, Kentucky 41605
Availa"{~
.GAS
�Wednesday, February 22, 1984
Section Two, P age Twelve
The Floyd County Times
•
59
PLUS
DEPOSIT
FAMILY SIZE
PURE X
SHOW BOAT
UNDRY DETERGENT
PORK & BEANS
$1 29
GROiiNo J.J 10
Csii.ii(fKcE
ROAST......
LB.
BEEF ... ,.o.~
LB.
.MORE
BACON
3-Lb.
ENDS AND PIECES ..~~~.
U.S. NO. 1
$189
99C
PICK OF THE CHICK.. ...
HOLLY FARM
lb.
ARMOUR
·
32-0z.
CHOPPED HAM ....... ~2!~.
$359
$149
U.S.D.A. CHOICE
CHUCK STEAK . .. . .. .. . ..
ARMOUR STAR
16-0z.
SLICED BACON .......P.k~:.
FRESH
Lb.
$18 9
49C
PORK NECK BONES ... ..
Lb.
MR. TURKEY
C
12-0z. 6 9
FRANKS ...............~k.~..
MR. TURKEY
22-oz. aonLE
WITH THIS COUPON AND PURCHASE OF
ANY 2 PKGS. OF
FISCHER'S LUNCH MEATS
~~~WASHING
LIQUID ..... .
$119
.
SLICED HAM ........ ~~~:
MR. TURKEY
8-0z.69
WITH THIS COUPON AND PURCHASE OF
WITH THIS COUPON AND PURCHASE OF
I
ANY 25-LB. BAG OF
DOG FOOD
1
\~
1-8-LB. BUCKET OF
FISCHER'S LARD
WEDMESDA'I
IS
MP.
DA1!!
.
DOUBLE STA
1-64-0Z. CARTON
TROPICANA ORANGE JUICE
FREE QUAUTY STAMPS
WITH THIS COUPON AND PURCHASE OF
200EXTRA
fREE QUALITY STAMPS
\~.JWITH THIS COUPON AND PURCHASE OF
C
.1-2-LB. BAG CARROTS
SO EXTRA
\~~
1
FREE QUALITY STAMPS
WITH THIS COUPON
AND $40 OR MORE ORDER.
r
89
c
CELERY.......
CALIFORNIA
STALK lfmimiiil
SO EXTRA
FREE QUALITY STAMPS
FREE QUALITY STAMPS
$12 9
SLICED BOLOGNA .. ~~~=
SO EXTRA
SO EXTRA
8-0z.
�•
The Floyd County Times
Wednesday, February 22, 1984
On Foundation Board
Special Tax Rules Apply
If Divorced Or Separated
If you're divorced or separated, there
Richard L. Trumka, president of the
United Mineworkers of America, has
been elected to the Board of Directors
of the Appalachian Foundation.
The new Foundation met in
Washington Ja?uary 24 to elect officers
and adopt a 1984 action program.
Former Virginia Governor Linwood
Holton was elected Chairman of the
Foundation Board. Governor Harry
Hughes, of Maryland, was named Vice
·Chairman. Serving on the Board are the
governors of seven Appalachian states,
among them John Y. Brown, Jr., and
leaders from business and labor.
"We view the Appala chian Foundation as an excellent support organization
or the work the Mineworkers do
throughout the Appalachian Region in
• health care, education, and all-around
betterment of living conditions, "
Trumka said in an interview.
The Appalachian Foundation is the
first community foundation designed to
serve an entire region. It is a three-way
partnership among the states, business,
and labor in the App~ian Region.
The Foundati()Il-Board voted to target
private sector involvement in public
. ducation in its 1984 action plan. A
'school-to-work" conference is scheduled for later in the year. The Board also
approved Foundation sponsorship of an
Appalachian
Clearinghouse, a
computer-assisted data retrieval system
on the wide variety of non-profit service
delivery organizations in the 13-state Ap'palachian Region. A membership plan
for broad-based private sector participation in the work of the F oundation was
also approved.
•
Lawrence S. Stinchbomb, a sevenyear veteran of the community foundation movement, was named president of
the Appalachian Foundation.
HERE FROM HUNTINGTON .
Mrs. Mae H. Hinchman, of Huntington, W. Va., stopped in town last week
on business on her way to Harold to visit
her sister, Belle H. Ferrell, and brother,
Carl Hatcher, of Pikeville.
'
.
. ALLERGY
~
~
"
-
,_
•
-
Section
II
CHILDREN & ADULTS
S.K. JAIN, M.D.
Professional Building
Pikeville, Ky.
are special tax provisions that may affect you. There are tax rules you should
know about if you are paying or receiving alimony, a tax break if you qualify
for "Head of Household" status, a tax
credit if you pay someone to watch your
child so you can work, and an earned income credit that returns money to you
if your income is low. You should know
about these important rules before you
prepare }'Our return. This article tells
you what some of these rules are.
If yoW' divorce has been declared final
during this tax year, you are considered
to be in the "Single" filing status.
However, you can save money on your
taxes if you can qualify for the "Head
of Household" filing status. If you
qualify as a head of household, your tax
rate will be lower than the rate for single
people, or for married couples who file
separate returns.
To qualify for head of household
status, you had to be unmarried on the
last day of the year. You also must have
paid more than half the cost of maintaining a home during the year for an unmarried child who does not have to be
your dependent, for a married child
whom you can claim as a dependent, or
for any other relative whom you may
claim as a dependent. Except for your
parents, any of these relatives for whom
you maintain a home must live with you
all year.
If you are married, you can file as
"Single" if you paid over half of the cost
of maintaining your household for the
year, your spouse did not live in your
home at any time during the year, and
your child, whom you claim as a dependent, lived with you for more than six
months. But if your dependent child lived with you for the entire year, you can
file as "Head of Household."
If you pay someone to care for your
child so you can go to work or look for
work, you can save money on your taxes
as well. The credit for child and dependent care expenses allows you to take a
tax credit of up to 30 percent of the
money you pay for child care in 1983.
Your dependent child has to be under 15
years old or be unable to care for himself
or herself for you to take this credit.
It is important to remember that you
may claim this credit only if you had
child care expenses to allow you to work
or look for work. You can claim a credit
for the expense of having a pl."e-school
child attend a day care center or nursery
school during the day. However, the
regular costs of schooling for a child in
the first grade or above cannot be considered for the credit. Care for the child
before and after school hours can be used to figure this credit.
You may also claim a credit if you're
paying somebody to care for your child
in your home. You may even claim a
credit for the expenses of having a
housekeeper, maid, or cook if the person you have hired performs tasks
necessary to run your home and does
work that benefits your child.
If you were divorced or separated
under a decree of separate
maintenance, you may claim the credit
if you had custody of your child for the
longer period during the year. The child
does not have to be your dependent.
Your child also must have been in the
custody of one or both parents for more
than half the year and have received
more than half his or her support from
one or both parties. Genera lly, a person
who is married at the end of the tax year
must file a joint return to claim the child
care credit. A person who is legally
separated under a decree of divorce or
separate maintenance is considered unmarried and may claim the credit on a
Form 2441.
payments, you may be able to deduct
these payments from your income. You
may deduct alimony from gross income
to find your adjusted gross income. You
may only deduct the amount of alimony
payments specified in the court decree
or written .separation agreement. Any
additional amount of money you pay to
your former spouse may be considered
a gift, and is not deductible. You also are
not allowed to deduct child support
payments.
If you are receiving alimony, you are
required to treat these payments as taxable income. Remember that not all
payments are considered alimony. for
instance, property settlements, even if
paid periodically, are not alimony.
Check the special rules on alimony.
Also of interest to many divorced people is the Earned Income Credit. If you
earned less than $10,000 and have a child
living with you, you could get up to $500
back. If you think you will be eligible for
the Earned Income Credit, you can
receive it in advance as a part of your
weekly paycheck. If you want to begin
receiving earned income credit
payments with your weekly wages, you
should submit a Form W-5, "Earned Income Credit Advance Payment Certificate," to your employer.
To find out more about tax rules and
benefits for divorced and separated people, you can ~rder the free IRS Publication 504, Tax Information for Divorced
or Separated Individual::, Publication
503, Child and Disabled Depen'acnt Care,
and Publication 596, Earned Income.
Credit, by using the handy order blank
in your tax package. You may also order
the publications by writing the IRS
Forms Distribution Center, P .O. Box
6900, Florence, Ky. 41042.
PERMANENT HAIR REMOVAL
SAFE, EFFECTIVE, PAINLESS
Thanks All Who Helped
We would like to take this opportunity to thank everyone who helped our
family following the loss of most of our
possessions to fire, Feb. 6. To the churches, CB'ers, relative,s and friends who
were so kind in responding to our needs
we express our deepest appreciation. We
will never forget the kindness and consideration you have shown us.
DANNY & MARY HICKMAN
TACKETT ELECTROLYSIS
LOCATED ACROSS FROM HALL'S IGA, VIRGIE
McCLETHA TACKEn, Certified by State-Licensed School
Mon.-Tues.-Thurs.-!5 p.m. to 9 p.m. Fri.·Sat.-By appointment only
FREE CONSULTATIONS
Phone 639-2051
Announcing the Opening
Monday, March 5
of the Inez Office of
Creech & Curtis
A-ttorneys-at-Law
Main Street, Inez, Kentucky 41224
Phone (606) 298-7701
C. B. Creech
Michael J. Curtis
G. David Justice
Terry L. Clarke
1102 Plaza Building, Winchester Ave.
Ashland, Ky. 41105-0431
Phone (606) 329-0550
2·22-l t.
0
0
THIS · THURS • FRI • SAT ONLY!' . ~ ..:
~.s BIG
COME TO
I
•
•
,EVERY NEW FORD
•
LINCOLN
f
•
•
"'
~
MERCURY
AND HONDA IN SfOCK IS MARKED WITH
) A BIG RED TAG SO YOU CAN SEE THE SAVINGS!
However, if you are married but living apart and not legally separated, you
should check the special rules for claiming the child care credit.
For appointment:
606-432-3837
• HEADACHES • DIZZINESS
• ASTHMA • SINUS
• COLITIS
. """ .
People who are divorced should know
the relationship between alimony and
taxes . If you are paying periodic
a limony or separa te maintenance
WO?J~al
RANGER 4x4's
FROM
HOMEMADE PIZZA. SPAGHETTI- SUBMARINE SANDWICHES
ALL INGREDIENTS MADE FRESH DAILY
POS
CRISP FLAVORFUL PIZZAS
CUSTOM MADE IN
10" • 12" · 14" • 17" SIZES
DKICIOUS GONDOLA I STEAM
SANDWICHES
YOU RING ...WE BRING
FOR PROMPT CARRY OUT ~All
886-8118
OFI
886-8119
HOBERT'S
PIZZARIA
LA.NCER KY
FROM.
$
,
9AM-1AM TUES-SAT
.
lOAM-lAM SUNDAY-CLOSED MONDAY
ESCORTS
FROM
WE USE FRESH PIZZA DOUGH • Not Frozen • Not Pre-Bfied • No Substitutes
OPEN
..
PLUS
OVER $2,000,000 SURPLUS
USED.CARSANDTRUCKSMUSTBESOLD!
Every used car and truck in stock is RED TAGGED, too. Chances are·we've got the used
car or truck you want And the price will never be righter. Tremendous new car and
truck sales have left us too many great local trade ins to keep! Make us an offer.
..
�Section Three, Paae Two
Wednesday, February 22, 1984
RAY ~OWELL BUILDING
Water Well
& HOME UttPROVEMENTS
• REMODELING
• DICKS
•
•
.•
•
COMPLETE
ELECTRICAL SERVICES
PEDAL STEEL GUITAR-
FOR ALL YOUR INSURANCEAuto, tire, homeowners, hospitalization,
life. With D-25% savings. Call Darby and
Allen Insurance Agency,
by Licensed Electrician
Call 946-2226
or 946-2677
874-2347.
closses now rormlng tor E9th basic ro
Intermediate lessons to begin In early
March. Must have your own guitar.
Contact Rick Johnson at .t!52-.t237
-21-tf
15 YEARS EXPERIENCE.
CONTACT NORMA WRIGHT
AT 886-9181
OR 886-2527
2·22-tf.
l-25-4tpd
OTT
DOUBLEWIDE
$15,995.00
2-22-4t-pd.
PHONE 874-2873 2-15-21
SALES ON ALL BRANDS OF SEWING MACHINES AND VACUUM
CLEANERS.
• We service Electrolux. Kirby,
Compact Filter Queen.
ts, pa:ts In rock.
ROS~E'S
Portable Welding
874-8166
285-9550
886·3092 or
886-3789, after 4 p.m.
~
~
THE PAPERBACK BOOK
EXCHANGE STORE
~
118 Francis Sr., Prestonsburg
g
IIQ
SEW & AC CENTER
lc
~~
;
fl5
0.
...~~
We hne used homes In all sizes and
price ranees. Two 10' wides, 26-12'
wldes, 21- 14' wldes, 3 homes with Expandos. All used and priced to sell
quickly. M111y homes can be purchued
for as little as $500 down. Name
brands! 4 Windsors, 9 Rech111ns. We
•e literally runninc out crt room. See
for ,ourseH at Great American Homes,
1-75, Exit 97, halfway between Lex-
• Turn let t off Th1re1 street
between Court House & cathOliC Church
. . .:.., ... ,··:: ..:;,'.'·::':ft:.·.:
'
. ''::we _ti•\VE C)VER
30,000
. ·BOOKS'JO SELECT FROM!
:\~; ·O,HE • GROUP..:.l5 FOR ).l••
:._, ,·;'' ;, • iloNE ·o'vER - ·"
'~-~,. : ,.:~)i;HA'tF P~tcit~
-~~:~ ·.-: -:~~,~--:~ •· ~~~:~ ~.:<;~~~~ -·:~- .-~
New 1984, 3 Bed, 2 Balh, Garden Tub,
Total Electric, Wood-Siding, Shingle
Roof, Cathedral Ceilings, Beams, Stove.
Rerrlg., House Doors It Windows,
Carpet, Delivered anywhere and set.
You choose colors. Veterans no down
payment. Others pay $1700.00 down
and $217.00 per month. Fireplaces
available. TREEHAVEN HOMES. orrlceln
Clubhouse by swimming pool. Bttwnn •
Exit 187 and Exit tM off 1-84. Winchester, Ky. Phone (806) 744-778~
54 USED HOMES
ON ONE LOT!!
2-8-4t.
2-22
I
i Sandy Health Care
Interested!! Big Sandy Health Care, a
federally funded, non-profit corporation dedicated to quality
health care, tbru the Magottln
and Mud Creek Clinics, has
several openings on the board
of trustees.
Be a member of a team that
cares. Invest a few hours each
month sharing In your community's future.
CALL
349-3110 or 886-8546
2-15-4t
OR SAL
I
MOBILE HOUSING, INC. ·I
~ Come See Compare! If you buy
1 a new mobile home and don't
consider CHEAPS prices and
1 quality, you'll lose money.
I
FREE 300 mile delivery
: and set up on foundation.
I Payments to suit your needs.
Open after church on Sunday for
I
I
1
I
1
I
I
I
I ·
:
iCH~EAP'S i
~ MOBILE HOUSING, INC. :
I
FLEMINGSBURG, KY.
I
•
(606) 845-2261
I I
------------·
11 MI. EAST OF MT. STERLING, 54 ACRES
M/L. MODERN 3-BEDRM. HOME. FIVE
BENT TOBACCO BARN WrTH STRIPPING ROOM. SILO, CORN CRIB, TOOLSHED,
CELLAR, BIG GARAGE, SADDLE ROOM. GOOD ORCHARD, FOUR PONDS, TOBAcCO B SE NEAR 2500 LBS. REAL NICE UnLE FARM. $85,000.
CALL 498-2122 before 5, or 498-5512 after 5.
CALL
RICHARD BERINI & ASSOCIATES
Call 478-9407
FHA AND VA·
FINANCING!
11-2-tf
APPLIANCE REPAIR
Repairs on Walhen • Dryers • Stoves
No S.rYICI Char,._
Pay only If WI fix lt. 8Q-Day Warranty
on Parts, to-Day Warranty on Labor.
Only 10 days left to take ldvanblge of
these low, low rates! No dosing costs
or hidden charJes to pay!
Hurry! some crt your friends •• already
liYing in their new homes they ltought
fr0111:
FrH &Nmat••
CLa.YD»IL
HDI\4ESI
·u. &./La',~-
Don't Senle For less
Ph. 358-9617
ANY TYPE WILL BE MADE TO YOUR SPECIFICAnONS. FREE ESnMATE-FREE DEUVERY'
Phone 606-886-9563, Prestonsburg, Kentucky (anytime)
886-2073 H.L. Setser, President
PH. 358-9560
2-22-tf.
COLLINS SECURITY SERVICE
(606) 886-9867 OR 886-3665
JESSIE COLLINS, President
1·11-.tf.
PRATER'S FARM EQUIPMENT
10 MILES WEST OF PRESTONSBURG ON MOUNTAIN PARKWAY
• GOOD SELECTION OF USED TRACTORS
ALSO NEW AND USED EQUIPMENT AND PARTS
2-15-2t-od.
FREE ESTIMATES
Call 886-3544
u -pd.
NELSON'S
CONSTRUCTION CO.
BEAUTIFUL!
Sectional homes now on
display! The most beautiful
homes you've seen in years!
With all the options! From
$16,900.00 & up. See us today!
Call Hubert At:
C~lbn...
HDI't4EB
-~&./La',~.
•
886-2993 or 886-8549
Taking applications tor full
and port-time &JTiployment.
E.O.E.
ATTENTION!
AUCTION-DEALER
FLEA MARKET-JOBBERS
GROCERs-MERCHANTS...
BURTON DIST. WHOLESALE
Is now open In Somerset; tools,
furniture, jewelry, housewares,
electronics, much, much
more-prices you will not believe!
Bring your tax no. and come
on ln. Burton Dlst 2600 So.
Hwy. 27, Somerset, Ky.
(606) 679-8678.
HITCHCOCJ<
.REPAIR SERVICE
24-Hour
Emergency Service
FOR RENT
OFFICE
SPACE
f•
in Prestonsburg
Phone 886-1312
E"VIRONMENTAL MONITORING
SERVICE, INC.
SAIIPUNG AND ANALYSIS OF
WATER AND WASTE WATER
• Bacteriolacical Aulysis of Dtaestic & Well
Wlter Slpplies • Cotlpletiot et Qurtttty
II.P.D.E.S. ftniS As Ret~liral lj State & EPA
••ber
Hu~
I~~P,Kt
Statetlellts &
Assessllelts
ef 1ST II l ne lbtitlal flyirw•tll
Assaciati011. l.AIOUTOIY MilTS All
• uwinll•tlbl
'STAT£ OSI l EPA RECULAnOIIS.
• Heating • Refrigeration
• Laundry & Cooking
Equipment
PARTS
AVAILABLE
OR
886-1473
FOR SALE
PHONE 789-3258
,__ _....
!1-.S..-23-S....
, 1'11--nt·-·...........tf.. . •
DAN'S
APPLIANCE REPAIR
We repair all brandswashers, dryers and stoves.
• Guaranteed parts and work.
• Same day service.
• Discount to dealers.
• Fast dependable service.
CALL 3!58·9892 ANYTIME
2-l-5t.
• 1979 Dodge Challenger 2-door
Coupe. 4-cylinder, tan, AMFM with cassette, reclining
bucket seats, overhead console group, 5-speed transmission, alum inum wheels, 48,000
miles. Excellent condition.
Sandy Valley Monument
and
TROY'S
CABINET
CENTER
US 23,
606-87 4-2281
,OR 606·874-2870
(Inc.}
Phone 874-2273- AHen, Ky.
2-22-61.
lvel, Ky.
Stock or Custom-Built Cabinets
Kitchen Cabinets, Vanities
Thermador Appliances
on Display
Free Estimates
Discount Prices
Call 478-53441-1 -tf.l•
4
TWO NEW
DOUBLEWIDE
SPECIALS
IICHMQNQ
STORE MANAGER TRAINEE
no
FREE ESTIMATES 886-3598
-22-lt
1•
LEXJIIITON LOCATION:
New 1184, 3 led, 2 lath, SOlid Construction, Garden Tub, Total Electric,
Wood Siding, Shingle Root, Callledral
Ceiling, Stove, Frost Free Refrigerator,
HouH Doors • Windows, Carper.
Delivered .-set-Up. ONLY $18,99!$.00.
See this home at 537 New Circle Rd.,
Lexington, Ky. Phone (808) 293-1809.
Building Stone Co.
NOW IS THE TIME TO GET RID OF THAT OLD CRACKED AND
PEEUNG PAINT-COVER YOUR WOODWORK WITH ALUMINUM;
COVER THOSE OLD CROOKED PAINT PEELED WAU.S WITH DOU·
BlE 4 OR DOUBLE 5 OR 8 INCH WOOD GRAIN SIDING,
MORE THAN 20 COLORS TO CHOOSE FROM.
• SIDING
• TRIMWORK
• SEAMLESS GUmRING
• PA
& CARPORT COVERS
• SHUmRS
• TRAILER UNDERPINNING
• 5 YEAR WARRANTY ON ALL WORKMANSHIP
• 50 YEAR WARRANTY ON ALL VINYL SIDING
Roger Montgomery, Box 214 Lakeside
Jackson, Ky., 41339
We do: • Dozer and Loader work
• Sewage Systems Installed • Mobile
Home,Movlng • Furnace Replllrs
REASONABLE RATES.
Call ,ted Nelson, Jr.
NOTICE-NOW HIRING
BEAUTIFUL BUILDING STONE
RAINFLOW SEAMLESS GUTTERING
AN EQUAL OPI'ORTUNITY EMPlOYER
(RAISED PRINTING)
$21.50 per 1,000 ppd.
Send Check or Phone:
358-3075, 10 a.m.-11 p.m.
WILUAMS~Wayland. Ky. 41888
2- -4t.
~
Ashland is moving into the quick service I food I !JCIIOiine and store business
with hs new SuperAmerica and offers good ground floor opportunities to
ambitious individuals seeking growth oriented careers. If you are willing
to work hard, like to meet and deal with the public, can function in a fast
pace atmosphere, are looking for a career rather than a job. Minimum
of 2 yrs. experience in Retailing required. You may be the kind of person
we are looking for.
WRITE OR SEND RESUME AT ONCE TO:
,.
Dozers • Backhoes
• Dump Trucks
BUSINESS CARDS
For further details, call
Doug Woody or John Woods at
The Bank Josephine
886-9101 ext. 243 or 244
• LARGE AND SMALL
DOZERS
• BACKHOES
• GRAVEL TRUCK
AND GENERAL HAUUNG
• 18 YEARS' EXPERIENCE
Ashland.
BOB WHITE
CONSTRUCTION
Box 282, Prestonsburg, Ky.
• 1981 Dodge Ram 150- 'h-Ton
Pickup. Yellow/ white, AMFM, 6-cytinder, 3-speed transmission with overdrive, 49,000
miles. New tires, excellent
condition. $4,500.
2-22-2t-pd.
Phone 886-6921
s99 & UP
$3,100.
-(Serious lnqulrt.. only)
• UCEJISED • BONDED • INSURED
• 18 YEARS SECURITY EXPERIENCE •
• 24-HOUR GUARD SERVICE •
Co.
I~twn. 874-22581
PHONE:
886-6900
East Kentucky Roof Truss Co~
CONTACT EDFORD OWENS -
Kinzer Drilling
Allen, Ky.
KIRBY SWEEPERS
2_15_22t-
Roof Trusses for
Commercial It ~esid~ntial.
Chain Link Fence, Residential
It Commercial.
LAND FOR SALE
CALL 886- 1640
2-l-4t.
'An equal opportunity employer.
2-15-4t.
seats or house a farm. Just minutes away from Allen
Central High School.
2-15-3t.
Only 3 left. Latest model. New
5-year warranty.
· 24-Hours A Day
NICE BOTTOM LAND Ideal ror 4 or 5 house
744-1918 or 744-4384 nights
REPO CLEANERS
BOLEN'S
AU fOil. IIOMf IM;,oYfMIIII llfiOS,
Most wells drilled in half 1
day by Rotary Mtchine.
For appointment call:
874-9041
Colby-Hills spacious (3300
sq. ft.) 4-bedoom ranch, stepdown dining room, sunken livIng room with fireplace, 2'12
baths, kitchen-family room
with fireplace, central air, gas
forced-air heat, loads of
storage, all on 1'12 acres and
very best location.
Asking $1!50,000.
iCHEAPS1
I
s-2S-te.
Drilling
ROOFING
FENCES
STORAGE BLDG$.
ETC.
WINCHESTER. KY.
ington l Richmond. (606} 624-0200.
.
ro•
•
•
•
•
CALL 478-288~-~-U-
24 HOUR SERVICE
PATIO • SH>EWALKS • STEPS
DRIVEWAYS • FOOTERS
• BLOCK WORK • SMALL JOBS
WELCOME. Call Eugene Ousley
PHONE 874-9281 - ·
874-2318 after 5.
~
$500.00 PER MONTH.
. CERTIFIED WELDERS
CONCRETE
WORK
Goble Townhouses. Two-bedroom,
unfurnished, total electric. S3SO per
month, plus deposit. Couples only.
FOR RENT-3-bedroom brick
house plus in-ground, fenced
swimming pool.
UNITED SERVICE CO.
2-
NEW
TOWNHOUSES
FOR RENT
WILL DO TYPING
OR SHORTHAND.
Keep America Strong"Weld It"
P41NTING
DRYWAll
TIXTURING
¥flLL ftAPERING
•
LOCAJJOtl:
New Floor Plan, 1984 24x80, 1344 Sq.
ft., 3 ltd, 2 Iaiii, Garden Tub, Utility
Room, Total Electric, Walk-In CloHt,
Cathedral Ceiling, Wood Skiing, Shingle
Roof, Roof Dormer, Frost Free
Refrigerator, Stove, Other deluxe optlons. ONLY t20,995.00 delivered and
set-up.
Thirteen oilier doublewlde models on
display. All models can be sold •
delivered as soon as weather permits.
FHA. VA Loans-20 Repo...IHCI.
over 50 Used Homh on lor.
See at
• LIMESTONE VENEERING
• MARB~ I.ANDSCAP£ CHIPS
• PORTABLE CONCRETE STEPS
• VERMONT SI.ATt
GREAT AMERICAN .HOMES
Located On Old U.S. 23
In New Allen
6-3-tf
•
1·75, Exit 97, halfway betwnn
Lexington • Richmond.
Phone (606) 624-0200
2-15-3t.
•
je
�Wednesday, February 22, 1984
The Floyd County Times
3 BEDROOM TRAILER FOR RENT
in Allen. $200 month, $200 deposit Call
21!5-9971 after 5. Harold Hall.
2-22-2t .
S Elt IT RIST.I
BW IT RlfiiiT.I
•
•
•
•
ALL NEW OFFICE SPACE for lease:
Consisting of reception - library and
four (4) connecting offices, with five (5)
assigned parking spaces. Located on
Third Avenue near the Courthouse,
downtown banks, postoffice, town center
parking lot, and the Floyd County Times
building. Ideal for physir.ians, attorneys,
accountants, realtors, and other
businesses and professions. Immediate
occupancy. Jim Hammond, 886-2376.
10-19-tf.
APARTMENT FOR RENT-OM
bedroom, furnished kitchen, central air
and heat. All utilities furnished. Mountain Parkway, near Prestonsburg. $300
month. Cleo DeRossett, 886-6568, day, or
886-1368, night.
1-11-tf.
DAN'S APPLIANCE REPAIR: We
repair washers, dryers and stoves. We
will make service calls. All work and
parts guaranteed. 358-9892 anytime.
2-1-St.
MACK HARVEY'S GARAGE located
one mile up Buck's Branch off new Ky.
80 at Martin. All types mechanic work.
Free estimates. Call285-3928. l-25-4t.
FOR RENT: 4-room apartment near
clinic and college. 886-3154, T.E. Neeley.
11-9-tf.
TOP DOLLAR paid for used washers,
dryers, gas and electric ranges, working or non-working condition. We pay
more. Phone 358-9617 or 358-4009.
1-18-12tpd.
NOW PAYING TOP DOLLAR for
mobile home wheels and axels. Ask for
Patty Wright, 639-4772.
12-7-tf.
1982 LINCOLN: Best deal in town. This
one has it all! Call Patty Wright,
639-4772.
12-7-tf.
•
1984 MOBILE HOME: 2 bedroom, 12'
wide, front kitchen, double windows.
Furnished. Total electric. Only $8,995.
12-7-tf.
Call John Wright, 432-1401.
PAYMENTS LESS THAN RENT :
14-wide mobile home. Only $10,995. Call
John Wright, 432-1401.
12-7-tf.
.•
e
HAVE YOU UPDATED YOUR PERSONAL insurance to meet today's
needs? If not, call us, we can insure the
entire family from 0 to 80. Call Sam
Wallen Insurance Agency. I have been
serving the insurance needs of Ky. for
over thirty years. Phone 874-2289.
2-l-5tpd.
FOR ALL YOUR INSURANCE-Auto.
fire, homeowners, hospitalization, life:
With 0-25% savings. Call Darby and
Allen Insurance Agency, 874-2347.
12-28-tf.
FOR SALE: Two-story, 11-room apartment.building, $40,000. At Twin Bridges,
Martm, on 100X50 corner lot. Call J .R.
samons, 285-3914.
12-14-tf.
All classified ads scheduled
for only one week, must be
paid In advance. All clissl·
lied ads with only telephone
numbers must be paid In ad.v ance.
CLASSIFIED
ADVERTISING RATES
lOc Per word, If paid In advance
15c: Per word on c:harae account
, ($2.50 minimum)
'DI.play daslllfled advertlslna
$3.00 per ~umn Inch.
peac111ne for ads:: 4 p.m.
Monda~
2-BEDROOM F URNISHED APARTMENT for rent at Cliff. $300 month,
$100 security deposit. For Sale: Two
pop coolers. upright glass doors. $400:
chest type, $200; metal store shelves.
good for any type of business; new
electronic cash register. Call 886-6030
or 886-1030, Rick Vanover.
2-22-2t.
FOR SALE : 1970 Case backhoe. GMC
dump truck. new bed. Call Clarence
Martin. 874-9038, after 5 p.m. 2-22-2tpd .
EQUAL OPPORTUNITY: The women
in our business make as much money
as the men. U you 're looking for equal
opportunity, call 886-9401 for appointment.
2-22·2t .
FOR SALE: 14x70 mobile home. Call
886-9065.
2-22-2tpd.
•
FOR SALE : 1973 Chevy pickup,
automatic. V-8, short bed. new paint.
$1500. Phone789-3904.
2-22-2tpd.
FOR RENT: One bedroom furnished
trailer. One or two people only. No
children. no pets. Call 886-2145 .
2-22-2tpd.
WOULD LIKE TO BUY size 5 or 6 competition gowns or formals. Call before
2-22-2tpd.
5. 886-8539.
•
L.P.N. with ten years' experience
seeks employment with a doctor's office. Call349-5789.
2-22-2tpd.
FOR LEASE : Beauty 5hop, mouth of
Cow Creek. Security deposit. See Bert
or Malta Porter.
2-22-2tpd.
•
ONE ROOM FURNISHED APARTMENT, 217 Westminster Street.
Utilities furnished . Working man or
couple. $175 month . Call 886~627 .
2-22-2tpd.
FOR SALE: House on 100'x100' lot on
Stone Coal at Garrett. Ky. Will sell
cheap. Call anytime. 349-1104. Salyersville, Ky.
2-22-2tpd.
FOR SALE : Handmade quilts. Phone
874-2717.
2-22-2tpd.
•
TRAILER FOR RENT: Call 478-2357.
2-22-2tpd.
LAND FOR SALE with small house.
Taylor Stumbo's home place. City
water gas. TV cable. Close to Clark
School. Call 886-6047 after 9 a.m ..
Noma Ruth Stumbo.
2-22-2t.
•
FOR SALE : Warm Morning heater,
$100. Exercise bike. $45 Antique gas
fireplace inserts. Call 874-9038 after 5
p.m. ·
2-22-2tpd.
·HOUSE FOR SALE: Twenty acres
land. gas and water. Call 377~842.
Walker Gayheart
2-22-2t.
FOR SALE OR TRADE: Cardoxauger,
conveyor, 24-inch steeL Phone 874-9033.
11-24-tf.
3-BEDROOM HOME FOR SALE near
school in Maytown. Located on three
lots. Central heat, full basement.
Adjoining building, 16'x24' with full
basement. Good neighborhood,
beautifully landscaped. Complete
fence. In the mid-30's. Call 285-3494.
1-lUtpd.
USED FURNITURE. GUARANTEED
APPLIANCES. Moore's Discount Furniture. Located about 3 miles from
Martin on Rt. 122. Low prices. Call
285-9354.
1-11-stpd.
ONE BEDROOM APARTMENT for
rent: $250 month, $250 deposit required. 4'/8-9593 or 874-9033, Hylton
2-1-tf.
Homes.
FOR RENT : Furnished trailer, near
college. Security deposit and lease required. No pets, please. Carlos E.
Neeley, 886-8565.
2-1-tf.
FOR SALE: 1975 Ford Granada. fully
equipped, 302 V-8, good tires. good condition. $1200. Call886-3084.
ltpd.
FOR SALE: Meat saw..-111eaf slicer.
grill, dishwasher. 170 white plates.
sewing machine, mimeograph
machine, Ditto copier, over-head projector, adding machine, projector,
stereo, tools, recorders, guns, knives,
jewelry. HOCK SHOP. 886-2367. ltpd.
CLASSIFIED ADVERTISERS
PLEASE NOTE!
Classified ads will no longer be accepted after
12 noon, Mondays. For the coming week, these ads
are also accepted on Thursday, Fridays, and·
Saturdays.
We rrusr this will nor unduly Inconvenience you,
and we will greatly appreciate your cooperation.
FARM FOR SALE : 375 acres, 6-room
modern house. 4 barns, two silos. 6
ponds, large stocked lake, all cleared,
15,000 pounds tobacco base, many additional improvements. $800 per acre.
Other farms in 100-acre range available. Tom Goebel & Co. , 141 S. Main
St., Winchester, Ky., 40391. 744-3637.
2-15-31.
FOR SALE: 1982 Kawasaki 750Spectre
motorcycle, low mileage. Call 447-2933,
A&C Carry-Out.
2-Ht.
HOUSE FOR SALE : 3-bedroom. 1-1/ 2
baths, garage, central heat and cooling, kitchen cabinets and appliances.
. carpeting. On half-acre lot. $61,000.
Eligible for bond financing . ~aple
wooa Village. Call 432-1517. -Dack D.
2-15-4t.
Deskins.
TREATED utility poles, 18ft. 20ft. and
25 ft. lengths. Also fence paots at GOBLE
LUMBER CO., phone 874-9281. 4-11-tf.
FOR SALE: One used Ampex stereo LEXINGTON TOWN HOUSE FOR
cassette deck. $45. One 20,000 BTU SALE: Opera House Square. two
space heater, $20. One old fiddle with blocks from Rupp Arena. priced below
hard case, $175. One 5-string banjo, no market at $99,500. Must sell. Owner:
case, $150. Call 886-2601 after 5 p.m. . Arthur Rouse, 134 N. Limestone, Lexltpd . ington, Ky. 40507 . (606) 252-7796.
2-15-4tpd.
WANTED: Secretary for medical office. Please send resume to P .O. Box
FOR SALE: 3-bedroom mobile home .
1008, Martin. Ky. 41649.
2-22-2tpd.
Plywood floors. new furnace and water
heater. Also 1970 F-700 Ford. 18' box. 4
DOZER FOR SALE : 450 John Deere.
Excellent condition. Asking $18,000. new tires, new motor and battery .
Phone 358-9617.
2-15-4tpd .
Phone 789-6800 or 1186-3904.
2-22-2tpd.
FOR SALE : 1!178 Toyota Celie a GT
Liftback. White, air conditioned.
5-speed, excellent gas mileage. Phone
358-9889 after 4 p .m.
2-22-2tpd.
Section Three, Paae T hree
FOR SALE : Three bedroom brick
home located near Drift. Ky . Attached
garage, 5 years old, $35,000. Call First
Guaranty Bank, 285-9281. ask for Mr.
2-15-4t.
Hall.
FOR SALE : 1980 Harley Davidson Low
Rider, 80 cu. in., 1340 cc, black, lots of
chrome. Buy now and save. $3900 firm.
606-437-4556.
2-15-2tpd.
FOR SALE : Nice, extra-large lot in
Woodland Hills. country setting, about
1-1/2 acres. 200-ft. road frontage, has
electricity, water and sewer already on
property. Five minutes from Prestonsburg. About one acre of lot level. plenty
of room for swimming pool, tennis
court or garden. Suitable for A-Frame.
brick ranch or modular home. Close to
Clark Elementary School. Price reduced to $15,000 firm. Call 886-8658 after 6
p.m., or 437-4556.
2-15~tpd.
FREE! FREE ! FREE ! Get your
washer, dryer, gas or electric stove
repaired free. Bring it to Bolen's Appliance Repair. old Rt. 80. Eastern. No
service charge. No labor charge. You
pay for parts only. For appointment.
phone358-9617.
2-15-12tpd.
ATTENTION: HYLTON HOMES Service Dept. now has parts for Whirlpool.
Kenmore. G.E and Hotpoint washers
and dryers. Also parts for Magic Chef
and Brown stoves. Also buying 30" gas
and electric stoves and good
refrigerators. Phone 478-9594 or
874-9033.
2-15-12t.
INTERIOR AND EXTERIOR Porter
Paint. 1,000 colors to choose from. BEN
FRANKLIN STORE,· phone 886-2169,
Prestonsburg.
5-16-tf.
GRAVEL FOR SALE: $8.75 per ton,
plus delivery charge. ~ll886-3425, JIM
cox.
.
6-23-tf.
LIGHT FIXTURES: 112 price at GOBLE
LUMBER COMPANY, phone 874-9281.
4-11-tf.
WATCH REPAIR: If you want the best
job, bring watch repairs and jewelry
repairs
to
WRIGHT
BROS.
JEWELERS.
ll-12-tf.
PERMA-SHIELD Anderson windows.
All styles, 20 percent off regular price
at GOBLE LUMBER CO., phone
874-9281.
4-11-tf.
FOR SALE OR RENT-1979 2 bedroom
Fairmont trailer. 2 miles up Daniels
Creek at Banner. Call 874-9572. Dallas
Justice.
1-1Hit.
SALISBURY USED FURNITURE. Two
miles up Arkansas. 285-S549.
1-11-8t.
FOR SALE: Peavy T60 guitar. black
with rosewood neck. custom pickup
with hardshell case. Peavy artist amp
with 15-inch Black Widow speaker.
two-cord MXR phase box, $600. Call
after 7 p.m .. 285-9546.
ltpd.
FOR RENT: Trailer on old Middle
ltpd.
Creek road . Phone 886-3184.
HOUSE FOR SALE: Full basement,
forced air, natural gas. Call after 4,
886-3860, Ann Slone.
9-14-tf.
FOR SALE: 1975'Mercedes-Benz 450-SL,
excellent conditif;m. Metalic green. New
tf.
top. Price $20,500. Call ~-8506.
HEY LOOK! We repair washers,
dryers, rangeS, all types appliances.
Parts ordered for you. Call 358-4009 or
358-9617.
11-3-tfpd.
FOR RENT: Rooms, weekly, monthly,
nightly. Also waterbeds availablP. .
886-2385, 886-9310, Sandy Vall«.>y Motel,
N. Lake Drive.
1-5-tf.
FOR SALE: Cabin at Cave Run Lake.
Three bedrooms, air conditioned, all
new carpet. Reasonable price. Call
784-7250 or 784-9203, J.C. SPENCER.
5-25-tf.
BOLEN'S MOVING & DELIVERY
SERVICE: We move a house full or
deliver one piece - anywhere. Phone
358-9617.
2-15-12tpd.
DAMRON NEW & USED FURNITURE: Living room suites starting at
$159. A-1 appliances. Rt. 122, Drift, Ky.
Phone 377-2071.
5-25-tf.
FOR SALE· Reconditioned washers.
dryers. gas and electric ranges. furniture. new and used parts for all
makes and models. Refrigeration
parts ordered for you. All guaranteed
60 days. For cheap appliances and
parts, plus a good guarantee. call us.
358-9617.
2-15-12tpd.
CARPENTRY WORK: Home building
and remodeling. Complete interior and
exterior. Masonry and concrete work,
all types interior and exterior painting.
Also have spray equipment to spray
barns and metal buildings. Free
estimates. Will furnish references. 15
years' experience. Call 886-8896,
anytime. Robie Johnson, Jr. 9-21-tf.
PHARMACIST POSITION : Part-limP
or full-time. Registered Pharmacist
position open at K-Mart. Pikeville. Ky
Apply in person . Equal Opportunity
Employer.
2-l:rtf.
FOR RENT : 4-room unfurnished apartment, $200 rent, $150 deposit. Couples only, no pets. Call Jeanette Hubbard,
886-2557.
5-18-tf.
FOR RENT: 4-room furnished apartment . No ..:hildren or pets. Phone
8!16~239 . Martha Goble.
2-22-21.
FOR SALE : 1972 J<'ord Tor ino. Fa ir
cond11ion . Call 386-!1847.
ltpd .
FOR SALE : 1977 Oldsmo b ile
Toronado . Extra nicP Below book at
$1995. PhonP !\74-2004. Rebecca Abner.
2-22-lt
SIGNS
4'x I ' Flaaher Road Signs.
Wood, hand painted, any size. Car,
truck. magn11tlc decals. stickers.
CALL
358-3075, 10 a.m.
ll
to 11 p.m.
FOR SALE : Captain ' s bed for boy's
room. Used for two years. Phone
886-6264, Peggy Kidd.
.
2-22-2t .
Sweetheart Special
FOR SALE OR RENT: 8-room house.
built-in kitchen. completely furnished.
fully carpeted. Call Bill Wells. Weeksbury. 452-2283.
2-22-2tpd.
1984. 2 Bedroom, All Electric, Mobile Home
FOR RENT: One bedroom apartment
on South Lake Drive. Call 886-6056 .
2-22-21 .
FOR SALE: Home in Wheelwright.
Fenced-in yard, garage, has been completely remode!ed, $16,000. Georgie A.
Bolden, Box 76, Wheelwright. Ky .
41669.
2-22-2t.
WANTED FULL-TIME OR PartTime : Lady to care for young infant
and do housework . Must have
references. Location - Mays Branch,
Prestonsburg, Ky. Call 886~961, J .
Hughes.
2-22-2t.
FOR RENT: 3-bedroom trailer on Abbott road. Furnished, $200 month plus
utilities, deposit $150. References required. Call after 5 p.m .. 886-9583 or
886·3022, Larry Prater.
2-22-2!.
NEED TIRES'? Can't afford those high
prices? Come to JIM'S TIRE SHOP in
Maytown for tires and prices you can
afford.
2-22-21.
OFFICE SPACE FOR RENT :
Business will remodel if necessary. Adjoining East Ky . Auto Parts , South
Lake Drive. Call886-6056.
2-22-2t.
HOME FOR SALE: Four bedrooms, 2
baths, living room, dining room and
kitchen combined, utility room. Also
18x4-ft. above-ground pool on one acre
land . Asking $35,000. Located at
Melvin. Call 452-4567. Paul Puckett.
2-22-2t.
FOR RENT: Two bedroom trailer in
Martin. Furnished. References required. $175 month, $100 deposit plus
utilities. Call after 5 p.m., 886-9583 or
886-3022, La':y Prater.
2-22-21.
Payments of
Call
$1 4 797
LarrY- Keene for D•tollsf
(606) 437-4078
We're glad
you asked!
John C. Hall
F ounde r
Hall Funeral Home
-
.
;
Who Can One Tum To In One's Deepest Sorrow?
Docton are surrounded by the Slldness of m.ny an irreversible and fatal illness.
with crief
They've lume!l throu&h their schooling and experience how best to
situ.tions. Ministen are well·-re•d and experienced in grief·the111py and belong to
the family circle as friends and counselon.
de-'
Doctors and ministers can help. They •e profession.as who hue pven over their
lives to helping f.miHes in emergency, sudden Slldness and mourning.
Depenllng on the inlllidu.a drcumstances, you can turn to each professional for
his partiaalar assistance. For the assu111nc:e that everything that could possibly be
done was d0!1.-your family doctor can be of unquestionable aid.
For consolation and aid in wc;rking through the mourning process, yow minister's
assistance can be invaluable.
We are also at your Slf'vic:e for whateYer information and personal aid we can proYide-in obtaining nec:esSIIry forms, contacting relatives, insurance companies,
unions or Sodal Sec:urity offices for benefits to which you may be entitled. Please
feel free to inquire. Just stop by or call.
HALL FUNERAL HOME
Near Junction of Ky. 80 and Ky. 122, Martin
Phones 285-9261 OR 285-9262
HOUSE FOR RENT: Three bedrooms .
2 baths, built-in kitchen with kitchen
appliances. Located at Lancer within
Prestonsburg city limits. $350 per
month. Call886-2403, J . Hughes. 2-22-2t.
FOR SALE : D&H 1973 Caterpillar
dozer transmission, $6000, A-1 shape.
New 24-inch tracks for D&H. $6000. 150
KW Caterpillar generator, 3 PH AC
power, $5000. 1974 International tractor
tandem with 5th wheel, new llx24 tires.
$6000. 50 HP 3 PH AC motor, $1500. 1978
60-ton goose neck low boy, like new.
new rubber, $20,000. Day phone:
587-2787. Night phone: 587-2954 or
478-5755. Todd Hamilton.
2-22-2t.
HACKWORTH'S MINOR PLUMBING
and carpentry work . Call day or night .
606-886-6623, Jim Hackworth.
2-22-3t.
WANTED TO BUY: Transmission for
1979 Plymouth Horizon. 105 engine.
Call 358-9142. Evenings. 358-9406.
Laymon Bragg.
2-22-3t.
FOR SALE: Yamaha SR-185 Exciter.
Like new condition. For sale or trade.
$900 or best offer. Phone 886-2201.
2-22-3tpd.
• APPROX. lo-ACRE MINI-RANCH WITH 2.800 SQ. FT. RANCH
STYLE HOUSE WITH RED BARN, WORKSHOP, AND PARTIAL·
LY COMPLETED APARTMENT OVER WORKSHOP. ALSO, ONE
BUILDING LOT ON THIS PROPE:RTY ALREADY GRADED. PRICE
$175,000.
FOR SALE: 4 walkers, $20 each: one
pattie, $25; one leg brace with shoes.
$20; one Honda mini-bike 70, regular
$700 - sell for $425. 600 original miles .
Day: 285-3561. Night : 285-3051.
2-22-3tpd.
BRICK. BLOCK, STONE WORK. Fifteen years' experience. Call collect.
606-29H080.
2-22-4tpd.
CARPENTRY WORK: New homes
and remodeling, drywall. FHA approved. Masonry and concrete work. Also
block work. Free estimates. James
Watkins, 886-3052 or 886-9673. 2-22-4tpd.
COURIER JOURNAL DAILY and Sunday route available in Prestonsburg.
Profit - $110 week. $250 cash bond
deposit required. If interested. call
1-800-29H563.
2-22-3!.
EARLY SEASON SPECIAL: Bring
your room air conditioner to our shop
for cleaning. maintenance. repairs
now. Sandy Valley Hardware . Allen.
2-22-61 .
Ky. 874-9218.
HOUSE FOP. SALE : Five rooms and
bath, one mile from KY llO up Buck's
Branch. Shown by appointment only. A
firm $30.000. Call after 5. R. Dingus.
285-3107.
2-22-4tpd .
WILL PAY TOP PRICES for standing
timber. Contact David Steagall. Rt. 1,
Box 695-J. Morehead. KY 40351
606-784-9463 .
2-22-41.
COMMERCIAL BUILDING FOR
SALE or lease. South Lake Drive.
Prestonsburg. Ky . Available im mediately . Call 606-32fK>148 after !i
p.m.
·
2-22-4tpd .
FOR SALE: Lot at Harold with doublewide. 3-bedroom . Completely furnished. new electric furnace and air condi tioner. $25.000 firm . Call 606-437-4556.
2-22~tpd .
SANDY VALLEY REPAIRS : Furnaces. room heaters. water heaters
SE>rviced !\74-9218 days or 8A6-14!l:1
2 22-fit
evenings.
pd.
• TRAILER PARK WITH 7 TRAILER SPOT5-ALL FILLED. ADJA·
CENT TO MTN. PARKWAY. GOOD COMMERCIAL PROPERTY.
PRICE $85,000.
�Wednesday, February 22, 1984
The Floyd County Times
Section Three, Page Four
OF'I''ICE H>R RENT: 20fi N. Arnold
Ave. approxtmately 1200 square feet
Suitable for doctor. attorney . etc
Phone 789~000 .
2-22-11 .
1<'0 R SALE ; Prop<'rt ~· on l\1 a r<' Creek
f<'or further mformat10n. l'all 4711-!1260.
.John G Ratliff
2 -ll.:~t
TRAILER FOH HI<::--:T 111 AJI(•n . ~o
pPt~. no children Deposit required
'ic<' clean court Call 1174·2141 After !1.
('all R74-2114. Akers TraiiPr Court
f<'OR SALE ; Wedding dress. size 7.
candlelight white. S75. Excellent condi tion . Call Kim . 886-1551. after 5·30p m
only.
2-15-2t
BOATS FOR SAL I<: : 191l4 r'1sh & Skt
bass hoat. 17ft. :1-tnC'hes. never been in
water. sa\E' $2!'iOO. 19A4 Glassport
V-hull. 120 h.p Ol\1C inboard. outboard
t•ng•ne. san $2600. 19R.1 Somt>rset 19-ft .
7 inches. 351 VA engine with boval out rlnve Boat is dt'ep \'-hull . I<:xcellent
conrlit10n . attracli\'e pricl' Phon<'
2R!'i·OO!l2 or 2115-!lRRR. Christian Ap
palachian PrnjPrl
2·11-31
I 001 HONDA XL!'iOO. Excellt'nl conrl1 ·
lion. 1:~50 miles Onlv rode on st reel
nnd d1rt roads . Never htll chmhed or
•nul rtdden $1250 606·6!12 -473!1
2·1l-:1tpd
HEAl1TJFUL QUAHTER HOit.~I<~ for
-;alP <:ood saddle horse for kids or can
h<' worked . Has worked in tohaC'CO. Call
'l00-652 ·473!1 an~·t ime.
2·11-3tpd
WALLEN'S TRADING POST & TIRE
SALES Retails and wholesales New
and used tires. wheels. caps. lugs,
wheel covers, batteries. tubes. auto
parts, stereos and boosters. tubes and
much more. We trade for most anything of value 874·2289.
2-1-5tpd
FOH SALE · llnfurnisht'd 12x7n
\tarlett mohtle home. 2 bedrooms.
$7!'i00. 'lew carpel. lots of extras. 2
flecks Call 606·6fi2-4n5 anytime
2-8-4tpd .
CORN FOR SALE · Ear or shelled .
A74-22:lA
2·11-6tpd .
FOR SALE OR WILL TRADE for a
tractor trailer. two DM-800 Mack
trucks. 21 -ft. coal beds. 65 rears. Phone
606 286-5851 . Ray Porter.
2-15-2t .
FOR SALE : Model 2.000 Ford diesel
tractor. grader blade. mower. scoop.
turning plow and disc. Call886·3444. G.
Smith.
2-15-2!.
FOR SALE : House in Martin. $30,000.
Call358-9764. Jerry Martin.
2-15-2t
PUPPIES FOR SALE : Mother. fullstock Collie. Have been wormed. $25
each . Call 377-1164. Katie Mullins.
2-15-2!.
TRAILER FOR SALE : Two bedroom.
gas heat. Excellent condition . Partly
furnished. On trailer park. Pike County . 285-3867. Eunice Samons.
2·15-2t
LOUISVILLE SHOW WINNERS!
Come to Clayton Mobile Homes of
Richmond and see the 1984 model
homes that have been show winners in
Louisville. We have a large selection of
these show winners at low prices at
Clayton Mobile Homes of Richmond .
623-9404.
2·15-2t .
FOR SALE· 1980 KAWKLX 200. Runs
good. Also. 1982 Honda CR80R Call
88&6043. Ervin Spears.
2-15-2t.
FOR SALE: Must sell 3-year-<>ld stud
located at West Liberty. Price $300.
Phone 725-4652. Harold Niece. 2-15-2t.
FOR SALE: 3-bedroom home with
laundry. one bath . Call 886-8076. John
Henry Meadows.
2·15-21 .
FOR REI\o'1': Basement efficiency
apartment with outs1de entrance Furnished and utilities paid. including TV
$225 per month. $100 security deposit
ltpd.
Call886-3744.
FOR SALE: 1979 Jeep CJ7. Excellent
condition. Special rims and tires. Extra sharp. $4500. Phone 886-1773. Shep's
Truck Stop.
2-15-21.
PUPPIES · Cream colored. Wormed
Healthv Five bovs. one girl. Six weeks
old S5each. Cali -RSG-8851
ltpd
FOR SALE: 1982 Z28 Camaro Pace
Car Has 35,000 miles. Selling for the
payoff. $10,200. Phone 789-5190 or
78~6972. Perry Endicott
2-15-2t.
FOR SALE
1978 MUSTANG 2-DOOR
8-cyllnder, automatic transmission,
81.000 miles. $2115, or will trade for a
pickup truck. CALL 888-1041.
MOBilE OME
MOVING SERVICE
CALl 358-4520
or 358-9348
Ralph O'Quinn
FOR SALE : Monark boat. aluminum.
14-ft. long. with Sears 7 h.p. motor.
Phone 886~419. Tony Travis.
2-15-2t.
WILL DO HOUSEKEEPING. Five
years' experience. Wi II furnish
references. Call 47&-5007. Dixie Belle
Salisbury.
2-15-21.
AUDITOR AND INSPECTOR for
casualtv insurance work . Area to be
worked-will be within a 75 mile radius
of Prestonsburg. Send resume to: Atwell, Vogel & Sterling, Inc .. 1066Starks
Bldg. Louisville. Ky. 40202.
2-15-21.
• Free estimates • Insured
STORAGE BUILDINGS for sale. Will
also b1•ild to vour specifications. Call
886-1640 after~ p.m
2-22-11
DOUBLE WIDES One of the largest
selections in state. Price from $14.900.
delivery and set-up FREE. Only at
Clayton Mobile Homes. Richmond.
Ky .. 606~23-9404 .
2-15-21
2-A-:~t
'RUMMAGE FOR SALE: Clothes.
shoes. coats. Sold by the box. Also two
broken-down washing machines.
Phone 478-2614. Jim Clarke.
2-15-21.
FOR RENT: Three bedroom trailer on
private lot. Furnished, newly carpeted.
References required . No pets. Couples
or with one child. Call 886-9583 after 5
p.m.
2-15-2tpd.
WANTED:
EXPERIENCED
QUILTERS & sewers are needed to
begin work immediately. Call for information or appointment. 886-9411
2-15-2tpd.
HANDMADE QUILTING FRAMES.
For more information. call 285-3679,
Glenn Slone.
2-15-2!.
BASSETT CRIB. MATTRESS &
stroller for sale. Excellent condition.
886-8101.
2-15-2tpd
GARY LILLY. of Auxier, Ky .. stands
fur BETTER GOVERNMENT.
2-15-2tpd.
FOR RENT: 2-bedroom, unfurnished
apartment, located at Town Branch.
Prestonsburg. All electric heat, TV
cable, city water. $270 plus utilities. Call
886~66.
2-22-2tpd.
FOR SALE: 1982 Dodge Aries. one
owner. 17.000 actual miles. A.C .. P.S ..
P.B. automatic transmission. Call
88&9583after Sp.m.
2-15-2tpd.
FOR SALE : Diesel International farm
tractor. $3000. Phone 874-2879 .
2-15-2tpd.
FOR RENT: One 3-bedroom unfurnished house. Also two trailers . Husband and wife or with one child. No
pets. 874-2225.
2-15-2tpd.
Hitf
NEED MONEY ? Pawn it. don't sell it.
We loan money on almost anything.
Hock Shop. N. Lake Drive. 88&2367.
2-1-81.
L. & H. Used Cars
On the lot financing.
Buy here, pay here.
HOUSE OR TRAILER FOR RENT at
lvel. No children. no pets. References
required. Call 478-9221 or 478-9000.
2-22-10tpd.
886-1225
1178 Oldsmolle Cutlass-t2500
1177 Buick Regal (T-top)-$2250
1175 Plymouth Fury-$1250
1974 Pontiac Ventura
Hatchback-t1250
1174 Ford Torlno-$1250
TRUCKS:
1e80 GMC Slerra-$3250
1977 Chevy Plckup-$1795
1974 Chevy Plckup-$1000
EXPERIENCED SALES PERSON
NEEDED to solicit Courier Journal in
Floyd County $100 plus commission
per week Auto necessary. Call
1-800-292-656R.
2-22-31 .
SPRING IS NEAR and grass wi II grow.
Brmg your mower. tiller. weed trimmer for tune-up or repairs now Sandy
Vallev Hardware. Allen . Kv . 874-9218.
.
.
2-22-6t
FREE PUPPIES : Four months old.
mixed breed. have had all shots. Call
874-2004. Rebecca Abner.
2-22-lt.
Mechanfcl Specfalf
1173 AMC Ambassador-$750
Route 23 North, below Prtttonsburg
POSITION OPEN
FOR DIRECTOR
FIREWOOD FOR SALE · Call 886-9460.
ltpd.
SHELTER FOR ABUSED SPOUSES,
FAMILY EMERGENCIES
Professional-level Job. Minimum five
years experience of responsibility ror
social program; or equivalent combination of training and experience. Send
resume to:
Janie Beverly Hall
Rt. 3, Box 403
Prestonsburg, Ky. 4HI53
BIG SANDY AREA SPOUSE ABUSE
SHELTER
2-22-Jt-pd
AnENTION: Descendents
& relatives of the late
Enoch & Cillie Blair Howell
now planning a family
reunion sunday, May 27,
1984, Memorial Day weekend. RSVP requested. Call
Ray Howell, 886·1640;
Jean Adams, 886-3581;
Barry Howell, 886·813.
YARD SALE : Ron's Bargain Barn.
again this Wednesday. Feb 22. and
Thursday. Feb. 23. 10-5.
It pd.
FOR IMMEDIATE SALE: 1982. 14x5R.
2-bedroom mobile home. Owner
transferred. selling for low payoff. Call
478-9798 or 478-9337. Vickie King.
2-22-11.
NEEDED· DRY. CLEAN SAWDUST:
Call Big Sandy Valley Stables. 789-5812
or 886-3160.
Itpd.
FOR SALE: Cook stove. washing
machine . twin mattress. microwave.
VCR with camera cportablel. Call
!\86-2385.
ltpd.
TWO WOOD WINDOWS for sale. Call
285-3656after6p.m .
Jtpd .
GOOD PACKING CLAY NEEDED for
horse stalls. Call Big Sandy Valley
Stables. 789·5812 or 886-3160.
ltpd.
FOR SALE: 200 coin collection.
Franklin Mint Set. Proof condition.
Also other coins Call 886-2367
ltpd.
Doublewide Clearance!
We Will Not Be Undersoldl
1984 24x44 Home
All Electric- 3 Bedrooms- 2 Baths • Completely Furnished!
'21,995
00
"Buy Today And 1 Will Give You A FREE Woodburnin.g Fireplace"
Call Larry Keene (
606) 437-4078
Dan Tax.
FOR SALE: 1974 Vega Call ll86-2267.
ltpd.
FOR SALE Flute: two wood bar
stools: 4000 BTU air conditioner: 100
Yamaha . If interested. call 47&-9887.
It pd .
LARGEST DOUBLE WIDE DEALER
in state of Kentucky for the last three
vears. REASON- Double wides as low
~s $14,900. direct from our factories to
vou. Only at Clayton Mobile Homes at
Richmond. Ky . 606-62~9404.
2-15-21.
FOR SALE Console 25-inch color TV .
Excellent condihon. $200. ('all 377-6881.
Kermit
Newsome .
2-15-21 .
I nco me Tax by
FOR SALE: 1981 Honda CM 400. Phone
358-4804 after 5 p.m.
2-15-2tpd.
FOR SALE: Used model 310 New Idea
corn picker. Good working condition.
$1500. Phone 886~907.
2-15-2tpd.
TREE TRIMMING of any kind. 25
years' experience Light hauling.
Phone 886-3771.
ltpd .
r;. ROOM HOUSE for rent at Stanville.
C-a II 47&-5288.
llpd .
FOR SALE · Parts for a 1972
Oldsmobile Delta RR. Ca II 358-3041
ltpd.
The People's Choice
WITH 20 OFFICES throughout the tri ·state area,
DanTax is becoming a force to be reckoned with .
With highly trained tax preparers and fees that
start at $7.50 for both a Federal and State return.
more and more people are choosing DanTax as
the firm to assist them in filing their Income Tax
Returns. Thousands of taxpayers in Kentucky,
·West Virgil'lia and Ohio have enjoyed the pleasant, professional atmosphere of a DanTax office.
Do yourself a favor. This year give Dan Tax a fry .
FOR SALE : 1977 Chevy van . Used as a
service van for T.V. repair shop. $1500.
Call 886-6474 or can be seen at TriCounty T.V .. Prestonsburg.
ltpd
DanTax
Coal Run Village
Pikeville, Ky.
DanTax
112 West Court St.
Prestonsburg, Ky .
437-4131
886-9952 - ·
WANTING TO DO tree trimming and
cutting. fruit tree pruning. 25 years' experience. Call after 3 p.m . 886-1631.
ltpd.
QUILTING: Regular size. $12: queen.
$15: king . $18: baby. $5. 100 percent
polyester batting, regular. $5: queen.
$6: king. $7: baby, $2. Hemming, $3:
bias tape and binding. $5. Quilts can be
seen at Janie & Lillian Sewing &
Decorating. Quilts can be left at the
first house on Lakeville road. 1/4 mile
from Salyersville. Ky . Call 349-6723 or
886-5817.
ltpd.
FOR SALE : Honda 250. new motor.
good condition. $375. Call 285-3575.
ltpd.
HOUSE FOR RENT: Four rooms and
bath with garden in West Prestonsburg . Call886-3745.
ltpd.
FOR RENT: Two bedroom house,
downtown Prestonsburg, $275 month
plus utilities. References required .
Phone 886-3487. or 886-2918.
ltpd.
10-FT.
SATELLITE
DISH
52,195
INSTALLED
LOW IAMK UTES·
I'IITS. A,X. t70
ItO DOWN HIT .
FOR SALE: Singer sewing machine.
Zig-Zag model, $50. Call874-8958. ltpd.
CARD OF THANKS
We, the family of Morris Leonard
Anderson his wife, Annie; his brothers
and sisters and nieces and nephews wish
to extend our heartfelt thanks to our
many friends and relatives for their
kindness, love and words of comfort during our time of sorrow. A special thank
you to our cousins of the Hall Funeral
Home, to the staff of the McDowell
Hospital, to the Rescue Squad and to the
First Baptist Church of McDowell, its
members and to the minister for his
words of comfort.
Pallbearers for their uncle Leonard
were John Floyd, George Floyd, Glenn
Floyd, David Howell, Dean Howell and
Billy Hamilton.
Again we say thank you to each and
everyone and may God continue to bless
you all.
011 tiZ I'ER MO
WITH t!IOO DOWN
Multiple receiver
.
systems available for one or two households.
Dealer for Yamaha, Technics, Kenwood, J.V.C., Advent,
p.A., Paisley Resea
Audio Tech, zenith TV
listen to WOHY for weekly specials!
LANCER-WATERGAP RD.,
PRESTONSBURG, KY.
874·2635, 10 TO 7, MON ·FRI , 10 TO 5, SAT
LITTLE BEAR
MARKET A~~~-~2~Y.
...... n~.
MOND~Y-SATURDAY 8 A.M.-8 P.M: SU~DAY 10 A.M.-6 P.M.
FOR SALE: 12x54 mobile home .
Package heating and cooling unit.
Underpinning blocks and steps, electric pole and service. 9x10 outbuilding.
new carpet. $6000. Phone 874-2879.
2-15-2tpd.
.
-BONE
STEAKS
FOR SALE: 1980 3-bedroom trailer and
7 acres of land. 1!178 Ford truck. Also
2-15-2tpd.
firewood. Phone 358-9746.
$36
lB.
PRICES IN EFFECT
WED., FEB. 22
THRU TUES., FEB. 28
• QUANTITY RIGHTS
RESERVED
• NOT RESPONSIBLE
PRINTER' ERRORS
FOR SALE: 1980 Ski Boat. with 1980 55
h.p. motor. Only 50 hrs. on motor. Must
sell. foreclosure . Phone 88~-9914 .
2-15-2tpd.
FOR RENT: Sleeping rooms in private
home for single lady or gentleman .
Siamese kittens for sale. Call 886-9636.
2-15-21 .
FOR RENT on Arnold Avenue.
2-bedroom house. $200 per month plus
$100 security deposit. Also basement
~~_rtment with. ?utside e.ntrance. furnished- . and uhhtles pa1d. $225 per
month. $100 security deposit. Call
ll86-3744.
2-15-2t.
FOR SALE: Registered Brittney.
14-months-old. some hunting experience. 4x8heavy-duty utility trailer.
extra set of rims and tires. 886-6386
after 5 p.m .
2-15-2tpd.
BOATS FOR SALE: 1984 Fish & Ski
bass boat. 17-ft. 5-inches. never been in
water. save $2500. 1984 Glassport
V-hull. 120h.p. OMC inboard. outboard
engine. save $2600. 1983 Somerset 19-ft.
?-inches. 351 V8 engine with Volvo outdrive. Boat is deep V-hull. Excellent
condition. attractive price. Phone
285-9892 or 285-3790. Christian Appalachian Project.
2-8-31.
FOR SALE: King-size bed. good shape.
$125. 700 Ford dump. $1500. Call
21l.'5-3423after7 p.m .
2-15-3tpd.
ALTERATIONS: Get ready for Spring.
Call886-8398.
2·15-3tpd .
GERMAN SHEPHERD PUPPIES for
sale· $50 each. Garnis Martin. 358·9178.
2-15-3!.
10-15 ACRES FOR SALE : Beautiful
building sites. Located two miles north
of Prestonsburg on Jane Brown
Branch. exit 3/1(}-mile of U S 23 by
Plantation Motel. Possible land contract. Call or write Jim Bingham. 1182
Booth, Howell. Mich. 48843 . C517l
!146-66~5 .
2-15-3tpd .
WILSON'S CORN KING
SIRLOIN
$2 7 9 CHUNK
TIP STEAK.LB.
BOLOGNA .. LB.$1
SIRLOIN
$249 LEMON LIME
GATORADE.Qr.
TIP ROAST.LB.
:g~~¥. . . .
LB.
°
9
69
C
$1 9 9
LEAN, BONELESS
VAN CAMP'S
BEEF
FOR STEW
PORKLI
RIBS ........... LB.
$119
HORMEL SLICED
HARD SALAMI, GENOA SALAMI,
OR PEPPERONI
END CUT
PORK
CH
...... LB.
$129
3%-0Z.
PKG.
g·gc
• SEE THE GOLDEN VALUE MARKETS AD ELSEWHERE IN THIS PAPER •
•
�•
Wednesday, February 22, 1984
The Floyd County Times
Section Three, Pqe Five
Because the largest percentage of a bank's expenses are
incurred in processing checking account transactions, most
· banks ch~rge a nominal fee for this service.
Like you, we have always felt that charges can become ·
burdensome. That's why WE base our checking account
charges on AVERAGE balances rather than minimum
balances, ·like our competitors.
'
-·
DAY
THE BANK JOSEPHINE
BANK Z
BANK Y
Balance
Potential
Charge
Balance
Pot.
Charge
Balance
Pot.
Charge
1
$350
-0-
$350
$4.00
$350
-0-
2
$250
-0-
$250
$5.00
$250
$3.00
3
$300
-0-
$1,000
---
$1 ,000
---
TOTALS
$900
-0-
$1,600
$5.00
$1,600
$3.00
As you can see, our checking accounts
really DO cost less. In our example your total
balance Is divided by 3. And even though your
balance at The Bank Josephine dropped
below $300 for one day during the period,
you pay ~ service charge since your
AVERAGE balance was $300. Banks Y and Z
charge on MINIMUM balances. And even
though your average balance with them was
higher, you will still pay their HIGHEST charge
just because your balance dropped below the
· minimum for only one day!
AND TALK ABOUT CONVENIENCE!! ·we have six full-service locations.
Bank Y has four: Bank Z has only one •.
You'll find a Bank Josephine location on every maior highway in Floyd
County. And our combined locations oHer a total of 102 more banking hours
per week than Bank Y and 208 more than Bank
And NONE of OUR locations close for an hour in the middle of a busy Friday.
z.
Now, you know what we mean when we say we're
AND E ASTERN K E NTUCKY TOO!
•
•
•
•
•
. .
Prestonsburg • Garrett • Harold • Allen • Wheelwright
Member F.D.I.C.
·
�•
Wednesday, February 22, 1984
The Floyd County TimeS"
Section Three, Page Six
•
PETER
PEANU
$
U.S.D.A. CHOICE
ROUND
STEAK
18-0Z.
79
$
ARG
LB.
2/
NEW
MAXWELL HOUSE
INSTANT COFFEE
l~Z.$5
U.S.D.A. CHOICE SIRI.O$
29
3
~~AK ..... 2 ~
·
l·LB. PKG.
LUNCHEON $13 9
MEATS ...
1-LB. ROLL
PORK
Sl 09
DAIRY
=~L#:RY $119
GRAPEFRUIT BISCUITS
...
JUICE
PILLSBURY $
19
BUTTERMILK
ORANGE
JUICE
SAUSAGE .. .
3
32-0Z.
6-PAK
ORA~$
JUI
09
t;tWim\Un
a.
WIENERS .... ..
·.· .
6-PAK
64-0Z.-IGA
64-0Z.-IGA
BISCUITS ...
6-PAK
~~\a.:~::v $119
40-0Z.
BISCUITS ...
·
95-CT.
LEMONS
PRODUCE
YELLOW ONIONS
·
56-CT.
16-0Z.
TASTE 0' SEA
AVEL ORANGES
3Lbs.99 ,' .. 4/Sl
BANANAS
$139
Lbs.$1
69~.~
·-.•·. ·"- ·" ' ~-~ :----..-------'
4/$1
LARGE VINE RIPENED
TOMATOES
BEEF STEW, STEAK AND GRAVY,
FRIED CHICKEN, KRAUT AND
WIENERS, GREEN BEANS, CORN
ON COB, PEAS, OVEN BROWN
POTATOES, MUSTARD GREENS,
BROWN BEANS, HOT DOGS,
CORN BREAD, ROLLS, CHERRY
COBBLER.
•
OCEAN
PERCH .......
FRESH
11-0Z.
CAULIFLOWER
BEEF LIVER AND ONIONS, STEAK
AND GRAVY, FRIED CHICKEN,
HOT DOGS, HAMBURGERS,
PORK CHOPS, GREEN BEANS,
CORN, MASHED POTATOES,
PEAS, MUSTARD GREENS,
BROWN BEANS, CORN BREAD,
ROLLS, PEACH COBBLER.
MORTON
TV
DINNERS ..
•
.
STEAK AND GRAVY, MEAT
LOAF, FRIED CHICKEN, TURKEY
AND DRESSING, HOT DOGS,
CORN, GREEN BEANS, MASHED
POTATOES, BROWN BEANS,
BLACKBERRY COBBLER.
I
FRIED CHIC
AND GRAVY,
DOGS, FRIED
BEANS, CO
POTATOES, ·
MUSTARD
BLER, CORN
�Wednesday, February 22, 1984
The Floyd County Times
Section Three
12-0Z. CAN
GOLD MEDAL
GREEN
NIBLETSGIANT2J$1
CORN.......
ER,.
39
SELF-RISING
.~. . . . . .
FLOUR
17-0Z. CAN
GREEN
WHOLE GIANT
KERNEL 2 / $ 1
CORN ........ .
AS
gc
16-0Z. CAN
:~~~~GIANT
89C
ENRICHED FI.OUII
. . 'IIIli
CHEER
$129
AUNDRY
DETERGENT
GENERIC
~~~~E ...... ..
Bag
ALL PURPOSE
&SC
4-ROLL PAK
RINSO
LAUNDRY
DETERGENT ....
5-Lb.
~-
GREEN BEANS ...
42-0Z.
09
2 FOR
......,. ~
84-0Z.
$
j0iiNsoN $14 9
~~:~~ON ....
29
PARAMOUNT
CHILl WITH BEANS
16-0Z. BOX
lS~Z. 69c
lORE
IGA
SALTINES
HORMEL
;JEW
POTTED MEAT
39
3-0Z.
$
4/$1
NESTLE SAVINGS FOR Y
. 20-0Z.
BANQUET
~.
CPHE RREY 'sB·L·U·E· ·E·R··R·'·..
1
PorNQUET CH.
20-0Z.
PIES
s119
WsUgY c
2
EN,.
9
9
C FR.IE'Dun $2 99
9 . ._....·_. __
r--_.__P_IE_S_
BANQUET
C.
...... ...
PEACH & APPLE
..J._c_HI_C_K_EN_._
...._ _...J
•
LIVERS, STEAK
LASAGNA, HOT
ICKEN, GREEN
I, SCALLOPED
~OWN BEANS,
~
APPLE COBEAD AND ROLLS.
I
MEAT LOAF, FRIED CHICKEN,
PORK CHOPS AND DRESSING,
HOT DOGS, GREEN BEANS,
CORN, PEAS, MUSTARD
GREENS, CHERRY COBBLER,
AND ROLLS.
$
53
~r:,sf~~~......... .
1Ml-NESCAFE
2-LB.-NESTLE
ai,~t\~E.~ s189
gnrc~oL~~~ ..... s219
~~\~ThT~ . . . $ 199
6-0Z.-NESTLE
8-
..
~:~r.
age
. . . . $1
BUTTERSCOTCH
....B_AR_s_
... _... ....
_ _..._._
CHICKEN AND DUMPLINGS,
BEEF AND NOODLES, CABBAGE
ROLLS, MEAT LOAF, HOT DOGS,
GREEN BEANS, CORN, MASHED
POTATOES, PEAS, BROWN
BEANS, MUSTARD GREENS,
CORN BREAD, ROLLS, BLACKBERRY COBBLER.
I)
9
55
TA-STERS
~~i~c~~
$599
. . . . $15
9
____. cocoMtx ....... .
·FISH AND HUSH PUPPIES, PORK
·BARBECUE, FRIED CHICKEN,
STEAK AND GRAVY, HOT DOGS,
SPAGHETTI, GREEN BEANS,
CORN ON COB, MASHED,
POTATOES, PEAS, MUSTARD
GREENS, BROWN BEANS, CORN
BREAD, ROLLS, APPLE COB·
BLER.
Seven
�The Floyd County Times
Wednesday, February 22, 1984
Section Three, Page El&ht
NOTICE OF
INTENTION TO MINE
NOTICE OF
INTEl'iTION TO MINE
NOTICE OF
JNTE.'JTION TO MINE
NOTICE OF
INTENTION TO MINE
NOTICE OF
INTENTION TO MINE
NOTICE OF
INTENTION TO MINE
Pursuant to Application
Number 636-5091
I< 1) In accordance with the provision
of KRS 350.055, notice is hereby given
that J & J Coal Company, Inc., Box 21-A,
Harold, Ky. 41635, has filed an application for a permit for an underground
mining operation. The proposed operation will affect a surface disturbance of
0.65 acres and will underlie an additional
140.87 acres located 0.5 miles west of
Craynor in Floyd county.
(2) The proposed operation is approximately 1.5 miles southeast from Mink
Branch Road' junction with Ky. 929 and
located 0.5 miles west of Mink Branch.
The latitude is 37' 26' 12" . The longitude
is 82" 40' 28".
(3) The proposed operation is located
on the McDowell U.S.G.S. 7 1z minute
quadrangle map. The surface area to be
disturbed is owned by: T & N Coal Company, Inc., Craynor, Ky. The operation
will underlie land owned by: Joseph
Mining Company, Inc. McDowell, Ky.;
Mary Howell, Craynor, Ky.; David
Akers, McDowell, Ky.
(4) The application has been filed for
public inspection at the Dept. for Surface
Mining Reclamation and Enforcement's
Prestonsburg Office, 431 South Lake
Drive, Prestonsburg, Kentucky 41653.
Written corr.ments, objections, or requests for a permit conference must be
filed with the Director of the Division of
Permits, 6th Floor, Capital Plaza
Tower, Frankfort, Kentucky 40601.
2-15-3t.
Pursuant to Application
Number !i:JC.5G3!J
I (1 >In accordance with the provision
of KRS 350.055, notice is hereby given
that T & N Coal Company, Inc., Grethel,
Ky., has filed an application for a permit for an underground mining operation. The proposed operation will affect
a surface disturbance of l.91 acres and
will underlie an additional 132.94 acres
located .5 miles southwest of Craynor in
Floyd county.
(2) The proposed operation is approximately 1.5 miles south from Mink
Branch Road junction with Ky. 979 and
located 1.5 miles in Mink Branch. The
latitude is 37' 25' 54". The longitude is 82"
40' 29".
(3) The proposed operation is located
on the McDowelll'.S.G.S. 7 12 minute
quadrangle map. The surface area to be
disturbed is owned by: Blaine Slone,
Craynor, Ky.; Dennis Reynolds,
Craynor, Ky.; Jack Hamilton, Craynor,
Ky. The operation will underlie land
owned by: Blaine Slone, Craynor, Ky.;
Hazel Hamilton, Craynor, Ky.; Dennis
Reynolds, Craynor, Ky.; Jack Hamilton,
Craynor, Ky.; Joseph Mining Company,
Inc., McDowell, Ky.; T & N Coal Company, Inc., Grethel, Ky.; David Akers,
McDowell, Ky. The operation will effect
an area within 100 feet of public road
Mink Branch. The operation will not involve relo(!ation of the public road.
(4) The application has been filed for
public inspection at the Department for
Surface Mining Reclamation and Enforcement's Prestonsburg Regional Of·fice, 431 South Lake Drive, Prestonsburg, Ky. Written comments, objections, or requests· for a permit conference must be filed with the Director
of the Division of Permits, 6th Floor,
Capital Plaza Tower, Frankfort, Kentucky 40601.
2-15-3t.
Pursuant to Ap(llication
:\umber 4:l!i-5101
In accordance with the provisions of
KRS 350.055, not1ce is hereby given that
Melana Coal Company, Drift. Kentucky
41619, has filed an applicatiOn for a permit for an underground mining operatiOn. The proposed operation will aff€ct
a surface disturbance of 1 acre and will
underlie an additional 49 acres located
l.5 miles northeast of Drift in Floyd
county.
The proposed operation is approximately 2 miles northeast of State Route
122's junction with Kentucky.Route 1022
and located on the south side of
Stonecoal Branch. The latitude is
37°-29' -41". The longitude is 82°-44 '-20".
The proposed operation is located on
the McDowell U.S.G.S. 7 1 ~minute quadrangle map . The surface area to be
disturbed is owned by Harry and Reba
Martin. The operation will underlie land
owned by Harry and Reba Martin.
The operation will affect an area
within 100 feet of public road, Stone Coal
Branch Road. The operation will not involve relocation of the public road.
The application has been filed for
public inspection at the Department for
Surface Mining Reclamation and Enforcement's Prestonsburg Regional Office, South Lake Drive, Prestonsburg,
Kentucky 41653. Written comments, objections, or requests for a permit conference must be filed with the Director
of the Division of Permits, 6th Floor,
Capital Plaza Tower, Frankfort, Kentucky 40601.
2-8-4t.
Pursuant to Application
Number 836-5032
1J In accordance with the provisions
of KRS 350.055, notice is hereby given
that Blackhawk Mining Company, Inc.,
P.O. Box 150, Prestonsburg, Ky. 41653,
has filed an application for a permit for
an underground mining operation. The
proposed operation will affect a surface
disturbance of 3 acres and will underlie
an additionaL90 acres located 1 mile
northeast of Drift in Floyd county.
2) The proposed operation is approximately 1 mile east from State Route
122's junction with Stonecoal Branch
Road and located on the north side of
Stonecoal Branch. The latitude is
37'-30'-41". The longitude is 82'-44'-15".
3) The proposed operation is located
on the McDowell U.S.G.S. 7.5 minute
quadrangle map. The surface area to be
disturbed is owned by Harry and Reba
Martin. The operation will underlie land
owned by Harry and Reba Martin.
4) The application has been filed for
public inspection at the Department for
Surface Mining Reclamation and Enforcement's Prestonsburg Regional Office, South Lake Drive, Prestonsburg,
Kentucky 41653. Written comments, objections, or requests for a permit conference must be filed with the DirectQr
of the Division of Permits, 6th Floor,
Capital Plaza Tower, Frankfort, Kentucky 40601.
This is the final advertisement of this
application; all comments, objections,
or requests for a permit conference
must be received within thirty (30) days
of today's date.
It.
Pursuant to Application
Number 498-0168
In accordance with the provisions of
KRS 350.055, notice is hereby given that:
Hawkeye Coal Company, 1200 First
Security Plaza, Lexington, Ky . '40507,
has filed an application for a permit for
a surface mining and reclamation
operation of approximately 207 acres
located SE of Endicott in Pike County
and Floyd County.
The proposed operation is approximately 5 miles SE from State Route
194's junction with Buffalo Creek Road.
The latitude is 37', 39', 30". The longitude
is 82', 36', 06". The surface area is owned by Wanda Spears, Sellard Heirs,
Hawkeye Coal Company, Roscoe
Blackburn, Ray Taylor and Georgia
Blackburn.
The oroposed operation is located on
the Thomas U.S.G.S. 7% minute quadrangle map. The operation will use the
mountaintop removal and contour mining methods with associated hollow fills.
The application has been filed for
public inspection at the Department for
Surface Mining Reclamation and Enforcement's Pikeville Regional Office,
P .O. 2289, Pikeville, Ky. 41501. Written
comments, objections, or requests for a
permit conference must be filed with the
Director of the Division of Permits, 6th
Floor, Capital Plaza Tower, Frankfort,
2-15-3t.
Ky. 40601.
Pursuant to Application
Number 436-519:!
In accordance with the provisions of
KAR 350.055, notice is hereby given that
Big "D" Excavating, Inc., P.O. Box 34,
Betsy Layne, Kentucky, 41605, has filed
an application for a permit for an underground mining operation. The proposed
operation will affect a surface disturbance of 9.88 acres and will underlie an
additional 62.50 acres located 1.0 miles
southwest of Allen in Floyd county.
The proposed operation is approximately 0.5 miles northwest from
Oklahoma Road's junction with Eel's
Branch Road and located 1.5 miles north
of Martin. The latitude is 37° 35' 47". The
longitude is 82" 44' 58''.
The proposed operation is located on
the Harold U.S.G.S. 7 1/5 minute quadrangle map. The surface area to be
disturbed is owned by Robert Ousley
heirs. The operation will underlie land
owned by Robert Ousley heirs.
The application has been filed for
public inspection at the Department for
Surface Mining Reclamation and Enforcement's Prestonsburg Regional Office, 503 South Lake Drive, Prestonsburg, Ky. 416!13. Written comments, objections, or requests for a permit conference must have attached a copy of
the newspaper clipping and must be filed with the Regional Administrator of
the Prestonsburg Regional Office, 503
South Lake Drive, Prestonsburg, Ky.
41653.
2-8-3t.
NOTICE OF
INTENTION TO MINE
Pursuant to Application
Number 436-5148
I (1) In accordance with the provision
of KRS 350.055, notice is hereby given
that Mink Branch Coal Company, Inc.,
Rt. 2, Box 40, Craynor, Ky., has filed an
application for a permit for an underground mining operation. The proposed
operation will affect a surface disturbance of 3.8 acres and will underlie an additional 252.0 acres located 0.50 miles
east of Craynor in Floyd county.
(2) The proposed operation is approximately 1.0 miles south from Mink
Branch Road junction with Ky. 979 and
located 0.5 miles east of Mink Branch.
The latitude is 37" 26' 14". The longitude
is 82" 39' 47".
(3) The proposed operation i!:' located
on the McDowell U.S.G.S. 7 1z minute
quadrangle map. The surface area to be
disturbed is owned by: Mink Branch
Coal Company, Inc., Craynor, Ky.; Jay
E. Evans, Craynor, Ky.; Cephus McKinney, Craynor, Ky. The operation will
underlie land owned by: Mink Branch
Coal Co., Inc., Craynor, Ky.; Jay E.
Evans, Craynor, Ky.; John B. Evans,
Craynor, Ky.; Kelly Hamilton, Craynor,
Ky.; Cephus McKinney, Craynor, Ky.;
Walker Tackett, Craynor, Ky.; Gary
Newsome, Craynor, Ky.; Blaine Slone,
Craynor, Ky.; Pearl Gillispie, Craynor,
Ky.; Bob Mitchell, Craynor, Ky.
(4) The application has been filed for
public inspection at the Department for
Surface Mining Reclamation and Enforcement's Prestonsburg Regional Office, 431 South Lake Drive, Prestonsburg, Ky. 41653. Written comments, objections, or requests for a permit conference must be filed with the Director
of the Division of Permits, 6th Floor,
Capital Plaza Tower, Frankfort, Kentucky 40601.
2-15-3t.
FLOYD CIRCUIT COURT
83-Cl-728
The First Commonwealth Bank of Prestonsburg, Ky ...............................Piff.
VS: NOTICE OF SALE
Theda L. Johnson, Rt. I, Prestonsburg,
Ky. 41653 .................................... Deft.
By virtue of a judgment and order of
.;le of the Floyd Circuit Court rendered
" t the November 22 term, 1983, in the
above-styled cause I shall proceed to of1er for sale at the Courthouse door in
Prestonsburg, Kentucky, to the highest
and best bidder, at public auction, on the
23 day of February, 1984, at 10:00 o'clock
a.m ., same being a day of the regular
term of the Floyd Circuit Court, for cash
or upon a credit of six months, the
following described property, to-wit:
That certain tract or parcel of land, lying and being on the waters of Middle
Creek in Floyd County, Kentucky, and
being the same property conveyed to
Theda L. Johnson by deed from Frank
Adams and Susie Adams, his wife, dated
June 5, 1962, recorded in Deed Book 180,
page 51, Floyd County Clerk's Office,
which is more particularly described as
follows:
. Beginning on an elm near the State
Road Fork Creek; thence running with
A.E. Vaughn's line to the top of the hill ;
thence with Woodrow Whitaker's line
down the ridge with George Spradlin's
line; thence with Spradlin's line to Ben
Parker's line; thence with Parker's line
to the creek; thence with the creek back
to the place of beginning.
The amount of money to be raised by
this sale shall be in the principal sum of
$14,378.03 subject to a rebate in interest
for payment prior to maturity on July
14, 1987, and the costs of this action, including costs of advertising of this sale
and the fees and commissions for conducting this sale.
For the purchase price the purchaser
must execute bond with approved surety or sureties , bearing legal interest
from the day of sale until paid and having the force the P.ffed of a judgment
with. a lien retained upon said property
as a further security . Bidders will be
prepared to comply with these terms .
Given under my hand, this 6 day of
February, 1984.
MARSHALL DAVIDSON,
Master Commissioner
2-8-3t.
MASTER COMMISSIONER'S
SALE
FLOYD CIRCUIT COURT
82-CI-823
Grayson financial Services, lnc .. Pif.
VS: NOTICE OF SALE
Leslie Trucking Company, Inc. and
Branham & Baker Coal Company. Inc.
................................................ Defts.
By virtue of a judgment and order of
sale of the Floyd Circuit Court rendered
at the January 13 term, 1984, in the
above-styled cause I shall proceed to offer for sale at the equipment lot located
at Harold, Kentucky, adjacent to The
Bank Josephine Branch on U.S. 23, to the
highest and best bidder. at public auction. on the 1st day of March, 1984, at
10:30 o'clock a.m., same being a day of
the regular term of the Floyd Circuit
Court, for cash or the purchaser shall
pay 10% of the purchase price in cash,
cashier's check or certified check on the
day of sale and may fill bond for theremainder of the purchase price due and
payable six (6) months from the date of
sale, the following described equipment :
1 Joy 1,1RU Cutter 2-613 Mach. No.
17221; 1 Joy 6SC Shutile Car 6S C 5PF-2
SIN FT 5666; 1 Joy Loader; 1 Galis 300
Roof Bolter; 1 Power Center; 1 Porter
Wagon Drill ; 1 Click 6' Fan; 1 Switch
Box.
The amount of money to be raised by
this sale shall be in the principal sum of
$121 ,676.16 with interest thereon @ 12%
annually from the 13 day of January,
1984 until satisfied and the costs of this
action, including costs of advertising of
this sale and the fees and commissions
for con(lucting this sale.
For the purchase price the purchaser
must execute bond with approved surety or sureties. bearing legal interest
from the day of sale untll paid and having the force the effect of a judgment
with a lien retained upon saifl property
as a further security. Bidders will be
prepared to comply with these terms.
Given under my hand, this 2nd day of
February, 1984.
MARSHALL DAVIDSON
Master Commissioner
2-15-3t.
NOTICE OF
INTENTION TO MINE
Pursuant to Application
Number 836-0085
In accordance with the provi:::ion of
KRS 350.055, notice is hereby given that
Renegade Mining, Inc. 2885, Pikeville,
Ky. 41501, has filed an application for a
permit.for an underground mining operation. The proposed operation will affect a surface disturbance of 16.37 acres
and will underlie an additional 64.85
acres located 1.50 miles southeast of
Osborn in Floyd county.
The proposed operation is approximately 1.0 miles northeast from State
Route 1426 junction with Bush Branch
and located 0.25 miles northeast of Bush"
Branch. The latitude is 37" 28' 22". The
longitude is 82" 35' 41".
The proposed operation is located on
the Pikeville USGS 71Jz minute quadrangle map. The surface area to be disturbed is owned by Osborn heirs. The operation will underlie land owned by Osborn
heirs, Estill Sal•sbury, L & J McClanahan, Ruth & Green Tackett.
The application has been filed for
public inspection at the Department for
Surface Mining Reclamation and Enforcement's Prestonsburg Regional Office, 503 South Lake Drive, Prestonsburg, Ky. 41653. Written comments, objections, or requests for a permit conference must have attached a copy of
the newspaper clipping and must be
filed with the Regional Administrator of
the Prestonsburg Regional Office, 503
South Lake Drive , Prestonsburg, Ky.
41653.
This is the final advertisement of this
application; all comments, objections,
or requests for a permit conference
must be received within thirty (30) days
lt.
of today's date.
NOTICE OF
INTENTION TO MINE
Pursuant to Application
Number 836-0031
<1) In accordance with the provisions
of KRS 350.055, notice is hereby given
that Energy Elkhorn Coal, Inc., P.O.
Box 1178, Paintsville, Kentucky 41240
has filed an application for a surface and
underground mining operation. The proposed operation will affect a surface
disturbance of 29.15 acres and will
underlie an additional 51.06 acres
located 1:3 miles southeast of Os.born in
Floyd county.
(2) The proposed operation is approximately 0.2 miles east from KY 1426's
junction with Keathley Branch Road
and located 0.06 miles northeast of Toler
Creek. The latitude is N 37' 27' 29". The
longitude is W 82° 36' 12". The surface
area to be disturbed is owned by the E.L.
Osborn heirs.
(3) The proposed operation is located
on the Pikeville U.S.G.S. 7lh minute
quadrangle map. The operation shall
use the contour-strip method of mining
for the surface disturbance. The operation will be owned by::!: .L. Osborn heirs.
-(4) The application has been filed for
public inspection at the Department for
Surfa~e Mining Reclamation and
Enforcement's Prestonsburg Regional
Office, 431 South Lake Drive, Prestonsburg, Ky. 41653. Written comments, objections, or requests for permit conference must be filed with the Director
of the Division of Permits, 6th Floor,
Capi~l Plaza Tower, Frankfort, Kentucky 40601.
This is the final advertisement of this
application; all comments, objections,
or requests for a permit conference
must be received within thirty (30) days
of today's date.
lt.
PUBLIC NOTICE
The City of Prestonsburg, Prestonsburg Park Commission will accept bids
until February 24, 1984, at 2 p.m. for
various items of playground recreational equipment. This project will consist of the development of a playground
area for children in Archer Park. Bid
Specifications may be obtained by contacting the Park Administrator at
886-6390 or by stopping in the Archer
Park Office. Bids will be opened
February 24, 1984 at 2:00p.m., at which
time they will be opened publicly and
read aloud. The City of Prestonsburg
reserves the right to change or alter any
bid specifications or to waive any informality in the bidding process. The City
of Prestonsburg observes Equal Opportunity Purchasing Practices. Mail bids
to City Administrator, P.O. Box 31, Prestonsburg, Ky. 41653. Mark "Recreation
Equipment Bid" plainly on the outside
of the envelope.
DAVID EVANS
City Administrator
4-15-21.
PUBLIC NOTICE
The City of Prestonsburg, Prestonsburg Park Commission will accept bids
until February 24, 1984 at 2:00p.m. for
the repair of the lighting system on
various ballfields in Archer Park. This
project will consist of replacing and
repairing all lights on th~ Men'~,
Women's, and Little League Ftelds. B1d
specifications may be obtained by contacting the Park Administrator at
886-6390 or by stopping in the Archer
Park Office. Bids will be opened
February 24, 1984 at 2:00p.m., ~t which
time they will be opened publlcly and
read aloud. The City of Prestonsburg
reserves the right to change or alter any
bid specification or to waive any inf?rmality in the bidding process. The C1ty
of Prestonsburg observes Equal Opportunity Purchasing Practices. Mail bids
to City Administrator, P .O. Box 31, Prestonsburg, Ky. 41653. Mark "P~rk
Lighting Repair" plainly on the outstde
of the envelope.
DAVID EVANS
City Administrator
2-l5-2t.
--- ------ - -The first president to accept his party's nomination with a speech at the party convention was Franklin D.
Roosevelt, who flew from Albany to
Chicago in 1932.
NOTICE OF
INTENTION TO MINE
Pursuant to Application
Number 436-0123
0) In accordance with the provisions
of KRS 350.055, notice is hereby given
that Omni Natural Resources, Inc., Rt.
PUBLIC NOTICE
6,
Box 11-G, Manchester, Kentucky,
An application for a place of entertainment license has been filed by Brenda · 40962, has filed an application for a perTackett, of Box 580, Galveston, Ky. mit for a surface coal mining and
41629. The nature of business will be reclamation of approximately 16.2 acres
,Yrocery Store, Carryout B~r, sell beer located 1 mile northeast of Hippo in
Floyd county.
)>y the drink, and have pool tables.
(2) The proposed operation is approxThe County Attorney's Office is required to file a written report to the imately 1Vz miles north from state Route
County Judge Executive's office reflec- 850's junction with Prater Fork County
ting if the person applying is ""not of,good Road and located at the head of Prater
moral character or who will not, in the Fork of Brush Creek. The latitude is 37'
judgment of the Court, (County Judge 32' 27". The longitude is 82' 50' 48". The
Executive) obey the laws of the state in surface area is owned by Morton Allen
heirs (mining and haul rMd) and
the carrying on of the business".
Any interested citizens having infor- Gladys S. Allen, Akfred G. Allen, Volney
mation relative to said applicant's lack Allen and Denneth F. Allen (haul road
of "good moral character" or willing- only).
(3) The proposed operation is located
ness to obey the laws of the state in the
on
the Martin U.S.G.S. 71/z minute quadcarrying on of the business is requested
to file the same in writing, with the rangle map. The operation will use the
County Attorney's office. Said written in- contour and auger method of mining.
The application also includes a proposformation shall be signed, dated, and
ed laud use change from the
reflect the current address of said
undeveloped land premining land use to
citizen, and must be delivered to the
a bayland or pasture post-mining land
County Attorney's office no later than
use.
the 1st day of March, 1984.
(4) The application has been filed for
ARNOLD TURNER, JR.
public inspection at the Department for
Floyd County Attorney
2-22-2t. Surface Mining Reclamation and
Enforcement's Prestonsburg Regional
Office, 431 South Lake Drive, Prestonsburg, Kentucky 41653. Written comments, objections, or requests for a perPUBLIC NOTICE
mit conference must be filed with the
An application for a place of entertain- Director of the Division of Permits, 6th
ment license has been filed by Delmar Floor, Capital Plaza Tower, Frankfort,
F. Johnson, of P .O. Box 125, Hi Hat, Ky. Kentucky 40601.
2-15-3t.
41536. The nature of the business will be
video games, pool tables, and juke box.
The County Attorney's Office is reNOTICE OF
quired to file a written repot to the CounINTENTION TO MINE
ty Judge Executive's office reflecting if
Pursuant to Application
the person applying is "not of good
Number 836-5028
moral character or who will not, in the
In accordance with the provisions of
judgment of the Court, (County Judge
Executive) obey the laws of the state in KRS 350.055, notice is hereby given that
Powell Branch Coal Company, P.O.
the carrying on of the business" .
Any interested citizen having informa- Drawer 367, Harold, Ky., has filed an aption relative to said applicant's lack of plication for a permit for a undergraund
"good moral character" or willingness mining operation. The proposed operato obey the laws of the state in the car- tion will affect a surface disturbance of
rying on of the business is requested to 10.28 acres located Vz mile southwest of
file the same in writing, with the Coun- Tram in Floyd county. The mine will
ty Attorney's office. Said written infor- underlie1 an additional 198.49 acres
mation shall be signed, dated, and located h mile southwest from KY 80
reflect the current address of said junction with Tram Bridge and located
citizen, and must be delivered to the Vz miles southwest of Tram. The latitude
County Attorney's office no later than is 37° 33' 55". The longitude is 82' 38' 55" .
The proposed operation is located on
the 23rd day of February, 1984.
the
Harold U.S.G.S. 7¥2 minute quadranARNOLD TURNER, JR.
gle map. The surface area to be disturbFloyd County Attorney
. 2-22-21. ed is owned by Emmett Lawson and
G.C. Blair. The operation will underlie
land owned by Emmett Lawson, S.
Thurman Harvel, and G.C. Blair.
The application has been filed for
NOTICE OF
public inspect,ion at the Department for
INTENTION TO MINE
Surface Mining Reclamation and
Pursuant to Application
Enforcement's Prestonsburg Regional
Number 636-5055
Office, Prestonsburg, Ky. 41653. Written
I< 1) In accordance with the provision
comments, objections, or requests for a
of KRS 350.055, notice is hereby given
permit conference must be filed with the
that B J & L Coal Company, Inc.,
Director of the Division of Permits, 6th
Craynor, Kentucky 41614, has filed an
Floor, Capital Plaza Tower, Frankfort,
application for a permit for an under- Kentucky 40601.
2-15-3t.
ground mining operation. The proposed
operation will affect a surface distur-.
bance of 1.72 acres and will underlie an
PUBLIC NOTICE
additional192.60 acres locat~d-0.5 miles
An
application
for a place of entertainsouthwest of C~r In Floyd county.
(2) The pi'CJ}osed operation is approx- ment license has been filed by Jeff
imately 1.50 miles southwest from Mink Mullins and Archer D. Boyd, of StanBranch Road junction with Ky. 979 and ville, Kentucky 41659. The nature of the
located 1.50 miles in Mink Branch. The business will be a restaurant and serve
latitude is 37" 25' 54". The longitude is 82' beer by drink.
The County Attorney's Office is re40' 29".
(3) The proposed operation is located quired to file a written report to the
on the,McDowell U.S .G.S. 7 •2 minute County Judge Executive's office reflecquadrangle map. The surface area to be ting if the person applying is "not of good
disturbed is owned by : Chester New- moral character or who will not, in the
some, Teaberry, Ky. The ope:-ation will judgment of the Court, (County Judge
underlie !arid owned by : Chester New- Executive) obey the laws of the state in
some, Tea berry, Ky. ; Blaine Slone, the carrying on of the business".
Any interested citizen having informaCraynor, Ky.; Joseph Mining Co., Inc.,
McDowell, Ky.; Sie Hall, Craynor, Ky .; tion relative to said applicant's lack of
John Hall, Craynor, Ky. ; Donna Terry, "good moral character" or willingness
to obey the laws of the state in the carTeaberry, Ky.
<4> The application has been filed for rying on of the business is requested to
public inspection at the Department for file the same in writing, with the CounSurface Mining Reclamation and En- ty Attorney's office. Said written inforforcement's Prestonsburg Regional Of- mation shall be signed, dated, and
fice, 431 South Lake Drive, Prestons- reflect the current address of said
burg, Ky. 41653. Written comments, ob- -::itizen, and must be delivered to the
jections, or requests for a permit con- County Attorney's office no later than
ference must be filed with the Director the 23rd day of February, 1984.
ARNOLD TURNER, JR.
of the Division of Permits, 6th Floor,
Floyd County Attorney
Capital Plaza Tower, Frankfort, Ken2-15-2t.
tucky 40601.
2-15-3t
•
NOTICE OF
INTENTION TO MINE
Pursuant tc Application
Number 636-5040
1(1) In accordance with the provisions
of KRS 350.055, notice is hereby given
that T & N Coal Co., Inc., Grethel, Ky.
41631, has filed an application for a permit for an underground mining operation. The proposed operation will affect
a surface disturbance of 0. 76 acres and
will underlie an additional 73.87 acres
located 0.5 miles south of Craynor, Ky.
in Floyd county.
(2) The proposed operation is approximately 1.50 miles southwest from Mink
Branch Road junction with Ky. 979 and
located 1.50 miles in Mink Branch. The
latitude is 37° 25' 54". The longitude is 82"
40' 29".
(3) The proposed operation is located
on the McDowell U.S.G.S. 7 1h minute
quadrangle map. The surface area to be
disturbed is owned by: Blaine Slone,
Craynor, Ky_ The operation will underlie
land owned by: Blaine Slone, Craynor,
Ky.; David Adkins, McDowell, Ky.;
Chester Newsome, Craynor, K·y .;
Joseph Mining Co., McDowell, Ky.
(4) The application has been filed for
public inspection at the Department for
Surface Mining Reclamation and Enforcement's Prestonsburg Regional Office, 431 South Lake Drive, Prestonsburg, Ky. 41653. Written comments, objections, or requests for a permit conference must be filed with the Director
of the Division of Permits, 6th Floor,
Capital Plaza Tower, Frankfort, Kentucky 40601.
2-15-3t.
NOTICE OF
INTENTION TO MINE
Pursuant to Application
Number 880-0018
(1) In accordance with the provisions
of KRS 350.055, notice is hereby given
that Martin County Coal Corp., Rt. 40,
Box 82-A, Inez, Ky. 41224, has filed an application for a combination permit for
surface and underground coal mining
and reclamation operations. The proposed operation will affect a surface
disturbance of 475.0 acres in Martin
County and will underlie ari a<!_d.itional
64.0 acres in Martin County·, ~.0 acres
in Pike county and..s.l:O acres in Floyd
county located 11.h miles northeast from
Brushy Fork road's junction with Ky.
Hwy. 194 at Thomas, Pike Co., Ky.
(2) The proposed operation is approximately . H~ miles northeast from
Brushy Fork road's junction with Ky.
Hwy. 194 at Thomas, Pike County, Ky.
and located on Wolf Creek, Cow Fork of
Wolf Creek, and Pesley Fork of
Maynard Fork of Wolf Creek in Martin
County, Ky. The latitude is 37' 41' 34".
The longitude is 82' 33' 13".
(3) The proposed operation is located
on the Thomas U.S.G.S. 7lf.! minute
quadrangle map. The operation will use
the contour strip and auger with hollow
fills, and underground method of mining. The surface area to be disturbed is
owned by Pocahontas Kentucky Corporation. The operation will underlie
land owned by Pocahontas Kentucky
Corporation, Mintie Blackburn, and
Lacy Marsnall. This application also includes a proposed land use change from
the forestland pre-mining land use to a
combintation
forestland
and
pastureland post-mining land use.
(4) The application has been filed for
public inspection at the Department for
Surface Mining Reclamation and Enforcement's Prestonsburg Regional Office, 503 South Lake Drive, Prestonsburg, Ky 41653. Written comments, objections, or requests for a permit conference must be filed with the Director
of the Division of Permits, 6th Floor,
Capital Plaza Tower, Frankfort, Ky.
40601. Within 30 days of the final weekly advertisement. The written comment,
objection, or request for a conference
must reference in above permit application number.
2-22-3t.
•
•
PUBLIC NOTICE
The commissioners of the Beaver
Elkhorn Water District will hold their
regular monthly meeting w.e~esday,
February 22, 1984, at 6:30 p.m~t the
water office in Estill.
JAMES A. SCOTT,
Chairman
It.
•
�•
Wednesday, February 22, 1984
Tiny Miss Vaielttine
Jamie Lynn Hall, three-year-old
daughter of James G. and Michelle Hall,
~Topmost, won the Tiny Miss Valentine
~ageant, Sunday, Feb. 12, at Allen Central High School. She received a 3 ft.
trophy, crown, and banner. She was also
first runnerup in the Miss Winter Time
and won third place at the National
Dream Girl Pageant held at Pikeville
earlier this month. She is the granddaughater of Dewey and Mary Hall, of
Wayland, and Harold and Marie Hall, of
Topmost.
The Floyd County Times
The Everly Brothers
Kick Off KET TeleFund
Section Three, Paae Nine
Kentuckians can now participate in the protection and preservation of our rich natural
heritage. On Line 21 <?·you can designate
all or a portion of your Kentucky tax refund
to help wildlife.
DO
Celebrate an evening of comedy,
music and mystery on KET, Saturday,
March 3, during TeleFund '84, beginning at 6 p.m. with the "Marx Brothers
in a Nutshell." This two-hour encore performance includes some of the most
popular moments from the brothers'
films and a recently discovered unfinished television pilot starring Groucho,
Chico and Harpo. ''The Marx Brothers
in a Nutshell' is produced by Robert B.
Weide and Whyaduck Productions in
association with Rollins, Joffe, Mora and
Brezner, and is presented by KQED/San
Francisco.
"The Everly Brothers' Rock 'n' Roll
Odyssey," at 8 p.m., includes concert
highlights, interviews with Don and Phil
Everly and other notable musicians
such as Chet Atkins and Linda Ronstadt.
The brothers revisit the scenes of their
childhood in Brownie, Ky.-the coal
mines where their forefathers worked;
Aunt Hattie's farm where the family
held reunions, and the Baptist church
where their Uncle Ted was minister.
11
SOMETHING
WILD!
Your tax deductible contribution will support
non-game species protection programs by
the Department of Fish and Wildlife
Resources and the purchase and maintenance of natural areas by the Kentucky
Nature Preserves Commission. These
programs have no other sources of funding.
'•
'
Wildlife needs your help Ho amount Is too small.
Do Something_Wild!
IT'S THE 2ND BIG WEEK OF OUR GREAT
•,
•
Lice Control Methods
Should Not Be Costly
Cattle lice are a cold weather
headache, building up to really large
populations in late winter.
The lice, which can be the biting or
sucking type, can cause anemia and
weight loss, especially on cattle that are
~ick or which are on a poor ration, acWcording to an Extension entomologist in
the University of Kentucky College of
Agriculture.
Dr. Chris Christensen says by late
winter, infested animals have large
numbers of adult al!d immature lice
feeding on them.
However, he says that lice control is
quite easy with a large number of dif. ferent insecticides available for use.
"It does become confusing for cattlemen when it comes to determining
evhat product is most cost effective,"
said Christensen. In an effort to determine the most economical insecticide
products to be used for lice control,
prices were obtained for various products recommended by UK for control
of lice on beef cattle.
Prices were obtained from four
companies-three local pesticide
dealers and one mail order veterinary
supply house. The resulting cost figures
.-illustrate the cost of treatment per
Wfanimal for the different products in the
categories of sprays, pour-ons and spotons.
The comparisons indicate that if you
have a large number of cattle to treat,
it is most cost effective to use a pour-on, .
such as Lysoff. But if you want to use a
ready-to-use product, one of the spot-on
products is going to be the most cost effective and most convenient.
The comparison showed that:
Sprays can be the least expensive type
f insecticide to use in controlling lice on
cattle.
"However," said Christensen, "it is
important that you shop around and buy
the insecticide that costs the least per
animal to use. In our examples, malathion or Co-Ral would be the products of
choice."
The specialist notes one big expense
in using sprays: you need to have a high
pressue sprayer. Also it usually takes
anore preparation time to use sprays
'Wbecause spray must be mixed, spray
equipment checked and cleaned and
equipment moved. So labor costs are
higher using sprays.
And, Christensen points out, spraying
cattle in very cold weather can be very
stressful to them.
Pour-on insecticides can be the most
cost effective products to use for lice
control on cattle. Christensen said these
products, especially Lysoff, are very
economical and provide excellent lice
e ontrol.
"It is necessary to have a good livestock handling setup when using peurons," he noted, adding that a g!)od set of
corrals with a well-designed chute and
head catch make it more convenient to
use pour-ons.
A disadvantage to this method is that
measuring pour-ons usually is more
time consuming than using spot-ons,
especially if the insecticide is measured
alirectly from the can. And Lysoff, the
~east expensive pour-on, involves more
labor than the ready-to-use products
since it must be mixed with water before
use, Christensen points out.
Spot-on insecticides are very comparable in treatment cost per animal to
those for ready-to-use pour-ons.
These products usually are easier to
use than pour-ons because they are
marketed with easy to use dose measuring applicators, according to Christensen.
• Research at UK shows that using spoton insecticides saves two seconds per
animal treated.
Finally, Christensen notes that in
reviewing prices for all products
evaluated, "It becomes immediately obvious that if you know exactly what you
want to buy, purchase it from a mail
order veterinary supply house."
He adds, however, that this pesticide
outlet will not have the personal services
ssociated with local pesticide dealers
• More information on the cost effectiveness of insecticides and on control of
cattle lice is available from county
agricultural Extension agents.
FROM THE "BARGAIN CHAMPION:'
JENNY WILEY TOYOTA ...
WE'RE OSER
TO OUR GOAL/
JOIN THE CROWD
THAT'S TAKING ADVANTAGE
OF OUR
GREAT LEASING DEALSI
FEBRUARY 15TH MARCH 15TH
IT'S JENNY WILEY'S FIRST
DAYS
*WE WERE
GE's
LARGEST
DEALER
IN KENTUCKY IN
'83-HELP US
STAY NO. 7!!
-0-
LEASING
*30 NEW CARS & TRUCKS MUST BE LEASED FEB. 15TH-MAR. 15TH
SUPRAS, CRESSIDAS IN STOCK!
JENNY WILEY
IS QUICKLY
BECOMING THE
"USED TOYOTA
CHAMPION': ..
$333°0
PER MO.
48 MO.
BLACK
OR RED
50oEUVERS
ANY PICKUP!
BECAUSE JENNY WILEY PAYS YOUR
1ST PAYMENT!
·133°
0
4-SPEED
SHORTBED
" COME AND GET 'EM"
s195oo
' (CASH)
• SOME RETURNED
ON LEASE
(GREAT
CONDITION)
$2 56
5
SEVERAL '82'S & 83'S
IN STOCK
WILL SELL
• CELICAS
BELOW
• COROLLAS
• PICKUPS
BOOK
• CRESSIDAS
VALUE
• llX4'S
SPECIAL I
4X4
STANDARD BED
48-MO. LEASE
PER MO.
48-MO.
$149~N?
UP
ALL LEASES
AVAILABLE
WITH 4-YEAR
EXTENDED
SERVICE
ARRANTY!
• YES, WE CAN LEASE GM PRODUCTS TOOl
*USED CAR
SPECIALS TOO!
APPROX. FORTY TO
CHOOSE FROM.
• OPEN TILL 6 P.M.
*A FREE GIFT
WITH EVERY
LEASE!
CALL THE
LEASING CHAMPION:
886-3861
..
�Wedneaday, February 22, 1984
The
USAA Award Winner
'Hillbillyism' Topic
Of Appalshop Film
The United States Achievement
Academy announced today that Lesa
Mae Prater has been named a 1984
United States National Award winner in
business education.
Miss Prater, who attends Prestonsburg High was nominate<! for this National Award by Mrs. Francis Brackett,
business education teacher at the school.
Miss Prater will appear in the United
States Achievement Academy Official
Yearbook, published nationally.
She is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Denis Akers. Her grandparents are Lula
Mae Ousley, of Prestonsburg and the
late Raymond Calhoun, of West Prestonsburg.
WANTED
EXPERIENCED QUILTERS
AND SEWERS ARE NEEDED
TO BEGI~ WORK IMMEDIATELY.
CALL FOR INFORMATION
OR APPOINTMENT:
886-9411
2·15-21·
VERNON SLONE'S
TAX SERVICE
Reasonable Rates
• Located 4 miles off Mt. Porkway on Rt. 404 (David Rd)
23-yrs. exparlence. "Knows
how to do the best job for You."
Hometown Boy-lives here oJI
_year.
Call 886-6060
or 886-9007
2·22-tf
BIFOCAL
CONTACT LENSES
and
EXTENDED WEAR
CONTACTS
Ouf speclo lfy
Marcus Minix
optical
522 Collage Street
Paintsville, Ky.
789-6000
Member of
contact Lens society
of America
County Times
The first film in an ambitious new
history series by Appalshop filmmakers
will premiere Friday, March 9, at the
Appalshop Center in Whitesburg.
Appalshop is a nonprofit media
organization which has received national recognition for its f\lms, record
and plays dealing with Appalachian life.
The new film release, called Stran11~:-.,
and Kin, details the devejoprr:ent of the
''hillbilly'' stereotypc·and the impact of
that stereotype on the lives of mountain
people. Scripted by veteran filmmaker
Herb E. Smith, actor/playwright Don
Baker and sociologist Helen Lewis, the
film juxtaposes clips of Hollywood films
and television shows w1th interviews of
people who live in Appalachia, revealing the wide gap between the perceived
and the actual.
A special guest at the Whitesburg
premiere of Strangers and Kin will be
Ned Beatty, a Hollywood actor and
native of Kentucky. Beatty, who appears
in a segment of the film, has starred in
several feature films-including
Deliverance and Kentucky Woman,
which have drawn heavily on the
''hillbilly" image. Beatty will be present
at the Appalshop reception and will address the audience at the film screening.
The reception begins at 7:30 p.m. at
the Appalshop Center, 306 Madison St.,
Whitesburg. The film will be shown in
the center's theater at 8:30p.m. Coffee
and snacks will be served following the
film.
The premiere showing of Strangers
and Kin will celebrate the completion of
the first in a proposed seven-part series
of Appalshop films on the history of Appalachia. Beginning in 1!179, the National
Endowment for the Humanities funded
the planning, research and scripting of
the series, as well as the production of
the first film, Strangers and Kin. The
Appalachian Regional Commission also
provided money to e.stablish an archive
for the wealth of materials turned up
during the film research.
The premiere in Whitesburg, and one
in Lexington, March 10, are fund-raising
events for the second film in the series.
Long Journey Horne, which is scheduled to begin production on April 1.
.
Admission to the rect>ption and
premiere in Whitesburg is $15 per person. For every person who attends the
premiere, Appalshop will receive an additional $15 in matching money from the
Kentucky Humanities Council. The
Council has awarded $15,000 to the second film as an outright grant, and has
pledged to match any private donations
up to $20,000.
To make res~rvations or to get more
information, call or write Appalshop, 305
Madison St. Box 743, Whitesburg, Ky.,
41858, (606) 633-0108.
Latin America-U.S.
Relations Foram Set
Prestonsburg Community College will
hold a town forum on U.S. relations with
Latin America on Wednesday, February
29, at 7 p.m. in Pike Auditorium. The
event is being co-sponsored by Christians for Peace and Justice and the First
Presbyterian Church of Prestonsburg.
Dr. Thomas Matijasic will act as
moderator of the discussion. Vicky Archer, sociologist at P.C.C., and Dr. Ken
Coleman, professor of policitical science
at the University of Kentucky, wil join
Dr. Matijasic in responding to audience
inquiries about our role in this critical
area. The general public is urged to attend and actively participate in this program which will be free of charge.
Wednesday, March 7, at 7 p.m., Prestonsburg Community College will show
the motion picture ''Missing". The film
portrays events in Chile during the
violent overthrow of the Allende government in 1!173. It stars Jack Lemmon and
Sissy Spacek.
Section Three, Page Ten
Pageant Runner-Up
Lawson Completes
Basic Training
· .We're Open! ::- Big Savings!
.
•
BEDSPREADS .& :CHILDREN'S CLOTHES
Army Pvt. David Lawson, son of
Matilda J. Lawson, of Harold, has completed basic training at Fort Dix, N.J.
During the training, students received instructiOn in drill and ceremonies,
weapons, map reading, tactics, military
courtesy, military justice, first aid , and
Army history and traditions.
He is a 1980 graduate of Betsy Layne
High School, Ky.
• CHILDREN'S THINGS, NEWBORN TO 8X, FANCY DRESSES, DRESSY COVER-ALLS,
ftiGHTIES, JOGGING SUITS, CABBAGE PATCH SHIRTS, WINTER COATS 8X THRU 12.
~ BEDSPREAD5-LOTS OF COLORS AND DESIGNS IN FULL, QUEEN AND KING, SHEET
SETS, TOWELS, CURTAINS, AND MORE.
Th• small lfor• with big sov:ngs
-OPEN 11-5 EXCEPT SUNDAYSU.S. 23 NORTH-NEXT TO JERRY 6 GERRYS SHOE STORE
(BEHIND THE PHILATINA BEAUTY SALON)
•
-Photo by Steve Porter
Kristy Lynn Bishop, 12-year-old
daughter of Richard Bishop and Thelma
Wallen Bishop, was named second runnerup in the Miss Wintertime Pageant
held Sunday, Jan. 22, at the Allen Central High School gym.
Kristy is the granddaughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Ollie P. Wallen, of Water Gap,
and Mr. and Mrs. John Bishop, of
.Paintsville.
•
Save on Paramount Chili- No Beans and savor
the best Olili Con Queso this side of the border.
It's a "Olili'n'Chips" snack that's great for family
meals or parties.
Paramount's Chili Con Queso or "Chili'n'Chips"
1 15 oz. can Paramount Chili-No Beans
1 cup cheddar cheese, grated
1h cup green onions, thinly sliced
Ledford, Recipient
Of Two Top Awards
Cawood Ledford, the "Voice of the
Kentucky Wildcats," has been named
the recipient of two prestigious awards.
Ledford has been honored with an
Eclipse Award for his television
coverage of the 1983 Keeneland July
Selected Yearling Sale. The one-hour
documentary, "Racing's Million Dollar
Babies," seen on nine area TV stations,
was chosen by the Thoroughbred Racing Association as the top show in the
country covering the thoroughbred
horse industry. Honorable mention went
to KABC-TV in Los Angeles, the New
York Racing Association and Pacesetter Productions in Florida.
•
.h teaspoon salt
1
cup com chips, crushed
Dash of tobasco sauce (optional)
Com chips for dipping
Combine chili, cheese, onions, salt and com
chips in a saucepan. Gently heat, stirring constantly, until hot throughout. Serve warm. Makes
about three cups.
1/2
Ledford had won two previous Eclipse
Awards for his work with WHAS-TV in
Louisville. He is the only three-time winner for local TV coverage. Ledford accepted the award at a dinner in New
York City Feb. 3.
It's winning the hearts
of chill lovers.
---------------------------------SAVE
SAVE
Save
30¢
·
30¢ Paramount
on one 15 oz. can of
30¢
Chili No Beans
STORE COUPON
Ledford has also been named Kentucky's "Sportscaster of the Year" for
the 15th time. The award is given annually by the National Sportscasters and
Sportswriters Association. This marks
the eighth straight year Ledford has
been named the state's top sportscaster
in voting by his peers in the broadcasting and newspaper industry.
Mr. Retailer: We will redeem this coupon for 30< plus 7< handling provided ( a )
dealer has accepted it in cxchangcform'le IS oz. can Of Paramount Olili-No Beans;
(b) dealer mails to Paramount Foods. LouisviUc, Kentucky 40232. Customers must
pay sales laX whcne,'Cr applicable Invoices showing dcalc:rs purchased sufficient
stock to cover coupons presented for payment must be shown upon request. 1his
coupon is void if duplicated, prohibited or restricted by law.
Ledford is currently in his 31st year of
calling the play-by-play for University
of Kentucky football and basketball. He
has called the NCAA Basketball Finals
for NBC and CBS Radio for the past
eight years.
.Ledford is president of his own comp~ny, Cawood Ledford Productions,
·Iru;., in Lexington.
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
Coupon expires March 31, 1984.
'
I
I
.
I
I
I
.Param·ount.
PARTS
and
PICI'URE
TUBE
25 .. DIAGONAL COLOR COfoiSOl.£
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HOME ENTERTAINMENT Ct:NTER
•
355 SOUTH MAIN
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OWNED AND OPERATED BY SHAFFER TELEVISION
PRESTONSBURG STORE ONLY: OPEN 10 TO 6, MON.·F1U., 10 TO 7, FRI., 10-3, SAT., CLOSED SUNDAYS
886·8381 • HIGHLANDS PLAZA • PRESTONSBURG
•
�•
10-Year Employee
State Protects
Its Farmland
Kentucky, like 25 other states, has
legislation protecting farmland and encouraging the formation of voluntary
agricultural districts to see that
agricultural lands remain in
agricultural usage.
Currently, Kentucky has 22 voluntary
agricultural districts, with total acreage
of 20,144.7 acres. Six new petitions for
district formation will be reviewed at the
mid-February meeting of the state Soil
& Water Commission, state officials
The First Commonwealth Bank of said.
Prestonsburg announces Carol Wilson
"We have been pleased with the inhas completed 10 years' service as of
terest shown in this program since its inFebruary 4. She is head teller and
ception in 1982," said Steve Coleman,
cashier at the main office in Prestons- Assistant Director of the Division of Conburg.
servation. Coleman, who has worked
Her banking career began as a file
with the program since its beginnings in
a lerk in bookkeeping. Shortly afterthe Agricultural Lands Study and Policy
~ard she advanced to proof machine
Committee in 1980, said that a total of 44
1
operator and in 1980 she entered teller petitions have been received by the comtraining and became head teller three mission for certification in the past 18
years later. She was promoted to assismonths.
tant cashier in June. 1983.
"Districts which were not approved
Mrs Wilson's professional education often involved land which was located
includes completion of "Cross-selling within a '201' water quality boundary
and Product Knowledge" in 1980 and and thus not eligible for inclusion under
'83. She has also attended numerous the 1982 Agricultural District and Conservation Act," Coleman said.
workshops and seminars.
"Geographically, we have found that
a_ A Floyd county native. Carol lives in
Whe Allen area with her husband and interest in this program has been
family.
centered in three main areas of
Kentucky-northern Kentucky in Boone,
Campbell and Kenton counties, in the
Bullitt County area outside Louisville
ARMY RESERVE NOTES and
in the rich agricultural area around
Robert Sayers, of Drift, ·Darrell Cas- Henderson County," he noted.
tle, of Harold, and Alan Bailey recently
"Lately, we have been receiving petienlisted ~n the Army Reserve at tions which indicate that interest is
Pikeville. Sayers will undergo construc- growing in other areas of the state as
tion equipment training at Fort Leonard well. For example, one of our most re.
ood. Mo. Castle enlisted for the $4000 cent petitions is a 2,077 acre area in
educational assistance program and will Fulton County, in the far-western porundergo combat engineer training at tion of the state," he said.
Fort Leonard Wood.
State officials said that districts have
PVL James D. Sellards, of Betsy been certified in several counties
Layne, recently returned from his ad- throughout the state. Districts are found
vanced individual training in combat in Hardin, Cumberland, Campbell,
engineering at Fort Leonard Wood, Mo. Bullitt, Wayne, Breckinridge, HenderSSG Randall Wills and SSG Andrew son, Kenton, Boone, Taylor, Nelson and
Slone, both of Prestonsburg, reeently Daviess counties.
District sizes range from a 256-acre
completed the Advanced NonCommissioned Officer course at Hazard. site in Breckinridge County to a 4,6l2.fi
The Army Reserve is currently offer- acre site in Henderson County)Yhi.C:h in. g a $2000 cash bonus or $4000 educa- cludes lands beloning tp..-15' different
tional assistance to qualified high school landowners.
Two measures which have been inseniors or graduates. For more information contact Staff Sgt. Leonard J. Sayers troduced into the Kentucky General
Assembly will effect the districts. House
at 606-432-2293.
Bill 34 would create a state advisory
committee to review any state agency
Pike Native Honored
For Research Work
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CLYDE I. IURCHm
court St.. Prestonsburg, Ky. 418!53
2·1-tf.
Dr. Peggy D. Brewer, assistant professor of business administration at
Eastern Kentucky University, has been
selected to receiv~ an award for the
Outstanding Research Paper in the
Southwest Administrative Services
Association. She will receive the award
Feb. 29 in San Antonio, Texas.
Her paper deals with results from a
survey of Kentucky's universities and
large businesses concerning the changes
in the office environment resulting from
the use of microcomputers, word processors, and advances in telecommunication technology. She says the
survey's findings can be used to update
university business curricula in Kentucky to keep up with the changes.
A native of Pike county, she is the
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Richard
Hopkins. Brewer earned herBS degree
from Morehead; MS from Murray; and
a doctorate in business administration
from Louisiana Tech. She has been at
Eastern since 1980.
H&R BLOCit
Found
•
Joseph Dybas
$762
What can we find for you?
People who know their business go to
H&R BLOCit
Prestonsburg
888-3885
•
proposal converting more than 50
farmland acresd to nonagricultural
usage. The committee would advise the
Governor on possible actions or
alternatives.
House Bill35 would amend Kentucky's
1982 agricultural district legislation by
creating a five-year review of district
formation and extending eligibility to
participate in districts to those farms
located within a "201" water quality
boundary.
For information on these districts or
on the requirements for forming a voluntary agricultural district, contact the
state Division of Conservation, Teton
Trail, Frank(ort, Ky. 40601, telephone
(502) 564-3080, or local Conservation
District officials.
MSP/FCC
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20.95
72.95
180.00
6.97
).97
5-97
16.97
12.97
2.4.97
1.97
7.97
5-97
16.97
11.97
U.97
29.97
99.00
GOLD FILLED f!1
STERLING JEWELRY
CLT-2
RF·ll
R0-11,11
RY·30
ATC·31
TZ-2.1
7Iach Chain
Cant Cue
Aachor Perwlant
ICDife
CroM Pcacil
Zippo Money Clip
5-95
10.95
13-95
13.95
0.50
1.49
6.97
9.97
8.97
5-97
3.97
WATCHES
ARM·3
AVC·58
AVC-70,71
AVC·74,75
AVC-90
DW·10
DX·2
WWC-2
MIUiical Calculator Watch
ICey J.inc Watch
BIC Lipter Watch (Gold or Silver)
Pea f!1 Perwlaat Watch Set
Peadaat Watch w/ Chancublc Diale
Caleulator/J.uler
Muieal Pocket Watch
Geata Diamo...t Watch
E·132
E· 148
Julep Cup
Gl... Liaed Jiger
Main Street
Mortln
285-9879
Open 9 AM-9 PM Weekdays, 9·5 Sat .
Consult your Yellow Pages for the office nearest you .
MasterCard and Visa accepted at most area locations
GG·34
LS-450
LS-475
LS·530
LS-483
LS-484
LS-500
LS-507
lN·35
Fl'·14
FP·24
FP·20
FP·27
GG-17
GG· l9
GG-44
GG·52
GG·53
GG-87
LS·O
LS-29,30,31
LS·40
LS-41
LS·152
LS-200
LS·271
Silver f!1 Cryetal Water Pitcher
4 rc. Coffee Set
4 Pe. Silver f!1 Cryatal Cauter Set
Champqne Bucket
12Ya IDCh Tray
lS lach Tray
81ach Tray
10 loch Tray
7 Pc. Caa.Ue Set
Brui Tray
Tray
Hart Shaped Ban·Boa (lr.)
Sileat Buder
J ulep•Cup (Gocliarr)
Silver eJ Cry1tal Sal..S Set/Uteaaill
Salaol Toap
Candlutick Trio
Hvricaae Lamp
Water Pitcher
Julep Cup
Goblet(Water, WiM or Sherbet)
Tray
Tray
Candlutidu
l.aor (with eta...t)
Caadlutidu
JK·l1
OT· 102·104
OT·117· 119
OT· l52
OT·l53
OT-155
OT·150
STS·3
UC·3
UC·4
LS-819
DRI·2
CA-2
CCI·50
CCI-51
CCI-52
CCI-49
CCI·48
CCI-47
CW·MLK
HY· l9
HY·03
IG· 13
lN-22
IN·H
IN -122
Jewel lox
A.orte<l Porcclaia B...U
Auortal Pan:elaia Pillboxu
3 IDCh Pon:elaia V aae
1 U..:h Pon:elaia Vue
5 l.ac:h Pan:elaia Giaacr Jar
Porcelaia Giaacr Jar
Uteaail Set
Porcelaia V AM
Pon:elaia Vue
8 A-ortal GlaN Aai....J fipriau
MIUiie Box (Play• 3 oaap)
Soa,.toae ChCM Set
Le..S Cryatal Ca...ty Piah
l.u4 Cryetal Bawl
Lead Cryetal lee B11dtet
l.u4 Cryetal Compote
Lead Cryetal Vue
l.u4 Cryetal Pitcher
All Corawall!Maleck Woocl Giftware
A.orted Planten
Aaeorted Bellll
7 Pc. Juice Set
Temple Jar
Temple Jar
6 Inch Temple Jar
J.ET.
SALE
$ 39-95
$ 9.97
.99
4.95
5.95
1.95
1.95
0.95
8.95
5-95
8.95
2.95
0.95
14.95
80.00
14.95
14.95
14.95
14.95
14.95
14.95
5.95
3.95
10.95
0.95
12..95
10.95
1.97
1.49
.99
4-97
5.97
l-97
).97
1.49
4-97
9-97
39.97
9.97
9-97
9.97
9.97
9.97
9.97
1/1 price
}.97
1.97
7.97
1.97
3.97
3.97
BRASS
59.95
24.95
9 .95
13.95
8.95
23.95
52.95
225.00
2.4.97
6.97
5-97
9-97
6.97
10.97
24.97
49.97
19.95
0.95
14.97
4.97
SILVER HOLLOWARE
In a recent survey of customers who got refunds, we found 3out
of 4 believed H&R Block got them bigger refunds than if they'd
prepared their own taxes. 3 out of 4. Are you one of them?
88 Richmond Plaza
HU4/ey Brealeftut. Onty s •7.
PEWTER
•
•
Section Three, Paae Eleven
The Floyd County Times
Wednesday, February 22, 1984
32.95
59.95
5.95
59.95
13.95
17.95
10.95
12.95
21.95
19-95
25.95
}0.95
19.95
10.95
14.95
6.95
24.95
15.95
34-95
7.95
9-95
42.95
28.95
44.95
8.95
14.95
12.97
19.97
2.97
]9.97
9-97
11.97
7.97
8.97
11.97
14.97
1G.97
(pr.)7.97
13-97
4.97
4-97
3.97
17.97
10.97
19.97
2.97
4-97
]3.97
17.97
14.97
0.97
9.97
GG-45
GG-101
ARD·3
ARD·5
DH·7
CDK·88
Hl·23
IN·2
IN·4
IN· l7
IN·27
1N·29
IN-41,42,31·33
IN·36
KH·
GJ ... Top Table
U•brella Stand
Boot
fror
Heart Paule
J.awr
Ca...tlaticlu (AMorted Si11a)
tl Inch Cancl1utidu
Coat Tree
Gallery Tray
Timer
Poc:ket Chanp Holder
Fin.oide Set
7 Pc. Candle Set
All Seiden Br...
23.95
39.95
28.95
11.95
10.95
12.95
2.99
24.95
29.95
19.95
0.95
4.95
59.95
12.95
11.97
14.97
19.97
9.97
1.97
7.91
1.49
9.97
14.97
5.97
3.97
.99
19.97
0.97
50% off
Sur. l.et.
99.00
69.95
27.95
17.95
.89
1.19
9-95
36.95
24.95
10.95
49.95
54-97
44-97
!M7
G.97
.]9
-59
G.!)7
14.!)7
14.97
9.97
29.97
975.00
859.00
99.95
09.95
54.95
49.95
19.95
349.97
279.97
49.97
59.97
ELECTRONICS
RCI-2
SUT·5
UNC·2
UST-18
VH·OO
VH·90
VH· l20
GSI-2
PRC-2
RC1·3
RCI-4
Conllue Phone
Clock ll.adio with Speaker Phone
Whiatlc Switch
Phone
60 Miaute Stereo c-ttc
90 Miaute Stereo Cuuttc
1·4·6 Hour Video Tape
Ivory Phoae with eard reel
Diec Camera
Stereo Headpllonu with Radio
Clock J.uio with Telephone
CLOCKS
RC·201
ZCP·2
CN-7,8
ZAL-3
LCC-81,125,120
PTC·2
AVC-12.0·122
Grandfather (l.idpway)
Gruwlfathcr (Pearl)
Maade
Schaalhoue
Car, Train, or Ship
Pipt~ Duk Alarm
Alarm (Bl•ck, Burpndy or Jlcip)
.U.97
34.97
14.97
BABY GIFTWARE
Sterliac Silver l.attle
Stcrliac Silver Cup
Silver Cap
Silver Bank
Silver Comli/Bnuh Set
Gold Baby llinc
Gold Bra~lct'
26.95
73-95
7-95
10.95
14.95
10.95
27.95
14.97
49.97
5-97
6.97
9-97
7.97
13.97
�The Floyd County Times
Wedne•day, Februarv 22. 1984
· Soil Test Early
For Pasture Needs
The Only Way To Split Wood
Any wood burners out there who have used the old maul and wedge or an
axe to split their firewood know that beyond a little exercise and fresh air it
can get to be a real pain. Anyway, that was the case with 25-year-old Lloyd
Michael Daniels, of Cliff, so he decided to come up with a "better
mousetrap."
Using currently avaiable mechanical log-splitters as a rough model, he
began, through a series of skillful ' 'horse trades,'' to collect the necessary
components for a powerful hydraulic splitter which would have been prohibitively expensive if purchased from a manufacturer.
Utilizing hydraulic parts from heavy equipment and coupled with an 8-h.p.
motor, the rig, mounted on a trailer and fully mobile, provides a whopping 28
tons of force. A commercially available log-splitter capable of 12-ton ·
pressure output costs about $1.600, he pointed out. His cost around $350, complete.
He's arranged the whole layout to make it a one-man operation. One simply sets the log in place and throws a lev<ar. The log splits cleanly with practically no sweat.
Daniels, whose regular work with the emil-mining business has been slow
this winter, found the project to be a lot of fun, and he's even considering the
possibility of picking up a few extra bucks splitting wood for folks who would
like to cast their maul aside and take it easy.
SATELLITE TELEVISION
NEWS
SPORTS
MOVIES
RELIGION
The harsh winter weather now gripping the state makes it hard to realize
that only next month you shol:lld begin
reestablishing legumes in your grass
pastures.
"Legumes can be sowed in February
because the grass will protect the young
seedlings from frost and heaving," said
Dr. Harold Rice, Extension agronomist
in the University of Kentucky College of
Agriculture. Heaving occurs when the
freezing and thawing of the soil pushes
plant seedlings out of the ground.
But before you plant, take a soil test
to determine lime and fertilizer needs.
Soil samples should be taken now
because of the two or three weeks required to get the results back. Later in
the spring when the rush is on, getting
samples analyzed may take a month or
more.
"Many farmers put off taking a soil
sample until it is too late to get the
results back in time to apply the needed lime and fertilizer, " said Rice.
The most necessary element for
establishing legumes is phosphorus,
which is essential for plant life and is
especially needed in cold, wet soils late
in winter.
Phosphorus can be applied well ahead
of planting because it does not leach
from the soil. Phosphorus reacts with
the soil, which ties it up. But high levels
of phosphorus can build up in the soil and
still be unavailable to plants because of
soil pH.
The phosphorus content in Kentucky
soils varies widely, Rice said, because
both native phosphorus and phosphorus
applied as fertilizer are tied up in soils
with low pH.
''Both naturally-occurring phosphorus
and phosphorus applied as fertilizer are
more available when the soil pH is between 6 and 7," he said. "Liming your
pastures will be beneficial in increasing
the availability of soil phosphorus."
The only way to know if phosphorus is
available in your pastures, concluded
· Rice, is to have your soil analyzed.
Cost Shar·e Monies
May Aid Farm Owners
• Bank
Financing
Available
USTOM ANTENNA
MARTIN, KY. • 285-3984
(Across the creek from Garth Vocational School
H ·tf
PRICES EFFECTIVE FEB. 22 THRU FEB. 26.
WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO·LIMIT QUANTITIES
AND CORRECT PRINTING ERRORS.
The Agriculture Stabilization and Conservation Service will be accepting applications through February 29 for costsharing under the Agricultural Conservation Program (ACP).
Practices available are: Permanent
vegetative cover establishment ; permanent vegetative cover improvement;
forest tree plantation; forest tree stand
improvement and permanent vegetative
cover on critical (erosion) areas.
Under ACP, ASCS can pay up to 75%
of the cost of eligible materials and labor
if the practice is found to be needed and
feasible.
Persons interested should contact the
:!floyd County ASCS Office, (Phone
886-2802) prior to Feb. 29.
Section Three, Page Twelve
''HEY-THERE
OUGHTA. BE A LAW:'
The 1984 General Assembly is under way and
the Issues have clearly emerged.
Below are some questions that I would like to
know your views on. It takes a little time and effort but It helps me d6clde on how to vote. 1 appreciate hearing from you, the people of the 95th
District, because I just work for you.
r·-----~---··············--···-·········-~
YES
NO 11
1
C1J Do you believe that education is the most
I
important issue facing the 1984 General Assembly?. D ..... D
I
1
I
·:
·I
C2J Do you favor competency testing for students? . . . . D
:
..... D
;
C3J Do you favor competency testing for teachers? . ...
D ..... D
:
:
C4J would you support a tax raise for education? . . ....
D .'.... D
:
:
<SJ Do you support a tax on unmined minerals? . .. : ... D
C6J would you still support such a tax if it would
create more unemployment and raise utility rates? . D
. : . .. D
:
. .... D
D
D
1
I
I
1
I
I
'I
1
1
•
1
1
1
I
1
1
I
I
<7 J Do you support a lottery? . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
.....
<8J Do you· believe coal trucks should continue
·
to use tarps? ....... . .................. ... . ..... D .. ... D
C9J Do you believe coal trucks should pay
additional money for hauling overweight? .. . ... .. D ... .. D
(10J Do you believe coal Operators should pay
additional money for allowing overweight hauling? D . ... . D
1
1
1
I
1
1
1
1
1
I
1 COMMENTS:
1
I
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.1
I
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NAME & ADDRESS (OPTIONAL>
·I
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·------~----~~~-~~--------~-~~~-----··--~·
MAIL TO: STATE REP. GREGORY STUMBO, CAPITAL ANNEX,
FRANKFORT, KY.
IF YOU WOULD UKE TO CALL ME, THE TOLL FREE NUMBER TO FRANKFORT IS 1-800-372-n81. I will be home
or at my otflceln Martin, Ky. on weekends. Those numbers are: 886-9953, Home, and 285-9228, Office. Senator
Bally and I have held one public meeting and are planning more. Everyone Is Invited to anend.
Thank you for taking the time to answer these questions, the results will be published In two weeks. If I
may be of any assistance feel free to call or write.
GREG STUMBO
19-0Z. NABISCO
CHIPS AHOY COOKIES ....
$169
age
PERFECTION FLOUR ...... .
age
LOG CABIN MEAL .......... .
SHORTENING ............... .
1.5-GAL
5-LBS.
24-0Z. CASnEBERRY
EVAPORATED MILK ..... .
2/$1
$14 9
42-0Z. FIRST PRIZE
5-LBS.
TALL CANS CARNATION
•
$159
CLOROX BLEACH .......... .
gg
e
BEEF STEW .............. .... .
$149
2-LB.
FREEZER QUEEN SUPPER ·
&ge
CRINKLE CUTS ...... ....... .
10-0Z. JFG
$399
2-LBS. ANGELO
32-0Z. JFG
$119
1-LB. PKG.
$14 9
24-CT.
$229
INSTANT COFFEE ......... .
SALAD DRESSING ........ .
gg
e
STEAK, BEEF, OR PORK ...
12-0Z. MORTON HOUSE
4-ROLL PKG.
WHITE CLOUD BATH TISSUE ....
$1 0 9
OCEAN PERCH ...... ....... .
SINE-AID TABLETS .. ..... .
.
3-0Z. TUBE
..
GLEEM TOOTHPASTE .....
$1 09
REG. AEROSOL
FINAL
NET
$2.07
s.oz.
CAN
2-15-2t.
e
�
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Floyd County Times 1984
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Floyd County Times February 22, 1984
-
http://history.fclib.org/files/original/41/3326/02-29-1984.pdf
d6ad54eaa0dcbc8dd791b353be9ab875
PDF Text
Text
•
•
in r lftlnyb Qtouuty Mimrs
Speaking of
and for
Floyd County
PRESTONSBURG,
Read Each Week by More Than 12,500 Families.
USPS-2027 -0000
vo~::.e;vn
2$e
WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 29, 1984
Jury Clears Marshall
Of Murder· Plot Charge
•
Photo by Chuck Akers
In a decision that stunned many, a
Fayette Circuit Court jury last Wednesday acquitted Clyde Douglas Marshall
of a charge of plotting the death of his
wife, Glenda Sharon Pack Marshall, last
June.
Members of Mrs. Marshall's family
surged toward the defendant, some crying out "No, no!" as the verdict was announced. Court officials quickly ushered
Marshall and three of his sisters from
the courtroom while others restrained
his pursuers.
In a ten-minute outpouring of anger
and disbelief, members of the victim's
family screamed out, pounded on walls
with their h:.:.S Ftnd sobbed.
By agreement of Floyd Circuit Judge
Hollie Conley, Commonwealth's Attorney James R. Allen and Public
Defender Ned Pillersdorf, the trial had
been moved to Fayette county because
it was thought the 32-year-old Minnie
man could not receive a fair trial here.
The verdict came shortly after 9 p.m.,
after the six-man, six-woman jury had
heard four days of testimony and
deliberated about eight hours. Judge
one of three verdicts: not guilty, guilty
of complicity to commit murder, or guilty of complicity to commit first-degree
manslaughter. For a conviction, all
jurors would have to have agreed on
Marshall's guilt "beyond a reasonable
doubt."
Prosecutors argued that Marshall
hired three men to kill his wife, put her
body in her car, set the car on fire and
push it over Sizemore Mountain last
June 20. Two of the three men-Bobby
McGuffey, who is Marshall's younger
brother, and Carl McFarland-testified
that Marshall wanted his wife killed so
he could collect on life insurance
policies. The third man, Ed Wright, was
killed July 7 in Tennessee.
McFarland also testified Marshall
wanted revenge against his wife's
former boyfriend.
The prosecution included testimony
by Mrs. Marshall's nine-year-old son
from a former marriage. Donald Brent
Morgan said he saw Marshall put something in the trunk of his mother's car as
he and his mother were leaving a Martin dentist's office, shortly before she
earlier testified that Marshall, in instructing them on the murder, told
them, "Everything you'll need will be in
her trunk."
The boy said that, although he had
gone to the dentist's with his mother, he
leftwithhisstepfatherbecauseMarshall
told him they were going out that afternoon to buy him a pony.
Despite the fact that prosecutors called nearly 40 witnesses to buttress their
charges, they failed to establish a
motive for Marshall to have his wife killed, argued Pillersdorf, Marshall's
attorney·
The insurance that Marshall stood to
collect was nearer to $40,000 than to the
$133,000 claimed by the prosecution,
Pillersdorf maintained. Moreover, Mrs.
Marshall's changing a $10,000 policynaming her husband as beneficiary instead of her mother-a month before her
death, was easily explained by the fact
that the couple had just had a child for
whom they wished to provide, the
defense attorney said.
"Amanjustdoesn'thavehiswifekiU-
BILLOWING SMOKE AND FLAMES shooting 200 feet into the air engulfed the Allen Lumber
Company, Saturday night. Although eight fire departments joined in fighting the blaze, it is said
that the loss may b~ near one million dollars.
· ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------~C~.R~-~L~uk~e~r~to~l~d~th~e~J~·u~ry~it~c~o~ul=d~r~e~tu=r~n--~di~·e~d~.~M~cG~uf~fsey~a~n~d~M~c~F!a~rl~a~nd~h~a~d~----~(Se~e~S:t~o~ry~N:o~
. l~,~P~ag~e~4~)------
From Two ViewDoints••.
Night Blaze Hits
Allen Lumber Co.
• Origin of Fire
Is Undetermined
In Early Probe
•
•
•
Fire of undetermined origin destroyed
the main office and most of the storage
sheds and supplies of the Allen Lumber
Company late Saturday night at a loss
that may approach a million dollars.
Evelean C. Akers, president and major shareholder of the company, said no
estimate of the damage has been reached. She said the loss was partially insured but added, "I know we've lost the
biggest portion of what we've got."
Early investigation of the blaze was
made by J.B. McKenzie, State Police arsori investigator, and was continued Sunday and Monday by Richard Carlson,
deputy state fire marshal.
The fire, which was reported around
10:45 p.m. by Allen Fire Chief Roy Compton, was first seen at the rear of the
main office. Eight fire departments joined in fighting the blaze.
"It (the lumber yard) went fast,"
Prestonsburg Fire Chief Tom Blackburn
said. "Flames shot 200 feet in the air."
Roughly two-thirds of the sprawling
installation was levelled. There are no
fire hydrants in New Allen, where the
lumber company was located, and fire
trucks were obliged to shuttle back and
forth to a hydrant owned by the Prestonsburg water system, near the Allen
Baptist Church, across US 23 from the
fire scene, for water needed in fighting
the fire. The blaze was brought under
control around 1:45 a.m .. Sunday.
Fire departments at the scene were
<See Story No. 4, Page 4)
-
MARRIAGE LICENSES
Lloyd James Click, 54, and Christina
S. Caudill, 51, both of Martin; Brennan
Newsome, 34, of Grethel, and Susan
Elaine Compton, 28, of Martin; John
Patrick Ousley. 20, of Martin and Jennifer Robinson, 18, of Langley; Arnold
Lee Mulkey, 21, and Elizabeth Pearl
Burchett, 19, both of Banner; Bartley
Price Bartrum, · 24, and Flora Grace
Bartrum, 23, both of Martin; Earl
Carr, 24, of Dwale, and Tina Denise
Shepherd, 18, of Hunter; Billy L.
Crider II, 20, and Danita Kay
Wireman, 18, both of Prestonsburg.
SUITS FILED
Pansy Goble vs. David Lee Goble;
Tammy Jo Gillum vs. Morris Gene
Gillum; Dottie Lawson vs. Michael
Lawson; Maggie Nelson vs. Hargus
Nelson; Martha Wicker vs. Jimmy
Wieber; Linda Spears vs. J.D. Spears;
Kathy Varney Poston vs. James
Poston, Jr.; Delcie B. Blair vs.
Frederick Ray Blair; Kimberley Gay
Little vs. Kenny Little; Phil Jones vs.
Sherry Darlene Jones; Leah D.
Stewart et al vs. Fredericka M. Tuttle;
F. S. Vanhoose and Co. v s. Rick
Vanover et a!; First Commonwealth
Bank vs. B. H. Vanover; Louis J. Allen
et a! vs. Lida Robinette Steel et al;
Joseph W. Justice vs. Carolyn Justice;
Kathleen Hall vs. Bert Hall, Jr.; Connie Younce vs. Johnny Younce;
Pikeville National Bank vs. Robert W.
Roberts et a!; Bank Josephine vs.
William J. May et al; Birdie Howell
Collins vs. Gale Collins; Sandra Kaye
Wright Gibson vs. Albert Gibson;
Clyde Roberts vs. Mildred Roberts.
• Woman Says Jones, Others
Sought Rival Mine Close
I
•
The Marshall Jury Verdict
A 34-year-old McDowell woman, who calculated to shut his competitor down,
took the stand last week in the trial of she said.
Edgar Jones and 17 others on federal
Jones told her Ray-Mac had underbid
racketeering charges, said the Prestons- him by $3 a ton on a contract he had to
burg coal operator ordered contract supply coal to a South Carolina utility
miners working for him to "do what it and implied that, unless Ray-Mac was
took" to shut down a rival coal company. stopped, JRM's contract miners would
Prosecutors are arguing in U.S. be out of a job, she said.
She later paid $2500 for weapons and
District Court that what it took to cripple the Ray-Mac strip mine near East ammunition for the demonstrators, for
McDowell two years ago was violence which Jones promised to reimburse her,
and extortion and that Jones, president she said.
After being lured into several converof the JRM Coal Company, orchestrated
efforts by his subcontractors-including sations which were secretly taped by an
firing on Ray-Mac workers, blowing up undercover agent of the federal Bureau
a $400,000 auger, and burning down a of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms in the
weeks following the violence at Raytipple-to sabotage the operation.
The defense contends there was no Mac, Mrs. Booth was arrested in
plot to drive Ray-Mac out of business but August, 1982 and subsequently agreed
that the winter, 1982 violence there grew herself to tape secretly three conversaout of attempts, which Jones supported, tions with Jones.
to organize the large, non-union operaIn an October, 1982 arrangement with
tion which had set foot only six months
previously on what is traditionally prosecutors, she pleaded guilty to an explosives charge, on the understanding
strong union soil.
Testifying for four days in the prosecutors would recommend a sixt week was . month jail term. She received two years
Pikeville federal court
with her bus- and a subsequent request to have the
Pearl Newman Booth
has since term reduced is pending.
band Phillip-the
Nashville attorney Aubrey Harwell,
divorced-operated two
representing
Jones, noted the plea
that were under r>nrtrr!>f'l
bargain in the course of lengthy cross
outbreak of the clash UJ"""''....
examination designed to erode credibiliFeb. 15, 1982, Jones
<See Story No. 5, Page 4l
permit her workers to joi
Long after the verdict was announc- weak, said allen, noting that Floyd
ed, attorneys on both sides of the Mar- Public Defender Ned Pillersdorf,
shall case keenly argued its merits, moments before closing arguments in
defense counsel hailing the jury decision the case, sounded out the Comas the only outcome justified by the monwealth on the possibility of a plea
evidence, the prosecutor damning it as bargain.
"the greatest miscarriage of justice" in · The jury decision confirmed his courtroom description of the handsome,
his trial experience.
The jury which acquitted Marshall of clean-cut Marshall as "a con artist,"
a charge of conspiring to have his wife said Allen, explaining, "Apparently he
killed was reportedly never near convic- conned the jury." The verdict raised
tion. Halfway through their eight-hour questions about the criminal justice
deliberation, nine jurorS were in favor system itself, he said.
But Pillersdorf, who represented Marof acquittal, one of them said; the other
shall with the assistance of Mary Lou
three were persuaded later.
"The jury absolutely blew this case," Chandler, public defender in Johnson
said an incredulous Floyd Com- county, insisted the verdict was "not
monwealth's Attorney James R. Allen · unexpected."
who, with Albert A. Burchett assisting,
His last-minute request for a plea deal
presented the state's case. "We proved was nothing more than a routine defense
this case to everyone in the courtroom, strategy to sound out the strength of its
from the judge to the bailiffs. The only position, the defense lawyer said. At
one we did not convince was the jury most, his client might have pleaded guilty to a charge of receiving stolen properitself. We feel heartsick about it."
Even the defense realized its ca~ was ty in return for a five-year sentence, he
said. "Doug would certainly not have
agreed to anything more,'' Pillersdorf
said. "He was not interested in a deal.
Sentenced in district court, following He told me he would go to the electric
guilty pleas or verdicts, were:
chair protesting his innocence."
Anthony McKinney, Harold, drunk
Widespread skepticism here about the
driving, $137.50 in fine and court costs, propriety of the verdict was attributed
referred to Alcoholic Driver Education by Pillersdorf to the fact that most Floyd
( ADE); Beulah Roberts, Harold, countians were dependent on a single
criminal mischief, $137.50 plus restitu- newspaper reporter for a day-by-day action; Glenn Bradley, Estill, cold check, count of the trial. Lexington Herald35 days' jail, $247.50 plus restitution to Leader reporter Thomas Tolliver so
the Trading Post; Claude Isaac, seriously understated the defense posiWheelwright, theft, 60 days, $147.50 tion in his reports, "I didn't know what
plus restitution; Donald B. Cheek, trial he was covering," the attorney
Salyersville, drunk driving, driving on said.
Although he had successfully petitionsuspended license, no insurance, 10
days, $350; Roy Hill, Betsy Layne, ed to have the trial moved away from
drunk driving, 10 days, $200 ; Floyd C. Floyd county for fear that jurors here
Carr, Prestonsburg, drunk driving, would be biased against his client,
Pillersdorf insisted this week that a
amended to public drunk, $47.50;
Phillip E. Mitchell, McDowell, drunk Floyd jury hearing the evidence
driving, speeding (96 mph in 55 mph presented in Fayette county last week
zone), $250; Louisina Hackworth, would have returned the same decision.
Prestonsburg, shoplifting, 30 days,
But Allen, who agreed to a change of
$147.50; Ronald Martin, Sandusky, 0., venue provided prosecutors could have
drunk driving, attempt to elude police, a say in choosing the trial site, said that
30 days, $347.50; Fred Hutchinson, Mt. ''obviously we were wrong'' in choosing
Gay, WV, possession of marijuana, Lexington.
carrying concealed weapon, $300.
<See Story No. 3, Page 4)
In District Court
WINTER'S HOARY BREATH seemed to enhance the beauty
of this meandering stream. A light sprinkling of snow on Tuesday morning had by nightfall become a blanket of white
reminding all that winter is not yet past.
Solid Waste
Office Moved
Almost every year, after complaining
my way through a dreary February, I
am reminded of the late Noah Harris'
sage remark which ran to this effect:
"I've always noticed that if I made it to
the first of March, I made it through the
rest of the year."
Hope we all keep on noticing'.
The offices of Floyd County Solid
Waste, Inc. are now to be found in the
courthouse annex. The offices of the Big
Sandy Community Action Program
have been moved to the Allen park.
THE BRIDGE
One oldtimer has been quotedaccurately, I hope-as saying that if the
month wasn't necessary to get from
winter to spring, he would be in favor of
skipping February.
WELCOME!
And now March, with all its whimsies,
bows in, and whate'er betide-storm,
snow, sleet, gale, sunshine or scented
zephyr-we longingly gaze upon that
magic date only twenty days ahead.
LOOK-ALIKES
The evening grosbeaks which have
been grazing feeders hereabouts have
apparently gone on, leaving the daintier
pin siskins to confuse many of us into
thinking the grosbeaks remain with us.
To discern the difference, shove your
glasses further up on the nose and take
a closer look at the beaks.
THE MISSING INGREDIE~T
I seldom get wound up on the subject
of education, and it's possible that a lot
of folks are happier because I don't. But,
since it seems to be the mark of the wellinformed citizen to belabor the subject,
I yield to the temptation to do likewise.
I maintain that what education needs
<See Story No. 2, Page 4)
CITY UTILIT.IES WORKER~ were hard at it. a_ few days ago filling in the gaping hole which
caused a portion of Lake Dnve near the Mumctpal Building, here, to buckle.
�Wednesday, February 29, 1984
;·Floyd Churches
:Complete Trade
·Of Sanctuaries
; Churchgoers who skipped last Sunday
could find themselves at the wrong services this week, following a trade of
church buildings, finalized this week,
between Floyd county Catholics and
'members of the Watergap Freewill Baptist congregation.
• The exchange will see members of the
Watergap church gather for services
this Sunday in the 81-year-old church
building in Prestonsburg occupied until
now by St. Theodore's Catholic community. Catholics from St. Theodore's
,and from St. Juliana's parish in Martin
will celebrate Mass in the four-year-old
.'lanctuary vacated by the Baptists on the
Lancer-Watergap road.
' The trade had been sought by the
:Watergap group which, badly split by an
·jnternal dispute last year, was hardpressed meeting mortgage payments on
its $350,000 property. The deal was approved on the Catholic side by the Most
Rev. William A. Hughes, Catholic bishop
of Covington.
In addition to the church building on
Third Avenue and an adjoining cottage
on Westminister Street, the Catholics
will reportedly pay the Baptists $175,000
under terms of the exchange.
The Prestonsburg building, which will
now be known as the Third Avenue
Freewill Baptist Church, will be housing
its third Christian denomination .
Originally built in 1903 for the First
Presbyterian Church community, the
Presbyterians sold it to the Catholics in
1964.
Catholics have yet to choose a name
for their new Watergap church. Acquisitions of the site will enable them to combine their two Floyd parishes whichthough they have shared a pastor, the
Rev. Ralph Beiting-have been managed independently. They hope to buy land
adjoining the existing property to construct a rectory and playground, a
church spokesman said.
NOTICE OF
INTENTION TO MINE
Pursuant to Application
Number (436-8000)
( 1) In accordance with the provisions
of KRS 350.055, notice is hereby given
that Bailey Mining, Box 177, Bypro, Kentucky 42612, has filed an application for
a permit for a washer coal processing
facility affecting 9.0 acres located 1.5
miles south of Weeksbury in Floyd
county.
(2) The proposed facility is approximately 3.5 miles south from Hwy. 122
junction with Hwy. 466 and south of Left
Beaver Creek. The latitude is 37-18-32.
The longitude is 82-42-04" .The surface
area is owned by Collins and Mayo.
(3) The proposed facility is located on
the Wheelwright U.S.G.S. 7l!z minute
quadrangle map.
(4) The application has been filed for
public inspection at the Department for
Surface Mining Reclamation and Enforcement's Prestonsburg Regional Office, 431 South Lake Drive, Prestonsburg
Kentucky 41653. Written comments, objections, or requests for a permit conference must be filed with the Director
of the Division of Permits, 6th Floor,
Capital Plaza Tower, Frankfort, Kentucky 40601.
2-29-3t.
NOTICE OF
INTENTION TO MINE
Pursuant to Application
Number 836-5028
In accordance with the provisions of
KRS 350.055, notice is hereby given that
Powell Branch Coal Company, P.O.
Drawer 367, Harold, Kentucky has filed
an application for a permit for an underground mining operation. The proposed
• operation will affect a surface disturb; ance of 10.28 acres located 1iz mile south: west of Tram in Floyd county. The mine
· will underlie an additional 198.49 acres
located i,'z miles southwest of Tram. The
· latitude is 37• 33' 55". The longitude is 82°
38' 55".
The proposed operation is located on
the Harold U.S.G.S. 71;2 minute quadran• gle map. The surface area to be disturb: ed is owned by Emmett Lawson and
• G.C. Blair. The operation will underlie
· land owned by Emmett Lawson, S.
· Thurman Harvel, G.C. Blair, Eugene
Lawson, James A. & Archie B. Dale,
Mrs. H.D. Gibson, John & Dora Kidd,
· samuel, P.T., & Rozina Lewis, Marvin
: &Marie W. Lewis, Alex Gardner, and
· Clay Justice.
The application also includes a proposed land use change from the Mountain Terrian pre-mining land use to a flat
• bench post-mining land use. The operation will affect an area within 100' of a
~ public road, Powell Branch Roa~. The
: operation will not involve relocation of
• the public road.
: The application has been filed for
: public inspection at the Department for
· Surface Mining Reclamation and En: forcement's Prestonsburg Regional Of: fice, Prestonsburg, Ky. 41653. Written
• comments, objections, or requests for a
: permit conference must be filed with the
Director of the Division of Permits, 6th
Floor, Capital Plaza Tower, Frankfort,
Kentucky 40601.
2-29-3t.
PUBLIC NOTICE
0
Pursuant to 405 KAR 8:010, Section
16( 4) (b), the following is a summary of
permitting decisions made by the
Department for Surface Mining
Reclamation and Enforcement, Division
of Permits with respect to applications
to conduct surface coal mining and
reclamation operations in Floyd county.
Left Beaver, 236-8021, Issued, 840217;
Branham & Baker Coal, 836-0069, Issued,
840217
It.
The Floyd County Times
Pageant Winner
If Insurance Paid, Defendant
May Be Asked To Pay Defender
If an insurance company pays Clyde
Douglas Marshall following his acquittal last week on charges of having
ordered his wife's murder, the state
public defender's office may move to
have Marshall pay for his defense,
Public Advocate Paul Isaacs confirmed
last week.
Because Marshall was said to be
without means, he was defended at state
expense by public defenders Ned Pillersdorf and Mary Lou Chandler. Cost of the
defense, at private attorneys' rates,
could amount to as much as $75,000,
Pillersdorf estimated. Involved in
preparing the case, besides the two attorneys, were two investigators and
Frankfort psychiatrist Dr. John A.
Gergen, who helped in jury selection and
was prepared to testify had the trial
Commemorative Stamp
Is Available Locally
Kelly McKay was crowned 1984's Little Miss Eastern Kentucky Dream Girl
at the Holiday Inn at Pikeville, Feb. 4.
Kelly is nine years old and is in the
fourth grade at Osborne Elementary.
She is the daughter of Charles and
Wilma McKay, and the granddaughter
of Talt and Arnie Johnson, all of Bevinsville. She iS also the granddaughter of
Edward and Nancy McKay, of Sterling
Heights , Michigan.
Liquor-by-Drink
Move Cancelled
By City Council
A move to raise the standing of Prestonsburg from a fourth to a third class
city was nipped in the bud at a city council meeting Monday by a church group
opposed to the easier access to liquor
such a move could bring.
Those seeking to change the city's
status were identified by Mayor Harold
Cooley only as " people interested in the
restaurant business" but were said to include backers of a proposed inn on U.S.
23 at Katy Friend. The change would
have meant that licenses could be issued
allowing sale of liquor by the drink in
this county.
In view of a reported increase in drunk
driving convictions, such a change
would be undesirable, Rev. Taylor
Biggs, pastor of the Community United
Methodist church here, told the council.
" The city does not need any wider permission to sell liquor," he said, adding
that he had been in touch with the Kentucky Temperance League with a view
to possibly organizing a petition to "vote
Prestonsburg completely dry" after the
May primary.
Following the lead of Councilman
Paul Hunt Thompson, who said he did
not want to be responsible for a decision
affecting the whole county, the council
abandoned the idea even before it was
officially proposed.
While the council might have petitioned for a change in the city's status, the
change would have to have been approved by the state legislature. One of those
in favor of killing the proposal locally
noted outside the meeting that State
Rep. Greg Stumbo is attorney for
developers of the Katy Friend Inn.
According to state statute, a city of the
third class should have a population of
8000 or more, but recent court decisions
appear to give a city some latitude in
reckoning population size, said City
Manager David Evans. The right to
serve liquor by the drink is enjoyed not
only by a third-class city but by any
county containing a city of that standing.
Residents and merchants living outside Prestonsburg but within five road
miles of the main city fire station will
have 60 days to decide whether to subscribe for city fire protection. Under a
plan adopted by the council, residences
within that radius will be eligible for fire
services for a $24 annual fee, businesses
for a fee calculated mainly on square
footage.
One of the city's 500-gallon " frontline"
trucks as well as the 260-gallon "minipumper" will be available to serve county subscribers. A crew of up to six
firefighters will be dispatched to
residential fires, up to 10 to business
fires .
The council authorized applications
for two grants totalling about $27,000 for
improvements at Archer Park. The
grants, administered by the state
Department of Local Government, will
permit rewu,ng lights at the ballfield
area and building a playground nearby.
The city will bear half the cost l)f the
projects.
Subscription
Rates Per Year
In Floyd County, $8.00
Elsewhere In Kentucky, $10
Outside Kentucky, $12.50
Please note expiration dale
opposite your name on wrap·
per or on yo~r copy of The
Times. Because of Increased
malllna costs, notices ol
subscription 'expiration are
no
lonaer
mailed
to
subscribers.
Subscriptions mrt be mailed to:
The Floyd County Times
Box 391
Prestonsbura, Ky. 41653
Section One, Paae Two
A new 20 cent commemorative stamp
marking 50 years of soil and water conservation in the United States was issued
by the U.S. Postal Service at the National Association of Conservation
Districts (NACD) Convention in Denver,
Colorado, on February 6, 1984.
Clark Allison, district conservationist
for the U.S. Soil Conservation Service at
Prestonsburg said the new stamp is now
available at the local post office.
The soil and water conservation movement began in 1934 when the Soil Erosion Service in the U.S. Department of
Interior began to work directly with
farmers through demonstration projects. In 1935, the agency was transferred to the U.S. Department of Agriculture . Later that spring, when Congress
passed Public Law 46, it became the Soil
Conservation Service.
Today SCS works through nearly 3,000
local conservation districts that are
local units of state government. The soil
conservation mnvement is a voluntary
one that has-involved 2.5 million landownerS and operators since its inception.
In the Floyd County Soil Conservation
District, over 500 landowners and
operators are cooperating with the
District to apply needed conservation
work.
reached the penalty phase.
David Marcum, an agent for Woodmen of the World Insurance, said last
week his company would pay Marshall
as beneficiary of a $10,000 life insurance
policy on his dead wife. Since the death
was accidental, the policy would pay
$20,000, Marcum said . But members of
the victim's family are expected to file
a circuit court chalJenge to the settlement and the insurance company will
withhold payment in the meantime, according to a knowledgeable source.
Proving the prosecution case would be
less formidable in a civil suit, where
juries do not have to be convinced of a
defendant's guilt beyond a reasonable
doubt but have to find only that a
preponderance of the evidence favors
that conclusion.
Public Advocate Isaacs last week asked Pillersdorf and Chandler to total their
hours and expenses with a view to collecting payment from Marshall if he collects from the insurance company. State
law permits the public advocate to collect legal fees up to five years later if a
defendant originally declared indigent
later comes into money. In Marshall's
case, a claim would probably have to be
filed before Trial Judge C.R. Luker,
either in Floyd Circuit Court, where the
original determination of indigence was
made, or in Fayette Circuit Court, where
the case was tried.
Pillersdorf said last week he felt " ambiguous" about his boss's interest in
pressing Marshall for payment. " Doug
was found innocent. Why should he be
penalized?" he asked. Commonwealth's
Attorney James R. Allen said he felt that
any insurance proceeds should go to
Mrs. Marshall's children rather than to
the public defender's office.
Dan Tax.
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DanTax is becoming a force to be reckoned w it h.
Wi t h highly tra ined tax preparers and fees that
start at $7.50 for bot h a Federal and State return,
more and more people are choosing DanTax as
t he firm to assist t hem i n fil i ng their Income Tax
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Coal Run Village
Pikeville, Ky.
437-4131
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112 West Court St.
Prestonsburg, Ky .
88~-99~4 --
l -ll- l2t.
TRANSMISSION LINE MECHANIC
An area industry is seeking qualified applicants for the position of transmission line mechanic to work in the Pikeville
area. Responsibilities include inspection, maintenance and/or
construction of ultra-high-voltage transmission lines and structures up to 161,000 volts. Job requirements include climbing
wood and steel structures, driver's license, and limited overnight travel.
Applicants should have a strpng background in ultra-highvoltage work experience. Only experienced applicants need
apply.
Send letter stating experience and salary requtrements to:
PO BOX 471
CATLETTSBURG, KY 41129
An Equal Opportunity Employer
2·29-2t.
SPRING PAINT SALE!
.SPECIAL VALUES on quality paint.
FLAT WALL ......... GAL. 9.95
• DELUXE WALL
. GAL. 12.95
• SEMI-GLOSS
. GAL. 12.95
ADVERTISEMENT FOR BIDS
The Floyd County Fiscal Court at its
regular meeting on February 17, 1984,
authorized the County Judge/Executive
to advertise for bid at the next election
to be held in 1984 for the Primary
(whether it be in May or August) , the
printing of the ballots to be used in the
voting machines here in Floyd County.
All interested persons may contact the
County Judge/Executive for the necessary specs. The Court reserves the right
to reject any and all bids.
FLOYD COUNTY
JUDGE/ EXECUTIVE
John M. Stumbo
2-22-3t.
Income Tax by
e
1400 COLORS
to choose froml
LATEX WHITE
HOUSE ..
e
A paint for every need...
2 GALS. 21.95
LATEX (COL'ORS)
HOUSE .......... GAL. 13.88
• ALSO ON SALE••.
LADDERS, BRUSHES
AND ROLLERS.
1
Sandy Valley Hardware'
874-9218
Allen,
FOR SALE
RATLIFF & LENOX REAL ESTATE
WE HAVE HOMEs-BOTH BRICK AND FRAME-THAT WILL
QUALIFY FOR THE NEW FLOYD-JOHNSON COUNTY BOND
MONEY. WE ALSO HAVE LO'I'S-:WOODED, SECLUDED AND
CLOSE TO TOWN-AND WE WILL HELP YOU WITH
PRELIMINARY PLANNING. CALL FOR FURTHER INFORMATION.
New brick home ready for occupancy in a lovely area just outside
Prestonsburg. Front porch, living room with picture window and
fireplace wall, dining room, eat-in kitchen with GE appliances. sliders
to patio, master bedroom suite, two other bedrooms, two ceramic tile
baths, utility area and two-car garage. Central heat and air, fully insulated for energy efficiency. The fireplace has blowers and the roof is
pitched steep with pull-down stairway for extra overhead storage. City
water. cable TV. Value prices. Floyd County Bond Money available.
Farm-A quiet and secluded farm on a blacktop road. Just the place to
relax after a hard day's work on 78 acres. Buildings include main house,
two smaller houses and a large barn. The main house has 2-3 bedrooms,
living room, kitchen and bathroom and best of all-FREE GAS. The
smaller houses are unimproved but could be brought into shape. The
barn is large enough to take care of any horses or cattle you might want
to keep. Good gardening area and plenty of developing timber. If you
would like to get away from it aU, but be 5 minutes from four-lane, call
us for an appointment. Better hurry-this type of property doesn't last.
Nt>at thrt>t>-bt>droom starter homt> that is an extra spt>cial opportunity if
,vou qualif,v for Farmt'rs Homt' Financing. Lh·ing room. kitcht>n-dining.
thret' bt'drooms: with masonitt> siding. shinglt> roof and concrt>tt>
drivt>way. City watt>r and St'Wt'r. Located at David.
One of the largest and most beautifully built and decorated homes it has
been our pleasure to offer this year. Built of white stone <brick ) from :
North Carolina, with privacy ( 10 acres ), yet within three miles of
Prestonsburg. Approximately 3200-sq. ft. or living space. plus oversize
garage of 750-sq. ft. and 100' patio in rear give great spread-out room for
family or parties. Space for pool if desired. Old bond 8 7/8% partial
:assumable mortgage available: Shown by appointment.
On Daniels Creek we have a modular on 260 front feet, wedge shaped to
the top of the hill. Extra insulation and double-pane windows and a
fireplace in the family room make this three-bedroom, two-bath home
with beamed cathedral ceiling in living and dining rom a real energy
saver. Special General Electric kitchen with side-by-side refrigerator,
self-clean range, pot scrubber dishwasher, compactor and disposal.
Central heat and air, deck area, utility building to stay.
Modified A-frame with wrap-around deck : lots of windows and light, 2
beautiful stone fireplaces, one is two-story height. Foyer. living-diningkitchen Cgreat room> area, three bedrooms. plus lower level rec room
and unfinished basement (utility, storage. workshop area l. Central
heat and air. Good buy with Floyd County Bond money financing
available. Adj,oining lot could be added. Owner financing also possible.
·we again have Kentucky Housing money available for new homes in'
Jenkins. Old-time interest rates for a few lucky buyers. Call for details.
'Commercial PrestQnsburg lot contaming approximate1y one levt>l acn
at intersection or Porter and University Drive. Adjoining Highland
Plaza Shopping Center. ExceUent location in a growing and busy area.
Two lots on May's Branch in Village Estates. City utilities ; i)Ur contractor, your plans.
Almost new brick ranch with carport on a country size lot close to four
lane 110. There is a large living room with picture window. kitchen.
familv area with utility room, three bedrooms, one and one half baths.
low g~s rate-s and cit,v ~ater is available. This homt' has been wt>ll cart>d
for and FLOYD COUNTY BOND MONEY financing Is available.
High. dry building ground within walking distance to hospi"l. Coul4 be
hH• home sites or professional or business office. 192' r~ont xtse• deep.
City water available.
Two storv home in Martin on big creekbank lot-room for gardt>n. Uving room. with fireplace. dining room. den, eat-in kitchen. utility room.
three bedrooms. 2• 2 baths. Partial basement. Forced air furnact>, concrett> block doublt> garage. downtown location. Grt>at famil,v homt'.
Brick home-three bedrooms, two baths, full basement. Equipped kitchen. nice carpeting. Deck with built-in seating, central heat and air.
Two-car garage. Professionally landscaped lot is 100'x200'. Terrific
space for the money. REDUCED.
Small framt' tnrrt'-bedroom startt>r or rt>tirt>mt>nt hom(' in a r('al <·uuntrv st>tting. Prt>St>nt ownt>rs hav(' givt'n this four .vt>a r old homt> !'XC('Jit>nt
c~rt', tht>rmopan(' windows . full,v insulated. back patio. Possiblt>
Farmus Homt' Administration financing. Priced undf"r $40,000.00.
A-frame for rent or lease purchase. Call for details .
Charming three-bedroom, two-story home with front porch. two baths,
kitchen with appliances and a fireplace in the living room . Remodeled,
with new carpeting and wallpaper, washer and dryer and window airconditioner to stay. Outside storage building with utilities.
Prestonsburg city water and gas. Located just below Sugarloaf.
Ownt>r transl'<•rrt>d. Brunc~·-built ran<·h homt' on Abbott ('n•t>k with
ovt>rsizt> Jot and spt>cial dt>corating. Entr~· foyt>r. long lh ing-dinin ~
room with slidt>rs to patio and abovt>-ground pool. t>quippt>d kitcht>n with
(iE applianc('s, an abundanct' of cabinrts and countt>r spact> and an t'atin art>a. Famil\' room panf'llt>d, with woodburning firt>placf' . thrt>t'
bE-drooms. twu .full baths. and an attacht>d 1'1\io-car garag('. Storag('
building to sta.\'. L0\'('1." ar('a of W('ll-kt>pt hom('S . Old X 7/X% bond
mont>,v assumablt> loan availablt>.
We wtll help you sell what yoll have to sell-and try to find what yot.
want to buy. Appraiws and counseling. You may be sPUing too low an•
buying too high.
OFFICE PHON£: 886-6138
We Invite You To Call Us.
Offic:e Hours: 9 a.m.-3:30 p.m. or By Appo(n ~ment
PHYLUS RATUFF LENOX, Real Estate Brolter
Phone 886-8689 after 7 p.m.
WAYNE W. RATLIFF, JR., Salesman, Phone: Home 874-:(720 after 6 p.m.
JOYCE LYNN BLACKBURN, Sales Representative,
1-478-9450
ALTA JEAN GIBSON, Sales Representative,
VIRGIL 0. TURNER, Sales Representative, Phone •~..c:·~o•
GUS KALOS, Sales Representative, Phone
LINDA LENOX, Sales Representative, Phone BB4i-84ilr.l
JEWEL REED, Sales Representative, Phone
CAROL Mc:CARTY, Sales Representative,
�•
The Floyd County Times
Wedneaday, February 29, 1984
State Ag Dept. Aids Recognized By USAA
Cattle Feed Program·
l
•
Livestock in eight Kentucky counties
will have enough corn to eat during the
remaining winter months because of
help the state Department of
Agriculture gave to a federal emergency feed assistance program
"The Agricultural Stabilization and
Conservation Service offices in these
counties were having trouble locating
enough rail cars to ship the low-cost
grain into Kentucky from Iowa," said
state Agriculture Commissioner David
E. Boswell. "Rita Jones at the Scott
County ASCS office called the department for any help we could provide.
"Fortunately, we were able to get in
touch with the right people and make
enough rail cars available to get the
120,707 bushels of corn to Kentucky," he
added.
The program, administered by each
county ASCS office, allows livestock producers who live in counties which were
designated disaster areas to purchase
Commodity Credit Corp. corn at a
reduced cost. Farmers in nearly all
counties in the state qualified for the program after last summer's drought. They
are receiving feed from surrounding
states and throughout the Midwest.
The first rail cars from Iowa began arriving in the state. Monday. About 25
farmers from Scott county unloaded the
20,000 bushels allocated to their livestock
at Blue Gras~...Grain m Lexington.
Farmers-in~Henry, Owen, Woodford,
Shelby, Oldham, Fayette and Bourbon
counties will soon be receiving their
corn.
The corn is good quality feed, according to Ms. Jones, and it will cost about
$1 less per bushel for the qualifying
farmers.
"We had to go all the way to Coon
Rapids, Iowa, to get all the corn we
needed at the cheapest cost for the
farmers," said Ms. Jones, executive
director of the Scott County ASCS office.
"But because so many rail cars were
tied up delivering PIK grains an.cLrroving corn for this program to other states,
we couldn't get enough cars to get the
corn back to Kentucky.
"We're certainly glad Commissioner
Boswell put the efforts of the Department of Agriculture to work to help solve
our problem," she added. "Our farmers
were really about to run into a feed shortage problem, so The help came at a very
good time."
•
The United States Achievment
Academy has announced that Lenny
Hall. McDowell Elementary student,
has been named a 1984 USAA winner in
both science and mathematics.
Hall, who was hominated for the
mathematics award by Freda Burke
and the science award by Joan
Caldwell, will be listed with
biographical information in the USAA
yearbook, published nationally.
He is a son of George and Mary Ann
Hall, and grandson of Mr. and Mrs.
Cecil Newsome, of Teaberry, and
Triplett Hall and the late Frona Hall, of
Hi Hat.
Social Security Number
Is Key To Protection
A person's Social Security number is
the key to.his or her future protection
against the loss or reduction of income
because of retirement, disability, or
death, Jim Kelly, district director for the
Big Sandy Area said recently.
This is because future Social Security benefits will be based on the record
of earnings kept under the Social Security number during a person's working
lifetime.
Many people have the same name, but
each person has his or her own Social
Security number. The number singles
Superman first appeared in a comic
each person's record from some 200
book in June 1938. Today, the comic book
million others .
is worth over $4,000.
A person should show his or her Social
Security card to each employer and
make sure the number is copied correctly for the employer's records. This will
help avoid any mistakes as earnings will
be reported under the correct number.
A person should keep a record of his
or her number in a safe place so that he
Reasonable Rates
or she can apply for a replacement card
• Located 4 miles on Mt. Park·
should that become necessary. A person
way on Rt. 404 (David Rd)
should apply for a replacement card on23-yrs. experience. "Knows
ly if he or she loses the card or there is
a change in name.
how to do the best job tor You."
A person applying for a replacement
Hometown Boy-lives here all
Social Security card must show evidence
_year.
of identity. A person whose name is
changed should show evidence showing
both the old and new names.
It is against the law to use another per2·22·lf
-son's Social Security number ~r a
number not assigned to you. It is also
against the law to use a Social Security
number obtained by giving false information on the application. Penalties include a fine, a jail sentence, or both.
"People applying for a Social-security number should have their birth certificate and some proof of identification
when contacting the Social Security office. If you have your proofs you can
- have your Social Security card in about
two weeks," Kelly said.
1NDIVIDUAL
More information about Social Security numbers and their use can be obtainGARAGE-R-STORAGE
ed at the Big Sandy Area Social Security office, located on U.S. 23 between
-STOR-IT
Prestonsburg
and Paintsville. The
-LOCK-IT
telephone number is listed in your local
-POCKET THE KEY
telephone directory under U.S. Government.
VERNON SLONE'S
TAX SERVICE
Call 886-6060
or 886-9007
•
U
Section One, Paae Three
Unusually Dry Weather
Poses Forest Fire Hazards
Unseasonably warm and dry weather
in much of Kentucky has accelerated the
state's spring forest fire season, bringing large numbers of forest fires
unusually early this year, officials of the
state Natural Resources and Environmental Protection Cabinet say.
State Division of Forestry officials
report that 330 forest fires have taken
place in Kentucky since Feb. 2, a figure
which they say surpasses average
February fire occurance rates. The
forest fires, which have been concentrated in Eastern Kentucky, have burned approximately 4,300 wooded acres.
"With extended forecasts calling for
additional dry, warmer weather, we
may be facing conditions which mean
danger to the state's forests," w1;1rned
Natural Resources Secretary Charlotte
Baldwin.
"In view of the potential threat to one
of our richest nat-ural resources, I urge
all Kentuckians planning to travel
through the state's forests and fields to
use extreme caution with any burning.
Even a small fire which gets out of control means a damaged environment,
wildlife sacrifice and loss of potential income from our abundant forest products," Baldwin said.
·
Forestry officials estimate that an
average forest fire results in the longterm loss of $2,000 per acre in the value
of forest products which would have
been produced, marketed and sold.
"Many people do not realize what a
fire does to our forests. A fire may kill
only the seedlings and saplings present,
but it also injures the bark on larger
trees, allowing insects and disease to
enter the trees,'' Forestry Director
Donald A. Harrim explained:
"The activities of these insects or of
disease may result in a tree becoming
completely worthless," he said.
Hamm said that the Division of Forestry has increased its law-enforcement
activities during recent fire seasons .
"This month alone, we have issued 29
citations for illegal burning," he said.
Under Kentucky's forest fire season
regulations, tt is illegal for anyone to set,
or to have another person to set, fire to
any flammable material within 150 feet
of any w,oodland or brushland except
between 4:30p.m and midnight , Hamm
said.
This regulation and others governing
burning and fire activities during forest
fire season, becomes effective March l ,
the official beginning of the spring fire
forest fire season.
"While we are not officially into the
fires season yet, we have stepped up our
activities and expect all citizens to
observe local and state burning ordinances and regulations," Hamm said.
During the 1983 spring forest fire
season, lasting from March 1 to May 15,
1983, there were 1,380 forest fires
reported in Kentucky, with more than
26,701 wooded acres burned.
• Bank
Financing
.Available
USTOM ANTENNA
MARTIN, KY. • 285-3984
(Across the creek from Garth Vocationa l School
1-4·
RECIPE
Enjoy our delidous casserole that combines
Paramount Chili with Beans and Beef Tamales.
It's easy to fix. It's economical. And it will
become a family favorite. Stock up on Paramount Chili with Beans and Beef Tamales and
try this great "Oli-males" casserole.
Paramount's "Qli-males" Casserole
2 ( 20 oz.) cans Paramount Beef Tamales
1 (25 oz.) can Param9nt Chili with Beans
11/3 cup cheddar cheese, grated
11/3 cup sour cream
4 green onions, thinly sliced
Garry Barker has been named communications coordinator for Morehead
State University's Appalachian
Development Center.
Barker, a Fleming county native,
received his bachelor's degree in
English from Berea College in 1965, and
has been employed by such regional institutions as the Southern Highland Handicraft Guild, Berea College, and Marketing Appalachia's Traditional Community Handicrafts, Inc.
Place one can unwrapped tamales in a large
casserole. Spoon 1/ 2 can chili over tamales
and sprinkle on half of cheese. Repeat. Cover.
Bake: 350° 20 minutes. To serve, spoon on sour
cream and sprinkle with onions. Serves eight.
He is the author of "Fire on the Mountain " a 1983 short story collection, and
is c~rently writing "The Appalachi
Handicraft Revival: 1930-1980," for the
University Press of Kentucky.
Barker's articles, essays, and short
stories about Appalachia have appeared
in "The Mountain Spirit," the Louisville
Courier-Journal," "Delta Scene,"
"Ceramics Monthly." "Southern Exposure," "Grit," "Berea Magazin~,"
"The Crafts Report," and "Facmg
South" a syndicated column. His first
novel, "Copperhead Summer," is scheduled for 1984 release, as is "Two Part
Harmony," an art-essay book done with
Berea artist Mitchell Tolle. Barker
serves on the advisory board of the Appalachian Writers Association, and is
vice president of the Berea Craft Festival.
NEWS
SPORTS
MOVIES
RELIGION
aramount's
ales" Cassero e
Morehead State Names
Barker To Coordinate
Center Communications
"We feel fortunate to have Garry
Barker on our staff," said ADC Director Dr. Donald L. Fogus. "His familiarity with the entire Appalachian region,
and his 20 years of writing and administration, will strengthen our communications programs."
SATELLITE TELEVISION
It's -winning the hearts
of chili lovers.
I
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---------------------SAVE
30¢
Save 30¢ on one 20 oz.
can of Paramount Beef
Tamales or on one 25 oz. or
larger can of Paramount Chili
with Beans
\1r Retailer· \\:'e "ill redeem th" coupon for 30< plus
handling pro,ided (a) dealer has accepted it in
ex<·hange fo r o ne 20 oz ~-an of Paramount Beef
Tamale' or on one 2S oz. or larger can ol Paramount
01ih "ith lkans. ( h ) ck:akr mails to paramount Foods,
~,
Loui,,i ll<: Krntudc)
~02 .U .
Customers must pa) sales
tax when<.""ver applioble lnmicelo sho"ing dealers
pun:ha.-.ed ,uffiuent stock to co--er couporu. pre'it'nted
forpa~ment mu.<;r be'oho"nupon request This coupon
" 'o •d if duph<-ated, proh1h1ted or restncted h) l:m
Coupon expires March 31, 1984.
Store Coupon
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~-----------------------------------
MONTHLY RATES
•
•
•
•
•
10X10
10X20
10X30
20X30
...... $25
...... $55
...... $65
..... $100
(606)886·2734 or 886·2412
CLYDE I. BURCHETT
court St., Prestonsburg, Ky. -41653
2-l·tf.
BETSY LAYNE CLASS OF 74
TO HOLD MEET, MARCH 4
There will be a meeting to discuss Betsy Layne's 1974 class reunion, March 4,
at 5 p.m., in the Betsy Layne Grade
School lunchroom.
All1974 students are urged to attend.
For more information, call 478-2440.
TRADE-IN RING
•
SALE
·An average day in the life
of a natural gas family:
only 75¢ a person.
~sg%
When it comes to getting a lot for your energy dollar,
natural gas is a great value. For the average family of
four over a year's time, natural gas costs only about 75¢
per person, per day. And that 75¢ cooks your meals,
heats your water, dries your clothes, grills your burgers,
and keeps your home warm and comfortable all winter
long. Natural gas. Day in and day out, it's a good buy ...
and still your best energy value.
•
·FREE RING SIZING WHILE YOU WAIT
CLYDE BURCHETT
COLUMBIA GAS
JEWELER
PHONE 886-2734
PRESTONSBURG
2·1·5!
r.
�Wed~y,
The Floyd County Times
February 29, 1984
lf1r 1J11oyb otouttty <lrimrs
Published Every Wednesday by
Prestonsburg Publishing Co!ftpany
NORMAN ALLEN Editor
Subscription Rates Per Year:
In Floyd County, $8.00
Elsewhere in Kentucky, $10.00
Outside Kentucky, $12.50
Entered as second class matter June 18,
1927, at the postoffice at Prestonsburg,
Kentucky, under the act of March 3, 1879.
--- 1 ---
<Continued from Page One)
ed " said Pillersdorf in his closing argum~nt Wednesday. "What motive is
there'? The insurance that's so blown
out of proportion it defies description'?"
Prosecutors contended that Marshall,
McGuffey, McFarland and Wright hatched their murder plot during a June 7,
1983 meeting at the Plantation Motel,
just north of here, Marshall booking and
paying for the motel room. At the
meeting, Marshall spoke of his desire to
collect on his wife's insurance policies
and of his anger at her ''stepping out on
him" with an unnamed schoolteacher,
McFarland testified.
Sandy Boyd, of Dana, a former schoolteacher, later testified he had dated
Glenda Pack for four years prior to her
marriage to Marshall in July, 1982. In
the first few weeks of her marriage to
Marshall, she confided to him that she
had been beaten by Marshall and
wanted a divorce, but soon after said she
and her husband would be able to "work
things out," Boyd said. He had no further contact with the woman after that,
he said.
Marshall admitted beating his wife
once, soon after they were married.
"I'm not proud of it," he said. They enjoyed a peaceful relationship thereafter,
he said.
The "revenge" motive was first suggested inadvertently to McFarland by
state police, argued Pillersdorf, who
played for the jury a tape recording of
a June 29, 1983 conversation in which
Det. Danny Stumbo used the phrase
"stepping out on him" that McFarland
would later repeat in his testimony.
The real purpose for the June 7
meeting at the Plantation Motel, the
defense said, was to conclude a deal by
which Marshall would pay the others
$4500 to steal a bulldozer for him. He intended to lease the bulldozer to Adrian
Lafferty, operator of a Prestonsburg
pipeline firm, Marshall said. The deal
fell through when Lafferty insisted that
ownership papers be delivered with the
machine, he said.
Angered at what they took to be a
breach of their agreement, McGuffey,
McFarland and Wright came back to get
their money, anyway, and, frustrated at
their inability to get their hands on it,
killed Mrs~ Marshall, the defense
contended.
·
In an exchange with Pillersdorf during cross-examination-an exchange
which the defense attorney recited twice
to the jury during his closing argument-McFarland appeared to acknowledge a bulldozer agreement with Marshall. Asked by the defense lawyer
whether he was on parole for a particular tractor theft, McFarland replied,
"You've got the wrong 'dozer deal there.
That was in 1979. We're talking about
1983, with Doug Marshall's 'dozer.
That's a different 'dozer, different case
altogether."
Although McGuffey and McFarland
denied there had been a deal involving
a bulldozer, the defense said McFarland
had a long history of dealing in stolen
equipment-he was on parole for a 1979
tractor theft at the time of Mrs. Marshall's slaying-and drew from him an
admission that he sometimes cooperated with police in order to "get even"
with those he thought had welched on a
deal.
McFarland .was granted immunity
from prosecution on a complicity to
murder charge in return for his
testimony, but he would not have been
immune from a stolen property charge
and so had reason to deny the alleged
bulldozer deal, the defense counsel said.
Four prisoners were brought from
Floyd and Pike county jails to testify for
the defense. James Lewis Bradley, Kenny Sanders, Jake Jackson and Phillip
Dale Moore all said McFarland, in
jailhouse conversations, had mentioned
a bulldozer deal as the reason for his being in Floyd county last June.
During closing arguments, attorneys
on both sides attacked the credibility of
each other's key witnesses, all of whom
had criminal records.
McGuffey, who was scheduled to be
tried with his brother, entered a plea of
guilt before the trial opened, and agreed
to testify against Marshall in exchange
for a recommended We sentence. He has
yet to be sentenced.
Petition Certified,
Tax Goes To Vote
Some 4987 petition signatures were
certified by County Clerk Carla R. Boyd
this week, apparently ensuring that the
question of a utilities tax to finance
Floyd schools will be on the November
ballot.
A total of 9380 signatures were affixed to the petition, which was filed two
weeks ago by a group which wanted the
Board of Education levy put to a general
vote. Only 2307-15 percent of those in
this county who voted in the last
presidential election-were required to
force a referendum on the issue.
Checking the signatures took her staff
four days to complete, Mrs. Boyd said.
Every weeK, nine out of 10 adults read
at least one newspaper.
--- 2 ---
(Continued from Page One l
is more education and less hoop-la and
fol-de-rol. And that the basic ingredient
that's missing is discipline. More
dropouts and F students result from a
lack of discipline, first in the home and
next in the school, than from any other
single cause.
By "discipline" I don't necessarily
refer to knuckle-cracking and resorting
to "the peach-tree limb," though neither
is ruled out. The term covers several
matters, including behavior and obedience not only to standards of conduct
but to the demands for effort, study,
perseverance, and so on.
Young minds need disciplining, at
home and school; otherwise, they stand
little chance of staying the course. This
business of learning is no computerized,
push-button affair. It involves, if not
blood, some sweat and, perhaps on occasion, a few tears.
The pupil doesn't know how to study'?
Why'? Has he had the help he needs'?
Speaking of the need for discipline,
one begins to see wherein parents and
teachers may fail. And that gets us
around to the matter of discipline for
them, also, to the extent that they deny
themselves enough to care enough for
the young minds to whom they owe a
chance.
You cannot pray the Lord's Prayer
From beginning to end of it, and
Even once say "I"
You cannot pray the Lord's Prayer
And even once say "my."
You cannot pray the Lord's Prayer
and not pray for another;
For when you ask for daily bread,
you must include your brother.
For others are included
In each and every plea;
From beginning to the end of it,
It does not once say "me."
John Donham
--- 3 ---
(Continued from Page One)
Both attorneys agreed the verdict
turned on the legal rule that, for conviction, jurors be convinced "beyond a
reasonable doubt" of the defendant's
guilt, Pillersdorf calling it a "classic
case" of reasonable doubt.
But Allen said the Fayette jury
"almost had to have a misconception"
about the meaning of reasonable doubt.
"I don't know what kind of evidence that
jury had to have," he said. "It seemed
they required the Commonwealth to
prove its case beyond any doubt." The
legal boundary between reasonable and
irrational doubt is difficult to determine
with precision, the prosecutor conceded.
Pillersdorf
characterized
as
"outrageous" plea bargains struck between the state and some prosecution
witnesses, including Carl McFarland,
who was granted immunity from prosecution on a complicity to murder
charge, and Larry Jones, who had
charges of assault and attempted
murder dropped in exchange for his
testimony.
Allen said the Commonwealth could
not have made its case without dealing
with accused felons . "My only regret is
that McFarland got not time. But he is
an old man; he would not have agreed
to (a deal that included) prison time,"
he said. McFarland is 58. As to thepact
with Jones, Allen said court officials in
Lafayette, Tennessee, seemed reluctant
in any event to prosecute him on the attempted murder charge.
--- 4 ---
(Continued from Page One)
those of Allen, Prestonsburg, Maytown,
Cow Creek, Left Beaver, Betsy Layne,
Garrett and Martin. Saws and other
equipment were lost, but four company
trucks and two fork lifts were saved.
Mrs. Reynolds said she lost personal
records in the blaze but that duplicates
of company records were kept in her
residence.
Rolling stock was saved because, Mrs.
Akers said, she snatched up a key to the
garage where they were parked as she
ran from her home in answer to the fire
alarm and "began throwing doors open
as soon as I got there.''
The lumber company was founded in
1946 by Mrs. Akers' father, the late J.S.
Reynolds, and others. She and her
nephew, Richard Reynolds, are the only stockholders now.
They expect to continue the business,
she said.
ATTEND RECEPTION
Mrs. Mary Zemo and Mr. Clara Harris attended the 50th wedding reception
for their sister and brother-in-law, Mr
and Mrs. Paul Roberts, in New Albany,
Ind., Sunday. The reception was hosted
by Mr. and Mrs. Roberts son and
daughter-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Paul
David Roberts, at their home in New
Albany.
HOLD CHILI DINNER
Youth of the Community United
Methodist Church sponsored a chili dmner, Sunday, to raise funds for the
Methodist Youth Camp. A large number
of people attended.
Our Yesterdays
(Items taken from The Floyd County
Times, 10, 20, 30, 40 and 50 years ago.)
Section One, Paae Four
55 Years Ago
We don't dare say who is the oldest living subscriber to The Times, but
Robert Samons, of Arkansas Creek, near Martin, has received the paper a t
least 55 years. The reproduction of his check, dated Aug. 27, 1929 (below) is
proof:
~· ~_.27
Ten Years Ago
·Twenty Years Ago
<March 5, 1964)
Plants that will give protection to bare land left after strip mining in
forested areas of Eastern Kentucky are being sought by the U.S. Forest
Service, it was announced this week ...The Prestonsburg Municipal Housing Commission expects to file application with the Housing and Home
Finance Administration for an additional 70 to 80 low-rent public housing
units here... A total of 9,611 students in 317 Eastern Kentucky
schools-mostly one-room and isolated units-now enjoy lunches made
possible by the Special Assistance Program ...The State Department of
Health 's community health service program will launch an intensive
pilot program of disease detection in Floyd and 17 other Eastern Kentucky counties by mid-March ...Burl Spurlock, president of The First National Bank here, is one of 16 new directors of the Kentucky Chamber of
Commerce elected by Mail ballot for three-year terms which begin April
14... Fred and Jim Setser combined for 51 points here Monday night to offset a 43-point performance by Bob Tallent, the state's No. 1 scorer, and
give Prestonsburg a 93-79 victory over Maytown .. .There died : Reca
Baker Harkins, 79, widow of Joseph D. Harkins, Sr., prominent Prestonsburg attorney, Monday at Lexington ; Levi Strickland, 103 years old.
Eastern Kentucky's oldest resident, Saturday at Prestonsburg General
Hospital after a brief illness; Mrs. Douglas Hopson May. 47, formerly ~f
Prestonsburg, Tuesday at Lexington; Hargis Hayes, 60. of Hunter. Friday at McDowell : Lonnie Hall, 65, Thursday at his home at Honaker;
Mrs. Rachel Mullins, 76, of Price, Friday at McDowell; Andrew J . Carroll. 78. formerly of Amba, Sunday at Sandusky. Ohio.
Thirty Years Ago
<March 4, 1954)
Heavy snow Sunday night snapped power and telephone lines in this
and surrounding counties. The snowfall ranged from six to ten
inches ...The fiscal court Tuesday named Greenville R. Spradlin county
welfare director and Ex-Magistrate Glenn C. Burchett his assistant. They
will handle the distribution of surplus commodity foodstuffs which are
due to begin arriving here wit}1rn a week for the aid of the needy... Robert
Frazier, of Bonanza, was severely wounded by a knife thrust Saturday
night.. .Samuel S. Porter, of Lexington, formerly of this county. took the
oath of office of U.S. Marshall Monday . He succeeds J. M. Moore. of
Pikeville, who retired ...The'Mayo Trail home of Mr. and Mrs. D. C. Herndon. near here. was damaged by fire, the night of February 18... Born: to
Mr and Mrs. Joe Burke. of Prestonsburg. a daughter. Vickie Lee.
February 20 at Martin .. .There died : Woody Osborne, 42, of Martin, Monday of tetanus; Mrs. Mary Akers, 85. Sunday at Grethel; Sarah Thacker.
82. of Alphoretta . last Thursday at a Lexington hospital.
Forty Years Ago
<March 2, 1944)
Almost 500 men are scheduled to leave here next week for preinduction
examination at Huntington, West Virginia ...First soldier at Ft. McClellan, Ala. to receive the severance pay authorized by Congress was
16-year-old Arthur Miller. of Garrett. He served nine weeks in the Arm.y
before his actual age was learned ... Pvt. Lundy L. Turner, of Garrett, IS
reported to have been slightly wounded ... Duran Hamilton, 24, of
Teaberry. was shot and killed last week at Rising Sun, Maryland ... Frank
Howell. 30. of Dony. was seriously wounded, last Monday, by a re~olv~r
shot. ..The Inland Steel Company at Wheelwright has announced 1t w11l
match, dollar for dollar, contributions made by its employees to the Red
Cross ... Pvt. Frederick R. Cottrell, of Prestonsburg, has been awarded
the Silver Star for gallantry in action on the Italian front where. though
wounded himself, he went to the aid of three members of his platoon who
had been wounded .. .There died : Joseph Jarrell. 57, veteran Floyd
teacher. Saturday at his home here ; Bill Burchett. 55. of Johns Creek.
Friday at a Martin hospital. of injuries suffered when crushed beneath
the wheels of a truck; Lloyd Allen. 19. of Lancer, last Thursday at a
Paintsville hospital; Mrs. Sallie Bailey. 51. at her home ~ere last Th.ursday ; Mrs. N.J. Brown. of Honaker, February 18at a Huntm~ton hosp1tal;
Troy Conley. 42. Monday at Whelwright; Mrs. Susan Martm Turner. 89.
at Wayland. February 22; Russell Thacker, 41, last Wednesday at Manton ; Buddy Triplett, of Hollybush, Knott county. at a Lackey hospital.
February 21
Fifty Years Ago
<March 2. 193-1)
Recruiting of a new army of reforestation workers is expected to. begin
soon. with possibly 300 to be enlisted from ~loyd county .. .Ownersh1p of a
cat provided a court trial here Tuesday wh1ch was the outstandmg co~r
thouse news of the week ...Ex-Jailer W. A. Dingus has purchased an mterest in the Home Bottling Company here and will be associated with
Dan Patiemo in operation of the business ... Hays Vance. who escaped last
fall from jail here where he was held on a ~laying charg~. was arrested
last week in Perry county ... A Hungarian mmer.name~ Rtckey was s~ot
and killed Sunday on Left Beaver Creek ...Marned: M1ss Esther Bolhns
and Mr. Marshall Bradford. both of Wheelwright. February 26 at
Pikeville ... Born : to Mr. and Mrs . W. A. Salisbury, of Printer. February
26. a daughter. Elizabeth Ann .. .There die? : Robert Ousley. about 80.
Saturday at home on the Spurlock Fork of M1~dle Creek : ~s. Lyd1a ~ar
tin. 34. of Prestonsburg, Tuesday at a Huntmgton hosp1tal : Mrs. K1tty
Cecil Hunt, 92. February 22: Hazel Jarvis, 17. of Endicott. Saturday at a
Martin hospital; Samuel J. Click. 67, Sunday at Banner. and his b"?t~er.
Joseph, 73. the following morning. at his home on Prater Creek; W1lham
R. Francis. 83. at Heisey .- Pike county: Lorena Honeycutt. 14. of Garrett.
at a Pikeville hospital. Monday of last week .
Civil Air Patrol Meets
Dewey Lake Comp. Squadron held its
scheduled meeting Feb. 14 at Squadron
headquarters at Lancer Mayor Harold
Cooley was the guest-speaker. I?i~cus~
ed were possible ways the CIVll A1r
Patrol could assist in helping with traffic at the various parades and scheduled activities held here.
The next scheduled meeting will be
•
held March 13.
ID~Wo.
THE BANKd08EPHI:NE
.._..=:;..____(/'~L ~~ "$L~ 7
<February 27, 1974)
County Supenntendent Charles Clark said last week that any notions he
might have entertained about installing a central distribution point of
gasoline for school bus use during the fuel crisis have been abandoned
and that buses will continue to depend upon private service station
operators ...Damage which may run as high as $60,000 was caused by a
Sunday midnight fire at Parkway Motors. Inc .. on South Lake Drive
here ... Roger Powers, 26. of Auxier. was killed Tuesday afternoon in an
accident at a coal loading operation at Water Gap ... Four men were arrested during the week in liquor raids in the Mud Creek and Left Beaver
sections of the county .. .Born: to Mr. and Mrs. James Keathley. of
Prestonsburg, a son, Robert Lee, Feb. 15; to Mr. and Mrs. Paul Daniel
Collins, of Ho'haker, a daughter, Paula Arlene. Feb. 13; to Mr. and Mrs.
Ronaldo Frasure, of Hueysville. a daughter, Faith Earleen. Feb. 18; to
Mr. and Mrs. Verdell Johnson, a daughter. Feb. 11; to Mr. and Mrs
Johnie D. Patton. of Weeksbury, a daughter, Feb. 6; to 1\Jr. and Mrs
James Bailey Hall , Jr . of Wheelwright. a daughter. Feb. 7; to Mr. and
Mrs. Jimmy D. Hall, of McDowell, a son. Feb. 9 ... There died: John N.
Hamilton . 89. formerly of Prestonsburg and a former Floyd County Attorney, last Thursday at Lexington; Mrs. Jemima Moore, 93. of Hippo,
Thursday in Ohio ; Clifford S. Daniels. 60, formerly of Drift, Monday in
Trenton, Mich .; George Castle, 70, of Weeksbury, Sunday at McDowell
Appalachian Regional Hospital; Mrs. Anna S. Burchett, 84, of Prestonsburg, Feb. 18 here; Mrs. Maude P . Hatton, 73, Hueysville native, Monday
at Plymouth. 0 . : William James King, 82, Wednesday at his home a t
Martin; Mody Hoover, 63, Monday at his home at Garrett ; Mrs . Thelma
Geraldine Danflous. 58. of Prestonsburg, Feb. 19 at Lexington : Sam K
Hatcher. 59. of Prestonsburg. Monday while at work near Sugar Loaf.
Assigned to Duty
In West Germany
Army Pvt. Mitchell J. Cheatham, son
of Joe W. and Lulu Cheatham, of Columbia, Ky., has arrived for duty in
Fliegerhorst, West Germany.
Cheatham, a missile crew member
with the 59th Ordinance Brigade, was
previously assigned at Fort Sill, Okla.
His wife, JoAnn, is the daughter of
Billy Harrington, of Wheelwright.
•
--
~
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-"'~"'
HIIJ
•rrJ ews
..... ~___L!jru
.SAr~
e UA ~LAA
CEPO&IT I!IOK'E:$ I N
ANO riRE PROOr VAULTS
ro"' flltC.N T
Note the subscription rate-$1.50. Today, in F loyd county, it's $8-and still
we're not keeping up with the inflation. Consider the prices for items advertised in The Times, back in those days when a dollar was worth a t least 100
cents:
Men's dress shirts, 45t and up; Florsheim oxfords, $5-and a Ford V-8 fourdoor, $575.
If this newspaper wasn't an old fogy and had kept pace with other prices,
a year's subscription would have read, "$20 and up. "
Letters to the Ed.i tor
The views expressed here are those of the writers, and not
necessarily those of this newspaper. No unsigned contributions
will be published.
Says··Money Not Answer
Judge Commends Officials
To all people, voters and otherwise, in
Floyd county:
I have heard all kinds of talk about the
three percent sales tax in Floyd county.
I think there are a few people in this
county that think they should get this tax
passed just because they say they need
it.
I think that money is probably needed in the school system, but I think that
first, the need is for better management
and accountability. Second, the need is
for rededication to the teaching profession, instead of a blind dedication to the
superintendent.
.
We don't need to build any more
monuments to people in the school
system.
Our teachers, and we have some good
ones need to remember that the taxpay~rs are their employers and their
loyalties should be to educating our
children.
Money is not the answer to Floyd
county's problem.
HENRY D. BAILEY, McDowell, Ky .
Hon. James Allen
Commonwealth Attorney
Floyd Circuit Court
Prestonsburg, Kentucky 41653
Dear James:
Just a note to express my appreciation
for your work in the Marshall case.
Your experience and expertise made
my job much easier.
I am aware of the time and effort expended by you, Mr. Burchett and your
staff in the preparation and trial of this
case. I know you must be disappointed
in the result, but the case was well and
fully presented and that is all that can
be expected.
The people of Floyd County and the
Commonwealth of Kentucky were competently and professionally represented
and I congratulate you.
Sincerely yours,
CHARLES R. LUKER
. - - - - - -·- - -
--- 5 ---
(Continued from Page One)
ty of the prosecution's " star witness."
Mrs. Booth had reason to hope for an
early release from prison if her testimony proved helpful to the government,
he suggested.
Harwell, who argued at the trial's
opening a month ago that much of the
prosecution case rested on the Booths'
testimony, sought to show that the couple was prejudiced against Jones and
that they had themselves admitted
responsibility for crimes they were a tlributing to others.
The defense attorney's questioning of
Mrs. Booth, whom he earlier characterised as "as vengeful and .vindictive as
she is charming," reduced the witness
to tears on several occasions. U.S.
District Judge G. Wix Unthank ordered
several recesses to allow her to regain
her composure.
After a year of good profits and high
living, the Booths faced mounting debts
in 1982-including bills for $80,000 in
state and an undisclosed amount in
federal taxes-and asked in vain for help
from Jones, Harwell said. Their financial problems were compounded-and
their animosity toward Jones sharpened-when he began rejecting their
coal as being too dirty, the defense
counsel sought to prove.
Asked whether she had said to Benny
Caudill, {)oe of the 18 defendants, " I
swear on my kids' lives I'm going to get
Edgar Jones one way or another," Mrs.
Booth said she did not remember making such a statement.
Nor did she recall statements her
former husband allegedly made claiming responsibility for the dynamiting of
a Ray-Mac auger and the burning of a
tipple leased by the firm. If he did make
such remarks, they were idle boasts, she
said, adding, " He was all the time bragging. I knew he didn't do half the things
he said he did. "
In three days of cross-examination,
much of it drawing strong denials from
the witness and some of it conducted out
of the jury's hearing, Harwell portrayed
the attractive, blond woman as chronically bent on violence, mentally
unstable, and a liar.
Mrs. Booth admitted once having shot
her ex-husband's finger off but denied
trying to kill him. She a lso admitted
shooting at C.B. Hall a t McDowell in
March, 1982.
When Harwell noted that, even after
agreeing to deceive her friends by working undercover for the government, she
failed to get on tape a single admission
by Jones that he was involved in the
Ray-Mac violence, Mrs. Booth said she
had been afraid to press Jones on the
point.
.
The defense attorney suggested that
meetings attended by some defendants
shortly before violence erupted at the
Ray-Mac mine reflected unionists' concern to organize the operation. Even
Phillip Booth, who as an operator was
not eligible, had recently applied for
membership in Local 5976, he noted.
But, under questioning by U.S. Attorney
Thomas L. Self, Mrs. Booth said the
question of organizing Ray-Mac was not
discussed at the meetings.
The prosecution continued to present
its case this week. Some attorneys involved in the trial predicted last week
it could stretch out for another month.
Lt. Gary Rose
Kentucky State Police
Post9
Route 3, Box 356
Pikeville, Kentucky 41501
Dear Gary:
As you know, I did not ask for the
assignment as trial judge in the Marshall case, but did not hesitate to accept
it.
This was the longest trial over which
I have presided, and I am relieved to
return to routine.
Before closing the file, I feel impelled to express to you and the officers in
your command my appreciation for excellent police work.
I am concerned that the trial result
may be discouraging, especially to your
younger officers.
There is no reason for this.
I observed the reSults of meticulous,
persistent, impartial investigation. The
murder was solved, the guilty identified,
the whole sordid affair completely exposed to public view.
Your officers conducted themselves
properly and with reserve.
As the Court's responsibility does not
begin until arrest, the police responsibility ends with trial.
I am proud of you and your men and
the manner in which all of you discharged this responsibility.
It was a pleasure to be associated with
you in this matter and I hope to have the
opportunity again in the future.
Sincerely yours,
CHARLES R. LUKER
4t
Clarification
The Randy Burchett who wrote a letter to the editor, published in last week's
edition of The Times, regarding Prestonsburg City Council's restriction on
out-of-town fire runs, is not Randall
Clyde Burchett, Prestonsburg architect.
A Serious Problem
•
In the often congested, sometimes
confusing traffic flow of downtown Prestonsburg, the strangest request one can
make is for another traffic control
devise. It is quite obvious though, that
this request is not unwarranted. With the
large number of accidents that happen
in the area around Prestonsburg High
School, c ity officials should realize that
something must be done.
A local traveler knows to avoid trying
to make a left turn from University
Drive on to US 23, but often cars sit there
for 10 minutes or more only to charge
boldly into traffic, several times in front
of me. The speed limit in the city limits
beyond the High School should be reduced to 35 MPH and str ictly enforced.
The Prestonsburg Businessmen's
Association was quick to admit their
mistake and resume traffic flow to its
original course. One would think that city officials would be just as prompt to •
admit that the traffic flow in front of
Prestonsburg High School was fine 10
years ago, but poses a more serious and
deadly problem now.
ROBERT N. SCHLOTTER
Ivel, Ky.
50TH ANNIVERSARY
Mr. and Mrs. William M. Nolan will
celebrate their 50th wedding anniversary with open house at the home of Mr.
and Mrs. Gus Kalos, of Prestonsburg,
Sunday, March 4, at 2 p.m. All family
members and friends are invited to
attend.
�~ednesday, Febnaary 29, 1984
Section One, Paae Five
The Floyd County Times
Pikeville College Trustees
Support President Hall
ALLAN D.
HALBERT, M.D.
BOARD CERTIFIED IN FAMILY PRACTICE
Announces the relocation of his office to
DOWNTOWN MARTIN
IN THE FORMER DERMONT BUILDING
EFFECTIVE MARCH 5, 1984
Patients and Friends are invited for
OPEN HOUSE
Saturday, March 3, 1984
1:00 to 3:00p.m.
2-29-Zt.
Pikeville College has its troubles, but
"positive things are happening" there,
according to Burlin Coleman, vicechairman of the college board of
trustees.
The recent board meeting held at the
college spurred this renewed optimism.
" We are operating within the budget for
the 1983-84 fiscal year, the board is looking forward to approving a balanced
budget for the '84-'85 fiscal year," Coleman said.
The board of trustees, inv_estigated in
depth the challenges facing the college
and adopted resolutions to this effect.
The board expresses its unamious support and confidence in President
Jackson 0. Hall as the chief exectuvie
officer of the college, and commends
him for his outstanding efforts in generating financial support for the college
from private, corporate, and foundation
sources; expresses its unanimous ap-
preciation of the faculty for articulating
their concerns about the college and its
future, and their offer to work with the
board and the administration in resolving the challenges facing the college.
The board of trustees listed three
primary concerns-recruitment, coJ;t
control and communication with and
among the entire college family.
Dr. Jackson 0 . Hall, president of the
college, said, "I interpret this as a very
direct statement of unswerving commitment by the Trustees to the mission of
this college. And, when you get down to
bedrock and you look at the foundation
of this college, which is its history and
tradition of leadership and service, the
commitment of the Trustees has been
and will always be so essential. "It is
evident that we are joining together at
the institution. This college will survive.
It will endure. Good and caring people,
both within and outside of the institution,
will make certain that this happens."
Charles Abraham, M.D.
F .A .C.S., Diplomate
American Board of Otolaryngology
Ear, Nose, and Throat
Specialist
Announces
Opening of His Office
For the treatment of Child and Adult Food and Inhalent Allergies, Diseases and Surgery of Ear, Nose,
& Throat, Facial Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery
of the head and neck
Paintsville Clinic Building
111 Main Street
Paintsville, Ky. 41240
Office hours by appointment
2-2~3t.
Phone: 606-789-4250
�Wednesday, February 29, 1984
The Floyd County Times
WAYLAND
WOMAN'S CLUB MEETS
The GFWC/Lackey-Garrett-Wayland
Woman's Club met Thursday evening,
Feb. 23, at the home of the club president, Mrs. Otto Martin, of Wayland.
In the absence of the speaker, State
Trooper Phillip Tucker, who had planned to show a film on drunk driving, the
club president spoke on MADD
<Mothers Against Drunk Drivers). She
urged each club member to become a
member of MADD and do everything
possible to help get drunk drivers off the
highways.
The club president called attention to
the district spring contests and reported
that Allen Central High School"s art
department would have entries in the
Art division. The Miss Floyd County
Pageant was also discussed, and the
club decided not to sponsor an entry this
year.
The president asked that the club consider contributing money to help in the
purchase of uniforms for Allen Central's
students in the Special Olympics. A $50
contribution was approved for tank tops
or T-shirts, whichever is required.
It was also mentioned by the president
that the club's scholarships to both Alice
Lloyd and Prestonsburg Community colleges were now due and checks would be
mailed from the club, as well as checks ·
to both the Wayland and Garrett volunteer fire departm~nts .
A nominating committee was elected
to present a slate of nominees for the upcoming spring election to be reported on
at the March meeting, which will be held
at the home of Mrs. James A. Duff,
Hueysville, March 19. The election will
be held in April, with installation of officers at the May meeting.
Following adjournment, refreshments
were served to Mrs. Alma Souleyrette
and Mrs. Betty Mullins, of Wheelwright,
and Mrs. James 0. Childers and Mrs.
Charley Sergent, of Wayland, guests;
and Mrs. Hansel Bradley, Mrs.
Marcellous Dunfee, Mrs. Don Hughes,
and Mrs . Buford Layne, by the
hostesses, Mrs. James E. Martin and
Mrs. Otto Martin, assisted by little Miss
Anna Marie Martin.
ALLEN
WOMAN'S CLUB MEETS
The Allen Woman's Club held its
February meeting at the George and
Josephine Evans Multi-Purpose Complex at the Allen Park, Feb. 7. The president, Hollie Blanton, presided.
Roy Compton, chief of the Allen
Volunteer Fire Dept., talked about the
problems of the department. He said a
new building is necessary for the fire
department to continute and that more
members are needed. The Allen
Woman's Club will be mailing letters on
behalf of the fire department to all area
residents.
The club voted to donate $50 to KET.
President Blanton appointed a committee of Joann Adams, Belle Conn and
Diana Reed to present a slate of officers
for the March meeting.
Judy Hester is the chairman of the Little Miss Floyd County Pageant, which
is sponsored annually by the Allen
Woman's Club.
Members present were JoAnn Adams,
Hollie Blanton, Belle Conn, Judy Hester
and Diana Reed.
The next meeting will be Tuesday
March 6, at 7 p.m. Allen area women are
invited to attend.
BIRTHDAY PARTY IN FLORIDA
Herman Porter, of Allen, celebrated
his birthday, Feb. 15 in Ft. Pierce,
Florida, with members of his family
joining him for the occasion. The group
went on a boat cruise to Lake
Okeechobee, visited orange and lemon
groves, and enjoyed a smorgasbord
lunch, with live music. Sharing in the
festivities were the guest of honor, and
his wife, Mrs. Bernice Porter, his sister,
Mrs. Goldia Williams, and the sons and
daughters-in-laws of Mr. and Mrs.
Porter; Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Porter
Mr. and Mrs. Paul Porter, and Mr. and
Mrs. James Henry Porter.
NOTICE OF
INTENTION TO MINE
Pursuant to Application
Number 836-0085
In accordance with the provision of
KRS 350.055, notice is hereby given that
Renegade Mining, Inc. 2885, Pikeville,
Ky. 41501, has filed an application for a
permit for an underground mining operation . The proposed operation will affect a surface disturbapce of 16.37 acres
and will underlie an additional 64.85
acres located 1.50 miles southeast ofr
Osborn in Floyd county.
The proposed operation is approximately 1.0 miles northeast from State
Route 1426 junction with Bush Branch
and located 0.25 miles northeast of Bush'
Branch. The latitude is 37' 28' 22". The
longitude is 82° 35' 41" .
The proposed operation is located on
the Pikeville USGS 7% minute quadrangle map. The surface area to be disturbed is owned by Osborn heirs. The operation will underlie land owned by Osborn
heirs, Estill Salisbury, L & J McClanahan, Ruth & Green Tackett.
The application has been filed for
public inspection at the Department for
Surface Mining Reclamation and Enforcement's Prestonsburg Regional Office, 503 South Lake Drive, Prestonsburg, Ky. 41653. Written comments, objections, or requests for a permit conference must have attached a copy of
the newspaper clipping and must be
filed with the Regional Administrator of
the Prestonsburg Regional Office, 503
South Lake Drive, Prestonsburg, Ky.
41653.
This is the final advertisement of this
application; all comments, objections,
or requests for a permit conference
must be received within thirty (30) days
lt.
of today's date.
~--------------=Sec===ti~o~n~O~n~e,~P~aa~e~S=I=-x ~
15 DAYS
LEFT!
2 WEEKS.
IT'S THE
REMAINING!
SECOND HALF
OF THE SUCCESSFUL & EXCITING
•
DAYS
-0LEASING
''People are lonely because they build walls. We help people break through
the wall ~Y providing a bridge of love and concern,' • according to Gerald
Sublett_. d1~ector of opera~ions for the Christian Appalachian Project, a nondenommatwnal, non-profit organization, this is one of the central themes for
the o~ga~izatio?'s work in the region. Appropriately, the name of the Martin
locatiOn IS " Bndges."
Currently, the group at Martin is engaged in working on boats. There are
two full-time employees and six volunteers directing the activities of the group.
The Christian Appalachian Project, funded by the Department of Human
Resources and Mountain Comprehensive Care, is headquartered in Lancaster,
and has 43 ministries throughout Appalachia , chiefly in Kentucky.
The ministry at Martin is located in the former location of Hall Brother's
Funeral Home on Main Street, which will become an activity center for many
of the projects serving this and surrounding counties. Sublett said that one
of the fi~t area~ of concentration will be to build bridges for young people who
are walkmg a hght rope of trouble by offering them work therapy, sports,
outings, and an opportunity for Christian growth.
In addition to programs carried on at the various centers such as that at
Martin_, the Project reaches out in other areas. The following is an example
of one of these.
Christy (not her real name) is a little four-year-old girl. The smile on her
face tells you how bright and beautiful she is, but the braces on her legs and
the walker she uses also tell you how severely handicapped she is.
Christy lives deep in the hills of Appalachia. She was born with an open spine,
and her doctors could not guarantee she would live very long. Her unemployed
parents could not afford the mounting medical costs.
That's when the spirit of the Christian Appalachian Project came into her
life. Suddenly there was hope. Her birth defect was partially corrected by
several long and expensive operations.
Then, when Christy did get out of the hospital, a volunteer was there to see
that she got the special attention she required.
Through work such as this comes their motto, "In God's service, our greatest
ability is our availability."
Anyone in the community who would like to participate in Christian service can call or write the Christian Appalachian Project.
Opportunity for participation in serving can be found in any of the following programs :
Visits to the elderly; Handicapped Workshops; Emergency shelter; Grow
A Garden Seed Program ; Christmas Basket Program; Spouse/Child Abuse;
·
Child Development Programs, and home repair.
YES, BILLY MAYNARD, YOUR LEASING CHAMPION,
IS BRINGING IN MORE NEW VEHICLES JUST FOR
THIS BIG EVENT!
HURRY!
NOW THRU MARCH 15.
LEASE A NEW
TOYOTA VAN
$250Au":
¥
25650 PICKUP
DELIVERS ANY NEW
ON LEASE!
r._.---r~~~
$133° 0 ~~
48-MO.
*15,000 MillS PER YR. DRIVI
~~~C~HASE
4-SP. STD. BED
$12,500
SEE OUR NEW DISPLAY OF
CUSTOM VANS BY
VALLEY VANS & CEDAR CREEK.
HURRY!
•
*JENNY WILEY MAKES
YOUR FIRST PAYMENT!
• 4X4's
• SRS's
• XTRA CABS
•
• WE ALSO HAVE A GMC JIMMY (LOADED)
a 1984 Cherokee GMC Pickup (auto);
a New 1983 Chevy Pickup (auto).
SEE THE NEW TERCEL
4X4 WAGON!
• 1983 CELICAS... $8,995
2 IN STOCK (LOADED), $10,250
• 1981 CRESSIDA
• 1981 CELICA
• 1982 COROLLA SRS
AND OTHERS!
CALL THE
BARGAIN
CHAMPION.!
886-3861,
Billy and Dallas.
•
�(
mQr ltilny~ Qtnuuty i!rimrs
Wednesday,
February 29, 1984-
Tuesday,
March 6, 1984
«wednesday))
2/29/84
MORNING
9:00
1D
MOVIE: 'House of
Cards'
'
AFTERNOON
1 :00
lfj MOVIE: 'Sign of
the Pagan'
EVENING
6:oo
o m o oo m rn
to earth to build faulty
atomic plants.
Kirk
Douglas, Simon Ward.
1978.
G) (!) Andy Griffith
1:00 G)
(!)
To
Be
Announced
2:00 lfj MOVIE: 'Sister,
Kenny' The famous
nurse fights to gain acceptance for her methods of treating polio.
Rosalind Russell, Alexander Knox, Dean Jagger. 1946.
4:30 ID World/large
7:30
Newshour
@) CID Dr. Who
6:30 0
(]) (ifj (l) NBC
News
0 (]) CBS News
G)(!) ABC News
ID Carol Burnett
@l
CID
Business
Report
7:00 0 (])PM Magazine
D
Cil Wheel of
Fortune
G)(!) People's Court
lfj Hogan's Heroes
fB
ffi Kentucky
General Assembly
@) CID MacNeil/lehrer
Newshour
(ifj (})Switch
7:30 0 (])Tic Tac Dough
D Cil Family Feud
(!) Jeffersons
lfj Sanford and Son
8:00 0
(]) (ifj (l) Real
People
0 00 Body Human:
The Journey Within
G) (!) Fall Guy Colt
and Roy Rogers try to
capture some rustlers
who have stolen $8
million dollars worth of
diamonds. (60 min.)
1D MOVIE: 'Four For
Texas'
fB ffi @) CID Great
Performances
'Live
from Lincoln Center:
James Galway and the
New York Philharmonic
with Zubin Mehta Conducting.'
Renowned
flutist
9:00 0 (]) (ifj (2) Facts of
life Problems develop
for T ootie when her
successful
lawyermother comes to lecture at Eastland.
[Closed Captioned]
0 Cil MOVIE: 'The
Parade'
(!)Dynasty
9:3o
Night
Court
1 o:oo
st.
Elsewhere
G) (!) Arthur Hailey's
Hotel
fB
(I)
Business
Report
CID light in the
West
10:30 lfj
TBS
Evening
News
fB (I) Tony Brown's
Journal
STREETCAR
CHECK LISTINGS FOR EXACT TIME
3/1/84
@)1984 Compulog
MORNING
1:00
6:00
C!D (2) News
@) CID Not the Nine
O'Clock News
(ifj (2) Tonight
Show
0 Cil Police Story
G) (!) Nightline
1D Catlins
CID latenight
America
12:00 G)
(!)
Eye
on
Hollywood
lfj
MOVIE:
'Chubasco'
11 :30
0 (])
m
12:30
0 (]) late Night with
David letterman
Cil
MOVIE:
'Holocaust 2000' A
young man, who is actually the devil, comes
0
MOVIE: 'Who's
Minding the Mint?'
omoCIJmrn
C!D (})News
1D Andy Griffith
fB (I) MacNeil/lehrer
6:30
7:00
7:30
News hour
@) CID Dr. Who
0 (]) Cii (2) NBC
News
0 Cil CBS News
G) (!)ABC News
lfj Carol Burnett
@l
CID
Business
Report
0 (]) PM Magazine
0
Cil Wheel of
Fortune
G)(!) People's Court
ID Hogan's Heroes
fB
(I)
Kentucky
General Assembly
@) CID MacNeil/lehrer
News hour
C!D (2) Appalachian
Encounters
0 (])Tic Tac Dough
D Cil Family Feud
Jeffersons
lfj Sanford and Son
C!D (}) lorne Greene's
Wilderness
0 (]) C!D (2) Gimme a
Break
0 Cil Ma.gnum P.l.
Magnum is caught in a
current when his surf
ski is capsized with
near-disastrous
results. (R) (60 min.)
G) (!) All-Star Family
Feud
lfj NCAA Basketball:
Mississippi State at
Auburn
People's
Business
@) CID Sneak Previews
m rn
8:00
m
o m o oo m rn
ID
EVENING
o m m oo
o m m rn
11 :oo
lfj MOVIE: 'Miracle
In the Rain'
AFTERNOON
m
m
8:00
Treat Williams plays Stanley
Kowalski in an "ABC Theater"
presentation of Tennessee
Williams' classic drama "A
Streetcar Named Desire." airing SUNDAY, MARCH 4.
«thursday))
9:00
1 o:oo
o m m rn
Hill
Street Blues Joyce
witnesses a vengeful
man's slaying of another and the new
mayor criticizes Furillo
for publicly ridiculing
his sweep of a drug 'supermarket.· (60 min.)
D (]) Knots landing
m rn 2o;~o
1D
TBS
Evening
m
m
Report ·
Business
News
~ (ill Avengers
10:30
11 :oo
fB (I) Tony Brown's
Journal
o m o oo m rn
fB ® C!DOO News
lfj All In the Family
@) CID Not the Nine
O'Clock News
11 :30 0 Cil NCAA Basketball: Mississippi at
Kentucky
D ® Trapper John,
M.D. Things go a little
crazy at the hospital
when Jackpot and Slocum
are distracted
from their duties by a
-Movie WeekSUNDAY
(ABC) SUNDAY NIGHT MOVIE
"A STREETCAR NAMED DESIRE" (1984) Ann-Margret. Treat
Williams. Beverly D'Angelo. Randy Quaid. A fading Southern
belle is confronted by her unfeeling brother-in-law.
MONDAY
(ABC) MONDAY NIGHT MOVIE
.
"THE DARK MIRROR" (1984) Jane Seymour, Stephen Collins.
A doctor becomes involved with twin sisters to discover wh1ch
tw1n is normal and which is a demenJed murderess.
TUESDAY
(CBS) TUESDAY NIGHT MOVIE
"CALAMITY JANE" ( 1984) Jane Alexander. Frederic Forrest.
Ken Kercheval. The story of the unorthodox courtship of Martha
Jane Cannary and Wild Bill Hickok. based on letters from the
colorful western heroine to her daughter
WEDNESDAY
(CBS) WEDNESDAY NIGHT MOVIE
woman. (R) (60 min.)
G) (!) Nightline
1D Catlins
CID latenight
America
C!D 00 Tonight Show
12:00 G)
(!)
Eye
on
Hollywood
lfj
MOVIE:
'The
Southern Star' This
comedy-adventure is
based on the Jules
Verne story about a
search for stolen diamonds in the wilds of
Africa. George Segal.
Ursula Andress. Orson
Welles. 1969.
12:30 0
@ MOVIE: 'To
Find My Son' A sincere, loving man tries
to adopt a child. and
finds himself embroiled
in a bitter battle because of the unprecedented circumstances
of his situation. Richard
Thomas. Julie Cobb.
G) (!) Andy Griffith
1:00 G)
(!)
To
Be
Announced
2:15 lfj MOVIE: 'Hammerhead' British security
borrows an American
secret agent to aid in
capturing a master criminal. Vince Edwards.
Judy Geeson, Peter
Vaughan. 1968.
4:15 lfj Rat Patrol
4:45 lfj World/large
m
«frid!i))
m m
3/2/84
MORNING
9:oo
0 (])
Cij (2) Family
Ties Jennifer begins to
have flashbacks of her
past aher she is admitted to the hospital for a
tonsillectomy.
@) CID Good Neighbors
9:00 0 (]) tiD (2) Cheers
D (j) Simon & Simon
A.J. and Rick's easy
missing husband case
evolves into a potentially lethal spy mission.
(60 min.)
lottery!
fB (]) Scholastic
Challenge
@) CID Mystery! 'Reilly:
Ace of Spies.· Reilly becomes determined to
convince the many factions in Russia to aid his
purpose of overthrowing the Bolsheviks. (60
min.)
[Closed
Captioned]
9:30 0 (]) Cij (2) Buffalo
Bill
8:30
C!D 00 Goins Brothers
Cil Tic Tac Dough
D (]) Family Feud
0
m rn Jeffersons
(ifj (l) News
1D Andy Griffith
fB ® MacNeil/lehrer
TV
SCHEDULE
m
MOVIE:
'P.J.'
AFTERNOON
1:00
3:30
lfj MOVIE: 'The D.l.'
fB ® New Shapes in
Education
EVENING
6:00
6:30
m rn
7:00
Ken Kercheval (1.) portrays Buffalo Bi". C,?dy, and
Frederic Forrest plays Wild Bill H1ckok. 1n Calam1ty
Jane," airing Tuesday, March 6 on CBS.
0(])0(1)6)@
Cij (})News
1D Andy Griffith
fB (I) MacNeil/lehrer
Newshour
@) CID Dr. Who
0 (]) C!D (l) NBC
News
0 Cil CBS News
G)(!) ABC News
lfj Carol Burnett
@)
(ill
Business
Report
0 Cil PM Magazine
D
(]) Wheel of
Fortune
G)(!) People's Court
lfj Hogan's Heroes
fB ® Enterprise
m CID MacNeil/lehrer
Newshour
lfj Sanford and Son
fB ® Comment on
Kentucky
C!D 00 This Week in
Country Music
0 (])
legmen
After repossessing a
yacht, David and Jack
compete for the affections of the boat's
beautiful captain. (60
m1n.)
0
® Dukes of
Hazzard Boss Hogg
promotes Enos mto a
new job while hiring
Coogan as his new deputy. (60 min.)
G) (!) Benson Benson
is shocked and Clayton
is crushed when Clayton· s father offers Benson the job of running
his empire. [Closed
Captioned]
lfj NBA Basketball:
Los
Angeles
at
Atlanta
m rn
m
rn
m
CID
Washington
Week/
Review Paul Duke is
joined by top Washington journalists analyzing the week's news.
8:30 G) (!) Webster
CID Wall
Street Week Louis Rukeyser analyzes the
'80s with a weekly review of economic and
investment matters.
9:00 0 (]) (ifj 00 Master
Max and the Master try
to stop four ex-green
berets from pulling off a
multi-million dollar robbery. (60 min.)
D Cil Dallas
G) (!) Blue Thunder
Chaney, framed by a rival pilot, is pulled off
the Blue Thunder team.
(60 min.)
fB
®
Kentucky
General Assembly
@) CID Session '84
9:30 @) CID Enterprise 'Perfectly Frank.' Tonight's
program tells the story
of Frank Perdue, the
man
who
turned
chicken into a brand
name item. [Closed
Captioned]
(]) Cii (l) New
1 0:00 0
Show
0 (]) Emerald Point
N.A.S.
G) (!) Matt Houston
Matt goes into action
when an escaped mental patient goes on a
murderous
rampage.
(60 min.) [Closed Captioned]
fB
(I)
Business
Report
@) (ill Austin City
limits ·Jonny Rodriguez/David Allen Coe. ·
Jonny Rodriguez and
David Allen Coe perform some of their favorites. (60 min.)
10:15 lfj
TBS
Evening
News
10:30 fB (I) International
Edition Ford Rowan
hosts this look at important trends and
news events in the U.S.
as they are reported by
foreign journalists.
11:oo
(l)
fB (]) CiB (2) News
@) CID Not the Nine
O'Clock News
11 :30 0 (]) tiD (l) Tonight
Show
0
(j)
MOVIE:
'Patrick' A man with
psychokinetic power is
believed to be insane.
Sir Robert Helpmann.
1978.
mmm
o
o oo a rn
�c
(
G)(!) Nightline
Catlins
MOVIE: 'You're
Telling Me' A fnendly
fore1gn Princess gives
browbeaten Fields respectability in his hometown . W .C
Fields .
1934
12:00 G)
@
Eye
on
• Hollywood
m Night Tracks
12:30 0
[) l\D 00 Friday
Night Videos
G) @:; Andy Griffith
1:00 G)
l4'
Pentecost
Today
1 :30 G) (!) Bionic Woman
2:00 D ill News
m
mem
CALAMITY JANE
Jane Alexander stars 1n the
title role of "Calamity Jane,'' a
TV mov1e based on the life of
the Old West heroine , a1nnq
TUESDAY; MARCH 6 on
CBS
CHECK LISTINGS FOR EXACT TIME
«saturday))
@)1984 Compulog
3/3/84
MORNING
5·00
lfj
Night
Tracks
Cont'd
5:30 G)(!) Rev. Pete Rowe
6:00 G)(!) Farm Digest
lfj
TBS
Morning
News
6 :15 G)(!) Forum 19
6 :30 0
ill Saturday
Report
0 (J) T .V. Classroom
G)(!) Town Crier
7 :00 0
Joy
of
Gardening
0
(J)
Captain
Kangaroo
G) (!) Andy Griffith
lfj Between the Lines
Market to
Market
7:30 0 ill Bugs Bunny &
Friends
G) (!) ABC Weekend
Special
lfj Romper Room and
Friends
Great Chefs/
San Francisco
8:oo
Flintstone Funnies
0 (I) Charlie Brown
& Snoopy
G) (!) Monchhichis/
Little Rascals/Richie
Rich
lfj Starcade
Two Ronnies
8:3o
shirt
Tales
0
(J)
Saturday
Supercade
lfj MOVIE: 'Lafayette
Escadrille'
m Fawlty Towers
9 :00 0 (I) l\D CV Smurfs
Gl (!) New Scooby/
Scrappy Doo
m Clll Good Neighbors
9:30 0 (J) Dungeons and
Dragons
G)(!) Pac-Man/Rubik
Cube Hour
Dave Allen at
Large
10:00 0 (J) Tarzan: Lord of
the Jungle
Dad's Army
10:30 0 ill l\D 00 Alvin &
the Chipmunks
0 (J) Bugs Bunny/
Road Runner Show
m (!)Littles
lfj MOVIE: 'Barabbas'
m
m em
m em
o
m
m
m
m em
o m m m
12:30
m em
(I) l\D CV Thundarr
(I) Benji, Zax/ Alien
Prince
(!)
American
Bandstand
fB ® Here's to Your
Health
Wall Street
Week Louis Rukeyser
analyzes the '80s with
a weekly review of
economic and investment matters .
1:00 0 ill l\D 00 NCAA
Basketball: LSU at
Kentucky
0 (J) Let's Go To The
Races
fB @ Here's to Your
Health
Family Portrait
1:30 0
(I) Fishing w/
Roland Martin
G) (!) Love Connection
lfj MOVIE: 'The Guns
of Navarone'
Gl
®
Focus on
Society
Family Portrait
m em
2:00
0
(J) NCAA Basketball: Teams to be
Announced
Gl (!) U.S. National
Skiing Championship
fB ® Focus on
Society
m
Making It
Count
em
2 :30
fB ®American Gov't
Survey
m em
Making
It
Count
3:00
ill l\D 00 NCAA
Basketball: NevadaLas Vegas at Oklahoma
Gl (!) NCAA Basketball: Sec Teams:TBA
fB ® American Gov't
Survey
0
om m m
m em
12:00
0
Gl
(I) Biskitts
(!) America's Top
Ten
fB
(]) Business
Management
G) Clll Washington
Week/Review
Paul
4 :30
5:00
fB
m em
m em
3 :30
4 :00
m em
fB
®
Dealing w/
Social Problems
House For All
Seasons
11:oo
Mr. T
G) (!) Puppy/Scooby
Doo Show
fB ® Bits and Bytes
All New This
Old House
11 :30 0 ill l\D (J) Amazing
Spiderman/lncredible
Hulk
fB
® • Business
Management
MU Report
AFTERNOON
m em
m em
em
m em
0
0
The common cold can
drag down your spirits even
as your temperature rises,
psychologists agree. Instead
of being upset about not
being up and about, put the
time you have to rest up in
bed to good use. Start a
knitting project ... watch
those day-time TV shows
that you
usually miss
... read a new book or
browse through old favorites. Enjoy a few snacks and
warm, soothing cups of lemony sweetened hot tea.
You '11 be back on your feet
in no time.
5 :30
6:00
Vietnam: A
Television History
fB ® Another Page
0 (J) CBS Sports
Saturday Today's program features a 10round
welterweight
bout between Howard
Davis
and
Gene
Hatcher, World Cup
Skiing and the World
Sprint Speed Skating
Championships.
fB ® GED Series
m ill) All Creatures
Great and Small
fB (]) GED Series
0 (I) Honda Classic
Golf Coverage of the
third round is presented from the Tournament Players Club,
Coral Springs, FL. (60
min.)
G) (!) Wide World of
Sports
lfj Fishin' w/Orlando
Wilson
fB ® Firing Line
mill) Dolphin Touch
l\D (J) America's Top
Ten
lfj Motorweek Illustrated
l\D (J) Wild Kingdom
EVENING
year has passed. (60
min .)
G)(!) Love Boat Two
sisters meet for the
first time in 40 years, a
childless couple who
want to procreate wind
up in separate cabins
and Isaac ignores a
blind student in his bartending class. (60 min .)
[Closed Captioned]
9:30 0 (I) l\D (J) Mama's
Family
fB (]) Beach Boys
20th
Anniversary
Special
m
ill)
Country
Memories with Willie
Nelson
10:00 0 Cil l\D CZ) Yellow
Rose
0 (I) Mickey Spillane's Mike Hammer
After a woman he has
just met is murdered,
m World
om m m
m
m
m em
original sitcom airing on
Superstation WTBS, will
make its debut on Saturday, March 10. The show
concerns Ethel MacDoogan
(Carol Mansell) , a zany
angel who has one last
chance to earn her wings.
She must return to earth
and restore harmony to the
home of a widower and h1s
three children.
0 ill 0
(J) News
Championship Wrestling
fB ® Marx Brothers
In A Nutshell
CD 00 At The Movies
6 :30
NBc
News
0 (J) Concern
G) (!) Dance Fever
m ill) Dr. Who Movie
7:00 0 (I) Dance Fever
0 (I) Hee Haw
Gl (!)Solid Gold
CZ)Jamboree
7:30 0 (I) Inside Look
lfj
Atlanta
Super
Cross
8 :00 0 (I) l\D CZ) Diff'rent
Strokes
0 (J) Ringling Bros./
Barnum
&
Bailey
Circus Special Barbara
Mandrell hosts this
look at the 1 14th edition of Ringling Brothers and Barnum &
Bailey Circus. (60 min.)
G) (!) T.J. Hooker
fB ®Everly Brothers'
Rock 'n' Roll Odyssey
m ill) Best of Live
from the Grand Ole
Opry
8:30 0 (I) l\D CZ) Silver
Spoons
Ricky
becomes suspicious of
the pitcher on his baseball team when he
thinks she has a crush
on him .
lfj NBA Basketball:
Atlanta at Chicago
9:00 0 CilCB CZ) We Got It
Made
0 (I) Airwolf Through
a scam, Hawke is involved in a plane crash
and awakens to find a
Mike has to find out
why the authorities
deny that it happened.
(60 min.)
G) (4) Fantasy Island
10:30 fB (]) Mystery! 'Reilly:
Ace of Spies · Nadia
Massino falls in love
with Reilly but Massino
will only divorce her if
eilly will strike a deal
with him. (60 m1n )
[Closed Captioned]
1 0:45 lfj Unknown War
11:00 0 (I) 0 (J) News
G) (!)ABC News
ffil Johnny Cash:
Flower Out of Place
l\D 00 Music Magazine
11:15 G)(!) News
11 :30 0 ill l\D CV Saturday
Night Live
0 (J) MOVIE: 'Curse
of the Fly' An escaped
mental patient marries
and finds that her hus·
band and his father are
affflicted with a strange
malady . Brian Donlevy,
Carole Gray, George
Baker. 1965
G) G) Solid Gold
11 :45 lfj Night Tracks
12:00
MOVIE: 'The
Virginian' A ranch
foreman is forced to
superintend the hanging of a friend turned
rustler. Gary Cooper,
Mary Brian, Walter
Huston. 1929
12:30 G) (!) Music Magazine
1:00 0 (I) MOVIE: 'The
Gilded Lily' A girl
meets a boy who turns
out to be an English nobleman. Claudette Colbert, Ray Milland, Fred
MacMurray. 1935.
G) (!) Black Music
Magazine
1:30 G) (!) Rockford Files
Night
Tracks
2:00 I&
>Cont'd
Lucille Ball
RELIGIOUS DRAMA
Anthony Hopkins and
Robert Foxworth will star
in " Peter and Paul," a twopart drama. which CBS
rebroadcasts Tuesday.
April 17 and Wednesday,
April 18. Hopkins plays
Paul , the Apostle to the
Gentiles. while Foxworth is
cast as Peter, the rock of
the Christian Church . The
cast also includes Eddie
Albert, Raymond Burr,
Jose Ferrer, Jon Finch
and Jean Peters.
TV HONORS ITS OWN
TV pioneers Lucille
Ball, Milton Berte, Norman Lear, William S.
Paley and the late Paddy
Chayefsky, Edward R.
Murrow and David Sarnoff will be honored for
their outstanding achievements when they become
the charter inductees into
the Television Academy
Hall of Fame on Sunday,
March 4 during the NBC
special " The Television
Academy Hall of Fame."
PEOPLE'S CHOICE
CBS will air the tenth annual
" People's Choice
Awards" on Thursday,
March 15, live from the
Santa Monica Civic Auditorium. The awards. which
cover TV, movies and
music, are determined by
members of the public.
CABLE COMEDY
"Down to Earth," the first
«sunday))
3/4/84
MORNING
5:00
6:00
6:15
G)(!) Rev. Pete Rowe
m News
G) (!)Time to Shine
lfj Week/Review
6:30 0 (I) TV Chapel
0 (I) Better Way
G) (!) What Does the
Bible Say?
lfj
TBS
Morning
News
7:00 0 Cil Music and the
Spoken Word
0 (I) Jerry Falwell
G) (!) Roger Sparks
Religion
I& World Tomorrow
m
ill)
MOVIE:
'Calling Dr. Gillespie'
Gillespie's life is endangered when an insane
ex-patient breaks into
the hospital to kill him .
Lionel
Barrymore,
Donna Reed, Philip
Dorn. 1942.
€D 00 Time for
Refreshing
7:30 0 (I) Fountain of Life
G) (!)James Robison
lfj It Is Written
8:00 0 (I) Hour of Power
0
(!)Dayof
Discovery
Gl (!) Jerry Falwell
Cartoon Carnival
fB ® Sesame Street
[Closed Captioned]
l\D
(I)
Gateway
Gospel
8:30 0 00 Oral Roberts
and You
0 (J) Christ for the
World
Starcade
ill) Wild America
l\D 00 Biblical Viewpoint
9:00 0 (I) Rex Humbard
0 (!) Sunday Morning
G)
(!)
Kenneth
Copeland
lfj leave It to Beaver
fB (]) Sesame Street
(Closed Captioned]
m
ill)
Undersea
World of Jacques
Cousteau
l\D 00 Sunday School
9:30 0
Cil
Kenneth
Copeland
lfj Andy Griffith
l\D CV Rev. R.A. West
10:00 G)(!) Rev. R.A. West
Good News
fB (]) Mr. Rogers'
Neighborhood
m ill) Nova 'Will I
Walk
Again?'
Tonight's program explores the chances for
cures to paralyzing
spinal injuries. (60 min .)
[Closed Captioned]
CB CZ) Big Creek
Baptist
10:30 II Cil Dr. D. James
Kennedy
m
m
m
m
Robert Foxworth
�-·-
(
·- (
(
fiB (])
3 :3 0
ONE LIFE TO LIVE
Jenny (Brynn Thayer) and
David (Michael Zaslow) tie
the knot thiS week on ABC's
" One L ,fe to Live," air1ng
MONDAY, MARCH 5 through
FRIDAY, MARCH 9.
4:00
CHECK LISTINGS FOR EXACT TIME
@) 1984 Compuiog
4:30
0
UJ
® Ernest Angley
(!) Jimmy Swag·
gart
ID MOVIE: 'Circus
World' An American
circus owner searchs in
Europe for an aerialist
he loved fifteen years
before . John Wayne,
Claudia Cardinale, Rita
Hayworth. 1964.
€8
®
Electric
Company
11 :00 €8 ® Sesame Street
[Closed Captioned)
@)®Six-Gun Heroes
fiB 00 Leonard Repass
11 :30 0
CI) Bill Dance
Outdoors
0 ® Fishin' Ohio
U) (!) World ·Tomorrow
fiB 00 Rev. R.A. West
AFTERNOON
12:00
5:30
5:45
6:00
0
0
CI) At Issue
® NBA Basketball: Los Angeles at
Detroit
U) (!)This Week with
David Brinkley
€8 ® From Star Wars
to Jedi
@) ® Sesame Street
[Closed Captioned)
fiB 00 Old Time
Gospel
12:30 0 CI) Meet the Press
1 :00 0 00 Bowling
U) (!) Biblical Viewpoint
@) ® Victory Garden
fiB 00 NCAA Basketball :
Virginia
at
Maryland
1 :30 U) (!) Virgil Wacks
Presents
ID MOVIE: ' My Old
Man' A spirited teenager and her downand-out horse-trainer
father are reunited after
a 14-year separation
and set out to explore a
new
life
together.
Kristy McNichol, Warren Oates, Eileen Brennan . 1979.
.fB ® Business of
Management
@)
®
Working
Women
2:00 0 (!) NCAA Basketball: Southern Conference
U) (!) U.S. National
Skiing Championship
€8 ® Business of
Management
@) ® MOVIE: 'The
Hardys Ride High'
Prospective heirs try to
prove their claim to a
fortune.
Mickey
Rooney, Cecilia Parker,
Ann Rutherford . 1938.
2:30 0 ® NCAA Basketball: Teams to be
Announced
€8 ® Focus on
Society
3:00
5:oo
m (!) NCAA Basketball: PCAA Final
Cil Focus
Society
fB
on
6:15
6 :30
Honda Classic
Golf Coverage of the
final round is presented
from the Tournament
Players Club , Coral
Springs, FL. (2 hrs. )
ID MOVI E: 'Benji' An
apparent w astrel of a
dog leads in the capture
of a gang of teenage
kidnappers.
Peter
Breck , Edgar Buchanan, Terry Carter.
1975.
fB ® Making It
Count
@)
®
Barbara's
Horses & Ponies
0 CI) Honda Classic
Golf J IP
fB ® Making It
Count
@)® Inside Story
0 ® CBS Sports
Sunday Today ' s program features World
Cup Skiing, the World
Sprint Speed Skating
Championships and the
Phoenix
10K Road
Race. (90 min.)
fB ® Social Problems/Ciassrm .
@) ®
New Tech
Times
o
rn
m
oo
Sports World Today ' s
program features the
World Triathlon Championships. (60 min .)
U) (!) 1984 Uniden
LPGA
Invitational
Golf Championship
fB ® All New This
Old House
@) ® Seeing Things
ID Wild World of
Animals
f1) Cil Woodwright's
Shop
EVENING
0
UJ
CI) 0 (1) News
(!) Star Search
ID Special
@)®Dad's Army •
fiB (]) Bill Francis
Gardening
fB Cil Motorweek
0 Cil fiB 00 NBC
News
8:30
9:00
FAMILY TIES
Steven
(Michael Gross)
and Elyse (Meredith Baxter
Birney) have diftering ideas
about how to celebrate their
20th anniversary on "Family
Ties," airing THURSDAY,
M ARCH 8 on NBC.
9 .30
10 :00
10:30
CHECK LISTINGS FOR EXACT TIME
@) 1984 Compuiog
11 :00
11 :30
O®CBS News
@) ® Fawlty Towers
7:00 0 CI) fiB 00 First
Camera
0 ® 60 Minutes
U) (!) Solid Gold
Countdown '83
ID Best of World
Championship Wrestling
€8 Cil Nature 'Jet Set
Wildlife.'
Tonight's
program looks at mil·
lions of plants and animals that, over the
years, have come to
Florida and created serious implications for resident wildlife.
(60
min .) [Closed
Captioned)
@) ® Tony Brown's
Journal
7 :30
®Lawmakers
8:00 0 Cil fiB 00 Knight
Rid9r Michael helps a
beautiful toy designer
recover some stolen
schematics. (60 min.)
0
® · Suzanne
Pleshette Show Mag-
m
mm
Nostalgia
By Marie landiorio
gie turns down an offer
to become a feature
writer for the paper's
Modern Living Section .
ID MOVIE: 'The Big
Trees' A ruthless land
baron seeks possession of the timberlands
belonging 'to peaceful
homesteaders.
Kirk
Douglas, Eve Miller. Patrice Wymore. 1952.
fB Cil Leo Buscaglia
@) ®
Nature 'The
Plight of the Bumblebee.' Tonight's program compares the life
cycle of the bumblebee
to that of a human
being. (60 min.)
[Closed Captioned)
8:30 0 ® Four Seasons
Danny Zimmer strains a
. cherished friendship by
loaning
Ted
Bolen
$15,000.
9:00 0
Cil
fiB
00
Television Academy
Hall of Fame Tonight's
program celebrates the
induction of seven new
members into the T elevision Academy Hall of
Fame. Among those inducted are Lucille Ball.
Milton Berle and Norman Lear. (2 hrs .)
0
®
Jeffersons
George, after agreeing
to manage a singing
group,
mistakenly
books the four black
women into a country
and western bar.
U)
(!)
MOVIE:
'Streetcar Named Desire'
m
m m ®
Masterpiece Theatre
'The Irish R.M .' Because she loves Flurry,
Sally 's mother is sending Sally to live with an
aunt in England. (60
min.)
9:30
"Hullabaloo," debuting on NBC in 1965, was one
of TV's first attempts to give rock 'n' roll a big-budget, top-quality showcase in a prime-time slot. Each
week top recording artists performed their current
hits backed by elaborate production and the frantic,
miniskirted "Hullabaloo" dancers.
The whole affair had the atmosphere of ·a·
discotheque in full swing, including the "girl in the
cage," doing a perpetual frug. Among the hosts who
presided over each telecast were Paul Anka, jack
jones, Frankie Avalon and Annette Funicello, and jerry Lewis and his rock star son, Gary. Performing were
such artists as the Beatles, the Supremes, the Ronettes
and Sonny and Cher.
Question: ABC's rival rock. show used a similar format to "Hullabaloo," but had a regular host, Jimmy
O'Neill. It also featured a musical "discovery," teendream Bobby Sherman. Can you name this show/
11:30
«daytirne))
ID Texas
AFTERNOON
12:00
5 :00
5:30
6 :00
6:15
6:30
6:45
7:00
7:30
8:00
8:15
ID Varied Programs
U) (!)Rev. Pete Rowe
0 CI) NBC News at
Sunrise
0 ® m rn Jimmy
Swaggart
ID
TBS
Morning
News
@) ®
Varied Programs
0 CI) News
0
00 CBS Early
Morning News
U)
(!)
Assembly
Echoes
U) (!)ABC News This
Morning
@)®Weather
0 00 fiB 00 Today
0 ® CBS Morning
News
U) (!) Good Morning
America
ID SuperStation Funtime
@) ®
Varied Programs
1D I Dream of Jeannie
ID Bewitched
€8 Cil Weather
@) ® Sesame Street
[Closed Captioned)
fB Cil Instructional
Programs
0
CI) Hot Potato
0 ® fiB 00 News
12:30
1 :00
1 :30
2:00
2:30
3:00
3:30
4:00
MORNING
0 ®
Alice Alice almost falls for a hot air
balloonist.
1 0:00 0 ® Trapper John,
M.D. Gonzo insists
that one of his patients,
who is showing signs
of a mental disorder, is
actually physically ill
and must not be released from the hospital. (60 min.)
ID Sports Page
€8 @ Bits and Bytes
10:15 @)(fi) MOVIE: 'I'm All
Right, Jack' A young
man. who visualizes
himself as an executive
in industry, goes to
work in a factory controlled by his uncle. Peter
Sellers,
Terry
Thomas,
Margaret
Rutherford . 1960.
10:30 ID Oral Roberts
f1) 'CIJ New Tech
Times
·
11 :00 0 Cil 0 (j) News
G Jerry Falwell
•
(]) It's Your
Business
m rn lovir:~g
0
CI)
MOVIE:
'College Humor'
0 ® This Week in
Country Music
U) (!)ABC News
fiB
00
MOVIE:
'French Postcards' A
group of college students come of age on a
trip to Paris. Miles
Chapin, Debra Winger.
Lynn Carlin. 1979.
11 :45 U) (!) Forum 19
12:00 0 ®Face the Nation
U)
(!)
Pentecost
Today
ID Open Up
@) ® Dave Allen at
Large
12:30 0 ® MOVIE: 'The
Killing Game' Young
couple produce comic
strips until they meet
an overstrung young
man who turns their
make-believe ·adventures into real-life dramas.
Jean
Pierre
Cassel, Claudine Auger, Michel Duchaussoy. 1968.
UJ (!) Jim Bakker
1:00 ID MOVIE: 'The LShaped Room' An
unwed mother-to-be,
living in a squalid room
in a boarding house,
finds
companionship
and love . Leslie Caron.
Tom Bell , Brock Peters.
1963
1 :30 U) (!) Star Search
3 :45 ID Rat Patrol
4 :15 ID Candid Camera
4 :45 ID World/large
ID I Love lucy
0 ® Braun and
Company
0 ® Andy Griffith
U) (!) Jim Bakker
ID Movie
@) CITl Instructional
Programs
fiB 00 700 Club
0 ® Here's Lucy
0 ® Facts of Life
0 ® New $25,000
Pyramid
UJ (!) 700 Club
fiB
00
Diff'rent
Strokes
0 CI) Sale of the
Century
0 00 Press Your
luck
fiB
00
Morning
Stretch
0 CI) fiB 00 Wheel of
Fortune
0 00 Price Is Right
U) (!)Benson
ID Catlins
0 CI) fiB 00 Dream
House
4:30
5:00
5:30
U) (!) Family Feud
ID Perry Mason
0 CI) News
0 ®Young and the
Restless
U) (!)Ryan's Hope
fiB 00 Search For
Tomorrow
0 CI) Days of Our
lives
U) (!) All My Children
IDMovie
fiB (]) Sale of the
Century
0 ® As the World
Turns
fiB ill Days of Our
lives
0 CI) Another World
U) (!) One life to Live
0)
®
Electric
Company
0 ® Capitol
@) ® Instructional
Programs
fiB (]) Another World
0 CI) Match Game/
Hollywood
Squares
Hour
0 ® Guiding light
UJ
(!)
General
Hospital
ID Flintstones
@) ® Varied Programs
ID Battle of the
Planets
fB @ Varied Programs
fiB 00 Match Game/
Hollywood
Squares
Hour
0 CI) Mr. Cartoon
0 ® Hour Magazine
U) (!) Rockford Files
ID Munsters
fB @ Sesame Street
[Closed Captioned]
@l ® 3-2-1. Contact
ID Leave It to Beaver
@) ® Mr. Rogers'
Neighborhood
fiB
00 To Be
Announced
OCI)B.J./loboShow
0 ® Hawaii Five-0
UJ (!) Superfriends
ID Little House on the
Prairie
fB ® Mr. Rogers'
Neighborhood
@) ® Sesame Street
[Closed Captioned)
fiB 00 PTL Club
U) (!)Tic Tac Dough
fB ® 3-2-1. Contact
The dandelion blossom is
actually a bouquet of about
150 to 200 - tiny flowers
set in a solid head on a stem.
�(--------~,-------~
(~--------~-------------------
(
«monday))
MORNING
9:00
1:00
6:00
6:30
@) ® Sesame Street
[Closed Captioned]
Cfj MOVIE:
'Palm
Springs
Weekend'
The local police try to
keep the parties and
fights in hand during
Easter
weekend
in
Palm Springs. Troy
Donahue, Connie Stevens, Ty Hardin. 1963.
AFTERNOON
m
MOVIE:
'The
Plainsman' Wild Bill
Hickok, Buffalo Bill and
Calamity Jane foil Indians and gunrunners.
Don
Murray,
Guy
Stockwell, Abby Dalton. 1966.
EVENING
orno®mm
m
Cil News
Cfj Andy Griffith
fB ® MacNeil/Lehrer
Newshour
@)@Dr. Who
0 (]) (ifj 00 NBC
News
0 Cil CBS News
&l G) ABC News
Carol Burnett
@)
(ll)
Business
Report
0 Cil PM Magazine
0
Cil Wheel of
Fortune
&l G) People's Court
Cfj Hogan's Heroes
fB
ffi Kentucky
General Assembly
@) (ll) MacNeiVLehrer
News hour
(ifj 00 How the West
Was Won
0 (]) Tic Tac Dough
0 Cil Family Feud
ill Jeffersons
Sanford and Son
m
7:00
7:30
m
m
8:00
0
Cil
m
muscle man and plans
to finance a string of
gymnasiums. Frankie
Avalon, Annette Funicello, Luciana Paluzzi.
1964.
AFTERNOON
m
3/5/84
7:30
to honor their handyman George Utley.
10:00 0 Cil Emerald Point
N.A.S.
TBS
Evening
News
@) (ll) Mario Lanza: An
American Caruso
10:30 fB
ffi Business
Report
11 :oo o rn o oo m m
(ifj 00 News
Cfj All In the Family
11:30 0 (]) (ifj 00 Tonight
Show
0 Cil Hart to Hart
G) Nightline
Catlins
®
Latenight
America
12:00 &l
G)
Eye
on
Hollywood
MOVIE: 'The Devil
at 4 0' clock' A priest
aided by three convicts
saves the lives of the
children on a South Sea
island when a volcano
erupts. Spencer Tracy,
Frank Sinatra, Kerwin
Mathews. 1961.
12:30
rn m oo Late
Night with
David
Letterman
0 Cil Columbo
&l G) Andy Griffith
1:00 &l
G)
To
Be
Announced
2:45 Cfj MOVIE: 'Lonelyhearts' A young writer,
assigned the 'Lonelyhearts' column of a
newspaper, becomes
involved with one of his
correspondents. Montgomery Clift, Myrna
Loy,
Robert
Ryan.
1958.
00
Stars
Salute
the
U.S.
Olympic Team A host
of
celebrities
and
former Olympic gold
medal winners salute
this year's U.S. Olympic Team. (3 hrs.)
0 Cil Scarecrow and
Mrs. King
&J G) Automan Walter attempts to help
Teresa free her brother
from imprisonment on
a cham gang. (60 min.)
MOVIE:
'The
African
Queen'
A
spinster persuades a
dissolute captain to try
to destroy a German
gunboat.
Humphrey
Bogart, Katherine Hepburn, Robert Morely.
1951.
· fB ® Secrets of a
Desert Sea
@) ® Great Performances 'Dance in America: Don Quixote.· The
American
Ballet
Theatre presents Mikhail
Baryshnikov's
of
Don
production
Quixote from the Metropolitan
Opera
House, New York City,
NY. (90 min.)
9:00 0
Cil AfterMASH
Potter and Klinger circumvent VA regulations to get a new drug
for a patient.
li) ill MOVIE: 'Dark
Mirror'
fB ® Great Performances 'Dance in America: Don Quixote.' The
American
Ballet
Theatre presents Mikhail
Baryshnikov's
production
of
Don
Quixote from the Metropolitan
Opera
House, New York City,
NY. (90 min.)
9:30 0 Cil Newhart Dick
and Joanna plan a party
m
m
m
1 :00
4:00
m
4:30
o
«tuesday))
6:oo
6:30
7:00
News hour
@)@Dr. Who
0 Cil (ifj (I) NBC
News
0 Cil CBS News
li) ill ABC News
Cfj Carol Burnett
@)
(ll)
Business
Report
U (])PM Magazine
0
Cil Wheel of
Fortune
li) ill People's Court
Hogan's Heroes
fB
ffi Kentucky
General Assembly
@) ® MacNeil/Lehrer
News hour
(ifj (I) At The Movies
0 (])Tic Tac Dough
0 Cil Family Feud
7:30
m
Lee Greenwood and Bar·
bara Mandrell will team on a
25-date concert tour beg1nning
this month and runn1ng
through mid-May. To celebrate
the tour, MCA will release a
duet single by Lee and Barba·
ra.
•
Tammy Wynette will be
spotlighted in the June 1ssue of
Redbook magazine because,
according to the editors,
"Tammy is the epitome of the
female country entertainer."
Steve Wariner
Several thousand David
Frizzell fans flocked to Billy
Bob's in Ft. Worth for a spec1al
evening of entertainment. Frizzell headlined the club on
"Dallas Appreciation Night" to
celebrate B1lly Bob's third
anniversary 1n bus1ness.
@1984 Compulog
m m Jeffersons
m Sanford and Son
(ifj (I) Headwaters
8:00
•
Steve Wariner is in the studio with producers Norro· Wilson and Tony Brown working
on his third album for RCA. It is
scheduled for an early summer
release.
•
Larry Gatlin and the Gatlin
Brothers Band headlined one
of three benefit concerts for
the United States Olympic
Team. The benefit was held at
Billy Bob's and also featured
appearances by Morgan Fair·
child, Moe Bandy, Janie
Fricke, George Strait, Rich
Little, Marty Allen, Boxc.u
Willie and Sammy Davis Jr.
0 (]) (ifj (I) A Team
0 Cil Mississippi A
best-selling
novel
based on life in a small
town embroils Ben in a
defamation-ofcharacter lawsuit.
&l
G)
Foul-ups/
Bleeps/Blunders
Cfj
MOVIE:
'The
Silencers' An American espionage agent
tries to prevent a defecting U.S. scientist
from passing top secrets to a Chinese mastermind. Dean Martin,
Stella Stevens, Victor
Buono. 1966.
fB (]) Nova 'Visions of
the Deep: The Underwater World of AI Giddings.' AI Giddings,
one of the greatest underwater photograpers
in the world, is profiled.
@)®·Ingrid
m (I) News
m Andy Griffith
rc(f)JHJV~~
Eddie Rabbitt has just
accepted a series of four headlining engagements at major
resorts this year. Including two
weeks at the MGM Grand 1n
Las Vegas. a week each at
Harrah's Lake Tahoe and
Harrah's Trump 1n Atlantic
City.
CHECK LISTINGS FOR EXACT TIME
o m o oom m
~@{f]/IY@
•
Arnold (Gary Coleman, r.)
gets a younger brother when
his father marries the mother
of Sam (Danny Cooksey) on
"Diff'rent Strokes," airing
SATURDAY, MARCH 10 on
NBC.
m
MORNING
Cfj MOVIE: 'Muscle
Beach Party' A wealthy woman is interested in a handsome
DIFF'RENT STROKES
fB ® MacNeil/Lehrer
3/6/84
9:00
Cfj
MOVIE:
'The
Wrong Box' Various
family members vie for
a large trust fund. John
Mills, Ralph Richardson, Michael Caine.
1966.
0 Cil NBC Special
Treat
'Bobby
and
Sarah.' A streetwise
boy from a broken
home becomes involved with a teenage
girl with a strong family
orientation. (60 min.)
0 Cil CBS Schoolbreak Special 'Revenge of the Nerd.' A
high school freshman,
who is considered a
'nerd by his classmates, leaves himself
open for ridicule when
he shows affection toward a classmate. (R)
(60 min.)
EVENING
&l G) a.k.a. Pablo
(PREMIERE) A young
comedian's chance to
star in his own television series provokes a
confrontation with his
proud father.
9:00 U (]) (ifj (I) Riptide
Cody, Nick and Boz are
drawn into a competition to clear a divorcee
of her husband's murder. (60 min.)
0
Cil
MOVIE:
'Calamity Jane' This
drama traces the courtship of Martha Jane
Cannary and Wild Bill
Hickok, which results in
the birth of a child that
Bill doesn't want and
Jane can't properly
care for. Jane Alexander, Frederic Forrest,
Ken Kercheval. 1984.
&l
G)
Three's
Company
fB
ffi American
Playhouse 'The Gin
Game.' Hume Cronyn
and Jessica Tandy star
• in this story of an older
woman
man
and
whose
gin
rummy
game becomes a catalyst for
unleashing
years of hidden pain
and emotions. (2 hrs.)
[Closed Captioned]
9:30 li) G) Oh Madeline
Madeline's recollection
of a traumatic singing
experience helps her
regain her voice to perform in a theater musical.
@) (ll) MOVIE: To Be
Announced
1 o:oo
Remington Steele A
society matron hires
Laura and Remington
to track down the person who placed an ad
in a sex magazine using
her name and number.
8:30
u
m m rn
Gl G) Hart to Hart
1 0:15 Cfj
TBS
Evening
News
1 0:30 fB
ffi Business
Report
11:oo
oo
(ifj (I) News
Cfj All In the FamilY_
o rn o
11:30
0 (])
mm
12:30
(ifj (I) Tonight
Show
0 Cil Magnum
m G) Nightline
m Catlins
m (ll)
P .I.
Latenight
1:00
2:15
America
12:00 li)
G)
Eye
on
Hollywood
Cfj MOVIE: 'Bombers
B-52' A sergeant, who
resents the commanding officer, makes a
play for his daughter,
4:15
4:45
then is ordered on a se- ·
cret mission to test B52 bombers. Natalie
Wood, Karl Malden, Efrem
Zimbalist,
Jr.
1957.
0 (])
-Late
Night with
David
Letterman
0 Cil McCloud
&l G) Andy Griffith
&l
ill To Be
Announced
Cfj MOVIE: 'The Long
Dark Hall' A wife
stands by her husband
when he is accused of
murdering
his
girl
friend. Rex Harrison,
Lilli Palmer, Dennis
O'Dea. 1951.
Cfj Rat Patrol
Candid Camera
m rn
m
MEDIA MONITOR
'Airwolf' role turns
Cord's hair white
By Joan Crosby
"I have to go in soon and
have my hair touched up,"
said rugged Alex Cord with
a smile, adding "and those
are words I never thought I
would hear myself say."
Cord, a natural brunette,
had to get his hair lightened
to play the white-haired
character, Archangel on
"Airwolf," the CBS series
about a high-powered helicopter.
"They finally convinced
me to lighten my hair. At
first after it was done, I
wouldn't go out without a
hat," says Cord. "But now
I'm beginning to like it."
Before he· came to Hollywood, Cord was an accomplished stage actor as well
as a published novelist. His
book, "Sand Song," was
written under his real name,
Alexander Viespi.
Horses have been one
of Cord's other interests.
He is a professional horse
trainer and a fine polo player, a game that is having a
resurgence in Hollywood.
"There are lots of polo
jokes going around now,"
he says. "One goes: Do
you know how to make a
small fortune in polo? Start
with a large one.
"I have tremendous
patience when I am dealing
with horses and I get an
energy from them. Animals
can provide such joy to us
Alex Cord
from the very simplicity of
their own lives. Horses are
my passion and people tell
me I'm crazy to devote so
much time to them.''
Alex pauses. "Do you
want to know what I think is
crazy? I think it's the person who pays $500 a week
to snort cocaine. That's
crazier than anything I may
sacrifice to devote time to
my animals."
THIS
WEEK'S
HIGHLIGHT
Ann-Margret stars as the tragic
Blanche DuBois in "A
Streetcar Named Desire,"
an "ABC Theater" adaptation of Tennessee Williams'
Pulitzer Prize-winning
drama, a1rmg Sunday,
March 4. The drama also
stars Treat Williams as
Stanley Kowalski, Beverly
D'Angelo as Stella and
Randy Quaid as Mitch.
�-~~ed
__ne.d
___a_Y~·~F_e_b
__
ru_a_ry~2_9_,~1984
_______________________________________________________T_h_e_F_I_o~y-d_C_o_u_n_ty~T~ime~~s--------------------------------------------------------~Sec~~U~o=n~O~n~e~,~P~aa~·~e~N~In~e~
Recognized For Sales
To Wed March 3
GS Cookie Sale
Now In Progress
The Wilderness Road Girl Scout Councll's 1984 Cookie Sale is now in progress.
Floyd county Girl Scouts will be selling
cookies for the next three weeks. Call
your favorite Girl Scout to get your
cookies today. Those who do not know
any Girl Scouts, may call one of these
numbers:
Ada Depoy-874-9997, Janice Hall
-377-6966; Mary Conn-478-9173; Lila
DeRossett-874 2844; Nell Banks-874-2352;
Cathie Martin-452-4229, or Sandy
Howell-886-8113.
There's no validity in the old saying
that moss grows only on the north s1de of
a tree, says National Wildlife's Ranger
Rick magazine. In a dark, moist forest,
moss can be seen growing all around the
trunk of a tree.
James H. Nunnery, Jr., of Betsy
Layne, has been named top salesman
for the new account award by Kenway
t;pemical Company. Mr. Nunnery was
~arded a free trip to Florida.
Clark Equipment Company has also
recognized Mr. Nunnery's salemanship,
the president of the southeast region
having presented him with an engraved plaque for the most sales of highspeed buffers
Mr. Nunnery serves a six-county area
of Floyd, Johnson, Martin, Pike, Morgan
and Magoffin counties. He is the son of
the late James H. Nunnery Sr., wellj9lown Prestonsburg businessman, and
Sylvia Nunnery Rudy, of Portsmouth,
Ohio.
Church Honors
Elder Seniors
The Cow Creek Free Will Baptist
Church honored three of its elder seniors
for the month of January. They were
.~ack Mosley and Mr. and Mrs. Conny
Darby. There were more than 60 friends
and relatives attending a dinner given
in their honor. They were each presented a certificate of appreciation for
their years of working for the church.
Mr. Darby, who is 83 years old, was
also presented a birthday cake.
PUBLIC NOTICE
The City of Prestonsburg will accept
applications until March 1, 1984 at 3:00
.m. for the position of Mechanic. The
successful applicant will perform
maintenance and mechanical repairs on
all city owned vehicles and equipment
and do related work as required. Considerable knowledge of the standard
practices, equipment, and tools used in
the automotive mechanic and equipment mechanic trade is necessary. Applicant should have knowledge of the
operation of gasoline and diesel engines.
~alary will be based on training, qualifications and experience. Applications
can be obtained by contacting the City
Administrator in the Municipal
Building.
DAVID EVANS
City Administrator
2-22-2t.
HOMEMAKERS MEET
The Cow Creek Homemakers held
their regular monthly meeting at the
church annex there Tuesday, Feb. 21, at
1 p.m., with Mrs. Louise Carey, president, presiding. Mrs. Louise Carey and
Mrs. Hester Leslie presented the lesson
on "Consumer. Products Safety," with
special emphasis on reading and following the directions on purchased items.
Mrs. Imogene Caldwell shared with the
group a short story, "Pink Ribbons, "
which she had written and submitted for
the State Homemakers' short story
contest.
Mrs. Frances Pitts exhibited some
pillow-tops, made with the currently
popular "chicken scratch" stitching,
and asked those who may wish to learn
this art to bring the required materials
to the next meeting.
The hostess, Mrs. Sally B. Goble, served refreshments to Imogene Caldwell,
Edith Burchett, Louise Carey, Virginia
poble, Hester Leslie, and Frances Pitts.
The next meeting will be Tuesday
afternoon, March 20, at 1 o'clock, with
·Mrs. Mary Zemo giving the lesson on
"Food and Drugs," and Mrs. Hester
Leslie serving as hostess.
CARD OF THANKS
The family of Charles Newsome would
like to thank everyone for their kindness
and concern. Thanks to all who sent
flowers and food; especially Prestonsburg IGA, and the Fraternal Orders of
Eagles, of Prestonsburg. Also Mrs.
Geneva Scalf for her help, and the many
others. We very much appreciated
everyones concern for the loss of our
love one.
announces the opening of his office
THE PAINTSVILLE CLINIC BUILDING
111 Main Street, Paintsville, Kentucky
for the practice of
UROLOGY
Telephone (606) 789-7584
MONDAY-WEDNESDAY-FRIDAY
10:00 AM until 4:30PM
<Betsy Layne office closed February 1l
There's no excuse not to
slim down now! Because
Gloria Marshall's oHering
5 free treatments and all
you have to do is donate
$10to Easter Seals.
Gloria Marshall g1ves you:
• no strenuous exercise or
need to change clothes
• a fnendly, relaxing
atmosphere and your
own Personal Figure
Counselor
• a free, no obl1gat1on
demonstration and
f1gure analys1s
• 19 years of success m
the figure shaping l1eld
Start free Gloria Marshall
treatments and make your
Easter Seals donation today!
Patrrc1a Sommons lost 44 3;, lbs and 53'·• mches Vorgm1a M1ller lost 151bs and 19 mches
Beverly Rh,neberger lost341bs and 37'·' 1nches •
Glona Marshall
F1gure Salons, 1964
We•ght foss varres w1lh each mo•v•auat
r--«==~~~~•·;:
I EASY CREDIT TERMS
I Low Monthly Payments
I
1 Phone 789-7441
~ FREE
~~~~~!';J,!ENrs
: Highway 23
I Paintsville
E!~.:o ..
Pa• Bxt!e
~'k;~!':r'er
Se•l• 'b""
,________________ _
I•
L m11 5 free treatments per patron new patrCM"S Of'\ly ThtS trtal olfer •s to
I
only at partiC pat•ng salons
•nterest you'" purchas.tl')() a r89o..~lar program Other prog~arn' 0 1fer00 Valid
5
Select groups of
Select groups of
Dresses
Skirts
5
I
1
I
I
)!.
$7
5
10· 2· 15
Select groups of
Knit Tops
Select groups of
FREE* V.
Coupon exp1res 3·3-84
ERNEST C. HOLBROOK, M.D. FACS
Cato•s uper Low Sale-a-thon Prices
Are Good
Thursda~ Friday and Saturday Only
$4&$6
Donate S10 And Get
5 Treatments ~
I
I
The various colleges of the University of Kentucky have announced their
dean's list for the 1983 fall semester.
To be named to the dean's list in a college, a student must have attained a
high academic standing based on a 4.0
grading system .
The studenl<> from Floyd county, along
wtlh their home address and college,
are: Agriculture-Joey Collins, Stanville: Engmeering-Thomas Gregory
Porter, Allen: Pharmacy-Debra Jean
Allen, Auxier. Nursing-Sharon Kay
Wells, Prestonsburg; Business &
Economics-Kathy Hamilton, Stanville,
and Darrell Wayne Woods, Prestonsburg; Education-Charla Dene McNally, Trimble Branch, Prestonsburg, Arts
& Sciences-Lois J Chaffins, Garrett,
and Jeffery D Damron, Weeksbury.
-Photo by Jimmy Adams
Mr. Billy Joe Reynolds and Nola K.
·Nelson are announcing the engagement
and forthcoming marriage of their
daughter, Marlen.l! Reynolds, to Linzie
Joe Harman, son of"~nd Mrs. Paul
Harman, of Paintsville. ·
The ceremony will take place at 1
p.m., Saturday, March 3, at the First
Presbyterian Church, here. The pastor,
the Rev. Timothy Jessen, will be the officiating minister.
The gracious custom of open wedding
will be observed with a reception following at the D&M Restaurant.
AN OFFER TO
SMILE ABOUT. . .
I
Dean's List Announced
By Various Colleges
Blouses
se&sa
New Arrivals
Full Figure and Regular
Jeans
20%oFF
Select groups of
Pants
a Jeans
$7
Select groups of
-Handbags ·
$3&$4
New Arrivals
~Pa2sf!~!'-~~rt!
20% OFF
Including Full Figure
Hurry or The Best Selections!
�Wednesday, February 29, 1984
The Floyd County Times
BID REQUEST
GROUNDBREAKING
at Highland Ave.
site of
NEW
DA YCARE CENTER
Saturday, March 3
11:00 am
All Welcome.
CLEVA WELLS LAWSON, DIRECTOR
FLOl"D CO.
DEVELOPMENTAL CHILD CARE
2·29·11
Sealed bids will be received by the Big
Sandy Area Development District, Prestonsburg, Kentucky until 4:00 p.m.,
March 15, 1984, for the provision of Ombudsman Services for the Big Sandy
Area Agency on Aging Ombudsman
Program, funded by Title III-B Older
Americans Act Funds for the period July 1, 1984 through June 30. 1985.
Complete bid specificatiOns may be
obtained by contacting Phyllis Stanley,
Director of Aging Services, Municipal
Building, 2nd Floor, Prestonsburg, Kentucky 41653.
The Area Agency on Aging reserves
the right to accept or reject any or all
bids.
EQUAL OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYER
2-22-2t.
OPAL'S BEDSPREAD OUTLET
First quality sheets, towels, blankets, spreads and curtains.
Jet. 1091 and 7-Above Bestway Market
Topmost, Ky.
PHONE 477-2266 OPEN MON.-SAT.
2-29-olt.
NOTICE OF APPOINTMENT
I, Frank DeRossett, Clerk of the Floyd Circuit Court, do hereby certify
that the following persons have been appointed by the Floyd District Court
and qualify according to law, and all persons indebted to the said estate are
entitled to file with the undersigned persons at the designated addresses
within 6 months from date of appoinlment:
ht.tea
14-P-023
Joaephl1111 Wallen
Prestonsburg, lty.
14-P-024
Jerry Lee Hamihon
Liton, lty.
14-P-027
Reginald Letar
ES1ill, lty.
An-y
Ficlueiory
Mary I. Ehrgott
East Point, ly.
1·31-14
Jay Lembert
Prestonsburg, lty.
Dorotlly Slo1111
Ky.
1·31-14
Arnold Turner, Jr.
Prestoftallurg, ly.
Dellor8 latar
2-02-14
JanetShlllk
PreatoniMrg, ly.
George Wells
Preatonallurg, ly.
Liton.
Hueysville, ly.
14-P·030
Jeck Scott
Springfield, Ohio
Jacklynn Derlint
Moreh..d, Ky.
2·03-14
14-P·037
John F. Wal..ce
Al,.n, lty.
Pauline Wallace
Allen, Ky.
2·13-14
Amok! Turner, Jr.
Preatenaburt. ly.
14-1'-031
Leonanl Hall
Martin, Ky.
Eunice Hall
Martill, Ky.
2·13-14
ArnoW Tumor, Jr.
l'reatoaaburg, Ky.
14-P-039
Herman lleYins
Harold, lty.
Vine lleYinl
Haro14, ly.
2·13-14
W•.Sid1111y Trivette
Pikeville, ly.
14-P-040
Sarah Jo loyd
MeiYin, lty.
Charles Jollnaon
MeiYin, ly.
2-14-14
Caasie AUea
Prestonaburt, ly.
14-1'-041
Otia Hackworth
Preatonaburg, lty.
Millie Hackworth
Prestouburg, ly.
2-15-14
Amakl T•mer, Jr.
PreatOIIIMrg, ly.
14-P-042
Ab111ham Shephenl
0.Yicl, lty.
Henry C. Hale
l'reatonsflurt. ly.
2·15·14
DeYkl Borller
Prestonsburg, ly.
14·P·043
Ietty Miller
Ligon, Ky.
lretMia M. H II
Liton, Ky.
2·16-14
No Atty.
14·P-044
Polly Tackett
Hi Hat, lty.
Meredith Slone
Hi Hat, ly.
2-16-14
Janet Stvmbo
Prestonsburg, ly.
14·1'-045
ltintkrly Steffey Mos..y
Allen, lty.
Ja~~~es Steffey
T.....,ly.
2-17-14
Arnold Turner, Jr.
l'reatonallurg, ly.
Malcol• Colli•
2-17-14
Amol4 Turner, Jr.
Preatolllllurt, ly.
14-P-046
Ediftl Collina
PrestonaiHirg, lty.
Preatouburt, ly.
14-P-047
James M. Hale
Blue linr, I y.
lidlanl Hale
llue liver, ly.
2·22-14
Amokl T•mer, Jr.
Prestonlllurt, Ky.
14-P-041
Gilda Crager
Wayland, Ky.
Terri LJIIII Johnson
Wayland, ly.
2-22-14
W. W. lurd!ett
Prestonlllurg, ly.
14·P·049
Vinnie Devil
Dwale, Ky.
Jollnny O.Yia
Preatonallurt, ly.
2-22-14
Eric D. Hall
Preat-burg, ly.
14-P·OSO
Arnell ltldd
Herold, lty.
lathy lidd
Harold, ly.
2-22-14
Janet Stvmbo
Preatonallurg, ly.
14·1'·051
Joe Williams
Wltnlwright, Ity.
Ada Williams
Whnlwnpt, Ky.
2-22-14
Janet Stvlllllo
Prestonsburg, ly.
84-P-052
1'aullo11
Prestonsburg, lty.
wn-loaa
Preatonlllurg, ly.
2-23·14
w.w. Burchett
Preatonallurg, I y.
14-1'-053
Iennie Lafferty
Allen, lty.
Gretchen Lafferty
Allen, ly.
2·24-14
lark..y Shlrgill
l'reatolllkrg, ly.
14·1'·054
Lovie Gene Stephens
HllrGid, lty.
14·1'·055
Rebecca Ja1111 Stephana
Harold, lty.
In response to an attorney's questions
Thursday, a key prosecution witness in
the federal conspiracy trial in Pikeville
of Edgar Jones and 17 others repeated·
ly invoked her Fifth Amendment right
against self-incrimination.
Cross-examining Pearl Booth in an effort to demonstrate her unreliability as
a government witness, Aubrey Harwell,
the Tennessee lawyer heading the
defense team, laid a minefield of questions-suggesting her involvement in arson, insurance fraud and perjury, and
raising doubts about her mental
stability-that her attorney advised her
to av01d.
In all but one instance, Mrs. Booth's
recourse to her constitutional right of
silence occurred out of the jury's hearing and was elicited only for the purpose
of the trial record, which an appeals
court may need subsequently to review.
Even so, the defense strategy drew a
protest from-the prosecutor and-when
the questioning moved into Mrs. Booth's
mental health care-a question by the
judge about the source of the defense
counsel's information.
One line of questioning the jury did
hear suggested Mrs. Booth had lied
under oath when she appeared as a
witness in her husband's March, 1982
trial in Winchester on charges of drunk
driving, speeding and driving on a
revoked license. Mrs. Booth did not deny
telling an undercover agent later that
"the judge caught me lying twice" but
said she was only trying to impress the
agent, who was posing as a "hit man"
interested in buying dynamite.
On the advice of her attorney, David
Justice, of Ashland, Mrs. Booth refused
to answer charges by Harwell that she
and her husband paid Gary Martin, a
friend of theirs and a former employee
of the state motor vehicle licensing division here, to have the revocation of
Booth's license erased from the record.
During an "avowal"-a court procedure which allows questioning of
witnesses on matters the trial judge
holds inadmissible but the defense wants
recorded in case of appeal-Harwell
questioned Mrs. Booth about the 1980
burnings of a home she owned on Jacks
Creek and a trailer owned by Vern Hall;
the 1981 burning of neighbor Arlie Potter's house at McDowell and of a 1977
Lincoln Continental; and the reported
theft of the Booths' new 1981 Cadillac
and its later recovery from a Wheelwright slate dump.
In arguing for the admissibility of
Mrs. Booth's answers, Harwell said his
questions involved allegations of arson,
insurance fraud and perjury and were
relevant to her credibility as a witness.
Moreover, the fact that she was immune
from prosecution by reason of a plea
bargain meant she could not invoke the
Fifth Amendment, the lawyer
contended.
U.S. District Judge G. Wix Unthank
held, however, that the issues were
peripheral to the central matters on trial
and that the witness had not waived her
Fifth Amendment right-a right Mrs.
Booth exercised in response to all questions relating to arson or fraudulent insurance claims.
Questions by Harwell stemming from
Mrs. Booth's visits to a mental health
agency prompted a protest by prosecutor Thomas L. SeH that the information was confidential and so protected by
law against public disclosure and an inquiry by the judge as to how the defense
attorney came by it.
Harwell said he subpoenaed Mrs.
Booth's records from the Mountain
Comprehensive Care Center in Prestonsburg and that, if the information
was protected by law, it was up to agency administrators to assert that right.
Don Lafferty, a social worker at the
agency, said Ia ter he was angered at the
use made of his former client's records.
Disclosures of such information is forbidden by agency policy, said Lafferty,
who hinted the information might have
been obtained by deceit.
Ietty Ann Stephana
Hal'9hl, ly.
2·24-14
Amol4 T•mer, Jr.
Preatonallurg, ly.
When lightning strikes, it's hot. In
fact, a bolt of lightning is more than
twice as hot as the surface of the sun,
says National Wildlife's Ranger Rick
magazine.
Ietty Ann Stephens
2-24-14
Amolcl Turner, Jr.
Prestonsburg, ly.
SURPLUS PROPERTY BID
NOTICE
Harold, ly.
14·P·025
Tllo~~~es Moore
Weyland, lty.
2-01-14
Ronald Combs ·
lhlzanl, ly.
14·P·026
Ella Hamilton
Tnberry,ly.
Dorotlly Slone
Lifon, ly.
2·01-14
Ja1111t Stvlllllo
Prestonsburg, ly.
14·1'·021
Stne Hamilton
Stanville, ly.
Annie Hamilton
SttiiiYille, ly.
2-03-14
Ja1111t Stvmlto
Prestonsburg, ly.
14·P·029
Gary Lee Wright
Preat-burg, ly.
Edgar l. Wright, Jr.
Prestonsburg, ly.
2-03-14
ltennia Maynenl
111111, Ky.
14-P-031
Josephine Moore
Prestonaburg, Ky.
l.l. Moore
Prestonsburg, I y.
2·06-14
14-P-032
Reynolds Nelaon
Dwale, ly.
Sally May Nelson
Dwale, ly.
2·01-14
OYal I. Noll
2·01·14
Palmer L. Hell
Morehntl, ly.
14-P-033
Clabo li,..._
Moreh..d, Ky.
Woman Witness
Invokes 'Fifth'
At Jones Trial
Morehee4, ly.
John E. Hunt
Prestonsburg, ICy.
Coaale Allen
Preatonakrg, ly.
14-P-034
Cort Stevenson
Preatonaburt, ly.
Moe St11enaon Ousley
PrestonsiHirg, ly.
2-10-14
Da•ld larller
Prestonsburg, Ky.
14·1'·036
Susie Allkina
Hueyavine, ly.
Mildred lellemy
Hueynille, lty.
2·1 0-14
Amok! Tumor, Jr.
Prestonsburg, Ky.
The City of Prestonsburg has declared
surplus and will offer for sale to the
highest bidder one (1) 1981 Chevrolet
Malibu that was used as a police vehicle. Bids will be accepted until March 8,
1984 at2:00 p.m., at which time they will
be opened publicly and read aloud. The
vehicle can be inspected at the
Municipal Building between the hours of
8:00a.m. and 4:00 p.m. Monday thru
Friday. Mail Bids to City Administrator,
P.O. Box 31, Prestonsburg, Ky. 41653.
The City of Prestonsburg reserves the
right to reject any or all bids.
DAVID EVANS
City Administrator
2-29-2t.
PUBLIC NOTICE
K.M. Liquor doing business at Box 19,
Beaver, Ky, Rt. 979, by Kathy Lynn
Maldonado, Rt. 979, Box 19, Beaver, Ky.
41604, hereby declares her intention to
apply for a license as a retail package
liquor dealer under the state law. ltpd.
PUBLIC NOTICE
FlANK DEIOSSITT, Clerk
Floyd Clrc.it Caurt
ly: More MtConllick, D.C.
The Hitching Post doing business at
Rt. 7, Hueysville, Ky 41640, by Colin
Cornett, Box 41, Hueysville, Ky. 41640,
hereby declares his intention to apply for
a license as a retail package liquor
dealer under the state law.
lt.
Section One, Paae Ten
Cutter to Conduct
Region XI Workshop
Teen Pageant Finalist
FOR SALE
CX!500 MOTORCYCLE, UKE NEW; GE.
ELECTRIC DRYER; 26' TRAVEL TRAILER.
SELF-CONTAINED, WILL SACRIFICE.
Ron Cutter, executive director, Kentucky Association for Retarded Citizens,
will conduct a workshop for parents and
professionals working with handicapped
persons in Region XI. This includes
Floyd, Johnson, Magoffin, Martin, and
Pike counties.
The workshop will be held at 7 p.m.,
tomorrow <Thursday) in the old Fellowship Hall of the First Baptist Church on
4th and Scott streets in Pikeville.
874-2832
JOB OPENING
Marketing Director.
Send resume to
P.O. Box 159
Harold, Ky. 41635
CARD OF THANKS
The family of John F. Wallace would
like to take this opportunity to thank
everyone for their help during the illness
and death of our loved one-those who
sent food, flowers, or just spoke comforting words. We deeply appreciate all of
you, especially the ministers and
employees of Columbia Gas Co. Your
kindness will never be forgotten.
THE RUBY WALLACE FAMILY
Miss Debra Karen Hall, daughter of
Lloyd and Amanda Hall, of the Goble
Roberts Addition, Prestonsburg, has
been chosen to be a finalist in the 1984
Miss Kentucky U.S. Teen Pageant to be
held in Bowling Green, April 28, at the
Holiday Inn Holidome at 7:30p.m.
The Miss Kentucky U.S. Teen Pageant
is the official state final to the Miss U.S.
Teen Pageant to be held in Alabama, July 18. Miss Kentucky U.S. Teen will
receive prizes including a round trip
flight to the national finals, $200 cash,
jewelry by Aubrey Creations, crown,
banner, trophy and other gifts.
Miss Hall, who is a junior at Prestonsburg High School, is being sponsored by
Action Petroleum, Inc., Prestonsburg.
2·22·2t·pd
Z·29-It.
ATTENTION TRUCKERSt
Jim's Tire Shop has
1100x22 tubes for $16.95 each,
1000x22 tubes for $14.95 each.
PHONE 285-5058
2 · · .,
THE DIRECTORS OF FLOYD COUNTY PUBLIC LIBRARY
CORDIALLY INVITES YOU TO
ATTE~D
A MORTGAGE BURNING CEREMONY
THURSDAY, THE FIRST OF MARCH
NINETEEN HUNDRED .AND EIGHTY-FOlJR
AT QUARTER PAST FOVR
FLOYD COUNTY PUBLIC LIBRARY
Berea College Offers
Rising Seniors Program
Berea College is accepting applications for its 1984 summer program for
outstanding high school students.
This summer's Rising School Program, open to students who have completed the junior year of high school with
a B average, consists of college-<:redit
courses in Wildlife Biology, Creative
Writing, Elementary German, Mathematics and Critical Issues for Black
Americans. The four-week session,
which allows students to do intensive
study in one subject, begins June 10 and
continues through July 6.
Each course offers one college credit,
the equivalent of four semester hours.
The per student cost of $204 covers room
and board, use of college facilities, insurance, health service and activities
fees . Some full or partial scholarships
are available, and each student will
receive pay for participation in Berea's
on-<:ampus work program. The college
library, tennis courts, pool and gymnasium, as well as planned activities,
are available.
Applications an<i additional information are available from Charles E.
Morgan, Rising Seniors Admission, CPO
2344, Berea College, Berea, Ky. 40404.
Students from Berea's nine-state admissions territory, especially those with
limited financial resources, will receive
preference in admission to the summer
program.
BRIDGES
IN THE OLD HALL BROTHERS FUNERAL HOME
MARTIN, KY.
PRESENTS
REBUILT BOATS
Like new and ready to go
-COME IN TODAY -SEE NEW BOATS
AT UP TO
BUYIRAX
GET ONE
40%
BUYIRAX
GET ONE
SAVE$1.00
ON2BAKED
POTATOES
FREE
famous RaH roast beef,
thin, piled high and
hot.
I
I
I
offer not valid with any other
nt or coupon. Sales tax charged
apphcable Offer good at
oarticic>atirlQ RAX Restaurants only.
Auffy baked potatoes with a
choice of 5tantalizing toppings.
FREE
Our famous Rax roast beef,
l sliced thin, piled high and
lserved hot
~~~~~q~
~~~~~q~
discount or coupon. Sales tax charged
where applicable. Offer good at
participating RAX Restaurants only.
1from
Offer good
3/13
DISCOUNT.
I
discount or coupon. Sales tax charged
where applicable. Offer good at
part1C1patmg RAX Restaurants only.
1m I
Offer good
from 3/20
3/26/84
1m
----- ----- -----
good thru
3/12/84
RESt
to
: - r ·3/19/84
Week One
FOR$2.89
I FREE
REGULAR I
2 BBC'SJM
ICED TEA
I WITHTHEPURCHASEOF
I FOR $2.89
ENDlESS SAlAD BARTM I
I
I with
I
I Offer good ~ OHer good
I from 3113
lfrom 3/20
.
This offer not valid with any other
d1scount or coupon. Sales ta>< charged
where applicable Offer good at
partic1pating RAX Restaurants only.
d1scount or coupon. Sales tax charged
where apphcable Offer good at
partictpattng RAX Restaurants only
RESt
RANTS
Week Three
Build your own masterpiece from
garden fresh ingredients and top
it with 1 of 6 salad dressings.
Served
ked tea.
White meat of turkey, slices of
crisp bacon plus tomato, lettuce
and mayonnaise.
This offer not valid with any other
RESt
RANTST:o
Week Two
2 TURKEY BACON
CLUB SANDWICHES
Offer good thru
3/12/84
RESt
Juicy roast beef, crisp bacon
land cheddary sauce on a comdusted roll.
ThiS offer not vahd wtth any other
~discount or coupon. Sales tax charged
where appllcable Offer good at
~participating RAX Restaurants only.
!e:
.....·------·--·-----.
RANT'>
I
to 3/19/84
RESt
~
I
to 3/26/84
North Mayo Trail
Pikeville, Kentucky
RESt
RANTS
• .
•
�~
Wednesday, February 29, 1984
The Floyd County Times
Sectton One, Pqe Eleven
USDA CHOICE
CHUCK
ROAST
PH: 478-5275
HAROLD, KY.
12-0Z. CAN
ARMOUR
TREET ....
99c IGA LARGE EGGS
PUNCH/LEMON LIME/ORANGE
GATORADE ·· ·· ··· · ···· ··· ···32-oz.Btt.
69C
3/$1
11--EV_A_P_O_RA_T_E_D_M_IL_K_.·~··_.· ·-··-·~-~.s.
TALL JERZEEFIELD
13-Dz.
___
BANQUET
2-LB.$2
BOX
•
3
79
CHICKEN DRUMSTICKS .................. LB.
C
4-0Z. BTL. .
6
5959
$1
HY-TOP BLEACH ................. .
G4-0Z. JAR
KRAFT ORANGE JUICE ........ .
2/89
C
VIENNA SAUSAGE ...... ~!'.
5-0z.
3/$1
16-0Z. CAN
BUSH PINTO BEANS .......... .
49-0Z. BOX
TIDE LAUNDRY DETERGENT ....
$19 9
FRYING
89C
fi9c
\l49c
,
C:tiiC:I(IEft lrtiiCitl!i ........................... LB.~
.
CHICKEN LIVERS ~ ...........
LB.
DERIND
$109
USDA CHOICE
$1 59
SLAB BACON ..... -.......................... LB.
CHUCK STEAK ......... _.................... LB.
IDAHO
FIR!iT CUT
POTATOES
PORK CHOPS
10-l.B. BAG
IGA
$149
FRYING
DOZEN
GRADE A
5c OFF LABEL ARMOUR
FRIED CHICKEN
BACON ENDS & PIECES .................... .
99 c
UltfR'
•
3-LB. BOX
GRANULATED SUGAR
urr$1.49 ~~~8-PAK, 16·0Z. BRS.
DIET PEPSI, PEPSI,
MTN. DEW, PEPSI FREE
$J69
PLUS
DEPOSIT
4/$1c
~~lf:TOES .......... L~ 75
RADISHES .
5X6-SIZE
•
•
•
•
DELiCious
c
APPLES._ .. _. __ .__ ._ .. aa~- 89
l-U.
Mrs. Amanda Whitten Adams celebrated her 100th birthday, Sunday, at
her home at Baker's Branch in Johnson
county. She has eight children, Denzil,
Jjershell, Robert, Clifford,. Jay P.,
~arcella, Hazel and Charles Whitten.
She has 36 grandchildren, 72 greatgrandchildren and three greatgreat-grandchildren.
Friends and relatives calling on her
throughout the day and presenting her
with gifts were Charles and Madeline
Whitten, Phyllis Henreqiues, Gladys
Mannix, Marcella Mills, Yvette Leslie,
Brenda Peek and Elizabeth Toth, of
Michigan ; Conley and Ruby Roach and
f~mily Teresa, Pamela, Connie and
1VIarce of Ohio· Hazel Meade and
Howa;d Meade', of Williamsport ;
Charles Estill Meade, of Ohio; Chad and
Fayetta Meade, of the Auxier Road ;
Granville and Casey Meade, of Hager
Hill; Jay P. Whitten, Mr. and Mrs. Randall Daniel and Mr. and Mrs. Jerry
Daniel, of Tutor Key; Sophia Fitzpatrick, of Van Lear ; Denzil and Hope
Whitten, Phillip, Linda, Bryan Keith and
Christopher Taylor Whitten and Denzil
~d Mary Whitten, all of Prestonsburg.
.
------~----
Family Group
Sets Potluck
A potluck dinner, sponsored by the Big
Sandy Family and Childbirth Education
Association, will be held Saturday,
March 3, at5:30 p.m. at the home of Pat
and Tim Hites in Prestonsburg. Persons
interested in family-centered materniJ;l care and support for families with in. nts and small children are invited to
attend and brmg a dish to share. For
more information, contact Pat Hites at
886-8786 or Ann Slone at 886-3863.
Lynn Branham, 14-year-old eighth
grader student at Harold Elementary,
won the Floyd County Education Association's annual spelling bee, spelling
down representatives from 15 other
schools in the county. She is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Steve Branham, of
Betsy Layne.
Miss Branham was presented a $50
check from the Floyd County Education
Association and will compete in the
Eastern Kentucky Education Association spelling bee in Ashland, March 24.
Runner-up was Tammy Johnson,
13-year-old daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
David Johnson, also of Betsy Layne,
who is an eighth grade student at Betsy
Layne Elementary.
.
Philip Dingus, director of pupil personnel, was pronouncer for the annual
bee and judges were Betty Flanery,
reading teacher and Debra Rollins,
learning disabilities teacher, both of
Allen Elementary, and Edith Hopkins,
retired teacher, of Minnie. The bee was
held at Allen Elementary School,
.,February 16.
CARD OF THANKS
The family of Betty Miller wishes to
thank everyone for their help and kindness in the recent passing of our dear
mother. We thank those who sent food
and flowers, also those who prepared the
grave. We deeply appreciate the Little
Nancy Regular Baptist Church and its
members, also Old Samaria Baptist
Church members, and the Regular Baptist ministers for their wonderful
preaching. We also wish to thank Dr.
Kent Gibson and the Wheelwright Clinic
staff, the fourth floor nursing staff at
H.R.M.C., the Hall Funeral Home for
their kindness and help. To all our
friends and neighbors, we thank and
love you all.
PRICES EFFECTIVE THRU MARCH 4.
NOT RESPONSIBLE FOR PRINTER'S ERRORS
WE HAVE FEED FOR LIVESTOCK.
WE WELCOME FEDERAL FOOD STAMPS.
OWNERS, HAROLD & ANN COOLEY.
The car that doesn't
shock you with
•
extra--cost options.
The Peugeot 5058.
So lavishly equipped is the Peugeot 5055 that
the only things you can add are an automatic
transmission and metallic paint.
The list of standard equipment goes on and
on: air conditioning, electric sunroof, power
steering and power brakes, AM I FM radio I
cassette player with four speakers, a central
locking system, cruise control, and so on.
Yet a few more reasons for buying a
Peugeot 5055.
Peugeot Automobiles-
built since 1889. The
second oldest auto maker in the world.
Test drive a Peugeot and see what 95 years of
engineering expertise can mean.
'12,563
Lease From '251 °
Pl'icedF_rom
2
~
PEUGEOT
Pikeville, Kentucky
+
Tax
Month
�Wedne.tay, February 29, 1984
The
County Times
Miss Trautner-Mr. McGuire Wed
Two Years Old
Nikki Croft, daughter of Mike and
Debbie Croft, of Columbus, Ohio,
celebrated her second birthday,
January 27, with dinner and a clown
cake. Nikki is the granddaughter of Mr.
and Mrs. lberay Johnson, of Wheelwright.
CELEBRATES FIRST BIRTHDAY
Miss Jackie C. Waddles celebrated
her first birthday, Sunday, at the home
of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. James A.
Waddles, Jr., of Prestonsburg.
Celebrating with her were her paternal grandparents, James and Phyllis
Waddles, of Middle Creek, maternal
grandparents, Dr. and Mrs. Ted
Sanders, of Prestonsburg, great-grandparents, Wayne and Daisy McCarty, of
Prestonsburg, and numerous relatives.
Paula Michelle Trautner, daughter of
Elder and Mrs. Paul T. Trautner, of Versailles, and Maurice Mark McGuire, son
of Mr. and Mrs. Tom 0. McGuire, Sr.,
of Prestonsburg, were united in marriage in a candlelight ceremony,
December 23, at the Lexington
Primitive Baptist Church. The bride's
father officiated at the double-ring
ceremony.
At the front of the sanctuary, the baptismal shelf held a large triangular ar·
rangement of white pine, magnolia, and
pink poinsettias behind which stood the
unity candle. Two brass candelabra
holding lighted white tapers and accented with pine, magnolia, and pink
bows flanked either side. Pink poinset·
tias were banked between their bases.
A cottage candle, pine, magnolia, and
poinsettias decorated each window.
Kim Cowgill, harpist, presented a
program of classical music, and during
the ceremony, two vocal selections were
performed acappella by Pamela
Trautner, sister of the bride.
On behalf of her parents, the bride was
given in marriage by her uncle, Harold
Fletcher, Sr. She wore her mother's
floor-length gown of pearl white satin
with iong, closely fitted sleeves tapered
to pomts over the hands and fastened
with satin covered buttons. The gown
was of princess style with a scalloped
neckline, featuring a deep front yoke of
Alencon lace embellished with pearls
and crystals. Extending from the yoke,
the front panel of satin was edged with
pearl and crystal embroidered Alencon
lace motifs spreading to the hemline.
Satin piping highlighted the back of the
dress at the bottom edges of the yoke
and extended center panel of the bodice
which was fastened with satin covered
buttons. Falling from the hipline, a bustle like effect was created by the fully
gathered back center panel of the skirt
which flowed into a chapel-length train.
A Juliet headpiece covered with Alencon lace, seed pearls, and crystals held
a fingertip veil edged with a narrow
band of matching lace.
The bride carried a cascade of bridal
white roses and stephanotis enhanced by
English holly and white pine foliage .
The maid of honor was Pamela
Trautner, sister of the bride.
Bridesmaids were Amy Hammonds, of
Danville, Bridget Salyers, of Lexington,
and Renee Smith, of Winchester. The
junior bridesmaid was Emily McGuire,
of Pikeville. niece of the groom. The
bride's attendents wore floor-length
gowns of wine tissue taffeta and burgundy velvet. The maid of honor carried a
triple-tiered posey drop bouquet of
sweetheart roses, miniature carnations,
snowflake poms. statice, English holly,
and boxwood foliage with contrastmg
velvet ribbon and she wore a hairpiece
of sweetheart roses The other att tendants carried iden.tical .double tiers
and wore na1rp1eces like tnat ot the
honor attendant.
Sarah McGuire, of Pikeville, niece of
the groom. and Tracy Ramey, of Versailles, were flower girls.
Dr. Tom 0 . McGUire, Jr., of Pikevi)\e.
served his brother as best man.
Groomsmen were Dennis Ashley, of
Leitchfield, AI Pelphrey, of Prestonsburg, and Kirk Tolle, of Maysville. The
junior groomsman was Patrick
Trautner, brother of the bride, and
Brian Hughes, of Lexington, and David
Pitts, of Prestonsburg, were ushers.
Carol Searcy served as wedding director. Judith York attended the guest
book, and Tara Cook presented wedding
programs to the guests.
A candlelight buffet supper was held
in the church's fellowship hall, which
was decorated with garlands of holiday
greenery, miniature white lights, and
pink bows. Wedding guests were entertained By Tim Mize, guitarist. The
tables were draped with coordinated
country provincial prints of pink, wine,
and wedgewood blue. Hostesses were
Marie Fletcher and Anna Lou Combs, of
Means, aunts of the bride; Jayne
McGuire, Pikeville, sister-in-law of the
groom , and Martha Featherston.
Rachael Fletcher, cousin of the bride,
and Shareese Simpson, Nicholasville,
served as rice bearers.
The bride is a graduate of Woodford
County High School. She attended Transylvania University and the University
of Kentucky, and is a member of Phi Mu
sorority.
The groom is a graduate of Prestonsburg High School. He attended Transylvania University and is currently
enrolled at the University of Louisville
Dental School He is a member of Delta
Sigma Phi fraternity.
After a wedding trip to New York
City, the couple is residing in Louisville.
Guests from a distance included Elder
and Mrs. Harold Fletcher, Jr., and Sonny, Tina, Justin, and Evelyn, of Benton,
and Mr. and Mrs. Michael Combs, of
Fort Lauderdale, Florida; Mr. and Mrs.
Waldo Smith, of Kingsport, Tennessee,
and Mr. and Mrs. Tom Baldridge, of
Dayton, Ohio; Elder and Mrs. Lasserre
Bradley, Jr., and Leanna, Peggy, and
Trevor, of Cincinnati, Ohio.
RETURN FROM HOLY LAND
The Rev. T.L. Biggs, pastor of the
Community United Methodist Church,
and Mrs. Biggs have returned from a
trip to the Holy Land which was spon·
sored by members of that church and
other friends here. During services Sunday evening, they showed slides and told
of their trip.
HOLD ANNUAL BANQUET
The annual Sweetheart Banquet, sponsored by the United Methodist Men of
the First United Methodist Church, was
held Friday evening, Feb. 17, with approximately 85 in attendance. Candlelit
tables-for-four were covered with white
cloths, with red napkins, carrying out
the Valentine theme. The Rev. Ted
Nicholas, pastor, Charles Neeley, director of youth, and Miss Kathy Harris,
along with several members of the
men's group and women of the Methodist Sewing Circle, assisted in serving.
Entertainment was furnished bv Miss
Llaurie Keller, the present "Miss
Ashland," who was assisted by Mark
Fontaine, in rendering a musical program.
Free Tax Help For Elderly
And Low Income In County
Free tax assistance for elderly and
low income taxpayers in Floyd County
will be available through April14. Two
sites will be staffed by volunteers from
the American Association of Retired
Persons (AARP), and one site will be
staffed by volunteer students from Prestonsburg Community College.
All volunteers either participate in an
IRS training program or receive special
tax instruction at their college. The
volunteers at the AARP sites will give
priority help to taxpayers 60 and older,
but will alslo give assistance to other low
income and handicapped persons of any
age. The Prestonsburg College site will
give assistance to any low income and
elderly taxpayers. All sites will help with
both federal and state returns.
Taxpayers coming to the sites listed
below should bring their tax packages
received in the mail, records of income
such as Form W-2, " Wage and Tax
Statement," Form W-2P, " Pension
Statement," information on deductions
and credits, and copies of last year's tax
returns.
Floyd County Public Library, Arnold
Avenue, Prestonsburg; Tuesdays and
Thursdays only, 10 a.m. - 3 p.m.
First Guaranty Bank, Martin, Tuesdays and Thursdays only, 10 a.m. - 2
pm.
Prestonsburg Community College,
Pike Technology Bldg., Bert Combs
Drive, Rm. P-203, Prestonsburg; Saturdays only, 10 a.m.- 12 noon.
VISIT MRS. COLLINS
Mr. and Mrs. Gorman Collins, Sr.
spent Sunday at Lackey visiting his
mother, Mrs. Mary Collins.
WOMAN'S CLUB TO MEET
The regular meeting of the Prestonsburg Woman's Club will be held tomorrow <Thursday) evening, at 7:30 at the
Emma Wells May Cultural Center. The
topic for this meeting will be "Education,'' and the club will have as speaker
Tom Whitaker, associate professor of
Art, at Prestonsburg Community College. Mr. Whitaker, a native of Puncheon Creek, in Magoffin County, will
discuss his background, and how he
went about his training for teaching art
in the area. He will have some of his
paintings on display, and will do a watercolor scene during his discussion:
CIRCLE MEETING SLATED
The Annie Allen Circle of the Irene
Cole Memorial (First) Baptist Church
will meet at the home of Mrs. Vivian
Fraley, next Monday evening, at 7
o'clock. Mrs. Ruby Garrett, president,
asks that all members and prospective
members make an effort to attend.
ANNOUNCE BIRTH
Mr. and Mrs. Michael Dye, of Prestonsburg, wish to announce the birth of
their second daughter, Stephanie
Michelle, who was born February 4 at
the Highlands Regional Medical Center.
Her grandparents ar~ Mr. and Mrs.
Ernest Balsley, of Louisville, and Mr.
and Mrs Robert Dye, of Pikeville .
Section
Twelve
REBEKAHS MEET
The regular meeting· of Miriam
Rebekah Lodge No. 31 was held Tuesday
evening, Feb. 21, with the noble grand,
Miss Kelly Sue Moore, presiding, and
conducting the business session. Those
who were ill were noted, and " get-well"
cards to be sent to them were signed.
Members welcomed back Mrs.
Virginia Goble, who had been ill. Mrs.
Goble was installed during the evenmg,
as inside guardian for this year. .
Reminders of important events were
given, and are to take place as follows:
The I.O.O.F. district meeting will be
held here March 10; the District No. 4
Rebekah meeting, at the Paintsville
R.E.C.C. Building, with Pleasant Valley
Lodge No. 116 as hostesses, March 17;
and an initiation will be held by the local
lodge during the latter part of March.
Members of Miriam Lodge have been
asked by District Deputy President
Wilma Castle to be in charge of a
memorial service for the members of
District 4 who passed away during last
year. This memorial will be held at the
school of instruction, with several
members helping to demonstrate different phases of the work of the order.
Following the meeting, a Valentine
party was enjoyed inthe lodge dining
room. Games were conducted by Mrs.
Sue Moore, and refreshments in keeping
with the Valentine season were served.
All game and door prizes were won by
Mrs. Jean Hickman.
Present for the meeting and party
were Kelly Sue Moore, Mabel Jean
LeMaster, Rebecca Bingham, Hope
Whitten, Sue Moore, Theckley Short,
Venelia Rinehart, Paulena Owens,
Virginia Goble, Myrtle Allen, Norma
Stepp, Willa Mae Branham, Effie
Hopkins, Nola Stepp, Jean Hickman,
and Helen Ormerod.
The next meeting will be next Tuesday
evening at 7 o'clock at the I.O.O.F. Hall.
IS HOSPITAL PATIENT
Mrs. Jennifer Harrison, of
Waynesburg, Ky., is a patient at Ft.
Logan Hospital, Stanford, Ky. Mrs. Harrison is the daughter of Wilbur and
Honey May, of Prestonsburg.
-,,A
smile
can be
affordable.'' \
RELY ON THE
PROFESSIONAL DENTIST
MEMBERS OF
DENTURES
STANDARD
DENTURES. . . . • . .
CHARACTERIZED
DENTURES. . . . . . .
$129
$169
.
PER UPPER
OR LOWER
PER UPPER
OR LOWER
OUR PLEDGE:
1. AFFORDABLE PRICES.
2. ONE-DAY SERVICE ON DENTURE REPAIRS AND RELINES.
3. AVAILABIUTY: FILUNGS, EXTRACTIONS.
4. NO SURPRISES; TREATMENT AND COST ARE DISCUSSED FIRST.
YOU DETERMINE THE AMOUNT OF SERVICE.
5. P£RSONAL AnENTION; OLD FASHIONED COURTESY AND CONCERN
ARE ASSURED IN THE OFACE OF A DAD MEMBER DENTIST.
6. HIGH STANDARDS.
DENTURE REPAIRS: RELINES ALSO AVAILABLE
ALLEN DENTAL CENTER
PHONE 606187 4-2020 ALLEN, KY.
DR. R. I. GOODMAN D.M.D.
DR. W. FU D.M.D.
It.
Of course, you can deposit
5
2,000 into your I.R.A.
But you don't have to!!
Design an I.R.A. you can afford. we have the affordable plan. Because we understand how hard
5 2,.000 is to come by-especially all at once.
I.R.A. made easy
contribute to your I.R.A. weekly, monthly, or any
other schedule you desire. Importantly, you get
all the tax advantages of the lump sum deposit.
I.R.A. reduces income taxes
Simply add up your I.R.A. contributions for that
tax year and deduct that total from your gross
income.
You still have time to reduce your taxes
for 1983.
u
'
AND EASTERN KENTUCKY TOO!
.
.
THE BANK -:BJ:· JOSEPHINE
Prestonsburg • Garrett • Harold • Allen • Wheelwright
Member F .D.I.C.
RE YOU CONCERNE
ABOUT THE DRUG PROBLEM
IN FLOYD COUNTY
.
If you are.parents of school age children, please plan to attend this meeting.
1\Aonday Evening, March 6 at 7:30 at the Floyd County Library
THIS MEETING IS BEING SPONSORED BY TI-E PRESTONSBURG KIWANIS Q.UB AND PRESTONSBURG AREA JAYCEES.
Kiwanis Club
�. Wednesday, February 29, 1984
DOCIA B. WOOO.S, SOCIETY EDITOR
RETURN FROM SOUTHERN TRIP
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas R. LeMaster
have returned from a trip of about 12
days to various parts of Florida and
North Carolina. They traveled west to
Walton Beach, Florida, for a visit with
Mrs. LeMaster's niece, Mrs. Barbara
Baker, and family, then to Orlando to
see Mr. LeMaster's aunt, Mrs. Bernard
Williams, and Major Williams, then farther south, to Margate, for a visit with
another of his aunts, Mrs. Dorothy Cunningham. On the east cost they traveled to Long Beach, N.C., for a visit with
Mr. and Mrs. Jimmy Douglas.
RETURNS FOR VISIT
Mrs. Florence Castle Ison, formerly
of this county, who now resides in
Benham, Ky., visited friends and relatives in Prestonsburg last week. She was
the houseguest of her niece, Mrs.
Charles F. Hughes, and was also the
guest of Mrs. Zelia Archer.
LEAVES HOSPITAL
Mrs. Chalmer Frazier, who was a patient for a time at the Highlands
Regional Medical Center following an
apparent heart attack, is now improving nicely at her home on Court street.
Mrs. Frazier's mother, Mrs. E.A. Stumbo, who has been sick, is also showing
improvement.
Lee Cecil celebrated his 89th birthday Jan. 28, and he and Mrs. Cecil
celebrated their 69th wedding anniversary on the following day. A dinner was
given in their honor at the Free Will Baptist Church of Boldman by their
children and grandchildren. Attending this event were ll:bout 50 persons, including their five children, Mr. and Mrs. Bill Ratliff, of Ashcamp; Edward
Cecil, of Owingsville; Mr. and Mrs. Joe Osborn, of Harold; Mr. and Mrs.
Homer Cecil, of Harold; Mr. and Mrs. Billie Williams, of Banner; 11 grandchildren and 14 great-grandchildren. Mr. and Mrs. Cecil have lived at Harold
for many years and are well-known citizens.
';J
World Day of Prayer
Observance Scheduled
The annual World Day of Prayer,
sponsored by the Local Churchwomen
and the Prestonsburg Ministerial Association, will be held Friday, from 10 a.m.
to 4 p.m., at the First United Methodist
Church here. Members of churches of
this area and the public are invited to
come for prayer, worship and meditation during this time. Mrs. James
Donahoe is in charge of arrangements.
GIVE SOMEONE A LIFT
.>END A BOUQUET OF BALLOONS
ALL OCCASIONS- DELIVERED
ANNOUNCE BIRTH
Mr. and Mrs. Neil Turner, of Prestonsburg, announce the birth of their second
child, second son, February 20 at the
Pikeville Methodist Hospital. The baby
has been named Matthew Kyle. The
maternal grandparents are Mr. and
Mrs. Robert L. Burchett, of Prestonsburg, and the paternal grandparents are
Mr. and Mrs . Bobby Turner, of
McDowell. The maternal great-grandmothers are Mrs. Anna Burchett, of
Prestonsburg, and Mrs. Priscilla Hager,
of East Point, and the paternal greatgrandmothers are Mrs. Mae Turner, of
Drift, and Mrs. Malta Howell, of Price.
YOUNG LADIES
Interested In competing In the
MISS FLOYD COUNTY PAGEANT
should contact Betty Slone at
886-8286, alter 5 p.m.,· Peggy
Kldd at 886-6264, or any other
member of the Prestonsburg 1
Junior Woman's Club.
Entry Deadline-March 3, '84
2-22-2l.
HIGHLANDS PLAZA
lttsa
LADIES'
LEE REG. JEANS
AU LADIES'
WINTER SPORTSWEAR
60%.70%oFF
$1798
LADIES' WINTER
SHOES AND BOOTS
ALL LADIES'
LINGERIE
60%
OFF
ALL PONY
TENNIS SHOES
$1
O%oFF
98
60%
R19.
taO
NOW
TENNIS SHOES
FOR MEN.1i3D ~;~LDREN
OFF
RECOVERING AT HOME
James Carter, III, son of Mr. and Mrs.
James Carter, II, is recovering at his
home following leg surgery at the University of Kentucky Medical Center,
Lexington, after being struck by a car
here, Feb. 15. Members of his family
were with him during his hospitalization.
70%
s350
ATIEND RITES
Among those who called at the Carter
Funeral Home and attended services for
Abe Shepherd, at the Shepherd cemetery at Pyramid recently were three of
his sisters, Mesdames Lulie Lockwood,
Nora Bailey, and Thelma Goodrigh, all
of Ohio. While here, they spent some
time visiting their sister, Mrs. Ora Lee
Wireman, and other relatives.
VISITED BY BROTHER
Mrs. Eva Hyden Hopson has as her
houseguest this week her brother, Doug
Fitzpatrick, of Garrett. Mr. Fitzpatrick
is recuperating after a recent heart
attack.
MEN'S
WINTER COATS
MEN'S
WESTERN BOOTS
HONORED ON BIRTHDAY
Mrs. Wanda Rodebaugh was honored
on her birthday, Thursday, February 23,
with a luncheon at the Western Sizzlin'
Steak House. Celebrating the occasion
with her were Mrs. Marcella Slone and
Kimberly, Mrs. Dwayne Rodebaugh,
Mrs. Dewana K. Robinson, David Kyle
and Gena Camille, and Mrs. Eileen
Campbell.
A decorated birthday cake was baked for Mrs. Rodebaugh by her daughter,
Mrs. Rayanna Spradlin, and she received a bouquet of red roses from another
daughter, Mrs. Susie Krasucki, of
Scotia, New York. Cards and telephone
calls from members of her family in surrounding states were also received, and
she was the recipient of many gifts from
those who attended her birthday luncheon, and joined her for refreshments
at her home.
FIRST CHILD BORN
Mr. and Mrs. Jerry Thompson, of Lexington, announce the birth of their first
child, a daughter named Brittany Paige,
on Feb. 13, at the Good Samaritan
Hospital, Lexington. Mrs. Thompson is
the daughter of Mrs. Otelia Smiley, of
Prestonsburg, and the late V.A. Smiley.
IS HAVI
MEN'S
WINTER PANTS
MEN'S
SUITS
YALUfS TO 1130.00
l
IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIDIDIIIIIIIIIIIIIllllmnnniDIIIIIIUIIDIIIIIIIIIIIllllllll
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Section One, Pase Thirteen
The Floyd County Times
For a children's book about
life in Eastern Kentucky from 1880
to 1910, we would appreciate any
recollections, anecdotes or access to
family photographs and journals. We
are also interested in games or toys
popular at that time.
Please write:
MOUNTAIN LAUREL
P.O. Box 112
Ii
§
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e
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i3
~1 umuoouwan::::.~m=:~:~~:.::HIImmu~oJ
READERS MUSIC PROGRAM
Miss Rebecca Haywood, of Falmouth,
was soloist during services at the First
United Methodist Church, Sunday morning. She was accompanied at the piano
by Davia B. Leslie.
UNDERGOES SURGERY
Miss Bonnie J. Bradley is improving
nicely at the Highlands Regional Medical Center following surgery there last
week.
PASTOR'S WIFE HONORED
Mrs. Kavin Collins, wife of the pastor
of the First Church of God, was honored
by women of the church with a stork
shower in Fellowship Hall there, Friday
evening. The colors of pink and blue
were used in the decorations and
refreshments . A large crowd was in attendance, and the honoree received
many useful gifts.
SECOND SON BORN
- r~ and Mrs. Woodrow Wells Allen, of
Overlaml L':!rk, Kansas, announce the
birth of their secu1"' o;on, Charles David,
born Friday, Feb. 24. ThP- paternal
grandparents are Woodrow and Mabel
Allen, of May's Branch, and the maternal grandparents are Mr. and Mrs.
James L. Brady, of Versailles, Kentucky.
RETURNS FROM HOSPITAL
Mrs. Eva Hyden Hopson has returned home after having knee surgery at St.
Joseph's Hospital, Lexington. Mrs. Hopson's daughter, Mrs. Polly Sparks, who
took care of her mother, and was the
guest of Mr. and Mrs. Guy Greer,
formerly of this county, while there, has
now returned to her position at the Floyd
County Health Department.
VISITS MOTHER
Jack Wells, student at Centre College,
Danville, spent a few days here recently with his mother, Mrs. Jack F . Wells,
and his sister, Miss Susan Wells.
HERE FROM SHELBYVILLE
Mrs. Kay Ann Wilborn, of Shelbyville,
was here last weekend for a visit with
her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Chalmer H.
Frazier, her grandmother, Mrs. E.A.
Stumbo, and other members of her family. Mrs. Wilborn who has taught for the
past several years in the Shelbyville
Schools has recently been appointed
director of the Division of School Improvement, State Department of Education, Frankfort.
ATTENTION: Descendents
& relatives of the late
Enoch & Calle Blair Howell
now planning a family
reunion sunday, May 27,
1984, Memorial Day week.e nd. RSVP requested. Call
Ray Howell, 886-1640;
Jean Adams, 886-3581;
Barry Howell, 886-8113.
CONCLUDES VISIT
Mrs. Otelia Smiley has returend home
after a visit with her daughter, Mrs.
Jerry Thompson, Mr. Thompson, and
baby daughter, Brittany Paige, in Lexington.
WICKES IS SPEAKER
Approximately 35 persons attended
the covered-dish dinner and program of
the American Association of Retired
Persons (A.A.R.P.l, Friday evening, at
St. James Episcopal Church. The guestspeaker was Monroe Wicker, formerly
of this county, now of Morehead. Mr.
Wicker who is chairman of the Kentucky
Legislative Committee, as it relates to
the A.A.R.P., listed several "Do's" and
"Don'ts" for A.A.R.P. members, along
with an informative discussion regarding the legislative program as it affects
this organization.
LUNCHEON HONOR GUEST
Mrs. Mary Zemo was honored on
Thursday, Feb. 23, with a luncheon, at
Jerry's Restaurant, given by friends in
commemoration of her birthday. Enjoying this event were the guest of honor
and Mesdames Rose Collins, Carol
Holland, Jan Chaffin, Juanita Reid, Debbie Reid, Dorothy Osborne, Sue Roberts,
Barbara Spurlock, Plurria Branham,
and Mae Brown. Following the luncheon, the group went to the home of
Mrs. Rose Collins, where decorated
birthday cake and other refreshments
were served, and the honoree opened
her gifts.
RECOVERING AFTER SURGERY
Mrs. Hazel Rice, of Highland Terrace,
is now at home with her sister, Mrs.
Goldia Vanderpool, of Webb Layne,
Kentucky, where she is recuperating
from open-heart surgery, performed at
St. Joseph's Hospital, Lexington,
February 3. Two of her other sisters,
Mrs. Ann Jacobson, of Chicago, and
Mrs. Thelma Coburn, of Highland Terrace, have also been with her.
VISITORS FROM LEXINGTON
Wm. B. Sturgill, his daughter, Miss
Mary Hartley, and Mrs. Hartley's
daughter, Miss Emmie Hartley, spent
Sunday with his mother, Mrs. Troy B.
Sturgill, and other relatives. Mrs.
Sturgill and her guests were joined by
another son, Barkley Sturgill, Mrs.
Sturgill, and their daughters, Misses
Dorothy, Patricia and Nancy, for lunch
at May Lodge.
OCCUPIES PULPIT
The Rev. Robert Wood, superintendent of the Kentucky Methodist Conference, was the guest-minister at the
First United Methodist Church Sunday
evening.
SPECIAL PURCHASE
CAROLE
sc
NYLON PANTY
REG. $2.00
SAVE $1.12
STYLE NO. 888
White only in size 5 to 10.
100% tricot nylon with a
100% cotton
odav's
best
buy!
.
BLOUSES
100% polyester
Reg. 12300-$6.99
Sizes 8 to 18
in assorted spring
shades. SLACKS
Elastic back. Putt on
style. 100% polyester
Gabardine
Reg. $18.00-$6.99
Size 10-20. A nice
Men's
Sizes 30 to 42
100% cotton
SWEET
SWEATS
From Levi
Athletic Club
HANES
BRIEFS
$419 ofPkg.3
Reg. $7.59 pkg.
Hanes...The name more shoppen know f01 high
quality than any other brand of underwear.
SAVE $3.60 per pkg.
ENTIRE STOCK
FALL AND WINTER
CHILDREN'S WEAR
75%oFF
Court and Arnold Streets,
Prestonsburg, Ky.
(
VIS4'
!J
OPEN DAILY 9:00 to 5:00 MON. THRU SAT.
FLOWERS PLACED
Flowers were placed on the altar of
the First Church of God for services ·
there Sunday morning by Mrs. Della
Herald, in memory of the birthday of her
husband, Ballard Herald. Flowers at the
First United Methodist Church for services there Sunday were for Mrs. Inez
May Hereford and Miss Elizabeth Lynn
Frazier, in commemoration of their
birthdays, and were placed there by
their families. A rose on the altar announced the birth of Matthew Kyle
Turner, to Neil and Diane Burchett
Turner.
KIWANIANNES MEET
The Prestonsburg Kiwaniannes met
Thursday, Feb. 23, at May Lodge for
their monthly luncheon-meeting. In the
absence of Mrs. Garnett Fairchild,
president, Mrs . Jane Bond, vicepresident, presided.
Mrs. Bond welcomed new members,
Mesdames Dolly Pettrey and Zelia Archer. Cards to be sent to Mrs. Myrtie
Davis and Mrs. Kathryn Frazier, who
have been ill, were signed by members.
Members who volunteered to work during the Heart Clinic at the Floyd County Health Department, April 24, were
Mesdames Orpha Meece, Dorothy
Osborne, Myrtle Allen, and Lucy Regan.
Mrs. Carolyn Ford, who, with her husband, Winston Ford, Jr., is in charge of
the St. Jude's Hospital's walkathon and
bike-a -thon here, asked that the Kiwaniannes help sponsor these forthcoming
events.
The next meeting will be Thursday,
March 22, at 12:30 p.m. Kiwanianne
Founders' Day will be observed at that
time.
Attending Thursday's luncheon were
Mesdames Rebecca Rasnick, Zelia Archer, Dolly Pettrey, J a ne Bond, Vera
Ford, Carolyn Ford, Stella Spurlock, Orpha Meece, Dorothy Osborne, Margaret
Alley, Lucy Regan, Ora Bussey, Myrtle
Allen, Jane Wallace, Stella Lafferty,
Elizabeth Ramey, Mary Lou Layne and
Docia Woods.
----------------------------~-------------------------------L------------------------~----
�_____..
Wedneeday, February 29, 1984
WANT TO BUY:
OLD FASHION, CLAW FEET, CURVED
FRONT GLASS CHINA CABINET.
PLEASE CALL:
886-3584 or 886-1510
2·29-ltpd
The Floyd County Times
USAA Award Winner
DEMocRAT ExEc. coMMITTEE
TO MEET, HERE, MARCH 6
REPEAL THE GREED BILL
AND SAVE TAXPAYERS MILLIONS
The Floyd County Democrat Executive Committee will meet at 7 p.m.,
Tuesday, March 6, in the Floyd County
Annex conference room .
MUSIC-CARTER-HUGHES IS
HAPPY TO ANNOUNCE THAT
JIM NECESSARY HAS REJOINED OUR SALES STAFF.
Senate Bill N103 (Legislative Retirement Bill), better known as the "Greed Bill" that became law
in the 1982 Legislative session as the following State Legislators voted IN FAVOR OF THE BILL by
overriding Governor Brown's veto of the bill.
This retirement bill for the Legislators provides up to $27,500.00 a year to retire on for working only
part time 60 to 120 days every two years.
Sixty·five (65%) of the Legislators can presently qualify for the $27,500.00 annual retirement benefits
if they serve in the Legislature for twenty years. If they serve for ten years the annual retirement
benefits would be $13,750.00. If a Legislator lived on the highest retirement benefits for twenty years
he could receive up to $550,000.00 in cash, not mention other medical and dental benefits he will receive.
JIM INVITES HIS MANY FRIENDS AND
'CUSTOMERS TO STOP IN AND SAY
HELLO. HE WILL ALSO ENJOY SHOWING
YOU OUR WIDE SELECTION OF NEW AND
USED CARS.
These same Legislators received a typical salary and expense allowance of $19,800.00 for 1983 which
will increase to $23,200.00 in 1984, for working part time 60 to 120 days every two years.
HOW THEY VOTED: SENATE BILL #103
-IN FAVOR OF THE BILL-
MUSIC-CARTER-HUGHES
cHEVROLET-BUIcK :~~~K~:~~~~1ESTONSBURG
SENATORS
2 22 3!.
SPORTS
/
The United States Achievement
Academy announced recently that Sally Huffman, Prestonsburg High School
student, has been named a 1984 U.S.A.A.
award winner in business education.
Sally, who was nominated for the national award by Mrs . Francis
Brackett, business education teacher
at Prestonsburg, will appear in the
Academy yearbook, published nationally.
The Academy selects USAA winners
upon the exclusive recommendation of
teachers, coaches, counselors or other
school sponsors and upon the standards of selection set forth by the
Academy.
Sally is a daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
John Huffman, of Prestonsburg, and
granddaughter of Mrs. Myra West, of
Dearborn Heights. Mich., and the late
Frona Compton, of Phoenix, Arizona .
G WORLD®
MENS, LADIES, BOYS
Jaycee Women
Receive Charter
Nylon
Velcro
Closures
Genuine Suede Trim
Cushion Arch & Insole
MENS 7-12
BOYS 2Y2- 7
LADIES 5 · 10
Grey I Pink
White I Lilac
Grey or Navy
Shoe Show
HIGHLAND PLAZA, PRESTONSBURG
The Prestonsburg Area Jaycee
Women attended the Winter All-State
meeting, Feb. 10-13, in Owensboro. The
meeting included a dance, breakfast
buffet, workshops, and an awards dinner where this newly formed club was
presented with their charter. Those in
attendance were President Margaret
Hunt, Vice-Presidents Kay Hale and
Jane Wallace, Treasurer Renita Haywood, and Pat Vincent.
In observance of National Jaycee
Week, President Hunt called a special
dinner meeting to inform those members that did not attend the meeting of
the developments at the All-State
Meeting. The next regular meeting will
be an orientation meet, March 8, at 6:30
p.m. at the Ky. Power Building, here.
CHILDS 11 - 2
INFANTS 6 - 10
Navy; Grey or
White I Lilac
Store Hours:
Mon.-Sat., 10-9,
Sun., 1-6
TUESDAY
IS DOUBLE STAMP
DAY!!
SHOP THIS WEEK AT
BESTWAY· AND $AVE!
PRICES GOOD THRU SUNDAY, MARCH 4, WHILE QUANTITIES LAST.
I
SecUon One, Paae Fourteen
.
.
I
.
FLAYOR-PERFECT MEATS
..
-
7
-
--
Robert Nelson Allen
Benny Ray Bailey
Fred Bradley
Dr. Ed Ford
Helen Garrett
Henry Lackey
Pat M. McCuiston
c
Roast
SENATORS
.
u.s.o.A~j19
CHOICE
REPRESENTATIVES DEMOCRATS
LB.
$1 3 9
Sliced
$169
Bologna .....
FISCHER'S FESTIVAL
AcCOoUNrT
Whiting
::~e~~~~
.
LB.$139
---MciNTOSH swm I JUICY
3 Lb. BID
IPPIIS
SWIET I JUICY CAUFOaMIA
1ava10ranaas
Fresh Broccoli
MUTIIITIOUS lUNCH
Ronny Layman
Randy Moore
Arthur L. Schmidt
Ken Harper
Edward L. Holloway
Albert Robinson
-ABSTAINED FROM VOTINGDEMOCRATS
DEMOCRATS
REPUBLICANS
Clarence D. Noland, Jr.
Raymond Overstreet
Elvin E. Patrick
Tom Riner
Dan "Mala"o" Seum
James B. Yates
J, R. Gray
Louis Johnson
Paul W. Richardson
We urge you, the taxpayer, to contact your Legislator and ask him or her to repeal the Greed Bill
law now. Call Legislative Message Center 800-372-2985.
--:-If this law Is not reeled by these Legislators In this 18sslon of the Legislature then the voters may
use the above lntermetlon to take the necessary action to vottt out of oHice the Legislators who will
benefit from this bad law.
8149
I OZ. HYDE PARK
Shredded Cheese ~
ggc
Cinnamon Rolls . . . . . ..
9.5 OZ. HYDE PARK
40 OZ. DINTY MOORE
Beet Slew. .
32 OZ. MRS. BUTTERWORTH'S COMPLETE
82~
ggc
Pancake Mix.. . . . .... . ..
spa Pancake SyruP..... . . .9 c
age
·
Frozen Wallles.~r'!.~
ilaiiiiiuriirKiielaer. . $1°9
12 OZ. MRS. BUTTERWORTH'S
FisirFAilielsHY FISH STICKS OR
12 OZ. DOWNY FLAKE
-
16 OZ. REI. OR NO SALT
DEL MONTE
HYDE PARK 12 OZ. IUnERMILK
BISCUitS
~4/89c
12 OZ. BREAKFAST OF CHAMPIONS
=r a, 29
59
39
_Ju_lc_a_
. . . . ._.=_
. ~- __ ,_t_he_c_ob_S1~
PR... '"- CE
Frliir'CiiiCien ioiSQIIICk
GnREENoGIAnNT
199
REPUBLICANS
REPRESENTATIVES
Richard Fryman
Louie R. Guenthner, Jr.
FROZEN
:~:~~~.... Lb.$129
oLb.
Potatoes
_...,$
H. Ramsey Morris, Jr.
Roger Noe
Carl C. Perkins
Charles 0. Petty
Dottie Priddy
Kenny Rapier
Bobby H. Richardson
Frank J. Smith
Phillip Stone
Gregory D. Stumbo
Sam B. Thomas
David H. Thomason
David L. Van Horn
Jimmy White
Aubrey Williams
IOLD MEDAL
25 Lb. Flour
~~~49=
12 OZ. PKG. FISCHER'S
oraln~~CAN$
April 15, 1982
(Date passed)
William Donnermeyer
James R. Dunn
Lewis Foster
Benny Handy
Roy Joe Head
Carl R. Hi-nes, Sr.
Robert A. Jones
Thomas M. Jones
Carolyn Kenton
Mae Street Kidd
Jim LeMaster
N. Clayton Little
Marshall Long
Terry L. Mann
William K. McBee
Gerta Bendl
AI Bennett
Donald J. Blandford
· Dr. Walter Blevins, Jr.
David E. Boswell
William T. Brinkley
Jerry Bronger
Ray 0. Brown
James E. Bruce
Thomas J. Burch
Lloyd E. Clapp
L. E. "Gene" Cline
Ronald R. Cyrus
Hoover Dawahare
Herbert Deskins, Jr.
16-0Z. FISCHER'S !EXCEPT BEEF)
::!s ........ 99c
LB.
REPUBLICANS
Vegetables
59c
Fish ....... LB.
FRESH LEAN
W. L. Quinian
John A. "Eck" Rose
Gus Sheehan, Jr.
Woodrow Stamper
A.D. "Danny" Yocom
Doug Moseley
Eugene P. Stuart
s1 19
U.S.D.A. CHOICE
::~!~~~
Bill "Fibber" McGee
Danny Meyer
Frank Miller
Michael R. Moloney
Delbert S. Murphy
Ed O'Daniel
Georgia M. Powers
Gene Huff
John D. Rogers
FISCHER'S 16 OZ.
\~U\tl!tb~"'
April 14, 1982
(Date passed)
DEMOCRATS
s299
SMUCKER'S 3 LB. JAR
Grape JellY
$149
(01111
~Yt~~~
$159
y, GAUON P£T
ICE CREAM .......... ..
LARGE EGGS .. .........
99c
8159 COOKIES ... .......... ...89
·
•
•
Brownie Mix........... 1
15 CT. SHEER STIENGTH
j(·iroyGEI:i1tN ... 3/89c-
11119
Trash Baas.. . . ..... . . . . •£
16 OZ. BARBARA DEE
PEPSI, DIET PEPSI, PEPSI
$17 9
FREE, MT~DEW . . l&.OZ. RETURNABl£S
6 OZ. NINE UVES ASSORTtD
CAT FOOD ......... .2179
HI-DRI J MBO ROLL
.3/89C
. sac
ggc
C,
C
apar Towels
2/99c
�The Floyd County Times
Wedne.tay, February 29, 1984
Section Two, Pace One
Pageant Winner
Auxier Club To Discuss
Proposed Water Rate Hike
The Auxier Community Development
Club will hold a special meeting at 6
p.m., Monday, March 5, at the Auxier
Grade School lunchroom to discuss the
proposed water rate increase by the
Auxier Water Company.
Everyone is welcome to attend and
voice their opinion.
.................................. ...
~
I ·\ \;· -,.._~
~
~~~~:
..::::: ~-.:;.•~~~~
oooooou.. uoooo..ooooooouuoooolloo• •" l
Apple lie Business System: 64K computer with extended 80 column card,
2 disk drives, monitor, and Apple
Dot Matrix Printer.
Rebecca Ann Kidd, six-year-old
daughter of Garland and Anna Kidd,
recently participated in and won the
Valentine Pageant held at Allen Central
High School. She also participated in the
Miss Winter Time and Miss Eastern Ky.
Pageant and won Tiny Miss Winter
Time. Her sponsors were Taylor's
Studio, Family Drug and Hindman
Promart.
The SINGING COOKES from Kingsport, Tn.
Will be in CONCERT at
the Allen United Methodist Church
Allen, KV.
MARCH 4TH, 7:00 P.M.
Sleep better for less
on a waterbed.
I
/
I
Enjoy the even support and
soothing comfort of flotation sleep.
Forget about the myths of waterbeds being too heavy; making you
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Wake up rested and ready for the challenge of the new
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35 miles!
*ASK ABOUT OUR 15 NIGHT FREE TRIAL!
• 70% DISCOUNT WITH THIS AD •
CUSTOM WATERBEDS
MAIN STREET, MARTIN, KY.
PHONE: 285-9400, CALL COLLECT.
Hours: Mon.-Fri. 11 to 7, Sat. 11 to 9, Sunday 12 to 6
I
Apple III Business System: 256K
computer with built-in disk drive,
ProFilerM hard disk drive with Catalyst~
monitor, 12 -month AppleCare5 M
Carry-In Service Plan.
Save your business
abundle.
Weights, Measures Week
Scheduled For March 1-7
When you make a purchase at the
grocery store, fill your tank with gasoline at the service station or buy any product by weight or measure, you think the
transaction is only between you and the
vendor.
"There's always a third person involved in every consumer transaction, even
though it may not be apparent," said
Kentucky Agriculture Commissioner
David E. Boswell.
That third person is the weights and
measures inspector from the Kentucky
Department of Agriculture. He checks
all weighing and measuring devices used in sales to the public.
"This third person is always present
in spirit to protect both the buyer and the
seller," Boswell said. "The buyer is protected by receiving full measure. The
merchant is protected from giving away
part of his profits in overweight or
overflow.
"Most people take the accuracy of
scales and measuring devices for
granted," the Commissioner added.
"But it actually takes our inspectoPS
thousands of hours each year to make
the inspections ne<;_ei)Saty to insure his
accuracy.
"Because accurate weights and measures are so essential to everybody, I am
very proud to honor these consumer protection officials during National Weights
and Measures Week, March 1-7,"
Boswell said.
The theme of the 1984 observance is
"Weights and Measures-Equity in the
Market Place-." National Weights and
Measures Week has been observed for
the past 26 years during the first week
in March to focus attention on the work
of Weights and Measures officials.
The days were selected by weights
and measures officials and the Scale
Manufacturers Association for their
historical significance. On March 2, 1799,
President John Adams signed the nation's first weights and measures law.
Introducing the Apple® lie and Apple III Business Systems.
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mark ofApple Computer Inc. © 1983 Apple Computer Inc.
Pre-register now for Computer Workshop.
AbAcus
CoMpUTER SToRE,
INc.
101 W. COURT STREET ,PRESTONSBURG, KY. 41653
(606) 886-8447
RESULTS OF
QUESTIONNAIRE
I would like to thank each and every
person who responded to the survey.
1 received over 500 questionnaires
that were returned, and the results are
as follows:
LUNCHEON PARTY
Following services at the First
Presbyterian Church, Sunday, Mrs.
Otela Smiley, Mr. and Mrs. Sonny Goble, Mrs. Sue Goble Martin and granddaughter, Heather Ousley, enjoyed
lunch together at a local restaurant.
,------~-------------~-~-------------~---·
I
(1.) Do you believe that education is the most
lli !2 UNDECIDED ::
72% 23%
5%
1
(2.) Do you favor competency testing for students
78% 16%
6%
·:
(3.) Do you favor competency testing for teachers?
57% 40%
3%
I
:
(4.) Would you support a tax raise for edUcation?
60% 27%
11%
:
:
(5.) Do you support a tax on unmined minerals?
43% 42%
15%
:
I
:
(6.) Would you still support such a tax if it would
create more unemployment and raise utility rates?
24% 60%
16%
:
:1
(7.) Do you support a lottery?
62% 30%
8%
I
;
.:
I
First Anniversary
,nlAN/1YfJUSLUR
16-0Z. LOAVES
RAINBO
BREAD
Reg. 2/$1.0 9
You Save
11.18
I$
4 1
• FROM THE BAKERY •
FRESH HOT
YEAST
DONUTS
Reg. $2.29
EGGS
99~
NOW
BUY ONE AT REGULAR PRICE
GET A SINGLE-DIP CONE
FREE
WHOLE
MILK
1 ~LON
5 9
:
1
1
1
:
RAINBO
I
SNACK CAKES
:
HONEY BUN. CINNAMON ROLL
99~N
24 FLAVOR
HAND-DIP ICE CREAM
FLAV-Q-RICH
Reg. 49c Each
5
4/ 1
DIET PEPSI,
PEPSI, PEPSI FREE
MOUNTAIN DEW
$16 9
8-18-0Z. RETURNABLE BOTTLES
important issue facing the 1984 General Assembly?
(8.) Do you believe coal trucks should continue
to use tarps?
(9.) Do you believe coal trucks should pay
additional money for hauling overweight?
(10.) Do you believe Coal Operators should pay
additional money for allowing overweight hauling
'I
:
85%
6%
9%
I
I
1
70% 22%
8%
I
I
70% 22%
8%
:
~----------------------------------------·
During the 1984 General Assembly, I will continue this weekly column: If any of you have any comments or questions about
legislation, you may write or call.
My mailing address Is:
STATE REP. GREGORY STUMBO, CAPITOL ANNEX,
FRANKFORT, KY.
THE TOLL FREE NUMBER TO FRANKFORT IS 1-800-372-7181.1 will be at home
or at my office in Martin, Ky. on weekends. Those numbers are: 886-9953,
Home, and 285-9228, Office. Please feel free to call or write about your
concerns since It Is your government.
Thank You,
GREG STUMBO
�Wed.-.day, February 29, 1984
The Floyd County Times
Fishing Tips From Bassin' Buddies
NOTICE
Floyd County Solid Waste, Inc.
will be moving from their present location, to
the Floyd County Court House Annex Building,
room number 101.
If you have any question call
886-8060 Billing or 285-5133 Landfilf
David C. Cooley, Director
2 293t
DENTAL TIPS
Dr. H.G. Salisbury
RICHMOND PLAZA,
PRESTONSBURG
PHONE 886-2676
ANKYLOSED TEETH
Q. What is an ankylosed tooth?
A. An ankylosed tooth is one which is partly or wholly
fused to the jawbone. Sometimes the entire tooth is
submerged in the gum and can be seen only by X-rays.
In other instances, the tooth may erupt partially, then
stop where it is. The condition may not be noticed until
the teeth on either side of it have fully erupted. Other than
its stunted size, the tooth can look perfectly normal, for
the enamel looks fine. The X-rays tell a different story .
If the ankylosed tooth is a baby tooth, it must be removed to allow eruption of the permanent tooth beneath it.
However, when a permanent tooth seems to be ankylosed, the dentist will very likely wait and watch to see if
it moves into proper position on its own. It may not present any pr9blems whatsoever.
It's Roller
Skating
Fun Time at
Music Rollerland
East Point-Phone 789-3904
Open Wednesday thru Saturday,
7:30 to 10 p.m.
Two sessions Sunday, 2-5,
no boys over 12: girls, all ages,
5:30-8:30, all skat_e
Skating classes
Thurs., 6-7
II you can't skate,
we'll teach you.
If you con
we'll t-ch you
to slcote better.
Instructors-
Roller Bear
Larry Clark
Gina Goble
Rt. 1428, Easr Point, halfway between
Paintsville • Prestonsburg
Available for reservations anytime, other
than regular hours-Call 789-3904
Fined
82-P-213
Patrick L. LayIa 1. Winvate
larry Wi11911fe
final
83-P-151
Edgar Herald
Mary A. Heralcl
Annual
13-P-291
Mauie laach Heywoed
Artl!ur W. Heywoed
final
78-P-036
John Shephenl
Ashland Shepherd
Annual
81-P-226
Lottie 'Johnson
Ruth Branham
fino I
82-P-212
Wando T. Hall
Phillip Moore
FinoI
81-P-130
Bee Hays
Peggy Jo Clark
77·1'·022
Charles I. Combs
Priscilla Combs Henry
Annual
flANK DEROSSm, Clerk
Floyd Circuit Court
By: Nora McCormick, D.C.
Spread Of Avian Flu
Said To Be Slowing
The latest report from the U.S.
Department of Agriculture indicates
that an avian flu epidemic hitting
poultry flocks in the Northeast may be
under control , according to state
Agriculture Commissioner David E.
Boswell.
Over a two-day period in late
February, no additional birds in the affected areas had to be destroyed. This
indicates the spread of the disease has
been slowed, Boswell said.
Prior to that time, more than 11
million chickens and turkeys were
. destroyed in the affected states, Pennsylvania, Maryland, Virginia and New
Jersey. The USDA has paid total indemnities of more than $22.6 million for
birds, feed and other materials which
had to be eradicated.
The disease has not appeared in Kentucky. However, officials took action to
avert a spread into the Commonwealth
after an outb'r eak occurred in January
in nearby Virginia.
"The slowdown is a very positive sign
for Kentucky's poultry industry,"
Boswell said. "I think we can breathe a ·
little easier now that the disease seems
to have been contained."
Earlier this month, Boswell created
an 11-member task force to deal with the
disease in the event it did strike Kentucky. The group prepared step-by-step
procedures to prevent the disease from
spreading throughout Kentucky flocks
or for isolating it if an outbreak
occurred.
The task force consists of representatives from the Department of Agricult~, the poultry industry, the University
of Kentucky, USDA, the Department of
Fish and Wildlife, a pathologist and a
veter.j.narian.
" I'm glad we haven't had to _u se the
procedures, and I hope we won't in the
future," Boswell said. "But having the
plan and the task force will enable Kentucky to handle any eventuality."
CARD OF THANKS
The family of Stella Crum would like
to acknowledge with heartfelt thanks, all
those who sent food ,. flowers, those who
gave donations and the Church of Christ,
on Arkansas Creek for the use of the
church for the funeral services. A
special thanks to the Church of Christ
ministers, and the doctors and nursing
staff of Highlands Regional Medical
Center, the pallbearers, to the Floyd
Funeral Home for their kind and efficient service, and to all who prayed for
Music
Rollerland
NOTICE OF FILING OF SETTLEMENTS
I, Frank DeRossett, Clerk of the Floyd Circuit Court, do hereb;Y certify
that the following settlements of estates has been filed in the Floyd District
Court, and anyone desiring to take exceptions to said settlements must do
so on or before March 30, 1984 at 10:00 a.m.
By ALAN SUBLf;TT
lower lip. Try not to tip the fish on its
"Catch and release." If that sounds to side and do not lay it on abrasive areas,
you like a kid's game , you couldn't be such as carpet in the boat. This will
more wrong , This is a program being remove a protective coating from the
practiced by thousands of fishermen
fish ; without this protective coating the
· throughout the country.
fish will become susceptible to disease.
A fisherman's releasing part or all of
For best results, the fish needs to be
his catch is not only an inexpensive released as sooo as possible. Should you
method, but probably the most produc- wait until the end of the day to release
tive way of restocking our streams and your catch, the chance of survival is
lakes.
decreased. Release the fish one at a time
Most fishing clubs, including the and notice their reaction. If the fish canBassin' Buddies, make it a practice to not swim away on its own, hold it upright
release the entire catch of a tournament. , and move it back and forth in the water
This enables adult fish to continue their very slowly. This will allow water to flow
reproductive cycle.
through its gills and build up its oxygen
If a fish is to live after being caught, intake. It may take a couple of minutes
merely thorowing it back into the water to revive the fish, so don't give up.
will not do. Should you hook a fish deep
All fish need to be released very
in the stomach, do not attempt to pull the carefully, even the small 6- and 8-inch
hook free. Cut the line close to the hook,
bass that so many people haphazardly
release the fish and Mother Nature will throw around ; these are the Junkers of
remove the hook.
'tQ.'inarrow .
When handling the fish , hold it by the
If you have never released your catch,
try these tips, andexperience another of
the many enjoyable pleasures that
fishing has to offer.
Tim Sammons
Sundays
Section Two, Pace Two
LUMBER & HOME
72602
24"x64"
''VANTASTIC!
72546
84 Interior
White Flat
1!1
WALL PAINT
33176
46701
2 Gallon
Interior / Exterior
Terra
~
47808
Sculptured .. . .......... . 'each
building supplies
fRAMING
LUMBER
Slza
2"x4"
4'x8' Pre-Finished
10'
12'
14'
PANEUNG
16'
1.89
2.29
2.58
2.89
3f!t
2"x4" Pre-Cut
584
IJ4' New Cut Cedar. . . . . . . .
~edl
JOINT
COMPOUND . . .
59201
00123
lfc'' Birch Firelight. . ... .
1...
'each
4!1
Mix
8 TO 6 PM.
Phone 886-3861
1.89
2.59
3.24
133
each
649s
gallon
:.::G........ 6~~~
~A Certified
-
DO&WOOD
5'-6'
(753«) Whitt Dogwood. (75375) Red
Maple. (75380) Red Dtllcloua Apple.
(7537Bl Alberta Peacll
f!A4
YOUR CHOICE •••••••••••••• U'iaeh
753<15
Now your Authorized Valley van Dealer.
OPEN:
2"x4"
Southern Yellow Pine 1/2"x4'x8'
Pink Dogwood . • • . • . • • . • • .
Luxurious
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12'
59222
5'-6'
price!
10'
5/32" Mushroom Hickory
5-SPEED OR AUTOMATIC.
LOW
Slza
8'
STUDS....... . .....
each
75351
5'6'
Bradford Pm . . . . . . . . . . . .
LEASE OR BUY.
'84 ·cHEVY VAN
CIR4
Ulach
1,..
Utach
~~~~ ~l·a·t . .. . .. . .... . . 111!:!h
TREATED
LUMBER
20492-01
59208
CASH DEALI
•
Celotex
#215 White Fiberglass
ROORNG SHINGLES
00885
Fibered
FOUNDATION &
ftR4
ROOF COATING ....•.•• .::J! gallon
24" Interior Lauan
Pre-Hung
DOORS
38!14--.a
Bored with casing.
54920
30".......
COMPLETE
448
1130 Bright Brass
Tubular
484
PRIVACY LOCK .. .. . .. . ..
PASSAGE LATCH . . . • . . . . •
WILLIAMSON, W.VA.
0
PAINTSVILLE, KY.
U.S. 52 and Chattaroy Rd.
(304) 235·3884
Rt. 23 South at Hagerhill Exit
i606) 789-8084
Wnkdtra 7:00 t.m. ta 8:00p.m.
<untaya 8:00 a.m. 11 5m p.m.
Sundeya 11:00 e.m. ta 5:00 p.m.
Wt rmrvt1he right to limit quantlllu.
each
each
WAREHOUSE/SHOWROOMS
0
'eact~
1182 Bright Brass
Tubular
vanderbilt
conversion
$17,900
· · ' · ' '· · · 21.84 each
33990
CBUNG TILE
JUST RECEIVED 2 TOYOTA VANS
Black or
s
gray & red. UNDER 20,000
18. 84 each
4~n
2'x4' Lay-In
3'·4' White
JUST RECEIVED 2 CUSTOM
CEDAR CREEK CONVERSIONS
• •· · · · · ·•
72553 · · • • ' • · · · • 20.84 each
36"x64"
JENNY WILEY TOYOTA
TOYOTA OUALI
16.84 each
35"x64•
AT THE BARGAIN CHAMPION-
$12,500
' · • · · ·' • •
726 16
THE CRUM FAMILY
II
f5.84 each
30"x64·
us.
BUSINESS IS
· ' ·•· ' •·•
72609
26"x64"
•
�Wednesday, February 29, 1984
The Floyd Count)' Times
WHEELWRIGHT'S NO. 12 was caught in a mid-air leap as he
launched one during the Trojans' 59-51 win over Dorton at
Wheelwright's homecoming game last week.
W'Wright 1984 Homecoming Queen
THE REBELETTES of Allen Central lost a heartbreaker,
56-54, to the Clay County Cougars, last Thursday night. The
Rebelettes will face the winner of the WheelwrightPrestonsburg game in the district tournament here, Friday
night.
Betsy Layne Ends
Season Winning Two
Prestonsburg Is Host Tonight
To 58th District Showdown
Stats by MALETA CAMPBELL
The Betsy Layne Bobcats raised their
record to 23 and 4 with a 50-44 win over
Mullins, last Tuesday, then went of) to
end the season on a high note as they
defeated Virgie, 58-48, in thier last game
of the season, Friday night.
Betsy Layne-Levi Hamilton, 16; Jeff
Campbell, 19; Dwayne Kidd, 6; Jimmy
Parsons, 2; Chris Conn, 2; Duran Hall,
3; Brett Meade, 2.
Mullins-Green, 4; McCoy, 7; Hall, 4;
Friend, 2; Conley, 10; Clevinger, 8;
Williamson, 5; Tibbs, 2; Compton, 2.
Betsy Layne-Virgie game scoring
was:
Betsy Layne-Levi Hamilton, 17; Jeff
Campbell, 12; Dwayne Kidd, 4; Chris
Conn, 14; Duran Hall, 8; Brett Meade, 3.
Virgie-Gerald Osborn, 14; Jeff
Damron, 4; Stan Elswick, 10; Lonnie
Howe, 6; Bart Osborn, 3; Brent Thomas,
5; Tom Burke, 6.
Betsy Layne will play the winner of
the McDowell-Allen Central game, Friday night, in the district tourney, here.
The 58th district basketball tournament for both boys and girls will get
under way tonight (Wednesday) at the
Prestonsburg High School gymnasium.
In the opener at 7 p.m., in the girls'
bracket, Wheelwright will take on the
host team, Prestonsburg. In the boys'
division Allen Central will face
.1\kDowell High at 8:30. Thursday night
at 7 p.m., Betsy Layne girls will meet
McDowell at 7 p.m., while in boys' team
play the Wheelwright Trojans will vie
with the Prestonsburg Blackcats.
Prestonsburg and Betsy Layne boys
drew first-round byes.
In the Friday round of play for boys,
the winner of the Allen Central- .
McDowell game will play the Betsy
Layne Bobcats.
The girls' game at 7 p.m. will see Allen
Central pitted against the winner of the
Wheelwright-Prestonsburg game.
' Saturday night's action will see the
girls' championship game played at 7
p.m., followed by the boys' title matchup
at 8:30.
Section Two, Paae Three
THOUGH THE DAREDEVIL'S Tim Newsome hit for two with
his jumper during the McDowell-Hazard game, Saturday
night, the Bulldogs held on for a tough 55-53 win.
PHS Homecoming Queen
Sure Sign of SpringBass Tourney Slated
Photo by Betty Hyden
Miss Nawonia Hall was crowned 1984 Basketball Homecoming Queen at
ceremonies held between games last week when the Trojans played Dorton.
Miss Hall was escorted by Johnny Isaac.
Rebelettes Fall
To Clay County
By BETTY HYDEN
The Allen Central Rebelletes had their
hands full tangling with the Clay County Cougars, last Thursday night at Allen
Central High.
Clay County jumped out to an early
lead, 27-19, in the first half. Very few
fouls were committed by either team,
nd both were displayed the philosophy
that a good offense is the best defense.
The Rebelettes shot six of 12 free
throws for 50%, and the Cougars shot
seven of 14 for 50%. Allen Central came
back after halftime to outscore Clay
County, 18-14, and a basket by Lisa
Green tied the game at 35 all. Clay County came back in the fourth quarter, scoring three quick baskets, but Allen Central hung in there to tie the game with
two minutes left in the game. The
Cougars wound it up with an exciting
56-54 victory over the Rebelettes, raising their record to 17-5, while Allen Central drops to 18-11.
Leading scorer for the Cougars was
Missy Davidson with 16 points, followed by Lotta Hobbs with 12; Gill Carnahan, 8; Missy Carnahan, Liliie Mae
Bowman, ana U1ane tlaKer, With 7 each.
For the Rebelettes, Belinda Click led
all scores with 20 points; Lisa Green, 13;
Robin Roope, 10; Rhonda Combs, 7, and
Missy Bentley with 4.
It takes, on average, 37 seconds to deal
a deck of 52 cards.
W'wright Homecoming
Sees Trojans Winner
By BE'ITY HYDEN
The Wheelwright Trojans came
through with a 59-51 win over Dorton to
make their homecoming festivities a
victory celebration, too.
Both teams started out slow in the first
quarter with Wheelwright leading, 9-4.
The Trojans quickly got their offense going in the second quarter, outscoring
Dorton by 10 points and went into halftimewith a 27-17lead. Dorton, trying to
make a game of it, came within four
points but Wheelwright pulled away and
stayed out front for the win.
David Hall led all scores with 24
points; Charlie Martin had 17; Jeff
Boyd, 6; James Hall, 5; Tony Hutton, 4,
and Jackie Hall, 3.
Dorton was led in scoring by Freddie
Mullins with 15 points, followed by Joey
Goodson, 10; Donnie Hall, 8; Chris
Wright, 7; Gary Cantrell, 6, and Shannon Beverly, 5.
Homecoming ceremonies were held
between games when Miss Maunia Hall,
escorted by Johnny Isaac, was crowned Wheelwright's 1984 Homecoming
Queen. Her attendants were Sabrina
Curry escorted by Charlie Martin, Beth
Hall, escorted by Delmas Johnson, Ronda Johnson, escorted by James
Sweeney; Sharon Meade, escorted by
James Hall. Miss Hall was crowned by
last year's queen, Miss Dena Curry, who
was escorted by Tim Cole.
Sabrina Hall was flower girl, and Kelly Johnson was crown bearer.
Cabin fever got you down? Well, one fishermen catching impressive stringers
sure cure for cabin fever is spring, and of bass."
one sure sign of spring is the scheduling
A $1,000 first prize is guaranteed. In
of bass fishing tournaments. The first addition to first, cash or merchandise
open tournament in Eastern Kentucky
prizes will be awarded to at least the top
will take place in less than eight weeks.
ten finishers. According to officials of
The Grayson Lunker Hunters Bass the Grayson club, at least 75% of all enClub, of Grayson, will sponsor a bass try fees will be returned to the parfishing buddy tournament out of the
ticipants in the form of cash awards. At
Bruin Ramp on Grayson Lake from 8 this point, club officials estimate the
a.m., until5 p.m., Saturday, April7. The total cash payback will be from $2,500
event will be open to the public with a 'to $3,500.
guaranteed $1,000 first place purse, plus
The tournament is open to the public.
other cash and merchand:iS'e awards.
Registration may be made by mail, or
Those that hav~ not fished Grayson in person at the Bruin Ramp before the
Lake in a few years, or those that will tournaments 8 a.m. starting time. Club
be fishing the lake for the first time, are officials pointed out participants starin for a pleasant surprise. The 1400-acre ting positions will be determined by their
impoundment, just south of the town of order of registrallon, Mail-in entries
Grayson, is on the bass comeback trail.
<based on the postmark ) will start first,
The lake now offers some of the areas then those registering in person on a first
finest bass fishing.
come, first start bases.
Local fishermen credit the good
To insure a fair tournament, top
fishing to two factors, decreased fishing finishers may be required to take a
pressure and a special bass size limit. polygraph, and members of the sponsorThe first factor, decreased fishing ing club will not be allowed to enter the
pressure came about because other event.
lakes have been built in the area which
Entry forms will soon be available at
gave fishermen a wider selection of most Giovann's Pizza and many area
places to fish.
marinas, tackle shops, and other retail
The second factor is Grayson Lakes outlets catering to the fishermen . For
special size limit. There is a 15-inch size additional information, entry forms, and
limit on the bass at Grayson, but here tournament rules, write, GLH Bass
again, most local fishermen feel it im- Club, P.O. Box 925, Gray!'on, Ky . 41143
proved the bass fishing. After fishing or phone <606) 474-4724.
Grayson Lake, two time Kentucky state
bass fishing champion, Phillip Cooper
Despite the growing popularity of
said, "Having fished most of the lakes
in this area, I have found 15-inch bass recycling in many countries, Internaeasier to catch on Grayson than 12-inch tional Wildlife magazine reports that onbass on most other area lakes. It is my ly about one-fourth of all paper,
opinion the special limit has really im- aluminum, iron and steel is recycled. A
proved the bass fishing." On the upcom- report from Worldwatch Institute says
ing tournament, Cooper speculated, "If that in 1981 people in the United States
the weatherman cooperates, the winn- · threw away more aluminum in the form
ing weigh at the April event could go of beverage containers than all the
well over 20 pounds, with many aluminum produced in Africa.
\
Photo by Betty Hyden
Johnna Elizabeth Hill was crowned 1984 Basketball Homecoming Queen at
ceremonies held here, Friday, February 17. Escorted by Marty Minix, Miss
Hill received her crown from last year's queen, Stephanie Branham. The new
Homecoming Queen is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. John T. Hill, of Prestonsburg.
Members of the Homecoming Court were Mike Jones, escorted by Herbie
Lemaster; Laura Cooley, escorted by Windle Burke ; Paula Spencer, escorted
by Doug Greene; Rachel Allen, escorted by Shag Branham; Laura Hereford,
escorted by John Goble ; Donna DeRossett, escorted by Trent Nairn; Mary
Porter, escorted by Gordie Ratliff ; Lisa Lafferty, escorted by Brian Wallace;
Mona McKinney, escorted by Jon Hale; Hope Sword, escorted by Greg
Shepherd ; Doris Click, escorted by Brent Horn ; Diane Johnson, escorted by
Jody Hackworth ; Donna Adams, escorted by Todd Nairn ; Rona Lawson,
escorted by Richie Slone ; Gina McKenzie, escorted by Tony Whitaker; Sarah
Pitts, escorted by Chip Salyers, and Missy Thompson, escorted by Kelly Cecil.
Deer Hunters To Get Refunds
Hunters who purchased a 1983 deer
permit after Dec. 31 to hunt on the
perimeter of Bernheim Forest can get
their money back, Fish and Wildlife
Commissioner Carl E. Kays announced
today.
The four-day open deer season in portions of Bullitt and Nelson counties was
originally scheduled to be held in conjunction with the Feb. 3-6 hunt on Bernheim Forest Refuge, but a court injunction prevented this hunt from taking
place.
Only those hunters who purchased
1983 deer tags in 1984 and who did not or
were not eligible to hunt on the Bernheim refuge 1tself will be granted
refunds , Kays said.
Because county court clerks retain a
75-cent fee from every tag sold, only the
fish and wildlife departments share
($10.75) of the $11.50 tag will be
refunded.
To receive a refund, mail the deer tap: ·
along with your complete mailing ad~
dress to Deer Tag Refund, Kentucky
Depart ment of Fish and Wildlife
Resotirces , No. 1 Game Farm Road,
Frankfort, Ky. 40601.
Bulldogs Win 55-53
Over McDowell, Sat.
In Saturday night action, the Hazard
Bulldogs won a hard-fought overtime
victory, defeating McDowell, 55-53. In
overtime play, Carl Wallace made two
clutch free throws and a field goal to put
the Bulldogs ahead.
Tim Newsome, of McDowell, fired a
desperation shot from center court at
the buzzer. but came up short.
�The Floyd County Times
Wedn..tay, February 29, 1984
Section Two, Pase Four
(Reproduced below is page 6 of the 21st issue of The Floyd ()ounty Times
published Nov. 4, 1927)
SIX
'LOUISA
ONE KILLED IN EXPLO.SION
G. M. BUCKLEY DIES
Billie Barnett Cordell, three year old
Mr. G. M. Buckley, aged 32 years,
died at the Methodist hospital last Sat- son of Liss Cordell, formerly of this
urday afternoon. He was sick only a county, is dead, and WAllie Moore, also
of this county, is perhaps fatally inweek. He had been employed for some
ti~e with the state highway depart- juted, as the result of a gas explosion
ment. He leaves a wife and two ch!l- in the Cordell home at Columbus, Ohio,
dren. He was a brother of Tom Buck- on Thursday of last week. The child
ley, his father, John Buckley, having was brougn.t here ~nd bur.ied Tuesday
died about six weeks ago. He was also ttear Ledocw on Little Blame.
. of J u d ge Jl. W . P rm'tt.
so terrific that
a first cousm
. The explosion,
.
. . . it
Grundy Mitchell Buckley was born · Jarred wmdow panes out o~ adJOmmg 1
•
houses, occurred when Willla Moore, a
J anuary 2 . 1896.
.
The funeral was conducted Monday ~rather of Mrs. ~oraell, atte'?pted to
afternoon at the Buckley graveyard on . hght a gas stove m an upstairs room. 1
•• 1ey •s c reek , b y R ev. M . C . R eyn- The Cordells
B uc...
,._had .just moved into the
new home, a:ud evidently ·the outgoing
ld
d A D cr
0
s an
· · me.
tenants had left a gas valve open; for
the instant Moore lighted the match
HOSPITAL STAFF BANQUETED
the room burst into flames. He manag_
A beautiful and sumptuous banquet ed to get out of the room, but the 3- TO .MY FRIENDS, BOTH ~EPtJBl.ICANS A:SD DE:\IOCR.\TS OF THE 3~~
was served Friday night in the parlors year-o1d child, who was standing at the
JUDICIAL DISTRICT Of' KENTuCK~:
of the M. E. Church to the staff and head of the stairway, was knocked
directors of the MethodU;t Hospital. down stairs and badly burned. It died Ladies and Gentlemen:
The tables were lovely with.their Hal- saturday in st. Mary's hospital, ColIn pressing IllY cliUms .for the Qtn~ of Commonwealth's Attorney of this
lowe'en decorations. Dr. z. A. Thomp- umbus. Moore is In the same hospital Judicial District, I 1\rst cahvassed
own county. t hat of F loyd, and found
son was an ideal toastmaster. Beauti- 1 with slight chances of recovering. He that most all my friends in s&me· wete en~husiastically for me; however, a few
ful vocal selections were given by Mrs. was burned severely.
of them had "cold feet," so to spe.alt, but we:·e my friends and would have voted
, s. B. Casebolt, and the Hospital Trio,
Mr. and Mrs. Liss cordell and an- and done all they could to have· el~ted me. but were weak in the faith.
· composed of Mrs. Mau E. York, Mrs. other of Mrs. Cordell's brothers, con
I telieve without a doubt I would have carried this coun t y by a good rnaF. w. Baker, lthd Miss Bertha Kissling, Moore were more or less burned but j::>rity. It is not necessary for me to say here h ow much , but it would have been
and Mrs. wood delighted the gliests not se~·iously. Their home and an
a hrgi tr..atority in this county, for ~early all the Republicans w?~ld have
;with a reading.
joining building were considerably voted for me, as well as a great number of the best Democra ts In tms county,
The main speaker of the evening was damaged before the fire department I who o.re my personal .friends.
Rev. Overly, of Ashland district super- could extinguish the flames.
In Knott county, I found tblDiS entirely different. The Republicans werel
intendent, on the subject, "The Gospel
-opp:n;ed to my running for ~bts omce and m any of them were actually for m:vl
of Heali~g." All present were made to FORMER LAWRENCE MAN SLAIN opponent, but said they were my !pe~ and many of them wrote me about
feel that they were serving the Master
Alfred E. Brown, 55, who moved to withdrawing fro~ the race and I made a visit to s~e and talk with them per- i
when they helped to heal the sick. He . this county a few years ago from Ohio, sona!ly about tru.s Il),atter, b":t, wu. urliiJ)le. to convmce them and get them to
urged the ardent support of the Meth- was shot and killed near w~t Union, j help me, so about half of the Re~. in Knott county would have voted
Odist hospital at this place.
! Ohio, saturday night, acqording to a ~ga.lllst me, a!thougb they ~d. ~~y "!ere 2i!t:f friends and that they had not~
Four new members were added to the telegram sent to omcers here request- per.sona.lly or otherwise aiab3st me aP'd :~ I would make a good Oommon•
Board of Directors : Rev. H. E. Trent, ing that they apprise his family who wealth's Attorney.
'
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of Covington, Dr. and Mrs. D. C. John- ' live on the Mayo Trail near five FQrks.
T'ne other half of the ~p\lblir.llns' were enthusiastically for me and woQld
· son, Ashland, and P. B. Stratton, Pike- ' According to a dispatch to the Ports- have followed me untU the laft .'v~ was cast and counted as cast. There .ie.
ville.
•.
mouth sun, Brown, on his way to see two factions of the De~¥ part, ~n- ~nott cotmty opposed to each other o:a
.
__
.
his daughter at Wilmington, ·o ., - had mc:;t all candidates for eounty all4f ~~ o~ces, but I trted to get the suppo~
·
Istopped at the home of a former wife of cne or-the other of these tact~ bl)t~·not get their help. I foUDd, ~ ·
REYNOLDS-GATLIN
...,_ ....._.,..
...,.----....::.,..
.
-~
. .
Mrs. wm F: ancis. A number of peo-' ever, a. great many ot _•.......
-~. _~Knott county for me and .._
On Saturday everung, October 15, at · 1
t th Fr
is h
Late h:we voted•for me and woUlcl ·ha-.&60 ·..U~could to have elected -Political Adv.
the J'arsonage of Rev John Carpenter P e were a
e
anc
orne.
-r........L . ........ ~
•
. .
· .
' Saturday night. Brown and one Jonas Knott county would ba'le lften ;&~ __,~ agamst me; much JartW\
· at Wllhamson, W . Va., m the presence c
d
b
d in
against me than Floyd woulet ha1'8 ~ tot.....,..._ so that I could not have .._.
of Miss Minta Peery and, Miss Cassie ooper, age 20 ' ecame engage
a elected
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.r · '
· ~
·
Martin Mr R
v G tlin d Mi quarrel, the shooting occur;ing in the I
·
11
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· usse
· a
~
~ • kitchen. Brown died a few hours l~After arrivini home f~ Knott count y on Tuesday, October 25, and after
Alyc~ Mayo Reynolds were umtled m ter from a shot throu,;h his head Mi's reilding many letters 'sent me and taking counsel with many of my frl~
marrJ.age.
Francis, the former wife of Bro~, and I both Democrats and Repub~, and after calling . the Republlcan Comml~
Mr. Gatlin was reared in Lexington, several children ;ue said to have been together and after m.'ijch dehberation and counsel w1th my friends of. both parOkla., but has been living in Ashland eye-witnesses of the killing.
ties here in J;>restonsburg, on Saturday, October 29, it was thought to the~
for the past !ew years. He is a gradinterest of my. friends 1n this campaign for me to tender the resignation of JQJ
uate o! the University of Oklahoma. ·
nomination for the afllce of Commonwealth's Attorney in the 31st Judicw · ~
His !ather is a prominent business man
VICTIM OF TYPHOID
t nc
· t • wh'1ch was accor..,~
.. ,~~1y d one and accep ted by the comm lttee and a t ·-,;.
.ed
t
his
h
.
CharIes P &rsIey, 17, d 1 a
of Ash! d
d 1
be 0 f th
orne 1
•
an • ~n s a m~m r
e on Donithon early this week. He had , court house at 7:00 o clock p . m ., October 29, I publicly announced my wi~,..
Rarnsey-Gatlm Construct1on Company. .
.
1 drawal from the r ace for the omce of Commonwealth's Attorney to be voted for
Mrs. Gatlin is the oldest daughter of recently returned from an Ironton hos- i t th N
be 1 tl
N
be. 8 1927
' Mr. and Mrs. w. w. Reynolds, of this pita! ~here he had a long siege of a
:r;:~. r~e;~ul~n
~:~mwit~cb-awn .from this race if there had bee,U
·
city, and is the grand-daughter of Mr.·. typhmd.
any reasonable hope of being elected ' and would have run on anyway, if my
· and M rs. D . Milt Hager, or Lexington,
·
He was a. son . of Sherman Parsley
. "n had. not appeared to be mjunous
.'
.
.
. ' I runnmg
to my fnends
in this campaign·
.
.
who
was
killed
m the school elect10n
'
formerly of Pamtsv11le, and are numI have not words sumctent to express to my many friends, both Democn.tlc
bered among the finest families of battle at Kermit three years ago.
ai)d Republican, men and women, the gratitude and the heartfelt 1tha.nks I ._ve
E te
Funer al services were conducted
at for my many fnends
.
. th1s
. race and were read:y to~
as rn ~entucky. She graduated at
,
who encouraged me m
Pikeville College in the class of 1924.
Webb, W. Va., by Rev. J. D. Marcum, me.
.
Mr. Gatlin is employed by the state of Louisa.
The day o~ night will never be too dark, cold or wet, that I will not be read1
highway department. This marriage
-and· w1lling to lUd and assist you, if It be in my power so to do, and I will alWllfiJ
was the result o! -a 1·omance of short :
STEEL FOR HOTEL
remember you as my frie~¢1 and wUl aid you when t he opportunity pre2Ilte
duration, they having known each 1 A_carload of s~ru~tural steel !or the 1 itself. After· I have done all _I can for my friends, if I can, I am willlni ~
other for only a few weeks.
five story Masomc temple and hotel I my enemies if ii have any .
building has arrived and is being plac- 1
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Your sincere friend,
DIES SUDDENLY
ed on the site of the prot>Osed &trueOn last Wednesday afternoon at five ture. A second carload is due to arrive
o'clock, the beautiful life of one of · today. The two carloads are for. the
Mrs. Joel C. Martin left Saturday far
Pike county's beloved old ladies came coostructioh of two stories of the buildto a close. Mrs. Minta Thompson, wife ing, it is saiq.
___
Hite after a week's visit with her 'liar
1
.A
The basement of the buildillg was ·
bus
... -ito in ter, Mrs. German Vance.
of Tom Thom..,son, died at her home on completed some weeks ago .
II
.w. I. Myers was a __lnllSS • .., r
Mr. a nd Mrs. W . I. Myers and Ilk'.
Chloe Creek. She was 71 years of age.
Pl estonsburg Tuesday
-·
and Mrs. Tom T urner were visitors hl
At one o'clock she lay down to take her
PLANNED ROBBERY
Mrs. W. H. Mathis w-.s the guest of ·Garre.tt &mday.
!1-fternoon nap, which she was accus- · According to a confession made to 1 Dr. and Mrs. M. V. Wl:cb!r, of Wayland, :
tomed to do. At five o'clock she turned
hnsoD
t
m . Is b
1 Thursday ~d Friday.
'
-Polltkal Adv.
NOTICE
over and gasped. She had breathed Jo --..cohuadn Yb
Cia tedy fa !_ounkg j MiSs Ethel Stumbo ll!ft Sunday for
-~
. man .-uu
een arres
or -ea ,
,
FOR BOARD OF EDUCATION
NOTICE
TO
TEACBE
her
1-.
She
Is
survived
by
her
hus·m.o
to
f
th
N
h
t
Plkevllle,
for
a.
two
weeb
viait
at
tha.t.
.
1
·
The Ea5tem Kentucky Educational band, Tom Thompson, and several !ng 1 · as re 0
e ort -Eas coa1 ' place.
·
The Prestonsburg Hardware aDd
A$80eiat1on meets in Ashland Novem- hlldr
So hi Sl
M d Robin- ' Company, near Paintsville, he and
Mrs E ·
OlbsoJI and hlldr . Supply Company has sold out to otbtr
......
h
in
c
en.
P
a
one,
au
e
th
th
had
I
d
to
h
W
L
I
·
wmg
·
c
~n
·
ber ·10 • 11 and 12• and we are op g son, Anthony Thompson, Bes&ie Camp- · 0 er yo~ s
·ewe are authorized to announce
~ anne . ro
· · spent the week-end w;flb her sis).er, Dr. parties, wbo will occupy the same
that Floyd county's representation will bell M th M W d c 11. D
FergWIOD s store m Lomsa SUnday nd
H
M
of artln
building
GEORGE I'IALE
be 100 per cent of its teachers. You
' ar a ay ar • a JC aws~n, night.. He said that the ga,ng of which a
Mrs. . . H. ayO\.
M:
•
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of Good]oe, Ky., as a candidate for are especia.ll¥ urged to attend this and Jale Thompson, all of whom live h
be h d tol
.to
1 J.D. Martm was a baW.Dess visitor in 1 All parties owing the Presto~
13
•-w .,..._
lftftt in ..a ._,..... by te was a mem f th
r, a s en
au Ployd Board of Education, Educational meet ........
... ....e"""
....ac._
a
near Pikeville, except Mrs. Callie Da.w- : b"ed P r estonsburg TuesdQ.
Hardware and Supply Company wW
to the.tachera.
1 mo ..... 0 ne o
e cars was rea:wer ·
Dl9ta1on No. 2, to be voted for at the t.en4J,ng will be given
JOHN S'l'EPBENS,
son. wbo lives in Chicago.
Lid.: Cr k
Lo is
Tbe; l; I Raymond Hall, d
Martin, &J*U please ·c.n and settle at once. ~
regular election November 8, 1927.
eount:v su~""'-tendent.
The llurial was made Frkla.y after- on
htee • tnhear
uf tah.
sedoy Sunday with his gtmld-ftatlser, J~ to do so. their accounts wlU be put
·
.,.......
was caug on e eve o
e propo
,
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noon a.t the home cemetery at Chloe
b"-'• f th Lo !sa to
Martin, who 1s W.
.
, for collet:tioo.
U..f 0
5
3
e
u
rt).
~~~~~~~~!!!!·~~~~--~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
WF£1F.¥.1tEt.il¥.!f!lilfit.!f!li!f!li!!ili!f!li!!ili!f!li!ll!!ili!lfl!f!li!f!li!llilit.!llir.t.lll!ll!!ili Creek. The funeral will be preached ro ,...
::orne time next summer.- News.
AGED MINISTER DI&9
I
John Miller, 96 years old, and a Free- l
v;ill Baptist miDister of the old order,
died at Cyrus, W . Va., Saturday and 1
~Irs. B. F. conn has been on the sick was taken back to his forme: home at ,
!ist for the past few days, but is some Torchlight for burial Monday.
I
bett~r at this time.
Elias Miller, of Louisa, Is a son of
~ Miss Lottie Jarrell is ill, but reported the deceased minlster.-Big Sandy j
~ some better.
News.
1
~ "Uncle" I. L. Clark and wife were
;isiting their grandchildren, Mr. and
!
Mrs. Arnold Robinette at Betsy Layne,
Misses Elizabeth and Beatrice Sturn- 1
n!ght and Sunday.
bo attended the show at Drift Sunday
~ Saturday
Born
to
Mr. nnd Mrs. Alvin Hall, on evening.
.
~~
October 27, a ten- pound son. Mot her
Misses Gertrude a nd Ma ry Stumbo '
and Ben Martin and ' Ernest S tumbo '
and baby are doing fine.
Mrs. Mal!ssa Akers, of Harold, is vis- were the dinner guests of Gertrude
and Mary's grandmother , Mrs. Mary ,
~~
~1~ .ting friends and relatives at Da na .
"Uncle" Wesley Boyd, wllQ has been Stumbo, Sunday.
~l~
ill for t he ):a.!>t year, was out car r iding
G. c . S tumbo was the s un day dinner
guest of his mother , Mrs. Mar y S turn- ,
~! ~ Sunda y.
~~ :
Mrs. Mar y A . ::Joyd and M~·s . Noah bo.
'
Guy Hopkins · a nd P hillip Newsom,
~~. {
Eo:;d were the dinne': g::ests of M:·s.
of I.IcDowc!l " e:·c mot::>ring Saturday
:;-lcyd Ea:J. S:iturd:Jy.
v . A . S:nile'y. ''· h o v:o:·ks in tlle store ar>d Sunday.
Coi·a Kewsom is visiting re!:J.t;v~s ~ t
::. t Allr n . wa~ :-.~ l: ome Sunday. He re~ : . , :: o: ts t! .::. t he !.~ doing a fine bus:n ess.
Ligon this week.
Misses \Vilma Hopkins, F annye H a l~.Irs . A. L . e miley, "· ho h as been on
,J:e s !~k list f.;,:· SJ r!lC t in1e, is ilnp!·oy- bert, Barbar a Hcpkin.s a nd M r. Henry
S tumbo were out walking Sunday af- ·
ing.
ternoon.
~~~ W.-\NTED-Side line salesman, selling Miss Nora Salyer s, o! Borders, Lang~~~ high class sales boards assonmen ts to ley Hall, Misses Mida Halbert, Thelin&
;t;;; 1 goOd merchants. Write Standard , Halbert and Wayne Hall motored to
""'=·~~,.,:.;-.;;+:~'..!ill~!..!.::_
_ o: •+•.,!•••'.l!J.!IJ•I~!..!_!~I···'~!,C ·~!.o!.!!,!".l.!!J.!J!tl!i! sales Company, Oklahoma City, Okla.lI :owale Sunday.
:=-1
••• l_l:«.•! ..- ·-' ~ 'e ..~ c ·; ~iTi'"'ii"'i'rl - .r,,r,_.-itle . ,;r.;t.:aht ;!CI • ul•ltl telliTiTiilili
I
ntv
I
a.d-1
I
I
C. B. Wheeler
FOR CIRCUIT JUDGE:
j
,
,
..
THIS DISTRICT NEEDS
I
Tom Lauhon
- FOR-
I ::Y
RAILROAD G0MMI~ ~ I~ N[ R
================== =======-== ==== = -==
HE KNOWS WHAT THIS DISTRICT NEEDS
AND HE WILL SEE THAT WE GET WHAT WE
NEED.
::Ve
I
REGARDLESS OF YOUR POLITICAL BELIEF,
DO NOT LET THIS STOP THE WELFARE AND
UPBUILDING OF YOUR DISTRICT. LET'S
:MAKE THE ELECTION OF TOM LAUHON
ONE HUNDRED PER CENT!
Willi.a..m Dingus
MINNIE
°
-----------------------------B8----
ou
.'ANN·~u·N·ct· . ·oP'EN·I·N·c.......l
A New Hardware
Store at Lackey
I
DANA
m
~
~
McDOWELL
We have a full line of sL-..ple and fancy
groceries to fill the neeois of every home.
Delivery of orders is made in Prestonsburg ;
We carry a complete line ilouse- ~~
wares, Hardwai,e nd
Electrical Supplif :~
~l~
lort thaD two hours between ·trainE
Buy For Cash
Save Money
Lackey, ".
:wiDth makes ft an ideal place for ·.
•
j
~.
GASH GR~CERY STOR[
-------
lackey Hardware Co. ~i~ ,
...-,, • • •
KentUCkY
W. B. Howard, Prop.
Middle ·(jreek,
Kentucky
I
i
�The Floyd County Times, February 29, 1984
USAA Award Winner
The United States Achievement
Academy announced today that Brett
Traver has been named a 1984 United
States National Award winner in science
and mathematics.
Traver, who attends McDowell High
School, was nominated for this National
Award by Joan Caldwell and Brenda
Newsome, science and mathematics
teachers at the school. His biography
will appear in the United States Achievement Academy Official Yearbook, published nationally.
He is the son of Duane and Brenda
·Youmans, of Minnie, and his grandparents are Mr. and Mrs. Robert
England, of Melvin, and Mrs. Rubine
Traver, of Largo, Fla.
Section Two, Pa&e Five
In Dream Girl Pageant
Don't Lose Cattle
To Grass Tetany
This year many farmers will lose cattle because of~ problem that is simple
to solve.
The culprit is grass tetany, a nutritional disorder of cattle caused by an abnormally low contration of magnesium
in the animal's blood. And although
grass tetany can strike at any time of the
year, it is most likely to occur during the
spring when cattle are grazing early,
rapidly growing grass.
Dr. Warren Gill, Extension livestock
specialist in the University of Kentucky
College of Agriculture,.$ays grass tetany
typically strikes elder cows after thesecond lactation. And it's most likely to occur when the temperature is cool with
average daily temperatures between 40
and 60 degrees.
"It's unfortunate so many farmers
lose cattle to grass tetany because a simple supplementation program can prevent it," said Gill who is headquartered
at Robinson Substation, Quicksand.
He notes that commercial mixtures
which contain magnesiwn are available.
Producers also may mix their own supplementation using one part magnesium
oxide, part trace mineralized salt and
one part soybean meal.
Another mixture which Gill says has
the advantage of providing other essential minerals is one part magnesium oxide, one part trace mineralized salt, and
one part dicalcium phosphate and one
part soybean meal or finely ground
shelled corn.
~
Starts Friday, March 2
HELD OVER
MURDEROUSLY
FUNNY:...ec.• :'
-(,tnt\h.alu TOOAY'HO'tl
" ... the Ministry of Silly
" ... charming and delightful.
Walks should declare
Dudley Moore a national
treasure. 'Unfaithfully
Yours' is faithful to
comedy's best
professional standards:'
..
Kimberly Raye Robinson, daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Kenny Robinson, of Martin, was sponsored by the Little Elkhorn
Coal Company in the Dream Girl
Pageant held at Pikeville, recently. She
was first runnerup in the photogenic
category, there. In the Miss Wintertime
pageant held at Allen Central High
School, she was winner in the photogenic
category and second runnerup for the title of Miss Wintertime.
T\
THISIS THE STORY
OF A SMALL TOWN
THAT LOST ITS DREAMS.
AND A BIG-CITY KID
WHO BROUGHT
THEM BACK.
DUDLEY MOORE
Dudley Moore's best role
since 'Arthur:"
- P.a• f olhM ( 8\ T\
NASTASSJA KJ.NSKI
1Jnfatth(ufly~
is on his side.
R PARRITlOI..NT
fl(TURE ....... ·.
~·W.&Il,IUIN
. . :, _,
--·-··· -·-·- ..
..__...__~~
M"'r'o~"
40601.
All comments, objections, or request
for a permit conference must be filed
within fifteen ( 15) days of today's date.
lt.
:
;:.•
~m~• 1111111S11. -~~~~~
'W/1111!1- Clll111l 1M liD .dill-• ._.._
_ , . _ . , . , ... li~ . . . . . . . . . . . . . .u . . . . . . . . . .~ . ...
~=-~~
--·-·Ul-
Showtlmes 7:1!5-9:30-Sunday Matinee Open 1:00 Starl1:30 Over 3:20
It takes two minutes for a giraffe to
run a mile.
for
Bargains
MARCH 2-17
Mulching
FUm
Mark 75
steel
Belted
Radials
S169
3 )(50 ft.
No. NH·350. serviceable black plastic, 1
112m11. thick. conserve moisture, con·
trol weeds, save labor. #102-37166.
Reg. sug. pr. $2.69
•4PP1ss/80R·13
·~~
P195/75R14 ............................
SJO!O 1/2-hp
P205/75R14 ............................
•ssoo
saoo
P215/75R15 ............................
$
P225/75R15 ......................... ...
P235/75R15 ............................•,,~
outstanding an-weather tire. Fine traction. Highest tread·
wear rating In the Industry. Smooth soft ride. Polyester/
steel.
I
I
.7
steel
1
r
11-hp 38-in.
Lawn Tractor
Shallow Well
Jet Pump
No. NCSS·26. Hlgh·pressure, multi-use
modeL 5elf·prlming. Heavy·duty ball·
bearing motor. #060-11310.
s1aoo
Model 3386-41 has 12-volt starting. 5·Speed transaxle, twin blade
Reg. sug. pr. $164.00
floating deCk, seated-beam headlights, 38·1n. deCk. #103·12938.
m
Panel
cates
Oil-base
Exterior
Paint
Rugged, welded. galvanized construe·
tlon. Resists rusting, sagging, twist·
lng.
12-ft.
14-ft.
INo. PG·512, lr100·30620l
INO. PG-514, lf10Q-3062Sl
Reg. sug. pr. S41.75
Reg. sug. pr. $46.00
Deluxe Yard Lights
5-hp 26-in.
Tiller
S4f95 :.~·' SJI9'5
Reg. sug. pr. $56.00
No. 451·25. Gloss white. General·
purpose. Brushes, covers well. Resists 'checking, cracking. #09514237.
SJ600
Reg. sug.pr. $398.00
Model 5054·41 has 3-Step chain
drive, handle clutch, unbreakable
self-sharpening tines. #1 03·22770.
Boost security, vlsablllty with these energy·savers. Automatic
dusk, off at dawn.
95
•41
Reg. sug. pr. $51.00
Sodium vapor light. NO. DR70H 1#061-29810>
95
•75
Reg. sug. pr. $90.50
-
2-gal.
·. ,,. -.
Air
5-CU.
ft.
Wheelbarrow
S6f00
Reg. sug. pr. $91 .50
#102·32113.
24-ft
Extension
Ladder
$9450
Reg. sug. pr. $113.00
NO. 01124·2. Aluminum.
Extra·strength ralls
Double·rung loCk. lf070·
03894.
~
Lawn Fence
$15
95
Reg. sug. pr. 525.00
#081-1 3925
36·in. X S(}ft.
of· .
sprayer
stgts
Reg. sug. pr. $30.50
N0.152U
#102-41022
White
House
Paint
2 1/2-gal
cas can
s-po
Reg. sug. pr $10.65
NO. SP2 1/2
#070·05300
.... ~_
....
. -/
.'
4·pt.. 151/2·ga High tenslle strength Lighter we1ght .
lOnger lasting ASTM Class 111 z111c coat1ng #081 17090
80-rod roll
SIJ!~can
umco No 201 Slow ·chalking
Stays bngnt wears long "095·
14125
SOUTH LAKE DRIVE
.
:
- .:~'Y=- ~ .
Reg. sug
pr
$31 oo
PRESTONSBURG FARM & HOME STORE
PHONE 886-8596
_
·.'~
Motto
Barbed ~Mo~~:~
.
lJ}!
Wire
.• !
compressed
on at
Mercury Vapor Ught. NO. DR100M 1#061·29806)
NOTICE O.V
INTENTION TO MINE
PursJiaht to Existing
Permit Number 098-0242
In accordance with the provisions of
KRS 350, notice is hereby given that
Lower Hurricane Mining Company,
Inc., Route 3, Box 44, Pikeville, Ky.
41501 , intends to transfer its permit to
BX Corporation, P.O. Box 362, Betsy
Layne, Ky. 41605.
The existing operation is approximately 1.5 miles southeast from Ky.
979's junction with Ky. 1426 and located
1.5 miles south of Harold. The latitude
is 37" 31' 15". The longitude is 82' 37'
30".The surface area is owned by Alice
Hopkins, Paul Gearheart, Don Combs,
Boldman Fuel.
The existing operation is located on
the Harold-Broadbottom USGS 7 1':!
minute quadrangle map. The operation
will use the auger method of mining.
The application has been filed for
public inspection at the Department for
Surface Mining Reclamation and Enforcement's Pikeville Regional Office at
P .O. Box 2289, Pikeville, Ky. 41501. Written comments, objections, or requests
for a permit conference must have attached a copy of the newspaper clipping
and must be filed with the Director,
Division of Permit, 6th Floor, Capital
Plaza Tower, Frankfort, Kentucky
'
Bee There
ADVERTISEMENT FOR BIDS
The Floyd County Fiscal Court will accept bids on material items listed below.
To qualify, sealed bids must be received by the Office of the County Judge Executive on or before March 9th 1984.
Bids will be opened and read publicly
at the Floyd County Courthouse Annex
Conference Room as an item of the
Fiscal Court meeting agenda that day.
7,900 Linear feet 4" c1160 PVC water
line pipe; 3,000 Linear feet 4'' cl 200 PVC
water line pipe; 500 Linear feet 4" SDR
11 PE water line pipe.
The Court reserves the right to reject
any and all bids for cause.
JOHN M. STUMBO
County Judge Executive
Floyd County, Kentucky
2-22-2t.
STRAND II
"NEW AND
FRESH AND
Genealogical Seminar
Slated in Welch, W. Va.
Boyd Plumley, County Library Director, will conduct an eight hour, 8 a .m.-5
p.m., research seminar in the basics of
family and local history on Saturday,
May 5. There is room for 100 persons.
Mr. Plumley will cover the historical
value and techniques of research of
basic primary United States records as
follows:
Personal: Bibles, diaries, letters,
tools, artifacts, official papers, pictures,
portraits, etc.; Courthouse: Birth,
death, marriage, wills, deeds, deeds of
trust, military. maps, surveys, population census; Federal Population Censuses, 1790-1910; State Population Censuses; Land Deeds: Federal and state;
Military: Federal and state, discharges,
service rolls, pension papers;
Naturalization: Federal and state; Ship
passenger lists; Biographical tools;
Maps and gazeteers; Cemetery.
Mr. Plumley is an experienced, 13
years, genealogist and library director,
17 years. He specializes in West Virginia
records especially probate and land
records and has indexed the testators of
West Virginia wills written before 1851.
To register, write to Boyd Plumley,
Director, McDowell County Public
Library, Welch, West Virginia 24801.
Enclose a stamped self-addressed
envelope.
STRAND I
PRESTONSBURG
. .
�HI-RISE
QUARTER PORK LOIN
SELF-RISING FLOUR
SLICED INTO CHOPS
25-LB.
BAG
$
NEW CROP, YELLOW
ONIONS
3-LB.
BAG
c
WILSON
CORN KING
CHUNK
BOLOGNA
c
LB.
ASSORTED
PORK CHOPS ..
8-PAK, 16-0Z. BTLS.
COKE, TAB, ·
SPRITE,
OR DIET COKE ....... ..... .. ...
$118 0
$1680
PORK CHOPS .. ·
·.
. FlESH POlK .
.
$480
CENTER CUT
PLUS
DEPOSIT
.NECK BONES ........
SO EXTRA
~~\ FREE QUALITY STAMPS
WITH THIS COUPON AND PURCHASE OF
' 2 PKGS. GARDEN SEED
SO EXTRA
SO EXTRA
, FREE QUALITY STAMPS ~.,::;;t~·"-'"'"" FREE QUALITY STAMPS
ONE 16-0Z. BOX HUNGRY JACK ~!:J
INSTANT POTATOES
~~ RENTAL OF CARPET MAGIC
STEAM MACHINE SYSTEM
MR.
TURI(Ey
tA\\·
"t\)"tif.S
~
WITH THIS COUPON AND PURCHASE OF ~o::::::l'l
WITH THIS COUPON AND PURCHASE OF
.
SLICED
BOlOGNA
8-oz.69
\'l..01.·
NOT RESPONSIBLE FOR PRINTER'S ERRORS
�STAR-KIST
CHUCK LIGHT TUNA
IN OIL OR WATER
c
6.5-0Z.
CAN ·
CASEY'S
SANDWICH SPREAD
$
GRADE A LARGE
EGG
$
MAXWELL HOUSE
INSTANT
COFFEE
II
GI£R0uND BEEF$1
FlYER
t.EG UARTERS.:.
0
80
$880
TiiiGHs . . . . . . . . . . . $6
80
10-0Z. JAR
HEAD
.LETTUCE
c
N...............$1
BANQUET
EACH
FRIED
CHICKEN
SO EXTRA
\\-~.\ FREE QUALITY STAMPS
WITH THIS COUPON AND PURCHASE OF
·
TUESDAY, MAR. 6
QUANTITY RIGHTS RESERVED
ONE 8-LB. BUCKET
FISCHER'S LARD
·
32-0!2
9
�The Floyd County Times, February 29, 1984
Campbellsville Offers
Scholarships in Music
Homemade CHILl & SOUP Dinner
Friday, March 2; s to 8 pm .
SPECIAL TREAT-FEATURING THE
SINGING SAMMONS FAMILY, 7·9 PM
First Church of God, university or.
I
I
WE EXTEND A PERSONAL INVITATION
FROM
THIRD AVENUE
FREEWILL BAPTIST CHURCH
<Two Doors from Floyd county courthousel
TO COME Worship with Us
sunday School . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Morning worship
.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Evening worship . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Wednesday Prayer service . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
I
. 10:00
.11:00
. . 6:00
. . 7:00
PRAISE YE THE LORD; FOR IT IS
GOOD TO SING PRAISES UNTO OUR LORD.
...........
-------- ..... -----
1
t
1
a
I
t
2·29-lt .
GOSPEL SINGING
at
TRIMBLE CHAPEL CHURCH, WATER GAP
March 3, 7:00 p.m.
FEATURING: TRUE BEUEVERS
HUMBLE SINGERS
TRUE TONES
Refreshments will be served in dining room.
Rev. Green Boyd, Pastor
-EVERYONE WELCOME-
2·29·lt
REVIVAL
Free United Baptist Church
Beginning Sun., March 4 at 1 p.m. nightly
Brother Jackie Powers, Brother David
Shepherd, Rev. L. P. Tussey, pastor
2·29-1tpd.
st. James
Three $1,600 music scholarships will
be awarded by Campbellsville College
through a competition Friday, March 9,
sponsored by the music faculty. Only
first time freshmen for the fall 1984
semester are eligible.
The scholarships, to be spread over a
four-year period, will be given to one
vocal student, one keyboard student and
one instrumental student. Scholarship
recipients may also apply for performance grants and other financial aid at
the College
The competition schedule will begin
with a written exam of approximately
one and half hours length at 10 a .m. in
Room 200 of the Fine Arts Center. Auditions will be held from 1 p.m. to 4 p.m.
in the Recital Hall of the Music Annex,
after lunch at noon, compliments of the
College, in the Student Union Building's
cafeteria.
Knowledge of the following will be
tested during the exam: basic theoryscales, key signatures, intervals,
rhythmic notation, time signatures and
triads; and music literature-musical
periods, promifient composers and im·
portant works.
Individual auditions will last about 15
minutes and will be performed for the
College's music faculty. Each student
must perform two pieces from memory,
with classical selections preferred, and
will be asked to sight-read a brief
passage
Students auditionining may bring an
accompanist or, if preferred, one will be
supplied. Students may not accompany
themselves but unaccompanied pieces
are allowable.
If a student is proficient in more than
one performance area, auditions in each
category will be permissible.
For more information about the com·
petition, contact Dr. Mark Bradley,
assistant professor of music, at (502)
465·8158, ext. 269.
Campbellsville College is an independent, senior liberal arts college located
in central Kentucky. Affiliated with the
Kentucky Baptist Convention, the College believes in academic excellence in
'a caring atmosphere.
First Presbyterian Church
North Lake Drive
WORSHIP SERVICE
Church School 10:00 a.m.
Morning Worship 11:15 a.m.
SHROVE TUESDAY PANCAKE DINNER
5:30 p.m. to 7:30 p.m.
March 6, 1984
2·29-ltpd.
GOSPEL SINGING
West Prestonsburg, Ky.
Across From Clark School
Sunday School . . .. 10:00 a .m
Morning Worship
11 a.m.
Sun. Evening Worship .6:00p.m.
except when schQ>Ol os ouU 7:00 p.m
7:00p.m .
Wed. Bible Study
Youth Church for ages 5-10
during Sunday Morning Worship
•NURSERY PROVIDED•
REV. JOHN WOODS. Pastor
Sat., March 3, 7 p.m.
MARTIN FREEWILL BAPTIST CHURCH
FIRST ASSEMBLY
OF GOD
West Prestonsburg, Ky.
MARTIN, KY.
~~~~
Featuring: True Believers
Harbormen
Brother Charles Adkln
Gospel Travelalres
10Gt
710 Burtt Awe.,
Prestonsburg, Ky.
SUNDAY SCHOOL
10:45 A.M.
"The Church Where Exciting
Things Are Happening"
Pastor
Highland Avenue
Freewill Baptist
Church
Sunday School
..
Morning Worship .
Evening Worship .
Wednesday Worship
WADE MARTIN HUGHES
Pastor
Sunday School
9:45a.m.
Morning Worship
11 a.m.
7 p.m.
Evening Worship
Wednesday Prayer Study 7 p.m.
Auxier Freewill
Baptist Church
Sunday School ... 10:00 a.m.
Morning Worship .... 11 a.m.
Evening Worship .. 6:00p.m.
Prayer Meeting
·Thursday ....... 6:30p.m.
Pastor, Elder Douglas Burkett
Asst. Pastor Clyde Bowling
12·14-lf
10 am
11 a.m.
7p.m
7p.m
Taylor L. Biggs. Pastor
Phone: 118&.110!17
SUNDAY
Sunday School .......... 10 a.m.
Worship Service ........ 11 a.m.
Everung Service ....... .6 p.m.
WEDNESDAY
FIRST
Prayer Meeting . . . . . . . . . 7 p.m.
CLIFFORD H. AUSTIN, Pastor
ZION
DELIVERANCE
TABERNACLE
..
~'1.--
UNITED
METHODIST
CHURCH
60 So.Arnold Ave., Prestonsburg
WAYLAND, KENTUCKY
Sunday Schoolll a.m.
Evening Worship 7 p.m.
Wednesday Prayer Service 7 p.m.
Saturday Evening Worship 7 p.m.
Ada Mosley, Pastor
Everyone Welcome.
AU The Earth Shall Worship Thee.12· 14-tf
Dr. Ted Nicholas, Minister
Sunday School .......... 9:45
Morning Worship . . . .. 11:00
Junior and Senior UMYF2:30
Rhythmic Choir . . ...... 4: 30
Wesley Bell Choir . . . . . . 5: 15
Evening Service ........ 7:00
A CHRISTIAN WELCOME
AWAITS YOU.
SUN., WDOC AM-11:00-
EPISCOPAL
1
l
•.
FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH
Mc:Oowell, Ky.
Sunday School. .
9:45a.m .
Morning Worship.
11 a.m.
Evening Worship ......... 7 p.m.
Wednesday
Prayer Meeting.
7 p.m .
H. Bailey Sadler, Pastor
Visitors Expected
\l/
CHURCH
COME
WORSHIP
WITH US
AT
The First Church of God
University Dr., Prestonsburg, Ky.
KEVIN
R.R. #5
Prestonsburg, Kentucky 4165.1
Spurlock Fork of Middle Creek
... ..
.... 10:00 ...m.
.
1Classes lor all ages)
SundaJ Morning Worship Servic~ II :00 a.m .
Sunday Evening Service . .
7:00p.m .
"Pdntsday.Prayer and Bible Study7 :00 p.m.
PHII.IPPIA:\S 2:16
"HOLDI"iG FORTH THE WORD OF
I.Wt:..:·
Dan Heintzelman-Pastor
Box RSO. Martin, Ky. 41649
Parsonage Phone-2R.'i-:!444
"A Christ Centered Church
Built On Love"
ACTS 2:1-47
S4£t
.. C.t
PRESTONSBURG
ZfJPCAf
CHURCH OF CHRIST
SOUTH LAKE DRIVE
Pastor
SUNDAY:
Sunday School . .
Morning Worship
Evening Service
[fl.$~~
I EPISCOPAL>
PRE!>'TONSBl'RG. KENTl'CKY 1165:1
9:45 p.m.
.. 10:45 a.m.
6:00p.m.
SUNDAYS
WEDNESDAY:
9:45 01.11.-CIIurch
School iiiMI Bible Clas
11 Ull.-lloly CDM11ion
Prayer Service.
7:00a.m.
.
7:00p.m.
WDOC·AM
2:00p.m. Sundays
EVERYONE WELCOME
CATHOLIC CHURCHES ~.
Of Floyd County
Welcome You
St. Theodore. Prestonsburg
7 p.m .. Sat: 11 a.m. Sun .
St Juliana. Martin
5 p m Sat: 9a .m. Sun .
A church with a message ·
for children of all ages.
Sunday School
9:45 a.m.
Morning Worship .
11 a .m .
I Nursery Provided l
Come and grow with us!
RADIO PROGRAMS
Sun
Wl\IDJ Martin
.ll ·<Xia .m .
Sun -WDOC'FM Prestonsburg 11 00 a.m
Wed. -WDOC Prestonsburg
10:55 a.m.
Fro -WRLVSalyers\'olle
7:50a.m.
-EVERYONE WELCOME2·29-11.
The Singing Cookes
RAD 10 BROADCAST
WPRT MONDAY thru FRIDAY 9:30A.M.
WMDJ SUNDAY 9 A.M.
ucome Let Us Reason Togetfler" Isaiah 1:18
Evangelist Bennie Blankenship 886-3379, 886-6223
LOOKING FOR SOMETHING DIFFERENT?
285-3254
PROCLAIMING
NEW tESTAMENT
CHRISTIANITY
MAYTOWN
UNITED
METHODIST
CHURCH
The growing church for
the growing Christian.
Morning Worship . . . 9:30a .m .
Sunday School ..... 11:00 a.m.
Youth Group
..... 5:00p.m.
Evening Worship
. 6:30pm.
Come and grow with us r
Weyman McGuire. Pastor
358-4419
No Book but the Bible.
No Creed but Olrist.
No Name but Christian .
FIRST CHRISTIAN CHURCH
429 "'lo. Arnold A\'t>.
Prestonsburg
Sunday School
Morning Worship
Evening Worship
Wed. Bible Study
10 a .m.
11 a.m.
6p m
.7 p.m .
Walt Staude. Prracht>r
886-8773
10·28·lf.
FIRST ASSEMBLY OF GOD
Lorie Vannucci, Pastor
Phone 285-3051
Martin, Ky.
Sunday School ...... . .... lU a.m.
Children's Church
.11 a.m.
Morning Worship . . . . . ... 11 a.m.
Youth Worship .. . . . . . .. 6p.m.
Evangelistic Service . .. . . . 7 p.m .
Wednesday. 7 p.m . . . Family Night
Attend Services At The
FIRST CHURCH OF GOD
(Little Paint) 1~ mile off Route 1428
Between Prestonsburg & East Point, Where
"THE DIFFERENCE IS WORTH THE DISTANCE"
Sl'NDAY SCHOOL .... ... 10:00 a.m.
\10RNING WORSIIIP . . 10:45 a.m.
YOllTH SERVICE ........ 6:00p.m.
EVE!'IING WORSHIP ..... 6::!0p.m.
BIBLE STUDY IWED.l ... 7:00p.m.
In Concert
Saturday, March 3, 6:30p.m.
MARTIN BRANCH
FREE WILL BAPTIST CHURCH
Estill, Kentucky
<Nl' RSERY PRO\'IDED>
RADIO BROADCAST
WQHY-FM 95.5
MON.-FRI., 8-8: 15 A.M.
ROY L. TINCHER. Pastor
l-29-11.
~41
~
Pastor: Fathrr Ralph Beiting
WEYMAI\' McGUIRE. Pastor
:!511-4419
i-4-t£.
LORD'S DAY
BIBLE CLASS ...................... 10:00 A.M.
WORSHIP .......... .' .............. 10:45 A.M.
EVENING WORSHIP ............. 6 P.M. STD. TIME
7 P.M. D.S.T. TIME
WEDNESDAY
BIBLE STUDY .......................... 7 P.M.
~)
TUESDAY :
WAYLAND
UNITED
METHODIST
CHURCH
Sunda) School
COLLI~S.
Prayer Encounter
7-2J·tf.
:1\\tl 10 BE LIKE THE JERIJ
~\¥.6
9:30A.M.
REV. TIMOTHY D. JESSEN
Pastor
SERVICES
FlnPATRICK
FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH
COMMUNITY
UNITED
METHODIST
CHURCH
To the
Jane Stevens, and the brothers and
sisters of Louie Stevens, wish to thank
all.
Perhaps you sent a lovely card, or sat
quietly in a chair. Perhaps you sent a
funeral spray, if so, we saw it there.
Perhaps you spoke the kindest words, as
any friend could say. Perhaps you were
not there at all, just thought of us that
day. Whatever you did to console our
hearts, we thank you so much whatever
the part.
THE FAMILY
lt.
Episcopal Church
PASTOR PAUL JOSEPH
You Are Invited
In Appreciation
West Prestonsburg
-EVERYONE WELCOME-
•
Section Two, Pa&e Elcht
Bible Study . . 9:45 a.m.
Mormng Worship .. 11 a.m.
Evening Worship . 5:30 p.m.
Mid·Week Praye1 Service7 p.m.
FIRST AVENUE, DOWNTOWN PRESTONSBURG
NURSERY PROVIDED AND PLENTY OF PARKING
•• vE HOPKINS, PASTOR. MINISTER OF MUSIC, GUS KALOS.
Morning
•rn icr broadcast
h•· ~.
11:15, 1\QHY F\195.5
~}
�Wednesday, February 29, 1984
Big Business Has
Bargaining Power _.
It's late at night and you're watching
TV. You get hungry and decide to fix a
sandwich, but there's no lunchmeat.
"No problem," you say, "I'll just run
tjown to the corner convenience store
fnd buy a pack."
You get there and to your surprise the
price of the package of lunchmeat is
nearly double the price you normally
pay at the town grocery. Why is this so?
Dr. Larry Finley, associat~ professor
of management at Western Kentucky
University, says larger businesses buy
in larger quantities and receive discounts from the suppliers which allows
them to sell for less to the consumers.
· One reason big businesses can do this
is because they have more bargaining
power with the suppliers-they have
more financial resources and suppliers
are going to need their business more,"
he says.
Also when suppliers sell more, their
costs per unit become less, Dr. Finley
adds.
Dr. Finley has recently published an
article on the "Effects of Level of Tran,A>actions on Organization Resource Ac:,cess" as part of the WKU College of
Business Administration Working Paper
Series, and in his article says an
organization's or business's survival
ultimately "depends upon access to
resources.''
"This is not a relatively new problem," he points out, "but a study was
needed to explain why this occurs and
to see exactly how wide-spread it has
l;>ecome." And Dr. Finley says he has
ound the big business vs. small business
situation to be much larger than ever
before thought.
"There appear to be many connections between an organization's volumes
of transactions ... and its access to
resources of customers, suppliers,
owners, creditors, and others," Finley
says in his article. "While economists
and sociologists have long been interested in effects of scale and size of eficiency, little is written or known about
effects of transactions volume on
resource access, costs, and terms of acquiring these resources.
"Not only can the large company often
sell at a higher price, but the large seller
has a definite advantage in being able
to reach customers for less cost per
customer and pe_r sales dollar."
Dr. Finley's paper is a follow-up on an
earlier study on organizational effectiveness, which dealt with a business's
ability to acquire needed resources as a
easure of its effectiveness.
The article is also being reviewed by
the American Journal of Small Businesses as a suggestion on how small
businesses can act together to achieve
some of the benefits the larger companies are receiving.
KAPPA DELTA INITIATE
Miss Kimberly Hughes, daughter of
Paul P. and Bonnie Hughes, of Prestons~urg has been initiated into the Epsilon
Omega Chapter of Kappa Delta social
sorority at the University of Kentucky.
She is a sophomore majoring in
Business.
Bailey
ELECTROLYSIS
Permanent Hair Removal
Certlfle~ by
State License.
EYEBROW
* FREE
CONSULTATION
UNDERARMS
NO. LAKE DR., PRESTOHSBUJG
Thurs. 1r Fri., 10 a.m. to 4:30 p.m.
AMer 4:30 1r Sat. by appointment
24 HRS. PHONE
SERVICE
886-8924
2·22-2t-
The Floyd County Times
Speaks at HRMC
Nursing Workshop
Dr. Roger Jurich spoke to area nurses
about croup and epiglottitis at Highlands
Regional Medical Center.
What treatments are available for a
child with a hoarse, barking cough or
one who wheezes when breathing in?
Many area nurses spent a Saturday
recently in the classroom at Highlands
Regional Medical Center learning about
and discussing the care of children with
these symptoms. Croup and epiglottitis
are the medical terms for the illnesses.
They are viral infections of the upper
airways that make children seriously ill
and can cause death.
Dr. Roger Jurich, Family Practitioner, spoke at the workshop on the
medical treatment of these infections.
Clara Garrett, R.N., M.S.N., Director of
the Prestonsburg Community College
Nursing Program, discussed the nursing care of children with the two illnesses. An overview of the anatomy of
the upper airways of pediatric patients
and the respiratory care treatment of
these patients was presented by George
Stevens, HRMC Technical Director of
Respiratory Care.
Nurses attending received continuing
education credit for the seminar. Many
commented on the value of the workshop. "It was an excellent program,"
said workshop participant Teresa Lynn
Leslie, R.N., who works in the family
practice office of Dr. Larry Leslie in
Prestonsburg. "I received practical,
down to earth knowledge that can be applied to our patients," she said.
NEW ARRIVALS AT ...
OUR LADY OF THE WAY
A son, Jeremy Lee, born February 1
to Michael and Teresa Stratton, of Minnie; a son, Michael Wayne, born
February 3 to Andy and Nora Rowe, of
Mousie; a son, Micheal Keith, born
February 5 to Lisa Voelker, of Hollybush; a son, Justin Keith, born February
6 to Keith and Joyce Conley, of
Hollybush; a son, Joshua Lee, born
February 8 to Mark and Rhonda Cook,
of Dry Creek; a son, Roger Dale, born
February 8 to Bill and Maxine Adams,
of Weeksbury; a daughter, Rebecca
Evelyn, born February 9 to Clyde and
Janis Blackburn, of Paintsville; a son,
William Robert, II, born February 10 to
William and Christina Russell, of Prestonsburg; a daughter, Jessica Rose,
born February 11 to Steve and Debbie
Lucas, of Fisty; a daughter, Rachel
Nicole, born February 14 to Donnie and
Vina Gayheart, of Price; a son, Aaron
David, born February 12 to David and
Mary Neeley, of Prestonsburg; a
daughter, Nichole Elizabeth, born
February 14 to Glenn and Desiree'
Franko, of Harold; a son, Virgil Lee,
born February 15 to Arthur, Jr., and
Daisy Singleton, of Carrie.
H&R BLOCit
Found
David Alameda
$1,961
W'wright Earns Award
In Nat'l Water Project
The Wheelwright water treatment
plant has earned an award for outstanding achievement in National
Demonstration Water Project's Comptrain Project, NDWP Executive Director Edwin L. Cobb has announced. Certificates of participation were presented
to the Martin water and wastewater
treatment plants in Floyd county and the
Salyersville water and wastewater
plants in Magoffin county.
Forty-three water and wastewater
treatment plants in South Carolina, Kentucky, Tennessee, West Virginia, Louisiana, and Mississippi received
specialized training through the Comptrain Project last year. All of the plants
were out of compliance with federal
standards before receiving Comptrain
assistance. All are in compliance or are
nearing that goal after the year of intensive, on-site training assistance.
In 1980 and 1982 studies, the U.S.
General Accounting Office found
widespread violations of federal standards in small water and wastewater
systems. The problem has been so
severe that Environmental Protection
Agency Administrator William
Ruckelshaus recently approved a new
"get tough" policy: EPA will sue
violators to force them to comply with
the law_
GAO identified the lack of properly
trained operators as an important
reason for non-compliance in small
systems. "Over-the-shoulder operator
training programs can help bring small
systems into compliance," said Executive Director Cobb. "We have shown
this in the first year of the Comptrain
Project, and we expect even better
results in the second year."
The Comptrain Project is a two-year
project funded by the Environmental
Protection Agency and the Appalachian
Regional Commission. The project identifies plants that are out of compliance
due to operator problems and attempts
to bring them into compliance through
on-site, individualized over-the-shoulder
training and technical assistance. Comptrain training, or ''Comptraining,'' was
provided by NDWP's affiliate, Water
Resources Assistance Corporation of
Prestonsburg, with management by the
national office. Special financial
management assistance was also provided to help communities improve
fiscal op~ration of their water or
wastewater systems.
National Demonstration Water Project is a nonprofit organization with a
LO-year record of assisting rural communities with their water and
wastewater problems. Headquartered in
Washington, D.C., NDWP is guided by
a board of directors chosen from local
and regional water and wastewater
assistance organizations from across the
country_
RALPH'S
TIRE SERVICE
U.S. 23 No:, Prestonsburg • 886-8806
• Computer Wheel Balancing
• New Tires (Steel lr Glass Belted 1r Polyester)
• Recaps-Regular lr Radial All Season,
4-Wheel Drive 10 1r 11x15
• New Batterles-36 mo. $39.95 Installed
plus exchange
• Rebuilt Batterles-90-day warranty $25.00
plus exchange
• Shocks-Lifetime warranty $19.95 each Installed
The first Christmas savings club
originated in a bank in Carlisle, Pa., in
1909.
You can always count on Jerry's for
value. Like our Husky Breakfast ...
2 large eggs, cooked to order, 3 sizzling
bacon slices, 2 pancakes, syrup and
chilled juice-all at a great price. Come
in and see for yourself how at Jerry's,
value is one more way . ..
FL:t=RIDA
1-11-81.
With direct deposit,
you don't gamble
•
aga1nst
bad lUck,
theft,
loss,
or destruction
of your
government ·check.
Not just social security, but black lung,
veterans retirement, railroad retirement and
civil service retirement, just to name a few of
them. ·
Remember, if you're 62 and retired, First
Commonwealth checking is free of required
balance charges.
.
"just Think What We Can Do Together!"
In a recent survey of customers who got refunds, we found 3 out
of 4 believed H&R Block got them bigger refunds than if they'd
prepared their own taxes. 3 out of 4. Are you one of them?
'
What can we find for you?
People who know their business go to
H&R
BLOC~
88 Richmond Plaza
Main Street
Martin
285-9879
Prestonsburg
888-3885
Open
9
AM-9 PM Weekdays,
9-S
Sat.
Consult your Yellow Pages for the office nearest you.
MasterCard and Visa accepted at most area locations
~~~
BANKER
Bank
Member FDIC
Martin • Betsy Layne • Two Locations In Prestonsburg
�Wednesday, February 29, 1984
Fred Hall
Fred Hall, 81, of Galveston, died
Thursday at the Highlands Regional
Medical Center after an extended illness.
Born February 2, 1903, he was a son
of the late Lee and Mandy Hamilton
Hall. A retired coal miner and mail carrier, he was a member of the Little
Racheal Regular Baptist Church, at
Galveston. His wife, Mrs. Franches
Rogers Hall, preceded him in death.
He is survived by a son, Wallace Hall,
of Oma, West Virginia; four daughters,
Betty Hall, of Huntington, West Virginia,
Nellie Hall, of Cleveland, Oh., and Barbara Hall, of Detroit, Mich.; a brother,
Brice Hall, of Croton, Oh. ; five sisters,
Narma Akers, of Amba, Ky., May Hall
and Liddie Hall, both of Galveston, Una
Wilson, of Columbus, Oh., and Loue
Hale, of Dayton, Oh. and several grandchildren.
Funeral services were conducted at
the Little Rachael Regular Baptist
Church at Galveston, Sunday at 10 a.m.
with Regular Baptist ministers officiating. Burial was made in the Robert
Hall cemetery at Galveston under direction of the Hall Funeral Home.
Claude Layne
The Floyd County Times
Obituaries Melvin Woman
James Campbeti
James Campbell, 80, of Auxier, died
Saturday at the Highlands Regional
Medical Center following a long illness.
A retired brakeman with the C & 0
Railroad Company, he was born
February, 2, 1904 at Mousi~ and was a
son of the late Joseph and Lizzie Campbell. A member of the Bethel Regular
Baptist Church at Wilson Creek, he was
preceded in death by his first wife, Mrs.
Edith Meade Campbell. He later married Mrs. Dixie Click Campbell, who
survives.
In addition to his wife, he is survived
by three sons, Daniel Campbell, of Allen,
Garnard Campbell, of East Point, and
Clenis Campbell, of LaGrange, Ind.; a
stepson, Henry Campbell, of Sidney,
Oh.; three daughters, Anna Lee Frazier,
of St. Mary's Ohio, Thelma Hale, of
Risner, Rita Fay Smith, of Allen; three
stepdaughters, Billah DeBoard, of
Thelma, Ora Allen, of Moraine, Oh., and
Lottie Fraley, of Ypsilanti, Mich.; a
brother, Richard Campbell, of Hazard;
a sister, Rosa Napier, Oh.; 14 grandchildren, five step-grandchildren, and
four great-grandchildren.
Regular Baptist ministers officiated
at funeral services conducted Tuesday
at 11 a.m. at the Wilson Creek Regular
Baptist Church. Burial was made in the
Whitt Martin cemetery at Dema under
direction of the Hall Funeral Home.
Claude (Cotton) Layne, 68, died Tuesday at his home at Langley, following a
sudden illness.
He was a son of the late Will and
Lucille Layne, and was born November
5, 1915 at Langley. He was a retired
miner.
Estill Prater
He is survived by his wife, Mrs. BerEstill
Prater,
50, of Indianapolis, Intha Stephens Layne; a son, Jan.es
diana,
formerly
of
this county, died SunMichael Layne, of Langley; three
daughters, Claudina Crum and Kaye day at the Wisherd Memorial Hospital,
Rowland, both of Langley, and Leona in Indianapolis, following a short illness.
He was a son of Mrs. Mae Reed
Sayre, of Greenville, Indiana; two
Prater,
of Hueysville, and the late Harve
sisters, Melvina Scoot, of Langley,
Bulah Bentley, in Indiana; nine grand- Prater and was born November 8, 1934
children, and five great-grandchildren. at Hueysville.
In addition to his mother, he is survivFuneral services will be conducted at
ed
by six brothers, Ogil Prater, of
1 p.m. tomorrow (Thursday) at the Hall
Waterloo,
Ind., James Prater, of HueysFuneral Home chapel with the Rev. P.L.
ville, Harold Lloyd Prater, of Wayland,
Clem officiating. Burial will be made in
Denzil Prater, of Belleview, Oh., Delbert
the Stewart cemetery at Langley.
Visitation may be made after noon to- Prater, of Crestline, Oh., and Elmer
Prater, of Galion, Ohio.
day <Wednesday).
Funeral services will be conducted at
11 a .m . tomorrow (Thursday) at the
Hall Funeral Home Chapel with the Rev.
Roger Reed officiating. Burial will be
Rawley Mann
made
in the Prater cemetery at HueysRawley Edward Mann, 71, of Corn
Fork, died last Wednesday at Highlands ville.
Visitation may be made after 4 p.m.
Regiona\ Medical Center after an ex·today (Wednesday) at the funeral home.
tended illness.
Born June 20, 1912, a son of the late
Benjamin A. and Mary E . Mann, he was
Student Aid Info.
a veteran of World War II, and a
member of the Auxier D.A.V., Chapter For Coming Year
18. He was an engineer and a surveyor.
Students and their parents should be
Survivors include his wife, Mrs. Ethel
made
aware of and have an understanHilbens Mann; three stepsons, Elige
ding of the various student financial aid
Thompson, of Stanville, Monroe and
Darvin J. Thompson, both of Prestons- programs made available to them by
burg; three stepdaughters, Mrs. Edith federal, state, and local student financial aid agencies.
Marsillett, of West Prestonsburg, Mrs.
There are three major forms of aid for
Phyllis Sherman, of Calf Creek, and
students: Grants and Scholarships,
Miss May Thompson, of Corn Fork; a
Loans, and Work programs. Grants and
brother, William Mann, of Tyler, Texas,
Scholarships-These are gift money that
a sister, Mrs. Ned B. Martin, of Hopedoes not have to be repaid. Examples inwell, Virginia, and nine step- clude the Pell Grant, State Grants,
grandchildren.
alumni scholarships, institutional
Funeral services were conducted at 2
grants, merit awards, local scholarship
p.m., Saturday, at his residence with the
Rev. Wade Martin Hughes officiating. awards from your community, and
Burial was made in the Thompson grants from private foundations.
Loans-There are a number of low incemetery on Sowders Creek of Corn
terest (5% to 9%) loans available to
Fork under direction of the Floyd
students to help with the cost of educaFuneral Home.
tion. These include the National Direct
Student Loan, the Guaranteed Student
Loan, the parent's Plus Loan program
PUBLIC NOTICE
and health profession loal)S such as nurThe Prestonsburg Planning Commis- sing loans. College Work-Study
sion will hold their regular meeting, prograna-Thefederalgovernmentsu~
Monday, March 5, 1984 at 7:00p.m. in ports a campus work program at most
the Council Room of the Municipal colleges and universities. In addition,
Building. The public is invited to attend. many institutions have their own work
JAMES A. HUGHES
programs to help students meet their
Chairman
costs. Under these programs a student
lt.
can work while in school. Many students
receive jobs that are not only interesting
but improve their chances for employment after graduation.
These three kinds of aid are used
together to meet the needs of students.
It is very important to apply for aid
1r BUILDING STONE CO., Inc.
early. Students who will be starting college in the fall of '84 will have their aid
874-2273 • ALLEN, KY.
determined based on their parents' in"THE AREA'S OLDEST ESTAIUSHED
come from January '83 to December '83.
MONUMENT RIM."
Kentucky Financial Aid forms are now
available and can be picked up from
high school counselors and college financial aid officers. Any student or parent
interested in any of the student financial
aid programs listed above, regardless of
the institution he is planning to attend,
may contact Mrs. Brenda C. Music, Admissions/Financial Aid Officer at Prestonsburg Community College, Prestonsburg, Ky. 41653. Telephone (606)
SANDY VALLEY
MONUMENT
BEST QUAUTY MEMORIALS
QUICK, EFFICIENT SERVICE
AND INSTALLAnON
SEE OUR LARGE DISPLAY OF
COLORED a GRAY GRANITES
LOCATED ON OLD U.S. 23
IN NEW ALLEN
-3-
886-3863.
More than 40 percent of the world's
rain forests have been cut down or burned down, says International Wildlife
magazine. Studies indicate this is reducing rainfall and increasing temperatures-perhaps affecting global weather
patterns.
Victim of Fall
The death last Friday afternoon of
Mrs. Ethel Collins Bailey, 44, at her
home on Abner Fork, near Melvin, has
been ruled by Deputy Coroner Glenn
Frazier and the State Police the result
of an accidental fall down a stairway.
Mrs. Bailey died of head and internal
injuries after she had fallen down a
steep stairwell onto the basement floor.
Her husband, William, told the deputy
coroner he was in a nearby room but
neither saw nor heard his wife's fall. He
said he discovered her body on the basement floor after opening the door to the
basement upon receiving no reply when
he called to her.
Time of her fall was placed at about
2 p.m . Mrs. Bailey was taken to the
McDowell Appalachian Regional Hospital, where resuscitation efforts continued for about 1112 hours before she
was pronounced dead at 5:30p.m.
The victim was a daughter of Mrs.
Dollie Hall Spradlin, of Melvin, and the
late Henry Hall. Besides her husband
and mother, she is survived by three
sons, Brian, Steven and Shane Michael
Curtis, all of Melvin; a daughter, Sheila
Hall, of St. Mary's, Oh. ; a stepson, Billy
Bailey, of Cincinnati, and a stepdaughter, Mary Jane Bailey, of Dorton.
Funeral services were conducted at 11
a.m. Monday from the Wheelwright
Free Will Baptist Church and burial was
made in the Tackett cemetery at Weeksbury under directfon of the Merion
Funeral Chapel.
Connie Shepherd Leader
The family of Connie Shepherd
Leader awaits the return of her body to
this county from Harrisburg, Pa., where
she was found dead at her home there,
Saturday morning. Mrs. Leader, 42, had
been beaten to death during the
preceding night.
According to the family members, a
man named Harry Fox has been detained by police investigating the case.
Born at Hueysville, December 8, 1941,
Mrs. Leader was a daughter of Mrs.
Avanelle Sexton Shepherd Collins, of
Hueysville, and the late Bert Shepherd.
In addition to her mother, she is survived by two sons, Bert Allen Leader, of
Landisburg, Pa. , and Leonard Jay
Leader, of Harrisburg, Pa.; three
daughters, Evalanell Shepherd, of
Hueysville, Ronda Miller, of Landisburg, Pa., Tonda Leader, of Harrisburg, Pa.; one brother, Steve
Shepherd, of Hellmer, Ind.; an halfbrother, Bruce Turner, of Pensacola,
Fla.; two sisters, Bonnie Elkins of
Hellmer, Ind., and Marlene Shireman,
of Kendallville, Ind.; one half-sister,
Berniece Turner, of Ft. 1':ayne, Ind., and
two grandchildreP.
Funeral services will be conducted at
10 a.m. tomorrow (Thursday) at the
Pentecostal Church at the head of Salt
Lick Creek, and burial will be made in
the Shepherd cemetery under direction
of the Hall Funeral Home.
1983 Savings Bonds
Sales Are Reported
Miss Burieta Gearheart, Floyd county Savings Bonds Chairman, reported
purchases of $13,091 in United States
Savings Bonds were credited to the
county for December, 1983. Total sales
credited to the County through 1983 were
$261,127.
Statewide sales of United States Savings Bonds totaled $2,810,617 for
December, 1983 according to reports
coming to the County Chairman from
Gregory L. Houston, District Director
for the U.S. Savings Bonds Division in
Kentucky. Kentucky sales in 1983 totaled $41,026,695.
Nationwide sales for 1983 are up to 20
percent at $3.9 billion. Redemptions for
the year were down 27 percent from a
year ago. The value of United Sta~
Savings Bonds held by the publ}e-was
$71.48 billion on December ;u:"
~
New Series EE Bonr;ls-, ·and eligible
Series E and EE IMnds and Savings
Notes, earn interest at a variable,
market-based rate if held at least five
years from the date of purchase or
November 1, 1982, whichever is later.
The rate is set at 85 percent of the
average market yield on five-year
Treasury securities during the holding
period.
JOIN IN, LEARN, ENJOY
Introduction to Stained Glass
Instructors: Bill and Kris Creech
Beginning Tuesday, March 15
6-9 p.m.-Six weeks
PRE-REGISTER NOW.
Location: Old Hall Bros. Funeral Home, Martin
COME AND SEE OUR ASSORTMENT OF STAINED
GLASS, WINDOWS, LAMPS, AND UNIQUE COLLECTABLES.
OPEN 9·5 WEEKDAYS-CUSTOM REPAIR WORK AVAILABLE
For more info. call 285-9888
Sponsored by:
Christian Appalachian Project
2-~21.
PETRY'S WINTER
IN MEMORIAM
In memory of beloved brother
It's been a year now since you were called away, but the memories of you get
stronger with each passing day.
Our hearts are weary and saddened with
pain, but we know our loss is Heaven's.
gain.
You are thought about often by family
and friends because you were always
there to lend a helping hand.
They say with time the hurt goes away,
but to all of us it seems like only
yesterday.
Its hard to forget you because we miss
you more and more. But we all hope to
be together again on Heaven's bright
shore.
With Loving Memories
The Family of Everett Mullins
lt.
• CHILDREN'S THINGS, NEWBORN TO 6X, FANCY DRESSES, DRESSY COVER-ALLS,
~IGHTIES, JOGGING SUITS, CABBAGE PATCH SHIRTS, WINTER COATS 6X THRU 12.
• BEDSPREADS-LOTS OF COLORS AND DESIGNS IN FULL, QUEEN AHD KING, SHEET
SETS, TOWELS, CURTAINS, AND MORE.
The small store with big sa11ings
-OPEN 11-5 EXCEPT SUNDAYSU.S. 23 NORTH-NEXT TO JERRY & GERRYS SHOE STORE
(BEHIND THE PHILATINA BEAUTY SALON)
FURNITURE
Recliners
.
Electronic Tuning
Living Room
WASHER: • Large Load Capac tty • 3 AutomatiC
Cycles • 3 Water Temps for Wash/R~nse • Super
SURGILATOR• Agttator DRYER: • Dry·Mtser"
Control • 4 Orytng Temperatures • 3 Dry1ng Cycles
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• Ltnt Stgnal • TUMBLE PRESS Control
Automatic Contrast ' Colo r Tracktng
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Automatic Fine Tuntng (AFT)
lllum1nated channel tndtcators.
Energy-efficient Xtendedl tfe chassts
Super A_ccuFilter black matnx p 1cture tube
Dining Room
<-'
ss4995
95
.$199
~"~~~
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Whirlpool Model EHT171TK No-Frost Refngera·
tor • 17 0 cu It Capac•tY • Textured Steel Doors •
Prov•s•on lor opltonal ICEMAGIC· Automaltc Ice
Maker • Adjustable Full -wtdth Shelves • AdjUStable
Rollers • Ju1ce Can Rack:
10 DAYS ONLY-FEBRUARY 29-MARCH 10-FREE o ·ELIVERY
Petry's Furniture & Appliance
Martin
"Service Is Our Best Salesman"
285-3214
2-~21.
PRESTONSBURG BUSINESS ASSOCIATION
BIG
ASH GIVEAWAY
WILL START GIVING TICKETS AGAIN ON THURSDAY, MARCH 1, 1984
TICKETS WILL BE GIVEN AWAY BY ALL PARTICIPATING BUSINESSES
"Don't forget, ask for your tickets when you shop."
DRAWING WILL BE HELD
SATURDAY. MARCH 24, AT 2 P.M.
-LOCATION: PRESTONSBURG'S LARGE MUNICIPAL PARKING LOT-
CARTER
FUNEUL
HOME
som
47
WE DRIVE • PRESTONSBURG
Phone 886·2774
1st Prize $ 500-DRAW ONE TIME-IF MO WINNER-WILL BE $750 IN APRIL)
2nd Prize $ 200-(DRAW TILL SOMEONE WINS)
3rd Prize $ 100-(DRAW TILL SOMEONE WINS)
4th,Sth,6th,7th Prize $ 50 EACH (DRAW TILL SOMEONE WINS)
�Wednesday, February 29, 1984
The Aoyd County Times
Section Two, Paa:e Eleven
Miss Music, Mr. Botkins To Wed
Teams Up with Allied Sew-Vac
t __ -~----
By HAROLD COOLE-Y
TO GIVE YOU GREAT SALES I SERVICE
Most sore throats are due to virus infections which
will not respond to antibiotics or mouthwashes. For sore
throats that are due to bacteria, an antibiotic, administered in tablet form or by injection, will benefit the
affected area. The only way to determine if a sore throat
is viral or bacterial in origin is by a throat culture. This
is very important for severe, long-lasting infections
since the possibility of a strep throat is dangerous and
demands penicillin treatment or the like to prevent further serious complications. Symptomatic treatment
with a mouthwash would be harmful in that it may delay
a trip to the doctor.
First see your doctor and then if he prescribes
medication for any reason have him call us directly. At
COOLEY APOTHECARY we take great pride in the
role we play in promoting the health of folks in our community. Our complete medical family profiles are readily available to you at income tax time. We are located at
No. 2 Town Center Bldg., 886-8106. Open: Mon.-Fri.
9-5:30, Sat. 9-4.
HANDY HINT:
Humidity from a room vaporizer will often help in
preventing sore throats.
Help-Mate™
HOOVER
Vacuum
CLEAN GREEN
CONVERTIBLE
$3995
UPRIGHT
sag9s
•
•
•
•
Reg. $109.95
• steel agitator
• full time
edge clean
• full one
year
warranty
Reg. $44.95
Easy ~mpty Dust Cup - Angertip Switch
•
1 .
Powerfui120V Motor
A little over 12" Long
®
't./11/1.
51059
U4127
HOOVER
SHAMPOO-POLISHER
$7995
MARTIN ULTRASOUND ASSOCIATES
Reg. $99.95
at Family Health Center, Martin, Ky.
Has added new State of the Art
Echocardlogram with M Mode, to their
existing ofller modern diagnostic Instruments.
This Is used to detect cardiac abnormalities.
Mr. and Mrs. Bob Music, of EastPoint, Ky., announce the engagement and
forthcoming marriage of their daughter, Miss Brigitte Renee Music, to Mr.
Billy Lee Botkins, Jr ., son of Mrs. Janice Carpenter, of Clarksville, Ind., and
Mr. William A. Carpenter, of Greenville, South Carolina.
Miss Music is a 1981 graduate of Stephens College and presently employed
at Salyer's Store in Paintsville. Mr. Botkins' is a 1978 graduate of Clarksville
High School and is presently employed with a firm in Charlotte, North Carolina.
The wedding is planned for Saturday, June 16, at 6:30 p.m., at Mayo
Memorial United Methodist Church, Paintsville, Ky.
• Holter Monitor with computer read out
tor evaluation of Irregular heart beats.
• Cardiac Stress Testing machine to evaluate
Cardiopulmonary fitness and detect heart
and lung problems.
• Ultrasound Equipment to help determine·
position, age and sex of the fetus In the
uterus. Also painlessly helps diagnose
gallbladder, kidney, liver and other
abdominal problems.
Is Enrolled Agent,
Treasury Department
Eugene Russell, H & R Block
owner/manager, has achieved the
status of an enrolled agent of the U.S.
Treasury Department.
To become an enrolled agent, applicants must pass a written examination administered by the Internal
Revenue Service. As a Block associate,
Russell has nearly 200 hours of
classroom training including a special
course in preparation for the exam.
"H & R Block is fortunate to have
Eugene Russell as one of our franchise
owners/managers," said Jed W. Utsinger, district manager for Eastern Kentucky and Western West Virginia.
Eugene Russell has been with H & R
Block for 16 years.- He is currently
owner/manager of nine offices in West
Virginia and Kentucky, including the offices in Martin, Pikeville, and Prestonsburg.
• Doppler Vascular Flow Meter to help detect
blood clots and other circulation problems.
• Flberoptlc flexible gastroscope for viewing
file stomach and upper Intestinal tract.
• Flberoptlc flexible colonoscope to view the
lower Intestinal tract.
• Flberoptlc flexible bronchoscope to detect
diseases of the lungs and windpipe.
Also offering complete microscopic examination
facilities, colposcopy, otoscopy, fetal monitor
for evaluation of fetal heart condition. Complete
facilities for Black Lung determinations and related
problems.
Manln Ultrasound Is located across from Our Lady
of the Way Hospital.
The Ultrasound Associates Is owned and operated by:
Gan Maddlwar, M.D., FACS, Board Certified Gen. Surgeon;
Chandra Varia, M.D., Board Certified OBS-GYM;
Raghu Sundaram, M.D., Pulmonologlst;
Board Certified Internal Medicine
ELDER AMBURGEY PATIENT
AT OUR LADY OF THE WAY
Elder Brody Amburgey, pastor of the
Lackey Freewill Baptist Church, is a patient at Our Lady of the Way Hospital at
Martin.
His many friends are wishing him a
speedy recovery.
2-29-3t.
MAYTOWN HOMEMAKERS
Maytown Homemakers met Feb. 9 at
7 p.m. at the home of Mrs. Aida Gibson
who served a lovely meal. Those attending were Vanessa Adkins, a new
member, Melvina Scott, Helen Boyd,
Frances Pitts, Alice Hayes and Susan
Goins. The meeting was called to order
by Helen Boyd with devotional led by
Aida Gibson and reading of numites by
Susan Goins. The lesson by Frances
Pitts was on consumer safety. There
were three new members present: Libby Flanery, Vanessa Adkins and Debbie
Goodman.
-----
EFFECTIVE
FEB. 28
Maturity
GITlN-GO
CHICKEN NOODLE SOUP
Auxier, Ky.
Terry Lykins
Manager
TOM'S CHIPS ..... ONLY
AN AUTHORIZED WARRANTY SERVICE DEALER
,,
WE SALUTE'·THE GIRL SCOUTS-BUY COOKIES!
·.
--
-------------
RATES
THROUGH
MARCH S
AMOUNT
DEPOSITED
AMOUNT
DEPOSITED
AMOUNT
DEPOSITED
$500-$2,499
$2,500-$49,999
$50,000-$99,999
3 89c..,._-.,.~,
FOR
99c
EACH
BUSCH
s72s
BEER......
CASE
RAINBO.
BREAD ....
-~--------------~
$J9 9
BORDEN'S
=~~L£.............. :. .
8.50% 8.75%
7-59 days
~~~EcJ::~. ~~~·!~~~$1 s~
8-0Z. BAG
OLD RT. 1110-ALLEN, KENTUCKY 41601-(606)174-9997
STORE HOURS: 9 TO 5, MON., TUES., THURS., SAT. 9 TO I, FRIDAY
-CLOSED SUNDAY-
CAMPBELL'S
FOOD MART
886·8936
F4143
ALLIED SEW-VAC CENTER
& MERT'S GUNS & AMMO
------- - - - ----
----
• Compact - Portable - Lightweight! 11 Y, " iong.5" wide,
10'h" high
• Fits on a stair tread
• Full size canister power
• 3-way filtered air system
• Easy to empty dust bag
• Complete with tools and '
extra long .cord
• 4-qt, trigger
control super rank
• Wrap around
anti·splash guard
• transport wheels
• wide flare
shampoo
brushes
• hangs up
for easy
storage
GALLON
60-90 days
6.25% 8.75% 9.0%
91-180 days
7.20% 9.20% 9.50%
181-365 days
7.50% 9.50% 9.75%
366 days
- 18 months
7.75% 9.75% 10.0%
*LONGER MATURITIES AND RATES ARE AVAILABLE UPON REQUEST
SUBSTANTIAL PENALTY FOR EARLY WITHDRAWAL
"just Think.What We Can Do Together!"
$18 9
PEPSI, DIET PEPSI
MOUNTAIN DEW, s-t&-oz.
PEPSI FREE ..........Returnables
·First
Commonwealth
~"tTl~ Bank
;!!\;
Member FDIC
Martin • Betsy layne • Two locations In Prestonsburg
.,
'
�The Floyd County Times
Wednesday, February 29, 1984
Section Two, Pace Twelve
PRICES
IN EFFECT
WEDNESDAY
FEB. 29
THRU SUNDAY
MARCH 4
FISCHER'S
BONELESS
·FESTIVAL
**************~***
_ __!
4 LOCATIONS!
* • PIKEVILLE
LB.
•
: BETSY LAYNE • ELKHORN CITY .:
:
OPEN 1 DAYS A ·WEEK ~
•WERESERVETHERIGHT
TOLIM•TQUANTITIES
• WE ARE NOT RESPONSIBLE
FOR PRINTER'S ERRORS
• ZEBULON
!
HAMS
$ 49
* 8 A.M. TO J J P.M:.
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * ** * •
WE GLADLY
ACC
EPT U.S.D.A.
FOOD STAMPS.
---------•r
i
l
l
l
BREEZE
PORK LOIN ·.-.
...-----.....$ 2~~!
$ 19
LAUNDRY DETERGENT
QUARTER
SIZE BOX
MARTHA WHITE
SELF-RISING
LB.
MEAL
10-LB.$
;:::z_~
BAG
99 .
$1 Q99
25-LB. PAIL
ARMOUR LARD ................. .
99C
VALLEYDALE BACON .........
9
C
CHUNK BOLOGNA...................
12-0Z. PKG.
VALLEYDALE
2
69
GUNNOE'S SAUSAGE ........ .
LB.
10-0Z. CAN-CAMPBELL'S
CHICKEN NOODLE
SOUP
~~
2-LB. ROLL
$
EXTRA LEAN
$149
GROUND CHUCK........... ..........
3/$1
2/99C
MORTON 2/79C PORKDR1Bs . . . . . . . . . ... . . ....... . s1
BUNS....
$119
CHUCK ROAS
SAUSAGE .s9c :~~~rQUID . . _
CiiUNKLBLAZER $ 79 TIDE"TSIZ£ $199
$ 59
DOG FOOD
3
,.~o:A~::~~~
10\0-0Z.
POT PIES ...
CAN
BONELESS
22-0Z. BOTTl£
LAUNDRY DETERGENT ....
rr$149 VANh:rA· $119
C~ANSER...
.
~ AFERS ·······
19
49
w·isK . . . . s1 ::.~~~:1~sl
$149
RUSSET POTATOES ...... .
DLiXIE"LAND
ICE CREAM ..
~~:~N
NAVEL ORANGES....
-LB.
U1DAIAX ....
$119 CRiSCo
$1
4
9
OIL............... .
HE.1BNTTZ
69
c ARMouR $1 09
CATSUP.........
TREET ......... ..
HE1·Nz
s12
s
WHITE· cLouo 99 c
BABY JUICE .
BATH TISSUE
PAMRKAv age DOWNY $199
MARGARINE .
2/7 9
$1 6 9
~~~~t,~~-Y
FABRIC SOFTENER ...
~PAK-l~Z. BOTTLES
10-COUNT
C
~\~'o:~~rP:~7~·REE.
m~"
10-LB. BAG
.
4/99 C .... .
3 $1 ..,~----·
BANANAS ..........
LIS.
LB.
2
~
�Wed.-day, February 29, 1984
The Floyd County Times
Section Three, P . .e One
In
Paintsville
In
Paintsville
YOUR COMPLETE HOME CENTER HEADQUARTERS
1
Not a pre-fab • . not a shell house! A
Lowe-E~ Homestead IS complete. Tne
package has all the matenals needed
to build the home of the future-today-on
your lot from the foundation plate up. Labor
and construction costs are not mcluded
3
The .Lowe-E!. Homestead~~> has been specially designed as the most energyefficient home you can buy. It has
• extra msulation • double-paned windows
• extensive caulking • energy-saving heat pump
• light-colored, heat-reflecting roof .
2
You, the home buyer, furnish the land,
labor, and foundation. We provide
everything else from the inside out!
This il_'lcludes not only blueprints and building
matenals, but also paint, carpet, light fixtures, plumbing accessories & supplies, etc.
4
Building matenals are delivered to
the home s1te as work progresses, so
there's minimal waiting or wasted
matenals. FHA property standards are adhered
to. Any changes required to meet local codes,
may alter the price accordingly.
"Special Note"
*Complete
I AVIS 'I' otrl?9t'
,, 0• 11 .J
COMPLETE includes everything you need
from your foundation up.
• All structural materials-lumber, plywood shingles, doors, windows.
• All interior finishing-drywall, carpeting,
kitchen cab., paint, vinyl flooring,
insulation.
• All plumbing and electrical-tubs,
vanities, __wiring, light fixtures.
• Heat pump with duct work
~
For your convenience. If you would like
an early morning or evening appointment we would be happy to show at our
store all materials included in our
homestead package. You may choose
from one of our 87 home designs or bring
your own floor plan for a complete
material take off by one of our professional salesmen. And we will guarantee
our price for 90 days.
14 O•Zl·O
''Y!XG -mg.w
~
JO ... .
0
:::
.22 IQ
u .1
0
t
II
3
0
' "
•complete Grass Roots
$19,280°
0
*Complete Pine Hurst
$251146°0
••
- 0~
I
I
~~
I
..
GIIEAT
'o
1 3'- ~- .
:
--
.~ .·.rrt...-
lij,
__ I
2.,MlOW
·..o·
KOIIOQiol
u·.o·.tO··o·
~--=-'
''·"'-ff-----1
s5,9QQ00 Dry In Package
OUR DRY IN-PACKAGE INCLUDES-All lumber • 2x10 floor
ioists • plywood sub floor • roof rafters and ioists • shingles
• siding • doors • windows • shuHers • vents • exterior trim and
paint • caulking • nails • fiberglass tub .
Homemaker 111
.---------~~r-~~----~ - -~
-·I
(1,000 SQ. FT.)
~
<
"'
~-""'1
~•v•••
•o•
·Z.6• 15 ti'
.1Q
e TOO~
I
._J
: FREE Home Plans Brochure
Phone
Lowes
Today!
~
1~------------------~
Clip And Mail Thi~ Coupon For 1
For Fastest Information
On Affordable Homes,
789-3800
0
The Homemaker III offers maximum square
footage of living space for the lowest dollar of
construction cost. Designed for convenience
with the ultimate in material utilization. With
this in mind, the designer produced a floor
plan having rooms with livability; abundant
storage space, an exterior style with character
and curb appeal.
Mail To: Lowe's of Paintsville
Rt. #23 Nonh
1
I
Paintsville, Ky. 41240
1
Rt. ##23 North
Paintsville
Open Mon.-Fri. 8-2, Sat. 8-5, Sun. 12-5
1 Name
I Address
I City
I
NSP
:
1
I
1
1
I
State
Zip
I
I
L----------~-------~
�Section Three, Pace Two
WedneMiay, F ebrvary 29, 1984
RAY HOWELL BUILDING
Water Well
Drilling
& HOME lft'PROVEMENTS
•
•
•
•
•
REMODEliNG
PAINTING
DRYWALl
TUTURING
vf'All PAPERING
•
•
•
•
•
DECKS
ROOFING
FENCES
STORAGE BLDGS.
ETC.
Most wells drilled in half a·
day by Rotary Machine.
Kinzer Drilling Co.
FOI All Y04Jt HOM! IMPtoVIMIIIT NIIOS,
COMPLETE
ELECTRICAL SERVICES
FOR ALL YOUR INSU~ANCEAuto. fire, homeowners. hospitalization,
life. With 0-25% savings. Call Darby and
Allen Insurance Agency,
by Licensed Electrician
Call 946-2226
or 946-2677
874-2347.
12-21-tf
z-u-41
BOLEN'S
·WILL DO TYPING
OR SHORTHAND.
APPLIANCE REPAIR
15 YEARS EXPERIENCE.
CONTACT NORMA WRIGHT
AT 886-9181
OR 886-2527
2-22-tf
Repairs on Washers • Dryers • Stoves
No SlfVICI Chargi-
Pay only If we fix lt. 60-0ay Warranty
on Parts, 90-Day warranty on Labor.
Fr11 Esflmat11
REPO CLEANERS
Don't Settle For less
Only 3 left. Latest model. New
5-year warranty.
Ph. 358-9617
24-Hours A Day
SCOTT
DOUBLEWIDE
NEW '84's!
$15,995.00
Brand new 1984 60'x12' 2-bedroom homes!
Only 2 left at
New 1984, 3 Bed, 2 Bath, Gorden Tub,
Total Electric, Wood-Siding, Shingle
Roof, Cathedral Ceilings, Beams, Stove,
Refrlg., House Doors 1r Windows,
Carpet, Delivered anywhere and set.
You choose colors. Veterans no down
payment. Others pay $1700.00 down
and $217.00 per month. Fireplaces
available. TREEHAVEN HOMES. Office In
Clubhouse by swimming pool. Between
Exit 1#67 and Exlf 1#94 off 1·64. Winchester. Ky. Phone (606) 744-n62.
Some like new! Many only
$1000° down! Hurry-only a few
left at these incredible savings!
Nice selection of 14-wides and
12-wide homes!
b--..
SEE US TODAY!
Cl.ag_lb~a.
~
THE PAPERBACK BOOK
EXCHANGE STORE
~
116 Francis Sf., Prestonsburg
~
i
• Turn left off TnirO Street
between Court House & Catholic Church
:.c
e!
:'
"'
i!:
WE HAVE OVER 30,000
BOOKS TO SELECT FROM!
• ONE GROUP-15 FOR '1°0
HD~t4EB
• NONE OVER
HALF PRICE!
"We&dd~-
V \
2l He<old
I( y
~~r,::;;a
4-bedroom home at Estill.
$29.000.
HD~t4ES
·we&dd~·
FREE ESTIMATES
Call 886-3544
CALL 358-4906
it.
47e 9241>
NELSON'S
CONSTRUCTION CO.
We do: • Dozer and Loader work
• Sewage Systems Installed • Mobile
Home Moving 1r Furnace Repairs
REASONABLE RATES.
Call Ted Nelson, Jr.
47e 924&
2-8-71-pd.
East Kentucky Roof Truss Co.
COLLINS SECURITY SERVICE
• UCENSED • BONDED • INSURED
• 18 YEARS SECURITY EXPERIENCE •
• 24-HOUR GUARD SERVICE •
ADAMS CONSTRUCTION
Taking applications tor full
and part-time employment.
UNBELIEVABLE!
New 1984 Clayton 14-Wide
Home! Large front kitchen, full
bay window, breafast bar, 2
spacious bedrooms, chapel
roof, extra insulation, and
more!
*CONCRETE ........ ALL CLASSES
*GRAVEL . . . . . . . . . . . . ALL SIZES
*SAND
• Extra charge for delivery
(606) 886-9867 OR 886-3665
LAND FOR SALE
NICE aonOM LAND Ideal for 4 or 5 house
seats or house A farm. Just minutes away from Allen
Central High School.
CONTACT EDFORD OWENS
PH. 358-9560
(Serious Inquiries only)
2-22-2t-pd.
STATEMENT OF NONDISCRIMINATION
Big Sandy Rural Electric Coop•ratlve Corporation haa llled with the Federal Gowernmenl a
Compliance Auurance In which II uaur•a the Rural Electrification Admlnlatratlon thalli will comply
fully with all requirement• ol Tille VI oft he Civil Rlghla Act of 18M and the Aulae and Regulallona ollhe
Depart,.nl of Agriculture l11ued thereunder, to the end that no pereon In the United s ..tea ahall, on the
ground of race, color, or national origin, be ncluded I rom participation In, be denied the benellla ol, or
be otherwlae aubjected to dlacrlmlnatlon In th• conduct ollla program and tha operation ollacllll....
Under IIIIa Auurence, thla organization Ia committed not to dlacrlmlnale agalnal any peroon on the
ground ol race, color, or national origin In Ita pollclet and pracllcea In relation to treatment of
benellclarlea and parllclpanta Including ralea, conditione, and exlenalon ol aerYice, uta of any of Itt
laclllllea, attendance at and participation In any meellnga of beneftclarlea and parllclpanta or the
nerclae of any rlghto ol auch benellctarleo and parllclpanta In the conduct of the ope<allont of lhlt
organization.
Any peraon who betlnea hlmaell, or any apeclllc clue ol lndlvlduala, to be aubjecled by thla
organization to dlocrlmlnatlon prohibited by Tille VI of the Act and the Rulet and Regulatlonal11ued
thereunder may, by hlm..ll or a repreaentatlye,llle with the Secretary of Agriculture, Waahlnglon, D.C.
20250, or the Rural Electrlllcatlon Admlnlolratlon, Wethington, D.C. 20250, or thla organization, or all, a
written complaint. Such complalnta mual be flied not later than 110 daya alter the alleged dlacrlmlnallon,
or by auch tater date to which the Secretary or Agriculture O< the Rural Electrlll""llon Admlnlllrellon
axt•ndt the time lor llltng. Identity ol complalnta will be kept conlldenllal••c•pl to u.. extent n-aaary
to carry out the purpooeo of the Rulea and Regulallono.
874•2991 . .
CALL 358-4520
or 358-9348
A
HOIWES
u S 21 Harold ICy
ASK FOR ROBERT WILLIS
2-29-4t.
RICE
LAND DEVELOPING CO.
• LARGE AND SMALL
DOZERS
• BACI(HOES
• GRAVEL TRUCK
AND GENERAL HAULING
• 18 YEARS' EXPERIENCE
606-874-2281
OR 606-874-2870
Roger Montgomery, Box 214 Lakeside
Jackson, Ky., 41339
AN EQUAl OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYER
4-0-t!.
ENVIRONMENTAL MONITORIN
SERVICE, INC.
471 914&
HITCHCOCK
REPAIR SERVICE
24-Hour
Emergency Service
• Heating • Refrigeration
• Laundry Be Cooking
Equipment
~
PARTS
~ ~j
AVAILABLE
PHONE:
886-6900
(
~
~
OR
886-1473
FOR SALE
SAMPUNG AND ANALYSIS OF
WATER AND WASTE WATER
• Bacteriolegieal Analysis of De111estic & Well
Water s.,plies • Cetttpletioa of Qurttlty
II .P.D.E.S. Foms As R"•in!d By State & EPA
• EaYinHimetltal lmjlaCt State11ents l
Ass esSII ewts
Me111ber of AST II l Tile lbtiottal EnYironRteat
Hultlt Associition. UBIIIIATDIIY IEETS AU
STATE OSIII l EPA REGUUnOIIS.
PHONE 789-3258
DAN'S
APPLIANCE REPAIR
We repair all brandswashers, dryers and stoves.
• Guaranteed parts and work.
• Same day service.
• Discount to dealers.
• Fast dependable service.
CALL 358-9892 ANYTIME
FM with cassette, reclining
bucket seats, overhead console group, 5-speed transmission, aluminum wheels, 48,000
miles. Excellent condition.
$3,100.
For further details, call
Doug Woody or John Woods at
The Bank Josephine
886-9101" ext. 243 or 244
2-8-41.
BEAUTIFUL BUILDING STONE
Sandy Valley Monument
and
2-1-St.
TROY'S
CABINET
CENTER
(Inc.)
Phone 874-2273-AIIen, Ky.
iff}
US 23, lvel, Ky.
Stock or Custom-Built Cabinets
Kitchen Cabinets, Vanities
Thermador Appliances
on Display
Free Estimates
Discount Prices
Call 478-5344l-l4-tf. l~
TWO NEW
DOUBLEWIDE
SPECIALS
LEXIN8TON LQCAnON:
New 1984, 3 Bed, 2 Bath. Solid Construction, Garden Tub, Total Electric,
wood Siding, Shingle Root, Cathedral
Ceiling, Stove, Frost Free Refrigerator,
House Doors lr Windows. Carpet.
Delivered lr Set-Up. ONLY $16,995.00.
See this home at 537 New Circle Rd.,
Lexington, Ky. Phone (606) 293-1609.
Building Stone Co.
• APPROX.1Q-ACRE MINI-RANCH WITH 2,800 SQ. FT. RANCH
STYLE HOUSE WITH RED BARN, WORKSHOP, AND PARTIALLY COMPLETED APARTMENT OVER WORKSHOP. ALSO, ONE
BUILDING LOT ON THIS PROPERTY ALREADY GRADED. PRICE
$175,000.
tf.
!J.S. 23 So., Polnlsville
• 1979 Dodge Challenger 2·door
Coupe. 4-cylinder, tan, AM-
.A
" .\
RICHMOND LOCATION:
New Floor Plan, 1984 24x60, 1344 Sq.
Ft., 3 Bed, 2 Bath, Garden Tub, Utility
Room, Total Electric, Walk-In Closet,
Cathedral Ceiling, Wood Siding, Shingle
Roof, Roor Dormer, Frost Free
Refrigerator, Stove, Other deluxe options. ONLY •20,995.00 delivered and
set·up.
Thirteen other doublewlde models on
display. All models can be sold a
delivered as soon as weather permits.
FHA lr VA Loana-20 Repossessed •
over 50 Used Homes on lot.
STORE MANAGER TRAINEE
Ashland is moving into the quick service I food I gasoline and store business
with its new SuperAmerica and offers good ground floor opportunities to
ambitious individuals seeking growth oriented careers. If you are willing
to work hard, like to meet and deal with the public, can function in a fast
pace atmosphere, are looking for a career rather than a job. Minimum
of 2 yrs. experience in Retailing required. You may be the kind of person
we are looking for.
WRITE OR SEND RESUME AT ONCE TO:
Ralph O'Qulnn
F
• 1981 Dodge Ram 150-112-Ton
Pickup. Yellow/wh~te, AMFM, 6-cylinder, 3-speed transmission with overdrive, 49,000
miles. New tires, excellent
condition. $4,500.
HUMANA HOSPITAL LOUISA Is a modern, 90-bed, acute
care facility, located In rural Eastern Kentucky. An excellent opportunity to establish a Physical Therapy
Department. This Is a full time position. As an affiliate
or HUMANA INC., one of the nation's leading hospltal
companies, you may advance throughout the company
without any loss of benefits or seniority. You will be
offered a highly competitive salary, outstanding benefit
package and unlimited growth opportunity.
Send resume to:
Ashland&
..._..
MOBILE HOME
MOVING SERVICE ~
We.Buddo~-
PHYSICAL THERAPIST
DIRECTOR
PERSONNEL Department, HUMANA HOSPITAL Louisa,
P.O. Box 769, Louisa, Ky., 41230 or call (606) 638-9451
Equal Opportunity Employer F/M
1-4-R.
SAVE OVER $3,000.00 !
Clmrg_lbra.
''No iob
too big or ~--iii
too small.''
E.O.E.
• Free estimates • Insured
\r·
~
For appointment call:
874-9041
$11,880°0 !
Pay us a visit without
paying a fortune!
FREE
ESTIMATES!
JESSIE COLLINS, President
.
NOTICE-NOW HIRING
2-22 tf
CORP.
~-
886-2993 or 886-854.9
ANY TYPE WILL BE MADE TO YOUR SPECIFICATIONS. FREE ESTIMATE-FREE DELIVERY
886-2073 H.L. Setser, President
~
Dozers • Backhoes
• Dump Trucks
FOR SALE
r~ag~lb~ ~a.
V S 23 HCI<Oid ICy
BOB WHITE
CONSTRUCTION
Box 282, Prestonsburg, Ky.
Phone 606-886-9563, Prestonsburg, Kentucky (anytime)
~'
;:
Chapel roof, large front kit·
chen, plywood floors, sheetrock walls, and more! .t.
Roof Trusses for
Commercial & Residential
Chain Link Fence, Residential
& Commercial.
·11-2-tf
~
$99 & UP
2·15-221-pd.
Call 478-9407
~
KIRBY SWEEPERS
CALL 478-288~-~-tl-
YouR CHOICE!
2-8-41
·An equal opportunity employer.
REPO HOMES!
$9,950°0 EACH-
Allen, Ky.
CALL 886-1640
i2j tf
• TRAILER PARK WITH 7 TRAILER SPOT5-ALL FILLED. ADJACENT TO MTN. PARKWAY. GOOD COMMERCIAL PROPERTY.
PRICE $85,000.
•
•
•
•
LIMESTONE VENEERING
MARBLI LANDSCAPE: CHIPS
PORTABLI CONCRETE STEPS
VERMONT SLATE
See at
GREAT AMERICAN HOMES
Located On Old U.S. 23
In New Allen
&-3-tf.
1-75, Exit 97, halfWay between
Lexington lr Richmond.
Phone (608) 624-0200
~
�Wednesday, February 29, 1984
The Floyd County Times
Section Three, Page Three
CONCRETE
WORK
ALL NEW OFFICE SPACE for lease:
Consisting of reception - library and
ur (4) connecting offices, with five (5)
assigned parking spaces. Located on
Third Avenue near the Courthouse,
downtown banks, postoffice, town center
parking lot, and the Floyd County Times
building. Ideal for physicians, attorneys,
accountants, realtors, and other
businesses and professions. Immediate
occupancy. Jim Hammond, 886-2376.
10-19-tf.
APARTMENT FOR RENT- One
oom, furnished kitchen, central air
nd heat. All utilities furnished. Mountain Parkway, near Prestonsburg. $300
month. Cleo DeRossett, ~568, day, or
886-1368, night.
1-11-tf.
DAN'S APPLIANCE REPAIR: We
repair washers. dryers and stoves. We
will make service calls. All work and
parts guaranteed. 358-9892 anytime
2-1-5t.
FOR SALE OR RENT-1979 2 bedroom
airmont trailer. 2 miles up Daniels
reek at Banner. Call 874-9572. Dallas
Justice.
1-ll-6t.
S~ISBURY USED FURNITURE. Two
miles up Arkansas. 285-3549.
l-11-8t.
TOP DOLLAR paid for used washers,
dryers, gas and electric ranges, working or non-working condition. We pay
more. Phone 358-9617 or 358-4009.
1-18-12tpd.
1 OW PAYING TOP .DOLLAR for
mobile home wheels and axels. Ask for
Patty Wright, 639-4772.
12-7-tf.
1982 LINCOLN: Best deal in town. This
one has it all! Call Patty Wright,
639-4772.
12-7-tf.
1984 MOBILE HOME: 2 bedroom, 12'
wide, front kitchen, double windows.
Furnished. Total electric. Only $8,995.
f:all John Wright, 432-1401.
12-7-tf.
PAYMENTS LESS THAN RENT:
14-wide mobile home. Only $10,995. Call
John Wright, 432-1401.
12-7-tf.
HAVE YOU UPDATED YOUR PERSONAL insurance to meet today's
needs? If not, call us, we can insure the
entire family from 0 to 80. Call Sam
Wallen Insurance Agency. I have been
serving the insurance needs of Ky. for
'ler thirty years. Phone 874-2289.
2-1-5tpd.
FOR ALL YOUR INSURANCE-Auto
fire, homeowners, hospitalization, life:
With 0-25% savings. Call Darby and
Allen Insurance Agency, 874-2347.
12-28-tf.
FOR SALE : Two-story, 11-room apartment building, $40,000. At Twin Bridges,
Martin, on 100x50 corner lot. Call J .R.
12-14-tf.
Samons, 285-3914.
WANTED FULL-TIME OR PartTime: Lady to care for young infant
and do housework. Must have
references. Location - Mays Branch .
Prestonsburg, Ky. Call 886-6961. J .
· Hughes.
2-22-2! .
WANTED : Secretary for medical office. Please send resume to P.O. Box
1008, Martin, Ky. 41649.
2-22-2tpd.
OZER FOR SALE: 450 John Deere.
xcellent condition. Asking $18,000.
Phone 789-6800 or 886-3904.
2-22-2tpd.
FOR SALE: 1978 Toyota Celica GT
Liftback. White . air conditioned.
5-speed. excellent gas mileage . Phone
358-9889 after 4 p.m .
2-22-2tpd.
FOR SALE : 14x70 mobile home. Call
886-9065.
2-22-2tpd.
OR SALE: 1973 Chevy pickup.
automatic. V-8. short bed. new paint.
$1500. Phone78~3904 .
2-22-2tpd.
FOR RENT : One bedroom furnished
trailer. One or two people only. No
children. no pets . Call 886-2145.
2-22-2tpd.
WOULD LIKE TO BUY size 5 or 6 competition gowns or formals. Call before
2-22-2tpd.
5. 886-8539.
.P.N. with ten years' experience
seeks employment with a doctor's of2-22-2tpd.
fice. Call34~5789.
FOR LEASE: Beauty s hop . mouth of
Cow Creek. Secutity deposit. See Bert
or Malta Porter.
2-22-2tpd.
ONE ROOM FURNISHED APARTMENT . 217 Wes tmin s ter Street.
Utilities furnished. Working man or
~ouple. $175 month. Call 886-6627.
.
2-22-2tpd.
FOR SALE: House on 100'x100' lot on
Stone Coal at Garrett. Ky. Will sell
cheap. Call anytime. 349-1104. Salyersville. Ky .
2-22-2tpd.
FOR SALE: Handmade quilts. Phone
874-2717.
.
2-22-2tpd .
TRAILER FOR RENT : Call 478-2357.
2-22-2tpd.
LAND FOR SALE with s mall house.
Taylor Stumbo's home place. City
water . gas. TV cable. Close to Clark
School. Call 886-6047 after 9 a.m ..
Noma Ruth Stumbo.
2-22-21 .
FOR ,SALE : Home in Wheelwright .
Fenced-in yard, garage. has been completely remodeled. $16.000. Georgie A.
Bolden. Box 76. Wheelwright. Ky .
41669.
2-22-21.
HOUSE FOR SALE: Twenty acres
land. gas and water. Call 377-6842.
Walker Gayheart .
2-22-21 .
FOR RENT: Two bedroom trailer.
Couples only. Call886-6602.
ltpd.
FOR SALE: Norge electric dryer. 5
years old Good condition. $75. 886-6031
after 5.
ltpd.
FOR SALE: Singer sewing machine.
Zig-Zag model. $50. Call874-8958. ltpd .
APARTMENT FOR RENT: Also
house for rent in Prestonsburg. For
more information. call 886-2094. Mter
5, 88&-2132.
ltpd.
FOR RENT: 2-bedroom, unfurnished
apartment, located at Town Branch.
Prestonsburg. All electric heat, TV
cable, city water. $270 plus utilities. Call
886-6366.
2-22-2tpd.
2-BEDROOM FURNISHED APARTMENT for rent at Cliff. $300 month.
$100 security deposit. For Sale: Two
pop coolers. upright glass doors, $400:
chest type, $200: metal store shelves.
good for any type of business: new
electronic cash register. Call 886-6030
or886-1030, Rick Vanover.
2-22-2!.
FOR SALE: 1970 Case backhoe. GMC
dump truck. new bed. Call Clarence
Martin, 874-9038, after 5 p.m. 2-22-2tpd.
EQUAL OPPORTUNITY: The women
in our business make as much money
as the men. If you're looking for equal
opportunity. call 886-9401 for appointment.
2-22-2!.
FOR SALE: 5-ton Cobey farm wagon
with 6'x10' oak flat bed. Call after 5
2-2Ht.
p.m., 886-6626.
TRAILER FOR RENT: Three bedrooms, near Prestonsburg, $200 month
ltpd.
plus electric. Call 886-1882.
FOR SALE OR TRADE: Two-year-old
male walker N/R. Will tree and run
with the best. Been raised and trained
with purple ribbon bred walkers. $300
or dirt bike of equal value. Serious enltpd.
quiries only. 478-9068.
FARM FOR SALE: 375 acres~ 6-room
modern house, 4 barns, two silos. 6
ponds, large stocked lake. all cleared,
15,000 pounds tobacco base. many additional improvements , $800 per acre.
Other farms in 100-acre range available. Tom Goebel & Co., 141 S. Main
St.. Winchester. Ky., 40391. 744-3637.
2-15-3t.
HOUSE FOR SALE : 3-bedroom. 1-1/2
baths, garage, central heat and cooling, kitchen cabinets and appliances.
carpeting. On half-acre lot. $61.000.
Eligible for bond financing. Maplewood Village. Call 432-1517. -Dack D.
2-15-4t.
Deskins.
LEXINGTON TOWN HOUSE FOR
SALE: Opera House Square, two
blocks from Rupp Arena. priced below
market at $99,500. Must sell. Owner:
Arthur Rouse, 134 N. Limestone, Lexington, Ky . 40507. f606l 252-7796.
2-15-4tpd.
FOR SALE : 3-bedroom mobile home.
Plywood floors, new furnace and water
heater. Also 1970 F -700 Ford, 18' box, 4
new tires, new motor and battery.
Phone 358-9617.
2-15-4tpd.
FOR SALE: Three bedroom brick
home located near Drift, Ky. Attached
garage, 5 years old, $35,000. Call First
Guaranty Bank. 285-9281. ask for Mr.
Hall.
2-15-4t.
NEED TIRES? Can't afford those high
prices'? Come to JIM'S TIRE SHOP in
Maytown for tires and prices you can
afford.
2-22-2t.
FORSALEORTRADE: Cardoxauger,
conveyor, 24-inch steel. Phone 874-9033.
11-24-tf.
USED FURNITURE. GUARANTEED
APPLIANCES. Moore's Discount Furniture. Located about 3 miles from
Martin on Rt. 122. Low prices. Call
285-9354.
1-11-stpd.
FOR SALE: 1978 Buick Regal. Ex cellent condition. Loaded with extras.
Serious calls only. 886-2541.
ltpd .
FOR SALE: 1983 Chevrolet S-10 pickup, V-6. automatic. P .S .. P .B.. air. AMFM cassette. Call 886-6503 after 9 p.m .
2-29-2tpd.
ONE BEDROOM APARTMENT for
rent: $250 month. $250 deposit required. 478-9593 or 874-9033, Hylton
2-1-tf.
Homes.
FOR RENT: Furnished trailer. near
college. Security deposit and lease required. No pets, please. Carlos E.
Neeley. 886-8565.
2-1-tf.
FOR RENT: 4-room apartment near
clinic and college. 886-3154, T.E. Neeley.
ll-9-tf.
3-BEDROOM TRAILER FOR RENT
in Allen, $~0 month. $200 deposit. Call
285-9971 after 5, Harold Hall.
2-22-2t .
FOR RENT: 4-room furnished apartment. No children or pets. Phone
886-6239. Martha Goble.
2-22-21.
TWO TRAILERS FOR RENT. Call
874-2603. At Allen.
ltpd.
FOR SALE: 1983 S-10 Blazer, dark
blue, stripes, automatic overdrive,
AM-FM cassette, A.C., luggage rack,
air deflector, outside tire holder, 16,000
miles. Excellent condition. $10,000
firm . 886-9586 anytime, or 886-2877 before 8 p.m.
ltpd.
FOR RENT: Two · bedroom trailer,
completely furnished, ofrt. .Jllile from
Prestonsburg. Couple or coup!~ .with
one child. Phone 886-1548.
ti},'t!
Contact Riel< Johnson at 452-4237
215·41 nd
Clayton
Mobile Homes
ONLY at
Call 888·8437
Aner 5:00 p.m.
2·21l-2l·
We're glad
you asked!
John C. Hall
Founder
REASON doublewldes as low
as $14,900, direct from our fac·
torles to you.
Hall Funeral Home
WHAT IS THE FUNERAL DIRECTOR'S CODE?
Richmond, Ky.-808-623-9404
2·~2L
54 USED HOMES
ON ONE LOT!!
We hne used homes in 111 sizes 1nd
price r~nces. Two 10' wides, 26-12'
wides, 21-14' wides, 3 homes with ExPindos. All used IRd priced to sell
quickly. MIRY homes can be purchased
for as little as 5500 down. Name
brands! 4 Windsors, 9 Red1111ns. We
•e literally running out of room. See
for yourself at Gre.t American Homes,
1-75, Exit 97, halfway between Lexington & Richmond. 1606) 624-0200.
2·22~1.
LOUISVILLE
SHOW WINNERSI
Come to Clayton Mobile Homes
oi Richmond and see the 1984
model homes that have been
show winners In Louisville. We
have a large selection of these
show winners at low prices at
Clayton Mobile Homes
TREATED utility poles, 18ft. 20 ft. and
25ft. lengths. Also fence posts at GOBLE
LUMBER CO., phone 874-9281. 4-11-tf.
SECTIONAL
HOME!
GRAVEL FOR SALE: $8.75 per ton,
plus delivery charge. ~11886-3425, JIM
cox.
6-23-tf.
LIGHT FIXTURES: lh price at GOBLE
LUMBER COMPANY, phone 874-9281 .
4-11-tf.
WATCH REPAIR : If you want the best
job, bring watch repairs and jewelry
repairs
to
WRIGHT
BROS.
JEWELERS.
11-12-tf.
PERMA-SHIELD Anderson windows.
All styles, 20 percent off regular price
at GOBLE LUMBER CO., phone
874-9281.
4-11-tf.
As professionals, we subscribe to the 'Code of proper funer1l practice. This
means that we adhere to the highest st1nd•ds of professiolllllism for funer1l
directors. It is your assurance of receiving the most ethical services and that we
are worthy of the trust you place in our care.
Specifically, ow- Code pledges us to provide you with full information and to include and display oui prices prominently.
We also provide full opportunity to all persons to discuss 'Or arrange funerals in 16.
vance and to n11ke funerals available in as wide • range of prices as best serves the
needs of Ill secments of the community.
We respect 111 faiths, creeds and customs, 1nd we pledge to help provide full effectiveness to the role of the clergy.
There are many other points in our code of proper funeral practice. We will be
pleased to discuss them with you. Just stop by tor full details.
HALL FUNERAL HOME
Near J1u1Ction of Ky. 80 and Ky. 122, Martin
Phones 285·9261 OR 285-9262
L& H USED CARS
-ON THE LOT FINANCING-
886·1225
HOME FOR SALE : Four bedrooms. 2
baths. living room, dining room and
kitchen combined. utility room. Also
18x4-ft. above-ground pool on one acre
land . Asking $35,000. Located at
Melvin. Call 452-4567. Paul Puckett .
2-22-2!.
FOR RENT: Two bedroom trailer in
Martin. Furnished. References required. $175 month, $100 deposit plus
utilities. Call after 5 p.m .. 886-9583 or
886-3022, Larry Prater.
2-22-2t .
FOR SALE : 1975 Mercedes-Benz 450-SL,
excellent condition. Metalic green. New
tf.
top. Price $20,500. Call 1186-8506.
FOR RENT : Rooms, weekly, monthly,
nightly. Also waterbeds available.
886-2385, 886-9310, Sandy Valley Motel,
N. Lake Drive.
1-5-tf.
FOR SALE: Cabin at Cave Run Lake.
Three bedrooms, air conditioned, all
new carpet. Reasonable price. Call
784-7250 or 784-9203, J .C. SPENCER.
5-25-tf.
DAMRON NEW & USED FURNITURE : Living room suites starting at
$159. A-1 appliances. Rt. 122, Drift, Ky.
Phone 377-2071.
5-25-tf.
CARPENTRY WORK: Home building
and remodeling . Complete interior and
exterior. Masonry and concrete work,
all types interior and exterior painting.
Also have spray equipment to spray
barns and metal buildings. Free
estimates. Will furnish references. 15
years' experience. Call 886-8896,
9-21-tf.
anytime. Robie Johnson, Jr.
FOR RENT : 4-room unfurnished apartment, $200 rent, $150 deposit. Couples only , no pets. Call Jeanette Hubbard,
886-2557.
5-18-tf.
2-~2t.
.$2500
. $1250
1975 Plymouth Fury ...
1974 Pontiac Ventura Hatchback . .$1250
1974 Ford Torino ....... ,... . .$1250
1973 Plymouth Duster, low mileage $1500
1978 Oldsmobile Cutlass .
New 1984 40'x 24' Sectional
home on display! 3-bedrooms,
1 Yz baths, breakfast bar,
cathedral ceiling, furniture, appliances, shingle roof, wood .
siding, and much more!
0
$18,900°
ON SALE!
SPECIAL ORDERS INVITED!
b;;;.
Cl.n!f:l.~lbP'-!!r.,.._
TRUCKS:
1980 GMC Sierra.
1976 Chevy Pickup
.$3250
.$1000
RT. 23 NORTH- BELOW PRESTONSBURG
2-~ltpd.
HOA4EB
"We &dd ().ua.m,.d.'u S 2) H•rol4 K y
OFFICE SPACE FOR RENT :
Business will remodel if necessary . Adjoining East Ky. Auto Parts, South
Lake Drive. Call886-6056.
2-22-21 .
HEY LOOK! We repair washers,
dryers, rang~. all types appliances.
Parts ordered for you. Call 358-4009 or
358-9617.
11-3-tfpd.
PHARMACIST POSITION: Part-limE>
or full-time. Registered Pharmacist
position open at K-Mart . Pikeville. Ky .
Apply in person. Equal Opportunity
Employer.
2-15-tf.
LARGEST DOUBLE-WIDE
DEALER IN KENTUCKY .
fOR THE LAST ~ YEARS
606·623·9404
FREE! FREE! FREE ! Get your
washer. dryer, gas or electric stove
repaired free. Bring it to Bolen's Appliance Repair. old Rt. so. Eastern. No
service charge. No labor charge. You
pay for parts only. For appointment.
2-15-12tpd.
phone 358-9617.
FOR SALE: Reconditioned wa shers.
dryers. gas and electric ranges. furniture. new and used parts for all
makes and models . Refrigeration
parts ordered for you . All guaranteed
60 davs. For cheap appliances and
parts.· plus a good guarantee. call us .
358-9617.
2-15-12tpd
HHl·pd
You will enJoy painting In your home
with Trl Chem Liquid Embroidery.
of Richmond
FOR RENT : One bedroom apartment
on South Lake Drive. Call 886-6056.
2-22-21.
HOUSE FOR SALE: Full basement,
forced air, natural gas. Call after 4,
886-3860, Ann Slone. .
9-14-tf.
BOLEN'S MOVING & DELIVERY
SERVICE : We move a house full or
deliver one piece - a nywhe re. Phone
358-9617.
2 15-12tpd.
p.m.
INTERIOR AND EXTERIOR Porter
Paint. 1,000 colors to choose from. BEN
FRANKLIN STORE, · phone 886-2169,
Prestonsburg.
5-16-tf.
FOR SALE: Nice. extra-large lot in
Woodland Hills. country setting. about
1-1/2 acres. 200-ft. road frontage. has
electricity. water and sewer already on
property. Five minutes from Prestonsburg. About one acre of lot level, plenty
qf room for swimming pool. tennis
court or garden . Suitable for A-Frame.
brick ranch or modular home. Close to
Clark Elementary School. Price reduced to $15.000 firm . Call 886-8658 after 6
2-15-6tpd.
p .m .. or 437-4556.
ATTENTION: HYLTON HOMES Service Dept. now has parts for Whirlpool.
Kenmore. G.E. and Hotpoint washers
and dryers. Also parts for Magic Chef
and Brown stoves. Also buying 30" gas
and electric s tov es a nd good
refrigerators . Phone 478-9594 or
874-9033
2-15-121.
PATIO • SIDEWALKS • STEPS
DRIVEWAYS • FOOTERS
• BLOCK WORK • SMALL JOBS
WELCOME. Call Eugene Ousley
886-3092 or
886-3789, after 4
"Let's Paint"
PEDAL STEEL GUITARctasses now rormlng tor E9th basic to
Intermediate lessons to begin In early
March. Must hove your own guitar.
ue
,166
HOME FOR SALE
Lovely 3-bdrm., 2-story Colonial brick home. 2,800 sq.
ft. All electric. Located at
Betsy Layne, Ky. In excellent neighborhood on
700x750 ft. landscaped lot,
out of the flood area. You
must see this home to appreciate Its quality.
Interested persons only call:
478-9629
2 29-2!-pd,
PUBLIC UTILITIES SALE!
WEDNESDAY, MARCH 14, 11 AM.
Mt. Sterling Auto Auction, Inc.
U.S. 460-West 'of Mt. .Sterling, Ky.
CHEAP'S
MOBILE HOUSING
"Eastern Kentucky's
Largest Dealer"
(There Has To Be A Reason)
COME TO SEE
47
New Models
Direct From The
Mobile Home Show
DON'T BUY AN OLD FLAT ROOF
SHOE-BOX LOOKING TRAILER
COME TO CHEAP'S WHERE
COACHES LOOK LIKE "HOMES".
If You Bu1 A New Mobile
Home And Don't Consider
Cheap's Prices and Quality,
You'll Lose Monef.
FREE
300 Mile Delivery And Set Up
On Foundat1on. Payments To
Suit Your Needs.
Open After Church
On Sunday For
Your Inspection
CHEAP'S
FLEMINGSBURG , KY.
Only 60 Minutes Onve
From Downtown Lexmgton
Phone 498-1414
�HOME REMODELINC. . additions.
roof shingling, concrete driveways.
sidewalks, patie!>, concrete repairing .
block layj.Pg. foundations. retaining
walls. f'ree estimates. 886-1090.
886-1:603.
2-29-21pd.
SElL IT RIST.I
B1W lr fNtJIIT.I
2 • -
2.
£. -
NEW 3-BEDROOM HOME for sah:
near Clark School in Woodland Hills
Subdivision 1440 sq. ft brick. 3 bedrooms. 2 full baths. living room with
fireplace. large built-in kitchen. dining
room and utility room with lots of
cabint>t space. Central heat and air
conditioning. fully carpeted Concrete
patio. beautifully landscaped Rt>ady
for 1mmt>diate occupancy. Call
:m-6405. Nathan Wright.
2·15-:11
CLAUDETT HALL--HAIRSTYLISTIs now working at Philatina. next door
to Gerrv & Jerrv's Her working days
are M~ndav. Wednesday and Saturdav. Other days by appointment only.
Business phone : 886-9175. Home
phone : 377-2804.
2-15-3t.
TELEPHONES. JACKS. ACCESSORIES : We sell. install and service All
work guaranteed Sen•ice contract:
$15 a vear residential. $20 commercial.
We now have Satellite receivers: Five
vear warranty on dish. two year on all
p)se. R&R Telephone. Beside Martin
Police Station Call 285-3825 or 285-3727
anytime
2-8-4tpd.
FOR SALE: 25 acres. 2-bedroom
frame house. 22x46 frame outbuilding.
Freegas.478-5205.
2-15-4tpd.
REAL ESTATE FOR SALE: Commercial property. up to ten acres or more.
Parallel to I-75. bound by Stuckey's.
McDonalds. For Mall. Steak House .
motel. etc. Berea. Kentucky.
606-986-4863after 7 p.m
2-15-Jtpd.
SELLING AT WINTER PRICE: 1981
Honda Silver Wing GL-500. Fully dressed. AM-FM cassette. cruise. 2 helmets .
and detachable trunks and rear seat
Must see! $1995. Call Jim Clarke.
478-2614
2-15-4t.
FOR SALE : Specialize in limited edition prints. Over 300 artists. Bret
Johnson 's first coal prints. Hampton.
etc. Ship daily We discount Campbellsville Cherry and reproduction Victorian furniture Teresa's Antiques &
Gallery. Berea. Ky .. 606-986-9147.
2-15-3tpd.
WALLEN'S TRADING POST & TIRE
SALES. Retails and wholesales. New
and used tires, wheels. caps. lugs.
wheel covers. batteries. tubes. auto
parts. stereos and boosters. tubes and
much more. We trade for most anything of value 874-2289
2-1-5tpd.
FOR SALI<> llnfurn1shPcl 12x70
Marlt'tt mobllt' homt'. 2 hedrnoms.
$7!1()(1 Nt'w carpet. lots of extras. 2
rlecks Call fi06-fi!12--t7:l!1 anyt1mP
2-IHtprl
CORN FOR SALE· Ear or sht>lled.
R74-22:ll\
2-1\-lit pel
NEED MONEY'? Pawn it. don't sell it
We loan money on almost anything
Hock Shop. N. Lake Drive. 886-2:l67
2-1-1\t
HOUSE OR TRAILER FOR RENT at
Ivel. No chlldren. no pets . References
requ1red. Call 478-9221 or 478-9000
2-22-10tpd .
EXPERIENCED SALES PERSOI\:
NEEDED to solicit Courier Journal in
Floyd County $100 plus commission
per week Auto necessary. Call
1-80()..292-6568.
2-22-:lt
SPRING IS NEAR and grass will grow.
Bring your mower. tiller. weed trimmer for tune-up or repairs now. Sandy
Valley Hardware. Allen. Ky 874-9218.
2-22-6t .
FOR SALE: King-size bed. good shape.
$125. 700 Ford dump. $1500. Call
285-3423 after 7 p.m.
2-15-Jtpd .
ALTERATIONS: Get ready for Spring
Call886-8398.
2-15 3tpd.
GERMAN SHEPHERD PUPPIES for
sale: $50 each. Garnis Martin. 358-9178.
2-15-31.
HH5 ACRES FOR SALE: Beautiful
building sites. Located two miles north
of Prestonsburg on Jane Brown
Branch. exit 3/1()-mile of U.S. 23 by
Plantation Motel. Possible land contract. Call or write Jim Bingham. 1182
Booth. Howell. Mich. 48843. !5171
546-6635.
2-15-Jtpd.
FOR SALE: Captain's bed for boy's
room. Used for two years. Phone
886-6264. Peggy Kidd.
2-22-21.
FOR SALE OR RENT : 8-room house.
built-in kitchen. completely furnished.
fully carpeted. Call Bill Wells. Weeksbury. 452-2283.
2-22-2tpd,
WITH 20 YEARS EXPERIENC
HOUSE FOR RENT: Three bedrooms.
2 baths. built-in kitchen with kitchen
appliances. Located at Lancer within
Prestonsburg city limits. $350 per
month. Call886-2403. J. Hughes. 2-22-21.
Call Romey Spears
874-2688 or 874-2061
FOR SALE: D&H 1973 Catel'pillar
dozer transmission. $6000. A-1 shape.
New 24-inch tracks for D&H. $6000. 150
KW Caterpillar generator. 3 PH AC
power. $5000. 1974 International tractor
tandem with 5th wheel. new llx24 tires.
$6000. 50 HP 3 PH AC motor. $1500. 1978
6tHon goose neck low boy. like new.
new rubber. $20.000. Day phone·
587-2787. Night phone· 587-2954 or
478-5755. Todd Hamilton
2-22-2t
WANT A
STONE FIREPLACE?
Finally, an affordable natural
stone fireplace, all types of
masonry work, residential,
commercial 1r ornamental work.
References available.
PHONE:
789-1911
297-4307
ATTENTION: B.J.'S GLASSWARE
will be opening at the Big Flea Market,
March 2, 3 & 4, Booth No. 101. Also buy.
sell or trade U.S. postal stamps. Call
886-1507.
ltpd.
2-29-3l.
FOR RENT
OFFICE
SPACE
FOR SALE: One-car garage door.
metal and wood ; living room table.
Call874-9038after 5.
ltpd.
IJ.g Sandy Health Care
Interested II
Big Sandy Health Care, a
federally funded, non-profit corporatlon dedicated to quality
health care, thru the Magoffln
and Mud Creek Clinics, has
several openings on the board
of trustees.
Be a member of a team that
cares. Invest a few hours each
month sharing In your community's future.
CALL
Delivered, Blocked
& Leveled
Cll/1:
Larry Keene
437-4078
FOR SALE: Yamaha SR-18.'5 Exciter.
Like new condition. For sale or trade.
$900 or best offer. Phone 886-2201.
2-22-Jtpd.
FOR SALE· 4 walkers. $20 each: one
pott1e. $25: one leg brace with shoes.
$20: one Honda mini-bike 70. regular
$700 - sell for $425. 600 original miles .
Day: 285-3561. Night: 285-3051.
2-22-Jipd.
BRICK. BLOCK. STONE WORK. Fifteen years' experience. Call collect.
fi06-29H080.
2-22-4tpd.
CARPENTRY WORK: New homes
and remodehng. drywall. FHA approved. Masonry and concrete work. Also
block work . Free estimates. James
Watkins. 88&3052or 886-9673. 2-22-4tpd.
COURIER JOURNAL DAILY and Sunday route available in Prestonsburg.
Profit - $110 week. $250 cash bond
deposit required. If interested. call
1-800-292-6568.
2-22-31
I•
FREE ESTIIIIA TESI
886-9528; 874-9934
2-29·3t-pd
BOAT: 19-ft. Searay. walk-through
windshield. 165 h.p. Mercury with tilt
control. plus trailer. full canvas mooring cover. Very clean, excellent condition. Price $4800. Call 297-4825 or
297-2448, Charles Boston.
2-29-21.
TRUCK AND WELDER for sale. Call
874-9547.
2-29-2tpd.
FIVE PROM DRESSES for sale. Only
been worn once. Prices from $10 to $60.
Sizes 3-9. Call, ask for Rhonda.
886-1041 or 285-9597.
2-29-2tpd.
FOR SALE: 1955 Olds 4-door. Good
condition . $1500. Phone 377-6265.
2-29-21pd.
FOR RENT: One bedroom. furnished
apartment. Security deposit. Adults.
No pets. Winchester Apartments. Mter
5, call 874-9038.
2-29-2tpd.
FOR SALE: Registered coon dog, 3
squirrel dogs, Spitz and Chihuahua
puppies. Phone 874-9713.
2-29-21pd
MINING SUPPLIES FOR SALE: 3
phase boxes. 600, 200 and 100 amp, 50
KBG isolated transformer, 500 BC
bolter cable in good condition,
Galvometer, hand-sqeezed detonator,
miscellaneous items. Call James Maynard, 478-9969.
2-29-2tpd.
SANDY VALLEY REPAIRS: Furnaces. room heaters. water heaters
serviced 874-9218 days or 886-1453
evenings.
2-22-61.
FOR SALE: Two bedroom house in the
city, $500 down and assumable loan.
Call886-6458 between 5 and 7 p.m . ltpd.
FOR SALE: 190Cl model Honda ATC 110
three-wheeler. good condition.
886-1012, Don Whitaker.
2-2!Ht.
BEES FOR SALE: Ten hives of bees
and super price. $25 each. Call Edward
Patton, 377-2456.
ltpd.
REUNION: Relatives and friends of
Elish <Strawberry) Johnson and Cindy
Cook Johnson will meet for their first
Johnson reunion, July 30, at Potter's
Park, Lansing, Mich. For more information, call Johnathan Johnson at
517-663-8359, or Ellen Lee Johnson
Beam at 517-663-4173, or write her at
7974 Holmes Hwy.. Eaton Rapids,
ltpd.
Mich. 48827.
NOTICE
Now thru Feb. 29, 1984 ONLY
$99 down and payments as low
as $124.98 on selected
modelsONLY AT
Clayton Mobile Homes ~
Richmond, Ky.-806-823·9404 ~
FOR RENT : 3-bedroom house near
grade school at Betsy Layne, $300
month plus utilities, security deposit
required, one child only, no pets. Also
private trailer lot, $100 month in Betsy
Layne, good location. Phone 478-9689.
2-29-2tpd.
FOR SALE: 1971 Chevy pickup, long
wheel base. Good dependable truck.
Call377-6596.
2-29-2tpd.
FOR SALE: Three Tennessee Walking
horses. One gelding, one mare, one filly. Call after 6 p.m., 886-1825. 2-29-2tpd.
FOR RENT: 12x60 trailer located in
the Goble-Roberts Addition. Phone
478-5034.
2-29-2tpd.
FOR SALE OR RENT: Two bedroom
trailer ~Old 23 between Allen and
Prestonsburg . Call 874-2069. 2-29-2tpd.
FOR RENT : Sleeping rooms in private
home for working ladies or gentlemen.
References required. Call 88&9636.
2-29-21pd.
FOR RENT : Basement efficiency with
outside entrance. Furnished and
utilities paid. $225 per month, $100
security deposit. Suitable for one person. No pets. David Leslie, 886-9937.
2-29-2t.
FOR SALE: 12X65 mobile home, 3 bedrooms including electrical hookup.
Ralph O'Quinn, 358-4520 after 4 p.m.
2-29-21.
WHETHER FROM GERMANY.
JAPAN, or any other LAND- Your
car is in good hands at Custom Coach
Building and Collision Service, 413 S.
Lake Drive <located in same building
with Scott Gross Welding Supply),
Prestonsburg, Ky. Phone 886-6010 or
874-2802.
2-29-2t.
FOR RENT OR SALE : 1975 2-bedroom
trailer. 12X60. Phone 285-5074, Randy
Carol.
2-29-2t.
FOR RENT : New 4-room office with
built-in kitchen . air conditioned.
Located in Stanville next to Brandeis.
Phone 478-2477, Jerry McMamee .
2-29-21.
FOR SALE : EZ-GO golf cart. electric.
Call 432-2311 after 5 p.m . PPggy Steele.
2-29-21.
FURNISHED TRAILER FOR RENT:
Will accept one small child. 886-8724.
Edith Stumbo.
2-29-21.
1984!
$8,995°
FOR SALE: Mobile home. Good condition. $7500. Phone 874-8947.
2-29-21pd.
SHIRT TALES FOR SALE: Call Donna Collins, 886-1532 after 3 p.m. 2-29-2t.
Spring
Special!
New
• Ucensed Contractors • Electricians
• 20 Years Experience
AU PHASES OF CONSTRUCTION
• Roofing • Carpeting • Concrete
• N11111 Con•tructlon • Remodeling
PALOMINA HORSE FOR SALE. Call
886-3505.
2-29-2tpd.
COMMERCIAL BUILDING FOR
SALE or lease. South Lake Drive.
Prestonsburg. Ky. Available immediately. Call 606-329-0148 after 5
p m.
·
2-22-4tpd.
2·15·3t
PROFESSIONAL BUILDERS
HOUSE FOR SALE: Three bedrooms.
2 baths. Call Rex Frasure. 377~508, or
Sharon Frasure. 377-1125.
2-29-21.
5-ROOM HOUSE FOR SALE at Pumpkin Center, Estill, Ky. Call Roger Gibson, Langley, Ky.. phone 285-3509.
2-29-2tpd.
FOR SALE: Good 12 h .p. garden
tractor-plow with all attachments, including snow blade. Call Tincy Hall.
377-6280.
2-29-21.
SOUTH PAW
TWO VANS FOR SALE: 1971 Dodge,
rebutlt motor: and 1975 Ford. 250
Econoline. Phone 886-9220.
2-29-21pd.
WILL PAY TOP PRICES for standing
timber. Contact David Steagall. Rt. 1.
Box 695-J. Morehead. KY 40351.
606-784-9463.
2-22-41.
STORAGE BUILDING FOR SALE or
will build to your specifications. Call
886-1640 after 5 p.m.
2-29-lt.
744-1918 or 744-4384 nights
WANTED: Used restaurant equipment. Also a good cook. Call 886-6047.
Penny McKenzie
2-29-21.
FOR SALE: Sticker collection, 858
stickers in all. 216 Coal Company. Also
tread mill, has timer and speedometer.
H interested, call 874-2795 after 5 p.m.
2-29-2tpd.
447-2493, 784-9203,
OR 784-725Q.
CALL
RICHARD BERINI 8r ASSOCIATES
WANTED TO DO: Tree trimming and
cutting. Also fruit tree pruning. Call
886-1631 after 3 p.m .
2-29-21pd.
HOUSE FOR SALE: Five rooms and
bath. one mile from KY 80 up Buck's
Branch. Shown by appointment only. A
firm $30.000. Call after 5. R. Dingus.
285-3107
2-22-4tpd.
HELP WANTED :
Radiologic
Technologist position available .
Hazard ARH. Primarily evening shift.
Contact Personnel Office. 439-1331 .
2-29-lt.
Colby-Hills spacious (3300
sq. h.) 4-bedoom ranch, stepdown dining room, sunken livIng room with fireplace, 2%
baths, kitchen-family room
with fireplace, central air, gas
forced-air heat, loads of
storage, all on 1V2 acres and
very best location.
Asking $150,000.
FOR SALE: House in Martin . Carport.
basement, well insulated with low utility bills, on large lot. $42.000. Call
285·9512.
2-29-2tpd.
FOR SALE: 1955 Chevrolet 2-door
hardtop, like new, $3500. 1975 15-1/2 ft.
Runabout boat, 85 h.p. Johnson motor.
with cover and extra tanks. $2600 or
best offer. Phone 377-1140.
2-29-21pd.
FOR SALE: Lot at Harold with doublewide. 3-bedroom. Completely furnished. new electric furnace and air conditioner. $25.000 firm. Call 606-437-4556.
2-22-6tpd.
0
c.JI:
OLLIE WATTS
Or
JOHN WRIGHT
606-432-1401
FREE MALE PUPPY: Black and
white. wormed To good home. Call
886-9513.
ltpd
YOU BEND 'EM. we MEND 'EM! For
quality, SEND 'EM to Custom Coach
Building and Collision Service. 413 S.
Lake Drive <located in same building
with Scott Gross Welding Supply).
Prestonsburg, Ky . Phone 886-6010 or
874-2802.
2-29-2!.
EARLY S~SON SPECIAL: Bring
vour room air conditioner to our shop
for cleaning. maintenance. repairs
now. Sandy Valley Hardware. Allen.
Ky 874-9218.
2-22-61.
FOR SALE AT CAVE RUN LAKE.
ESTABLISHED BUSINESS ON 1.8
ACRE LAND. LOCATED V2 MILE
FROM MAJOR BOAT RAMP.
$28,500. CALL:
WINCHESTER. KY.
215-41.
$2,995°
WANTED TO BUY: TransmiSSIOn for
1979 Plymouth Horizon . 105 engine.
Call 358-9142. Evenings. 358-9406.
Laymon Bragg.
2-22-3t
2·29--'lt-
349·3110 or 886-8546
0
HACKWORTH'S MINOR PLUMBING
and carpentry work Call day or night.
606-886-6623. Jim Hackworth . 2-22-31.
THE FLOYD COUNTY SHERIFF'S
DEPT. needs mature persons for evening telephone wQO'k about six weeks.
Call886-8965.
ltpd.
BAIT SHOP
AND GROCERY
in Prestonsburg
Phone 886-1312
Used
2 Bedroom
Mobile Home
Section Three, Paae Four
The Floyd County Times
Wedneeday, February 29, 1984
FOR RENT: Two bedroom apartment.
kitchen includes appliances. new air
conditioner. Located at Stanville.
Phone 478-2477. Jerry McMamee.
2-29-21.
WANTED : Nursery Attendant to
watch children at First Presbyterian
Church. Prestonsburg, Sunday mornings. One to two hours' work Call
886-2214or886-1962.
ltpd .
FOR SALE: Bass boat, better than
new, at half price. 14-ft. aluminum
Starcraft with newly painted Sears
trailer. 18 h.p. engine restored to new
condition. Christian project, 285-9888 or
285-3790 <evenings).
2-29-2t.
FOR SALE: Interior and exterior
<Gray Seal) paint. Also glass windows.
Phone 886-6047. Penny McKenzie.
2-29-21.
FOR SALE: Mobile home. fu rnished,
$4000 cash. or $3000 and take over payments. May leave on present lot at $50
per month. 358-9827, James Hughes.
2-29-2t.
IF YOUR CAR'S IN DESPAIR and it
needs REPAIR with a quality FLAIR.
take it to Custom Coach Building and
Collision Service, 413 S. Lake Drive
(located in same building with Scott
Gross Welding Supply), Prestonsburg.
Ky. Phone 88&6010or 874-2802. 2-29-2t.
FOR SALE: 1980 Grand Prix . No rust,
drives perfect. Book price $5500, but
will take $3500. Call 377-6606, Jeff
Wright.
2-29-21.
FOR SALE AT MAYTOWN on Rt. 80:
House, 7 rooms and bath, 3 outbuildings, pasture, garden, corn field.
Will take used trailer trade-in. Call
285-9839 or 285-9196.
2-29-2t.
FOR SALE: Two night clubs in Lexington and Owensboro, Ky. Lexington
club in prime location, grosses over
$400,000 a year. Reason for selling,
partner dispute. Write to P.O. Box
22263, Lexington, Ky. 40522.
2-29-2t.
EQUAL OPPORTUNITY: The women
in our business make as much money
as the men. H you're looking for equal
opportunity, call 874-0041 for appointment.
2-29-2t.
OLD BARN SIDING WANTED for
lumber. Also need old chicken crate
and apple crate. Mail price and
description to Christian Appalachian
Project, Box 1119, Martin, Ky. 41649.
2-29-21.
FOR SALE: 12x54 mobile home
Package heating and cooling unit.
Underpinning blocks and steps, electric pole and service. 9x10 outbuilding.
new carpet. $6000. Phone 874-2879. ltpd.
FOR RENT: Two bedroom trailer on
private lot. Call886-8316.
ltpd
FOR SALE: Maytag dryer. works but
does not kick off, $50. Also antique
stereo. works fair, $25. Call 874-2346.
ltpd.
TRAILER FOR RENT: Tanker Fork
of Mud Creek. Call Chester Hamilton.
587-2099.
ltpd.
BIG 3-FAMILY YARD SALE: Rain or
shine. Monday & Tuesday, March 5-6.
Location: 30 Bingham St.. behind
Elliott Supply Company. Ladies' shoes
sizes 5, 7 & 10; men's, ladies' and toddler clothes, dresser. appliances an~
lots more. 8:30a.m. till? 886-6644 1tpd.
HELP WANTED: Baker apprentice to
start new bakery. Must have basic
knowledge of dough, mixing and baking, and desire to own the business in
the future . Write Box 658, Martin, Ky.
41649. Shera Cole.
2-29-21.
YARD SALE: Friday and Saturday. on
old 23, between gas company building
and mouth of Cow Creek. Mostly baby
clothes, etc. Mary Wright.
2-29-2t.
ITEMS JUST OFF PAWN : Air conditioner, microwave, sewing machine.
power tools, movie projector. tent.
knife, stereos, cameras, radar detector. The HOCK SHOP, 886--2367. 2-29-2t.
HELP WANTED: Security person
needed to patrol and protect. Must
have strong self-confidence and be able
to sell service part of the time. Write
Box 658, Martin, Ky. 41649. Shera Cole.
2-29-21.
HAY: Excellent quality. 6()..80 IU bales,
$3.001 bale. Call 1-638-4204, James E.
Sparks.
2-29-Jt.
BUSINESS OPPORTUNITY, FOR
SALE: Work for yourself at your own
leisure. Newly established. growing
business. Grocery store. gas station
and carry-()ut. Three bedroom brick
house. All in one package. 874-2314.
2-29-3tpd.
FOR SALE: 1979 Subaru G-L station
wagon, 4-WD. Excellent condition.
Books for $3,300, will sell for $2,750 or
negotiable. Call 886-2201 after 4 p.m.
2-29-3tpd.
TRAILERS FOR RENT: Singles or
couples only . 874-2114, Akers Trailer
Court.
2-29-31.
WILL DO ANY KIND of odd jobs.
358-3481, Timothy Webster.
2-29-41.
FOR SALE: 500 Case backhoe. 1971
Chevrolet dump truck. Phone 874-2395,
Leo Music.
2-29-41.
IF YOU NEED WORK DONE. call
Stumbo Painting, Drywalling, Accoustics, Spray Ceilings, 886-1926,
886-6466. Milton Stumbo
2-29-4t .
WASHBOARD WANTED (hand size).
Also need old well bucket <stove pipe
type). H you have old kitchen furniture: dry sink, cabinet, round oak
table or oak ice box. write Christian
Appalachian Project, Box 658, Martin,
Ky. 41649.
2-29-21 .
FOR RENT: 28x28 room located in
downtown Martin. Nice location for office or small retail business. Air conditioned, heat and restroom. Call285-9400
for more information. Wesley Case.
2-29-4t.
FEATHERBED WANTED: Also
QUILT or quilt top. Will pay ca~h for
qua lity. Reply to Christian Appalachian Project, Box 658, Martin.
Ky. 41649.
2-29-21.
HOUSE FOR SALE at mouth of
Steele's Creek near Wayland. Three
bedrooms, central air, fully carpeted
on large, chain-linked fenced lot.
Phone 447-2510.
2-29-4tpd.
TRAILER TIRES WANTED. Also
need mobile home axles and wheels.
Write Christian Appalachian Project,
Box 658, Martin, Ky. 41649.
2-29-21.
3-BEDROOM HOME FOR SALE near
school in Maytown. Located on three
lots. Central heat, full basement.
Adjoining building, 16'x24' with full
basement. Good neighborhood.
beautifully landscaped. Complete
fence. In the mid-30's. Call 285-3494,
Thomas C. May.
2-29-4t.
1956, 1955 CHEVY WANT~ Send
description and J>.ric&-tu-al'ristian Appalachian ProJect, Box 658, Martin.
Ky . 41649.
2·29-2t.
~
HOUSE OR TRAILER FOR RENT at
!vel. No children, no pets. References
required. Call 478-9221, 478-9600. or
478-5970.
2-22-10tpd.
NO MATTER what BRAND, either
foreign or INLAND. if it needs a
REPAIR, take it down THERE to
Custom Coach Building and Collision
Service, 413 S. Lake Drive <located in
same building with Scott Gross Welding Supply), Prestonsburg, Ky. Phone
886-6010 or 874-2802.
2-29-2t.
RAISE, LEVEL OR MOVE HOUSES
and mobile homes. Also lay block and
pour concrete. Call Johnny Slone at
447-2240.
2-29-12tpd.
APPRENTICE WANTED: Training
available in sign painting <must be
good in lettering). LEARN WELDING: Must be able to lay a bead. Reply
by letter to Box 1119, Martin, Ky. 41649.
2-29-21.
FOR SALE: 1979 Chevette. Silver.
2-door, air conditioned, automatic
transmission, AM-FM radio, radial
tires. Good condition. $2500 firm. Call
Gary Frazier. 285-3590 after 5 p.m.
2-29-41.
BOAT WANTED: Also need boat
trailer and used outboard engine <any
condition). Call 285-9888 or 285-3700.
Christian Appalachian Project. 2-29-21.
4- WHEEL DRIVE: We can align and
balance yours. WHEEL & ELECTRIC.
874-9774.
2-29-tf.
WANTED: FORD TRACTOR with 3
PT plow and 3 PT disc. Call Jerry.
285-9888 or Mike, 285-3790. Christian
Appalachian Project.
2-29-21.
FOR SALE: 100 acre farm, located in
Menifee county. 8 miles from Cave Run
Lake. Good 2-bedroom house, 2 barns.
tobacco base, $100,000. Call606-768-2451
after 4 p.m. Milburn Denniston. 2-29-21.
FOR RENT: One bedroom furnished
apartment, on Court Street. Prestonsbu-~·1tCouple or singles only. $220
month plus utilities. Clifford Wright.
886-8721.
2-29-tf.
FOR SALE : Reddog, $6 per ton
delivered. price depends upon location.
Stockpile is located at Garrett. Ky. For
information. call the One-Stop Market
in Pikeville at 437-7040 or 432-4375, \
Frank Bailey.
2-29-tf.
FOR RENT: Two bedroom, fully furnished apartment, carpeted and air
conditioned Utilities paid. Located in
New Allen. No children or pets. Phone
874-2664 after 5 p.m .. Garver Shepherd .
2-29-2t .
AUTO & LIGHT TRUCK ALIGNING
and balancing. Good work. fair prices
Wheel & Electric Phone 874-9774
2-29-tf
MANAGEMENT TRAINEE: Business
opportunity for person with moxey,
ambition and desire for success. Equity possible in 6 months. Send qualifications to Box 658, Martin, Ky. 41649.
Shera Cole
2-29-2t.
FOR RENT: Thelma Apartments .
Furnished or unfurnished . Two bedrooms, bath. washer dryer connection.
air conditiomng, dishwasher, disposal.
balcony, wall-to-wall carpeting. inside
swimming pool, coin-operated laundry Phone 789-6072.
2-29-tf.
�Wednesday, February 29, 1984
The Floyd County Times
Section Three, Pqe Five
Ford - Lincoln - Mercury - Volkswagen - Mazda - Peugeot
Pikeville, Kentucky
Phone 606-437-9641
�The Floyd County Times
February 29, 1984
Section Three, Paae Six
PRODUCE
3-LB. BAG
ADPCPi.ES . . . 89c
WHITE
POTATOES
3-LB. BAG
iPPLEs . . . 89c
GREEN
3/99
ONIONS... .
.
APPLES . .. 89c
3-LB. BAG
ARMOUR
BONELESS, FULLY COOKED
MELOSWEET
HA S
2
20-LB.
BAG
LB.
.
WHOLE
FRESH
CARROTS
LB.
ARMOUR-SPICED
ARMOUR
BROCCOLI ...... 99E~H
LUNCHEON
MEAT
CHICKEN FRIED
BEEF
PATTIE-~~~
DAIRY
TROPIC ANA
~~· ORANGE
79
c
1-LB. BAG
$
FROZEN
JUICE
09
59
9
64-0Z.
CARTON
$3
59
TURKEY
ARMOUR
WHITE MEAT
BLUE BONNET
WHIPPED
MARGARINE...
BANQUET
69c
~Stick
ROAST ..
CHICKEN PATTIES,
CHICKEN STICKS,
CHICKEN NUGGETS
2-LB.
.$6~?
ARMOUR
CHOPPED
HAM
$3 2-LB~
CAN
ARMOUR-SPICED
LUNCHEON
MEAT .·
$2!~
ARMOUR
CAN
TU'RKEY$319
ROAST ..
2-LB.
~.....
.A.'\
12-0Z.
2-LB.
\.
FREEZER QUEEN' .-
DINNERS.
KRAUT lr WIENERS, CHICKEN 1r DUMPLINGS, STEAK lr GRAVY, FRIED CHICKEN,
PORK BARBECUE, HOT DOGS, GREEN
BEANS, CORN, PEAS, MASHED POTATOES,
BROWN BEANS, MUSTARD GREENS, CORN
BREAD, ROLLS, PEACH COBBLER.
1-LB.
12-0Z.
PKG.
ROLL
NOODLES, STEAK • GRAVY, UVER a
ONIONS, HOT DOGS, GREEN BEANS, CORN,
PEAS, OVEN BROWNED POTATOES,
BROWN BEANS, MUSTARD GREENS,
BLACKBERRY COBBLER, CORN BREAD AND
TURKEY lr DRESSING, MEAT LOAF, STEAK
lr GRAVY, LASAGNA, HOT DOGS, PEAS,
MASHED POTATOES, GREEN BEANS, CORN
ON THE COB, MUSTARD GREENS, BROWN
BEANS,
CORN
BREAD,
ROLLS
STRAWBERRY COBBLER.
I
s
A
T
u
R
D
A
y
FRIED CHICKEI
BEEF lr N DL
lNG, COR N
BEANS, MUST~
ROLLS, APP-l:E
I
�Seven
Section
Times
The
GROCERY
ARMOUR
ARD
99
FRESH
PORK .
NECK BONES
25-LB.
CAN
c
$12!
4
$1 !
1
~ ~~~~~~ 1 L~
KK ....
LB.
GOLD MEDAL
FRESH
FLOUR
$ 99
HOME MADE
PORK
SAUSAGE
$ 09
IES ....
GORDON'S TWIN PAK
POTATO CHIPS
gc
25-LB.
BAG
LB.
22-0Z.
BOSTON BUTT
JOY
DISHWASHING LIQUID
IPORKROA t
$ 19
LB.
3-0Z.- 8 VARIETIES
LB.
JELLO
INSTANT
PUDDING
ARMOUR
BACON
$17~
18-0Z. SUPERMAN$
CREAMY
PEANUT
BUTTER
s
7
49
COFFEE .
3-LB. CAN
MAXWELL
HOUSE
ARMOUR
COOKED HAM
$2!~~
PKG.
~
N
0
A
y
..
•
STEAK & GRAVY, ROAST BEEF & GRAVY,
FRIED CHICKEN, GREEN BEANS, CORN,
MASHED POTATOES, APPLE COBBLER,
ROLLS.
STEAK & GRAVY, MEAT LOAF, CABBAGE
ROLLS, HOME MADE CHILl, HOT DOGS,
CORN, GREEN BEANS, MASHED POTATOES,
PEAS, BROWN BEANS, MUSTARD GREENS,
CORN BREAD, ROLLS, AND PEACH
COBBLER .
SPAGHETTI & MEAT BALLS, FRIED
CHICKEN, CHICkEN LIVERS, BEEF STEW,
HOT DOGS, GREEN BEANS, CORN ON THE
COB, SCALLOPED POTATOES, PEAS, .
BROWN BEANS, MUSTARD GREENS, CORN
BREAD, ROLLS, CHERRY COBBLER.
�Section Three, Paae Elaht
~OTICE OF
INTENTION TO i\II~E
Successfully Complete CPA Exam
Pursuant to Ai)Pii<.:ation
;\;umht'r 4:lli·5101
In accordance w1th the provi:wns of
KRS 350.05:>, not1ce is hereby g1ven that
Me lana Coal Corn pan_}. Drift, Kentucky
41619, has filed an applicatiOn for a permit for an underground mming opt'ration. The propo ed operation"' ill affect
a surface disturbance of 1 acre and will
underlie an additional 49 acres located
1.5 miles nr;thcast of Drift in Floyd
county.
The proposed opera!Jon 1s approx·
imatelv 2 miles northeast of .State Route
122's junction w1th Kentucky Houte 1022
and located on the south side of
Stonecoal Branch The latitude IS
37°-29'-41". The longitude is 82 -4-1'-20".
The proposed operation is located on
the l\lcDowell U.S.G S. 71 :! minute quadrangle map. The surface area to be
disturbed is owned by Harry and Reba
Martin. The operation will underlie land
owned by Harry and Reba Martin .
The operation will affect an area
within 100 feet of public road. Stone Coal
Branch Road. The operation will not involve relocatiOn of the public road.
The application has been filed for
public inspection at the Department for
Surface Mining Reclamation and Enforcement's Prestonsburg Regwnal Office, South Lake Drive, Prestonsburg,
Kentucky -11653. Written comments. objections. or requests for a permit conference must be filed with the Director
of the Division of Permits. 6th Floor,
Capital Plaza Tower, Frankfort, Kentucky 40601.
This is the final advertisement of this
application; all comments, objections,
or requests for a permit conference
must be received within thirty (30) days
of today's date.
ll.
ADVERTISEMENT FOR BIDS
The Floyd County Fiscal Court at its
regular meeting on February 17, 1984,
authorized the County Judge/Executive
to advertise for bid the next election to
be held in 1984 for the Primary (whether
it be in May or August). Bids should indude the following: storing the
machines, transporting the machines to
and from the polls, election school for
precinct workers, setting-up machines,
and service/maintenance on the
machines.
Sealed bids will be received in the
CountYJudge/Executive's office in the
Courthouse Annex until 9:00a.m. on the
9th day of March 1984. The Court
reserves the right to reject any and all
bids.
FLOYD COUNTY
JUDGE/EXECUTIVE
John M. Stumbo
2-22-3t.
PUBLIC NOTICE
The City of Prestonsburg, Prestonsburg Park Commission will accept bids
until March 7, 1984, at 2 p.m. for various
items of playground recreational equipment. This project will consist of the
development of a playground area for
children in Archer Park. Bid Specifications may be obtained by contacting the
Park Administrator at 886~390 or by
stopping in the Archer Park Office. Bids
will be opened March 6, 1984 at 2:00
p.m., at which time they will be opened
publicly and read aloud. The City of
Prestonsburg reserves the right to
change or alter any bid specificationS or
to waive any informality in the bidding
process. The City of Prestonsburg
observes Equal Opportunity Purchasing
Practices. Mail bids to City Administrator, P.O. Box 31, Prestonsburg, Ky.
41653. Mark "Recreation Equipment
Bif;l" plainly on the outside of the
envelope.
DAVID EVANS
City Administrator
lt.
JUST TELLING T
LIKE IT IS!
IN REPLY AND ANSWER TO MR. BURCHETT'S AND MRS. EMANUEL'S "LETTERS TO
THE EDITOR" FEB. 22, FLOYD COUNTY TIMES.
Johnny Denison, Kevin Stumbo and Jeff Jones, all Pikeville College
graduates, recently passed the CPA examination. They will be honored in
Louisville March 16 by the Kentucky Society of Certified Public Accountants.
Jones is a staff accountant with Helton, Butter & Wells, here.
The Kentucky Garden Journal
By Bonnoe Leo Appleton
State Urban Garden & Home Hott1culture Spec11hst
COOPERATIVE EXTENSION PROGRAM
KENTUCKY STATE UNIVERSITY
I don't know about you, but I frequently get confused when I read or hear news
items in which initials and abbreviations
are used. The government, the sports
community, citizens action groups,
every group seems to have its own
special set of letters. I might as well join
the crowd and hit you with three letters
that have become very important in
many aspects of agriculture in the past
few years.
I'm referring to IPM- Integrated Pest
Management (not a new way to control
kids at nursery school or a new personal
computer). This is a multifaceted approach to insect and disease control.
Rather than immediately run for our
chemical arsenal when a cabbage looper
peeks at us from between the broccoli
buds or when we find aphids wandering
along our forearms after we brush
against the tomatoes, let's look at some
alternative pest-control approaches.
Let's turn to IPM for some basic
maneuvers to outwit, run away from,
move away from or even hide from
these nasty creatures.
First and foremost, and I know you've
heard this before, get pest problems
identified correctly before seeking
remedies. Nothing makes a control
measure more ineffective, more futile,
than the incorrect identification of the
problem. Believe it or not, Sevin or
malathion or captain or benlate won't
kill everything. Nor is it necessarily
desirable to kill everything- some
beneficial insects prey on harmful insects. This is called biological control
and is important in IPM.
The University of Kentucky's Plant
Diagnostic Lab is available for iden·
tification of insect and disease problems via your county agricultural agent. But
do your ag agent and the lab people two
favors . First, try to be sure that your
plant's problem is pathological--caused
by a disease or insect- and not
physiological-caused by the weather,
too little water, too much fertilizer, even
by the urine of your pet puppy! Second,
even if the first isn't possible, provide a
sufficiently large sample that is in good
condition (be it dead or alive, don't bend,
staple or mangle it!) and that is typical
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$1 00 sitttng lee lor each additional subject in same portrait
Sears Catalog Store
North Highway 23
Prestonsburg, Ky. 41653
Thurs., Mar. 1-Sat., Mar. 3
Thurs. 1r Friday, 10·1, 2·5:30
Sat. 10-1, 2-4:30; Lunch 1·2
of the problem. Bigger is better in this
case.
Once as correct an identification as
possible has been made- and each year
we see new and old problems that leave
us puzzled-we need to approach the
problem in two ways-how do we control it right now and how do we prevent
it in the future. Let's look at future controls first (because many of these things
you can do this spring to decrease prob~s this swnmer), then we'll come
back to "what do I do now?"
Start with gankln preparation. First,
clean up the debris from last year's
garden. U you even suspected that some
of your plants had pest problems,
dispose of them, don't compost them or
leave them lying near your garden.
Many diseases and insects overwinter
on or in plant debris. This part of IPM
is called sanitation.
Sanitation should also be exercised
during the growing season. If a
cucwnber plant suddenly collapses from
bacterial wilt, pull it or "rogue it out,"
as the experts say, and trash it. If a
cucwnber beetle feeds on the diseased
plant, it can be the agent or vector for
transmitting the disease to a healthy
plant. A quick pull and toss to the garbage can may solve the problem. This
also applies to weeds that may harbor
problems.
Next, if soil-borne problems plague
your plants, it might help to sterilize
your soil. Either a chemical designed for
homeowner use, or solar sterilization
under plastic will help to rid the soil of
many insect, disease and even some
weed problems.
Now, as you plan your garden on
paper and order your seeds, do three
things. First, rotate the location of crops
and relatives. Don't put cabbage back
where cabbage was, or even where its
cousin broccoli was. Put it where the
watermelon was. This physically
removes plants from areas in which
their pests may have built up.
Second, carefully read those pretty
seed catalogs. Your favorite tomato
variety from twenty years ago may be
susceptible to diseases such as fusariwn
and verticilliwn wilt. Pick new plant
varieties that have been bred for increased disease and insect resistance or
tolerance. Also, when shopping at the
garden center, be sure to purchase
disease-free seed and transplants.
Third, put plants in the environmental conditions in which they belong- sun
plants in sun, shade plants in shade.
Tomatoes in two hours of sun will be
stressed, less healthy and more
vulnerable to attack. Likewise, water,
fertilize, mulch and apply other cultural
practices correctly.
Despite all these good efforts, few
gardens will ever be pest free. Effective
use of chemicals is an integral part of
IPM, but more of a last rather than a
first defense. Chemical manufacturers
are becoming more and more aware of
the public's concerns with regard to both
commercial and their own private use
of chemicals and are adjusting products
accordingly. When you shop for
chemicals this year, look for some of the
newer products such. as insecticidal
soaps that use bi~radable fatty acids
to kill baddies ~mot goodies. There are
also premeasilred, small doses of insecticides and fungicides in individual containers "'cor easy mixing and no waste,
and insecticides in easy to insert sticks
similar to fertilizer sticks or spikes. Ask
your county agriculture agent for more
information on these products.
While many of these IPM techniques
are common sense and have been advocated as individual helpful practices
in the past, this multifaceted approach
is now the "in" way to battle the bugs
and beasties.
Timely Tip: Save money on garden
seed this year by buying seed in bulk and
sharing with neighbors, club members
or participants in community gardens or
farmers markets. And if you have seed
left from last year, check whether
enough of it is still alive <viable)-roll
10 seeds up in a moist paper towel,
enclosa in a plastic bag and germinate
in a warm place. If fewer than 5 seeds
(50 percent) germinate, either buy fresh
seed or double to triple your seeding
rate.
~
THE PEOPLE SERVING ON THE PRESTONSBURG CITY COUN·
CIL DO NOT HAVE ANYTHING AGAINST OUR FRIENDS AND
NEIGHBORS LIVING OUTSIDE THE CITY OF PRESTONSBURG. The
people that want to be a part of the city can be and the people
that don't want to be In can vote down any annexation that ever
comes up.
The City Council was saying "that our city taxpayers could
not continue pulling the whole load, 2!! fire protection, for
everyone In ·the lower end of the county." All cities and towns
are feeling the slow economic times and lack of.surplus money.
The whole thing bolls down to: Why doesn't the Floyd Co.
Fiscal Court treat the people of Prestonsburg and the people In
·Magistrate Dlst. #1, the same on county benefits as the rest of
the county gets'??
The Mud Creek area has received approx. $30,000 for their
fire protection, from the fiscal court-the Beaver Creek area has
received nearly the same amount for their fire protection. The
people of Cow Creek and Auxier bought th.elr own fire trucks
with a very limited capacity of water and that's It, period I The
majority of the county's p·opulatlon lives In or around Prestonsburg and gets the least amount of fiscal court help.
The people living In Prestonsburg pay their city taxes and
their county taxes also, the people living outside the city pay
their county taxes too. All of these people (Abbott Creek, Mid·
die Creek, Cliff, Auxier road, Sugar Loaf and Prestonsburg) get
treated like we all live in Johnson County or as If we are not
as good as the people in the rest of the county. We must not
be; because the fiscal court only hands out crumbs to us while
the rest of the county gets the whole cake.
That Is the way It has been ever since I can remember and
everyone knows that It is the truth. Why??
Since all this started, Frankfort just recently (last week) promised to try and find Prestonsburg a qualified fire truck tor service to May Lodge and park, for us to keep at Lancer, thereby
making an extra truck that we could use for additional service
for our area.
Last week the City of Prestonsburg placed a notice in the
Floyd County Times to see If anyone would like to subscribe for
fire truck service. The fees are very small but at least they would
be something to help buy and maintain fire service equipment
with.
The Floyd Co. Fiscal Court's money for fire protection and
anything else, goes to the·upper end of the county but the people In Prestonsburg and Dlst. #1 who pay their county taxes too
are treated like (1) They don't deserve it; (2) They don't get
it; (3) Aren't good enough; (4) They don't know any better; (5)
2! let the·retired people, home owners, and working people in
Prestonsburg continue to furnish fire protection for the whole
lower end of the county and the Floyd Co. Fiscal Court won't
have to spend a dime for fire p_rotectlon for the people in District
#1. The fiscal court should treat all sections ot Floyd County the
same.
Another w~y the people In the Town of Prestonsburg get
the county sha : Our city population doesn't increase, but the
extra garbage that we haul for others that bring theirs into town
and dump It and don't pay their county garbage fee, does increase. We started paying solid waste fees to the county at
$1200 per month!!!!,!!!!! the city of Prestonsburg pays $2250
per month to the county solid waste or garbage dump. If everyone In Floyd County had to pay their garbage bill at the same
high rate that Prestonsburg has to pay, the solid wasiiProject
would not be short of money or have to be Investigated or be
In debt. The dump could or would look like "Disney World" or
"The 1984 Olympics," and have plenty of money In the bank.
I
·It seems that the fiscal court is trying to
ride a good horse to death.
BILL RAY COLLINS
Member Prestonsburg City Council
�Wednesday, February 29, 1984
The Floyd County Times
Prestonsburg High School Honor Roll
<Second !';irie Weeks>
9th Grade-All A's, David Martin,
Clifford Miller, Damon Newsome, Scott
Wells.
B An>rage, James K. Allen, Marina
lien. Phillip Blankenship, Lee Boyd,
largaret Clark, Wendy Combs, Bridget
Conn, Susan Cooley, Tina Davis, R.B.
Davis, Ntcholas Dawson, Diana Demitruck, Loretta Endicott, Bryon Fugate,
Cathy Horn, Beth Howard, Missy
Hunter, Elizabeth Leslie, Tiffany Martin, Paula Meade, Sharon Minns, Brent
Music, Mike Parker, Anthony Patton,
William Potter, Randy Powers, Tony
Skeans, Melinda Slone, Claudette Smith,
Jackie Stanford, Michelle Vaughn,
rian Wallace, Betty Whitaker, Rhon
da Willis.
lOth Grade-All A's, David Edwards,
William Fleming, Keith Hackworth,
Melissa Horn, Paul Prater, Lauren
Slone, Pat Allen. Lee Ann Bottoms.
B Awrage, Geoffrey Belcher, Melinda Borders, Connie Branham, Shag
Branham. Tina Branham, Traci Burke,
Mike Campbell, Tommy Click, Vickie
Compton, Morris Copley. Ronnie Diddle,
aren Ellis, Billy Elkins, Glenda Foley,
Chris Frasure, John Goble, LaDonna
Griffey, Bryan Griffith, Cindy Hackworth, Michael Hager, Alex Hughes,
Renee' Kinzer, Missy Layne, Herbie
LeMaster, Alan K. Moore, Leslie
:\forgan, Trent Nairn, Gretchen Nunn,
B.D. Nunnery, Tena Ousley, Patricia
Patrick, Patricia Slone, Mae Thompson,
Joseph York, Jessica Porter, Janice
Prater, Kim Prince, Ramona Rice, Chip
alyers, Leslie Sheets, Richenna Slone.
lith Grade-All A's, Carol Blair, Debbie Hall, Ronnie Lawson, Mark Tussey,
Missy Willis.
B Average, Susan Adams, Tammy
Bates, Mark Bays, Julie Bennett,
Angela Blair, Derek Calhoun, Mike
Gunter, Jon Hale, Sally Huffman,
James Little, Regina McKinney, Marty Minix, Bill Tom Moore, Brenda
Mullins, Nancy Music, Karen Ousley,
Gordie Ratliff, Tina Shepherd, Jenny
Jrackett, Jamie Wallen, Denna Whitten,
Robert Williams.
12th Grade-All A's, Lynn Holton, Keith
Horn, Mina Howard, Rona Lawson,
Ramona Ratliff.
B Average, Susan Alexander, John
Anderson, Mike Blackburn, Margarita
Borders, Duane Branham, Kelly Cecil,
Eddie Compton, Laura Cooley, Mattie
Craft, Melinda Deerfield, Donna
DeRossett, John DeRossett, Kendall Epperson, Susan Goble, Mark Greene,
~ice Hall, Tim Herald, Laura Herefor~,
NOTICE
Prestonsburg Housing Authority presently has vacancies In
our elderly, one-bedroom apartments at Dixie. If you are elderly, disabled, or handicapped,
with Income between $6,450
and $11,000, you may qualify
for these apartments. If Interested, please come to our
Green Acres office or Call
886-2717 for more Information.
2-22-3\
Subscription
Rates Per Year
In Floyd County, $8.00
Elsewhere lri.Kentucky, $10
outside .Kent~ky, $12.50
Please note expl~tlon ~ate
c)pposlte yaur;.ame on wrapper er on yotir copy of The
Times. ~ause of lncreaseJI
malllt1a' costs, notices of
subscription .expiration are
no
lonaef • mailed
to
subscribers.
SubScriptions may be mailed to:
The Floyd County Times
Box391
,.,._.tonsbura, Ky. 41653
Section Thr-, Pqe Nine
USAA Award Winner
Johnna Hill, Steve Hopkins, Clyde
Johnson, Diana Johnson, Miki Jones,
Ricky Kendrick, Sharon Kendrick, Lisa
Lafferty, Gladys Marsillett, Arlene
Maynard, Bobby Maynard, Jeana
McKenzie, Ramona McKinney, Ted
Miller, Jane Mollett, Todd Nairn, Denise
Ousley, Sarah Pitts, Mary Porter, Jen·
nifer Powell, Lucreasie Reed, Misha
Reynolds, Glenda Shepherd, Missy
Shepherd, Barry Slone, Dwight Slone,
Richie Slone, Dewey Stephens, Vincent
Stephens, Missy Thompson, Doug Wells,
Tony Whitaker, Linda Whitten, Anita
Woods Daniels, Kime Woods.
"FIREPLACE SPECIAL"
Asks Rule Change
To Deter Fraud
Kentucky Attorney General David L.
Armstrong told the Federal judicial
Conference Commtttee on Rules of
Practice and Procedure that state efforts to combat Medicaid fraud schemes
are being hampered by a rule prohibiting disclosure of federal grand jury investigation information to state investigators.
Representing the National Association
of Medicaid Fraud Control Units, Armstrong urged the Committee to recommend a revision of Federal Rule of
Criminal Procedure 6(e) to allow state
law enforcement officials ready access
to federal grand jury materials revealing potential violations of state criminal
law. Currently, Rule 6(e) severely
restricts the disclosure of federal grand
jury matters to state officials.
Citing Medicaid fraud as "an intolerable danger to our nation's already
beleaguered health care system," Armstrong stated that current losses from
Medicaid fraud and abuse present "a
burden that public funds cannot and will
not sustain."
"State Medicaid Fraud Control
Units," said Armstrong, "continue to
represent the public's single greatest
weapon to deter and punish those who
would abuse the Medicaid system."
Since Medicaid is a joint federal-state
program and state Medicaid fraud control efforts sever both federal and state
interests, Armstrong continued, "it is
crucial for the state units to have ready
access to federal grand jury investigations which might contain evidence of
Medicaid fraud."
Kentucky's Medicaid system, which
provides for the health care of the poor
and disabled, is monitored by Armstrong's Medicaid Fraud Control Unit.
The unit's investigative and prosecution
efforts in 1983 resulted in 8 convictions
of health care providers and produced
nearly $400,000 in criminal fines and
reimbursements to the Medicaid
system.
OPT BAl
WINDOW
28
The United States Achievement
Academy announced today that Kristi
Elizabeth Hall has been named a 1984
United States National Award winner in
science and mathematics.
Miss Hall, who attends McDowell
Elementary School, was nominated for
this National Award by Freda Burke for
mathematics and Joan Caldwell for
science, teachers at the school.
Her name and biography will appear
in the United States Achievement
Academy Official Yearbook, published
nationally.
She is the daughter of Troy and Eula
D. Hall, of McDowell, and granddaughter of Barzell and Versa Brown,
of McDowell, and Eula Hall, of Honaker,
and the late McKinley Hall.
CARD OF THANKS
The family of Rhoda Jones, of Bypro,
wishes to thank all who stood by the
family in our time of sorrow. We
especially want to thank Doctor Verma
and Doctor Sundaram and all the nurses
and the Sisters at Our Lady of the Way
Hospital at Martin, and Hall Funeral
Home, for a job well done. All the old
friends and neighbors of Stampers
Branch at Wayland, and Lower Burton
and the surrounding area of
Wheelwright, who-sent food and flowers,
the Old Regular Baptist ministers for
such a. beautiful service, and the pall
bearers. God bless all of you.
THE FAMILY
38
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Food service management companies
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1984 summer food service program for
children in Kentucky must register with
the state on or before March 15.
The summer food program provides
nutritious meals to children from areas
of economic need, without regard to
race, color, national origin, sex or handicap, at qualified public or private nonprofit, nonresidential institutions or
residential camps during the summer
months.
Regulations require that companies
providing food for the summer food program must be reputable and able to
meet the terms of their contracts. In addition, under USDA's rules, food service
management companies must provide
states, at the time of registration, with
detailed information on their operation
for the past two years.
Companies wanting information on
the summer food program or applications for registration in Kentucky should
contact: Rendell Butler, Director; Division of School Food Service; State
Department of Education; Capital Plaza
Tower, 17th Floor; Frankfort, Ky. 40601.
Telephone: (502) 564-4390.
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�The Floyd County Times
Wednesday, February 29, 1984
NOTICE OF
INTENTION TO MINE
Pursuant to Application
Number 636-5091
I< 1 J In accordance with the provision
of KRS 350.055, notice is hereby given
that J & J Coal Company, Inc., Box 21-A,
Harold, Ky. 41635, has filed an application for a permit for an underground
mining operation. The proposed operation will affect a surface disturbance of
0.65 acres and will underlie an additional
140.87 acres located 0.5 miles west of
Craynor in Floyd county.
(2J The proposed operation is approx
imately 1.5 miles southeast from Mink
Branch Road junction with Ky. 929 and
located 0.5 miles west of Mink Branch.
The latitude is 37° 26' 12". The longitude
is 82" 40' 28".
<3> The proposed operation is located
on the McDowell U.S.G.S. 7 12 minute
quadrangle map. The surface area to be
disturbed is owned by . T & N Coal Company, Inc., Craynor, Ky. The operation
will underlie land owned by: Joseph
Mining Company, Inc. McDowell, Ky .;
Mary Howell, Craynor, Ky., David
Akers, McDowell, Ky.
<4 >The application has been filed for
public inspection at the Dept. for Surface
Mining Reclamation and Enforcement's
Prestonsburg Office, 431 South Lake
Drive, Prestonsburg, Kentucky 41653.
Written comments, objections, or requests for a permit conference must be
filed with the Director of the Division of
Permtts, 6th Floor, Capital Plaza
Tower, Frankfort. Kentucky 40601.
2-15-3t.
NOTICE OF
INTENTION TO MINE
Pursuant to Application
Number 436-5148
I< 1 J In accordance with the provision
of KRS 350.055, notice is hereby given
that Mink Branch Coal Company, Inc.,
Rt. 2, Box 40, Craynor, Ky., has filed an
application for a permit for an underground mining operation. The proposed
operation will affect a surface disturbance of 3.8 acres and will underlie an additional 252.0 acres located 0.50 miles
east of Craynor in Floyd county.
<2> The proposed operation is approximately 1.0 miles south from Mink
Branch Road junction with Ky. 979 and
located 0.5 miles east of Mink Branch.
The latitude is 37' 26' 14". The longitude
is 82' 39' 47".
<3> The proposed operation is located
on the McDowell U.S.G.S. 7 12 minute
quadrangle map. The surface area to be
disturbed is owned by : Mink Branch
Coal Company, Inc., Craynor, Ky. ; Jay
E. Evans, Craynor, Ky.; Cephus McKinney, Craynor, Ky. The operation will
underlie land owned by: Mink Branch
Coal Co., Inc., Craynor, Ky.; Jay E.
Evans, Craynor, Ky.; John B. Evans,
Craynor, Ky.; Kelly Hamilton, Craynor,
Ky.; Cephus McKinney, Craynor, Ky. ;
Walker Tackett, Craynor, Ky. ; Gary
Newsome, Craynor, Ky. ; Blaine Slone,
Craynor, Ky.; Pearl Gillispie, Craynor,
Ky.; Bob Mitchell, Craynor, Ky.
(4) The application has been filed for
public inspection at the Department for
Surface Mining Reclamation and Enforcement's Prestonsburg Regional Office, 431 South Lake Drive, Prestonsburg, Ky. 41653. Written comments, objections, or requests for a permit conference must be filed with the Director
of the Division of Permits, 6th Floor,
Capital Plaza Tower, Frankfort, Kentucky 40601.
2-15-3t.
PUBLIC NOTICE
The deadline for buying City Auto
Stickers in the town of Wayland at the
cost of $10.00 each is March 15, 1984. A
penalty of $2.50 will be added after that
date on each sticker.
All Wayland city tax is due by the 15th
of March with a penalty of 2% added on
the tax after that date. The City Clerk's
office is open to the public on Tuesdays
from 9 a.m. until 1 p.m.
MARY BRADLEY, City Clerk
2-29-2t.
NOTICE OF
INTENTION TO MINE
Pursuant to Application
Number -l36-5231
In accordance with the provisions of
KAR 350.055, notice is hereby given that
Buck Coal, Inc., Route 2, Branham
Village, Prestonsburg, Kentucky, 41653,
has filed an application for a permit for
an underground mining operation. The
proposed operation will affect a surface
disturbance of 5.0 acres and will underlie
an additional81.0 acres located 1.1 miles
north of Hunter in Floyd county.
The proposed operation is approximately 0.5 miles west from State Route
122's junction with Akers Branch Road
and located 0.25 miles west of Akers
Branch. The latitude is 37" 31' 18". The
longitude is 82' 45' 45".
The proposed operation is located on
the Martin U S.G S 7 1/5 minute quadrangle map . The surface area to be
disturbed is owned by Jake Bates and
Orphie Akers . The operation will underlie land owned by Claube Webb, Bud
Hayes. Mande.r Moore. Virgil Moore.
and James Slone.
The application has been filed for
public inspection at the Department for
Surface Mining Reclamation and Enforcement's Prestonsburg Regional Office, 503 South Lake Drive, Prestonsburg, Ky. 41653 . Written comments, objections, or requests for a permit con
ference must have attached a copy of
the newspaper clipping and must be filed with the Regional Administrator of
the Prestonsburg Regional Office, 503
South Lake Dnve, Prestonsburg, Ky
41653
This is the final advertisement of this
application; all comments, objections,
or requests for a permit conference
must be received' within thirty <30> days
of today's date.
lt .
MASTER COi\BIISSIOl\:ER'S
SALE
NOTICE OF
INTENTION TO MINE
Pursuant to Application
Number 880-0018
<1 >In accordance with the provisions
(irayson Fin and<~ I St•n ict·s. Inc .. PI f.
of KRS 350.055, notice is hereby given
\ S: ~01'1( ' 1<: OF S.\LE
Leslie Trucking COIIlllilll~. Inc. and that Martin County Coal Corp., Rt. 40,
Branham & Baker Coal Companv. Inc. Box 82-A. Inez, Ky. 41224, has filed an ap................................................ Defts. 1 plication for a combination permit for
By virtue of a judgment and order of surface and underground coal mining
sale of the Floyd Circuit Court rendered and reclamation operations. The proposat the January I:l term . 1984. in the ed operation will affect a surface
aboYe-styled cause I shall proceed to of
disturbance of 475.0 acres in Martin
fer for sale at the equipment lot located County and will underlie an additic,tal
at Harold. Kentucky. adjacent to The 64.0 acres in Martin Countv, Z"..i.o acres
Bank Josephine Branch on U.S. 23. to the in Pike county and ~0 acres in Floyd
htghest and best btdder. nt publtc auc- county located liz miles northeast from
tion. on the 1st dav of l\larch. 1984. at Brushy Fork road's junction with Ky.
10::!0 o'clock am .'same being a day of
Hwy. 194 at Thomas, Pike Co., Ky.
(2) The proposed operation is approxthe regular term of the Floyd Circuit
Court. for cash or the purchaser shall imately 11'2 miles northeast from
pay lOtto of the purchase price in cash. Brushy Fork road's junction with Ky.
cashier's check or certified check on the Hwy. 194 at Thomas, Pike County, Ky.
day of sale and may fill bond for there- and located on Wolf Creek, Cow Fork of
mainder of the purchase price due and Wolf Creek, and Pesley Fork of
payable six <6) months from the date of Maynard Fork of Wolf Creek in Martin
sale. the following described equipment: County, Ky. The latitude is 37' 41' 34".
1 Joy IIRV Cutter 2-61:3 1\lach. No. The longitude is 82° 33' 13".
(3) The proposed operation is located
17221, 1 Joy 6SC Shuttle Car 6S C 5PF-2
S•!\: FT 5666 . 1 Jov Loader : 1 Galis 300 on the Thomas U.S.G.S. 71z minute
Roof Bolter : 1 Po~\ er Center . 1 Porter quadrangle map. The operation will use
Wagon Drill: 1 Click 6' Fan: 1 Switch the contour strip and auger with hollow
Box.
fills, and underground method of minThe amount of money to be raised by ing. The surface area to be disturbed is
this sale shall be in the prmcipal sum of owned by Pocahontas Kentucky Cor$121.676.16 with mterest thereon !J.t 12% poration. The operation will underlie
annually from the 13 day of January. land owned by Pocahontas Kentucky
1984 until satisfied and the costs of this Corporation, Mintie Blackburn, and
act10n. including costs of advertising of Lacy Marshall. This application also inthis sale and the fees and commissions cludes a proposed land use change from
for conducting this sale.
the forestland pre-mining land use to a
forestland
and
For the purchase pnce the purchaser combintation
must execute bond with approved sure- pastureland post-mining land use.
ty or sureties. bearing legal interest
(4) The a~plication has been filed for
from the day of sale untll paid and hav- public ins~tion at the Department for
ing the force the effect of a judgment Surface Mining Reclamation and Enwith a lien retained upon saio property forcement's Prestonsburg Regional Ofas a further securit v. Bidders will be fice, 503 South Lake Drive, Prestonsprepared to comply 'with these terms.
burg, Ky 41653. Written comments, obGiven under my hand. this 2nd day of jections, or requests for a permit conFebruary. 1984.
ference must be filed with the Director
MARSHALL DAVIDSON
of the Division of Permits, 6th Floor,
Capital Plaza Tower, Frankfort, Ky.
Master Commissioner
2-15-31. 40601. Within 30 days of the final weekly advertisement. The written comment,
objection, or request for a conference
NOTICE OF
must reference in above permit applicaINTENTION TO MINE
tion number.
2-22-3t.
Pursuant to Application
Number 498-0168
In accordance with the provisions of
NOTICE OF
KRS 350.055, notice is hereby given that:
Hawkeye Coal Company, 1200 First
INTENTION TO MINE
Security Plaza, Lexington, Ky. 40507,
Pursuant to Application
has filed an application for a permit for
Number 636-5039
a surface mining and reclamation
I< 1 >In accordance with the provision
operation of approximately 207 acres
of KRS 350.055, notice is hereby given
located SE of Endicott in Pike County
that T & N Coal Company, Inc., Grethel,
and Floyd County.
Ky., has filed an application for a perThe proposed operation is approxmit for an underground mining operaimately 5 miles SE from State Route
tion. The proposed operation will affect
194's junction with Buffalo Creek Road.
a surface disturbance of 1.91 acres and
The latitude is :rl', 39', 30''. The longitude
will underlie an additional 132.94 acres
is 82', 36', 06" . The surface area is ownlocated .5 miles southwest of Craynor in
ed by Wanda Spears, Sellard Heirs,
Floyd county.
Hawkeye Coal Company, Roscoe
<2 J The proposed operation is a pproxBlackburn, Ray Taylor and Georgia
imately 1.5 miles south from Mink
Blackburn.
Branch Road junction with Ky. 979 and
The proposed operation is located on
located 1.5 miles in Mink Branch. The
the Thomas U.S.G.S. 7 1~ minute quadlatitude is :n•25' 54". The longitude is 82'
rangle map. The operation will use the
40' 29".
mountaintop removal and contour min<3> The proposed operation is located
ing methods with associated hollow fills.
on the McDowell U.S.G.S . 7 1z minute
The application has been filed for · quadrangle map. The surface area to be
public inspection at the Department for
disturbed is owned by Blaine Slone,
Surface Mining Reclamation and EnCraynor, Ky . ; Dennis Reynolds ,
forcement's Pikeville Regional Office,
Craynor, Ky.; Jack Hamilton, Craynor,
P .O. 2289, Pikeville, Ky. 41501. Written
Ky. The operation will underlie land
comments, objections, or requests for a
owned by: Blaine Slone, Craynor, Ky. ;
permit conference must be filed with the
Hazel Hamilton, Craynor, Ky. ; Dennis
Director of the Division of Permits, 6th
Reynolds, Craynor, Ky.; Jack Hamilton,
Floor, Capital Plaza Tower, Frankfort,
Craynor, Ky.; Joseph Mining Company,
Ky. 40601.
2-15-3t.
Inc., McDowell, Ky.; T & N Coal Company, Inc , Grethel, Ky.; David Akers,
McDowell, Ky. The operation will effect
NOTICE OF
an area within 100 feet of public road
INTENTION TO MINE
Mink Branch. The operation will not inPursuant to Application
volve relocation of the public road.
Number 436-0123
(4) The application has been filed for
<1) In accordance with the provisions
public inspection at the Department for
of KRS 350.055, notice is hereby given
Surface Mining Reclamation and Enthat Omni Natural Resources, Inc., Rt.
forcement's Prestonsburg Regional Of6, Box 11-G, Manchester, Kentucky,
fice, 431 South Lake Drive, Prestons40962, has filed an application for a perburg, Ky. Written comments, objecmit for a surface coal mining and
tions, or requests for a permit conreclamation of approximately 16.2 acres
ference must be filed with the Director
located 1 mile northeast of Hippo in
of the Division of Permits, 6th Floor,
Floyd county.
Capital Plaza Tower, Frankfort, Ken( 2) The proposed opera lion is a pptoxtucky 40601.
2-15-3t.
imately 11 z miles north from state Route
850's junction with Prater Fork County
Road and located at the head of Prater
Fork of Brush Creek The latitude is :n•
NOTICE OF
32' 27" . The longitude is 82" 50' 48". The
INTENTION
TO MINE
surface area is owned by Morton Allen
Pursuant
to
Application
heirs <mining and haul road) and
Number 636-5040
Gladys S. Allen, Akfred G. Allen, Volney
I< 1 J In accordance with the provisions
Allen and Denneth F . Allen <hilUl road
of KRS 350.055, notice is hereby given
only> .
that T & N Coal Co., Inc., Grethel, Ky.
(3) The proposed operation is located
41631. has filed an application for a peron the Martin U.S.G.S. 71z minute quadmit for an underground mining operarangle map. The operation will use the
tion. The proposed operation will affect
contour and auger method of mining .
a surface disturbance of 0.76 acres and
The application also includes a proposwill underlie an additional 73.87 acres
ed land use change from the
located 0.5 miles south of Craynor, Ky.
undeveloped land premining land use to
in Floyd county .
a hayland or pasture post-mining land
<2> The proposed operation is approxuse.
imately 1.50 miles southwest from Mink
(4) The application has been filed for
Branch Road junction with Ky . 979 and
public inspection at the Depar~ment for
located 1.50 miles in Mink Branch. The
Surface Mining ReclamatiOn and
latitude is 37' 25' 54" . The longitude is 82"
Enforcement's Prestonsburg Regional
Office, 431 South Lake Drive, Prestons- 40' 29".
< 3J The proposed operation is located
burg, Kentucky 41653. Written comon the McDowell U.S.G S 7 1 ~ minute
ments, objections, or requests for a perquadrangle map. The surface area to be
mit conference must be filed with the
disturbed is owned by : Blaine Slone,
Director of the Division of Permits, 6th
Craynor. Ky. The operation will underlie
Floor, Capital Plaza Tower, Frankfort,
land owned by: Blaine Slone, Craynor.
Kentucky 40601.
2 15-3t.
Kv. ; David Adkins, McDowell, Ky .;
Chester Newsome , Craynor. Ky.;
PUBLIC NOTICE
Joseph Mining Co., McDowell. Ky
<4> The apphcation has been filed for
Pursuant to 405 KAR 8:010, Section
public inspection at the Department for
16(4) <b), the following is a summary of
Surface Mining Reclamation and Enpermitting decisions made by the Deforcement 's Prestonsburg Regional Ofpartment for Surface Mining Reclamafice. 431 South Lake Drive. Prestonstion and Enforcement, Division of Perburg, Ky. 41653. Written comments , obmits with respect to applications to conjections. or requests for a permit conduct surface coal mining and reclamaference must be filed with the Director
tion operations in Floyd county.
of the Division of Perm1ts. 6th Floor.
Cow Creek Mining, 836-0054, Issued,
Capital Plaza Tower, Frankfort. Ken2/8/84; C & H Coal Mine No. 33,836-5019,
tucky 40601.
2-15-31.
Issued, 2/13/84.
lt.
FI.OYI> CIHCl'IT ('Ot'ln
Section Three, Paae Ten
~OTICE OF
ISTENTION TO MINE
NOTICE OF
INTENTION TO MINE
Pursuant to Application
!\:umbet· li:lti-5055
I ( 1> In accordance with the provision
of KRS 350.055, notice is hereby given
that B J & L Coal Company, Inc.,
Craynor, Kentucky 41614, has filed an
application for a permit for an underground mining operation. The proposed
operation will affect a surface disturbance of 1.72 acres and will underlie an
additionall92.60 acres loC'"!ttd 0.5 miles
southwest of Cra.vi!Vt m Floyd county .
<2>The P"{i~osed operation is approximately 1.50 miles southwest from Mink
Branch Road junction with Ky. 979 and
located 1.50 miles in Mink Branch. The
latitude is 37' 25' 54". The longitude is 82'
40' 29"
< 3) The proposed operation is located
on the McDowell U.S .G.S. 7 12 minute
quadrangle map. The surface area to be
disturbed is owned by: Chester Newsome, Teaberry, Ky. The operation will
underlie land owned by: Chester Newsome, Teaberry, Ky. ; Blaine Slone,
Craynor, Ky.; Joseph Mining Co., Inc.,
McDowell, Ky.; Sie Hall, Craynor, Ky . ,
John Hall, Craynor, Ky.; Donna Terry,
Teaberry, Ky.
<4>The application has been filed for
public inspection at the Department for
Surface Mining Reclamation and Enforcement's Prestonsburg Regional Of·
fice, 431 South Lake Drive, Prestonsburg, Ky. 41653. Written comments, objections, or requests for a permit conference must be filed with the Director
of the Division of Permits, 6th Floor,
Capital Plaza Tower, Frankfort, Kentucky 40601.
2-15-3t.
Pursuant to Application
Number: 860-5023
In accordance with the provisions of
KRS 350.055, notice is hereby given that
National Mines Corporation, Box 12022,
101 East Vine Street, Lexington, Kentucky 40579, has filed an application for
a permit for an underground mining
operation. The proposed operation will
affect a surface disturbance of 3.13 acres
and will underlie an additional 13f>.49
acres located 2.7 miles southwest of Garrett in Knott county.
The proposed operation is approximately 2.0 miles southwest from Route
SSO junction with Route 7 and located 0.7
miles southeast of Jones Fork. The latitude is 37' 26' 37". The longitude is 82'
50' 05"
The proposed operation is located on
the Wayland U.S.G .S. 7 1z minute quadrangle map. The surface area to be
disturbed is owned by Glen Click. The
operation will underlie land owned by
Glen Click, Barbara Conley, Gordon
Howard, Arnold Filch, National Mines
Corporation. Charles and Juanita
Thornsburg, James and Francis Allen.
This application also includes a proposed land use change from the forest land
pre-mining land use to a pasture land
post-mining land use. The operation will
affect an area within 100 feet of public
road Triplett Branch. The operation will
not involve relocation of the public road.
The application has been filed for public inspection at the Department for Surface Mining Reclamation and Enforcement, Jackson Regional Office, Howell
Heights Building, Route 2, Box 500,
Jackson, Kentucky 41339. Written comments, objections, or requests for a permit conference must be filed with the
Director of the Division of Permits, 6th
Floor, Capital Plaza Tower, Frankfort,
Kentucky 40601.
2-15-3t.
PUBLIC NOTICE
An application for a place of entertainment license has been filed by Brenda
Tackett, of Box 580, Galveston, Ky.
41629. The nature of business will be
.Qrocery Store, Carryout Beer, sell beer
by the drink, and have pool tables.
The .County Attorney's Office is required to file a written report to the
County Judge Executive's office reflecting if the person applying is ''hot of,good
moral character or who will not, in the
judgment of the Court, <County Judge
Executive) obey the laws of the state in
the carrying on of the business".
Any interested citizens having information relative to said applicant's lack
of "good moral character" or willingness to obey the laws of the state in the
carrying on of the business is requested
to file the same in writing, with the
County Attorney's office. Said written information shall be signed, dated, and
reflect the current address of said
citizen, and must be delivered to the
County Attorney's office no later than
the 1st day of March, 1984.
ARNOLD TURNER, JR.
Floyd County Attorney
2-22-2t.
PUBLIC NOTICE
An application for a place of entertainment license has been filed by Delmar
F. Johnson, of P .O. Box 125, Hi Hat, Ky.
41636. The nature of the business will be
video games, pool tables, and juke box.
The County Attorney's Office is required to file a written repot to the County Judge Executive's office reflecting if
the person applying is "not of good
moral character or who will not, in the
judgment of the Court, (County Judge
Executive) obey the laws of the state in
the carrying on of the business".
Any interested citizen having information relative to said applicant's lack of
"good moral character" or willingness
to obey the laws of the state in the carrying on of the business is requested to
file the same in writing, with the County Attorney's office. Said written information shall be signed, dated, and
reflect the current address of said
citizen, and must be delivered to the
County Attorney's office no later than
the 23rd day of February, 1984.
ARNOLD TURNER, JR.
Floyd County Attorney
2-22-2t.
NOTICE OF
INTENTION TO MINE
Pursuant to Application
!\:umber .t36-5193
In accordance with the provisions of
KAR 350.055, notice is hereby given that
Big "D'' Excavating, Inc ., P .O. Box 34,
Betsy Layne, Kentucky, 41605, has filed
an application for a permit for an underground mining operation. The proposed
operation will affect a surface dtsturbance of 9.88 acres and will underlie an
additional 62.50 acres located 1.0 miles
southwest of Allen in Floyd county.
The proposed operation is approximately 0.5 miles northwest from
Oklahoma Road's junction with Eel's
Branch Road and located 1.5 miles north
of Martin . The latitude is 37" 35 · 47" . The
longitude is 82° 44' 58".
The proposed operation is located on
the Harold U.S .G.S. 7 1/ 5 minute quadrangle map. The surface area to be
disturbed is owned by Robert Ousley
heirs. The operation will underlie land
owned by Robert Ousley heirs.
The application has been filed for
pubhc inspection at the Department for
Surface Mining Reclamatton and Enforcement's Prestonsburg Regional Office. 503 South Lake Drive, Prestonsburg, Ky. 41653. Written comments, objections. or requests for a permit conference must have attached a copy of
the newspaper clipping and must be filed with the Regional Administrator of
the Prestonsburg Regional Office, 503
South Lake Drive. Prestonsburg. Ky .
41653.
This is the final advertisement of this
application; ali comments, objections,
or requests for a permit conference
must be received within thirty <30) days
of today's date.
It .
NOTICE OF
INTENTION TO MINE
Pursuant to Application
Number 836-5030
In accordance with the provisions of
KRS 350.055, notice is hereby given that
Hayes, Inc., Box 159, Betsy Layne, Kentucky 41605, has filed an application for
a permit for an underground mining
operation. The proposed operation will
affect a surface disturbance of 5.25 acres
and will underlie an additional 38.,75
acres located 2.25 miles southwest of
Grethel in Floyd county.
The proposed operation is approx·
imately .25 miles southwest from Rt.
2030 junction with Stonecoal Hollow Rd.
and located 75 feet south of Little Mud
Creek. The Ia titude is 37' 28' 06". The
longitude is 82° 41 ' 26".
The proposed operation is located on
the McDowell U.S.G.S. 71,2 minute quadrangle map. The surface area to be
disturbed is owned by Elkhorn Coal
Corp.
The operation will underlie land owned by Elkhorn Coal Corp. This operation
will affect an area within 100 feet of
public road Rt. 2030. The operation will
not involve relocation of the public road.
The application has been filed for
public inspection at the Department for
Surface Mining Reclamation and Enforcement's Prestonsburg Regional Office, 502 South Lake Drive, Prestonsburg, Kentucky 41653. Written comments, objections, or requests for a permit conference must be filed with the
Director of the Division of Permits, 6th
Floor, Capital Plaza Tower, Frankfort,
Kentucky 40601.
2-22-3t.
NOTICE TO CUSTOMERS OF
AUXIER WATER COMPANY OF
PROPOSED RATE CHANGES TO
BE FILED WITH THE PUBLIC
SERVICE COMMISSION
FEBRUARY 29, 1984.
PROPOSED RATES PER THOUSAND
1st thousand
$8.50
2nd thousand
4.75
Next 6 thousand
4.00
Next 6 thousand
3.25
Over 14 thousand
2.50
Minimum charge
8.50
The rates contained in this notice are
the rates proposed by the Auxier Water
Company. However, the Public Service
Commission may order rates to be
changed that differ from these proposed rates. Such action may result in rates
for consumers other than the rates included in this notice. Any corporation,
association, body politic or person may
request leave to intervene by motion
within thirty (30) days after notice of the
proposed rate changes is given. The motion shall be submitted to the Public Service CommissiOn, 730 Schenkel Lane,
P .O. Box 615, Frankfort, Kentucky,
40602, and shall set forth the grounds for
the request including the status and interest of the party ; and that copies of the
application may be obtained by contacting the applicant at Auxier Water Company, P.O. Box 99, Auxier, Kentucky,
41602.
2-22-3t.
BID REQUEST
Sealed bids will be received by the Big
Sandy Area Development District, Prestonsburg, Kentucky until 4:00 p.m.,
March 15, 1984, for the provision of congregate and home del\ver~d meals for
the Big Sandy Area Agency on Aging
Nutrition Program, funded by Title IIIC Older Americans Act Funds for the
period July I, 1984 through June 30, 1986.
Complete bid specifications may be
obtained by contacting Phylis Stanley,
Director of Aging Services, Municipal
Building, 2nd Floor, Prestonsburg, Kentucky 41653.
The Area Agency on Aging reserves
the right to accept or reject any or all
bids
EQUAL OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYER
2-22-2t.
PUBLIC NOTICE
Second Reading
The Floyd County Fiscal Court, at a
special.meeting commencing at 10:00
a .m ., March 9, 1984, to be held at the
Floyd County Annex Conference Room,
Prestonsburg, Ky., will call for a second
reading and then consider same for
passage of the following ordinance:
SECTION ONE: The Annual budget
for the fiscal year 1983-1984 is amended
to :
(a) Increase receipts of the General
Fund by $3,325.00 to include unanticipated revenues from the Commonwealth of Kentucky.
(b) Increase budget expenditures account number 304-15 by $3,325.00.
SECTION TWO: The sum added to
budget expenditures in Section One is
appropriated for general governmental
purposes.
A copy of the full text of said ordinance above will be available for
public inspection in the Floyd County
Courthouse Annex, Prestonsburg, Ky.,
between the hours of 8 :30a.m. and 4:00
p .m ., Monday thru Friday.
The Fiscal Court hereby certifies that
the summary above is true and accurate
and written in a way calculated to inform the public of its contents.
_,
FLOYD COUNTY FISCAL COURT
By: John M. Stumbo,
County Judge/Executive
2-22-2t.
PUBLIC NOTICE
Second Reading
The Floyd County Fiscal Court, at a
special meeting commencing at 10:00
a.m ., March 9, 1984, to be held at the
Floyd County Annex Conference Room,
Prestonsburg, Ky., will call for a second
reading and then consider same for
passage of the following ordinance:
SECTION ONE: The Annual budget
for the fiscal year 1983-1984 is amended
to :
(a) Increase receipts of the Revenue
Sharing Fund by $3,478.85 to include
unanticipated revenues from cash, voided check and intedrest incomdie_.t
j
(b) Increase bu get expen ures account number 408-3 by $3,478.85.
SECTION TWO : The sum added to
budget expenditures in Section One is
appropriated for general governmental
purposes.
A copy of the full text of said ordinance above will be available for
public inspection in the Floyd County
Courthouse Annex, Prestonsbw·g, Ky.,
between the hours of 8:30a.m. and 4:00
p.m., Monday thru Friday.
The Fiscal Court hereby certifies that
the summary above is true and accurate
and written in a way calculated to inform the public of its contents.
FLOYD COUNTY FISCAL COURT
By: John M. Stumbo,
County Judge/Executive
2-22-2t.
PUBLIC NOTICE
Second Reading
The Floyd County Fiscal Court, at a
special meeting commencing at 10:00
a.m., March 9, 1984, to be held at the
Floyd County Annex Conference Room,
Prestonsburg, Ky., will call for a second
reading and then consider same for
passage of the following ordinance:
SECTION ONE : The Annual budget
for the fiscal year 1983-1984 is amended
to: ·
(a ) Increase receipts of the Revenue
Sharing Fund by $7,315.35 to include
unanticipated revenues from the Commonwealth of Kentucky.
(b) Increase budget expenditures account number 416-4 by $7,315.35.
SECTION TWO : The sum added to
budget expenditures in Section One is
appropriated for general governmental
purposes.
A copy of the full text of said ordinance above will be available for
public inspection in the Floyd County
Courthouse Annex, Prestonsburg, Ky.,
between the hours of 8:30a.m. and 4:00
p.m. , Monday thru Friday.
The Fiscal Court hereby certifies that
the summary above is true and accurate
and written in a way calculated to inform the public of its contents.
FLOYD COUNTY FISCAL COURT
By: John M. Stumbo,
County Judge/ Executive
2-22-2t.
PUBLIC NOTICE
Second Reading
The Floyd County Fiscal Court, at a
special meeting commencing at 10:00
a.m., March 9, 1984, to be held at the
Floyd County Annex Conference Room,
Prestonsburg, Ky., will call for a second
reading and then consider same for
passage of the following ordinance:
SECTION ONE: The Annual budget
for the fiscal year 1983-1984 is amended
to:
(a) Decrease receipts of the Revenue
Sharing Fund by $95,798.00 due to not
receiving anticipated revenues the U.S.
Treasury .
(b) Decrease budget expenditures account numbers : 404-4 by $52,546.00 ; 405-4
by 31 .00 ; 408-3 by 12,767.34 ; 412-4 by
105.00 ; 414-4 by 3,000.00 ; 416-4 by
26,795.66; 430-4 by 553.00.
SECTION TWO: The sums taken from
the budget expenditures in Section One
was appropriated for general governmental purposes.
A copy of the full text of said ordinance above will be available for
public inspection in the Floyd County
Courthouse Annex, Prestonsburg, Ky.,
between the hours of 8:30a.m . and 4:00
p.m., Monday thru Friday.
The Fiscal Court hereby certifies that
the summary above is true and accurate
and written in a way calculated to inform the public of its contents.
FLOYD COUNTY FISCAL COURT
By: John M. Stumbo,
County Judge/ Executive
2-22-2t.
�Wedneaday, February 29, 1984
The Floyd County Times
Curry-Henson
Lawsuit Alleges Failure
To Assess Mining Property
Major legal action has been initiated
in federal court by the Kentucky Fair
1Tax Coalition alleging that the Kentucky
"Revenue Cabinet systematically fails to
fairly assess several forms of property
belonging to coal, oil and gas interests.
The class action suit asks relief for
state residents whose property is assessed and taxed at its full value, and who
therefore bear a disproportionate share
of the property tax burden. Relief should
be granted under the 14th Amendment
to the U.S. Constitution which
guarantees everyone equal protection
under the law, according to the lawsuit.
In addition to the failure to assess property correctly, KFTC is also claiming
that 1978 legislative action which
lowered the tax rate on unmined coal is,
in effect, a de facto exemption from taxation. Currently, the tax rate on unmined coal is so low that most counties
make no attempt to collect it.
KFTC is pushing legislation in the
General Assembly calling for a fair tax
on unmined minerals while protecting
small landowners.
In a Frankfort press conference last
Friday, KFTC attorneys stated that
although the suit names Property Valuation Administrators <PVA's) in six counties as defendants, representing a class
of all PVA's in the state, much of the
blame for the inadequacies in the tax
system fall on the Revenue Cabinet.
The state does not provide PVA's
"with sufficient technical assistance to
'enable them to properly assess property held by coal, oil, and gas interests,"
the suit reads. Supervision of such
assessments by the state is also inadequate, KFTC claims.
Revenue Cabinet Secretary Gary
Gillis has also been named as a defendant in the suit.
Mineral properties are underassessed
also because it is "politically expedient"
for state and local officials to do so,
~FTC attorneys stated.
J~ F. Childers, a Lexington attorney,
said that the types of property which are ·
historically underassessed include land,
improvements to land, equipment, unextracted coal, oil and gas, and mineral
leases.
Childers also indicated that the .
federal lawsuit is an attempt to get a
definitive ruling on a number of proper-
S.K. JAIN, M.D.
Professional
Building
Pikeville, Ky.
Section Three, Paae Eleven
LITTLE BEA
MARK·ET
ty tax issues KFTC members have been
fighting over the past few years on an
individual basis, including administrative challenges to low assessments of
corporately held surface land and
mineral properties.
Defendants in the case have 60 days
in which to respond to the charges. The
suit was filed in U.S . District Court in
Paducah.
.
'
·HOURS: MONDAY-SATURDAY 8 A.M~-8
P
-..
ALLEN, KY.
874-2290
·sUNDAY
10 A.M.-6• P.M.'
•.
,. I
12-0Z. PKG.-FISCHER'S
SKINLESS OR BEEF
WIENER
Could Help Thousands
Avoid Heart Surgery
PRICES IN EFFECT
WED., FEB. 29
THRU TUES., MARCH 6
• QUANTITY RIGHTS
RESERVED
• NOT RESPONSIBLE
U.S.D.A. CHOICE
A new diagnostic technique that could
eliminate the need for coronary bypass
surgery for thousands of patients has
been developed by cardiologists at the
Ann Arbor, Mich., VA Medical Center
and the University of Michigan Medical
School.
The new technique, which is described in the Januar)'issue of the American
Heart Journal, enables doctors to obtain
such precise measurements of the
heart's blood supply that they can determine immediately whether the patient
will require bypass surgery or whether
the blocked arteries can be reopened by
the simpler, non-surgical procedure
known as balloon angioplasty.
Robert A. Vogel, M.D., chief cardiologist at the VA Medical Center and
head of the research team, said about
'200,000 persons undergo coronary
bypass surgery each year. He said that
about 20-25 percent of these patients
might benefit from the simpler procedure, in which a balloon is inflated inside the artery to spread the artery walls
and restore blood flow to the heart.
In addition to being far less costly than
bypass surgery, angioplasty is also
much less traumatic. Results are immediate, and recuperation is measured
in days rather than weeks.
Another advantage is that if
angioplasty is the treatment of choice,
it can be performed immediately: the
balloon is simply inserted through the
catheter already in place for the
diagnostic procedure.
The new diagnostic technique uses the
computer imaging technique developed
for bringing back pictures from space to
enhance X-ray movies of the blood flow
in patients with coronary artery disease.
Because computer enhancement
brings out details not visible to the naked eye, Dr. Vos.el · said, "We can
measure the .flow of blood to the patient's heart and determine instantly,
artery by artery, whether the obstructions are significant: causing patient's
chest pain or other symptoms."
"With these measurements, we can
tailor therapy to each patient based on
the condition of his arteries," he added.
The system is currently in routine use
at the VA Medical Center and is being
installed in University of Michigan
hospitals as well.
ROUND
STEAK ......
99
Miss Donna Rose Curry and Mr.
Stewart Henson were united in marriage
Tuesday, Feb. 7 at the home of John B.
and Josephine Henson, of McDowell.
Jimmfe Hall, of McDowell, officiated at
the ceremony.
Miss Beth Curry, of Melvin, sister of
the bride, served as bridesmaid, and Mr.
Crandall Henson, of Clarksville, Tenn.,
served as best-man.
The reception was held at the Henson
home.
The bride is the daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Ukle Curry, of Melvin. The groom
is the son of Mr. and Mrs. John B. Henson, of McDowell. The couple now
resides at McDowell.
.. ...
~¥r::
_s2
!
.
~-------------------+------------~----~~
C
BOSTON BUTT STYLE
PORK ROAST
00
00..
LB.
$109
PORK STEAK ....
FRESH
LB.
STRAWBERRY$13 9
PRESERVES ....
2/8
.
9
c
BEANS ........ .
$1 09 GREENLY
FISCHER'S SLICED
PLATTER BACON
3
LB.
000
$129
GROUND BEEF.
FRESH
FLOYD COUNTY
HEALTH NEWS
..
·.
,.
LB.
By JANE BOND
Health Educator
will be in Martin at the Beaver Valley
Clinic, Monday, March 5, from 10 until
2. She will offer T.B. skin tests ,
urinalyses, anemia screenings, blood
pressures, immunizations and Pap tests.
This clinic is a service of the health
department and the public is welcome.
The health department still has flu
vaccine, and anyone desiring a flu shot
can get one any Monday, Wednesday or
Friday at the health department. There
is a $3 charge for flu shots.
There will be a Pap clinic at the health
department, Wednesday, March 7 from
8:30 until 11:30 and from 1 until 2. This
clinic is a free service and is open to
women of all ages, but those women age
45 and over are especially urged to take
advantage of this free service since this
is the high risk age for cervical cancer.
99c
12Yz-OZ.-KEEBLER
NEW YORK $369 DELUXE
STRIP STEAK..
LB.
GRAHAM COOKIES.
A nurse from the health department
.·
t--------------~~------------1 ··
2-LB.BOWL
KRAFT PARKAY
LIGHT SPREAD MARGARINE
$129
• SEE THE GOLDEN VALUE MARKETS AD ELSEWHERE IN THIS PAPER •
.,
Central Baptist Promises
"No-Charge" Satisfaction
Central Baptist Hospital announces
the implementation of a new patient
satisfaction program.
Called "Guaranteed Excellence", the
program means that if a patient is
dissatisfied with a service at Central
Baptist Hospital, and hospital personnel
are unable to solve the problem to the
patient's satisfaction, then the patient is
not charged for the cost of the service
in question. A patient representative is
available at all times to handle patient
concerns.
"We're proud of the 30-year tradition
of excellence established by our physicians, nurses and support staff," said
Tommy J. Smith, Central Baptist President. "And now we're expressing our
pride and confidence in our staff through
this Guaranteed Excellence Program."
Central Baptist Hospital, a 367-bed
facility established in 1954, is completing
a $22-million expansion renovation project his spring.
For further information, contact Lynn
Wiseman, Public Relations Director at
Central Baptist Hospital 278-3411 ext.
1300.
lntere$ted? Call .len Peters at
886-8506 and he'll call on you!
The Floyd County Times
,
r-----------------
Wif§!ZLti
HOMEMADE PIZZA- SPAGHETTI- SUBMARINE SANDWICHES
ALL INGREDIENTS MADE FRESH DAILY
,
WE USE FRESH PIZZA DOUGH • Not Frozen • Not Pre-Billed • No Substitut8$
OPEN
9AM-1AM TUES-SAT
lOAM-lAM SUNDAY-CLOSED MONDAY
CRISP FLAVORFUL PIZZAS
CUSTOM MADE IN
10"- 12"- 14"- 17" SIZES
DKICIOUS GONDOLA & STEAK
SANDWICHES
YOU RING ...WE IRING
FOR PROMPT CARRY OUT Qlll
886-8118
OA
886-81··1 9
HOBERT'S
PIZZARIA
LANCER KY·
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Stick these
ideas on your
refrigerator.
Ie
2.
3•
4e
5e
The more you use,
the more energy
you'll save.
Whenever possible, use a toaster, toasteroven or an electric frypan instead of your
large oven or range.
Never use the oven as a heater.
Place pans on the surface units of your
range before you turn on the heat .
Use a small amount of water when boiling
eggs and vegetables. Use tight-fitting lids,
too.
Place the most often used items in the front
of your refrigerator shelves so you can get
to them quickly.
6•
Make sure refrigerator door seals are tight,
free of grease.
8
Turn off the lights, radio and TV before
7.
Don't wash your dishes until you've got a
full load. T hat's usually after dinner.
e you leave.
9
Don't let the hot water run while you're
e shaving. Fill the sink halfway instead.
10.
II.
12.
13.
14.
If you can, use an electric razor. It uses
less energy in a year than the hot water
your hand razor uses in a week.
Set your water heater's temperature at a
moderate 140°F or as low as possible to
allow for enough hot water.
Take shorter showers.
Wash and dry only full loads of clothes.
Keep your thermostat at 68° or less in
the winter, at least 78° in the summer.
15.
In winter, open drapes and shades to let
sun heat your home. When sun sets,
close them.
16.
17•
18e
In summer, close drapes and shades to
keep your home from getting overheated.
Don't heat or cool unused rooms.' Close
them off.
Keep the damper on your fireplace
closed when not in use.
For dozens of additional ideas, call or visit our office and
ask for our free folder.
L----------------We give it our best.
KENTUCKY POWER COMPANY
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�Wednesday, February 29, 1984
The Floyd County Times
Section Three, Paae Twelve
Sponsors of HB 665
HAPPY BIRTHDAY
Mercedes-Benz .A
SALLY ANN!
_,~~.......,
Bii!=Ff!
We invite you to see
our selection
of Mercedes-Benz automobiles.
Hope you like this present,
Love
Wayne, Vicki, & Jilleyn
190
190
300
300
2-29 It
.'<eJ~
Rep. Greg Stumbo, D-Prestonsburg Oeftl, Rep. Roger Noe, D-Harlan, and
Rep. Herbie Deskins, D-Pikevile, (rightl are sponsoring legislation making
special funding available to Kentucky industries if they install coal fired
boilers.
House Bill665 directs the Board of Energy Research to issue revenue bonds
totaling thirty million dollars to meet the revenue costs of the proposaL
The legislative measure would allow industries to have up to ten years to
repay the loan.
Stumbo, Noe and Deskins agreed the legislation is designed to help the coal
producing area of the state that they represent. Plus, they said it should be
labeled one of the pieces of consumer legislation introduced in the 1984 session, because the impact of the bill would put miners back to work.
(*
In stock)
1
SURVEY
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per month tor fire pro- I
: taction. Approximately how many miles do you llvelrom the main I
?
;
~-------------------------~
2-22-2(.
FEB. 29 THRU
MAR. 4 ..
-PRICES EFFECTIVE
WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO ·LIMIT QUANTITIES
AND CORRECT PRINTING ERRORS. ·
State CaBinet for Human Resources
officials report that none of the 20 products tested last week at its Frankfort
lab or at a private analytical laboratory
in Memphis contained more EDB than
the federal Environmental Protection
Agency recently declared safe for
human consumption. <EDB, ethylene
dibromide, is a chemical used by some
food manufacturers and processors to
control pests. l
Irving Bell, director of the cabinet's
Consumer Health Protection branch,
said that EDB levels found in the tested
foods and mixes range from less than
one part per billion to 144 parts per
billion. The sample with the highest level
(a cake mix) and a cream of wheat sample with an EDB reading of 96 parts per
billion are undergoing confirmatory
testing in Memphis.
EPA standards established early this
month allow maximum EDB levels of 30
parts per billion in ready-to-eat products
(dry cereals, for example), 150 parts per
billion in products to be cooked <cake
mixes, hot cereals, etc.) , and 900 parts
per billion in raw unprocessed grains.
Bell said higher levels can be allowed in
foods to be cooked or processed because
EDG evaporates when subjected to
heat.
MAKE RESERVATIONS TO HAVE
YOUR CHILD'S BEST BIRTHDAY PARTY- THIS YEARII
* R£S£RV£0
* *
t~Bl£S.
*~
" Obviously, all the samples we tested
fall within the federal guidelines," said
Bell. "There is no cause for alarm. We
will continue testing various products
over the next three weeks and will let the
public know of any food products that
exceed the new EDB limits."
Bell said testing would continue
beyond the three-week period if high
EDB levels are found. If the levels are
well within the federal tolerance, he anticipates a slow-down in EDB testing.
Starting this week, Bell's office will
begin sampling products from various
warehouses in the state. The 20 products
already tested came from retail shelves
in Louisville, Lexington, Ashland and
Paducah. Bell explained that warehouse
carry a wider range of products for
testing and that problems can be identified faster by sampling at the
wholesale leveL
PARTY PLAN
#1
OR
The easiest and safest party
you'll ever have.
"ATTENDANTS ON DUTY AT ALL TIMES"
The Singing Cookes
At Allen Methodist
The Singing Cookes, nationally known
gospel singing group from Kingsport,
Tenn., will appear in concert at the Allen
United Methodist Church on March 4 at
7 p.m.
69C
LOG CABIN MEAL ......... .
GAL.$5.99
4/$1
POTTED MEAT ............ .
JUMBOROLL
24-LBS.
$33 9
8-ROLL PKG.
2-LBS. PURNELL OLD FOLK'S
$299
GENERIC BLEACH ....... GAL
$36 9
25-LBS.
2/99C
HI-DRI TOWELS ....... .
$13
9
PAIGE BATH TISSUE ..... .
·WESSON OIL ........
3-0Z. CAN ARMOUR
PERFECTION FLOUR ...... .
PURE PORK SAUSAGE ....
$16
9
PIGGIE LINKS SAUSAGE .
CHUNK DOG FOOD .... .... .
$12
9
9
CRsiNKL£
CUT
POTATOES
$1
S
FABRIC SOFTENER ....... .
89C VALUE PAK BACON ..... 79C
TRASH BAGS ....... ... ...... .
99
$1
09
ORANGE JUICE .............. .
SWEET PICKLES ........... .
$28 9
89C
FRIED CHICKEN ........... .
PLAIN CHILl ................. .
$1
29
89
C
AIRWICK AIRWAND ...... .
BEEF STEW ....... .......... .
25-LBS. TRAIL BLAZER
$399
12-0Z. OLD FOLK'S
33-0Z. DOWNY
10-CT. BESPAK
HORMEL
LB.
16-0Z. VLASIC
.
AUTO
WORLD
2565 Winchester Ave .. Ashland, KY . 606-329-2288
Early Tests Clear Products
Of EDB Danger in Four Cities
--------------------------·
1 fire station In Prestonsburg.
D
TO
SD
SL *
SE
SEC *
~~____ /_
The City of Prestonsburg Is considerIng Implementing an out-of-town fire subscription service for residents of the county within five (5) road miles of the main
fire station In Prestonsburg. This service
means that county residents would pay
a set fee bi-annually for fire protection
from the City of Prestonsburg, with the
city mini-pumper. This, of course would
lower the fire Insurance rates of the
subscribers. If you are Interested In
subscribing to this proposed service,
please fill out the form below and mall
It to the City Administrator, P.O. Box 31,
Prestonsburg, Ky. 41653 by March 7,
1984.
I
300
380
380
500
Call us for more information
on color, interior, etc.
NOTICE
1
D *
E
12-0Z. MINUTE MAID FROZEN
15-0Z. ARMOUR
2-LBS. MORTON
24-0Z. ARMOUR
ASSORTED
~
:t..--·~·~·-""'"......_~-··~~-·--·'-'-~-
C
�
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Floyd County Times 1984
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Floyd County Times February 29, 1984
-
http://history.fclib.org/files/original/41/3325/03-07-1984.pdf
9093afbdc87a685c0a2cc613904ee040
PDF Text
Text
i r 111lnyb O!nuuty iimrs
Speakmg of
A
and for
~l oyd
County
PRESTONSBURG,
KENTUCKY 41653
Read Each Week by More Than · 12,500 Fam_ll.ies.
USPS-2027-0000
Volume LVII
No.10
t
~ .
2 5~.
WEDNESDAY, MARCH 7, 1984
McNally, Gray Said G.u ilty
'In Fraud, Conspiracy Case
A Lexington jury yesterday <Tues- ly set up a dummy corporation through
day) afternoon found Charles J. McNal- which to funnel t.o themselves and others
ly and James E. Gray guilty of con- $200.000 in commissions from the state
spiracy and mail fraud.
workers' compensation insurance
The decision came after a five-and-apolicy.
half hour deliberation and seven weeks
The defense claimed the firm, Seton .
~f testimony from.64 prosecution and 10
Investments, Inc., was set up to go into
. ,defense witnes~es.
the real-estate business and was owned
Each of the charges carries a penalby McNally from the start. Gray claimty of up to five years in prison. The coned to have had no financial interest in,
spiracy charge also carries a possible
Seton, contradicting prosecution
fine of up to $10,000, the mail-fraud
arguments that he breached his duty as
charge a fine of up to $1000. U.S. District . a public official by failing to disclose his
Judge Bernard T. Moynahan set an
interest in the company.
April 19 sentencing date.
The defendants admitted receiving
McNally, manager of the East Kencommissions from state insurance
tucky Auto Parts store here, and Gray,
policies but said they had broken no
a cabinet secretary under Gov Julian
laws, a point stressed ~y their attorneys
~arroll, were tried on charges stemin closing arguments Monday. Defense
attorney William E. Johnson, represenming from the distribution of state inting Gray, also maintained that the prosurance commissions between 1975 and
secution had failed to show that the peo1979.
The prosecution argued that McNal- ple of Kentucky were deprived of honest
ly was a ·•front man'' for Gray and government-:-a requirement for convicformer Democratic state Chairman tion on the two charges.
McNally, whose five hours of
Howard "Sonn~ " Hunt, Jr.. who alleged-
•Family Seeks To Bar
Marshall Inheritance
Clyde Douglas Marshall should be
blocked from inheriting any part of his
wife's estate and his share should go instead to the deaq woman's children, the
children's guardian claims in a suit fil~ in circuit court here yesterday
CI:uesday >.
Glen Pack, of Ohio, father of Glenda
Stanley Asks
EMT Teams
J n Every Mine
Every deep mine with two or more
employees would be required to have
one trained as an emergency medical
technician if state Mines and Minerals
Commissioner Willard Stanley has his
way.
The proposed measure is included in
legislation designed to strengthen mine
safety rules and approved Monday by
the House Natural Resources and Environment Committee.
Other bills approved by the panel and
sent on to the House Rules Committee
would allow miners to accompany in"
spectors on their rounds, require
lifelines designed to guide miners out of
smoke-filled shafts, and require more
refresher courses for emergency
medical technicians.
The law currently requires an EMT in
mines with 25 or more underground
workers- a rule that Stanley says leaves
smaller mines _without_ provisio~ for
medical emergenctes . Nobng that etght
Kentucky miners have died already this
year-most in roof falls and all far from
medical care- Stanley proposed that the
state train enough miners to see that
every underground operation has at
least one EMT.
One member of the House committee
which considered the proposal Monday
said he doubted Stanley would find
enough miners to be certified. Many
(See Story No. I, Page 4)
. 1066
Sharon Marshall and custodian of her
two children, Brent Morgan, 10, and
Ashley Marshall, 1, claims in the suit
that his daughter died last June 20 "as
the result of intentional acts" of her husband. Marshall was acquitted by a Lexington Circuit Court jury last month of
a charge of conspiring to have his wife
murdered.
Under state law, Marshall is entitled
to half of the property left by his wife,
who died intestate, unless he is found to
have intentionally caused her death.
The dead woman's estate lists assets
of $55,1194 ; she had accrued $10,188 as a
participant in the Kentucky teachers'
retirement fund ; and Marshall is the
designated beneficiary of insurance
policies on her life amounting to $36,000.
Besides Marshall, the suit, which was
filed by Prestonsburg attorney Arnold
Turner, Jr., names as defendants Lanny Hamilton, administrator of Mrs.
Marshall's estate; Woodmen of the
World Insurance Co., issuer of two
policies with a combined value of
$20,000; Life and Casualty Insurance of
Tennessee, issuer of a $4000 policy; Kentucky Central Life and Aetna Life and
Casualty Insurance, each of which
issued a $6,000 policy; and Teachers'
Retirement Systems of Kentucky.
·Any benefits froin the insurance
policies or retirement fund which might
otherwise go to Marshall should be paid
to the estate and all proceeds from the
estate should go equally to the children,
the suit claims.
Unless federal charges are filed
against him, Marshall cannot be tried
again on criminal charges stemming
from his wife's death. The civil suit apparently means that the question of, his
involvement in her death will again have
to be adjudicated, however.
To find for the plaintiffs, a civil jury
would need to find only that a
preponderance of evidence favored the
plaintiffs' position. Criminal conviction
requires that the jury find the defendant
guilty beyond a reasonable doubt.
(Suits filed in circuit court present only one side of the issue in dispute.) ·
testimony wound up the defense case,
said last week that he had received
$77,500 from Hunt in commissions,
which he took as a reward for working
"extremely hard" in Carroll's gubernatorial election campaign. "If you win,
you get certain things; if you lose; you
don't," he explained.
The commissions were channelled to
him through the Snodgrass Insurance
Agency in Allen, McNally satd. Evidence in the trial indicated that the Prestonsburg businessman loaned Seton
$14,000 shortly after he received a $20,000
check lhrough Snodgrass.
According to earlier testimony, commission sharing may not be illegal in
Kentucky as. long as the recipient is a
licensed insurance agent. McNally
received his license on Dec. 13, 1977, but
he had already received $25,000 some 11
days earlier, the day he signed his
license application. He told the jury he
thought he could begin receiving the
commissions as soon as he had filed his
iicense application.
CROCUSES, WINTER'S PROMISE OF SPRING, brighten a dreary season and give notice that
spring is almost here.
Library Retires 20-Year Debt
~
-
A $51,000 bond issue that financed construction of the Floyd County Library
was retired with a flourish last week, Judge-Executive John M. Stumbo burning the note in a brief ceremony. Stumbo was assisted by R.B. May, left, president of a corporation formed March 1, 1964, to float the bonds.
On November 22 that year, the library building was dedicated. The county
picked up the bond payments until1968, when state funds were set aside for
that purpose. Under the library program initiated by former Gov. Louie
Nunn-Cliff Latta was the state senator credited with getting the Floyd project included in the grant- the library here has received $7200 annually to retire
its debt.
About $10,000 is still owing on an additional section built in 1968 and the
20-year-old building is in need of major renovations, said Librarian Carolyn
Hay Traum.
Unmined Minerals
Tax Bill Abo~d
For this legislative session at least, the
move to levy a tax on unmined minerals
is apparently dead.
The House Budget Committee voted
yesterday to table a bill that would have
taxed unmined coal at the same rate as
surface property. The move apparently kills the measure.
Defeat of the bill was attributed in
part to strong lobbying by organized
coal interests.
March is so unpredictable that it has
the crocuses and robins deceived.
THE MOST HATED
What is the most hated word in the
language? With their dark connotations,
the list of despised words would include,
among others, murder, hate, treason,
putrid, and so on. But the one word that
curls the lip and darkens . the
countenance as does no other is ''taxes.' '
A MATTER OF NAMES
Saw something the other day about the
gal whose name was Mary Ann and who
came to the point at which she demanded that her acquaintances use both
names in addressing her. For, you see,
her husband was named Virgil and she
was fed up with hearing that hen's
cackle of, a laugh from her next-door
neighbor after referring to them as Virg
and Mary.
•
~
Stumbo Mine
Is· Shut Down
- Photo by Laura Cooley
PRESTONSBURG'S MARTY MINIX leaped high to score needed points as Bl~ckcats and Bobcats tangled in a seesaw battle for the 58th district championship that went nght down to the
final buzzer, here, Saturday night.
"PAMPER CREEK" AND
"LAKE JUG JAM"
Have you ever heard or read
" Pamper Creek" ? I, who became a cquainted with it through our contemporary, Th e Troublesome Creek Ti mes,
recommend it.
It's one of those ballad-type things and
was written by musician-folksingerenvironmentalist Michael Johnathon.
It's about a Bunyanesque character
named Solomon Cornett, his 22 wives
a nd the 48 babies whom he fathered. The
" conflict" in the story arises from the
fact that these young'uns had to b~
diapered. and the women-folks complained about having to wash all those
"didies" every day.
But the redoubtable Solomon doesn't
y ield to the temptation to cut line and
run as a man of baser metal might have
done. He starts looking, and he runs
across ' 'plastic, taped-together britches" <which came to be known a s
di s posable diapers ; trade name,
Pampers ).
cSee Story No. 2, Page 4)
After Landowners
Request OSM Aid,
File Suit, Here
SUITS FILED
Tammy O'Quinn Crum vs . Tony
Crum ; Ronnie WiUiamson vs . Vivian
Ann Williamson ; Karen Marie Moore
vs. Dewey Dean Moore; Gregory
Acting on a complaint by landowners
Howard Honshell vs. Beverly G. Ron- who claimed they were ignored by state
shell; Patty Clouse vs. Clayton Clouse ; officials, a federal mining inspector
Barbara Allen vs. Carol Douglas Monday shut down a stripmine operatAllen; Billy M. Ratliff vs. Jim Hall ; ing at Minnie in the name of Rep. Greg
Action Petroleum vs. L. T. Ruth Coal
Co.; Pauline Colley vs. Donnie M. Col- Stumbo.
Owners of properties adjacent to the
ley ; Robin Jean Puckett Jervis vs.
stripmine
asked the federal Office of
.
Stanley Ray Jervis ; Tammy Calhoun
vs. Larry Calhoun ; Kentucky In- Surface Mining to intervene after state
surance Co. vs . Snodgrass Insurance officials agreed to settle with the mine
Agency; The Cloud Co., Inc . vs. Sam operator. The la ndowners also filed suit
in circuit court here in an effort to stop
Hall, dba Hall Septic Tank Service.
Branham and Baker Coal Co. vs. Bill the operation.
An agreement announced last week
Tom Shepherd; Sam Martin, Jr. and
Marguerite Martin vs . Pine Tree Coal between the state Department of SurCo. et al; Pete Grigsby, Jr. and Phyllis face Mining and the Minnie DevelopGrigsby vs. Pine Tree Coal Co. et al ; ment Corporation was reached without
Glen Pack et al vs. Clyde Douglas Mar- the knowledge or consent of the propershall et al .
ty owners who originally brought com<See Story No. 5, Page 4)
plaint against the firm , said the landowners' attorney.
Arnold Turner, J r ., who represents
E .P . "Pete" Grigsby, Jr. and Sam Martin, Jr., said his clients learned from a
. newspaper story last Friday that the
A grand jury refused last weekto 'in- same state officials who had scheduled
dict a Cow Creek mari accused last a hearing on their complaint this week
month of attempted murder and h<1d already worked out a deal with the
mine operator that belittled their comcriminal mischief.
Criminal charges against Paul David plaint and made the hea r ing on it moot.
" After telling us we'd be able to apDeRossett, 37, will be dropped as a
result of the grand jury' s failure to act pear and make our case, they settled out
on them. Palmer Crider, 31, of Endicott, under us. I feel pretty hot about it,"
had accused DeRossett of shooting a t Turner said Friday.
Mter inspecting the minesite Monday,
him on Feb. 10 as Crider fled in his laden
coal truck from Cow Creek to Martin. He OSM inspector Tim Brehm cited the
said he was able to foil the pursuit only mine for operating without a valid permit and ordered it shut down. The cessaby colliding with DeRossett's car in a
tion order stemmed from the inspector;s
supE:rmarket parking Jot.
But DeRossett appeared before the finding that the opera tion extended
Floyd Circuit Court grand jury last week beyond the area for which it had a minunder a 1980 court rule which allows per- ing permit, said Bob McKenzie, manasons to testify before a grand jury con- ger of OSM's P ikeville area office.
csee Story No 4, Page 4)
sidering charges against them. He was
prepared to call several alibi wirnesses
and to have grand jurors inspect his car,
Not Convicted
said his attorney, Gary Johnson .
Because of an error in district court
The panel apparently accepted
records , Roy Hill, of Betsy Layne, and
DeRossett's explanation without calling Ronald Martin, of Sandusky, Ohio, were
for further evidence, however. "We're listed las t week as ha ving been connot saying Palmer Crider made up his victed of drunk driving charges, when
story, " said Johnson, "but it was ob- the charges were in fac t dismissed. The
viously a case of mistaken identity."
Times regrets the err~r .
No Case Is Found
Against DeRossett
16 Men Are Indicted
In Area Theft Ring
A six-month state police investiga tion
into the activities of an east Kentucky
ring allegedly dealing in stolen vehicles
and mine equipment has resulted in the
indictment of 16 men by Floyd and P ike
grand juries.
Named · by the Floyd Circuit Court
jury last week were Bennie Tackett, 56,
a nd E ugene Tackett, 31, both of
Galveston, Dona ld Epling and Lee
Mann, of Pikeville, and E lwood Parker
of Raccoon, a ll charged with knowingly receiving stolen property; a nd Tracy
Yates, Pikeville, and Kermit Ratliff, no
a ddress listed, who a re both cited for
theft. The charges all involve the allege d remova l of a n endloader last
September from the Diamond Elkhorn
Coal Co. mine on Mare Creek to a
Branham's Creek mine site.
E pling a nd Mann were indicted by the
Pike Circuit Court grand jury on stolen
property char ges stemming from the
alle ge d thefts of a bulldozer, two
backhoes, three trucks, a 1978 Corvette
a nd two trailers . Also cited by the Pike
jury as participa nts in the ring were
Vernon Lee Cle mons , Jr., of Frankfort,
Richard E ldon Adkins, of McCarr,
Henry "Tadge" Mayna rd, of Pikeville,
Roger Dale Comer and J ames Edward
Com er , of Shelbiana, Ronnie Mullins, of
Elkhorn City, Denzil Newsome , of
Virg ie, Ar thur Bill Akers, of Pikeville,
an9 Johnny Wayne Charles, of Zebulon.
T he s ta te poli ce investigation
r eportedly led to the recovery of vehicles
and equipment valued at nearly half a
million dollars .
<See Story No. 3, Page 4)
�Wednesday, March 7, 1984
First Aid Facts
<Courtesy of Highlands Regional
Medical Center, Our Lady of the Way
Hospital, and the emergency physicians
of Medical Associates>
The Floyd County Times
Section One, Pqe Two
Nat'l Award Winners
TRAUMATIC SHOCK
Though Highlands Regional Medical
Center and Our Lady of the Way Hospital have twenty-four-hour emergency
services to treat illnesses and injuries,
immediate treatment for traumatic
shock while transporting a patient may
help keep from intensifying the damage
of his other injuries.
Traumatic shock is a life-threatening
situation in itself. The body's vital functions are threatened by insufficient
blood reaching the body tissues. Injuries
that result in a loss of blood, loss of body
fluid, too little oxygen reaching the
lungs, loss of nerve control, severe infections or heart problems can lead to
shock. It is a medical condition secondary to the serious illness or injury.
The symptoms of shock are pale and
cool skin, moist and clammy skin, weakness, rapid pulse, irregular rapid
breathing, restlessness, thirst, vomiting,
dilated pupils, blotchy skin, or possible
unconsciousness.
The victim should be kept lying on his
back and covered to prevent loss of body
heat. Do not move the victim if he has
head, neck or back injuries. If the victim's face is pale, elevate the feet eight
to twelve inches.
If the victim is experiencing chest
pain, has a red face, or has difficulty in
breathing, elevate the victim's head and
shoulders slightly. Do not elevate the
feet.
If there are no obvious injuries and the
reason for shock is unknown, leave the
patient lying flat on his back. If the patient is conscious, give him water or fruit
juice. Do not give the victim fluid if he
is unconscious, having convulsions, likely to need surgery, has a brain injury,
has a stomach wound, is vomiting or is
bleeding from the rectum. If possible,
obtain any information about the nature
of the accident so that you can relay the
information to the personnel at the Highlands Regional Medical Center emergency department or Our Lady of the
Way Hospital emergency department.
VERNON SLONE'S
TAX SERVICE
Reasonable Rates
• Located 4 miles off Mt. Parkway on Rf. 404 (David Rd)
23-yrs. experience. "Knows
how to do the best job for You."
Hometown Boy-lives here all
year.
Call 886-6060
or 886-9007
lntere,ttd? Cell ..len Peters at
116·1506 •nd h•'D call on youl
Th~
floyd County Times
"FIREPLACE SPECIAL"
M•STER
BEDROOM
OPT.IIAY
The United States Achievement Academy has announced that Danita Dawn
Hall and her brother, Douglas Ray Hall, have both been named as 1984 U.S.
N~tional Award winners.
Danita is an award winner in both mathematics and science, while Douglas
is an award winner for both leadersip and mathematics. Danita and Douglas
will appear in picture and biography in the 1984 U.S. Achievement Academy
official yearbook published nationally.
Danita is an 8th grade honor student at McDowell where she is active with
the high school band, is a member of the TAG program, and was a member
of the mascot and Jr. Majorettes for six years. She has also attained a perfect
attendance record for her 71' 2 years enrolled in school.
Douglas is an 11th grade honor student at McDowell. He is a member of
the Daredevils basketball squad, the Beta Club, golf team, the marching band
and received this same award in mathematics for 1982 and 1983.
The parents of Danita and Douglas are Denzil Ray and Donna Hall, of
McDowell, and their grandparents are Mrs. Margie Parsons, of McDowell,
and Mrs. Maudie V. Hall, of Grethel.
84 Lumber Grew
From Single Outlet
Numbers alone cannot tell the entire
story for any business. But for one local
company numbers seem to symbolize
the drive and determination which have
taken it from a small single retail outlet
to a nationwide chain of lumber and
home improvement outlets.
"Our stores now number 374 from
coast to coast and we have more on the
drawing boards for our namesake year,
1984," said Joseph A. Hardy Sr., President and Chairman of the Board of 84
Lumber and Home Centers.
Hardy founded the company with a
single store in Southwest Pennsylvania
just 27 years ago. Since then the firm has
grown to a leadership position in the
lumber and home improvement field,
boasting outlets across the nation, and
sales in excess of $600-million annually.
Hardy, who is still actively involved
in the operation of the business,
remembers his roots as a struggling
single store operator. The company has
nurtured that sense of pioneer retailing.
Hardy and his son, Joseph Jr. (the
company's Senior Vice President), have
seen many changes in the retail lumber
business over the years. "Perhaps the
biggest change has been our overall
direction," said the younger Hardy.
"Lumber, while still a vital factor in our
business, is now mixed with a myriad of
other products to form what we call The
Home Improvement Center."
From the kitchen sink to just the right
telephone, customers can browse
through an 84 Lumber Home Center and
find what they need for that special project around the house. ''And if they need
help, our associates are specially trained to help them from planning through
to completion," Hardy Jr. explained.
This emphasis on the do-it-yourselfer
has put 84 out in front in a very competitive field.
With 20 stores opened in 1983 and 30
more on the drawing boards for this
year, both father and son are optimistic
about the future.
If you wonder how parents can care
for quintuplets, imagine having 99 offspring. According to National Wildlife's
Ranger Rick magazine, water snakes
are known to have as many as 99 young
in one litter.
Any Large Pizza and a
Pitcher of Soft Drink-$9.95
Every Tuesday Evening 4 to 9pm.
at participating Pizza Huf Restaurants
'Coriolanus' To Air
On KET, March 26
"The Shakespeare Plays" continue on
KET with "Coriolanus," a drama of
political intrigue, on Monday, March 26,
at 9 p.m. The production stars Alan
Howard as Coriolanus and Irene Worth
as Volumnia.
" Coriolanus," Shakespeare's most
political drama, has been greatly admired by modern critics and audiences
for its exciting story and statement on
the corrupting influence of absolute
power.
The play is set in ancient Rome and
chronicles the political fortunes of a
Roman warrior, Caius Marcius, who is
awarded the title Coriolanus after his
valiant victory over the Volscian tribes.
Coriolanus discovers that the qualities
that helped him gain success as a warrior are the very qualities that spell his
defeat as a leader.
"The Shakespeare Plays" are produced by BBC-TV and Time-Life and
presented by WNET, New York.
~~DO'!_
28
38
70x14 2 or 3-bedroom, 2 full baths, garden tub, cathedral ceiling, paddle
fan, frost free refrlg., bay window, snack bar, deluxe furniture, plywood
countertops and floors, sheetrock ceilings and walls, fireplace w/blower.
FHA, VA & BANK FINANCING
VETERANS NO DOWNPAYMENT
478-9593
874-9033
ON THE 4 LANE BETWEEN PRESTONSBURG & PIKEVILLE
�Wednesday, March 7, 1984
The Floyd County Times
Section One, Paae Three
Observe 50th Wedding Anniversary
Charles Abraham, M.D.
F.A.C S, Diplomate
American Board of Otolaryngology
Ear, Nose, and Throat
Specialist
Announces
Opening of His Office
For the treatment of Child and Adult Food and Inhalent Allergies, Diseases and Surgery of Ear, Nose,
& Throat, Facial Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery
of the head and neck
Paintsville Clinic Building
111 h{ain Street
Paintsville, Ky. 41240
Office hours by appointment
Phone: 606-789-4250
2-~3t
•
saara
• FRIDAY AND SATURDAY, MARCH 9 &10 ONLY •
STEAK BURGERS ;~~b. 8::rg0~,:~ . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 58.19
SHRIMP-cooked and Peeled·. . ....... 10-oz. bag 54.39
CATFISH FINGERS-Breaded ....... 3·1b. box 512.99
Mr. and Mrs. Jeff Pat Bentley, of Buckhannon, W. Va., formerly of this county, observed their 50th wedding anniversary, February 18, with an open house
and dinner with family and friends at the Assembly of God Church in Tennerton, W. Va .
Mr. and Mrs Bentley were married February 17, 1934 at the home of his
parents, the late Sara and Robert Bentley, Sr .. The officiating minister was
the late Rev. Tom Smith. They are the parents of 12 children, six of whom
are living.
Mrs. Bentley is the former Mae Lyons, daughter of the late George and
Margarette Nelson Lyons. Mr. Bentley is a retired mmer.
The open house was given by their children and their spouses, Mr. and Mrs.
Elmer Bentley, of Geneva, 0.; Mr. and Mrs. Clearance Bentley, of Pickens,
W.Va.; Mr. and Mrs. Clyde Long, of Parsons, W.Va.; Mr. and Mrs. Pat
Bentley, Jr., Mr. and Mrs. Larry W. Brown, Mr. and Mrs. Roger L. Andrews,
all of Buckhannon, W. Va. The Bentleys also have 12 grandchildren and six
great-grandchildren. They expressed their appreciation to all who attended.
and those who sent cards and gifts.
You could be. Because your home
could be robbing you of valuable energy dollars every day - with energy
thieves such as inadequate insulation
in the attic and walls, bad caulking and
weatherstripping around doors and
windows, and cracks in the foundation.
These and many more energy thieves
all steal from your home's valuable en·
ergy supply.
That's why Columbia Gas wants
you to have a copy of its new, revised
"Everyday Energy Saver's Guide."
It contains nearly 300 inexpensive
tips and ideas on how you can save
energy in every room of your home. It
even has savings tips for your auto.
TENDER BONELESS
Honored at Mt. Manor
RIB EYE & SIRLOIN FILET
Stea
EACH
By The Box Frozen
41/• oz. ea./15 Per Box
$14.85 Box- No Limit
Tender & Delicious
USDA Inspected
Available Only At Sears
Mountairr 'Manor Nursing Home of
Prestonsburg recently celebra ted
Valentine's Day with a special Valentine's Day party. At this time a Valentine King and Queen were selected.
Representing Mountain Manor is Bill
Adkins, 79, of Floyd county, and Edna
Milon, 68, of Johnson county.
Wildlife Week
Set March 18-24
"Water: We Can't Live Without It."
That theme is the conservation
message of this year's National Wildlife
Week, to be observed March 18 to 24, and
sponsored by the National Wildlife
Federation. The theme will be promoted
throughout the year to make Americans
more aware of the critical significance
of life-sustaining water.
More than 20 million students,
teachers and conservationists are expected to participate in the Wildlife
Week observance helping promote the
importance of clean, life-giving water
and the necessity of conserving critical
water resources. Each year,
schoolchildren Jearn about Wildlife
Week with information provided by the
National Wildlife Federation in specially
prepared education kits.
"More than any other resource, water
is basic to survival," said Jay D. Hair,
NWF executive vice-president. " Water
is part of every living thing, and is just
as vital to our industrial processes. Unfortunately, our useable freshwater supplies are threatened by contamination,
mismanagement, and waste. We hope
to impress upon Americans this year the
need to protect and conserve our
precious water supplies."
Trimmed to
Restaurant
Spacifications
Great Buys on
Sea Food,
Steaks And
Other Specialties ·
Phone
886·813!1
789-«16
349-3200
ISears I
u.s.
23 North
Prestonsburg
SEARS. ROEISUCK AND CO
COMPLETES BASIC
Pvt. Donna G. Handshoe, sister of
Doyle and Blaine Handshoe of Hueysville, Ky., has completed basic training
at Fort Dix, N.J.
She is a 1977 graduate of J .H. Allen
Central High School at Eastern.
Memories Weekend
Set at Carter Caves
One of the most popular annual events
in the state parks system, the Mountain
Memones Weekend at Carter Caves
State Resort Park, is scheduled this
weekend (March 9-10) .
Kentucky's mountain heritage will be
reflected in music performed by a
number of noted folk entertainers. Three
well-known duos, J.P. and Annadeene
Fraley, Dick and Anne Albin, and Nancy and Blake Barker, are scheduled to
perform. Also playing will be the Corndrinkers, an oldstyle string band from
Troy, Ohio, and Betty Smith, a northern
Georgia resident who plays an ancient,
stringed instrument called a psaltery.
Also scheduled for the weekend is a
nature hike led by park naturalist John
Tierney. For reservations at any state
park call, toll-free, 1-800-255-PARK. Further information on the weekend may be
obtained by contacting the park directly at 1-606-286-4411.
AND OOT FOR FREE.
Pick up your free copy of " The
Everyday Energy Saver's Guide" at any
Columbia Gas office.
It'll help you catch the energy
thieves in your home.
COWMBIAGAS
The first American president to be born on Independence Day was Calvin
Coolidge. His birthday was
July 4, 1872.
LITTLEBEA
ALLEN, KY.
MARK
874-2290
T-BONE
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VANiLLAR $1 09
WAFERS ....... .
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$169 PiNTOAK BRAND $14 9
GROUND ROUND..
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Sale prices good thru Sun. MasterCard or Visa. Open evenings and open Sun. 1·8pm.
CHOPS
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89
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• SEE THE GOLDEN VALUE MARKETS AD ELSEWHERE IN THIS PAPER •
�Wednesday, March 7, 1984
The Floyd County Times
Published Every Wednesday by
Prestonsburg Publishing Company
NORMAN ALLEN Editor
Subscription Ratc>s Per Year:
[n Floyd Count_!.· $8.00
Elsewhere in Ke11luck.y, $10.00
Outside Ke-nluc1ly, S.J2. 50
--- 1
Entered as second class maHer June 18,
1927, a t Ihe post,offi ce at Prestonsburg, .
Kentucky, ooder the act ,o f March 3, l879.
-~-
(Continued from Page Orne)
employees of small mines have little formal education, said Rep. Elmer Patrick,
himself a coal operator.
But Stanley said Tuesday the training
program he has in mind will itself
educate miners. Cost of the program
would be borne not by coal operators but
by the state, which has $500,000 in
federal funds to spend on safety training, he pointed out. A specially-equipped
mobile classroom furnished recently by
the Mine Safety and Health Administration will also be available for use by the
program, he said.
His EMT program would not need to
cover the whole range of medical emergencies but only those likely to be encountered in the mines, the state official
said. "We don't need to have them trained in clinical-type areas like childbirth,"
he explained. "But if seriously injured
miners could get real good treatment
before they get to the medical people, it
would save lives in many, many cases."
"I don't believe there will be any problems" in getting the bill passed in the
current legislative session, the commissioner said, adding that he had not heard
of any opposition to it by organized coal
interests.
--- 3 ---
<Continued from Page One)
Among other true bills returned by the
Floyd jury last Thursday:
Albert 0. Gibson, 48, of Otway, Ohio,
faces two assault charges in connection
with a Jan. 13 disturbance at an Indian
Hills apartment, during which he
allegedly shot his daughter, Chandra G.
Nelson, 26, in the forearm. Also indicted
on an assault count was Russell Neeley,
of Hueysville, said to have fired on Joyce
Shepherd with a shotgun, wounding her
in the arm and face.
Ralph Hall, of Estill, and Larry
Moore, of Lackey, were cited for
burglary, Hall for allegedly breaking into Melda Messer's grocery, Moore for
allegedly looting the Allen Hoover
residence.
James W. Allen, of Betsy Layne, was
named on a count of unemployment insurance fraud, the grand jury alleging
he collected $1252 in jobless benefits
even though he was working for the
Boyd Coal Co. and the T.T. and V. Coal
Co.
Tommy Spradlin, of Justell, was indicted for theft, the grand jury charging
he stole a refrigerator, washer, dryer
and dining room suite from the unoccupied trailer of his brother, Robert
Spradlin, and then sold the furniture to
Paul and Evelyn Porter. Also cited for
theft were Carlos Little and Dave Slone,
both of Bevinsville, for allegedly stealing the wheels from a 1978 Pontiac
belonging to Russell Hamilton ; and Jeffery Allen Anders, accused of stealing
a roll of cable from Little's Hardware.
Robert Leroy McAlister, of the Cliffside housing project, was named for
possessing silverware stolen from
Cassie Allen, and Johnny Dye for
possessing a microwave oven stolen
from James "Demp" Alle n.
--- 5 -<Continued from Page One)
MARRIAGE LICENSES
Tony Curtis Akers, 18, of Harold, and
Jennifer Ann Hall. 17, of Grethel ; Billy
Roy Spurlock, 19, and Cynthia Lynn
Mitsch , 18, both of Printer; Leo Moore,
26, and Madonnia Bolen, 23, both of
Wayland ; Robert Skeans, 20, of Martin, and Sandra Kaye Shepherd, 17, of
Prestonsburg; Robie Dean Miller, 19,
of Martin, and Tammy Renetta Hill,
15, of Wheelwright ; Gordon Lee
Tackett, 18, of Melvin, and Betty
Meade, 17, of Bevinsville; Roger
Pinks, 24, and Stacey Lavonne Pinks.
18, both of Royalton.
Gary Randall Johnson, 19, and Edna
Mellissia Hill, 17, both of Wheelwright ;
Heston Cooksey, 72, and Georgia
·Childers, 55, both of Louisa; Joey Darrell Keen, 22, of Allen, and Bertha
Meade, 16, of Martin ; Dan Hayden Jennings, 31, and Vicki Lynn Lawson, 24,
both of Martin ; Willis Tackett, 50, and
Teresa Ann Tackett, 18, both of
Prestonsburg.
ABBOTT HOMEMAKERS
TO MEET, TUESDAY
The regular monthly meeting of the
Abbott Homema kers will be held at the
church annex ther e, Tuesday evening,
March 13, at 7 o'clock, with Mrs. Sharon
Sparr and Mrs. Ruby Merritt, cohostesses. All members and prospective
members are urged to attend.
Gen. Anthony Wayne,
Hero of Revolution
The Daughters of the American Revolution salute Brig. General Anthony
Wayne 1745-1796. A hero of the American
Revolution, he fought in many ba ttles
and wintered at Valley Forge with
George Washington. Although his home
was only five miles away from Valley
Forge he did not visit with his family
because he believed that his place was
with his troops. Wayne is one of many
Patriots and truly a part of our
American History.
--- 2 ----
1Continued from Page One I
His 22-woman harem was downright
happy about this, but another complication thickened the plot It was taking as
many as 3500 of those britches a week
to keep those 48little keels shipshapeand what do you do with that many
diapers after they have served their
purpose?
Sweat it not. Solomon found a way. He
threw them in the creek!
And now the denouement, or climax
or whatever you may call it to conclude
the story. Along comes the flood of '77,
the accumulation of diapers that had
almost clogged the creek is washed
away, and most of them come to rest in
the trees that border the stream.
The balladeer says the "inspiration"
for "Pamper Creek" hit him while he
was driving from Knott county to Pikeville toward the end of 1982. When he got
onto US 23, he says, "the leaves were off
the trees and there were literally
thousands of disposable diapers hanging
from the trees." Hence, the song,
"Pamper Creek"-and he dedicated it
to the Big Sandy River.
Now, will somebody try his or her
hand at translating that springtime
Clorox jug jam on Dewey Lake. into a
dirge for more spoiled beauty?
ADDS A LITTLE SWEAT
This man Johnathon has done more
than a ballad or song about the litter problem. He contacted Phyllis George
Brown, wife of Governor Brown, about
the problem in Knott county (which is
typical in the region), and she with
Jackie Swigart, secretary of the Department for Natural Resources and Environmental Protection, gave active
support to his cleanup program. The
man does more than sing the blues about
the situation. He rolls up his sleeves.
CORRECTION
As hastily as I can I retract my recent
report to the effect that the evening
grosbeaks had packed up and gone
elsewhere. They were back- more of
them and sassier than ever- the day
after the paper was printed.
SUGGESTION
Those legislators who admit that more
taxes are needed but fear the wrath of
the voters back home may have an
"out." If they will do what everybody
wants them to do- repeal that outrageous "Greed Bill" that they enacted
last session solely for their own
benefit- they will save the taxpayers
millions of dollars over the years, and
the total of new taxes needed will be
substantially less than now calculated.
Having done that, foregoing their own
personal enrichment, they may be excused by the voters for taxes that are
really necessary.
In District Court
Sentenced in district court, following
guilty pleas or verdicts, were :
Hardy Kilburn , Martin, drunk driving, 30 days probation, $137.50; Ricky
L . Prater, Hueysville, drunk driving,
$137.50, alcoholic driver education
CADEl ; Gary Brown, McDowell,
drunk driving, $137.50; William D.
Setser, Prestonsburg, drunk driving,
$137.50; Kenneth Campbell, West
Prestonsburg, drunk driving, $137.50,
ADE ; Warren D. Howard, West
Prestonsburg, drunk driving, $137.50, ·
ADE ; Rick Lee Hall, Prestonsburg,
drunk driving, no license, $64.50; Dawn
Thon, Charlotte, Mich, drunk driving,
$137.50; Lon I. Slone, Blue River, drunk
driving, no license, 30 days, probated,
$197.50.
Phillip R. Short, Mousie, drunk driving, $137 .50; Janet Boyd, Prestonsburg, drunk driving, $137.50; Darrell
D. Howes, Salyersville, drunk driving ,
amended to public drunk, $57.50; Martin D. Calhour., Topmost, driving under
influence of drugs , no insurance ,
$162.50; Ronald R. Robertson, Hazard ,
drunk driving, $137.50, ADE; Clay J .
Smith, Prestonsburg, drunk driving,
no license, harrassing, resisting arrest, criminal mischief, 30 days' proba tion, $287.50; Cret D. Caudill, Prestonsburg, drunk driving, no license ,
$154.50, 10 Saturdays in jail ; Rita
Baldridge, Paintsville, leaving scene
of accident, $100.
Barry S. House, Sassafras, drunk
driving, $137.50; Ga ry A. Vance, Topmost, drunk driving, amended to
public drunk, $87.50; Bobby Darrell
Slone, David, drunk driving, 30 days'
probation, $247 .50 ; Ray Hunter.
Printer , drunk driving, $137. 50 ;
Philman Mitchell , Hi Hat, drunk driving, $137.50; Jackie E . Delong, Eas t
Point, drunk driving, $137.50, ADE ;
James W. Caudill . Auxier, drunk driving, $137.50, ADE ; Willard Conn,
Printer, drunk driving, speeding ,
$137.50, state traffic school ; Rex Hall,
Willard, Ohio, drunk driving, $137.50,
ADE ; Ralph Hall, Wayland, drunk
driving, no license , $154.50, ADE.
Our American Heritage is made up of
many races and creeds. Study the lives
of our ma ny patriots, our heroes and
heroines- they came from many different backgrounds. F ebrua ry is a good
time to reflect on our past.
Section One, Pqe Four
--- 4 ---
Our Yesterdays
(Items taken from The Floyd County
Times, 10, 20, 30, 40 and 50 years ago.)
Ten Years Ago
I :\llareh 6, ltfH
The Times learned ,early this week that !he mystery surrmmding ! h!"
~unshot s layings last year on Rig.ht Bea,•er Creek of Depul:r Sheriff
Lawrence Comley and James Clay~{)n Conley has been cleared a nd tha t a
warrant has been nssued for tthe arrest or a m:an as lhe ll:iJletr of
both ...SUa le Senator Tom Ward m-versaillesl told members of Ih e F loyd
Cotmty Save Our Land Club at at mee1ing here Friday night lhal s hip
mine regulations are not being enforced str]ctly and unifonnly ... An a ltemplby a prisoner a t the F loyd county j ail lashveek to escape. ala John
DiUinger. by fashioning a pistol from a bar of soap and then coloring il
with shoe polish. went awry when Jailer's Assistant James Clark failed to
go " according to the book ." and landed a left to the jaw of the would-be
escapee ... A National Guard unit has been approved for Prestomsburg. it
was announced recently by Maj . General Richard Frymire .. House Bill9
on which thousands of Eastern Kentuckians had pinned their hopes of
relief from the ancient Broad Form Deed is in trouble in the Kentucky
Senate ... Allen Central High School won the 58th district basketball championship game over the Prestonsburg Blackcats Saturday night. 67 to
58...There died: Miss Ruby Lillian Robinson. 49. of Auxier. recently: Mrs.
Mae Green Wallen. 59. Sunday at her home at David : Bill Slone. 52. of
Halo. Monday at McDowell Appalachian Regional Hospital: Mrs. Cinda
Rollins. 80. of Hueysville. Wednesday at Our Lady of the Way Hospital.
Martin ; Jesse L. Jones. 73. last Thursday at his home at Wheelwright .
Twenty Years Ago
(March 12. 1!164)
The University of Kentucky'sJt~:rtliilsourg Community College
definately will open in September. 1964. with a full two-year academic
program ... One hundred seventy unemployed fathers of school children
went to work in this county Monday morning on public projects selected
for improvement during a six-month demonstration works program in
Floyd and six other Eastern Kentucky counties .. .Prestonsburg came in
first in District 7 of the Kentucky Chamber of Commerce's Opportunity
for Progress Program ... Dissension in the Republican party organization
that had been developing for weeks came to a climax at the courthouse
here Saturday afternoon when two slates of candidates for precinct committeemen and committeewomen were presented ...Two more community mass meetins have been scheduled by county officials next week in
their continued effort to procure from landowners easements which the
U. S. Corps of Engineers demands before it will enter on the two streamimprovement projects approved on Right Beaver Creek .. .The same window at Castle's Jewelry Store here which had on two earlier occasions
been smashed so that jewelry could be stolen from the store was broken
at 10 o' clock Tuesday night. and this time. said Earl Castle. owner of the
business. the "take" was heavier than last.. .There died: Mrs. Carme n
Strahan, 68, wife of well-known Prestonsburg photographer Val Strahan.
Tuesday at a Lexington hospital; John H. Hatcher. 84, of Ashland. former
Floyd county official and businessman. Sunday at King 's Daughters'
Hospital. Ashland ; Paul Richard Hamilton. 15, Sunday at home at
Grethel ; Mrs. Lucy Manns, 48, of Wayland, Friday at home ; Leander
Hicks, 64. of Wayland, Friday at the Beaver Valley Hospital. Martin :
Mrs. Ollie Woods. 82, of Weeksbury, Sunday at her home ; Ewing R. Gibson. 68, of Minnie, Saturday at South Williamson ; Beverly May (Pony>
Thompson , 68, former Prestonsburg merchant and policema n. last
Thursday at the Paintsville Hospital; Robert L. Wilson. 61 , of Portsmouth. 0 .. formerly of this county, Feb. 27 at a Portsmouth hospital.
Thirty Years Ago
Hssue for Thirty Years Ago segment missing) ...
T
Forty Years Ago
<March 9, 1944)
Claude P. Stephens, former Commonwealth 's Attorney from this
judicial district , was named last week acting U. S. district attorney to
succeed John T. Metcalf, who resigned ... John Graham Chapte r , D.A.R..
with a membership of 37, ranked first in three of the most important
phases of D.A.R. endeavor in Kentucky last year. official r eports
show ... Many Floyd miners have voted a day's pay--{)n an ave rage
$9.84- to the Red Cross drive ... Fra nk Howell, ?:7, of Dony. died Thursday
at a Martin' hospital of a bullet wound received the preceding
Monday ... Married : Miss Agnes Ha rris. of West Prestonsburg. a nd Sgt.
Louis Bowers, of Wisconsin. Februa ry 12 at Baltimore. Maryland ...Born :
to Mr. and Mrs. Robie Derossett. of Prestonsburg. a daughter. Dorothy
Randolph, March 4; to Pvt. and Mrs. John P . Bentley. a son , February 26
at a Martin hospitai...There died : Mrs . George Woods. 65. Sunda y. near
Allen ; Mrs. Susie Prater. 26, Saturday at Bra inard ; Albert E. Hicks. 20.
Saturday at Wayland: Johnny Crager. 40. last week near Gary. Indiana.
in an auto collision : Dutch Webb. 82, Sunday near Martin : Mrs . Lucy
Jane Gunnells Caldwell. 63. Monday at Tram .
Fifty Years Ago
<March !1, I !1:14 l
Plant of the Mounta in Printing Company at Allen was destro yed by fire
Thursday morning ... Floyd county streams went on a ra mpage Sunday as
an eight-inch s now we nt off with ra in ...Sammy Colvin died Friday of a
broken neck in a Drift mine accident ... Maytown high school defeated
Prestonsburg. 29-21. Monday night at Maytown to win the district basketball title ... The re died : Alex Da mron, 45. form er Floyd teacher . a t
Pikeville last week: Mrs. Mary Lou Music. 77. Friday on Little Paint
Creek.
One of Four Top Resources Posts
Goes to Knarr, Former P'burg Man
Natural Resources Secretary
Cha rlotte Ba ldwin has a ppointed four
top a dministrators in the Na tura l
Resources and Environme ntal Protection Ca binet.
Robert F . Knarr, forme rly of Prestonsburg, has been appointed acting
commissioner of the Department for
Surface Mining Reclamation and
Enforcement and principal assista nt to
Deputy Secretary Cha rles Martin.
Knarr, who graduated from the Uni-.
versity of Kentucky in 1962 with a B.S.
in Civil Engineering, has worked for 22
years as a r egis tered professiona l
e ngineer. His engineering experience._
has included land surveying as well as
civil , highway, sanitar y and mining
work.
Boyce R. Wells, of Frankfort, has been
named commiss ioner of the sta te
De pa rtment for Na tura l Resources. An
employee of the cabinet since 1977, Wells
has served as both deputy commissioner
of Na tura l Resources and executive
assista nt to the commissioner.
A native of Buffa lo in La Rue County,
he received a B.S. degree from Cam pbellsville College, majoring in Political
Science. He received a masters of P ublic
Affa irs degree from Kentucky Sta te
Umversity in 1982.
Brack Marquette has been na med
Head of the Office of Communications
and Community Affairs a nd Acting
Principa l Assis tant to Sec r eta r y
Baldwin.
Marquette is a 1975 graduate of
Georgetown College. He received a
masters degr ee in Speech from Louisiana Sta te University in 1977 a nd continues doctora l studies at India na University. From 1978 to 1983, he served as
chairman of the Department of Speech
and Theatre of Oklahoma Baptist
University .
Kare n Armstron g-Cummings of
Frankfort has been na med deputy commissioner of the sta te Depa rtment for
Environmenta l Protection.
Formerly executive sta ff advisor for
the Department for E nvironmental P rotection, ma na ger of the Progra m
Development Branch of the Division of
Waste Management a nd an administrative supervisor in the Division of Waste
Management, she has been an employee
of the Na tural Resources Ca binet since
1979. A 1972 gradua te of Ma rs Hill College in Ma rs Hill, No~~h Car?lina, she
received a B.A. in Pohlical Sc1ence a nd
Sociology.
Joseph Kelly, a na tive of Campbellsville, has been named director of the
Division of Water P atrol. Kelly is a
graduate of Ca~pbells~ille Colleg~,
receiving a B.A. m Soc1a l Sc1e nce m
1976. He served four years with the U.S.
Air Force, including duty in Viet Nam .
Prior to his appointment by Baldwin, he
worked in the Kentucky Department of
Transportation.
(Continued from Page One l
Rep. Stumbo and his father, Floyd
District Judge Harold Stumbo, are listed
as stockholders of the mining company
which began stripping late last year on
the elder Stumbo's property- on Sizemore Branch at Minnie- under a special
permit for stripmines of less than two
acres . Stumbo said he and his father
planned to develop the site as a trailer
court. The mining plan was coordinated
by Morris Isaac, F loyd deputy judgeexecutive, and the actual WOII'k con·
tracted Ollt to Ray and Randy Combs, of
Letcher count;·, owners of P ine Tree
Coal Company.
Tile O[peration was shrt.at dowD by a
state mining inspec tor last month for
blasting within 300 feet of neighbor Sam
Martin's bouse and for going beyond the
two-acre limit of the permit. Before they
could resume work at the site, the opera.
tors would have to obtain a regular stripmine permit and obtain waivers from
homeowners living within 300 feet, the
inspector said at the time.
In fact, the company resumed operations last Tuesday, after agreeing to pay
a $2100 fine and to reclaim the area
where it had exceeded the limits of the
permit.
According to the agreement, which
was signed for the Minnie Development
Corp. by Lexington a ttorney Eugene
Mooney, the company had " inadvertently" exceeded the two-acre limit and approached too close to Martin's house.
But Turner said it was " obvious to any
competent adult" that the operation was
well over its limit-some three-and-ahalf acres was disturbed, he claimedand labelled as "pretense" the firm 's
claim to be developing a two-acre house
site.
"To anyone who says it's a house site,
I say go take a look at it," the attorney
said. " It's straight up and down. It's way
back on the mountain. It's being stripped and augered. Last Friday I saw
trucks coming out of there every 10
minutes. "
Once the operators went over two
acres they should have been compelled
to reclaim the whole area or to cease
operations until they obtained a regular
stripmine permit, Turner said. Operations of less than two acres, unlike larger
stripmines, are exempt from most state
mining laws and are not subject to
federal regulations.
In a letter he had hand-delivered to
OSM's Pikeville office Monday, Turner
wrote that his clients had " abandoned
any hope of protection .. .from the Commonwealth of Kentucky" and complained that, by wor king under the two-acre
exemption, the Minnie mine was
evading regulations that might have
protected neighboring pr operties.
Federal officials were apparently persuaded by Turner's argument. The Minnie mine will not be. allowed to resume
operatioris until it ' obtains a regular
stripmine permit, OSM Manager
McKenzie said yesterday.
In asking the federa l agency to intervene, Turner said the mining firm
had conducted no pre-blast survey, was
not being made to observe blasting
regulations, and carried no liability
insurance.
The lack of insurance means that,
e ven if the aggrieved neighbors win a
court judgment for damages a gainst the
firm, they have little chance of collecting, he noted. The Pine Tree Coal Company is said to be renting its equipment
and to be virtually without assets.
In the suit filed on their behalf in Floyd
Circuit Court Tuesday, property owners
Sam and Marguerite Ma rtin seek $75,000
as compensation for a lleged blasting
damage to their home. Pete and Phyllis
Grigsby a re asking for $65,000 for alleged damage•o their property. Both parties a lso seek punitive da mages and a
court injunction against the operator.
A hearing on the injunction request
would normally be scheduled this F r iday , but Circuit J udge Hollie Conley
could disqualify himself, in which case
the issue may not be adjudicated until
a later date.
Young Couple
·Plead Guilty
To Forgery
A Cliffside couple pleaded guilty in circu it court Friday to for ged-check
charges, the Com monwealth recomme nding proba ted sente nces.
Ke nny Ray Jones and Debbie Lynn
J ones, both 22, were " poor people with
young children, who ran out of money,"
said their attorney. They wer e accused
last Septem ber of stealing checks from
John a nd Debbie Biliter's m ailbox, forging Mrs. Biliter 's signature on three
checks for $100 each, a nd cashing them
at different grocery stores.
In return for J ones ' plea of'guilt to five
counts, Assistant Comm onwealth's Attorney Albert A. Burchett recommended conc urrent five-year sentences on
each count, the pen terms to be proba ted . Defense Attorney Gary Johnson,
in asking for more time to s how why his
client should not go to jail, noted that
J ones had made restitution to the three
groceries and had helped police recover
some stolen property.
Mrs . Jones pleaded guilty to a single
for gery count, the Comm onwealth
recomme nding a probated one-year
sentence . Johnson said she was a n unwilling participant in the scheme .
Circuit Judge Hollie Conley set sentencing for this Friday a nd order ed J ones
held meanwhile in the county jail.
David Mullins , 25, of Price, was put on
two years' probation after pleading guilty to a stolen property c harge. P ublic
Defender Ned Pillersdor f noted tha t his
client had served nearly a month in jail
a nd had a part-time job to go to. Mullins
has been charged with possessing a
s tolen d inette set.
LETTERS
To the Editor ·
The views expressed here are th~ or the
writer, and not necessarily those of this
newspaper. No unsigned contrlbutio.,s will
be publlshtd.
Asks Public Apology
•
In your February 22, 1984 edition, Pete
Grigsby , superintendent of schools in
Floyd county, was quoted as making
derogatory comments about my cltaractcr. For the record. [am o nly exercising my democraltc righ ts and respon.sibi.lilies by parlicipahng in Un,e plllb lic
affairs or the public school system.
I am highly offended at Grigsby's
comments and have asked him for a
public apology in t.h:is paper, as well a s
others in whic~ the comments were
printed.
I trust that you will ask Mr. Grigsby
to either provide substantial evidence
for his claims or retract his comments .
EVERETT AKERS,
R. 2, Box 89
Martin, Ky.
Hoped for Harmony
I would like to respectfully respond to
your January 4 article about the Watergap Freewill Baptist Church. It was
my heart's desire that love, peace and
harmony would flow like a river in our
church. Harmony would have continued
in our church, had not confusion and a
foreign and non-freewill Baptist doctrine
come into the camp. I indeed mortgaged my home to help build the church as
stated in your paper, thinking my
brothers and sisters were willing to
fellowship and help the church prosper.
The church requires the ministry of
dedicated workers along with the
ministry of a dedicated pastor preaching
the word of God and subscribing to the
doctrine of the church.
I hold no ill will toward the
Pentecostal Christians. I am sure they
love the Lord. However, no pastor
should confuse Freewill Baptist.
members by changing the doctrine of a
church that the members established on
Freewill Baptist principles.
I agree with your paper that some will
be happy about selling the church and
some will be heartbroken and grieved.
Some were heartbroken when our
former pastor had our church voted out
of the Freewill Baptist Conference. We
thought we had built a church that would
be a Freewill Baptist until the Day of
Jesus Christ.
ROBERT A. DEROSSETT,
Auxier Road
The Rights of Children
I was recently informed by my eightyear-old daughter that she was shown
Michael Jackson's video thriller during
her gym class. I certainly do not, nor do
I think you parents, consider a video a
gym-related activity.
As a Christian parent, I try to raise my
children with a sense of right and wrong
and try not to be influenced by the majority. I am proud to say that my daughter asked her teacher to be moved to
where she could not see the television
(provided to the schools for educational
programs?). The teacher told her to
·tnove to, a specific place where the
television·.could still be seen. When my
da ughter then asked if she could leave,
she was told, no.
We often sit back and say, " What is
happening to the schools ?" My answer
is: When a child cannot say a blessing
over their food in the lunchroom, cannot
put their hands on their hearts and learn
pride in their country that their relatives
died for, yet are allowed every other exception to be placed before them in
public schools, what would or could a
child expect when she has m ade her
choice, and speaks out, but no? Our
future is our children. They need their.
rights freed.
PATRICIA C. OSBORNE
Martin, Ky .
Against Annexation
The City Council of Prestonsburg is
trying to annex north from the city
limits to the Auxier bridge. The majority
of the people in the a ffected area are opposed to the a nnexation, but still a few
council members ar e trying to force
their will on the majority. The way the.
annexation la w is written it will be
almost impossible for the majority to
prevent wha t they are against from happening. The only way it can be stopped
is by the few that started the ball rolling.
I urge a ll the City Council members
to seek the true facts about this venture
and decide if P restonsburg has the
money to m ake such a move. Will it be
like a snake trying to swallow an elephant?
J EFF BINGHAM
Auxier Road
•
On Child Support
P roviding money for the support of a
child is only one part of being a responsible parent. There are others that
money won't buy: love, time spent with
the child, health car e, teaching a nd
guiding a nd just pla in, hard work!
Where can one hire someone to care
for a sick child a t 3 a .m. ? The custodial
par ent willingly does it, unless sick
himself or herself. How does one expla in
why my fa ther or mother does not love
me ?
The custodial pare nt has a better
chance of doing a n accepta ble job of
rearing the child if the pressures aren't
so great.
The least the absentee parent can do
for his or her child is pa y child support
without the hassle of going to cour t . Going to court is expens ive!
Nothing is free if you work .
DOTTIE JEAN VAN HOOSE
J ohns Creek
�Wednesday, March 7, 1984
The Floyd County Times
Birthday Wishes
From Garden City, Michigan to Auxier, Kentucky.
We wish you Papa Otis a very, very,
very, happy birthday. Sorry we can't be
there, but you're in our hearts just the
same. We love you and miss you. Daddy and Mommy send their love and
lessings. Hope to see you this summer.
We love you, Happy Birthday, Papa,
Bye-your granddaughters, Rayetta
and Amanda Griffith.
It.
AARP Offers Free
Income Tax Service
Income tax service sponsored by the
American Association of Retired Persons is available free to the elderly each
aTuesday and Thursday, 10 a.m.-12 noon
~nd 1 p.m .-3 p.m. at the Floyd County
Public Library in Prestonsburg.
Tax counselors, mostly retired
business people with considerable experience in tax matters and training in
preparing tax returns, are equipped to
prepare federal and state returns for
older people.
Bring your copies of "1982 tax returns
and completeinf<irmation on your 1983
income. These AARP counselors will explain and help you to take advantage of
. c h benefit available in preparing your
tax returns.
This Driving Course
will be conducted
Monday and Tuesday
April 9th and lOth
9 a.m. to 1 p.m. each day.
at the
Presbyterian Church
Prestonsburg
Completion of this course will
result in reduced insurance
premiums. Total cost is ss.oo and
reservations must be, made by
March 30 by calling 886-2463.
Section One, Paae Five
WINS PROMOTION
Represent Riverview Manor
NINE TIPS FOR HANDLING
SIBLING FIGHTS
Almost all siblings fight at some time
or other during their growing up years.
Here are some tips from Growing Child,
the monthly child development newsletter, about how to handle such disputes.
*Teach by your example. The ways
you settle your own disagreementswith your children or with other
adults-will show your children how to
settle their own, no matter what you say.
*Be fair. If you must punish your
children for fighting, make your
''punishment fit the crime," and avoid
taking sides. Don't punish either of them
so harshly that you cause them to feel
even angrier at each other and at you.
And remember that there is seldom only one person at fault in an argument.
"Remember the Golden Rule. Try to
put yourself in each child's shoes before
you judge behavior. Try to remember
your own childhood and how you felt
when your parents· stepped into your
fights. Treat your child as you would
have liked to have·been treated yourself
in that situation.
*Discipline with kindness and respect.
Let your children know that you don't
like and will not allow certain behaviors.
But don't make them feel they are bad
people when they make mistakes. Avoid
name-calling. Labels such as clumsy,
stupid, careless can become selffulfilling prophesies. If you ·do slip in
anger, apologize to your child later and
explain that you don't really feel that
way about her.
• Accent the positive. Pay attention to
the things each of your children does
well and to their interactions that are
cooperative and constructive. They will
tend to repeat these behaviors since they
earned your attention.
*Minimize the negative. Whenever
possible avoid pointing out your
children's faults and mistakes, especially in comparison to siblings. Also, unless
they're hurting each other, ignore your
children's petty disputes with each
other. They may decrease simply from
lack of attention from you. Remember,
if you want to see a behavior repeated,
pay attention to it. If you don't want to
see a behavior again, ignore it.
*Explain your expectations. Let your
children know what responsibilities you
expect them to assume; what the limits
are on each of them; what behaviors you
will not tolerate; and what they can expect if they don't meet these
expectations.
•Be consistent in your response to
your children's behaviors. There are
days when their arguing doesn't bother
you and you ignore it. Other days it will
be the "last straw," and you might blow
up. Still, if you try to respond in a way
that is predictable, you will find you
have much calmer, less anxious
children since they know what to expect.
•cultivate patience. Patience and a
sense of humor are two of the most important qualities you can cultivate as a
parent. Try to be patient with your
children's bickering. Even though you
may think the things they're squabbling
about are silly, they're important to
them. And when your patience wears
thin, try to find some humor in ~ situation. Before you know it, your children
will be grown and the lessons they learn
now about how to get along with others,
particularly siblings, will be carried into their own families.
The Growing Child newsletter follows
' a child's development month-by-month.
For more information and a free sample newsletter, write to Growing Child,
P.O. Box 620N, Larayette, Indiana 47902.
Include child's birthdate when writing.
SOUTH PRESTONSBURG
HOMEMAKERS MEET
The South Prestonsburg Homemakers' Club met Monday evening,
February 20, at the home of Mrs. Vivian
Fraley, with the president, Mrs.
Darnelle Nunnery, in charge. Mrs.
Joyce Allen gave the devotionals, entitled, "What Do You See?" In the absence
of the secretary, Mrs. Carlos Jfaywood,
the minutes were read by Mrs. Vivian
Fraley. Mrs. Ora Bussey gave the
treasurer's report. The hostess, Mrs.
Fraley, served cherry pie, coffee, and
soft drinks to Joyce Allen, Theckley
Short, Ora Bussey, Karen Colvin,
Darnelle Nunnelly, and Frances Pitts.
The next meeting will be Monday evening, March 19, at 7 o'clock, at the home
of Mrs. Karen Colvin, and the topic will
be "Mixing Food and Drugs."
FREE ELECTRONIC
HEARING TESTS
Thursday
Feb. 16
Will Be Given By
9:00 Till
12;00 Noon
FOR SALE
76 Tlons Am, Red. lmmoculole cond1llon
Wilh gold pock. AUIOmOIIC. $4,000.00
Ca II 437-77 48
11 '"'
ROBERT I. GOODMAN D.M.D.- W. FU D.M.D.
ALLEN
DENTAL CENTER
RT 80 , ALLEN KY
DENTURES
$129
$169
STANDARD
DENTURES . . . . . .
PER UPPER
OR LOWER
CHARACTERIZED
DENTURES . . . . . .
PER UPPER
OR LOWER
ALL INSURANCE PLANS ACCEPTED
v PARTIALS
DENTURE RELINES
DENTURE REPAIRS
EXTRACTIONS
CLEANING
v FILLINGS
v
v
v
v
Deltver~ng
Affordable Oenusuv Inc
Riverview Manor Nursing Home was represented by Julian Murrill, of
Prestonsburg, in the Eastern District Rock'n Roll Jamboree in Lexington,
February 17. Over $8,000 was raised for the American Heart Association.
Riverview Manor would like to express special thanks to Dr. Mary Hall, of
McDowell, for the largest contribution. Pictured with Mr. Murrill are Mountain Manor's residents Edna Mil on, of Johnson county, and Emma Workman,
of Martin county.
Poison Prevention Week
Will Begin March 18
NationaJ Poison Prevention Week
begins March 18 and carries the theme
"Children Act Fast...So Do Poisons."
Dr. George C. Rodgers, Jr., medical
director of the Kentucky Regional
Poison Center of Kosair-Children's
Hospital, points out several easy measures which can prevent hundreds of
child poisonings each year.
Dr. Rodgers suggests parents purchase cleaning products, garden chemicals, paint products, and medicines in
safety packaging whenever possible.
These products should be stored in their
original containers, out of children's
reach, and preferably in a locked
cabinet.
· Dr. Rodgers also suggests parents '
survey their homes for easily reached
cigarettes, alcohol and household plants ·'
that could poison small children.
And Dr. Rodgers suggests keeping a
one-ounce bottle of syrup of Ipecac for
each child under five years old at home,
and the Kentucky Regional Poison Center's phone number near the household
telephone.
If an accident does happen, the Kentucky Regional Poison Center is available 24 hours a day at the toll-free
number in Kentucky, 1-800-722-5725 or
589-8222 in Louisville.
CARD OF THANKS
The family of Elmer Blankenship
would express thanks to all who helped
during the passing of our loved one.
Thanks to all who sent food, flowers,
prayers, and words of comfort during
this time of sorrow. Thanks to the
church and minister, Bert Hall, for their
comforting words and to the Hall
Funeral Home for its kind and efficient
service.
THE FAMILY
lt.
PRESTONSBURG BUSINESS ASSOCIATION
BIG
ASH GIVEAWAY
WILL START GIVING TICKETS AGAIN ON THURSDAY, MARCH 1, 1984
TICKETS WILL BE GIVEN AWAY BY ALL PARTICIPATING BUSINESSES
11
Free Hearing Tests Set
For Prestonsburg Area
'· ·-
Marine Sgt. Iris L. Flannery ,
daughter of Vernon and Doris Flannery,
of Martin, has been promoted to her present rank while serving at Marine Corps
Air Station Kaneohe Bay, Hawaii.
Don't forget, ask for your tickets. when you· shop."
DRAWING WILL BE HELD
BELTONE Consultant Who Will Be At:
SATURDAY. MARCH 24, AT 2 P.M.
Dr. Phillip Simpson's Office, 22 Court St., Prestonsburg
-LOCATION: PRESTONSBURG'S LARGE MUNICIPAL PARKING LOT-
Mr. Robert A. Black
Anyone who has trouble hearing is welcome to have a hearing test
using modem electronic equipment to detennine if his loss is one
which may be helped. Some of the causes of hearing loss will be
explained and diagrams of how the ear works will be shown.
We Also Service and Repair All Makes of Hearing Aids.
Batteries And Supplies For All Makes For Sale.
IF YOU CANNOT COME INCALL FOR A HOME APPOINTMENT.
PHONE 606-886-1416
1st Prize $ 500-DRAW ONE TIME-IF NO WINNER-WILL BE $750 I~ APRIL)
2nd Prize $ 200-(DRAW TILL SOMEONE WINS)
3rd Prize $1 00-(DRAW TILL SOMEONE WINS)
4th,5th,6th,7th Prize $ 50 EACH (DRAW TILL SOMEONE WINS)
�The Floyd County Times
Wednesday, March 7. 1984
Section One,
Paa• Six
Bishop Named Winne.USAA Nat'l Award
3 Days
nly
•
Thursday, Friday and Saturday
The United States Achievement
Academy has announced that Davey
Bishop has been namt:d a 1984 United
States National Award winner in history
and government. A student of Louisa
Middle School, was nominated for this
National Award by Kenneth Sammons,
his civics teacher. His photograph will
appear in the United States Achievement Academy Official Yearbook,
published nationally.
Bishop is the son of Linna Owens
Bishop. His grandparents are Mr. and
Mrs. Homer Owens, of Prestonsburg.
Craft Market Slated
In Lexington, Mar. 8-11
The fifth Kentucky Craft Market sponsored by the Kentucky Department of
the Arts, featuring some 100 of Kentucky's top craftsmen, will be held
March 8-16 in Lexington.
The first two days of the market are
for retail buyers. then on March lG-11 the
public will have an opportunity to see
a~d purchase from this vast display of
original and traditional Kentucky crafts
and handmade wearables.
Fran Padgett, crafts coordinator with
the department, noted that the past four
markets generated over a half million
dollars in sales for the state's craftspeople, plus additional reorder business.
"The last market alone created $157,000
in direct sales; and since the spring
market is traditionally best, we're anticipating $200,000 in wholesale and
retail purchases," she said. "Representatives from some 200 shops and stores
from around the country will be on hand
to buy from 100 or so craft displays that
will be set up."
The Kentucky Craft Market will be
held in Heritage Hall, Exhibit Hall West,
at Lexington Center, and there is a $2 admission charge to the public. Craft exhibits and sales will be open to the public
on Saturday, 10 a.m. to 7 p.m., and on
Sunday from noon to 6 p.m.
Entertainment scheduled includes:
A New York City style fashion show
by Images Model Agency of Frankfort
and Lexington, Saturday at 2 p.m. and
Sunday at 1:30 p.m.; the Kentucky
River Fork Dancers, Saturday, 11 a.m.
and 4 p.m.; the Bald Knob String Band,
Saturday noon, 3 p.m. and 5 p.m.; the
Foot in the Door String Band, Sunday,
12:30 and 3:30p.m.; Castlewood Morris
Women Dancers, Sunday, 2:30p.m. and
4:30p.m.
Summer Food Program
Seeks Sponsors in Ky.
The U.S. Department of Agriculture
is seeking sponsors to operate the 1984
summer food program in Kentucky.
The summer food program provides
nutritious meals to children in needy
areas, without regard to race, color, national origin, sex or handicap, during extended school vacation periods. In most
areas, the program operates from May
until September. Under the program,
meals and snacks are served to children
in such places as schools, playgrounds
and parks.
Public or private, nonprofit schools
and units of local, municipal, county or
state governments may qualify as sponsors of the summer food program 1 in
areas where at least 50 percent of the
children are eligible for free or reduc·ed price school lunches. Residential
summer camps whose enrollment includes needy children may also act as
program sponsors. Qualified sponsors
are reimbursed for program operating
and administrative expenses up to the
current rates of reimbursement.
To be eligible, sponsors must provide
continuing service to the community;
serve meals on a regular schedule to
children or provide meals as a part of
an organized program for enrolled
children at camps; and show they are
financially and administratively
capable of operating the program.
For more information, potential sponsors in Kentucky should contact the
Division of School Food Service; State
Department of Education; Capital Plaza
Tower; 17th Floor; Frankfort, Ky. 40601.
Telephone: (502) 564-4390.
Blankenship Preaching
At Church of Christ
Darrell Blankenship, formerly of
Prestonsburg, who now preaches in
Adams, Tenn.. and teaches Bible at
David Lipscomb College in Nashville,
Tenn., will be leading services at the
Prestonsburg Church of Christ on South
Lake Drive, Sunday, March 1L Services
will be at 10:45 a.m., Sunday, and at 7
each night through Wednesday. He will
also be guest speaker on WPRT each
day at 9:30a.m.
The Church of Christ extends a
welcome to all to attend these services.
•
• Do~ntown- Pike\·illtt
• South Side Mall- Williamson • Weddington Plaza
save 2 0 %
entire selection
of Playtex
save
20%
Cover Girl
cosmetics
Your favorite bras and girdles at special
savings for a limited time. Select one now
and save!
You save an additional 20% off
our every day low price on any
Cover Girl cosmetic. Hurry, this
offer good for limited time.
save30%
J.B.J. coordinates
by Cos Cob
•
~'>:!M
The kind of mix and match
separates you live in. Includes
roll sleeve jackets, pants
and skirts in blue, red,
jade and khaki poly/
cotton, 8-18.
reg. 20.00-34.00 now
save25%
. , .
mtsses spnng
rain wear
14.00-23.80
Selected styles to wear for rain or
shine. In woven polyester
in assorted colors.
reg. 49.00-59.00
36.75-44.25
Watson's Days
Special!
Watson's Days
Special!
8.99
12.99
12.99
reg. 15.00
reg. 22.00
poplin skirts
for misses
roll sleeve
missy jacket
A spring and summer bas1c m
two styles. Assorted solids in no·
iron poly/cotton, 8-18.
Popular unconstructed style by
Serkez in pure cotton. In brights
and pastels, 8-16.
reg_ 19.00
misses' shirts
by Oak Hill
Spring shirts in wash and wear
poly/cotton. Select from ruffled
collar, v-neck and yoke
styles, 8-18.
Watson's Days
Special!
24.99
reg. 35.-40.
.
,
.
mtsses spnng
stadium jackets
Popular stadium length jackets
in lightweight poplin for spring.
Assorted colors, 818.
Watson's Days
Special!
Watson's Days
Special!
7.99
save 5 0 %
large size
coordinates
An outstanding value on
selected styles from Ms. Russ.
Mix and match pieces in new
spring styles.
orig. 24.00-45.00
11.99-21.99
twin set
9 • 99
19.99 value
reg. 12.99
12.99
orig. 18.00
junior pants
for spring
19.99
35.00 value, our reg. 26.99
Levi's striped
junior baggies
Striped yoke front styles. By A.
Byer for s1zes 3-13.
Fashion jeans at a fabulous
price. Striped mdigo denim m
looser leg baggy style, 3· 13.
~
save 2 0 %
•
Use Watson's
convenient lay-away
plus 2 great ways
to charge.
petite dresses
and sportswear
Our entire selection of dresses
and sportswear specially
proportioned for women 5'4"
and under at special savings.
Select from many brand names
in a variety of styles and colors,
sizes.6·16.
'Not avatlable tn Greenevtlle, Hazard,
colorful striped
junior tops
Select scoop neck button front
or boat neck style in purple,
turquoise or geranium with
white stnpes, S ,M,L. Poly!
cotton knit.
Watson's Days
Special!
2 5 % off
entire selection
of bath towels
Select any towel in the store,
including those already marked
down and save 25%.
.88
1.59 values
assorted styles
of sheet sets
ExceptiOnal savings on these
ladies' pan lies in assorted solids,
4-10 sizes.
Select from five attractive
designs . Sets include flat, fitted
sheet and cases.
value our price
full set
29.99
14.99
queen set 36.99 .
18.99
24.99
king set
44.99
2 5 % off
3 0 % off
selected small
electric
appliances
selected gifts
top drawer
panty savings
Includes vacuum cleaners,
toasters, fry pans, m1xers and
more.
*Not available tn South Wilhamson
•
Exceptional savings on
porcelain, crystal, brass and
other gifts and our entire
select1on of ceramic and
porcelain mugs.
*Not avatlable
Welch
tn
Greeneville , Hazard,
Welch
~~~------~------~------------------------------~--------~----------~-----
�Wednesday, March 7, 1984
The Floyd County Times
Section One, Pye Seven
Wee Miss Valentine
3 Days Only
•
Thursday, Friday and Saturday
Shawna Gail Hall was crowned 1983
Southern Bell, Dec. 10, at Millard High
School. She was first runner-up, Dec. 3,
at Wheelwright's Sweetheart pageant
and also was first runner-up in the Miss
Eastern Ky. Dream Girl pageant at
Pikeville, Feb . 4. Her most recent title
she was crowned Wee Miss Valentine at
Allen Central on Feb. 12, and just
runner-up in sportswear. Shawn Gail is
the daughter of Verlis Jr. and Pat Hall
of Bypro, Ky. She is the granddaughter
of the late Muriel Martin, of Bypro,
Alma Martin and Desta Hall, of Bypro
and Mr. and Mrs. Verlis Hall, of Kite,
Ky. She would like to thank her sponsors
Family Flower Basket, of Price, Ky.,
and Family Drug, of Wheelwright, Ky.
A ·special thanks to you.
• Downtown - Pikeville
• Weddington Plaza
• South Side Mall- So.
Williamson
save3.00
girls' knit polos
Soft and colorful in poly/cotton knit
from Taffy Passage. With button down
placket and contrast color stripes on
collar and sleeve cuffs.
4/6X, reg. 7.99
7/14, reg. 8.99
4. 99
5. 99
save$3
to$5
men's sport shirts
•
'NOV A' On KET Examines
The Indian Health Crisis
Short sleeve sport shirts for spring in an
assortment of stripes and plaids. Of noiron poly/cotton for easy care, S,M,L,Xl.
reg. 12.99-14.99
9. 99
save$2
to$4
men's Wrangler® jeans
8. 9 9
Heavyweight 'No-Fault"" cotton denim
jeans in boot cut style. Choose regular or
prewashed finish, 30-40 waists.
regular finish, reg. 15.99
reg. 10.99·12.99
prewashed finish, reg. 19.99
ocean print
tees for boys
13.99
15.99
~·
Long sleeve t-shirts featuring ocean
scenes on front or back and down one
. sleeve. In pastel and bright poly/
cotton knit from Ocean Pacific,
Panama Jack and others, S,M,L,XL.
NOVA will explore the state of
medical care for a proud but vulnerable
Indian minority in " Make My People
Live: The Crisis in Indian Health,"
which will air on KET, Tuesday, March
27, at 8 p.m. The question of America's
obligation to its native Indian population
is examined in light of an important Indian health act that comes up for
renewal this spring.
In "Make My People Live," NOVA
visits the Sioux, Tilinget and other Indian tribes who, in exchange for their
lands, now receive free medical care
through the Indian Health Service. This
federal agency has undeniably helped to
cope with the demoralization caused by
unemployment and poverty on most
reservations.
NOVA also looks at a number of medical programs, from a half-condemned
IHS hospital on a Sioux reservation, to
native health aides who advise on
medical problems by CB radio and
telephone among Alaska's Tlinget Indians. NOVA discovers that staffing
such programs with Indian medics and
doctors helps ensure their success in the
community.
NOVA is produced by WGBH, Boston.
CARD OF THANKS
Watson's Days
Special!
9.99to
7.99
28.00
reg. 14.00.44.00
Nike active
footwear for
every member
of the family
Watson's Days
Special!
13.99
boys' Coyote
polo shirts
Colorful stripes with classic polo
styling in easy care poly/cotton
knit. You save 1.50 to 2.00 off
the regular price.
4/7, reg. 7.49
8/18, reg. 8.99
5.99
6.99
Versatile and easy care in navy,
brown and grey, 30-42 waists.
From Haggar and Royal Palm.
reg. 6.99
infant shawls
Save 35% on soft woven acrylic
shawls in 40x40 inch size with
fringed edges. In assorted
pastels and multi-color pastel
combination. A perfect gift for
mothers-to-be.
reg. 10.99
girls' short
sleeve oxfords
You save 3.00 on these buttondown collar classics in assorted
solids and stripes. No-iron poly/
cotton oxford cloth by Becky
Thatcher, 7/ 14.
10.99
reg. 14.99
save 4.00 on
girls' pants
Select from assorted solids for
spring and summer by Becky
Thatcher. In easy care poly/
cotton, 7/ 14.
Watson's Days
Special!
39.97
3 pc. set
Watson's Days
Special!
Watson's Days
Special!
9.99
special purchase
vinyl luggage
4.49
9.99
reg. 14.99-16.99
reg. 19.99
men's texturized
polyester slacks
4.49
men's classic
polo shirts
Soft and comfortable in poly/
cotton knit. Select from
assorted solids with chest
pocket, S,M,L,XL.
lightweight luggage in heavy
vinyl with woven poly interior.
Buy the 3 pc . set or each piece
individually. In cognac,
burgundy or blue.
shoulder tote
22" boarding bag
24" pullman
8.99
12.99
17.99
reg. 7.49
reg. 14.99
LCD acrylic
desk clock
place mat, napkin
& napkin ring set
Sleek and attractive for your
office or desk at home. In clear
acrylic in 3%x3" size.
4 each of straw mats , linen/
cotton napkins and coordinating
napkin rings.
The family of Polly Tackett would
thank everyone who showed kindness
and sympathy during her illness and
death. Thanks to those who sent flowers
and prepared food. We would also thank
the staff of the Riverview Manor Nursing Home and the staff of the Riverview
Manor Nursing Home and the staff of
the Highlands Regional Medical Center.
We especially want to thank the United
Baptist ministers and the Hall Funeral
Home for their kindness.
THE FAMILY
lt.
PUBLIC NOTICE
D. & G. Carryout doing business at
Route 122, Box 278, McDowell, by Goble
Martin and Demoris Martin, Box 278,
McDowell, hereby declare their intention to apply for a license as a retail
package liquor dealer under the state
law.
ltpd.
SURPLUS PROPERTY BID
NOTICE
The City of Prestonsburg has declared
surplus and will offer for sale to the
highest bidder one (1 ) 1981 Chevrolet
Malibu that was used as a police vehicle. Bids will be accepted until March 8,
1984 at 2:00p.m., at which time they will
be opened publicly and read aloud. The
vehicle can be inspected at the
Municipal Building between the hours of
8:00 a.m. and 4:00p.m . Monday thru
Friday. Mail Bids to City Administrator,
P.O. Box 31, Prestonsburg, Ky. 41653.
The City of Prestonsburg reserves the
right to reject any or all bids.
DAVID EVANS
City Administrator
2-29-2t
PUBLIC NOTICE
Watson's Days
Special!
5 0 % off
save 2 0 %
save 2 0 %
all telephones
2 0 % off
entire selection
of Playtex
any fishing rod
and reel combo
all fishing lures
Your favorite bras and girdles at
special savings for a limited time.
Select one now and save!
Choose any rod and reel
combination or make your own
and save 20%. Includes Garcia,
Shakespeare, Johnson and
more.
Our entire selection of telephones at incredible savings.
Includes one-piece, 10-memory
and other styles. Buy your own
and save!
orig. 17.99-119.00
8.99-59.50
*Limited quantities. Not available in
~ r.r••<>n.,vill", Hazard, Welch.
•Not available in Greeneville, Hazard,
Welch.
Every single lure in the store
including Bagley, Bomber,
Mister Twister, Rapala and more
Stock up now for spring fishing
season.
reg .. 39-4. 99 •
99¢
reg. 1.99
slightly imperfect
31-3.99
kitchen towels
*Not available in Greeneville, Hazard ,
Welch.
Absorbent cotton velour or
linen tea towels in various prints.
Select several at this low price.
PUBLIC HEARING
Municipal Road Aid
The City of Prestonsburg will hold a
public hearing at 6 p.m., on March 12,
1984 in the Council Room of the Municipal Building. The purpose of this public
hearing will be to discuss the uses of the
City's Municipal Road Aid money. The
City has a balance of $60,no.oo in the account and the estimate receipts of
$30,000.00 in the coming fiscal year, for
a total of $90,no.oo. This money is to be
used for the repair and improvement of
roads and for the repair of sidewalks in
the City of Prestonsburg. The public is
urged to attend this meeting. If you cannot attend this meeting, please mail
your written comments to the City Administrator, P.O. Box 31, Prestonsburg,
Ky. 41653.
DAVID EVANS
City Administrator
lt.
'
�Wedn.-sday, March 7, 1984
The Floyd County Times
Voices of Appalachia on Tour
FLOYD COUNTY
HEALTH NEWS
By .ft\:\'E BO:'\D
Health Educatot·
--,.o
_,
w
-
(
\•
Floyd county mt'mbers or \'oices of Appalachia are, from left, Jessica Hicks,
Carla Huff, )Jelanie Elliott and Solomon Kilburn.
Pippa Passes, KY-Singing of their mountain heritage through the hymns
and folksongs of the Southern Appalachian region, the "Voices of Appalachia,"
40-member choir from Alice Lloyd College, will travel this month through the
northeastern United States.
The choir members are Alice Lloyd students.
Richard Kennedy, is director of the choir.
This year's annual tour will take the choir to Virginia, Maryland, Pennsylvania, New York and the District of Columbia. The tour will begin Friday,
March 9 at the Chilhowie Methodist Church in Chilhowie, Virginia. On Saturday the choir will travel to Washington, D.C. where it will present a concert
Sunday morning at the National Presbyterian Church. Sunday evening the
group will be at the Douglas Memorial Community Church in Baltimore,
Maryland Monday evening, March 12, the choir will appear in Lencaster,
Pennsylvania Although the tour is strenuous, there will be time for choir
members to relax and do some sightseeing. While in Pennsylvania, they will
tour the Hershey chocolate factory at Hershey. Tuesday, March 13, the choir
will appear at Kendall at Longwood, a retirement community in Kennett
Square, Pennsylvania. Tuesday evening, the "Voices" will go to New York
City where they will remain until Thursday. While in New York the choir will
appear at St. John's Episcopal Church in Cold Spring Harbor and at the Garden
City Community Church in Garden City.
Saturday, March 17, the choir will return to the District of Columbia where
, the "Voices" will appear at the Palisades Community Church. This appearance
is sigmficant because the Palisades Church was the first church to host the
"Voices of Appalachia" during their initial tour in 1962. At that time the choir
was under the direction of Abner "Papa 'G' " Grender.
Early Sunday morning the choir will travel to Richmond, Virginia to participate in the morning worship service of the Bon Air Baptist Church, then
to Grottoes, Va. for the final spring tour concert. The choir will return to Pippa Passes March 19.
Several local concerts are planned for the spring.
Workshop Scheduled
A Trapunto workshop is scheduled
here Friday, March 9, at the Kentucky
Power Company at 10 a.m.
Supplies needed are building two
squares of pre-washed muslin or other
cotton material 18x18 in size, embroidery hoops, scissors, white rug yarn
thimble and a needle with eye. big
enough to thread yarn into. The instructors will be Mrs. Jean Watson and
Frances Pitts. Call886-2668 to register.
HOUSE FOR SALE
Clark School District
3-BEDROOM; 2-BATH; WITH DOUBLE
GARAGE AND LARGE LOT. ASSUMABLE
8.8" MORTGAGE, MANY EXTRAS.
CALL
432-0194 DAYS, or
J.
886-1661 after 8 p.m. &r weekends {[
TRI-COUNTY TV
SO. LAKE DRIVE
PRESTONSBURG
(Old Peerless Auto Supply
Building)
886-6474
3·7·21
APARTMENT
AVAILABLE
we presently have a one bed·
room apartment available for rent
at Highland Terrace.
To qualify for this apartment, you
must be 62 years of age, disabled
or handicapped.
To apply, please go Into the
Green Acres Housing Office during
the hours of 8:30 A.M.-12 Noon and
1:00 P.M.-4:30 P.M. Monday thru
Friday.
3-7-:lt
Directory Lists 12,000
Key Conservation People
They save wetlands and whooping
cranes; they fight toxic wastes and
water pollution; they hike, fish, farm
and take care of zoos.
The people who know natural
resources are listed in the National
Wildlife Federation's 1984 Conservation
Directory, which lists 12,000 individuals
and 1,800 organizations, from the Air
Pollution Control Association to Zero
Population Growth.
The 300 pages of the directory's 29th
edition, published this month, list key
contacts and addresses for organizations
involved with natural resource management in the United States and 113
countries.
Included are federal, state and Congressional officials, committees and
agencies concerned with the environment, as well as thousands of citizens'
groups-with interests as varied as
trumpeter swans, prairie grouse, New
England wild flowers, and American
wllderness.
The listings of organizations include
the address, telephone number, names
of directors, statement of purpose and
size of each group.
The directory also contains a list of
U.S. and Canadian state and provincial
fish and game administrators; a guide
to major colleges and universities offering professional training for careers in
conservation and environmental protection; lists of national forests, parks,
seashores and Wildlife refuges; a list of
conservation offices for foreign governments; a list of periodicals, directories,
and audio-visual sources of interest to
consevationists; a Jist of state education
agency coordinators for environmental
education.
The 1984 Conservation Directory can
be obtained for $9 plus $1.55 for shipping
charges per order <regardless of
number of books ordered) by wri ling to
Conservation Directory, National Wild·
life Federation, 141216th St., NW, Washington, DC 20036.
The Pap Clinic scheduled at the
Health Department today March 7, 1984
has been cancelled. There will be a Pap
cltmc at the Health Department on
Wednesday March 14 from 8:30 until
11:30 and from I : 00 until 2. 00. This clinic
is a free service of the Health Department and is open to women of all ages
but those women age 45 and over are
especially urged to take advantage of
this service.
A nurse from the Health Department
will be in Wayland at the Methodist
Church on Monday March 12 from 10:00
until2:00. She will offer T.B skin tests,
urinalyses. anemia screening, blood
pressures, and immunizations. This
clinic is a service of the Health Department and the public is welcome.
Also at the Health Department, there
IS a nutrition program that supplies
some foods to pregnant or breastfeeding
women, infants and children under 5
years of age This program is limited to
those persons at nutritional risk and that
also qualify within income guidelines.
Please call for an appointment at
886-2788; ask for the WIC Program.
Mrs. Eliza Blackburn Honored
On 90th Birthday, Feb. 26
Mrs. Eliza Blackburn was honored on
her 90th birthday, Sunday, Feb. 26, with
a buffet dinner served by her daughters,
Mrs. Mae Blackburn Newberry and
Mrs. Billie Jean Blackburn Osborne.
Of her immediate family who were
present to honor her, in addition to Mrs.
Osborne and Mrs. Newberry, were their
husband, Dean Osborne and John Newberry; Mrs. Blackburn's son, Glen
Blackburn and his wife, Kathryn, and
their children, Glenda Lynn, and her
husband, Bob Larson, and their daughter, Roberta ; Cheryl and Dale Meade
and children, Lisa and Mark; Glen
Michael and wife, Margie; Leslie Kay
Blackburn Hall and son, Jeremy, and
Jeffrey Blackburn and guest, Tammy
White.
Neices and nephews present were
Okey and Ginny Taylor, of Williamson,
W.Va., and Tom and Edith Taylor, of
Pikeville. Also present was Shirley Warrix, who lives with Mrs. Blackburn;
members of her twin sister's family, the
late Elizabeth Taylor Spears, Mrs.
Angeline Spears George, of Betsy
Layne, Charles E . and Requa Spears, of
Wells Addition, Pikeville, Mrs. Madge
Spears Mullins and son, Stephen, of
Elkhorn City.
After dinner, a large decorated birthday cake was placed before the honoree,
and everyone gathered to sing "Happy
Birthday" to Mrs. Blackburn .
Mrs. Blackburn has a brother, John
Taylor, of Johns Creek; a sister Mrs
Bertha Taylor Cornette, of Lexington,
and an half-sister, Mrs. Mae Taylor
Thompson, of Paintsville, Ohio.
Home Health Agency
Buys 2 New Vehicles
The McDowell Appalachian Regional
Hospital Home Health Agency recently
purchased two new vehicles which are
to be used in providing services to homebound patients in Floyd county. The
vehicles, a Chevrolet 4-wheel drive
Blazer and an S-10 pickup truck, were
purchased from Music-Carter-Hughes in
Prestonsburg. and replaced agency
vehicles \\ohich were no longer
serviceable
The home health agency has been providing home health services to the county residents since 1972 and presently offers skilled nursing <R.:'I.l , physical
therapy and home health aide services
to patients in their place of residence.
Agency personnel make an average of
500 home visits a month and serve approximately 130 patients.
COMPLETELY INSTALLED
NEWS
SPORTS
MOVIES
RELIGION
• Bank
Financing
Available
USTOM ANTENNA
MARTIN, KY. • 285-3984
for the practice of
UROLOGY
Telephone (606) 789-7584
MONDAY-WEDNESDAY-FRIDAY
10:00 AM until 4:30 PM
metsy Layne office closed February 1l
I.R.A. made easy
Contribute to your I.R.A. weekly, monthly, or any
other schedule you desire. Importantly, you get
all the tax advantages of the lump sum deposit.
I.R.A. reduces income taxes
Simply add up your I.R.A. contributions for that
tax year and deduct that total from your gross
income.
You still have time to reduce your taxes
for 1983.
u
AND EASTERN KENTUCKY TOO!
.
.
THE BANK ·:BJ:· JOSEPHINE
Prestonsburg • Garrett • Harold • Allen • Wheelwright
Member F.D.I.C.
The brand that fits.
N
DENIM LAND
PRESTONSBURG
SALE$5
1595°
111 Main Street, Paintsville, Kentucky
Design an I.R.A. you can afford. we have the affordable plan. Because we understand how hard
5 2,000 is to come by-especially all at once.
Prestonsburg Community College is
sponsoring a Financial Aid Information
Night for students and parents. The program will be presented tomorrow
<Thursday) in Room 129 of the Johnson
Administration Building, beginning at 7
p.m.
.
The Information Night activity is
recommended for all students and
parents who will need assistance in
financing their post-secondary education. Brenda Music, admissionsfinancial aid officer at the college, will
explain financial assistance programs
and procedures, and will answer questions. Further information on the program can be obtained by contacting the
college at 886-3863, Extension 223.
Retail $1!5.00
0
5
THE PAINTSVILLE CLINIC BUILDING
Financial Information Night
"LEE"
CANVAS
ZIPPER BAG
DAN EX
6' SYSTEM
announces the opening of his office
Of course, you can deposit
$2,000 into your I.R.A.
But you don't have to!!
Some people believe that a baby born
between the 21st and 24th of any month
will have good luck on the 13th day of the
month.
SATELLITE TELEVISION
ERNEST C. HOLBROOK, M.D. FACS
RETAIL
-FREE-
~
$25.00---$20.00
$27.00
$22.00
$29.00
$23.00
$30.00
$24.00
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U.K. AUTOGRAPHED
BASKETBALL
MEN'S AND WOMEN'S
JEANS AND TOPS
DARK INDIGO HEAVYWEIGHT DENIM
(Across the creek from Garth Vocational School
:1 7-1
• I
COME BY AND REGISTER
AT DENIMLAND TODAY ...
Drawing will be on
Saturday, March 17-3 P.M.
�Wednesday, March 7, 1984
March 4-10 Named
Save Vision Week
Mayor Harold W. Cooley has proclaimed March 4-10, Save Your Vision
Week. This is in conjunction with the
week's national observance in an effort
. t o "heighten awareness of the role of vision in our lifestyle," and to encourage
everyone's safeguardirlg their vision.
The Floyd County Times
Brackett Commended
For Forestry Work
PUBLIC NOTICE
An application for a place of entertainment license has been filed by Novella
Hunter, of Harold, Kentucky. The nature
of the business will be to serve alcoholic
beverages and live entertainment.
The County Attorney's Office is required to file a written report to the
County Judge Executive's office reflecting if the person applying is " not of good
moral character or who will not, in the
judgment of the Court, <County Judge
Executive) obey the laws of the state in
the carrying on of the business".
Any interested citizen having information relative to said applicant's lack of
"good moral character" or willingness
to obey the laws of the state in the carry·ng on of the business is requested to file
the same in writing, with the County Attorney's office. Said written information
shall be signed, dated, and reflect the
current address of said citizen, and must
be delivered to the County Attorney's office no later than the 14th day of March,
1984.
ARNOLD TURNER, JR.
Floyd County Attorney
3-7-2t.
NOTICE OF
INTENTION TO MINE
Pursuant to Application
Number: 436-0044
(1) In accordance with the provisions
of KRS 350.055, notice is hereby given
that Industrial Fuels Corporation, P.O.
Box 2687, Pikeville, Kentucky has filed
a.an application for a permit for a surface
~oal mining and reclamation operation
of approximately 387 acres located 1
mile west of Tram in Floyd county.
(2) The proposed operation is approximately 3 miles southeast from State
Route 1426 junction with US 23 and
located 1 z mile west of Big Sandy River.
The latitude is 37 deg. 34 min. 58 sec. The
longitude is 82 deg. 40 min. 48 sec. The
surface area is owned by Junior Conn,
Randy Hayes et. al., Industrial Fuels
Corp., Green Kidd, George Honaker,
st., Peter Justice, Oliver Glenn, heirs,
Ray Campbell, John M. Stumbo, Cecil
B. Hall, James B. Williams heirs.
(3) The proposed operation is located
on the Harold, Ky. U.S.G.S. 7 1h minute
quadrangle map. The operation will be
mountain top removal method of mining. This application also includes a proposed land use change from the forestland pre-mining land use to a combination forestland, hayland-pastureland
_post-mining land use.
•
(4) The application has been filed for
public inspection at the Department for
Surface Mining Reclamation and Enforcement's Prestonsburg Regional Office, 503 South Lake Drive, Prestonsburg, Ky. 41653. Written comments, objections, or requests for a permit conference must be filed with the Director
of the Division of Permits, 6th Floor,
Capital Plaza Tower, Frankfort, Ky.
40601.
3-7-3t.
PUBLIC NOTICE
An application for a place of entertainment license has been filed by Lowell
Paige, of General Delivery, Wayland,
Kentucky 41666. The nature of the
business will be Arcade Games.
The County Attorney's Office is required to file a written report to the
·c ounty Judge Executive's office reflec...J:ing if the person applying is "not of good
aoral character or who will not, in the
judgment of the Court, (County Judge
Executive) obey the laws of the state in
the carrying on of the business".
Any interested citizen having information relative to said applicant's lack of
"good moral character" or willingness
to obey the Jaws of the state in the carrying on of the business is requested to file
'the same in writing, with the County Attorney's office. Said written information
shall be signed, dated, and reflect the
rurrent address of said citizen, and must
delivered to the County Attorney's office no later than the 14th day of March,
1984.
ARNOLD TURNER, JR.
Floyd County Attorney
3-7-2t.
a;
PUBLIC NOTICE
Mountain Distributing doing business
at Mill Creek Road, Wayland; Ky. 4i66f
yKathrineAnn Martin Smith, P.O. Box
·279, 'Mill Creek Road, Wayland, Ky.
41666, hereby declares her intention to
apply for a license as a wholesale beer
distributor under the state law. lt-pd.
Eastern District Forester Stephen
Ray Brackett, at left, recently received
a Certificate of Appreciation for
outstanding forest law enforcement activities from Department for Natural
Resources Acting Commissioner and
Division of Forestry Director Donald A.
Hamm.
Brackett has been in charge of the
Eastern District, which covers Floyd,
Pike, Johnson, Magoffin, Martin, and
Lawrence counties since December,
1981. Since that time the Eastern District
has had one of the highest forest law enforcement prosecution rates statewide.
This increased prosecution rate is part
of a program initiated statewide by
Director Hamm, in an effort to reduce
the number of forest fires occuring from
illegal burning of debris.
Brackett is a graduate of Prestonsburg High School and of the United
States Army Military Police School at
Fort Gordon, Georgia. He also attended Prestonsburg Community College
and Eastern Kentucky University where
he majored in Police Administration. He
is currently a member of the Epsilon
Chapter of the National Criminal Justice
Honor Society, the Brigham Young
Lodge No. 59, Fraternal Order of Police,
The Kentucky Conservation Council,
and District Chairman of the Kentucky
Tree Farm Committee.
*Cancer
Hope line
Q. I recently learned that a relative of
mine has stomach cancer? This is a type
of cancer I hardly ever hear about. Is
this because it's rare? What causes
stomach cancer?
A. Stomach cancer is not rare. There
will be about 25,000 new cases diagnosed in the United States this year.
Although it remains a major health
problem, the death rate from this
disease decreased rapidly since 1930. Today the U.S. death rate for stomach
cancer is among the lowest in the world.
The reason for the rapid decline in death
rates and the causes of this disease are
not fully understood. Studies of countries
with high rates of stomach cancer suggest that environmental factors such as
socio-economic status and diet may play
a role in the development of this disease.
In Japan, stomach cancer causes
more deaths than all other types of
cancer combined, and it is five times
more common th~n in the United States.
However, when Japanese moved to this
country, their stomach cancer rates
decreased over successive generations.
This decline may be due to changes in
dietary habits, such as decrease in the
amount of pickled, salted or smoked
foods commonly found in the Japanese
diet. It is interesting, however, that the
rates of breast cancer and colon cancer
show a corresponding increase in successive generations.
Other research shows that close
relatives of people with stomach cancer
appear to have a risk two or three times
higher than the general population.
However, because families tend to share
the same environment, it is possible that
lifestyle factors may play a more important role in the development of this
disease than hereditary factors.
PRAYER MEETINGS SET
Prior to the revival, scheduled to
begin at the Irene Cole Memorial (First)
Baptist Church, a series of cottage
prayer meetings have been planned at
the following homes, and on these dates:
Mr. and Mrs. Paul Nunn, March 9; Mr.
and Mrs. Roy Ramey, March 12; Mr.
and Mitch Kalas, March 16; Mr. and
Mrs. Bill Pettrey, March 19; the Rev.
and Mrs. Steve Hopkins, March 26, and
Mr. and Mrs. Ron Hooker, March 30.
The minister for this forthcoming
revival will be the Rev. Robert D.
Hopkins, pastor of the First Baptist
Church, in Brooksville, Ohio, who is the
father of Rev. Steve Hopkins.
Section One, Paae Nine
Unemployment in Upward Leap
Pushed upward by a combination of
seasonal factors and new job seekers,
Kentucky's unemployment rate leaped
in January by the largest monthly
percentage in 20 years. The rate rose
from a revised 9.1 percent in December
1983 to a preliminary 11.7 percent in
January, according to figures released
by the Cabinet for Human Resources.
That increase of 2.6 percent is the biggest single monthly increase since the
December 1963-January 1964 report,
when the rate rose by 2.9 percent from
6.5 percent to 9.4 percent. January's 11.7
percent jobless rate is also the highest
for Kentucky since last July's rate of 11.9
percent. Nationally, the unemployment
rate rose from 8.0 percent in December
to 8.8 percent in January.
"The figures reflect seasonal labor
force activity," said state labor market
analyst Ed Blackwell. " The rate increase corresponds with a 2.6 percent
rise in the civilian labor force, which
grew by 44,100, from 1,683,100 in
December to 1,727,200 in January. This
was the greatest monthly increase since
September 1982, when the labor force
grew by 44,243 over August. ''
He pointed out that employment was
down by 4,500, from 1,530,100 in
December to 1,525,600 in January.
Meanwhile, the number of people who
were unemployed and looking for jobs
increased by 48,600, from 153,000 in
December to 201,600 in January. "A lot
of these people were new and re-entrants
into the labor force, " he said.
"Kentucky's economic picture is not
as bleak as these figures might have you
believe," Blackwell said. " We're still
recovering from a recession." He noted
that a year ago the rate jumped from
12.6 percent in December to 14.0 percent
in January, when 236,291 Kentuckians
were out of work.
Blackwell said there was an overall
employment increase of 1,000 in
manufacturing jobs. " Gains were
EAST POINT HOMEMAKERS
The East Point Homemakers ' Club
met Tuesday, February 28, at 12 :30
p.m., at the home of Mrs. Betsy Baldridge.
The devotional was given by Mrs.
Dorothy Harris, after which the club
members repeated th~ " Lord 's
Prayer."
Ways of raising money for the club's
donation to the Ovarian Cancer Fund
were discussed.
The club's president, Mrs. Wilma
Montgomery, announced a trapunto
workshop, to be held Friday, March 9,
at 10 a.m. , at the Kentucky Power Company. She said those who may wish to attend should register by March 8. Mrs.
Montgomery also gave each member
present a favorite casserole recipe.
A new member, Mrs. Nola McNicol,
was welcomed to the club. The lesson on
" Consumer Product Safety, " was
presented by Mrs. Dorothy Harris.
Refreshments were served by Mrs.
Baldridge, to Mesdames Frances Pitts,
Wilma Montgomery, Lorena Horne,
Nola McNicol, Dorothy Harris, Arnita
Snavely, and Gayle Bastin.
The next meeting will be at the home
of Mrs. Dorothy Harris, on Tuesday,
March 27, at 2:30p.m.
NORTH PRESTONSBURG
HOMEMAKERS MEET
The North Prestonsburg Homemakers' Club met Tuesday evening,
February 21, at the home of Mrs.
Garnett Fairchild, with the president,
Mrs. Mabel Allen, presiding. Mrs. Fairchild gave the devotions, the secretary's
report was given by Miss Christine
Spradlin, and Mrs. Thelma Wallen gave
the treasurer's report.
The lesson on "Consumer Product
Safety" was presented by Mrs. Mabel
Allen, and Mrs. Frances Pitts reported
on the sale of pecans for the purpose of
the Ovarian Cancer drive.
The hostess, Mrs. Fairchild, served
refreshments to Frances Pitts, Mabel
Allen, Christine Spradlin, ;June Adams,
Honey Huff, Elizabeth Ramey, Thelma
Wallen, and Betty Ward.
The next meeting will be Tuesday
evening, March 20, with Mrs. Betty
Ward as hostess.
The unaided human eye,
in optimum circumstances,
can distinguish 10,000,000
different color surfaces.
recorded in machinery ; tobacco; textiles and apparel; and petroleum , rubber and plastic products . These offse t
losses in fabricated metals, lumber and
furniture, food and chemicals."
In the non-manufacturing sector there
were 200 more jobs in the bituminous
coal mining industry, the only area
where an employment ga in was
reported, Blackwell sa id. The number of
trade jobs decreased by 13,900. " This
reflected a drop of 11 ,500 retail tra de
jobs, which were up for the Christmas
season, and 1,637 jobs in the tobacco
wholesale trade industry, which also
reported temporary gains in
December," he said.
IN APPRECIATION
The residents and employees of Mountai n Manor Nursing Home of Prestonsburg extend a big thanks to all of those
who helped to make our participation in
the Rock N' Roll Jamboree a huge success. Our appreciation goes out to the
following businesses: PriCe's Pic Pac,
Auxier Road Gas Co., Triple B Coal
Company, Calhoun's Garage, Jenny
Wiley Florist, Allen's Florist, Prestonsburg Bargain Store, C & C Apothecary,
Henson Glass Service, and Jim Ellis &
Associates. A big thank you also goes out
to all of those individuals who helped.
Thanks to all of you we contributed a
final total of $875 to the American Heart
Association. This money will go towards
helping people in our Floyd County area.
PO BOX 471
CATLETTSBURG, KY 41129
2-29-2t.
The Movies!
WITH OVER 400 SPEAKERS
TO SERVE YOU
CINEMA RADIO SOUND
INTRODUCING...
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• MEXICAN BEEF TACOS
by Mrs. Arriaga,
• CHINESE EGG ROLLS
by Mr. Chung
RIBS TO GOI
In SJ!rlng,
Those Pounds
Come Out of
Hiding
886·2735
CONCESSION OPENS 5 P.M.
SATURDAY NIGHT
Come Early/
Now that it's springtime. why not get rid of that
extra weight you've been hiding under your
winter clothing?
At Diet Center, we can show you how to lose
weight quickly and easily. And with our un1q ue.
all-natural, nutrit ional supplement, you won't
feel hungry either.
So go to Diet Center this spring. and don't just
hide those excess pounds. Get nd of them,
forever!
CALL US TODAY
for a free,
Introductory consultation.
• SPECIAL PRICE REDUCTION TO
NEW DIETERS.
PHONE: 886-8181
PRESTONSBURG (NEAR STRAND THEATRE)
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I
·STRAND I
STRAND II
.HELD OVER
HELD OVER
"NEW AND
FRESH AND
MURDEROUSLY
FUNNY.• :'
-(,t nr \h4 111 . TODAY !"H O ... . :"'IBC·T Y
..... the Ministry of Silly
\l2lks should dedare
THIS IS THE STORY
OF A SMALL TOWN
THAT LOST ITS DREAMS,
AND A BIG-CITY KID
WHO BROUGHT
THEM BACK.
"... charming and delightful
Dudley Moore's best role
since 'Arthur:"
Dudley Moore a national
treasure. 'Unfaithfully
Yours' Is faithful to
- Pal ( olhn\. C 8 \ T\
comedy's best
professional standards:'
DUDLEY MOORE
NASTASSJA KINSKI
1Jnf~~
.,
--·-··---·-·-~~~~
..
'"Rllll!-CIIIIIl--•IB••._..,
..
......
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is on his side.
R PRRRITlli.-"11 f'(TLflE
ft
~·loCMI..XJU(NI!y:.
....-~~:~= ··
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~
~~
Showtlmes 7:1!5-9:30-Sunday Matinee Open 1:00 Stan 1:30 Over 3:20
ss
Reg. 10.95
Reg. 16 .95
LADIES 5·10
Black, White, Red,
or Spring Grey
LADIES 5-10
.Grey or White
GIRLS 8lf2·l
$7
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Highland Plaza, Prestonsburg
Store Hours: Mon.-Sat., 10-9,
Sun., 1-6
An Equal Opportunity -Employer
I
lt.
TRANSMISSION LINE MECHANIC
An area industry is seeking qualified applicants for the position of transmission line mechanic to work in the Pikeville·
area. Responsibilities include inspection, maintenance and/or
construction of ultra-high-voltage transmission lines and structures up to 161,000 volts. Job requirements include climbing
wood and steel structures, driver's license, and limited overnight travel.
Applicants should have a strong background in ultra-highvoltage work experience. Only experienced applicants need
apply.
Send letter stating experience and salary requirements to:
FRIDAy MARCH 16
EVERYBODY FREE!
White or Grey
�Wedneaday, March 7, 1984
Section One, Paa;e Ten
Hueysville Woman
Is Beaten, Robbed
Jones' .Lawyer
Cross-Examines
Gov't. Witness
When 30-year-old Yvonne Compton
Porter returned from work to her home
near Hueysville early last Friday night
and switched on the kitchen light, she
was seized by two men, severely beaten,
bound and left lying on the floor while
her assailants made their getaway with
approximately $20,000 wortp of family
possessions.
And the getaway car was the almostnew Buick which the Porters recently
bought at a cost of $15,000.
The Porter residence is just off KY 7,
on Salt Lick Creek. Mrs. Porter, who is
employed by the First Guaranty Bank
at Martin, worked late on Friday, and
the house was dark when she arrived
home. Her husband, Willis Porter, who
is a foreman at a Magoffin county stripmine, and their daughter had left the
house, earlier in the day, and had not
returned.
Beaten and kicked by her assailants,
Mrs. Porter remains under treatment at
Our Lady of the Way Hospital, Martin.
Besides the automobile, the intruders
stripped the woman's rings from her
fingers, took approximately $90 in cash
from her purse, and also made off with
her husband's collection of guns and
knives.
Mrs. Porter contrived to free herself
some time after the two men left. She
telephoned her father, Floyd Compton,
who lives approximately half a mile
away, and he quickly alerted State
Police.
State Police Detective Danny Stumbo
IS investigating the assault and robbery. The stolen car was found Sunday
afternoon by Stumbo on a narrow side
road on Quicksand Creek, Knott county
It had been bw-ned. Stumbo said the robbers have not been identified, and no
resident of the area where the auto was
found has admitted having seen the car
or its occupants.
Mrs. Porter's condition, her father
said, is not serious. Her eyes were
blackened and she suffered one or more
broken ribs.
ON HER IOOTH BIRTHDAY LAST FRIDAY, Mrs. Sarah DeRossett received gifts and cards of congratulations from family and friends. Among those
who remembered her were President and Mrs. Ronald Reagan, who sent their
good wishes.
To Be at First Baptist Church, Sunday
P'burg, Betsy Layne
Students Win Contest
Last fall the Floyd County Conservation District co-sponsored the Jim
Claypool Poster and Essay Contest with
the Louisville Cow-ier Jow-nal. The goal
of this contest is to foster an appreciation for our natural resources and to encourage soil and water stewardship.
Floyd County schools participated with
over 1,000 students drawing posters or
writing essays
The county winner for the poster contest, Byron Crider, is eligible to compete
in the state final contest. Robin Lynn
Thompson, county essay winner, is also
competing in the state final contest, and
state winners will be announced at the
end of March.
Byron Crider attends Prestonsburg
Elementary School, and Robin Lynn
Thompson is a student of Betsy Layne
Elementary. The second-place county
winners are Katina Jean Krull, Martin
Elementary, for the poster contest, and
Susan Raye Carter, Clark Elementary.
for the essay contest.
The Floyd County Conservation
District voiced its appreciation to the
schools, teachers, and principals who
helped make the Jim Claypool Contest
a success this year.
In one second, the wings of a small
hummingbird can beat seventy times.
A live, 60-minute concert of contemporary Christian music will be performed
by the Reach Out Singers, Sunday at 7 p.m. at the First Baptist Church in
Prestonsbw-g.
There are seven groups of Reach Out Singers including Epiphany. Three
travel during the year, with four of the groups doing summer ministry. This
ministry takes the young people through the United States, Canada, Scandinavia, Central and Eastern Ew-ope. This tour will be traveling in the United
States, Scandinavia and Eastern Europe.
The program features familiar hymns, gospel music, medleys and choruses,
and is planned with an emphasis on bringing hope to people of all ages. The
purpose of the Outreach For Christ ministry is to challenge people to make
a commitment to, or a renewal of faith in Jesus Christ.
No admission fee will be charged, and a love offering will be taken at the
concert.
The Daughters of the American Revolution stress the importance of visiting
historic sites to remind its citizens that
our country has many famous points of
interest. Note the home John Jay built
when he retired in 1800. It is located in
Westchester county in the state of New
York. John Jay lived in this house until
his death in 1829. The 1,ooo-acre tract of
land on which Jay built his home had
been pw-chased from an Indian chief by
Jay's grandfather, Jacobus Van Cortlandt. John Jay was a lawyer and was
first Chief Justice of the United States.
He was a member of the First and Second Continental Congress and, of
course, one of the commissioners who
negotiated the Treaty of Paris.
Timberline
DEVELOPMENT
• Lots priced
510,000 to 516,000.
• Build yourself
or we'll build
to suit you!
• Lots are now
available to
build on. Each
lot has a sewer
tap and city water.
OUR
FIRST
HOME FOR SALE-we are now completing a spacious
and comfortable home that is affordable, 1700 sq. ft. (1100
finished> A combination brick and stained wood exterior
blends well with Its wooded surroundings.
• If your total yearly income is 520,000
or better, you can afford this home.
State Jaycees
Honor Preston
It was a buyer's market early in 1982.
Coal prices were low and stockpiles
high. There was no reason for a coal
operator like Edgar Jones to be worried
about getting enough coal to fill his order
with a South Carolina utility.
Such was the line of argument pursued
by Jones' attorney Monday during crossexamination of a key government
witness in the trial of the Prestonsburg
coal operator and 17 others on federal
racketeering charges:
Testifying in U.S. District Court in
Pikeville last week, Phillip Booth said
that what began as an effort by unionists
to organize the Ray-Mac stripmine near
East McDowell in February. 1982, turned into a ploy by Jones to drive the rival
company out of business. Booth has been
named as an unidentified co-conspirator
in the alleged plot.
Jones. president of the JRM Coal
Company, was "mad" because he
thought Ray-Mac had tried to underbid
him on his five-year contract to sell coal
to the South Carolina Gas and Electric
Company and was worried that he may
not be able to fill the coal cars he was
expected to dispatch each week, Booth
said.
After consulting with officials of the
McDowell union local, Jones made it
clear all his contract miners were expected to join the strike and later offered
to see that they were adequately armed, the witness testified.
Questioned by defense attorney
Aubrey Harwell this week, Booth said he
did not recall the state of the coal
market the week of Feb. 15, 1982, when
violence erupted at the Ray-Mac mine.
He did not remember whether there was
a surplus of coal at the time and was
unaware of the "huge stockpile"
Harwell suggested was awaiting shipment at the Martin tipple used by JRM,
he said.
Booth, who in 1982 operated two coal
companies which were under contract
to JRM, admitted reluctantly that he did
not know whether Jones was having
trouble "meeting his unit train" the
week of the Ray-Mac strike.
The defense lawyer tried unsuccessfully to elicit from Booth an admission that pickets who blocked truck traffic at Ray-Mac that week told the
drivers they could not haul unless they
joined the mineworkers' union. Harwell
has argued that Jones' involvement in
the Ray-Mac troubles stemmed solely
from his aiding a union drive to organize
the mine.
But Booth, who was identified by an
earlier witness as one of those firing on
Ray·Mac truck drivers, said he never
heard the drivers pressed to join the
union .
A private court-reporting firm retained by defense counsel since testimony in
the case began six weeks ago was
ordered to leave the cow-troom Monday
following a dispute between defense and
government attorneys over the use being made of daily transcripts furnished
by the reporters.
Harwell, who hired the reporters, objected to prosecution witnesses using
transcripts of their testimony to prepare
themselves for cross-examination. But
Assistant U.S. Attorney Thomas L. Self
said the government would be at a disadvantage if the transcripts were available
only to the defense.
(A shorthand stenographer is
employed by the cow-t to keep an official
record of trial proceedings but this is not
usually transcribed in type unless the
record needs to be reviewed by an appeals court and, even then, the
typescript may not be prepared for
weeks or even months after the trial. )
Since the unofficial reporting service
was causing problems, it would have to
be discontinued immecliately, ruled U.S.
District Judge G. Wix Unthank.
At the winter all-state meeting of the
Kentucky Jaycees held in Owensboro
Feb. 10-12, John David Preston, of the
Paintsville-Johnson County Jaycees,
was named one of the five Outstanding
Young Men of Kentucky for 1984. Mr.
Preston has served his local chapter as
treasw-er, vice-president and president,
and was honored by the state Jaycees by
being named a Kentucky Jaycee
Thoroughbred in 1981.
Preston graduated from Harvard University, magna cum laude, with an A.B.
in history in 1973. In 1976, he graduated
with a Doctor of Jurisprudence from the
University of Kentucky College of Law.
While there, he was a member of the
Moot Court Board and director of Student Research Service for the Law Journal. In 1969 he graduated from Prestonsburg High School where he was valedictorian, National Honor Society president, and varsity basketball player.
Preston has been a practicing attorney in Paintsville since 1976. He was
In 1777, George Washington had the
elected commonwealth attorney for the • entire Continental Army- then 4,000
counties of Martin, Johnson and . men- immunized.
Lawrence, and when he assumed office
he was the youngest commonwealth attorney in the state. He inherited a
backlog of more than 400 felony indictments. Recent figures released from the
Attorney General's office for 1983 showed that his office is the most proficient
in Kentucky.
Mr. Preston serves on the administrative board and is a lay-leader
for the Paintsville First United
Methodist Church. During a four-month
period in 1982, he was called upon to perform and lead worship services during
the illness of his minister. He is director of Hope Haven, Inc. (home for
displaced children), Paintsville Rotary,
and the Chamber of Commerce. He is
county coordinator for the Kentucky
Task Force on Exploited and Missing
Children, recently fingerprinting more
than 3,000 children, and is chairman of
the committee for Boy Scout Troup 851.
Preston, who is the son of Mrs. Olga
Auxier Preston and the late J . Frank
Preston, of Allen and Ulysses, and his
wife, the former Mary Stephenson, are
awaiting the publishing of his book, ''The
Civil War in the Big Sandy Valley of
Kentucky."
~q]~
~%/I
Ehi<ltf~,
JJarcA .._9, (9&4
&Tt'(Nn j/oal' ,7am~o/
<fl111t f/~oe
FOR SALE
Gre1t •mount cif sp1ce for the money in this r~nch home located in Cl11'1l School
s•division. The livinl room lws 1 pictlre window; kitchen and dining aru 1re
combined; f1mily room 1nd 1ft 18'x 31' recrution room filled with lipt. There
are three bedrooms, two fun blths, 1nd two utility rooms-Ill this on 1n oversire lot with plenty of p11'1ling 1nd 1 good prden 1ru. City w1ter, g1s, and
cable TV. C1ll for detlils.
Ratliff & lenDx
fileaf tEdate
Phyllis Ratliff Lenox, Real Estate Broker
_Prestonsburg, Ky. 41653
Office (606) 886-6138
COURT & ARNOLD STS.
PRESTONSBURG, KY.
~
L ,,,.. .j
LeVI'S
WOMf N~Wl Afi
SPECIAL
PURCHASE
SWEET SWEATS
From levi Athletic Club
KNIT
SHIRTS
Ret.
$10.00
Slrll
100%· polyester
~
Reg. $2310~6
Sizes 8 to 18
in assorted spring
shades.
99
(crew neck style)
Reg. $911
$17,00
(muscle shirt style)
SLACKS
SPORT PANT
. Ret-
$25.00
13''
5
Elastic back. P11il on
style. 100% polyester
Gabardine
SPORT SHORT
$711
Reg.
$15.00
Mix or match coordinates of yellow,
pink or blue in 100% cotton blends
$699
Reg. $18.00Size 10·20. Anice
selection of colors.
CARESS PILLOWS
STANDARD
QUEEN
KING
$6.99
$8.99
$9.99
Buy one pillow at Reg. Price
Get second pillow for
$1.0
Our Lady of the Mountains
School Registration: March 13-14
It was on December 4. 1783. that the
General bade a poignant farewell to his
officers at Fraunces Tavern. Pearl and
Broad Streets in lower Manhattan, New
York City After a triumphal tour at Annapolis where Congress was in session.
Washington appeared before that body
on.December 23, 1783. to resign his Commission as Commander-in-Chief and
"take .. leave of all the employments of
public life " Along v. ith the Daughters
of the American Revolution. observe
February as American History :\1onth.
• Our Lady of the Mountains Is a tully accredited elementary school • Kindergarten through the eighth
grade • Spaces available In all grades due to expansion of facilities • School bus transportation available
from Prestonsburg to Paintsville • Christian values taught and stressed dally • Discipline emphasized
and enforced • Teachers tully certified and teaching In their qualified fields • Basketball program InItiated this year.
HISTORY: Our Lady of the Mountains. established In October, 1945, has been and will continue to be
a Christian School, accepting children of all denominations.
Reglsrrarlon: Tuesday and Wednesday, March 13-14
Kindergarten: ages 4 If 5, Grades 1 rhru 8
Time: 12:30 ro 4:30 or by appolnrmenr (Call 789-3661).
•
�The Floyd County Times
Wednesday, March 7, 1984
l
.
VISITS DAUGHTERS
Mrs. May K. Roberts was in Pikeville
two weeks ago, where she visited with
her daughter and son-in-law, Atty. and
Mrs. Wm. J. Baird, III, and their daughters, Misses Virginia Kirk, Elizabeth
Anne, and Sarah Roberts Baird. While
there, she attended with them, funeral
services for the Rev. Dr. J.I. Myer,
retired pastor of the Pikeville Methodist
Church.
Mrs. Roberts also spent last weekend
in Pikeville, where she stayed with her
granddaughters, while their parents attended the U.K.-L.S.U. basketball game,
in Lexington.
FREE
8 X 10, 5 X 7
5 WALLETS
WITH AD AND
PURCHASE OF PACKAGE
Presbyterian Churches
Install Officers
Ordained and installed as elders at the
Drift Presbyterian Church last Sunday,
were Archie Fugate, Jr., Anna Hoffman,
and Shelby Reed. Honored as outgoing
elders were, Dr. Phil Fairchild, Sally
Miller, and Brent Reed.
At the First Presbyterian Church
here, Wesley Howard and James Goble
were again installed as elders, and Sue
Martin and Frank Heinze were ordained and installed as deacons in the
Church. Recognized for their service
were Deacons Sonny Goble and William
Kendrick, and Elders John Leake and
John Everly, whose terms have ended.
Pastor Timothy Jessen and other ordained elders shared in the ordination
and laying-on-of-hands during the services. Following each service, a reception and fellowship hour was held.
WELCOMED INTO CHURCH
Welcomed by baptism into the
fellowship of the Irene Cole Memorial
Baptist Church, during services there
last Sunday, was Miss Randi Lynn Polk,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Randy Polk.
The Lord's Supper was observed during
these same services.
CLIP & SAVE AD
VACATION IN FLORIDA
Mr. and Mrs. Carl Horn and Mrs.
Russell Hagewood spent two weeks
recently with Mr. and Mrs. Jesse B.
Hagewood at the Venice Motel, which is
owned and operated by the Hagewood
family in St. Petersburg, Florida.
VISIT AT STANVILLE
Mrs. Eva Collins and Mrs. Betty
Moore visited Mrs. Moore's mother,
Mrs. Ermon Ratliff, and Mr. Ratliff, and
another relative, Mrs. Rhea Porter, in
Stanville, this past Saturday.
YOUGET ALL THIS
t ·10 X 13
2-8 X 10 I
2·6X 7'1
19 •~alh~.t SIZ!..
•.
HONORED ON BIRTHDAY
Mrs. Carolyn Ford was honored by
members of her family' and friends with
a dinner at her home, recently, in
celebration of her birthday. Enjoying
this occasion were the guest of honor,
her husband, Winston Ford, Jr., son,
Winn, daughters, Kelli, and Mrs. Jerry
Fannin, and Mr. Fannin, their daughter,
Jenna, Mrs. Vera Ford, Mrs. Jane Bond,
and daughter, Holly, and Mrs. Lydia
Margaret Howard. Decorated birthday
cake and other refreshments were served following the meal, and the honoree
was presented gifts.
Only $3 when photographed
and $16.95 when you pick up
your package.
.
LYONS STUDIOS
P. 0. BoK 1026
Painuville, Ky. 41240
606 . 297 • 6288
t,
•Choice of icenic or hand
painted backaroundo
•Three different potet
•No aae limit
•tt.OO extra for 1 poup )Sortralt
• Additional Portraits avallable •
at low price•
BESTWAY MARKET
ENTERTAIN TO DINNER
Mr. and Mrs. Joe Weddington entertained to dinner at May Lodge, Sunday,
Mr. and Mrs. Andrew Tucker, of New
York City, Mrs. Edith James, Mrs.
Mary Hall and Miss Flo Weddington.
McDOW£U., KY.
MARCH 10 AND 11
s.t-12
~s
,....
Sun.-l-5 p.m.
ALL LADIES'
0
LADIES' LEVI
LADIES'
SPORTSWEAR WINTER
CORD ·PANTS
70% 70% 60%
OFF
OFF
OFF
$} 0
To Observe 60th Anniversary
D.OCIA B. WOOQS_. SOCIETY EDITOR
ANNOUNCE BIRTH OF SON
Mr. and Mrs. Gary Prater, of Prestonsburg, announce the birth of their second child first son, Paul Nathaniel, on
February 2s at the Highlands Regional
Medical Center.
Maternal grandparents are Mr. and
Mrs. Paul Greene, of Katy Friend, and
paternal grandparents are Mr. and Mrs.
Jack Nelson, of Abbott.
Mr. and Mrs. Prater also have a
daughter, Stacy Nicole.
ANNOUNCE BIRTH
Mr. and Mrs. Jack Absher, of Prestonsburg, announce the birth of their second child, John George Absher, II,
March 3 at the Pikeville Methodist
Hospital.
Paternal grandparents are Jack and
Katherine Absher, of Prestonsburg, and
the maternal grandparents are Oscar
and Anita Arriga, of Lomard, Illinois.
The Abshers have another son, Jack
Andrew Absher, II.
RECOVERING AT HOME
Mrs. Pat Mills, who suffered an apparent heart attack recently and spent
some time as a patient at the Highlands
Regional Medical Center and at St.
Joseph's Hospital, in Lexington, is now
showing improvement at her home,
here.
SUNDAY GUESTS
Mrs. Vivian Fraley had as her guests,
Sunday of last week, her son and
daughter-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Bill
Fraley, and their son and his wife, Mr.
and Mrs. Bob Fraley, all of Grayson.
SUPPLIES PULPIT
The Rev. Bill Neff, of the Shelbiana
United Methodist Church, brought the
Gideon message at the First United
Methodist Church last Sunday morning.
Assisting in the program were Charles
Neeley, youth director, and Bill Fannin,
who also works with the Gideon program.
Flowers on the altar for these services
were for Mrs. Anna May Mellon and
Mrs. Douglas Perry, for their birthdays.
RECENT GUESTS
Mr. and Mrs. Winston Ford, Jr., and
family had as their recent guests, her
sister and brother-in-law, Mr. and Mrs.
William Stubblefield, their son, David,
and daughter, Amy, of Lexington, and
another sister, Mrs. Tipton Baker, and
children, Ronnie and Tara, of Harlan.
The Ford family and their houseguests
attended funeral services for one of their
cousins, Pat Scott Schokey, at the First
Rresbyterian Church in Pikeville.
RETURN FROM FLORIDA
Mr. and Mrs. Delmas Saunders have
returned from a vacation in Florida. Accompanied by Mrs. Saunders' sister and
brother-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Clarence
Logan, of Ashland, they visited another
sistewr and brother-in-law, Mr. and
Mrs. John Davidson, at North Port, and
Mr. Saunders' aunt, Mrs. Pearl
Bingham, and her daughter, Mrs.
Seldon Ward, at Titusville. The
Saunders and the Logans spent about a
week at Miami Beach, and before
returning home, they toured the Kennedy Space Center, the Epcot Cent~r,
and Disney World. The Saunders arnved at their home here, Saturday
afternoon.
WORLD DAY OF PRAYER
The annual World Day of Prayer,
sponsored by the Local Church Women
and the Prestonsburg Ministerial
Association, was held at the First United
Methodist Church, last Friday. Persons
from various churches here came during the day for prayer and meditation.
Mrs. James Donahoe was in charge of
the arrangements, and Mrs. Vera Ford
represented the host church. Donations
are to be used for the transit program,
which is sponsored by the local
Ministerial Association.
BIRTH ANNOUNCEMENT
Dr. and Mrs. Karl Steinichen announce the birth of their second child,
Emily Brooke, February 13, at University Hospital, in Augusta, Georgia. Mrs.
Steinichen's parents, Mr. and Mrs. Hardin C. Short, have returned after a
week's visit with them. The paternal
grandparents are Mr. and Mrs. John
Steinichen, of Atlanta, Georgia.
HERE FROM NEW YORK
Mr. and Mrs. Andrew Tucker, of New
York City, spent the past week here
visiting her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Joe
Weddington, and Joe David Weddington.
TRAPUNTO WORKSHOP SLATED
Mrs. Frances Pitts, Floyd County
Home Economist, announces that there
will be a trapunto workshop, at 10 a.m.,
Friday, March 9, at the Kentucky Power
Company. Mrs. Pitts says that club
members planning to attend should c~ll
her office by Thursday (tomorrow) m
order to register and to obtain needed
supplies. The number is 886-2668.
f-l?.okrta .::Trauer)
_(Joe,
/LJ....
Arnold Avenue
Prestonsburg
Section One, Pqe Eleven
Q;
t>
I
~<J• c/E.M/t/1, U/'&UU',
wu/ cJfi~~
3·7-ll-pd
RECUPERATING
AFTER i\CCIDE='IT
J\.lr. and Mrs Thomas D. Lafferty, Sr.,
their daughter, Connie Castle, and
grandson .. Tristan, are all doing we!l
after suffering injuries in an auto acCIdent, February 18. They were on their
way to Huntington when their car was
struck head-on near the Johnson county line.
OBSERVES BIRTHDAY
Mrs. Marsha Wells observed her
birthday, Sunday, February 26. On the
following Friday, her son and daughterin-law, Mr. and Mrs. Fred Collins, of
Danville, and another daughter-in-law,
Mrs. Randall Wells, of Morehead, came
here, and with other members of her
family, Mr. and Mrs. Carl Watson and
Mr and Mrs. Marshall Davidson,
honored her. Dinner was prepared by
Mrs. Fred Collins at the home of the
honoree and following the dinner,
decorated birthday cake and other
refreshments were served. Mrs. Wells
was presented many nice gifts.
D.A.R. TO MEET
The John Graham Chapter, Daughters of the American Revolution, will
meet at the Emma Wells May Cultural
Center Tuesday afternoon, March 13, at
3:30. The hostesses and leaders will be
Mrs. Margaret Spradlin and Miss
Maurine Mayo. The guest-speaker will
be Mrs. Frances Pitts, Floyd County
Home economist, whose topic will be
"Conservation." The regent, Mrs.
Frances Brackett, urges all members to
be present.
RECUPERATING AT HOME
Miss Elsie Stephens, of Water Gap, is
recovering nicely now, at her home,
following recent knee surgery, at Good
Samaritan Hospital, Lexington. Her
sisters Miss Linda Stephens, and Mrs.
Thelm~ S. Wallen, of Watergap, and
her nephew and niece, Mr. and Mrs.
Dennis Stephens, and daughters, of Lexington, were with her much of the time,
during her hospitalization.
HONORED ON BIRTHDAY
Mrs. Beatrice Collins was honored
Sunday, February 26, with a luncheon at
May Lodge, on her birthday. Sharing in
this occasion with her were her son,
Astor Collins, ' of Prestonsburg, his
daughter, Miss Myra Collins, a student
at the University of Kentucky, Lexington, and a friend of Myra's, Mark
Blue of Armi, Illinois. She was
pres~nted gifts, and received many .
telephone calls and greetings.
NOW RECUPERATING
Mrs. Dallie Waddles, who recently
underwent surgery, at the Highlands
Regional Medical Center, is recovering
nicely, now.
Malcom and Ora Horn, of West Prestonsburg, will celebrate their 60t? wedding anniversary, March 2. They were married in 1924. They have two children,
Harry Horn and Rosa Lee Calhoun; 10 grandchildren and 14 greatgrandchildren.
NEW KIWANIANNES
A part of the Prestonsburg Kiwanianne news last week should have
read: Welcomed as new members were
Mesdames Dolly Pettrey, Rebecca
Rasnick, and Zella Archer.
HERE FROM U.K.
Miss Myra Collins, who is a senior at
the University of Kentucky, Lexington,
was here during the weekend for a visit ·
with her father, Astor Collins, and other '
relatives.
BEDSPREADS &
CHILDREN'S CLOTHES
Name Brands
at Big Savings
LOCATED-U.S. 23 NORTH OF
PRESTONSBURG
NEXT TO JERRY ll GERRY
- SHOES AND PHILATINA
BEAUTY SALON
�Wednesday, March 7, 1984
The Floyd County Times
Section One, Paae Twelve
IT'S HERE! TOMORROW, IN PAINTSVILLE, KY!
12:00 TO
12:oo
NOON
MIDNIGHT
THURSDAY. MARCH 8, 1984!
CLOSED TODAY! BE HERE
WHEN THE DOORS
OPEN AT
12:00!
COAST
TO COAST
AND BORDER
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... A MAGIC
DAY OF
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OnlyI
'348
Rag. " " · " King
Sh:a
aamco'•
Lowing Care mattr... a.ltoxMtl;
Only
Onlyl
'399
'9900 Both
Pes.
13 Wooden Rocking Chain All
% OH. Assorted Styles· &
Finishes.
START AS
LOW AS
Rag. to •449.95
Oueenlla:a . .rnco
ml1matchacl mattreua.ltox . .ta.
'199
Onlyl
Rag. U3t.tt Pull
lh:a
aamco
Oolclen Da.wn mat·
tr... a.boxMh.
Onlyl
'99
... plus much. much more!
e
•4900
ASTONISHING SAVINGS!
HALF PRia IARSTOOLS
24 Barstools, Auorted Styles
& Finishes~ 24" and 30"
Seating Height, All At '12 OH.
START AS •
LOWAS
2900
EACH
'49
..L----------L---------- Landmark-the beauty of 18th Century
SEASON SALE PRICESI
EVERY ADVERTISED ITEM (PLUS HUNDREDS MORE) GUARANTEED TO BE HERE WHEN THE DOORS OPEN AT
YES! BANKCARDS
j V1S4·
~
styling by lJ!~RW
.J~] WELCOME! A SPECIAL CREDIT TEAM ~J~ !~cooNu~:~~:2o0ci~~
; •'
TO PRESENT ACCOUNTS Ill
Use Maggard's·90 Days·Same As
Cash I
Across from the Courthouse In
Downtown Paintsville!
~~:,~:::n::1able• by ~MK"'
Beautiful dar1t WilliamsbUrg cherry finish on
selected cherry .solids and veneers. Carved in
Queen Anne styling.
ALL THREETAILES
REG.
$579.90
•29900
GRIAT IUY ON CHillY TAILISI
CLOSED TODAY TO REDUCE PRICES ON EVERYTHING!
s
Rich mansion cherry finish on Com 1 t Bed
cherry veneers and selected
P• •
room u 1te
solids with brass finished, Even lncludesNightTable.
authentic style pierced back
plates hardware.
REG. $ 1429· 95
AT ONLY
'89900
�Wednesday, March 7, 1984
The Floyd County Times
Celebrates First Birthday
Schools Join Blood Drive
By PAT PHILLIPS
Share your good health and donate
blood!
The McDowell Consolidated School
will be sponsormg a community blood
....Q.rive in the auditorium on Wednesday,
Wlarch 7 from 9 a.m. to 1 p.m., and the
mobile crew will move from there to the
McDowell Appalachian Regional Hospital to take donors in the library from 3
to 7 p.m. on the same day. Residents in
the area are invited to donate at either
location.
Thursday. March 8, Betsy Layne High
School is sponsoring a blood drive in the
Home Economics Department from 9
NOTICE
~
~
Prestonsburg Housing Authority presently has vacancies In
our elderly, one-bedroom apartments at Dixie. If you ore elderly, disabled, or handicapped,
with Income between $6,450
and $11,000, you may qualify
for these apartments. If Interested, please come to our
Green Acres office or Call
886-2717 for more Information.
2·22·31
a.m. to 12 noon, there the mobile crew
will move next door to the Mayo State
Vocatwnal Technical School to take
donors from 2:30 to 4 p.m.
Congratulations are extended to the
seniors of the Betsy Layne and
McDowell High Schools for taking on the
adult responsibility of donating blood.
Seventeen-year olds may donate with
written parental consent, provided they
pass all of the eligibility requirements.
The process for each donor takes an
average of 45 minutes to register, take
a mini-physical exam, donate (about
seven minutes) and to take some refreshments
McDowell ARH has sponsored
mobiles, dating back to 1976. This year
this group has volunteered to hold two
drives, due to a 20% increase in the demand for blood in the area in 1983. Mayo
State Vocational Technical School at
~etsy Layne is a new, welcome addition
to support the community blood program.
Groups wanting to set up a donor
group should contact the Prestonsburg
Donor Center by calling 886-1557.
Bighorned rams, while battling to
• establish dominance in the herd,
sometimes clash at speeds of 30 miles
per hour. says National Wildlife
magazine. Usually, the only injury is to
the loser's pride.
GREGORY
STUMBO
STATE
REPRESENTATIVE
951H DISTRICT
•
Miss Jackie C. Waddles celebrated
her first birthday, Sunday, at the home
of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. James A.
Waddles, Jr., of Prestonsburg.
Celebrating with her were her paternal grandparents, James and Phyllis
Waddles, of Middle Creek, maternal
grandparents, Dr. and Mrs. Ted
Sanders, of Prestonsburg, great-grandparents, Wayne and Daisy McCarty, of
Prestonsburg, and numerous relatives.
Beatrix Potter's Life
Dramatized On KET
DENTAL TIPS
Dr. H.G. Salisbury
Beatrix Potter was the creator of
Peter Rabbit and a menagerie of other
fanciful creatures in her classic tales
that have made her the best-known
writer of children's stories in the world.
Tune in to "Masterpiece Theatre's"
"The Tale of Beatrix Potter," which will
air on KET Sunday evenings, March 25
and April l, at 9 p.m.
The two-part program, starring
British actress Penelope Wilton in the title role, intersperses Potter's original
drawings with the story of her extraordinary life and work-her strangely
solitary childhood, her final breaking out
in her 40's from parental dominance and
repression, her tragic love affair, eventual marriage and final years as a sheep
farmer.
John Hawkesworth of "Upstairs,
Downstairs," "Flame Trees of Thika"
and other "Masterpiece Theatre" .
series' fame, wrote the BBC production
based on Margaret Lane's biographies.
He is executive producer of the program
which critics have acclaimed as
"magical," "enchanting" and "a treat. "
Hawkesworth utilizes the "deceptively
simple form of a children's story, using
vignettes of Potter's family life but with
some very adult observations along the
way."
RICHMOND PLAZA,
PRESTONSBURG
PHONE 886-2676
TEETH AND THE HEART
Q. Is there any relationship between health of teeth and
the heart?
A. A tooth abscess or infection is likely to affect ANY
organ of the body if the infection is neglected and permitted to travel. For that reason, any illness or symptom involving teeth should get the same prompt and careful attention given to other medical disorders.
An abscessed tooth causes high fever and toxicity which
can move through the body. If the patient has a history
of heart valve problems or rheumatic fever, he or she
may develop a heart condition called "endocarditis." This
is an inflammation of the lining of the heart and its valves
and can be fatal.
Since abscessed teeth are usually the result of extensive
decay, the best protection against endocarditis and other
complications arising from mouth infections is proper
diet, oral hygiene, and intelligent dental care.
TUESDAY
IS DOUBLE STAMP
DAY!!
Bestway is the
"BEST WAY" to Shop!!
_
PRICES GOOD THRU SUNDAY, MARCH 11, WHILE QUANTITIES LAST.
I
FLAVOR-PERFECT ·-ATS
Pork
Hamiel
ChOPS
Halves
c
.
...8139
LB.S269
5g
I
fAMILY PAK MIXED
FISCHER'S
lB.
Leg Quarters
Cuba Steak
Perch Fillets.
Bael Liver
U.S.D.A. CHOICE
FROZEN OCEAN
59C
...... li.S239
...... l •.
. ll.8139
FRESH SLICED
Ll.
69c
22 OZ. DISH DETERGENT
10 OZ. GREEN GIANT (IN BUTIER SAUCE)
llblets
c
or Peas . . . 99
PRODUCE
U.S. NO.I WISCONSIN RUSSET
Potatoes
S489
RED DELICIOUS ClltSP
3 Lb. Bag
APPles
Navel Oranges
cauliflower
CALIFORNIA SWEET
CALIF. SNOW WHITE
The 1984 General Assembly has only four weeks left. We are going to
be extremely busy In these final days dealing with the budget and other
Issues such as Roads, Unemployment, and Education. During the past two
months of the 1984 session, I have had the opportunity to meet and talk
with many people on these Issues. The results of the poll that appeared
In this column were very beneficial to me and 1appreciate the Interest everyone has shown.
Last week, Gov. Collins presented her Educational package and now,
we In the Legislature must analyze and study that proposal. I urge you to
continue expre~slng your views to me:We are planning at least one more
public meeting and I will continue to be available throughout the week In
Frankton by calling the toll free number listed below, and on the weekends
at my office In Manln or at my home. Please feel free to call me at any time.
During the past four years we have made tremendous strides forward
In the General Assembly concerning Eastern Kentucky. We, here In the mountains, still have many problems that must be addressed. I have been
prlvlledged to serve as your State Representative and I am asking for the
opportunity to continue In that capacity for another term.
This week, 16 students from the one room school on Panlels Creek will
come to Frankton to visit. I would like to Invite any school group that would
like to come and observe the Session to contact me and I will try to help
make the arrangements. It Is lmponant that we continue working on the
problems that we face here In the mountains so that the future will be bright
and properous tor these children.
I ask for your suppon In that'&{ldeavor.
RE-ELECT GREGORY D. STUMBO
STATE REPRESENTIVE
95TH DISTRICT
TELEPHONE NUMBERS:
TOLL FREE-1-800-372-7181 • OFFICE-285-9228 • HOME-886-9953
-7-lt.
$16 9
Spaghetti sauce. ~
32 OZ. RAGU HOMESTYLE
29
8
iM.Id . . . . . 1
7 OZ. KRAFT DINNER
ac. 1 Chees
2/7
II OZ. PETER PAN
&aanut Butter
~ $129 ~~·
of'I.AIN
8189
Collee Male.. . . . . . . . . . . .
8149
Hoi Chocolate..... . . .... ..
8119
16 OZ. CARNATION CREAMER
12 CT. CARNATION ASSORTED
12 OZ. BAKER'S FLAVORED
Chocolate ChiPS... . .... . .
cottage Cheese . . 8149
·
riiFmGiian Cheese spa
f(ii.riliitoas... . . spa
8118
aarllc Bread . . . . . . ..
U OZ. SIAl.TEST SMAll CURD
16 Ol. COlE
46 OZ. RED IOLD
32 OZ.
Tom to Juice
Ill'S TOMATO
KetchUP
69c
liMIT 3
PLEASE
U.S. INSPECTED FRESH FRYER
101
LB. BAG
Section Two, Paae One
99c
42 OZ. DETERIEIIT
Purax
$119
32 OZ. DELMONICO ELBOW
MACARONI OR
12-0Z. KRAFT
AMERICAN • PIMENTO • SWISS
Thin
8119
Spaghetti . ..
69C
sandwich Baas.. .... . .
Frun Drinks ........ 85c
$149
10 COUNT GLAD
age
7 OZ. ASSORTED
SIX PACK HERSHEY'S
32-0Z.-25( OFF LABEL
Sherbet._ .. __ .. __ ... _.
Crisco Oil .......... ..
COKE, DIET COKE, SPRITE
TAB, CAFFINE FREE COKE ...
$2 7 9
. sac
Bugles snacks . .
8179
candY Bars.. . . . . . . .
·
46 OZ. HAWAIIAN ASSORTED
12 PAK CANS
$179
Cheese Singles ..... .
SIX STICK-KRAFT MIRACLE
Whipped Margarine
ggc
c
Vienna ...... .. _.. 2189
age
QUART-PET
ARMOUR
2LITER
Shasta Pop ·..........
�Wedne.clay, March 7, 1984
Section Two, Paae Two
S.dlriAill
.,c
RAY 110WELL BUILDING
& HOME lft'PROVEMENTS
BIN
ITRifiiiT.I
J
- . \
'--I .
I
-· ---
•
•
•
. •
IIMODILING
P41NTING
DITWALl
1
TttruiiNG
··•u PAPIIING
I
• DECKS
• IOOFING
• FINCIS
• STOUGE ILDGS.
• • nc.
fOil AU JCIIII IOMI IMiloneu•r •liDS,
COMPLETE
ELECTRICAL SERVICES
by Licensed Electrician
Call
or
946-2226
946-2677
Only 3 left. Latest model. New
5-year warranty.
4-bedroom home at Estill.
$29,000.
Call 478-9407
CALL 358-4906
We do: • Dozer and Loader Work
• Sewage Systems Installed • Mobile
Home. Moving 6 Furnace Repairs
' REASONABLE RATES.
Call ,ted Nelson, Jr.
FOR ALL YOUR INSURANCEAuto, fire. homeowners, hospitalization,
IHe. With 0.25'l{, savings. Call Darby and ·
Allen Insurance Agency,
886-2993 or 886-8549
TIPPLES
FOR LEASE
t2-2l·tf.
BOB WHITE
CONSTRUCTION
Dozers • Backhoes
• Dump Trucks
NOTICE
Now thru Feb. 29, 1984 ONLY
$99 down and payments as low
as $124.96 on selected
models-
YARCO.PRUDEN AUTHORIZED BUILO£R
F. E. E., Inc.
lt.
Roof Trusses for
Commercial lr Resid•ntial.
Chain Link Fence. Residential
It Commercial.
ANY TYPE WILL BE MADE TO YOUR SPECIFICATIONS. FREE ESTIMATE-FREE DEUVERY
East Kentucky Roof Truss Co.
Phone 606-886-9563, Prestonsburg, Kentucky (anytime)
2·22-t£.
CORP.
*CONCRETE . . . . . . . . ALL CLASSES
*GRAVEL • . . . . . . . . . . . ALL SIZES
*SAND
MOBILE HOME
CLEARANCE SALE
Now selling oil models ot reduced
prices. We deliver and set up and you
can move In Immediately.
• New SCon doublewldt ONLY $18,995.
• New Bristol doublewlde, 24x!16, oak
cabinets, deluxe WAS $28,700
NOW $25,900.
• New 14x70, Roman Tub, 2 Bed, 2 Bath,
Wood siding, deluxe WAS $19,99!1
NOW $18,700.
• New 14x70, fireplace, oak cabinets,
ceiling fan, deluxe, WAS $19,525
NOW $18,400.
• New 14x70, 3 bed, 1 bath
ONLY $12,100.
• New 14x&O, 3 bed, 1 bath
ONLY $10.800.
• New Redman doublewlde, 28x80,
deluxe home WAS $33,000
NOW $29,100.
All other homes discounted.
Financing available.
Large lots for sale or rent. Pool, Tennis,
clubhouu, picnic, a playground.
TREEHAVEN
MOBILE HOME
SUBDIVISION
THE PAPERBACK BOOK
EXCHANGE STORE
118 Francis St., Prestonsburg
in Prestonsburg_
Phone 886-1312
• Turn left off Thlro street
between court House & catholic Church
between Winchester • Lexington.
Office In Clubhouse.
Open 7 days.
Phone 806·744-n&2 or n&5.
3·7-41.
MOBILE HOMES:
FREE
ESTIMATES/
EMERGENCY INVENTORY
LIQUIDATION SALE!!!
"Noiob
too big or ..:::.rilliil•
too small.''
ASK FOR ROBERT WILLIS
2· 29-41.
RICE
LAND ·DEVELOPING CO.
We ore uverely overstocked. our of
room, and have more homes on the
way. We must sell our Inventory. Immediate delivery on any of the follow·
lng homes In stock. No reasonable offer refused. Complete warranty on all
new homes. Financing available wlfh
10% down. Veterans loans with no down
payment. Don't miss this chancel
NEW DOUBLEWIDES
151n stock. Roman tubs. fireplaces, all
deluxe options. All sizes from 24x44 up
to 21x84. Prices begin at $15,995.
NEW SINGLEWIDES
59 In stock. Fireplaces, garden tubs, 2
and 3 bedrooms, all sizes from 14X52
up to the brand new 14x80. Prices start
at $9900.
USED HOMES
52 In stack. Slnglewldes and expandos.
All years from 1111 up to 1983. All sizes
from 10x50 up to 14x70. Prices start at
$2000.
REPOSSESSIONS
11 In stock. Most are 14x70. As llnle as
$!100 down and take your choice.
WE MEAN BUSINESS! CASH TALKS! All
homes will be sold. All homes may be
Inspected at our two sales lots located
within 15 minutes of each other.
GREAT AMERICAN HOMES, INC.
Exit 97, 1·75
(halfWay between Lexington 1r Rlc:llmand)
(808) 824-0200
or 537 New Circle Rd., Lexington
(808) 293·1809
"WE MEAN BUSINESS"
SOUTH PAW
l
It
For appointment call:
874-9041-'
f:.O.E.
MOBILE HOME
MOVING SERVICE
• Free estimates • Insured
CALL 358-4520
or 358-9348
ENVIRONM TAL MONITORIN
SERVICE, INC.
PROFESSIONAL BUILDERS
SAMPUNG AMD ANALYSIS OF
WATER AMD WASTE WATER
• Ucensed Contractors 6 Electricians
• 20 Years Experience
AU I'HASES OF COitSTRUCnOit
• Roaftng • Carpeting • Concrtte
• New Con•tructton ; Remodeling
FREE ESnMATESI
886-9528; 874-9934
2-29-3t·pd.
HOME FOR SALE
1111 Sandy Health Care
REASON doublewldes as low
as $14,900, direct from our factorlu to you.
Big Sandy Health Care, a
federally funded, non-profit corporation dedicated to quality
health care, thru the Magoffln
and Mud Creek Clinics, has
several -openings on the board
of trustees.
Be a member of a team that
cares. Invest a few hours each
month sharing In your community's future.
CHEAP'S
MOBILE
HOUSING
INC.
-COME-SEE-COMPARE!If you buy a new mobile
home and don't consider
Cheap's prices and quality,
you'll lose money!
FREE!
delivery &
Set Up on Foundation
PAYMENTS TO SUIT
YOUR NEEDS
Open After Church on Sun·
day 12·5, For Your Inspection. Weekdays, 8·6.
Only 60 minute drive
from Downtown Lexington
CHEAP'S MOBILE
HOUSING INC.
FLEMINGSBURG, KY.
606-845-2261
• Eniron•ental Impact SUte~~ents &
Assess~~ eats
Me•ber of AST M &The llatio~~al Enwirooment
llealtll Associati01. LAIOIIATORY MEETS ALL
STATE OSII & EPA REGULAnOIIS.
PHONE 789-3258
!J.S. 23 So.,
Clayton
Mobile Homes
hhrtsrile
BOLEN'S
Richmond, Ky.-eOH23-9404
2·29-2t.
CONCRETE
WORK
.
APPLIANCE REPAIR
Repairs on Washers • Dryers • Stoves
Ito S.IYice Cha~
Pay only If we fix 11. eo-Day Warranty
on Parts, 9Q-Day Warranty an Labor.
Free &tlmate•
Don't SeHie For less
PATIO • SIDEWALKS • STEPS
DRIVEWAYS • FOOTERS
• BLOCK WORK • SMALL JOBS
WELCOME. Call Eugene Ousley
886-3092 or
886-3789, after 4
p.m.
2-22-'lt-pd.
WANT A
STONE FIREPLACE?
Finally, an affordable natural
stone fireplace, . all types of
masonry work, residential,
commerclallr ornamental work.
References available.
PHONE:
789-1911 297-4307
•
Ph. 358-9617
24-Hours A Day
2·15-221-~
TROY'S
CABINET
·cENTER
US 23, lvel, Ky.
Stock or Custom-Built Cabinets
Kitchen Cabinets, Vanities
Thermador Appliances
on Display
Free Estimates
Discount Prices
2· 29-31.
CALL
349-3110 ar 886-8546
• lacteriokllical A~~alysis of Do•estic & Well
Wlter Slppf~e~ • Cenlpletio1 of .._rterly
II.P.D.E.S. FoniS As R~1irtd By Sbte & EPA
ONLY at
Lovely 3-bdrm., 2-story Colonial brick home. 2,800 sq.
n. All electric. Located at
Betsy Layne, Ky. In excellent neighborhood on
100x150 n. landscaped lot,
out of the flood area. You
must see this home to appreciate Its quality.
Interested persons only call:
478-9629 2-~2t-
LARGEST DOUBLE-WIDE
DEALER Itt KENTUCKY.
fQl IHE WI .l YEARS
Interested!!
1-64 lttwHn Exit •&7 1r Exit ,.94
• Extra charge ror delivery
, I
FOR RENT
OFFICE
SPACE
Taking applications for full
and part-time employment. .
~tf.
WHEN YOU KNOW WHO WE ARE
YOU WON'T BUILD ANY OTHER WAY
. .
'
JESSIE COLLINS, President
606-874-2281
OR 606-874-2870
447•2493, 784-9203,
OR 784-7250.
NOTICE-NOW HIRING
606-886-8852
(606) 886-9867 OR 886-3665
• LARGE AND SMALL
DOZERS
• BACKHOES.
• GRAVEL TRUCK
AND GENERAL HAUUNG
• 18 YEARS' EXPERIENCE
WE AT CAYE RUN LAKE.
H·2t.
Ralph O'Qulnn
Prestonsburg, Ky. 41653
• UCEftSED • BONDED • INSURED
• 18 YEARS SECURITY EXPERIENCE •
• 24-HOUR GUARD SERVICE •
.874•2991 . .
-
ESTABLISHED BUSINESS ON 1.8
ACRE LAND. LOCATED Y2 MILE
FROM MAJOR BOAT RAMP.
$28,500. CALL:
874-2688 or 874-2061
COLLINS SECURITY SERVICE
ADAMS CONSTRUCTION
BAIT SHOP
AND GROCERY
Call Romey Spears
We custom-design and construct
buildings to fit your precise
needs-without cost penalties or
added construction time. Industrial, commercial, warehouses,
agricultural, recreational and institutional. Durable, attractive
and energy efficient.
•
(606) 633-0126
WITH 20 YEARS EXPERIENC
HERE'S WHY:
b
Jeffrey Model 101-MC-1-F
FREE ESTIMATES
8
DISCOUNT IN
FEB. AND MARCH
~
3·7-21.
• ·
25QI
70
FOB
The Finance • Administration Cabinet of Kentucky desires to lease opproxlmatety
1,100 net square feet qf office space to be located In Prestonsburg, Kentucky.
Parking for five (5) vehicles must accompany the space. Space must be available
for occupancy on or before April 1. 1984.
Responses may be made by any person In writing on or before 10:00 a.m. Friday, March 18,1984. You need only to designate the type and location of the property, the name, address. and phone number of the property owner, and the dote
of availability of the property for lease. Leau Requisition Number PR-1642 should
be clearly marked on the outside envelope of each proposal submiHed to Room
ln, New Capitol Annex, Frankfort, Kentucky, 40801.
All responses received will be publicly opened and read at the above designated
time. You will be notified by a repreuntotlve of the Leasing Branch so that on
appointment con be mode to Inspect the proposed facility.
Property must be approved by the Office of the State Fire Marshal, meet OSHA
and handicapped accessibility specmcaHons, as wen as existing applicable building
codes. For any oddltlonollnformatlon contact Ms. W.H. Llle of the Leasing Branch
at (502) 564-2430 or 2319.
886-2073 H.L Setser, President
2·29-2t.
WHEN WE BUILT IT, YOU GET MORE
BUILDING FOR YOUR MONEY.
--------~----------·,·
INVITATION TO LEASE
OFFICE SPACE
Continuous
Miner
MODERN HYDRAULIC
JACKING SYSTEM
of Richmond
(606) 633-0126
Call 886-3544
FOR SALE
BY OWNER
Clayton Mobile Homes
HARDSHELL
TIPPLES, INC.
FREE ESTIMATES
2·
606-623·9404
Richmond, Ky.-80&-e23-9404
PEDAL STEEL GUllARclasses now forming lor E9th basic to
Intermediate lessons to begin In early
March. Must have your own guitar.
Contact Rick Johnson ot 452-4237
Come to Clayton Mobile Homes
of Richmond and see the 1984
model homes that have been
show winners In Louisville. We
have a large selection of these
show winners at low prices at
Clayton Mobile Homes ~
24 car rail siding (12 full,
12 empty) on ClrO ot Soldier,
Corter County, Kentucky
Box 282, Prestonsburg, Ky
You will enjoy painting In your home
with Trl Chem Uquld Embroidery.
Call 886-6437
After 5:00 p.m.
Z·29-2t·
ONLY AT
26 cor roll siding (13 full,
13 empty) on LlrN at Jackson,
BreathiH County, Kentucky
CALL 478-2882..~~-
LOUISVILLE
SHOW WINNERSI
"Let's Paint"
NELSON'S
CONSTRUCTION CO.
1r~ 874-22581
..
$99 & UP
lt.
An equal opportunity employer.
WILL DO TYPING
OR SHORTHAND.
..
Kinzer Drilling Co.
Allen, Ky.
KIRBY SWEEPERS
·11-2-tf.
874-2347.
Most wells drilled in hllf 1
day by Robry Machine.
~zs-tr. C~LL 886-1640_~
2·84t
15 YEARS EXPERIENCE.
CONTACT NORMA WRIGHT
AT 886-9181
OR 88~-2~27
2·22-tf
Water Well
Drilling
Call 478-5344
54 USED HOMES
ON ONE LOT!!
We hue used homes in all sizes and
price r111ces. Two 10' wlcles, 26-12'
wicles, 21- 14' wides, 3 homes with [x.
PIIIdos. All used 111d priced to sell
qtidlly. Milly holnes Cln be purch11ed
for as little as $500 down. Name
bn~nds! 4 Windsors, 9 Red1111ns. We
.-e literally runnin& out of room. See
for yourself at Greet Amerie~n Homes,
1-75, Exit 97, hltfway between Lexincton It Richmond. (606) 624-0200.
1-14-tf.
BEAUTIFUL BUILDING STONE
Sandy Valley Monument
and
Building Stone Co.
(Inc. I
Phone 874-2273- AIIen, Ky.
2· 22 t
HITCHCOCK
.REPAIR SERVICE
24-Hour
Emergency Service
• Heating • Refrigeration
• Laundry It Cooking
Equipment
PARTS
AVAILABLE
PHONE:
886·6900
OR
886-1473
•
•
•
•
UMESTONE VENEERING
MARBLE LANDSCAPE CHIPS
PORTABLE CONCRETE ST£PS
VERMONT SLATI
Located On Old U.S. 23
In New Allen
�Wednesday, March 7, 1984
The Floyd Coun ty Times
Section Two,
HAY: Excellent quality. 6o-80 IU bales.
$3 001 bale. Call H38-4204. James E .
Sparks.
2-2~31.
ALL NEW OFFICE SPACE for lease:
Co~isting of reception -library and
• four (4) connecting offices, with five (5)
assigned parking spaces. Located on
Third Avenue near the Courthouse,
downtown banks, postoffice, town center
parking lot, and the Floyd County Times
building. Ideal for physicians, attorneys,
accountants, realtors, and other
businesses and professions. Immediate
occupancy. Jim Hammond, 886-2376.
10-19-tf.
APARTMENT FOR RENT-One
. bedroom, furnished kitchen, central air
and heat. All utilities furnished. Mountain Parkway, near Prestonsburg. $300
month. Cleo DeRossett, 886-6568, day, or
886-1368, night.
1-11-tf.
NOW PAYING TOP DOLLAR for
mobile home wheels and axels. Ask for
Patty Wright, 639-4772.
12-7-tf.
•
•
CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING RlTES
IOc Per word, If paid In advance
ISc Pow word on c:n.,.e -count
($2.50 minimum)
Dl..,lay claulfled advertlsl.,.
$3.00 per column Inch.
~adlne for acl11: 4 p.m. Monda!;
FOR SALE: House in Martin. Carport.
basement, well insulated with low utility bills. on large lot. $42,000. Call
285-9512.
2-29-2tpd.
TWO VANS FOR SALE: 1971 Dodge,
rebullt motor; and 1975 Ford. 250
Econoline. Phone 886-9220. 2-29-2tpd.
WILL DO ANY KIND of odd jobs.
358-3481, Timothy Webster.
2-29-41.
PALOMINA HORSE FOR SALE. Call
886-3505.
2-29-2tpd.
FOR ALL YOUR INSURANCE-Aut().,
fire, homeowners, hospitalization, life.
With 0-25% savings. Call Darby and
Allen Insurance Agency, 874-2347.
12-28-tf.
GRAVEL FOR SALE: $8.75 per ton,
plus delivery charge. CallSS&-3425, JIM
cox.
6-23-tf.
FOR RENT: One bedroom, furnished
apartment. Security deposit. Adults.
No pets. Winchester Apartments . After
5, call874-9038.
2-29-2tpd.
LIGHT FIXTURES: lh price at GOBLE
LUMBER COMPANY, phone 874-9281.
4-11-tf.
FOR SALE: Registered coon dog, 3
squirrel dogs, Spitz and Chihuahua
2-29-2tpd.
puppies. Phone 874-9713.
WATCH REPAIR: If you want the best
job, bring watch repairs and jewelry
repairs
to
WRIGHT
BROS.
JEWELERS.
11-12-tf.
FOR SALE: 1955 Chevrolet 2-door
hardtop, like new, $3500. 1975 15-1/2 ft.
Runabout boat, 85 h.p. Johnson motor,
with cover and extra tanks, $2600 or
best offer. Phone 377-1140.
2-2~2tpd.
BOLEN'S MOVING & DELIVERY
SERVICE: We move a house full or
deliver one piece - anywhere. Phone
358-9617.
2-15-12tpd.
FOR SALE: Reconditioned washers.
dryers. gas and electric ranges, furniture, new and used parts for all
makes and models. Refrigeration
parts ordered for you. All guaranteed
60 days. For cheap appliances and
parts, plus a good guarantee. call us.
~58 -9617 .
2-15-12tpd.
FOR SALE : Unfurnished 12x70
Marlett mobile home. 2 bedrooms.
$7500. New carpet. lots of extras. 2
decks Call 606-652-4n!i anytimE'
2-8-4tpd .
CORN FOR SALF. : Ear or shelled .
R74-223R.
2-R-6tpd
FOR SALE : 12x65 mobile home. 3 bedrooms including electrical hookup.
Ralph O'Quinn. 358-4520 after 4 p.m.
2-29-2t.
PERMA-8HIELD Anderson windows.
All styles, 20 percent off regular price
at GOBLE LUMBER CO., phone
874-9281.
4-11-tf.
FOR RENT: Furnished trailer, near
college. Security deposit and lease required. No pets, please. Carlos E.
Neeley, 886-8565.
2-1-tf.
FOR RENT: 4-room apartment near
clinic and college. 88&-3154, T.E. Neeley.
11-9-tf.
FOR SALE : 1983 Chevrolet S-10 pickup, V~. automatic, P .S., P.B., air, AMFM cassette. Call 88&-6503 after 9 p.m.
2-29-2tpd.
HOUSE FOR SALE: 3-bedroom. 1-1/2
baths, garage, central heat and cooling, kitchen cabinets and appliances,
carpeting. On half-acre lot. $61,000.
Eligible for bond financing. Maplewood Village. Call 432-1517. -Dack D.
2-1S.4t.
Deskins.
LEXINGTON TOWN HOUSE FOR
SALE: Opera House Square, two
blocks from Rupp Arena. priced below
market at $99,500. Must sell. Owner :
Arthur Rouse. 134 N. Limestone. Lexington, Ky . 40507. <606) 252-7796.
2-15-4tpd.
FOR SALE : 3-bedroom mobile home.
Plywood floors, new furnace and water
heater. Also 1970 F-700 Ford. 18' box. 4
new tires, new motor and battery.
2-15-4tpd.
Phone 358-9tl17.
FOR SALE : Three bedroom brick
home located near Drift, Ky . Attached
garage, 5 years old, $35.000. Call First
Guaranty Bank. 285-9281. ask for Mr.
HaII.
2-15-4t.
SELLING AT WINTER PRICE: 1981
Honda Silver Wing GL-500. Fully dressed, AM-FM cassette, cruise, 2 tielmets,
and detachable trunks and rear seat.
Must see! $1995. Call Jim Clarke.
478-2614.
2-1Ht
FOR SALE : 25 acres. 2-bedroom
frame house. 22x46 frame outbuilding.
Free gas. 478-5205.
2-1S.4tpd .
HOUSE FOR SALE : Full basement,
forced air, natural gas. Call after 4,
886-3860, Ann Slone.
9-14-tf.
WHETHER FROM GERMANY,
JAPAN, or any other LAND- Your
car is in good hands at Custom Coach
Building and Collision Service. 413 S.
Lake Drive <located in same building
with Scott Gross Welding Supply).
Prestonsburg, Ky. Phone 886-1479 or
874-2802.
2-29-2t.
FOR SALE: 1975'Mercedes-Benz 450-SL,
excellent condition. Metalic green. New
tf.
top. Price $20,500. Call ~-8506.
FOR RENT IN MARTIN: Furnished
two bedroom trailer. References and
deposit required. Couples or with one
child. Rent $175 plus utilities. Call after
5 p. m .. 886-9583.
ltpd.
FOR RENT: Rooms, weekly, monthly,
nightly. Also waterbeds available.
886-2385, 886-9310, Sandy Valley Motel,
N. Lake Drive.
1-5-tf.
FOR SALE: 1974 Buick Regal. Real
good condition . $1000 Tincy Hall.
~77-6200.
3-7-1t.
FOR SALE: Cabin at Cave Run Lake.
Three bedrooms, air conditioned, all
new carpet. Reasonable price. Call
784-7250 or 784-9203, J .C. SPENCER.
5-25-tf.
NEED MONEY? Pawn it. don't sell it .
We loan money on almost anything
Hock Shop. N Lake Drive. 88&-2367.
2-1-RI.
HOUSE OR TRAILER FOR RENT at
Tvel No children. no pets. References
required . Call 47R-9221 or 478-9000
2-22-10tpd .
EXPERIENCED SALES PERSON
NEEDED to solicit Courier Journal in
Floyd County $100 plus commission
per week Auto necessary . Call
HI00-292·656R.
2·22-:lt
SPRING IS NEAR and grass will grow.
Hring your mower. tiller. weed trimmer for tune-up or repairs now. Sandy
Valley Hardware. Allen. K:v R74-9218.
2-22-6t .
3-7 2l
(606) 478-2334
DAN'S
APPLIANCE REPAIR
We repair all brandswashers, dryers and stoves.
• Guaranteed parts and work.
• Same day service.
• Discount to dealers.
• Fast dependable service.
CALL 358·9892 ANYTIME
HEY LOOK! We repair washers,
dryers, rangd', all types appliances.
Parts ordered for you. Call 358-4009 or
358-9617.
11-3-tfpd.
DAMRON NEW & USED FU~
NITURE: Living room suites starting at
$159. A-1 appliances. Rt. 122, Drift, Ky.
Phone 377-2071.
5-25-tf.
CARPENTRY WORK: Home building
and remodeling. Complete interior and
exterior. Masonry and concrete work,
all types interior and exterior painting.
Also have spray equipment to spray
barns and metal buildings. Free
estimates. Will furnish references. 15
years' experience. Call 886-8896,
anytime. Robie Johnson, Jr. 9-21-tf.
FOR RENT: 4-room unfurnished apartment, $200 rent, $150 deposit. Couples only, no pets. Call Jeanette Hubbard,
886-2557.
5-18-tf.
TRUCK AND WELDER for sale. Call
874-9547.
2-29-2tpd.
FIVE PROM DRESSES for sale. Only
been worn once. Prices from $10 to $60.
Sizes 3-9. Call, ask for Rhonda,
88&-1041 or28S.9597.
2-29-2tpd.
FOR SALE: 1955 Olds 4-door. Good
condition. $1500. Phone 377-6265.
2-29-2tpd.
FOR SALE: Sticker collection, 858
stickers in all. 216 Coal Company. Also
tread mill, has timer and speedometer.
If interested, call 874-2795 after 5 p.m.
2-29-2tpd.
S.ROOM HOUSE FOR SALE at Pumpkin Center, Estill, Ky. Call Roger Gibson, Langley, Ky., phone 28S.3509.
2-29-2tpd.
MINING SUPPLIES FOR SALE: 3
phase boxes, 600, 200 and 100 amp, 50
KBG isolated transformer, 500 BC
bolter cable in good condition,
Galvometer, hand-sqeezed detonator,
miscellaneous items. Call James'Maynard, 478-9969.
2-29-2tpd.
OR SALE: Mobile home. Good condition. $7500. Phone 874-8947.
2-2~2tpd.
FOR RENT: 3-bedroom house near
grade school at Betsy Layne, $300
month plus utilities, security deposit
required, one child only, no pets. Also
private trailer lot, $100 month in Betsy
Layne, good location . Phone 478-9689.
2-29-2tpd.
FOR SALE : 1971 Chevy pickup, long
wheel base. Good dependable truck.
Call377-6596.
2-2~2tpd.
FOR SALE: Three Tennessee Walking
horses. One gelding, one mare, one filly. Call after 6p.m .. 88&-1825. 2-29-2tpd.
FOR RENT: 12x60 trailer located in
the Goble-Roberts Addition. Phone
478-5034.
2-29-2tpd.
FOR SALE OR RENT: Two bedroom
trailer ~Old 23 between Allen and
Prestonsburg. Call874-2069. 2-29-2tpd.
FOR RENT: Sleeping rooms in private
home for working ladies or gentlemen.
References required. Call 88&-9636.
2-29-2tpd .
FOR SALE : 1982 Dodge Aries, one
owner, has 17,000 actual miles.
automatic transmission. air conditioner, power brakes and steering. In
excellent con~ .Price $6000 firm.
Call after5p:m., 88&-9583.
ltpd .
FOR SALE OR TRADE : Doberman
Pincher dog. Phone 358-3075, ask for
Tim.
1t~.
FOR SALE: 580 Case backhoe. 1971
Chevrolet dump truck . Phone 874-2395,
Leo Music.
2-2~4t.
IF YOU NEED WORK DONE. call
Stumbo Painting, Drywalling, Accoustics, Spray Ceilings, 886-1926.
88&-6466. Milton Stumbo.
2-29-4t.
FOR RENT: 28x28 room located in
downtown Martin. Nice location for office or small retail business. Air conditioned. heat and restroom. Call28~9400
for more information. Wesley Case
2-29-4t .
HOUSE FOR SALE at mouth of
Steele's Creek near Wayland. Three
bedrooms, central air, fully carpeted
on large, chain-linked fenced lot.
Phone 447-2510.
2-29-4tpd.
3-BEDROOM HOME FOR SALE near
school in Maytown. Located on three
lots. Central heat, full basement.
Adjoining building, 16'x24' with full
basement. Good neighborhood .
beautifully landscaped. Complete
fence. In the mid-30's. Call 28S.3494.
Thomas C. May.
2-29-4t.
HOUSE OR TRAILER FOR RENT at
Ivel. No children, no pets. References
required. Call 478-9221, 478-9600, or
478-5970.
2-22-10tpd.
4- WHEEL DRIVE: We can align and
balance yours. WHEEL & ELECTRIC,
874-9774.
2-29-tf.
FOR RENT : One bedroom furnished
apartment, on Court Street, Prestonsburg. Couple or singles only. $220
month plus utilities. Clifford Wright,
88&-8721.
2-29-tf.
FOR SALE: Reddog. $6 per ton
delivered, price depends upon location.
Stockpile is located at Garrett, Ky. For
information, call the One-Stop Market
in Pikeville at 437-7040 or 432-4375,
Frank Bailey.
2-29-tf.
FOR SALE: Male German Shepherd, 3
years old. $150. Call886-3598.
ltpd.
FOR SALE: Refrigerator. good condition. $150. Call 478-5841 or 478-9089.
ltpd.
FOR SALE : 1970 Monte Carlo.
automatic, $1000. CallSS&-3598.
ltpd.
FOR SALE: Pop cooler, 6 ft., 2-door
ltpd.
sliding top, $500. Call 478-9089.
FOR SALE: Red to-speed bicycle.
Needs pedals. $45. CallSS&-3598. ltpd .
PART-TIME HOUSEKEEPER &
BABYSITTER WANTED: References
required. CallSS&-2976.
ltpd.
FUND-RAISING PROGRAM
Can your church, school, club or civic
organization use extra money? Family
portraits by Mike Klrll will help.
Far more Information
Call (606)478·2334
3•7•2t.
Rewire older homes, troller
hookups, anything electrical In
your home or business.
No lob too small.
FREE ESTIMATES
CALL 946-2521
or 946-2677.
3·7-41.
FOR SALE : EZ-GO golf cart, electric.
Call 432-2311 after 5 p.m .. Peggy Steele.
2-29-2t.
FURNISHED TRAILER FOR RENT:
Will accept one small child. 1186-8724,
Edith Stumbo
2-2~2t.
FOR RENT : Two bedroom apartment.
kitchen includes appliances. new air
conditioner. Located at Stanville.
Phone 478-2477. Jerry McMamee.
2-29-2t.
L. It H. Used Cars
On the lot financing.
luy here, poy here.
886-1225
1978 Oldsmobile Curlau-t2t95
19n Pontiac Gran Prix (one owner)- t2500
1973 Plymouth Duster (low mlltage)-t1500
1978 Oldsmobile 442- t1285
1974 Ford Torlno-t1250
TRUCKS • VANS:
1980 GMC (Cash only) Reduced-t2500
1178 GMC 8 cyllnder-t1000
1972 Chevy 8 cylinder . t1000
1178 Ford von-t2915
Sp!clolaollhewllk
1979 Plymouth Volore (nllds work)--$1500
1988 Ford Folrtone-t250
1988 Chevy lmpolo- t325
Route 23 North, below Prestonsburg
7
Ask for Greg • 874·8171 -~~
SEAMLESS GUTTERING
NOW IS THE TIME TO GET RID OF THAT OLD CRACKED AND
PEEUNG PAINT-COVER YOUR WOODWORK. Wlnt ALUMINUM;
COVER THOSE OLD CROOKED PAINT PEEU:D WAUS WITH DOU..
BLE 4 OR DOUBLE 5 OR 8 INCH WOOD GRAIN SIDING,
MORE THAN 2o COLORS TO CHOOSE FROM.
.
• SIDING
• TRIMWORK
• SEAMLESS GUmRING
• PAno I& CARPORT COVERS
• SHUmRS
• TRAILER UNDERPINNING
• 5 YEAR WARRANTY ON ALL WORKMANSHIP
• 50 YEAR WARRANTY ON ALL VINYL SIDING
FREE ESTIMATES 886-3598
3·7· 1tpd.
MARTIN PRO HARDWARE ll:lnMIA\R\Tf
• MINE SUPPLy
MOME ClNTlR
Complete Line
Of Plastic and
Metal Fittings
and Plumbing
Supplies
• BUILDERS HARDWARE • LAWN & GARDEN TOOLS
• PLUMBING SUPPLIES • PAINT SUPPLIES
• ELECTRICAL SUPPLIES • TOOLS
ELECTRICAL
AND
I'LUMBING
CONTRACTORS
Mobile Home Accessories
Service Entrance Parts
Mobile Homes Set Up, Wired,
Electrical & Plumbing Accessories
Nuts, Bolts, Hardware, Chains, Hooks and Fa_steners
FREE ESTIMATES-ANY JOB-285-3243
We're glad
you asked!
AUTO & LIGHT TRUCK ALIGNING
and balancing. Good work, fair prices.
Wheel & Electric. Phone 874-9774.
2-29-tf.
WANTING TO DO house cleaning. Call
874-9340.
ltpd.
FOR SALE : Two bedroom house in the
city . $500 down and assumable loan.
Cal1886-6458 between Sand 7 p.m. ltpd.
SHIRT TALES FOR SALE: Call Donna Collins. 886-1532 after 3 p.m. 2-29-21.
Are you currently emptoyed and
desiring to make a career change,
or recently unemployed and can't
or won't live on a hand out?
We are currently recruiting Individuals who are willing to make
the sacrifice lr commitments It requires to be successful.
we otter the training and
organization you require to be. a
success. Call today to find out
more. It will only cost you your
time.
and Plumbed.
ELECTRICAL SERVICE
FOR RENT : New 4-room office with
built-in kitchen . air conditioned.
Located in Stanville next to Brandeis.
Phone 478-2477. Jerry McMamee .
2-29-2t.
RAI~FLOW
RAISE, LEVEL OR MOVE HOUSES
and mobile homes. Also lay block and
pour concrete. Call Johnny Slone at
447-2240.
2-29-12tpd.
FOR SALE: Atari game with 11
games. Price $150 for all. Call 886-6790.
ltpd .
STEAK AND SEAFOOD SALE : Friday and Saturday, March 9 & 10.
Steaks only 99 cents each. Don't miss
it! Sears Roebuck & Co., Hwy. 23
North, Prestonsburg. 88&-8135. 3-7-lt .
Tired of Working Hard
and Going No Where?
If so, this ad may Interest
you I
3·7-4
1
TREATED utility poles, 18ft. 20ft. and
25ft. lengths. Also fence posts at GOBLE
LUMBER CO., phone 874-9281. 4-11-tf.
ATTENTION: HYLTON HOMES Service Dept. now has parts for Whirlpool.
Kenmore, G .E. and Hot point washers
and dryers. Also parts for Magic Chef
and Brown stoves. Also buying 30" gas
and electric stoves and good
refrigerators . Phone 478-9594 or
874-9033.
2-15-12t.
2-2~3tpd.
TRAILERS FOR RENT: Singles or
couples only. 874-2114, Akers Trailer
Court.
2-29-31.
PAYMENTS LESS THAN RENT:
14-wide mobile home. Only $10,995. Call
John Wright, 432-1401.
12-7-tf.
FREE! FREE! FREE! Get your
washer. dryer. gas or electric stove
repaired free. Bring it to Bolen's Appliance Repair, old Rt. 80, Eastern. No
service charge. No labor charge. You
pay for parts only. For appointment.
2-15-12tpd.
phone358-9617.
FOR SALE : 1979 Subaru G-L station
wagon, 4-WD. Excellent condition.
Books for $3.300. will sell for $2.750 or
negotiable. Call 886-2201 after 4 p.m.
WANTED TO DO: Tree trimming and
cutting. Also fruit tree pruning. Call
88&-1631 after 3 p.m.
2-29-2tpd.
1984 MOBILE HOME: 2 bedroom, 12'
wide, front kitchen, double windows.
Furnished. Total electric. Only $8,995.
Call John Wright, 432-1401.
12-7-tf.
FOR SALE OR TRADE: Cardoxauger,
conveyor, 24-inch steel. Phone 874-9033.
11-24-tf.
FOR SALE: Nice, extra-large lot in
Woodland Hills, country setting, about
1-1/2 acres. 2oo-ft. road frontage, has
electricity. water and sewer already on
property. Five minutes from Prestonsburg. About one acre of lot level, plenty
of room for swimming pool. tennis
court or garden. Suitable for A-Frame.
brick ranch or modular home. Close to
Clark Elementary School. Price reduced to $15,000 firm. Call 88&-8658 after 6
2-15~tpd.
p.m .. or437-4556.
•
for only one week, must be
paid In advance. All classllled ads with only telephone
numbers must be paid In ad-
TOP DOLLAR paid for used washers,
dryers, gas and electric ranges, working or non-working condition. We pay
more. Phone 358-9617 or 358-4009.
1-l!!-12tpd.
INTERIOR AND EXTERIOR Porter
Paint. 1,000 colors to choose from.-BEN
FRANKLIN STORE,· phone 88&-2169,
Prestonsburg.
5-1&-tf.
1982 LINCOLN: Best deal in town. This
one has it all! Call Patty Wright,
639-4772.
12-7-tf.
FOR SALE: Two-story, 11-room apartment building, $40,000. At Twin Bridges,
Martin. on 100x50 corner lot. Call J .R.
Samons, 285-3914.
12-14-tf.
•
All classified ads scheduled
HOME REMODELING. additions,
roof shingling, concrete driveways .
sidewalks, patios. concrete 'repairing,
block layj.Jlg. foundations. retaining
walls ·Free estimates. 886-1090.
886-8603.
2-29-2tpd
BUSINESS OPPORTUNITY. FOR
SALE: Work for yourself at your own
leisure. Newly established. growing
business. Grocery store. gas station
and carry-{)ut. Three bedroom brick
house. All in one package. 874-2314.
2-29-3tpd.
WEDDING PHOTOGRAPHY
Remember your special day with
beautiful portraits by Mike Kirk
Don't delay ... call today,
Pace Three
John C. Hall
Founder
Hall Funeral Home
REASONS fOR PRE-PLANNING?
We are frequently asked why one should consider pre-planninc one's own funeral
now. There are several basic reasons:
First, economy.
You save money by stipulating only as much as you wish to spend.
Second, inner security.
You hne taken a weight off your mind, knowin& that your personal ar·
rancements are complete. And the cost won't become a burden on your family.
Third, personll choice.
You can choose your own service- your own minister, music, extent and kind of
service, right down to the smallest detail.
And fourth, simply so that your family won't hne to.
We can help you, as we've helped so many others in the community, in making prearrancements.
You may wish to call for an appointment to discuss pre-.-ranged funeral senices
with me or one of our directors. There is no obligation, of course.
HALL FUNERAL HOME
llear J1~etioa of Ky. 10 alld Ky. 122, lutia
Phones 285·9261 OR 285-9262
�Wednesday, March 7, 1984
The Floyd County Times
FOR IMMEDIATE SALE : Two bedroom mobile home. 1982. 14x58. a ll
elect r ic Owner transferred Ca ll H. C.
King. 478-2390
3-7-21.
·sEll. IT MST.I
BIN
II;c11/IJIIT.I
a
z- a
~.
~-&
FOR SALE: Three bedroom home. 2
full-size baths. Extra-large lot. Call
886-3394.
3-7-2tpd
HOUSE FOR SALE: Family room. kitthen & dining room combined. living
room. 4 bedrooms. 2 baths. utility
room. Economical gas heat. Out of
flood area. Located in new subdivision
at Harold. Asking price. $92.000. Call
478-9127
3-7-2tpd.
OLD FRIEND IN TOWN. Raleigh products are here again . Let's make them
welcome by calling for products.
Distributor needed for part-time work .
Call 789-8285.
3-7-:.ll!"d.
BOAT: 19-ft. Searay. walk-through
windshield, 165 h.p. Mercury with tilt
control, plus trailer. full canvas mooring cover. Very clean. excellent condition. Price $4800. Call 297-4825 or'
297-2448. Charles Boston.
2-29-2t .
FOR SALE : 100 acre farm. located in
Menifee county. 8 miles from Cave Run
Lake. Good 2-bedroom house. 2 barns.
tobacco base. $100.000. Call606-768-2451
after 4p.m. Milburn Denniston. 2-29-2t.
TWO APARTMENTS FOR RENT :
Estill. Kentucky . Call 358-4458 .
3-7-2tpd.
FOR RENT: One bedroom furnished
trailer. one or two people only. No
children. no pets. Call 886-2145.
3-7-21pd.
FOR RENT: Two bedroom. fully furnished apartment . carpeted and air
conditioned. Utilities paid . Located in
New Allen . No children or pets. Phone
874-2664 after 5 p.m .. Garver Shepherd.
2-29-2t.
FOR SALE: Interior and exterior
(Gray Seal> paint. Also glass windows.
Phone 886~047, Penny McKenzie.
2-29-2t.
FOR SALE: Two level lots located in
Cracker Bottom. Have approved septic
system and power pole. Ideal for
trailer hookup. Call Denver Bush.
28!>-9004. 28!>-9877.
3-7-2tpd.
FOR SALE : Gentle, good worker.
6-year-old pony, with rigging. Also
young cow and calf. Phone 874-2311.
3-7-2tpd.
FOR SALE : Mobile home. furnished.
$4000 cash. or $3000 and take over payments. May leave on present lot at $50
per month. 358-9827, James Hughes.
2-29-2t.
FOR SALE : Slide-in camper for 3/4 ton
long wheel base. Everything but bathroom. Sleeps four. Classic Deluxe. May
be seen at Hunter post office. Call
285-3752. Denver Spurlock.
3-7-2tpd.
IF YOUR CAR'S IN DESPAIR and it
needs REPAIR with a quality FLAIR.
take it to Custom Coach Building and
Collision Service, 413 S. Lake Drive
(located in same building with Scott
Gross Welding Supply>. Prestonsburg,
Ky. Phone 886-1419 or_. ~4-2302. 2-29-2t.
FOR SALE: Twelve acres of hillside
proP£rty with small "A" frame house
located in Cracker Bottom. Reduced to
sell. Call George Bush, Jr .. 28!>-9877.
285-9904.
3-7-21pd.
FOR SALE : Two night clubs in Lexington and Owensboro, Ky. Lexington
club in prime location, grosses over
$400,000 a year. Reason for selling,
partner dispute. Write to P .O. Box
22263, Lexington, Ky . 40522.
2-29-2t.
FOR SALE: 12x54 mobile home.
package heating and cooling unit,
underpinning blocks and steps. electric
pole and service, 9x10 outbuilding. new
carpet. $6000. Also for sale. 12x4t!
mobile home with central air conditioning, porches. blocks, underpinning
and electric service, $3200.
3-7-2tpd.
EQUAL OPPORTUNITY : The women
in our business make as much money
as the men. H you're looking for equal
opportunity, call 874-0041 for appointment.
2-29-2t.
FOR SALE: Alto saxophone. Call
285-3478.
ltpd .
FOR RENT: Two bedroom trailer, furnished or unfurnished. mile from Prestonsburg. 886-1548.
ltpd .
CONTROLLER
Controller needed for new
health care facility In Eastern
K~ntucky. Must have supervisory experience with a
Health Care background
preferred. Send resume with
salary history to:
$100 REWARD for the return of my two
dogs lost Saturday. Gray and white
miniature Schnauzer, male and
female. If anyone has these dogs or any
information as to where they can be
found, caU 886-9577 after 4 p.m . ltpd .
YARD SALE : Friday and Saturday, on
old 23, between gas company building
and mouth of Cow Creek. Mostly baby
clothes, etc . Mary Wright.
2-29-21.
MR. SAM FOWLER
. P.0. Box 1487
Paintsville, Ky. 41240
ITEMS JUST OFF PAWN: Air conditioner. microwave, sewing machine,
power tools, movie projector, tent,
knife. stereos, cameras. radar detector. The HOCK SHOP. 886-2367. 2-29-21.
3·2·2t.
FOR SALE
OR LEASE
NO MATTER what BRAND. either
foreign or INLAND, if it needs a
REPAIR, take it down THERE to
Custom Coach Building and Collision
Service. 413 S. Lake Drive (located in
same building with Scott Gross Welding Supply>. Prestonsburg. Ky. Phone
886'-,1479 or 874-2802.
2-29-2t.
Two lots on Mtn. Parkway, !5
miles from Prestonsburg, just
west of Ron's Bargain Barn.
Suitable for residential or commercial building. City water and
gas. 207'x 1n:
CALL
LOWELL SAMMONS
874-2181
874-28!58
atrer
WANTED : Used restaurant equipment. Also a good cook. Call 886-6047.
Penny McKenzie.
2-29-2t.
HOUSE FOR SALE : Three bedrooms.
2 baths. Call Rex Frasure. 377~508, or
Sharon Frasure. 377-1125.
2-29-2t .
FOR SALE: Three bedroom house. 147
Herald St.. Setser Div.. Gable-Roberts
Add'n.. Prestonsburg. $35,000. Call
88&3538.
3-7-2tpd.
Days
YOU BEND 'EM. we MEND 'EM ! For
quality, SEND 'EM to Custom Coach
Building and Collision Service. 413 S.
Lake Drive <located in &arne building
with Scott Gross Welding Supply!,
Prestonsburg, Ky. Phone 886·1479 or
874-2802.
2-29-2t.
FOR SALE AT MAYTOWN on Rt. 80:
House. 7 rooms and bath, 3 outbuildings, pasture, garden. corn field .
Will take used trailer trade-in. Call
285-9839 or 285-9196.
2-29-2t.
a p.m.
3·7-lt.
sears
HACKWORTH'S MINOR PLUMBING
and carpentry work. Call da~· or night.
600-886-6623. Jim Hackworth . 2-22-3t
WANTED TO BUY · Transmission for
1979 Plymouth Horizon. 105 engine
Call 358-9142. Evenings. 358-9406.
Laymon Bragg.
2-22-31 .
FOR SALE : Yamaha SR-185 Exciter
Like new condition. For sale or trade.
$900 or best offer. Phone 886-2201.
2-22·3tpd.
FOR SALE : 4 walkers . $20 each: one
pattie. $25: one leg brace with shoes.
$20: one Honda mini-bike 70. regular
$700 - sell for $425. 600 original miles.
Day : 285-3561. Night : 285-3051.
2-22-3tpd .
BRICK. BLOCK. STONE WORK. Fifteen years' experience. Call collect.
606-297-6080.
2-22-4tpd.
CARPENTRY WORK : New homes
and remodeling. drywall. FHA approved. Masonry and concrete work. Also
block work. Free estimates. James
Watkins. 886-3052 or 88&9673. 2-22-4tpd.
COURIER JOURNAL DAILY and Sunday route available in Prestonsburg.
Profit - $110 week. $250 cash bond
deposit required . If interested. call
1-800-29H568.
2-22-3t .
EARLY SEASON SPECIAL : Bring
your room air conditioner to our shop
for cleaning. maintenance. repairs
now . Sandy Valley Hardware. Allen.
Ky . 874-9218.
2-22-61 .
HOUSE FOR SALE: Five rooms and
bath. one mile from KY 80 up Buck's
Branch . Shown by appointment only. A
firm $30,000. Call after 5. R. Dingus.
28!>-3107.
2-22-4tpd.
WILL PAY TOP PRICES for standing
timber. Contact David Steagall. Rt. 1.
Box 695-J. Morehead . KY 40351.
606-784-9463.
2-22-4t.
COMMERCIAL BUILDING FOR
SALE or lease. South Lake Drive.
Prestonsburg . Ky . Available immediately . Call 606-329-014t! after 5
2-22-4t.pd.
p.m.
FOR SALE: Lot at Harold with doublewide. 3-bedroom. Completely furnished. new electric furnace and air conditioner. $25.000 firm . Call 606-437-4556.
2-22~tpd.
SANDY VALLEY REPAIRS: Furnaces . room heaters. w~ter heaters
serviced. 874-9218 days or 88&1453
evenings.
2-22~t .
FOR RENT: Trailer approximately 5
miles on Middle Creek road . Total electric, central air, wall to wall carpet,
$200 plus utilities. See or call B.B.
Shepherd. 88&3116.
3-7-2tpd.
FOR SALE : Electric dryer. G.E .• excellent condition. Gibson 8 h.p. garden
tiller . Call874-2832 after 5.
3-7-2tpd.
FOR SALE: Two bedroom bilevel
house with fireplace and large living
room. Located on five level lots in
Cracker Bottom. Reduced to sell. Call
George Bush. Jr.. 28!>-9877. 28!>-9904.
3-7-21pd.
2-BEDROOM
UNFURNISHED
APARTMENT in town for rent. $300
per month. $100 deposit. All utilities
paid. Call886-8991.
3-7-2tpd.
SAVE on Kenmore washer
and dryer combination
Extra-capaCity dryer
Large-capacity washer
CUT
$90.00
$34999
White
ONLY
5
25999
Prices are catalog prices • Now available In our
"ME" catalog supplement • Shipping, Installation
extra • Ask about Sears credit plans
Satisfaction Guaranteed or Your Money Back
ISears I
SEAIIS. IIOEaUCK ANO CO
u.s. 23 NorTh
PrNtonsburg
WILL DO HOUSE CLEANING. Five
years ' experience. Will furnish
references . Call 478-5087. Dixie Belle
Salisbury.
3-7-2t .
FOR SALE : House. 8 rooms. one bath.
Will take $10.500. Call358-9148, Geneva
Conley.
3-7-21.
FOR SALE: Four room house at Lower
Burton. near Wheelwright junction.
Built-in kitchen. fully carpeted. large
living room and air conditioned. Price
$15,000. Call452-4460. Bill Hall . 3-7-2t.
WASHER AND DRYER SALE ! Only
$649.99 for the pair (delivery extra l.
Large capacity. colors $10 higher.
SEARS Roebuck & Co .. Hwy . 23 North .
Prestonsburg. 886-8135.
3-7-2t.
FOR SALE : CR 250 dirt bike. Like
new. Phone 874-9316. Marvin Jervis .
3-7-2t.
FOR RENT : Basement efficiency with
outside entrance. Furnished and
utilities paid. $200 per month. $80
security deposit. Suitable for one person. No pets. David Leslie, 886-9937.
2-29-2t.
FOR SALE : 1!177 Oldsmobile 442 V-8
automatic. sporty car. runs good,
black on black. 1976 Datsun pickup,
standard , new paint. camper shell,
new tires, wagon wheels. 1975 Mercury
Comet, 6 cylinder automatic, runs very
good . will sell reasonably. Call
785-5197, Harold Combs.
3-7-2t.
BERTA TURNER & CLAUDETTE
HALL are now working at Magic
Scissors, Drift, Ky. Open Monday thru
Saturday, by appointment. Walk-ins
welcome. Business phone, 377-2871;
home phone. 377-2304 and 377~233 .
Owner and operator, Berta Turner.
3-7-3t.
NEW 3-BEDROOM HOME for sale
near Clark School in Woodland Hills
Subdivision. 1440 sq . ft. brick. 3 bedrooms, 2 full baths. living room with
fireplace, large built-in kitchen , dining
room and utility room with lots of
cabinet space. Central heat and air
conditioning, fully carpeted. Concrete
patio, beautifully landscaped. Ready
for immediate occupancy . Call
377-6405, Nathan Wright.
3-7-tf.
FOR RENT : Two bedroom house,
downtown Prestonsburg, $275 month
plus utilities. References required.
Call886-3487 or 886-2918.
ltpd.
COLLINS FURNITURE , APPLIANCES. Located half mile up Cow
Creek. New full-size mattress sets,
$130. Used full-size or twin-size mattress sets, $50. Electric, gas stoves.
washers, dryers , refrigerators, $125
each . Chests, $30 to $50. Dressers, $50
to $65. Beds. baby walkers, swings,
assorted prices. Wash bowl stand, $25.
ltpd.
Open 9a.m. tillS p.m. 874-2058.
CUSTOM BUILDING & REMODELING: Best price in town. Phone
606-297-6080.
3-7-4tpd.
TRAILER FOR RENT on Bull Creek.
Partially furnished. Utilities paid. Call
874-9802.
3-7-4tpd.
HOUSE FOR SALE : Four bedrooms. 2
baths, central heat and air. Jots of
privacy. Three acres hillside land at
Wheelwright. Call 452-2705 or 452-2536.
3-7-2tpd.
FOR SALE: House and two acres level
land. House needs repair. Deep well.
Garage. Call 606-432-5684 Friday, Sat..
Sunday nights only .
3-7-4tpd.
ATTENTION! Looking for a qualified
lady to represent AVON. Call for an
interview today, 874-2246.
3-7-2tpd.
FOR SALE: 1973 l2x60 mobile home.
Also Nikon photography equipment.
Call 478-5602.
3-7-21pd.
FOR SALE : New 1!173 Olds 98. "See to
Believe." Call874-2832 after 5. 3-7-2tpd.
FOR RENT: House near Highlands
Hospital. 3 bedrooms. basement. 2-car
garage, large yard . Couple only, no
pets. $400 month plus security deposit.
Call Paul Hom at 886-3169.
3-7-2t .
JA65721
FREE GIFT just for filling out a Sears
c redit application this month only !
t Must be 18 years old. l Stop by today
and get yours. SEARS Roebuck & Co ..
Hwy. 23 North. Prestonsburg. 886-8135.
3-7-2t.
MOTORCYCLE FOR SALE: Likenew,
Honda CX 500, 900 miles. Call 874-2832
after 5.
3-7-2tpd.
AVON NOW! AVON WOW ! H you're
thinking of going back to work. don't
settle for a 9 to 5 job. Tick your own
hours. Sell AVON . Call for interview.
23!>-3928.
3-7-2tpd.
FE13751
HOUSE FULL OF USED FUR NITURE for sale: Washer. dryer.
freezer. dinette set. two living room
s uites. 3 bedroom suites. lamps. antiques . many other items. Call Edith
Cook Skeans. 886-3331.
3-7-21.
FOR SALE: 650 Honda motorcycle.
1000 original miles. $1600. Call 358-9460.
John Boyd .
3-7-21.
FOR SALE : Remington model 1100
shotgun. 3~inch full choke ventilated
rib barrel. factory recoil pad. New condition. $325. 886-3428 after 6 p.m .. E .
Campbell.
3-7-21.
FOR SALE : 1!173 Chevy truck V-8
automatic. $500. Dependable. Call
377..Q864. Donald Howell.
3-7-21
FOR SALE : 1974 Ford Torino. Fair
condition. Call 452-2174 after 5 p .m ..
LarryTackett .
3-7-2t .
FOR SALE : Picmc tables. strong and
well constructed . Call 88&6466. Susan
3-7-21 .
Walls.
FOR SALE : PA system. includes four
SM 58 Sure microphones . Phone
452-4~6. Gary McCoy.
3-7-4t..
WALLEN'S TRADING POST & TIRE
SALES. Retails and wholesales. new
and used tires, wheels. caps. lugs,
wheel covers, batteries, tubes, auto
parts. stereos and boosters. tubes and
much more. We trade for most anything of value. 874-2289.
3-7-4tpd.
NEED INSURANCE? H so , call Sam
Wallen's Insurance Service. Insurance
for all ages. Life Q--85. Students.
Young American. o-26. Hospital for
all ages. Burial 45-a5. Guarantee
Issue Life 50-80. Hospital for those on
Medicare and also cancer insurance.
Phone 874-2289.
3-7-4tpd.
FOR SALE: 14x70 mobile home. three
bedrooms. two baths. In excellent condition . Call886-9065.
3-7-4tpd.
FOR SALE : Lot on Abbott Creek.
Ready for building . Has full si ze basement. Lot on Bull Creek . FHA approved . Call886-2818.
3-7-4tpd.
FOR SALE : 25 acres . 2-bedroom
house. 22x46 outbuilding. free gas. Call
478-5205. Robert Davenport .
3-7-4t .
DAN 'S APPLIANCE REPAIR : We
repair washers . dryers and stoves. We
will make service calls. All work and
parts guaranteed. 358-9892 anytime.
3-7-41.
USED FURNITURE. guaranteed appliances : Moore 's Discount Furniture.
Located about 3 miles from Martin on
Rt. 122. Low pri ces. Call 28!>-9354.
3-7-8tpd.
Section Two, Paee Four
FOR RENT : Two bedroom tra ile r.
Couples only. Call886-6602.
ltpd.
FOR SALE : 1978 Buick Rega L ... cellent condition. loaded with ...:tras.
Also a three wheel motor t>".e. 10 h.p..
$150. Call886-254 1.
1tpd.
FOR SALE : ?O' bicycle. sewi ng
machines . microwa ves. Gibson
amplifier and speakers. 10-speed bicycle. Qne carat lady's d iamond cluster.
$800; 14-K gold chains. $35and up ; cook
stoves : motorcycle. Call 886-2367. ltpd .
WANTED TO RENT : Small garden
spot on Mountain Parkway or near
Prestonsburg. Call886-3598.
ltpd .
TRAILER FOR RENT : 2-1 / 2 miles up
above Banner. Call874-9277.
ltpd .
WANTED TO RENT : Trailer space on
Mountain Parkway . Call886-3598. ltpd .
FOR SALE Six room house with basement at Wheelwright. Ky. Will take
$1000 down and a car or truck tha t
equals value of $1500 or $2000 and take
over payments on $11 ,000 loan. Call
452-2228.
ltpd .
FOR SALE : Two end tables and
matching coffee table. Like new. Call
886-3394.
ltpd.
HOUSE FOR SALE : Woodland Hills.
on Mtn. Parkway, one m ile past Clark
School, 2-story, 4 bedrooms. 2 ful l
baths. fireplace, 2-car garage, electric
heat, city water, nice neighborhood,
$65,500. Call886-3598.
1tpd.
PLEASE READ THIS! I want somebody to come to my home that can
write wills and notarize them so they
can be put to record . I ha~e Ml!ficien.t
papers from Molly Conley to do "anything I want to do with all my possess ions during my lifetime. I've got to
where I can't walk- have to crawl r
want to do this legal wor k now and get •
it on record. So. somebody, please
come at once. AN DY CONLE Y.
General Delivery, Lackey. Ky 3-7-lt.
FOR RENT : House in P restonsburg.
For information . ca ll 886-2094 or after
Jt pd.
5. call886-2132.
HOUSE FOR RENT OR SALE : Four
bedrooms, large living room. ki tchen.
laundry and utility room , $175 month . •
Good location in Martin . Call 886-8056.
Elizabeth Ter ry.
ltpd.
FOR RE NT : :>-room house. city conve1/4 mile from Cliff Bridge on
AbbotC!'tm4i_Call886-2535.
ltpd.
~s.
BIG RUMMAGE SALE: 14" & 15"
ri ms, children's skis, air conditioner.
majorette boots, books. 4t!" black
leather ba r, weed-eater. curta in~.
sheets. spreads. knick-knacks, jeans- .
children's. adults. Much more. Low
prices. Mouth of Trace Branch , Little
Mud , old Community Grocery Store
building. Thursday- Saturday. ltpd.
FOR SALE: 1959 Edsel. 4-door. standard shift, 44,000 actual miles. In A-1
condition , all original. $4000. Call
88&3598.
ltpd.
FOR SALE : Fireplace with stereo.
dark wood with marble base. in excellent condition., price $225. Al so.
weight bench and barbell set. like new.
price $80. Call after 5 p.m .. 886-9583.
ltpd.
DIRT TRACK RACE CAR for sale, 355
cu. in., $2500. 358-4277, Pat Morris.
ltpd.
HEY, ALL YOU CAR - TRUCK
OWNERS! J im has spring fever, so
everyone come on by and check ou
those wheels and tires jbat-•·-yol?re
needing. E verythlng -·at' sale prices.
Hurry before the weather cools the
fever . Come on by or call J im 's Tire
ltpd.
Shop, Maytown, Ky. 28!>-5058.
FOR RENT: Three bedroom mobile
home. Call Ted Nelson, 886-2993. ltpd.
TREE TRIMMING OF ANY KIND. 25
years' experience. Call 886-3771. ltpd.
FOR SALE: 1980 Toyota pickup t ruck.
four wheel drive, long wheel base. A-1
condition. Must see and drive to appreciate. Call Ted Nelson , 886-2993.
ltpd .
WANTED: Used hydraulic chair. Call
432-2724or 587-2782.
ltpd .
MUSIC-CARTER-HUGHES IS
HAPPY TO ANNOUNCE THAT
JIM NECESSARY HAS REJOINED OUR SALES STAFF,
JIM INVITES HIS MANY FRIENDS AND
CUSTOMERS TO STOP IN AND SAY
HELLO. HE WILL ALSO ENJOY SHOWING
YOU OUR WIDE SELECTION OF NEW AND
USED CARS.
MUSIC-CARTER-HUGHES
CHEVROLET-BUICK :~~K~~~~~1ESTONSIURG
PUBLIC UTILITIES SALEI
. WEDNESDAY, MARCH 14, 11 AM.
We have a good consignment
of vans, cars, pickups, bucket
trucks (2-tons and 1-ton),
1-ton utilities, (two) 2%-ton diggers,
(One) Jack hammer compressor, 3 cable trailers.
PUBLIC AND DEALERS WELCOME!
MI.·Sterling Auto Auction, Inc.
U.S. 480-West of MI. Sterling, Ky.
Phone 498-1414
2·29-2t.
WE'RE
OVERSTOCKED!
Used homes by the dozens!
large selection of 12' wides & 14'
wides in stock! Some like new!
No Reasonable OHer
Refused!!
Hurry While They Last!
$ave ThouSands!
C:l.a.!llh ,.._
HDAI"ES
· we BtLiLd-o~··
U.S. 23 , Harold , Ky.
606-478-9246
�Wedneaday, March 7, 1984
The Floyd County Times
DAY HOMEMAKERS
TO MEET MARCH 13
Presents Certificate to Collins
NOTICE OF FILING SETTLEMENTS
•
Section Two, Pace Five
The Day Homemakers will hold their
regular monthly meeting, Tuesday
afternoon, March 13, at 1 o'clock, at
Fellowship Hall, of the First United
Methodist Church. The hostesses will be
Mesdames Otelia. Smiley, Barbara
Dawson, and Dorothy Stover. Mrs.
Mabel Donahoe and Mrs. Dorothy
Stover will present the lesson on "Mixing Food and Drugs." The pre~ident,
1Ylrs. Eleanor Horn, urges all members
and others who may be interested in
becoming members, to attend.
I, Frank DeRossett, Clerk of tht' Floyd Circuit Court do ht'reby certify that
the following settlements of estalt's has been filed in the Floyd District Court,
and anyone desiring to take t'xceptions to said settlements must do so on
or before September 30. 198:! at 10:00 a.m.
,....
10/P/037
AIIIIUII
11/P/102
btates
Fiduciary
Philmon Johnson
Eula Johnson
H.F. Meade
Mado Meade
r...•
•
INSTRUCTION
LEARN TO DRIVE
TRACTOR-TRAILER
~~"'.L
sS.co'J '" ,.
J
p;otl'
·. :
NO EJIP£11tENCE NEEDED! We nom
N
and WOMEN No need 10 quot Pf....,l too
~ull Of Peri....._ tt8-*'Q DOT Certtfc.abOI'I
-
,..,11"1"~
11/P/116
FiMI
13/P/243
._,
let Crisp
Rase Crisp
Crit Mitchell
Daisy Hall Mitchell
12/P/098
Edna Simpson
Mary Jennings
NOTICE
Albert Beach, Jr.
Lorraine Beach
Floyd County Solid Waste, Inc.
Emma C. foster
Nell Fastar
Flllll
79/P/027
fl•l
ll/P/141
will be moving from their present location, to
the Floyd County Court House Annex Building,
room number 101.
If you have any question call
886-8060 Billing or 285-5133 Landfill
David C. Cooley, Director
2-29·3t.
FRANK DEROSSm, Clerk
floyd Circuit Court
3-7-ll.
Spring Sale
Russell Dean, assistant administrator at Highlands Regional Medical
Center, presents a Certificate of Appreciation to Gorman Collins, owner of
WDOC-AM and WQHY-FM, for airing "To Your Health," a public service
health information radio program.
•
•
•
First Birthday
PRE-SEASON SAVINGS ON
ABOVE-GROUND AND
IN-GROUND POOLS
See Us For:
• Bio Guard Pool Chemicals
• Pool Furniture
EASTERN POOLS
Lenora Baker celebrated her first
birthday, Jan. 18. She is the daughter of
Myrl and Shirley Baker, of Tram, and
the granddaughter of James and Ester
Lowe and Myrl and Betty Blevins.
Strawberry shortcake cake, ice cream
and punch were served. She received
many nice gifts with relatives and
friends present.
LOCATED ON NEW KY. 80, ONE MILE FROM GARRm AND THREE MILES
FROM MARTIN.
PHONE 358-9142
Hours: 9 a.m. to 4 p.m., Monday thru Saturday
•
3·7-3t.
The average lead pencil will draw a line
35 miles long or write about 50,000
words.
Spring Classes At PCC
A class in Graphic Design and Layout
begins Monday, March 5 at 6:30p.m. in
the Martin Student Center, Prestonsburg Community College. The class,
taught by Gwen Heffner, is designed for
peQple who needs to design or order
brochures, posters, business cards,
catalogues, yearbooks, etc. The course
covers design typography, printing processes, and production of mechanicals.
The 12-hour class offers 1.2 CEU credits
and is a practical way to upgrade skills.
The second spring session of gymnastics, taught by Robin Carlson, begins
Thursday, March 1, at 4 p.m. at Archer
'Par'k for- advanced students and on
:saturday, March 3, for beginners and
intermediates.
The second business seminar series
will begin Thursday, March 8 at 7 p.m.
in the Pike Auditorium. The speaker is
Homer Forster and the topic, cost control of fringes, benefits, insurance and
pensions. Mr. Forster has been the
director of an underwriting firm, an account executive, workshop leader for the
Purdue Pension and Profit Sharing Institute and is president of Investment
Seminars, Inc.
The second s~minar this week is U.S.
Relations with Latin America: Town
Form~. conducted by Dr. Tom Matijasic, and beginning in the Pike
Technology Building at 7 p.m. Wednesday, Feb. 29. This seminar will consist
of two meetings.
Call Continuing Education at PCC,
886-3863, ext. 215, to register for any of
these classes.
•
~tory
Hour Scheduled
The Floyd County Public Library will
feature a story hour, Monday, at 10:30
for children aged two through five. The
filmstrip "Curious George Flies A Kite"
will be shown and a craft activity is
scheduled.
ENDS CANNONEER COURSE
Pfc. John D. Ratliff, son of Berneice
and Billy Ratliff, of Manton, has com-
pleted the basic field artillery cannoneer
course at Fort Sill, Okla.
He is a 1982 graduate of Prestonsburg
High School.
•
8, 10,
8r 12 FT..
SATELLITE
DISH
SYSTEMS
INSTALLED
LOW BANK RATES • NO DOWN PAYMENT
20% OFF
ALL HOME STEREO
SYSTEMS
Multiple receiver systems available for one or
two households. Dealer for Yamaha, Technics,
Kenwood, J.V.C., Advent, D.A., Paisley
Research, Audio Tech
listen to WQHY for weekly specials!
LANCER-WATERGAP RD. ,
PRESTONSBURG, KY.
874-2635, 10 TO 7, MON ·FRI . 10 TO 5, SAT
"There's .11 .Meeting Going on"
PREACHING
PRESTONSBURG, KENTUCKY
•
SOUTH LAKE DRIVE
MONDAY·
FRIDAY
•
•
We're having a real
sale on a real treat.
Three thick layers of
real hot fudge and
crisp. crunchy peanuts.
With cool and creamy
DAIRY QUEEN· soft seNe
in between The Peanut
Buster Parfait:" Now only
99¢ at your participating
DAIRY QUEEN" store.
©AM D.O. Corp./1983
WE TIEATYOU liGHT~
PRESTONSBURG
DAIRY QUEEN STORE
Darrell Blankenship
Evangelist
ADAMS, TENNESSEE
March 11th, sunday, Morning 10:45 a.m.
Night 7:00 p.m.
THRU
March 14th, Wed. 7:00 Each Night
Guest Speaker Each Day on
W-P-R-T 9:30A.M.
PHONES
886-3379
886-6223
lt.
�The Floyd County Times
Wednesday, March 7, 1984
•
Blackcats Win District
For First Time Since '75
By LAURA COOLEY
This year's 58th district tournament
was filled with surprises and upsets. The
biggest upset, however, and the sweetest
victory was for the Prestonsburg Blackcats, who for the first time since 1975
won the district championship over Betsy Layne in the wildest game basketball
fans have seen around here in many a
season.
The spectacular boys' championship
game saw the Prestonsburg Blackcats
up against the Betsy Layne Bobcats.
<Haven't we seen this game before? l
The Blackcats came out as aggressive
as in the front of the season, and the Bobcats just missed keeping up. By the end
of the first quarter, four technical fouls
had been called, three of them against
Betsy Layne. At halftime, the score was
30-29, Blackcats The second half was as
tension-filled as the first half, with the
Blackcats maintaining a minimum of a
four-point lead, but with less than three
minutes to go, the Bobcats closed it up
to a one-point deficit. The Bobcats could
have won here, but a foul shot secured
the two-point lead by Prestonsburg.
With seven seconds to go, the Bobcats
again rallied to make the needed two
points, but lost control of the ball, turning it over to Prestonsburg. The Blackcats ran the remaining three seconds off
the clock for the 63-Q1 championship win.
Both teams will be playing in the 15th
regional tournament at Virgie where the
Blackcats will play the Johnson Central
Golden Eagles, Thursday night, and the
Bobcats will face the Belfry Pirates,
Wednesday night.
In the girls championship game, it
was the Betsy Layne Lady Cats versus
the Wheelwright Trojanettes The fastpaced and, for the most part, close
game, ended with the Betsy Layne Lady
Cats winning 66-55.
It's Nip and Tuck as Cats
(Black and Bob) Fight It Out
-Photo by Laura Cooley
BLACKCAT TONY WHITAKER barely got this one off with
Betsy Layne's Jeff Campbell, No. 15, and another Bobcat attempting to block the shot.
ACHS Cheerleaders, K.A.P.O.S. Winners
Kentucky
Afield
1983 DEER SEASON RESULTS
Kentucky's deer harvest set another
new record in 1983, with a total of 26,683
deer taken statewide. Since new harvest
records have been set every year since
1976, last year's effort was expected and
is further confirmation of what every
deer hunter in the commonwealth
knows-that our deer herd is growing by
leaps and bounds.
Gun hunters, as usual. accounted for
most of the deer-22,961 as compared to
3,722 for archers. Hunters in open counties took 21,538 deer, with the remaining
coming from federal installations and
military posts.
For the second year in a row, Christian County led the list of open counties
with 926 deer taken, followed by Ohio
County with 822 deer and Hopkins with
758.
Butler (676 deer), Muhlenberg (642),
Owen (619), Logan (617), Crittenden
l491 ), Todd (451) and Breckinridge <436)
round out the top ten deer producing
counties in Kentucky.
A quick glance at a map shows that all
these counties with the exception of
Owen are in the West-Central part of the
state and that this is clearly our most
productive area for deer. The secondbest part of the state is the North-Central
section, roughly within a triangle formed by Lexington, Louisville and
Covington.
This year's total harvest figure
represents a 5.42 percent increase over
the 1982 figure of 25,311. a smaller jump
in harvest than we've had in recent
years, when 20 percent increases were
not uncommon.
Allen Central's girls varsity cheerleaders tl)()k first place honors, Saturday,
in the 58th District K.A.P.O.S. cheerleading competition held at the Prestonsburg High School fieldhouse.
Members of the squad are Amy Mays, Gina Shepherd, Angie Barnette,
Melissa Jackson, Pam Hagans, Tina Thomas, Laressa Puckett, and Tanya
Horne. The squad, sponsored by Bonita Compton, of Martin, placed second
in the Jenny Wiley Tournament and will participate in regional competition
at Pikeville High School, February 5.
Stumbo Lady Mustangs Undefeated
J
Betsy Layne Girls Win
Second District Title
By BETTY HYDE:'\
In the champwnsip game for girls,
Saturday night, it was Betsy Layne over
Wheelwright 66-56. Betsy Layne came
ready to play by taking advantage of
poor shooting by Wheelwright. The Lady
Bobcats jumped ahead to an early Tead
of 18-10. Wheelwright came back in the
second quarter with a couple of quick
baskets to get back in the game, but the
Lady Bobcats tightened up their defense
and went into halftime leading 34-27.
Wheelwright came back in the second
half with a rally and outscored the Lady
Bobcats 16-12 in the third quarter, cutting the deficit 46-43. But that was the
closest Wheelwright could get. As the
Lady Bobcats got their offense going,
they outscored the Trojans 20·13 in the
fourth quarter, earning their second
straight 58th District title.
Leading scorer for the Betsy Layne
Lady Bobcats was Raquel Keathley with
16 points, followed by Kim Tackett 14,
Chris Lawson 9, Cassandra Keathley 12,
Christine Grose 7, and Wendy Kaylor
with 6 points.
Tina Hamby was the leading scorer
for Wheelwright w1th 14 pomts. M1ssy
Justice had 12, Mia Jones 10, Natilie
Johnson 3, Samantha Mays 4, and A.
Reeves with 2.
The John M. Stumbo School Lady Mustangs, defending county girls' basketball champiOn, had their best season ever this year with 25 wins, ~o losses
They also won five tournaments including t~e ~restonsbur~ InvJtahona~. the
McDowell Invitational, and the Stumbo InvJtallonal on the1r way to the1r second straight sectional and county tournament.
The Lady Mustangs are coached by Gerald Newsome and Thomas Hamilton ..
Bass Size Limit In Effect
A new size limit on black bass taken directly to the department's Division of
from the Kentucky portions of Kentucky Law Enforcement office in Frankfort,
and Barkley lakes is now in effect, ac- from which the complaint can be
cording to Department of Fish and Wild· relayed to the nearest conservation
officer.
life Resources regulations.
"We would prefer that anyone with in·
Bass fishermen at these two Western
Kentucky lakes may keep only one bass formation about fish and wildlife violaunder 14 inches long. All other bass inm tions contact the local officer directly,''
the daily creel limit of 10 fish must be says Steve Yontz, the department's
at least 14 inches in length, measured director of law enforcement. "But
from the tip of the lower jaw to the reaching a conservation officer can
sometimes be difficult, since these men
longest tail fin .
This size limit applies to largemouth, work out of their homes, so we have insmallmouth and Kentucky <or spotted) . stalled this toll-free number to make the
bass caught from Kentucky and Barkley process easier ''
Yontz said that callers should be
lakes.
Anyone w1shmg to report a violation prepared to give as much specific infor·
of fish or game laws may now call the mation about the violation as possible,
Department of Fish and Wildlife. toll- including descriptions and license
numbers of vehicles. It is not necessary
free, by dialing 1·800·252·5378.
Th1s number will connect callers for the caller to identify himself.
They're known as the Prestonsburg
Blackcats and the Betsy Layne Bobcats,
these two basketball teams that will
represent Floyd county in the regional
net tournament at Virgie. But their
records against each other indicate they
could as accurately be called Nip and
Tuck.
Except for their first encounter of the
season at Betsy Layne, which the Bobcats easily won by 12 points, a total of
only six points has separated the two
teams in four games. Betsy Layne won
the first two of these by a single point in
each game. Prestonsburg won the next
two-the Floyd County Conference title
game and last Saturday night's 58th
district finale-by margins of only two
points in each game.
Both teams go to the regional in different brackets and could-if they can
get past opponents such as Johnson Central and Salyersville-meet again in the
championship game there.
In the girls' division of the district
tournament, Betsy Layne was the winner, defeating runnerup Wheelwright, 66
to 55. Both go into the regional meet.
The tournament here drew the usual
b1g crowds with girls' play opening each
session, followed by boys' teams.
The scoring, game by game:
GIRLS' GAMES
Wheelwright (57>-Justice 2, Johnson
3, Jones 20, Boyd 18, Hamby 5, Mays 4,
Hall 3, Reeves, Newsome 2, Donna
Tackett; Prestonsburg (48)-Shepherd
4, Deerfield 10, Reed 6, McKenzie 22,
McKinney 4, Harris 2, Combs, P.
Patrick, Hall.
Betsy Layne (71)-Lawson 8,
Keathley 22, Grose 5, Tackett 13,
Keathley 12, Hall, Kaylor 5, D. Tackett
1, M. Tackett 5, Dillion, Hamilton;
McDowell (45)-M. Hall13, Turner 17,
T. Hall2, Griffie 6, Tackett, Bentley 3,
Martin, Mullins, Allen 1, Stegall 3.
Wheelwright (70)-Justice 4, Johnson
4, Jones 30, Boyd 10, Hamby 15, Mays 5,
Hall, Reeves 2; Allen Central (57)Green 4, Roope 12. Bentley 6, Combs 19,
Click 9, Baldridge 3, Bailey, Hall 4,
Boles.
Betsy Layne (66)-Lawson 9, C.
Keathley 12, Grose 9, K. Tackett 14, R.
Keathley 16, Kaylor 6; Wheelwright
(55)-Justice 12, Johnson 3, Jones 10,
Boyd 9, Hamby 15, Mays 4, Hall, Reeves
2.
BOYS' GAMES
McDowell (74>-Pack 14, Newsome
26, Slone 2, Mullins 7, D. Hall15, Jones
4, Tackett6; Allen Central (56)-Lawson
18, Green 6, Pack 18, Hall 4, Moore 2,
Ridener 4, Rice, Rister 4, Mullins.
Prestonsburg (87)-Ratliff7, Minix 15,
Cecil 7, Nairn 10, Whitaker 12, Green 8,
Slone, Shepherd 8, Hale 14, Horn 2, Go-
ble 4, Wallace; Wheelwright (50Martin 4, D. Hall27, Hutton 4, Boyd 6,
J. Hall1, Isaacs 9, Hunter, Jack Hall.
Betsy Layne (64>-Hamilton 16,
Campbell14, Kidd 6, Newsome 14, Parsons 10, C. Conn 4, Meade; McDowell
(52>-Pack 12, Newsome 18, Mullins 6,
D. Hall 4, Jones 4, Tackett 8.
Prestonsburg (63)-Ratliff 2, Minix 12,
Cecil 6, Nairn 26, Whitaker 15, Greene
2, Slone, Betsy Layne (61)-Hamilton8,
Campbell 21, Kidd 4, Newsome 4, Parsons 2, C. Conn 18, .Meade 2, Hall 2.
Both girls and boys teams will play at
Virgie in the regional. Pairings for girls
follow:
Monday-Wheelwright vs. Pikeville,
7:30p.m.; Sheldon Clark vs. Phelps, 8:30
p.m.
Tuesday-Belfry vs. Millard, 7:30;
Betsy Layne vs. Johnson Central, 8:30.
March 12-Semi-finals, 7 and 8:30
p.m.
March 13-Finals, 7:30p.m .
Boys' regional pairings:
Wednesday-:\llagoffin County vs.
Virgie, 7 p.m. ; Betsy Layne vs. Belfry,
8:45p.m.
Thursday-Millard vs. Johns Creek, 7
p.m.; Prestonsburg vs. Johnson Central,
8:45p.m.
Friday-Semifinals, 7 and 8:45p.m.
Saturday-Championship game at 8
p.m.
Original Bird Watchers
Studied With Shotguns
Before the advent of top quality field
binoculars, bird watchers studied birds
with shotguns. For them, the only sure
way to get close to a bird was to kill it.
Among those who relied heavily on
dead birds for models was the famous
ornithologist, John James Audubon.
Audubon once implied that "it was not
a really good day if he killed fewer than
100 birds," writes Roger Tory Peterson
in the current issue of National Wildlife
magazine, a bimonthly publication of
the National Wildlife Federation.
Peterson, the originator of the Peterson Field Guides, says that modern day
birders are well equipped with powerful
binoculars enabling them to closely
observe birds-alive2-"iD. their natural
jlabitat. Now, writes Peterson, birders
are demanding better and better guides
to help them identify nature's abundant
bird species.
The first illustrated bird guide
published in America was done by Alexander Wilson in 1808-with illustrations
painted from freshly killed specimens.
Audubon had a greater influence on
bird guides, says Peterson. Audubon's
"Birds Of America" "showed birds lifesize, in action poses and in their proper
ecological setting.. .for the first time the
majority of the birds of eastern North
America and many of those of western
North America were adequately portrayed," according to Peterson.
The shotgun school of ornithology,
which prevailed for over 75 years,
changed with Ludlow Griscom, a
curator in the bird department of the
American Museum in New York.
"When Griscom was a young man
developing his field glass technique, he
was challenged by one of the old boys
who made all his own identifications
through the sights of a shotgun," Peterson says in National Wildlife. "Griscom
pointed out a female Cape May warbler
in the top of a sycamore. The old boy
blazed away. He picked up the bird; it
was a female Cape May."
Peterson gives Griscom, whom he
met in the 1930s, credit for the
philosophy and fine points of field
recognition that Peterson used in his
Field Guide to the Birds.
Peterson's own career as an illustrator began in the mid 19305, and it continues today. There are now 30 titles in
the Peterson Field Guide series, and
Field Guide to the Birds has sold nearly three million copies. His books are
unique for his innovative dr.awirlgs,
which detail key bird fe,atut'es for fast
field identification.
Of his series·, Peterson says, "This
reference library, I like to think, has
made significant contribution to the environmental movement by making it
easier for people to know what they are
looking at."
-Photo by Betty Hyden
WHEELWRIGHT'S LADY TROJANS and Allen Central's
Rebelettes brace for the rebound in the semi-finals, here, Friday. Wheelwright won the game, 70-57, only to bow to the Lady
Bobcats in the Championship game, 66-56.
Little League
To Meet Tuesday
The Prestonsburg Little League will
hold an organizational meeting, Tuesday, March 12, at 8 p.m. in the Municipal
Building council room. Purpose of the
meeting will be to recruit managers,
coaches, umpires, and supporters.
For further information, contact
either John Earl Hunt, 886-6877, or
886-9670, or Ned Pillersdorf, 886-9645 .
It's the first 12 hours that are critical.
The l\-tarch Reader's Digest says within
12 hours after you've smoked your last
cigarette, your body will begin to heal
itself. If you can make it through that
first day, you're on your way to health.
-Photo by Betty H)den
A McDOWELL DAREDEVIL makes a grab for the ball as Betsy Layne's No .. 32 gets a shot off in Friday night's semi-final
game, here. The game ended, 64-52, Betsy Layne.
•
•
�Wednesday, March 7, 1984
The Floyd County Times
Martin Co. Kiwanis
Slates Adult Tourney
All-District, All-Conference
~oys, Gi.rls Teams Are Named
Four nights of elation for some, bitter
disappointment for others ended here
Saturday with trophies for excellence to
the winner, runnerup, free throw, both
individual and team effort, those named lo the All-District and All-Conference
teams.
Jack Stanford, Prestonsburg Blackcat
.&rentor, was named Coach of the Year,
~nd for girls' coaching, Paul Tackett
received the same honor
Named to the All-Conference team
were the following boys:
Todd Nairn, Tony Whittaker, Kelly
Cecil, Marty Minix, all Prestonsburg;
Levi Hamilton, Lester Newsome, Chris
Conn, all Betsy Layne; Dale Pack and
Tim Lawson, Allen Central; Tim Newsome and David Pack, McDowell;
David Hall and Charlie Martin, Wheel·
wright.
Boys' All-District team members are
Dale Pack, Tim Lawson, Allen Central;
Levi Hamilton, Jeff Campbell, Jimmy
Parsons, all Betsy Layne, Tim Newsome, David Pack, McDowell ; Kelly
Cecil, Todd Nairn, Gordie Ratliff, Tony
Whittaker, Prestonsburg.
Girls named to the All-Conference
team are Lisa Green, Missy Bentley,
Belinda Click, all of Allen Central; Kim
Tackett, Cassandra Keathley, Raquel
Keathley, Christine Gross, all of Betsy
Layne . Missy Hall and Amy Turner, of
McDowell; Melinda Deerfield and Gina
McKenzie, of Prestonsburg; Natalie
Johnson and Missy Justice, of Wheelwright.
Those named to the girls' All-District
team are Rhonda Combs, Robin Roop,
Allen Central; M1ssy Hall and Amy
Turner, McDowell; Melinda Deerfield
and Gina McKenzie, Prestonsburg ; Tina
Hamby, Evelyn Boyd, Mia Jones,
Wheelwright; Chris Gross, Kim Tackett,
Cassandra Keathley, Chris Lawson, Betsy Layne.
Team free throw winner for boys was
Betsy Layne and for girls, Wheelwright.
The individual free throw winners were
Chris Conn, of Betsy Layne High, and
Evelyn Boyd, of Wheelwright High.
Trophies were awarded to Prestonsburg's cheerleaders for both boys and
girls teams with Betsy Layne's
cheerleading squad for boys and Allen
Central's for girls named runners-up.
An adult basketball tournament, spon·
sored by the Martin County Kiwanis
Club will be held at Inez and Sheldon
Clark, March 19-24.
Trophies will be awarded and all pro·
ceeds will be used to further work of the
sponsoring club. For entry fee and other
information, call Mike Cassady at
Deadline for
<Wednesday.>
Fire Season Begins Early
~ompletes Basic Training
Although the spring fire season does
not officially begin until tomorrow
(Thursday), Floyd county has already
experienced a pretty severe fire situation in the past two weeks, according to
Stephen Ray Brackett, district forester.
Brackett said 17 forest fires had been
suppressed by rangers in the county and
that seven persons had been cited to
· district court for violations of Kru;.
149.375, allowing fire to escape to
woodland. He listed those cited as
Lucille Haywood, of Eastern, by officers
Ferguson and Brackett; Ike Poe, of the
Middle Creek road by officer Hamilton;
Jack Mosley, of Prestonsburg, by officer
Hamilton; Willis Akers, of Dana, by officers Brackett and Zoochi ; Sue Gibson,
of Tram, by officers Orner and
Ferguson; Susan A. Ratliff, of Brandy
Keg, by officer Phillips; and Brad Walls,
by officer Zoochi. Three other persons
cited for failing to take proper precautions when burning KRS 149.375, but did
not allow fire to escape to woodland
were listed as: Chalmer Whitt, of Allen,
by officer Ferguson; Rutherford James,
of Lancer, by officer Ferguson, ~nd
Wesley Giles, of Banner, by off1cer
Hamilton.
Greg D. Chaffin and his wife, Gay,
were here visiting his parents, Mr. and
Mrs. Douglas Chaffin, for a week upon
his completion of basic training in the
Marines, February 8. He was honored on
·s birthday, February 12, with a dinner
at the home of his parents. llis aunt,
Joyce Music, brought a cake, and
another aunt, Tammy Coleman, helped
with the dinner. Stephanie and Tina
Blair were also present.
He is now stationed in San Diego,
Calif., for further schooling, and his wife
has returned to North Carolina.
Americans write more than 24 billion
checks a year-over 100 checks a per·
_n.
Brackett advised that, beginning
March 1, it will be unlawful for any person to burn except between the hours of
4:30 p.m. and 12 midnight, within 150
foot of woodlands or grasslands leading
to woodland. Persons burning between
those hours are required to take all
reasonably precautions to prevent the
escape of fire by clearing carefully
around all materials to be burned and
piling such debris in small piles so that
fire will be easier contained. These fires
must be attended at all times and properly extinquished before leaving.
For further information, or to report
a forest fire, call the Divisjon of Forestry
office at Prestonsburg, 886-8562.
Prestonsburg, Ky.
Will accomodate 4 to 6 plots.
Reasonably Priced
is
LL
today
WRIGHT
LUMBER COMPANY
285-3368 • MARTIN, KY.
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Governor Martha Layne Collins told
the Executive committee of the National
Governor's Association at its meeting in
Washington last week that Kentucky
could not support a resolution the
Association wants to adopt dealing with
the Acid Rain Control Program.
She told the other governors that Kentucky could not support the resolution if
the state were asked to take on more of
the burden of sulfur dioxide reduction
than any other comparable state, and
unless the program provided for a
measurement program to account for
emission reductions. Additionally, Gov.
Collins said the resolution must concen· '
trate on all contributors to acidity rather
than just to sulfur dioxide.
"Kentucky has reduced its sulfur dioxide emissions by 36 percent since 1976,"
she said. "In all, an investment of over
$2 billion is being made in Kentucky to
take sulfur dioxide out of our air. "
"We are doing our share already,"
Collins added. "On the other side of the
coin, there are no scrubber units
operating in all of New England."
Governor Collins was JOmed m her ob·
jection to the adoption of the resolution
by West Virginia Governor Jay
Rockefeller and Missouri Governor Kit
Bond.
•
•
•
•
Insulation
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Opposes Acid
Rain Resolution
MEMBERS OF THE PRESTONSBURG BLACKCAT TEAM
look on as Mayor Harold Cooley signs the proclamation honoring them as 58th district basketball champions and naming this
"Blackcat Week" in Prestonsburg.
R
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What can we find for you?
People who know their business go to
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Consult your Yellow Pages for the off1ce nearest you.
MasterCard and Vtsa accepted at most area locations
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~· Parts Plus autostor•s ...
..,.
�Wednesday, March 7, 1984
The Floyd County Times
W0:\1.\:'\'S CLl18 :\IEETS
s~·l:'
. .~ SI:CVIlJ-r
..... it
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987-65-4320
...a.,~
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IUWTl ,......, • . , ,_ IWRA'-
Social Security
--------------------------~--------
i\ledicare 's Medical Insurance
l\IEDICARE GE:\ER:\L
ENROLLMENT PERIOD
B~ JDI KELLY
ENDSSOOS
<Social St'curity District Director for the
March is the last month of the 1984
Big Sandy Area>
general enrollment period for people
i\lost people 65 and over have come to
who failed to sign up for Medicare
recognize the importance of Medicare
coverage and have signed up for both
medical insurance at their first chance,
Jim Kelly, District Director for the Big
parts of the program, hospital insurance
Sandy Area said recently.
and medical insurance-about nine out
There is a general enrollment period
of ten people 65 and over. However,
during the first three months of each
there are still some who have yet to sign
year. Also eligible to enroll at this time
up for medical insurance. which covers
doctor bills and other medical b1lls not
are people who once had medical insurance but who dropped this protection.
covered under hospital insurance.
Medical insurance protection will
People who failed to sign up for
start July 1, 1984, for people who sign up
Medicare's medical insurance when
during the general enrollment period.
they had an opportunity to do so. or who
The basic monthly premium for medical
dropped out. may enroll through the end
insurance is $14.60 for the period ending
of March Coverage will be effective JuDecember 1984. The basic premium is
ly 1. 1984.
increased by 10 percent for each year a
There are a number of reasons a perperson could have had this protection
son may not sign up for coverage under
but did not.
medical insurance, which unlike the
The premium paid by those with medipayroll tax-financed hospital insurance,
requires the payment of a monthly
cal insurance represents about onepremium Some people may feel they
fourth of the costs. The remaining
can't afford the basic monthly premium,
amount is paid by the Federal Government from general revenue.
currently $14.60. Others may not feel
Medical insurance helps pay for docthey need it. Some people drop the
coverage for one reason or another
tors' services, outpatient hospital serIn addition to doctors' services,
vices, and many other items and sermedical insurance covers outpatient
vices not covered by the hospital insurance part of Medicare.
hospital care, outpatient physical
In general, after a person has had $75
therapy and speech pathology services,
in approved charges for covered medihome health care and many other health
services and supplies not covered by
cal expenses in a year-the annual
hospital msurance.
deductible-medical insurance will pay
80 percent of the approved charges for
Some 28.2 m!llion persons are currently covered under medical insurance, in- any additional covered services a percluding people who have been receiving son has during the rest of the year.
Anyone who has a question about
Social Security disability benefits for 2
years or more, and those with perma- either part of Medicare-hospital innent kidney failure. Contrary to popular surance or medical insurance-can get
the answer at the Big Sandy Area Social
perception, 25 percent of the cost of the
program is financed through the mon- Security office, located on U.S. 23 between Prestonsburg and Paintsville.
thly premmms, the rest comes from
Federal general revenues. This is one The telephone number is listed in your
reason why it would be difficult for the local telephone directory under U.S.
average person to match the coverage · Government. The people there have free
from private sources for the same cost. leaflets which tell about the protection
Another good reason people should offered by Medicare.
sign up for Medicare's medical insurance when they are first eligible is
that it costs more later-10 percent for
each year they could have had medical Some Garden Plots Yet
insurance but did not enrolL
People 65 and over who are not entitl- Available In Martin
There are still a few more garden sites
ed to Social Security or railroad retirement benefits can get medicare hospital available at the community gardens on
insurance by enrolling and paying a old U.S. 80 in Martin across from St.
monthly premium of $155. People who Juliana's church. Sponsored by the
buy hospital insurance must also sign up Christian Appalachian Project, all plots
for medical insurance and pay the are free and will be plowed. Participants
are asked to supply their own seed, fermonthly premium.
Those who have questions as to what tilizer, and tools.
Since there is a limited amount of
Medicare's medical insurance is all
about should call the Big Sandy Area space, plots will be given out on a first
Social Security office, located on U.S. 23 come first serve basis, and all applicabetween Prestonsburg and Paintsville tions should be in by this weekend. For
The telephone number is listed in the further information, contact Rick Fairlocal telephone directory under U S banks at 285-3254 between 9 a .m . and 5
p.m.
Government
THE
Section Two, Paae EJpt
SINGING TAYLORS WILL BE AT
the Trinity Pentecostal Church of God
at West Prestonsburg
ONE NIGHT ONLY
MARCH 9 At 7:00 P.M.
The executive board of the
G.F.W.C /Prestonsburg Woman's Club
met Thursday evenmg, March 1, at the
Floyd County Library, with the president, Mrs. Elizabeth Ramey, presiding.
Matters of importance, to be presented
dunng the regular meeting, were
discussed. Present were. Mesdames
Elizabeth Ramey, Arnita Snavely,
Dorothy Harris. Betty Rowland, Joyce
Allen. and Dacia Woods .
The regular G.F.W.C./Prestonsburg
Woman's Club meeti.ng was held at the
, Emma Wells May Cultural Center that
same evemng and the president welcomed the members and a guest, Tom
Whitaker, of Prestonsburg Community
College. Mrs. Joyce Allen read the
minutes, and the treasurer's report was
given by Mrs. Dorothy Harris.
Mrs. Judy Kittle, on behalf of Mrs.
Eileen Burchett, chairman, and other
members of the Arts and Crafts department, announced that the Arts and
Crafts Building, at Archer Park, would
be opened March 13, at 10 a.m. , for those
who may wish to do work there.
Mrs. Ramey named the following
members to serve on the nominating
committee for the club year, 1984-85:
Betty Rowland, Mabel Donahoe, Phyllis
Herrick, Dorothy Harris, Helen
Ankrom, Dorothy Stover, Arnita Snavely, Eileen Burchett, and Carolyn Traum.
The program chairman. Mrs. Roberta Davidson, introduced Tom Whitaker,
associate professor of art at Prestonsburg Community College. Prof.
Whitaker painted a picture for the group
while he lectured. He said that he grew
up on the head of Puncheon Creek, in
Magoffin county, received two degrees
from Kentucky colleges, and that he had
taught in various counties in the state
before coming to P.C.C. He explained,
"In my work, I don't create; only God
can do that. All I can do is to arrange."
Then he added, "I may inspire or motivate a student, but the art work must
come from within."
Hostesses for Thursday evening's
meeting were Garnett Fairchild, Sarah
Goble, Honey May, Lois George, Betty
Francis, Norcie Burchett, and Christine
Spradlin.
Refreshments, in keeping with the St.
Patrick's Day theme, were served to
guest, Prof. Tom Whitaker, members,
Roberta Davidson, Ora Bussey, Mabel
Donahoe, Judy Kittle, Zelia Archer,
Sharon Sparr, Barbara Dawson, Edith
James, Lucy Regan, Alice Harris, Fannie Runnels, Susie Poe, Kathryn Poe,
Dorothy Stover and son, Tommy, and
Orella McGuire.
The next meeting will be Thursday
evening, AprilS, with Ethel Burke, Betty
Jarvis, Dolly Pettrey, Pat Necessary,
Roberta Davidson Rebecca Rasnick,
and Ditty Tackett, hostesses.
AARP BOARD TO MEET FRIDAY
The Board of Directors of Jenny Wile.
Chapter No. 3528 AARP, will meet Friday, at 7 p.m. at the meeting room at the
Prestonsburg municial building. All
board members are urged to be present.
FLOYD COUNTY
CATHOLICS
Welcome You
~\'f.(;
886-9683 or 886-6093
3-7-IL
North Lake Drive
Church School 10:00 a.m.
Morning Worship 11:15 a.m.
REV. TIMOTHY D.
Pastor
JESSE~
FIRST ASSEMBLY
OF GOD
West Prestonsburg, Ky.
WADE MARTIN Hl'GHES
Pastor
Sunday School.
9:45 a m
Morning Worship
11 a .m .
Evening Worship
7p m
Wednesday Prayer Study 7 p.m
.
Auxier Freewill
Baptist Church
Sunday School . .. 10:00 a.m.
Morning Worship .... 11 a.m.
Evening Worship .. 6:00p.m.
Prayer Meeting
· Thursday ....... 6:30p.m.
Pastor, Elder Douglas Burkett
Asst. Pastor Clyde Bowling
12·14 tf
~ 0<;t
~~~~
AUXIER FREE WILL BAPTIST CHURCH
will sponsor a
CHICKEN & DUMPLIN
DINNER
Saturday, March 10, from 12 Noon to 6 p.m.
In the Church Dining Room, $3.00
:J.?·ll
THIRD AVENUE FREEWILL BAPTIST CHURCH
SERVICES
Sunday School .......... 10:00
Morning Worship ..... ••.. 11:00
Evening Worship ..... . .... 6:00
Wednesday Prayer
-----=~•' Service ...... .. ......... 7:00
~~~;;;;;;;;!!i• "Let us exalt His Name together"
-Psalms 34:3
"'To all Who mourn and n11d comfort, to all wllo are frlandlaaa and nttd lrltndahlp, to
all wllo are nomalaaa and need ahalterlng lou, to oil wllo pray, and to all who do nal,
bulahauld,lo allwlla lin and n11d a aawlour. lhla church apena wldtlta doora and makta
lrH a placa. and In Ilia nama of Jttua, the Lord, aaya wtlcamtl"'
710 Burlle Ave.,
WORSHIP SERVICE
Prestonsbura, Ky.
9:30A.M.
SUNDAY SCHOOL
10:45 A.M.
"The Church Where Exciting
Things Are Happening"
Pastor
REV.
Sunday School ..
Morning Worship .
Evening Worship
Wednesday Worship .
Highland Avenue
Freewill Baptist
Church
10 a.m.
11 am
7p.m.
7p.m .
Taylor 1•. Biggs, Pastor
Phon.-: 11116-110!!7
SUNDAY
Sunday School .... . . . 10 a .m.
Worship Service .. . . ... 11 a.m.
Evening Service ..... . .. 6 p.m.
WEDNESDAY
Prayer Meeting ........ 7 p m .
CLIFFORD H. AUSTIN, Pastor
FIRST
UNITED
METHODIST
CHURCH
so:.-.Arnold Ave., Prtllonsburg
ZION
DELIVERANCE
TABERNACLE
Dr. Ted Nicholas, Mlnlstef
Sunday School .......... 9:45
Morning Worship ...... 11:00
Junior and Senior UMYF2:30
Rhythmic Choir . . ...... . 4:30
Wesley Bell Choir .. .. ... 5:15
Evening Service ........ 7:00
WAYLAND, KENTUCKY
Sunday School 11 a.m.
Evening Worship 7 p.m.
Wednesday Prayer Service 7 p.m.
Satunlay Evening Worship 7 p.m .
Ada Mosley, Pastor
Everyone Welcome.
A CHRISTIAN WELCOME
AWAITS YOU.
SUN., WDOC AM-11:00 ·-
All The Earth Shall Worship Thee. 12•14-tf.
FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH .
McDowell, Ky.
Sunday School
. 9:45 a.m.
Morning Worship
. . 11 a .m.
Evening Worship ......... 7 p.m.
Wednesday
Prayer Meeting. .
7 p.m.
H. Bailey Sadler. Pastor
Visitors Expected
7-21-tf.
FlnPATRICK
The First Church of God
FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH
University Dr., PrestoiiSbur&, Ky.
KEVIN COLI~INS. Pastor
West Prestonsburg, Ky.
Across From Clark School
Sunday School
10:00 a.m.
Morning Worship
.. 11 a.m.
Sun. Evening Worship 6:00p.m.
!except when school is oull 7:00 p.m.
Wed . Bible Study
7:00p.m.
Youth Church for ages 5-10
during Sunday Morning Worship
•NURSERY PROVIDED•
REV. JOHN WOODS. Pastor
SUNDAY:
Sunday School ... . ... 9:45p.m.
Morning Worship
10·45 a.m.
Evening Service
.6:00p.m.
TUESDAY:
Prayer Encounter.
.7:00a.m.
WEDNESDAY:
Prayer Service . .
7:00p.m.
WDOC-AM
2:00 p.m. Sundays
EVERYONE WELCOME
~pu'r.lock
Bible Cltu'r.ch
R.R.#S
Prestonsburg. Kentucky 4165:\
Spurlock Fork of Middle Creek
SERVICES
Sunda~
School . . .
111 :1141 a.m.
1Class~• for all age-s 1
Sunday Morning Worship &nir~ II :00 a.m.
Sunda~ Ev~ning Suvice .
. 7:00p.m.
"edn!'Sda y- Pra~·er and HibiP Stud~·7:00 p.m.
Dan Heintzelman-Pastor
Box K."iO. Martin. Ky. 4164!1
Parsonagl' Phone-2K."i-:1444
"A
Christ <'entered Church
Built On Lovl'"
ACTS 2:1-47
WAYLAND
UNITED
METHODIST
CHURCH
s4£t
II eM
PRESTONSBURG
~JPc~
LORD'S DAY
BIBLE CLASS ...................... 10:00 A.M.
WORSHIP ......................... 10:45 A.M.
EVENING WORSHIP ............. 6 P.M. STD. TIME
7 P.M. D.S.T. TIME
WEDNESDAY
BIBLE STUDY .......................... 7 P.M.
RADIO BROADCAST
WPRT MONDAY thru FRIDAY 9:30A.M.
WMDJ SUNDAY 9 A.M.
"Come Let Us Reason Together" Isaiah 1:18
Evangelist Bennie Blankenship 886-3379, 886-6223
LOOKING FOR SOMETHING DIFFERENT?
COME
WORSHIP
WITH US
AT
CHURCH
A church with a message
for children of all ages.
[ft.
jiUIU6
~
EPIS<'OPAL.I
PREST~"'S~t'R<i. KENTI.TK\' 416.~3
l
Sunday School
9:45a .m ,
Morning Worship
11 am .
cNursery Provided >
SUIDAYS
9:45 u .-l:t.rch
SchOll 1111 Bible Class
Come and grow with us!
WEY!\1A;\i McGUIRK Pastor
:t.."il!-4419
·-
....---
PROCLAIMING
NEW TESTAMENT
CHRISTIANITY
MAYTOWN
UNITED
METHODIST
CHURCH
rn
No Book but the Bible.
No Creed but Olrist.
No Name but Christian.
The growing church for
the growing Christian.
Morning Worship
Sunday School . .
Youth Group
Evening Worship
11 u .-llolr C...llllio•
......
FIRST CHRISTIAN CHURCH
429
CHURCH
OF CHRIST
SOUTH LAKE DRIVE
The Women of The
~
First Presbyterian Church
:1"E.R TO BE LIKE THE JERIJ.
Call
COMMUNITY
UNITED
METHODIST
CHURCH
To the
I'HII.IPPL\!\S 2:16
"HOI.Ili!';G FORTH THE WOHO OF
LIFE ..:·
Water Gap Church
7 p.m .. Sat : 11 a.m Sunday
12·15 p.m .. SundayReligious Education Classes
Pastor: Father Ralph Reiling
2R."i-3254
-EVERYONE WELCOME-
You Are Invited
.9:30a.m .
.. 11:00 a.m.
. . 5:00p.m.
6:30p.m.
No. Arnold A\'t>.
Prestonsburg
Sunday School
Morning Worship
Evening Worship
Wed. Bible Study
Come and grow· with u.~!
10 a.m .
11 a .m
6p.m
7p.m
WaIt Staude. Preachf'r
Weyman McGuire, Pastor
886-8773
358-4419
......~.................
i--~t_,r . :.......................1-0·-28•·•-r .
FIRST ASSEMBLY OF GOD
Lorie Vannucci, Pastor
Phone 285-3051
Martin, Ky.
~:-
f
..
••'
10 a.m.
Sunday School
lla.m. '
Childr~n's Church
11 a.m.
Morning Worship
. . . . 6p.m.
Youth Worship
7 p.m.
Evangelistic Service
Family Night
Wednesday, 7 p.m.
Attend Services At The
FIRST CHURCH OF GOD
(Little Paint) 112 mile off Route 1428
Between Prestonsburg & East Point, Where
0~J~
murd~
J
1fCu.clv 10
~
"THE DIFFERENCE IS WORTH THE DISTANCE"
Sl '\IH Y SCHOOL ... . .. 10: Oil a.m.
~ORNING WORSHIP .. IO :.t5 a.m.
YOtTTH SERVICE ........ 6:00p.m.
EVENIN<i WORSHIP ..... 6::10 p.m.
BIBLE STl10Y <WEO. l ... i: IHl p.m.
11.·00
P7reemt~t aJapa;w e~uuc~v
{/J~tltv cJ<m1u 91ar//IO/t rmll 6e brr/!~'1~ tlte
<k<h(<~litNt me.r.rqf!e am/ tlln·c rm/1 6r·
J;/!!7'/!.fl
W thl' .lkA .::hmi&
J;,/Uht~
J£-hoo/ . .. .. . .
<'WRSJo:RY PROVII)EI>l
RADIO BROADCAST
WQHY-FM 95.5
MON.-FRI., 8-8:15 A.M.
10 "00
t:oe/l'1fl <fflotwluJ....•......... b·OO
1
-t >t)("f!f<h'l<'
r:r
111:4rJIIte-
ROY I..
TI~<'HER. Pa~tcu·
Bible Study ... ·.. 9:45 a.m.
Morning Worship . . . 11 a.m.
Evening Worship 5:30 p.m.
Mid·Week Praret Servite7 p.m.
FIRST AVENUE, DOWNTOWN PRESTONSBURG
NURSERY PROVIDED AND PLENTY OF PARKING
NS, PASTOR. MINISTER OF MUSIC, GUS KALOS.
~lorning
>en ire broadcast
the, It : I;, WQHY F~l 95.5
�Wednesday, March 7, 1984
Section Two, Pqe Nine
The Floyd County Times
USAA Award Winner
Jtelk& q;~ fS1adet,
.<7fi(t~· 100, (]3rr/tA1~~,
.9f9'..
/tear !7it~Nknan.
EFFECTIVE
MARCH 6
(~m
Jkrrt. th/'tl
~frtt .. .!) to· (}. .!fJAttne 7&6-47r.S'7
'
3-7-4t.
Maturity
RATES
AMOUNT
DEPOSITED
AMOUNT
DEPOSITED
. AMOUNT
DEPOSITED
$500-$2,499
$2,500-$49,999
$50,000-$99,999
8.50% 8.75%
7-59 days
TODAY'S
PORTRAIT...
TOMORROW'S
TRE'ASURE
The United States Achievement
Academy announced that Pam Salisbury has been named a 1984 United
States National Award winner in mathematics and science.
' Miss Salisbury, who attends
McDowell High, was nominated for this
National Award by Miss Freda Burke,
mathematics teacher, and Joan Caldwell, biology teacher, at the schooL Her
biography and picture will appear in the
United States Achievement Academy
Official Yearbook, published nationally.
Miss Salisbury is the daughter of Norma and Raymond Salisbury. Her grandparents are Stella and Tommie Collins,
of Minnte, and Arnold and Velvia Salis.bury, of Kendallville, Indiana.
60-90 days
THROUGH
MARCH 12
6.25% 8.75% 9.0%
91-180 days
7.25% 9.25% 9.55%
181-365 days
7.60% 9.60% 9.85%
366 days
- 18 months
7.75% 9.75% 10.0%
Brown Rice Recalled
2 (8x10s) • 3 (5x7s)
15wallets
TRADITIONAL POSES ONLY
PORTRAIT
PACKAGE ONLY
$1295
(95~ DEP-(iSIT)
Poses our selection • Beautiful backgrounds available
• Plus $1.00 sitting fee for each additional subject in same portrait
SUPER DOLLAR STORE
77 Hwy 80 & Main St.
Martin, Ky.
PHOTOGRAPHY DAYS
MARCH 8-MARCH 10
THURSDAY, FRIDAY, SATURDAY
Photography Hours: Thursday & Friday, 10-1, 2-6
Sat., 10-1, 2-5; Lunch, 1-2
Following the recommendation of the
Kentucky Cabinet for Human
Resources, Comet Rice Mills of Houston,
Texas, is recalling batches of brown rice
from Kentucky wholesale and retail
outlets. Cabinet tests indicate that the
rice contains EDB pesticide levels more
than three times higher than maximwns
advised by the federal Environmental
Protection Agency.
The cabinet's Food and Sanitation
Branch analyzed samples of Comet
brown long-grain rice in 14-ounce
packages coded S4923. The samples
came from a Winn-Dixie warehouse in
Louisville. Test results set the product's
EDB level at 453.3 parts per billion. Recent EPA recommendations set a maximum of 150 parts per billion for rice.
Branch manager Dudley Conner said
today that officials of Comet Rice Mills
have been "just as cooperative as they
could be" after receiving notice of the
test results. " I contacted the company,
and the management immediately initiated a voluntary recall of all S4923 pr<>duction known to be in distribution,"
said Conner. "They are alerting all
wholesale and retail outlets to return
boxes with that code number to the mill
in Texas."
*LONGER MATURITIES AND RATES ARE AVAILABLE UPON REQUEST
SUBSTANTIAL PENALTY FOR EARLY WITHDRAWAL
"Just Think What We Can Do Together!"
First
Commonwealth
~~T~~ Bank
:!!;
f
Member FDIC
Martin • Betsy Layne • Two Locations In Prestonsburg
Coal Operators:
Don't be misled by cheap imitations.
There's only one Superlow Tailpiecethe one invented by Johnson Industries.
• Patent pending.
• 43J4" dump height.
• Heavy-duty main roller with 3 7/16"
shaft for long belt sections.
• 16' dump length, 20' overall.
• Eliminates "shooting out" for bell moves.
• Cuts belt set-up time In half.
• Eliminates ramping up to higher tailpieces.
• Front roller boxes reduce belt wear.
• Ideal for scoops, ramcars, shuttle cars.
• Great for hlghdrlves to dump on.
• Approximately 50 units
in service over the past three years.
The New Johnson Industries
Personnel Carrier.
• Excellent for transporting
Inspectors, foremen, or personnel,
or, when used with our trailer,
it can be used as a mantrlp
with a capacity of up to eight men..
• Three and Four-Wheel cars
available.
• Also, we have a superlow version
that's only 17%" high.
Some well pleased customers In your area:
Fields Taylor, Butler Evans, Roger Bently.
)\
• Don't waste time and money
by bringing scoops outside
when you could be using
the Johnson Industries mantrlp.
�Wed.-day, March 7, 1984
Employee of Month
Order Of Odd Fellows
Hosts District Meet
The Kentucky Gorden Journal
The Prestonsburg Independent Order
of Odd Fellows, Lodge 293, will host the
district meeting Saturday, March 10, at
the Prestonsburg Lodge Hall at 12 South
Front Avenue. Dinner wtll be served at
6:30 p .m ., and all members are
welcome.
By Bonnoe lee Appleton
Sute Urban Garden & Home Hort1cuhure Spec••hst
COOPERATIVE EXTENSION PROGRAM
KENTUCKY STATE UNIVERSITY
Oh, my aching back! And guess what
-1 haven't even done anything to get
one.
My aching back develops every year
when J think about turning over the soil
in my vegetable garden. H's now that
time and fot" me, i!'s decision Lime. [ JUSL
broug.hl a brand new bouse complete
with dead turf and no gardens. And 1
know the pressure's on to see how weH
my garden thumb does.
You ean bet this lazy gardener will not
Lake spade in ~and. And I don't have
enough yard for a small tractor. So it's
time to think about a rotary tiller or rototiller, or perhaps a power cultivator.
When it comes to tillers, unfortunately, too many people spend too much
money for too big a tiller. It is generally recommended that if your garden is
less than a quarter-acre you annually
rent or borrow a tiller for initial soil
preparation, or consider buying a power
cultivator Power cultivators are like
mini tillers. They may be electric or gas
powered, with a motor housed above a
series of small blades. If you have a
moderate sized garden and hate spade
and hoe, consider a power cultivator.
If you decide you need a rotary tiller,
rent or borrow several types to really
"soil test" them before buying one. The
biggest decision you must make is
whether to buy a front-tine or a rear-tine
tiller.
Front-tine tillers cost less than reartine tillers, and do a good job of tilling
garden soil that has previously been tilled. They do not do a good job breaking
new ground, or operating in rocky,
weedy or compacted soil. And due to
their design you must walk directly
behind them to maintain control thereby
walking on the soil you've just tilled.
Rear-tine tillers are the more expensive garden work horses. Because rearmounted tines tend to dig down, they will
pull themselves into sod or compacted
soil to break it up. These heavier tillers
generally require less operator effort
and do a better job.
There have been some new developments in tillers irl the last few years. One
German-made tiller has no permanent
wheels and has sets of counter-rotating
tines- one set turns forward, one set
backward. The tiller also has no depth
CARD OF THANKS
The family of Norman Gearheart express thanks for all the kindness and
thoughtfulness during the recent loss of
our loved one; the Hall Funeral Home,
friends, relatives, and neighbors, and for
all the food that was furnished. Your
kindness and sympathy are more deeply appreciated than any words of thanks
can ever express.
WIFE, SON, MOTHER-IN-LAW
BROTHERS AND SISTERS
OF NORMAN GEARHEART
NOTICE OF
INTENTION TO MINE
Pursuant to Application
Number 436-0068
<1l In accordance with the provisions
of KRS 350.055, notice is hereby given
that Triple Elkhorn Mining Company,
Inc., P.O. Box 140, Ivel, Ky. 41642, has
filed an application for a permit for a
surface coal mining and reclamation
operation of approximately 25.9 acres
located 2.8 miles south of Allen in Floyd
county.
(2) The proposed facility is approximately 5 miles south of Rt. 1426's junction with US 23 and located 1 mile west
of Prater Creek. The latitude is 37° 34'
11". Longitude is 82° 42' 49". The surface
area owners are Scottie Crum, Everett
Crisp, H.L. Bryant, Teddy Ray Akers,
Bobby Joe Akers, Mexico Spear!i and
Gertrude Sammons.
<3) The proposed operation is located
on the Harold quadrangle U.S.G.S.
quadrangle 71 2 minute map. The operation will use the mountaintop removal
method of mining.
(4) The application has been filed for
public inspection at the Department for
Surface Mining Reclamation and
Enforcement's Prestonsburg Regional
Office, 503 South Lake Drive, Prestonsburg, Ky. 41653. Written comments, objections, or requests for a permit conference must be filed with the Director
of the Division of Permits, 6th Floor,
Capital Plaza Tower, Frankfort, Ky.
40601.
3-7-3t.
gauge and no gears, yet is rated superior
in soil preparation by a national gardening magazine.
Many companies have been develop
ing compact tillers for small gardens
Ins lead of the more typical five to eight
horsepowet" engmes or larger tillers, the
compac~ tillers have two h0rsepower
engines. R·ent a large tilaer the rirsl ye.ar
to lbire.ak.sod or compacted so:il, Lhen use
your compact ·tiller lo renovate the seed
bed.
No matter what type or size ll]]er you
select, a few practices will increase the
efficiency of your machine:
-Mow lawn or weeds before tilling
new ground; till only when soil is
moderately moist- too dry, the soil will
be hard and limit tilling depth- too wet,
clods will form; make several passes
over new or compacted ground, increasing depth gradually; perform regular
maintenance-clean soil off engine and
tines, service engine often, keep tines
sharpened.
I'm ready! Let's get out and dig in.
Timely Tip: Pinch, don't pull seedlings when you thin your garden rows.
Pulling damages seedling roots and
dislodges the plants. Pinch unwanted
seedlings off at ground level- the little
roots left behind will decompose.
PUBLIC NOTICE
Sandy's doing business at U.S. 23, Betsy Layne, Ky. 41605, by Sandy Boyd, Box
404, Betsy Layne, Ky. 41605, hereby
declares his intention to apply for a
~ license as a retail beer dealer under the
state law.
lt-pd.
CARD OF THANKS
The family of Paul Ross wishes to express its appreciation and thanks to all
who sent food and flowers during this
time of sorrow . Thanks to the minister,
Don Fraley, Jr., for his comforting
words and to the Hall Funeral Home for
its kind and efficient service.
THE FAMILY
lt.
GuU$/uimp DilwrOnJy 13.99
You can always count on Jerry's for value! Like our
Gulf Shrimp Dinner . . 21 delicious Gulf Shrimp,
served with plenty of sauce fer dipping, cole slaw,
French fries and a dinner roll-all at a great pnce!
Come in and see for yourself how at Jerry's, value
is one more way ...
In appreciation of her fine work and
dedication, Mabel Goble was recently
honored by her fellow employees, and
Goldie Rorrer, administrator of Mountain Manor. Mrs. Goble has been
employed by Mountain Manor for the
past 18 years in the Dietary Department
and was selected by her fellow
employees as " The Outstanding
Employee of the Month." She was
honored with a party and gifts.
A native of Floyd county, she is married to Andrew Goble and is the mother
of five children.
J&tklfi
~-------RESTAURANTS----I
US 23 & 460 Prestonsburg
Bee There
for
Bargains
MARCH 2-17
3/4-in
convertible
Jet Pump
CO-OP SPD
Passenger
Tires
NO. LOSS energy-saver. capacitor-run
motor. sealed ball bearings. High pres·
sure for wells to 100ft. #060-11315.
Extra-Heavy-Duty
Batteries
Reg. sug. pr. $253.00
wet. so-mo. warranty In passenger cars. Prices w ith trade-ln.
SJJ50P19~/75D-14
6-volt No. EHD-1 . Fits many tractors, other
equipment. #054-10100.
Reg.
P215175D-15 ((;78-15) .. . - ...... .. ...... .
Shoulder
Broadcast
Spreader
P225175D-15 (H78-15) ... _.............. .
NO. X3A. completely pre-assembled.
capacity, 20 lbs. Polyethylene hopper.
#102-31925.
P205175D-14 <F78-14) . ......... .... .... .
P215175D-14 ((;78-14) ................ .. .
4-ply whitewall bias tires. Polyester cord body. outstanding mileage
and bruise resistance.
$4091
sug. pr. $47.50
SJ7fJ
SJ795
Reg. sug. pr. $44.50
SJfiO
Reg. sug. pr. $46.00
12-volt No. EHD-24. Fits many Chrysler, CM
mOdels. #054-10200.
Reg.
sug. pr. $44.50
12-volt No. EHD-24F. Fits many Ford Motor co.
products. #054-10220.
12-volt No. EHD-71. Fits late model GM cars.
nos4-10260.
12-voit EHD-74. Fits late model CM cars.
#054-10258.
Reg. sug. pr. $27.50
$4495
Reg. sug. pr. $52.50
Motto High-tensile
Field Fencing
S6J45
20-rod roll
939-6-14 112-ga.
(#081-1 1604)
Reg. sug. pr. $74.00
SJ1 45
15 cu. ft.
Chest Freezer
SJ6f95
Reg. sug. pr. $433.00
No. C15DAB. Textured finish. Polyurethane Insulation In sidewalls and
bottom. Adjustable control. Key eject lock. #12C>-01235.
20-rod roll
1047-6-14 1/ 2-ga.
(#081 -11606)
Reg. sug. pr. $83.00
B-660
Multi-Purpose
crease
99~..' """
Reg. sug. pr. $1.10
Here's your all-around, high-performance lube in a cartridge.
#052-34015.
Super 12M
Motor Oil
s11• . .~,..
(99C
qt.J
Sale price $1 .05 each
Reg. sug. pr. $1 .25
Use year round. SAE-10W-40.
CC-SD-SE-SF. #052-12625.
Sf110
20-rod roll
939-6-12 1 / 2·ga.
(#081 -11612)
Reg. sug. pr. $106.00
$1 OJOO
20-rod roll
1047-6-12 1/2-ga.
(#081 -11614)
Reg. sug. pr. $1 20.00
Motto 141 12-ga. equals regular 121 12-ga. in strength. MOtto 12112-ga.
equals reg ular 11-ga. Easier installation handling. Plus Class 111 zinc
life.
- twice as thick for
cat Food
Price cut
Tomato
card
sets
ADVERTISEMENT FOR BIDS
The Floyd County Fiscal Court at its
regular meeting on February 17, 1984,
authorized the County Judge/Executive
to advertise for bid the next election to
be held in 1984 for the Primary <whether
it. be in May or August). Bids should include the following : storing the
machines, transp<)rting the machines to
and from the polls, election school for
precinct workers, setting-up machines,
and service/maintenance on the
machines.
Sealed bids will be received in the
County Judge/Executive's office in the
Courthouse Annex until9:00 a.m. on the
9th day of March 1984. The Court
reserves the right to reject any and all
bids.
FLOYD COUN'f.Y
JUDGE/EXECUTIVE
John M. Stumbo
2-22-3t
•
The Floyd County Times
SJ95,,..
our ll'l Red cat Dinner Is the taste
cats love. the nutrition they need.
Stock up.
Barbed Wire
Stretcher/Splicer
•1695
Reg. sug. pr. $21.1 0
No. 12372-DDSOOW #066-B0025W
weed-Killing
Reinforced
Carden
Hose
$950
Reg. sug. pr. $13.50
Carden
Rake
•1175
r~
Reg. sug pr. $16.50 ;,
N0. 18-817
II
#105-11625
NO. 20428. 50 ft. 5/8 ln. 400 PSI
burst -strength Brass couplings.
#102-31 120.
Dog Food
Special
Sf'
5.u.
Stock up now on Big Red Nuggets.
top nutrition plus top taste that's
guaranteed.
corn
Planter
Lawn
Fertilizer
$1195
· Reg. sug.pr. $14.60
#066-1771SW
$795
Reg. sug. pr. $10.50
Kleen-Gro wipes out broadleaf
weeds while it feeds. Bag treats
5,000 sq. ft. #102·37227.
PRESTONSBURG FARM & HOME STORE
.PHONE 886-8596
SOUTH LAKE DRIVE
PRESTONSBURG
•
�Wedneaday, March 7, 1984
The Floyd County Times
Easter Seal Campaign Begins
Floyd Among Counties To Share
In Community Service Grants
The Christian Appalachian Project
announces its annual scholarship program designed to promote community
spirit and involvement. This year $1,000
in scholarship money will be awarded to
each of the following counties: Floyd,
Clay, Garrard, Jackson, Jessamine,
Knott, Letcher, Lincoln, Madison,
Magoffin, Martin, Pulaski, Rockcastle,
Whitley, and Wolfe. Additional grants of
$1,000 will be awarded to the Buckhorn
Children's Center, Onedia Baptist Institute, Redbird Mission, and students of
the Kentucky School for the Deaf from
the Appalachian counties.
These scholarships are unique in that
grade standing and family financial circumstances are not the prime factors for
selection. Citizens' committees from
each community select the recipient or
recipients from their county, based upon
involvements and contributions to their
local communities. Applicants for the
scholarships must be graduating
seniors.
Examples of student involvement
might be volunteer work as hospital
•
Pursuant to Application
Number (436-9003)
(1) In accordance with the provisions
of KRS 350.055, notice is hereby given
that Bailey Mining, Box 171, Bypro, Kentucky 41612, had filed an application for
a permit for a refuse disposal processing facility affecting 13 acres located 1
mile east of Weeksbury in Floyd county.
(2) The proposed facility is approxmately 3.5 miles south from Hwy. 122
junction with Hwy. 466 and east of Caleb
Fork. The latitude is 37-19-16. The longitude is 82-40-52. The surface area is owned by Collins and Mayo.
(3) The proposed facility is located on
the Wheelwright U.S.G.S. 7lfz minute
quadrangle map. The application also
includes a proposed land use change
from forestland premining use to a
pasture land post mining use.
(4) The application has been filed for
ublic inspection at the Department for
Surface Mining Reclamation and
Enforcement's Prestonsburg Regional
Office, 431 South Lake Drive, Prestonsburg, Kentucky 41653. Written comments, objections, or requests for a permit conference must be filed with the
Director of the Division of Permits, 6th
Floor, Capital Plaza Tower, Frankfort,
3-7-3t.
Kentucky 40601.
- - · ~- ----- - -
Fiscal Court
To Meet Fri.
The monthly meeting of the Floyd
Fiscal Court, originally scheduled for
Mar. 16, has now been set for this Friday, Mar. 9, at 10 a.m. , court officials
announced this week. The court meets
in the courthouse annex.
.RALPH'S
TIRE SERVICE
U.S. 23 No:, Prestonsburg • 888·8808
• Computer Wheel Balancing
• New Tires (Steel lr Glass Belted 1r Polyester)
• Recaps-Regular lr Radial All Season,
4-Wheel Drive 10 1r 11x15
• New Banerles-36 mo. $39.95 Installed
plus exchange
• Rebuilt lanerles-90-day warranty t25.00
plus exchange
• Shocks-Lifetime warranty $19.95 each Installed
- --·----......
.._
--
U/'41 'T et'> •
,...... ,..,.. ... ..,.,..._
------
Dr. Combs Named
To National Group
Dr. Jerald F . Combs of Martin, has
been named to the Council On Sports Vision, a national organization made up of
eye care professionals with an interest
in vision care for athletes. The Council,
sponsored by the Bausch & Lomb
Soflens Division, was formed several
years ago to advance the concept of
sharper, more effective vision for
athletes at all levels of competition. Dr.
Combs joins over 1,000 eye professionals
affiliated with the Council in addition to
professional athletes Rocky Bleier of the
Pittsburgh Steelers and tennis player
Eddie Dibbs.
The Council On Sports Vision has tentative plans to sponsor sports vision
clinics for coaches, trainers, and
athletes.
·.
rnowe
n
IN APPRECIATION
The Cow Creek Volunteer Fire
Department deeply appreciates all
donations that were given to the Fire
Department at the Cow Creek and Emma roadblocks, Saturday March 2. The
donations will be used to purchase needed equipment.
The community and Fire Department
thank-you for your support.
MEMBERS, COW CREEK
VOLUNTEERS FIRE DEPARTMENT
·~----------------------~
MARTIN ULTRASOUND ASSOCIATES
at Family Health Center, Martin, Ky.
By opening (with just $25) an Individual
Retirement Account now, you can get a
jump on the rush to find deductions at tax
time.
All contributions up to $2,QCX) per worker are
tax-deductible;
the
interest
is
tax-deferred.
'
Has added new State of the Art
Echocardlogram with M Mode, to their
existing ottler modem diagnostic Instruments.
This Is used to detect cardiac abnormalities.
'
aides, visits to the sick and elderly,
church related community projects,
leadership roles in scouting, as well as
community improvements along conservation and ecological lines. Many other
examples would describe ways the student would contribute to making his or
her community a better place in which
to live.
Student counselors can or will provide
any interested student with application
fg.rms or further information, or students may contact Lew Phillips directly at C.A.P., 322 Crab Orchard Road,
Lancaster, Kentucky, 40446, phone (606)
792-3051.
..-....
..
The Kentucky Easter Seal Society officially started its 1984 campaign recently at the governor's office. Four year old Whitney Hayse, a resident of
Shelbyville and the 1984 Kentucky Easter Seal Child, visited Governor Martha Layne Collins at her office to present her with the first sheet of Easter
Seals in Kentucky. Governor Collins welcomed Whitney (center) and her
escorts, Major General Billy G. Wellman, adjutant General of the Kentucky
Army National Guard and 1984 state campaign chairman (at left kneeling) ,
and Easter Seal president John L. English (standing).
Whitney Hayse was the victim of a stroke prior to birth ; however, with
therapy and bracing she is now able to walk without the use of crutcnes o1·
a walker. She has received speech therapy at the Louisville Easter Seal Hearing and Speech Center for more than two years. This has helped her overcome her speech problems which resulted from the stroke. She is the daughter
of Mr and Mrs. Greg Hayse, of Shelbyville.
The Easter Seal campaign, which raises funds to support the service programs of the Society's seven treatment facilities in the state, will continue
through Easter Sunday, April 22. Highlight of the campaign will be the annual Easter Seal Telethon which will be broadcast March 31 and April 1 in
Louisville, Covington/Cincinnati, and Owensboro/Evansville. The Easter Seal
Telethon in Lexington will be broadcast April 28 and 29.
NOTICE OF
INTENTION TO MINE
Section Two, Pap Eleven
• Holter Monitor with computer read out
for evaluatlen of Irregular heart beats.
• Cardiac Stress Testing machine to evaluate
Cardiopulmonary fltneis and detect heart
and lung problems.
Don't wait-don't worry. Ask for more
information on Individual Retirement
Accounts from First Commonwealth.
• Ultrasound Equipment to help determine'
position, age and sex of the fetus In the
uterus. Also painlessly helps diagnose
gallbladder, kidney, liver and other
abdominal problems.
Substantial interest penalty required for early withdrawal.
• Doppler Vascular Flow Meter to help detect
blood clots and other circulation problems.
• Flberoptlc flexible gastroscope for viewing
the stomach and upper Intestinal tract.
"just Think What We Can Do Together!''
• Flberoptlc flexible colonoscope to view the
lower Intestinal tract.
• Flberoptlc flexible bronchoscope to detect
dlseasn or ftle lungs and windpipe.
Also offering complete microscopic examination
facilities, colposcopy, otoscopy, fetal monitor
for evaluation of fetal heart condition. Complete
facilities for Black Lung determinations and related
problems.
Martin Ultrasound Is located across from Our Lady
of the Way Hospital.
The Ultrasound Associates Is owned and operated by:
~~~
BANKER
Gan Maddlwar, M.D., FACS, Board Certified Gen. Surgeon;
Chandra Varia, M.D., Board Certified OBS-GYM;
Raghu Sundaram, M.D., Pulmonologlst;
Board Certified Internal Medicine
Bank
Member FDIC
Martin • Betsy layne • Two locations In Prestonsburg
2·29-31
\)
�The Floyd County Times
Wednesday, March 7, 1984
Section Two, Paae Twelwe
PRICES
IN EFFECT
WEDNESDAY
MAR. 7
THRU SUNDAY
MAR. 11
FISCHER'S
--·
......~~ ~
..... ,
"?"'::-..._
...
,,
r. · . .
!
~
~~'
~--
--
' '\..\·, '~~-,
******************
"·"
,
,_ _ !
4 LOCATIONS!
!
! • PIKEVILLE • -ZEBULON it
*
OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK
8 A•M• TO J J p•M•
:
TO LIMIT QUANTITIES
• WE ARE NOT RESPONSIBLE
*
* ****** ********
FORPRINTtR'SERRORS
•
~~-
!
BETSY LAYNE • ELKHORN CITY
• WE RESERVE THE RIGHT
49
$
~
.
•
BACON
i
.....'~..:.:
,
....
~
ENDS & PIECES
it
WE GLADLY
ACCEPT U.S.D.A.
FOOD STAMPS.
TROPICANA
ORANGE .JUICE
64-0Z.$139
.,.,.4,
Tropicana
Pl~lhlfl/ID
DRAM&£
~
·.._
" •
JUitl ...,.
IITWflt.L .nn ......
GROUND BEEF ·
NUGGETS/STICKS/PATTIES
::.~~PKG.
BETSY LAYNE STORE ONLY
EXTRA LEAN
BANQUET FROZEN CHICKEN ·
$2 19
LB.
COKE, TAB, OR SPRITE
12.Pak
Cans
$2
99
•
POST .
CORN FLAKES
lAS..ROZ.MOUR
HOT CHILl .......
69c
$149
SINGLES ...... .
6-STICK KRAFT
MIRACLE WHIPPED
-
MARGARINE.
~ft&0~ .. 3/$1 ~~~~~RD
~z.
.....
79c
69 C
99C
99C SUN LIGHT
FLAVoRICH 89 C CARNATI 0N2J$1
DILL CHIPS. ...
DISH LIQUID ..
5
SKIM MILK....
EVAP. MILK
COTTAGE $119 CHOCOLATE $15 9
CHEESE........
PINWHEELS.
2/89 C PistJJ(t''s2/7 9C
4/$1
6
9
c
~i~E-~·-·..
u~~~ZHUP
SAUSAGE...
3-0Z.
ARMOUR
T-BONE STEAK
STEAK .............. $28! CUBEDSTEAK.......
$19 9 CHEUCK ROAST $1 59
TIP ROAST.. .....
CHOICE
LB.
2
V"LAs1c
lB. '
BONELESS CHOICE SIRLOIN
$2 59 CHEESE
COLD TABLETS .
$2 8 9
$289
Ul
ggc
CONTAC
$3 9 9
~-RIB EYE STEAK.....
LB. BONELESS CHOICE TOP
PORTERHOUSE OR
$399 ROUND STEAK......
BONELESS
lB.
18-0Z. BOX
Vi£NNAUR
c
•
BEANS ....
14-0Z.
....
LB.
$1
49
MELLWOOD BACON ..........·..
•
ageREG. WIENERS...
.......... .
i-LB. PKG.
.
12-0Z. PKG. FISCHER'S
12-0Z. PKG. ARMOUR
· ,
..·. .
COOKED HAM..........................
$
2 • 29
$1
4
BEEFoRREG. BOLOGNA........
•
1-LB. PKG. FISCHER'S
YORK
APPLES
~:· 79c
3
•
.
CARROTS
1-LB. PKG.
BETSYLAYNESTORfONLY
BANANAS
39c 3LBS.f$1
�WednMCiay, March 7, 1984
Section Thr-, Paae One
The Floyd County Times
Watch for the
Be sure to register for big
RE-OPENING
19" Portable
COLOR TV!
of our
E I!
To be given away SATURDAY, MARCH 10.
Register at store as often as you wish!
SALE PRICES EFFECTIVE WEDNESDAY, MARCH 7 THRU SUNDAY, MARCH 17. WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES AND .CORRECT PRINTING ERRORS.
8-PAK, 16-0Z. RET.
DIET PEPSI, PEPSI,
MTN. DEW, or PEPSI FREE . . . ...
$16 9
~~~siT
GRADE A
CREAMEffiS
MACARON-I
OR SPAGHETTI
LARGE
5...... .
5 7-0Z.J$1 00
DOZ.
BOXES
TIDE LAUNDRY
IGA BREAD
DETERGENT
16-0Z. LOAVES
49-oz.$199
BOX
89
C
GRAPE JAM ......
$ 27 9
FABRIC SOFTENER
.
18-0Z. JAR SMUCKER'S
96-0Z. BR. FINAL TOUCH
24-0Z. CAN DINTY MOORE
$12 9
BEEF STEW .....
FRESH
18-0Z. SUPERMAN CREAMY
$149
PEANUT BUTTER ..
12-0Z. CANS
CHUCK ROAST
Sl.
$109
USNO.l
PLATTER BACON........
CUBEDSTEAK
cAs£
USDA CHOICE BONELESS
Sl.39LB.
USDA CHOICE
$4 99
FAYGO POP .$1.00 .oR
FRESH
LEAN
PORK STEAK
5 FOR
KY. BORDER
BOLOGNA ............ -~~J:~
LB.
7
7
9
C
4
9
C
ARMROAST....
BEEFFoRSTEW .
WIENERS .........
' NECKBONES....
9
9
C
$17 9 ~~~:u~~N
$16 9
9
9
C
SAUSAGE .. .. .. .. ..
CHUCK STEAK
BACON .........·... .
$2 29
USDA CHOICE
LB.
$16 9
USDA CHOICE
$18 9
LB.
12-0Z. CORN KING
LB.
USDA CHOICE
LB.
12-0Z. CORN KING
LB.
FRESH PORK
CHUCK.... ...... ......
FRESH PORK
ll.
LB.
RED
US NO. 1 IDAHO
FRESH GREEN
DELICIOUS
APPLES
POTATOES
ONIONS
88-CT. SIZE
6
5/$1
38UNCHES$1
10-Lb.
Bag
LETTicE . ..... 69!. REDCRAD1s s.
I
'
ORANGES
.5/51 ...
�AND PLAN NOW TO JOIN THE CROWDS THURSDAY!!
•
Phone: 432-2508 or 432-2509
7 Miles South of Pikeville
at the mouth of Upper
Chloe U.S. 460 East at
Shelbiana, Kentucky.
COAST
TO COAST
AND BORDER
TO BORDER!!
... A MAGIC
DAY OF
IMPORTANT
PRICE
REDUCTIONS
ON EVERY
ITEM IN
PARTICIPATING
HOME
FURNISHINGS
STORES!!
eTOMORROW!
AS ANNOUNCED ON
NATIONAL NETWORK
TELEVISION!
NEW! BIGGER! BETTER!
PLAN NOW TO JOIN THOUSANDS OF
VALUE WISE HOMEMAKERS & SAVE!
~
THE "NATIONAL" EXPANDED LAST YEAR!
Hundreds of stores offered incredible savings!
SAVE 20%, 30%, 40%, YES
YOU'LL SAVE UP TO 60% OFF!
BASSETT PIONEERS THE NATIONAL SALE!
It was August 1982- the original Bassett National Sale!
~~~~~~~------~~
e LIVING ROOM!
BARGAINS GALORE'
12 INCREDIBLE HOURS!
THURSDAY!
12 TO 12
~ WEL.COME!
L::...rz=z:J
Comfo rt Chair Traditional Sofa,
loveseat and c hair in beautiful
floral p ri nt- Available in Blue or
Green.
C&2J
"SORRY. NO ONE CAN BE ADMITTED BEFORE THE
CREDIT TERMS
Now: AVAILABLE!
Reg.
$799.00
SALE
PRICES
e DINETTE SET!
Stoneville 5 p c. with high
pressure laminated top, 4 plush
padded c hairs.
$88.00
Pub·EI•ck
o..p Cushions
BEDROOM
BARGAINS!
Reg.
$1 ,370.00
Broyhill Oak with head
&
board, dresser, hut ch mirror, 5
drawer chest , and nigh t stand.
This top quality suit would suit
any home as the .naster,bedroom
Reg $999.95
'lo"w: I 688.00
V~rginia Colony 1ncludes triple
dresser, massive hutch mirror, 5
drawer chest, n1ght stand massive cannon ball head &
footboard
Reg s 1 199.95
' o" : I 748.00
Now:
sgggoo
... plus much, much more!
DINING ROOM
SUITES!
NEW AND EXCITING'
LIVING ROOM
SUITES!
Solid Pine bunk b e d s.
Now:
Reg.
$119 .95
$74.00
REVOLUTIONARY SPECIAL!
e WATERBED!
Ttm berl1ne K1ng S1ze bookcase
headboard w1th mirrors Has
so ltd p1n e 4 foot mirro red
bookcase headboard Includes
full flotation matt ., heater, liner,
pedes tal- FREE SET UP AND
DELIVERY.
Reg $799.95 Now:
-LAWN FURNITURE
Includes so fa, easy chair and
spnng cha1r Has d urable tee·
taline fabric to stand weather
and so11. 3 pc.
Solid construction, cot! spnngs,
legs but! I 'n to the frame. Must see
to believe'
Reg . $ 1,499.95
' "'" 1788.1MI
Fashion Craft of H•ckoryBeaull ful so l a, toveseat 10
)usctous blue velvet w1th oyster
welts Has 8 way hand t1ed co11
spnng. w1th bui lt'" legs. Ltfet•me
warranty on sprtngs and frame
Reg $1 ,595.00
'""' 1'148.1MI
Bassett Sect•onal Livmgroom
ava1 lable in 2 fabncs-beaultlul
for any contemporary fam1ty room
Reg . $899 95
' "" ' A.';88. 1MI
. .. plus much. much morel
Now:
Reg.
$647.00
Solid Pine exposed wood tamtly
room suit, very heavy. Inc ludes
Sofa, loveseat, and chair. Nylon
cover 1n beaut1lul floral pnnt.
Reg . $1 ,399.95
'"'" 1888.1MI
Antron Nyton - Colomal 3 pc,
Sola toveseat. and chair has An ·
tron nylon cover w1th 8 way hand
11ed coil spnngs. bUill m legs
OUALoTY
Reg $1,499.95
' "'" 1788.1MI
Tradlltonal Sofa & Chatr 1n
beaut1lul be1ge & Rust floral prtnt.
8 way hand lted co• I spnngs, legs
built 1n to the frame
Reg. $999 95
\ mo: s:;88,1MI
Early Amencan sofa, loveseat, and
chaH in beige hercu lon cover
$488.00
$288.00
Bassett Queen Size trad itiona l
sleeper with English Pub back in
beaut iful rust chen ile cover fo r
more durable wear.
Now:
Reg.
$699.95
Bassett Sol1d Cherry Queen
Anne 4 poster bed. Has Queen
Anne pediment 1n headboard and
blanket rail on footboard.
SOFAS &
SLEEPERS!
Bassett
temporary Sleeper
ha~ TV headrest wi th Tri·fold
Bed .
Reg. $599.95
:'io" : S.118.01l
Comfort Chair sofa-bed with in·
nerspring mattress. Solid Pine
exposed w ood fintsh, legs built
into frame. Antron nylon cove r
Reg . $899.95
' '"" 1518.00
. . . pia milCh, milCh tnore!
ROCKERS &
RECLINERS!
M an s ize Act ion rec liner i n
du rable v inyl. Stock no. ·1440 by
Now:
Lan e.
Reg .
$299.95
$198.
00
Beige t weed Herculon cover. A
real bargain.
Now:
;~~9.95
$88.00
.. . plus much. much more!
BARGAINS OF EVERY TYPE AN DDESCRIPTION'
SOME ARE LIMITED QUANTITY, SOME ARE
ON E·OF A·KIN0 1 EVERYTHING IS REOUCE0 1
Reg $599.95
Now:
$298.00
ODDS-N -ENDS
GALORE!
3 pc. Bassett Wall Units. Con·
struc ted in dark pine solids, has
lighted library unit w1th TV com·
partment, desk unit w ith door
compartments, plu s curio unit
with lighted glass shelves.
Reg . $899.95
~ow : 1588.00
Vinyl wrapped bed will match any
bedroom suit. Includ es full flota·
tion matt., liner, heater and
pedestal. Availab le in king &
queen.
Reg . $379.95
'"'" 1 198.00
Cherry wall unit lighted, door
st orage u nit wi t h storage
shelves.
, .,... , 198.00
Reg . $279.95
Massive head & footboard. Con·
struc ted of sol id pine tn Forest
Pine finish
Reg . $79995
:'in" : 1288 .00
. . . plus much, much more!
•
cushioned chairs . Closed deck
china w ith glass doors.
e BEDROOM SUITE!
DINETTE
SETS!
Now:
Reg.
$999.95
$598.00
Col onial 8 piece solid Cherry
din ing -room includes lighted
ch ina, trestle table and 6 chairs
top ta b le.
Reg. $499.95
Now:
Bassett Oak Country Charm In·
eludes triple dresser, frame mir·
ror. 5 drawer chest , with solid
oak panel headboard.
] • - - - - - - - -..
SENSATIONAL VALUE'
Reg.
$799.95
•.. plus much. muc:h more!
EVERY ITEM IN
CURRENT SELECTION
WILL BE ON SALE!
THAT ENTIRE HOUSEFULL
OF FINE FURNITURE YOU
NEED CAN BE YOU RS! BUY
3. 4, 5 OR MORE ROOMS
FULL AN D SAVE HUNDREDS
OF DOLLARS NOW!!
TABLES!
]
L_A_M_P_S_!__
• ""'~,_,_
Beautiful Pine Parkay top tables
w ith real in-laid Parkay tops inclu des rectangular cocktail, and
2 square and tables.
Reg $369.95
Now: $188.00
Pecan Marble tops includes
door cocktail. One rectangu lar
door end table and one hexagon
door end table. All with marble
tops.
Reg. $499 95 set ' "" · 1298.tMJ ...,,
. .. plus much, much more!
$348.00
. MAlTR ESS
SETS!
e MATTRESS SET!
IMPORTANT REDUCTIONS'
... plus much, much more!
•
Now:
$348.00
SPECIAL OFFER!
*
Bassett Colonial w i th beige
nylon cover with beautifu l carv·
ed d ental molded exposed wood
t ri m .
$248.00
' o, : 1988.00
*SOFAS!
* BEOOINGI
*LOVE SEATS'
* LIVING ROOMS'
*CHAIRS!
* SLEEP SOFAS!
*RECLINERS'
DINETTE SETS'
*TABlES'
* DESKS'
*LAM PSI
* BOOKCASES'
*DINING ROOMS' *ACCESSORIES'
* BEDROOMS•
*
*
* ROCKERS1
ANO MUCH. MU CH MORE!
e LUXURY SOFA!
from U.S. Furnitu re Ind., table 42
by 60 Oval.
Now:
$S N o.w
OO:
98
Reg.
$899.95
7 pc. Solid Pine table and chairs
Reg . $ 499.95
$498.00
YOU'll LOVE THIS!
8 piece Pine diningroom suit Bassett 5 p iece Chrome and
wi t h light ed china, tab le, 6 g lass dinett~ round 42" glass
Reg. $1,399.95
e BUNK BED SET!
e SLEEPER SOFA!
REMARKABLE REDUCTIONS'
EXTRA SALES HELP . .. EXTRA DELIVERY PEOPLE . .. EXTRA CREDIT
PERSONNEL . . . EXTRA OFFICE STAFF ... ALL HAVE BEEN BROUGHT
IN TO ASSIST YOU IN QUICK AND EASY BARGAIN BUYING THURSDAY!
Rugged, Bold Pine Trim by ~
A MAJOR OFFER'
OPENING THURSDAY!
e FRIGIDAIRE eAMANA
• ZENITH
e ,PLuSMAIIY MoRa
Now:
Reg.
$159.95
HURRY!
"BASSm INDUSTRIES ARE PROUD TO HAVE FAMOUS BRANDS AT
AS OUR SElECT SALE REDUCTIONS!!
PARTICIPANT IN THE NATIONAl SAlE FOR • BASSETT .HIGH LAN
HOUSE
1984 IN THIS AREA. EVERYTHING (NOT JUST
e BROYHI LL •HAM MARY
BASSm PRODUCTS) Will BE OFFERED AT
e DIXIE
IMPORTANT PRICE REDUCTIONS THURSDAY!" •ACTION
$398.00 (EVEN AT
MAGIC SAVINGS'
90 Day Extended
Terms. VI SA,
MasterCard ,
Instant Cred it.
Bassett Glamou rpedic Deluxe.
Our best sellin g queen size mattress. Satin cover-beautiful Iris
design.
]
Back supporting Serta Posture
with white & blue floral prin t.
quilted cover with matching box
springs. Nationally advertised
per set Reg . $ 249.95
"' ow: 1188.00
Now:
Reg.
$450.00 Set
$288.00
AMAZING SElECTION!
-
PATIO FUR NITURE
5 p c. White o r Antique B lack
W rought Iron Umbrella table and
c hairs fo r pool o r p atio .
Reg.
$458.50
Now:
$248.00
Back supporti ng Serta Posture
with white & blue floral print .._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
quilted cover. With matching box
springs. Nationally adverti sed
ASTONISHING SAVINGS!
per setReg. $ 599.95
" "" : 1248.00
Bassett 4 p iec e C herry Bedro om
Bassett Glamourpedic Del uxe
mattress, our most plush mat.
suit incl udes trip le d resser,
tress in beautiful Iris patternframed m i rro r, 5 drawer c h e st
satin cover quilted for more com·
an d Quee n An n e ped i me n t
fort . Manufacturer's suggested
headboard .
retailReg .
•
$320 .00
' "": $l'I6.1MI
e BEAUTIFUL BEDROOM!
Now·
.. . plus muc:h. muc:h more!
$999.95
Concord Hall
Early American bedroom by
$748.00
!BaSSetti
EVERY ADVERTISED ITEM (PLUS HUNDREDS MORE) GUARANTEED TO BE HERE WHEN THE DOORS OPEN AT -
YES! BANKCARDS
j
~- . l....:e.... J WELCOME! A SPECIAL CREDIT TEAM ~~~ !~c0o~~:~~RT2 0°o"5~
•
End Tobie
11 a 27 • Z2 In
Cockt1ll Teble
41 • 11 Jt 111n.
•
•
TO PRESENT ACCOUNTS! tt
Thacker Furniture and Appli ance Co.
Phone: 432-2508 or 432-2509
7 Miles South of Pikeville at the Mouth of Upper
Chloe on U.S. 460 East at Shelbiana, Kentu cky.
•
Wlndeor Peril :A.,.u -t+l
Tredltlonel Tebl•• by ~
M'K1.,............,.""9
Belul•ful cs.tt Woloii"\.Ouro Cl'4f"r' hMPI on
C"-'Y ~oM aMI ...,....,. Car"lred "'
~
Inc ludes triple d re sser, hutc h
m irror amoi re, night stand and
Paul Bunyon bed .
Reg .
$199.95
Your Choice
$98.00
Fi nely crafted of pine veneers
and solid pine In a medium t one
finish.
R
eg.
$1,999.95
Now:
$1,398.00
•
�The Floyd County Times
ednesday, March 7, 1984
WD§ZJal
.~
HOMEMADE PIZZA - SPAGHETTI - SUBMARINE SANDWICHES
ALL INGREDIENTS MADE FRESH DAILY
WE USE FRESH PIZZA DOUGH • Not Frozen • Not Pre-Bfl<td • No Substitutes.
9AM-1AM TUES-SAT
OPEN lOAM-lAM
SUNDAY-CLOSED MONDAY.
I
CRISP FLAVORFUL PIZZAS
CUSTOM MADE IN
10" • 12" • 14" • 17" SIZES
DKICIOUS GONDOLA & STEAK
SANDWICHES
YOU RING...WE BRING
FOR PROMPT CARRY OUT ~ALL
886-8118
Riverview. Manor's Valentine King
and Queen werre Tom Burchett, 56, of
Prestonsburg, and Amanda Lafferty, 65,
of Martin. They were honored during the
Valentine Party held, February 14.
OA
886-81,1 9
HOBERT'S
...
Victor Borge Concert
Scheduled in Ashland
PIZZARIA
LANCER KY·
a:
For a children's book about
life in Eastern Kentucky from 1880
to 1910, we would appreciate any
recollections, anecdotes or access to
family photographs and journals. We
are also interested in games or toys
popular at that time.
Please write:
MOUNTAIN LAUREL
P.O. Box 112
Prestonsburg, Ky., 41653
2-2~21.
Concert pianist and funny man Victor
Borge will have a special guest during
his March 19 engagement at the Paramount Arts Center in Ashland.
Coloratura soprano Marilyn Mulvey,
a winner of the Metropolitan Opera National Finals, has joined the Victor
Borge Company in his show entitled
"Comedy in Music". She has previously sung professionally with the New
York City Opera Company, the Metropolitan Opera, the Philadelphia Lyric
Opera and in recitals with the London
Philharmonic, the Boston Symphony
and many other leading orchestras.
Limited seating is still available for
the PAC performance.
Borge will be playing a Bosendorfer
piano, which has rn keys instead of the
traditional sa. The $53,000 piano, which
the Paramount is having trucked in
from Indiana for the occasion, is considered the "Rolls Royce" of pianos",
according to Borge. "Only it has smaller
wheels," he laughs.
Kimball, the parent company, imports
Bosendorfers from Vienna.
A concert by the Danish-born Borge is
an evening rich in music, comedy and
showmanship. "After two hours on stage
with an audience equally divided in their
likes and dislikes of classical music, it
is incredible to hear them scream and
shout for more,'' says the comedian/pianist, who is now an American
citizen. "When I hear these cheers, I
think I could stay on stage until my voice
gave out completely."
Although Borge is noted for interrupting his classical pieces on the piano with
bits of humor, he does play some pieces
from start to finish. He feels that his informal style makes people feel more
comfortable with the music, and his
strong following among young people
helps to introduce more people to the
classics.
For ticket reservations, call the PAC
weekdays at 606/324-3175.
PETRY'S WINTER
VALUABLE COUPON
VALUABLE COUPON
TRASH
BAGS
10 COUNT
GLAD
EXTRA STRENGTH
DEUTRII 10's
FURNITURE
tRlY!
-----------·I
0
Recliners
Electronic Tuning
Living Room
LIIIIT I UPIIttS l-ll.U
WASHER : • Large Load Capacoty • 3 Automallc
Cycles • 3 Water Temps for Wash/ Ronse • Super
SUAGILATOA' Agotator DRYER : • Dry·Moser·
Control • 4 Dry1ng Temperatures • 3 Dry1ng Cycles
'Tmk
• Lonl Sognal• TUMBLE PRESS' Control
BIG 32 OZ.
Automatic Contrast/Color Trackong
Automatic Fone Tunong (AFT)
CHARCOAL
lllumonated channel indtcators.
Energy-efficient XtendedLtfe_chass ts.
STARTER
ggc
ONLY!
Wh>rlpool Model EHTt7tTK No·Frost Rel rigera·
tor • 17 0 t.u 11 CnJMCtly • Tclttured Steel Doors •
Prov•s•Oil lor opttonal tCE MAG IC
S-PIFCE DINETTES
Automahc Ice
Maker • Adju51.1ble Full Width s~elvcs • AdjuStable
Rollers • Jwce c.,r; H.1ck
10 DAYS ONLY-FEBRUARY 29-MARCH 10-FREE DELIVERY
Petry's Fumiture & Appliance
Martin
"Service Is Our Best Salesman"
259 c:~
285-3214
2-29-2t
I)
BIG 10 POUND
BAG
CHARCOAL
BRIQUETS
ONLY!
SALE PRICES GOOD
THRU MARCH 11, 1984
OR WHILE SUPPLIES LAST
GREAT VALUES
AT THE
SUNDRY STORE
NEAREST YOU!
5TDHCJ7 .
�Wednesday, March 7, 1984
The Floyd County Times
Section Three, Paae Four
IGA
GARLIC A
FRENCH BREAD
c
89
BAKED DAILY
16-0Z.
LOAF
15-0Z.
RAINBO
SNACK CAKES,
HONEY BUNS
CINNAMON BUN
SHOWBOAT
PORK
& BEANS
$
3/$1
.
TIDE
ARMOUR
TURKEY FRANKS
LAUNDRY DETERGENT
12-0Z.
PKG.
49-0Z.
BOX
79c
FIELD'S
COOKED HAM
12-0Z.$289
PKG.
IGA
13-0Z. BOX-KELLOGG
ci·:r:L C~':r:o
99 2/
c
·. GRAPE89c
FIELD'S
BACON
13-0Z.
CAN
NO SUGAR ADDED
18-0Z. JAR
JELLY ...
18-0Z. JAR
SMUCKER'S$13
STRAWBERRY
1-LB.
PKG.
9
32-0Z.-SIX VARIETIES
~~~~HETTI $1 59
SAUCE ....... .
16-0Z. PARAMOUNT
SWEET
PICKLES .....
$119
99c
a:ff~~ ---·····
ARCio"2/89c
5-0Z. PLANTERS
PEAS ..
BREYER
YOGURT
8-0Z. 5-VARIETIES
PARKAY
YELLOW MARGARINE
2/89c LB.59c
IGA
12-0Z.
ORANGEJ
2-LB.
TASTE 0' SEA
WHITI~
�ednesday, March 7, 1984
The Floyd Co
Section Three, Pase Five,
Times
ZESTA
CRACKERS
-\age
·
.
1
.
16-0Z.
BOX
.
10.5-0Z. CAN
CAMPBELL'S
FAYGO POP
VEGETABLE BEEF
FIVE FLAVORS
, ·.
SOUP
$
/89c
COUNTRY STYLE
7
SPARE$
RIBS .......
R CUT
·PORK
CHOPS
$229
POTATOES
·
WHITE
LB.
YEltow
sgc
ONIONS ..
LOIN END
PORK $
ROA T.
59
$
' -· 20-LB.
LB.
WHOLE
PORK LOIN ........
4/$1
. . RADISHES .
. 6-0Z. BAG
LB.
MUSHRooMs $}
$119
$14
9
PORK CHOPS...
LB.
QUART SIZE
LB.
THIN CUT
PORK CHOPS...
$159
09 PLAiiER·aACON $14
$1 ~
9
CHOPS ...·.
BEEF PATTIES........
ARMOUR-CHICKEN FRIED
LB.
LB.
FIELD'S
PLATTER
BACON
$
39
WEIGHT
. LB.
RANDOM
-ICE.. ggc ~~:TEO'SEABREADED
.$299
PERCH .......·... .
BUFFEfNDEiNNERS
:~:~::
RED EMPEROR
LB.
2
c .__
99 :;::'
6
9
C .·
GRAPES....
5/$1
SALAD
TOMATOES
CENTER CUT
29
LB.
!\ ·.
•
88 COUNT
WASHINGTON
STATE RED
· . ·· OR
GOLDEN DELICIOUS
APPLES ...
�WedneMtay, March 7, 1984
NOTICE OF
TO MINE
I~TE~TION
Pursuant to Application
Number 6:16-5091
I< 1l In accordance with the provision
of KRS 350.055, notice is hereby given
that J & J Coal Company, Inc., Box 21-A,
Harold, Ky. 41635, has filed an application for a permit for an underground
mining operation The proposed operation will affect a surface disturbance of
0.65 acres and will underlie an additional
140.87 acres located 0.5 miles west of
Craynor in Floyd county.
<2> The proposed operation is approximately 1.5 miles southeast from Mink
Branch Road junction with Ky. 929 and
located 0.5 miles west of :\link Branch.
The latitude is 37' 26' 12". The longitude
is 82' 40' 28".
(3) The proposed operation is located
on the McDowell U.S.G.S. 7 1 2 minute
quadrangle map. The surface area to be
disturbed is owned by. T & N Coal Company, Inc., Craynor, Ky. The operation
will underlie land owned by: Joseph
Mining Company, Inc. McDowell, Ky.;
Mary Howell, Craynor. Ky.: David
Akers, McDowell, Ky.
(4) The application has been filed for
public inspection at the Dept. for Surface
Mining Reclamation and Enforcement's
Prestonsburg Office, 431 South Lake
Dnve, Prestonsburg, Kentucky 41653.
Written comments, objections, or requests for a permit conference must be
filed with the Director of the Division of
Permits, 6th Floor, Capital Plaza
Tower, Frankfort, Kentucky 40601
This is the final advertisement of this
application; all comments, objections,
or requests for a permit conference
must be received within thirty (30) days
of today's date.
lt.
NOTICE OF
INTENTION TO MINE
Pursuant to Application
l':umber -t36-5148
I< 1l In accordance with the provision
of KRS 350.055, notice is hereby given
that Mink Branch Coal Company, Inc.,
Rt. 2, Box 40, Craynor, Ky., has filed an
application for a permit for an underground mining operation. The proposed
operation will affect a surface disturbance of 3.8 acres and will underlie an additional 252.0 acres located 0.50 miles
east of Craynor in Floyd county.
<2> The proposed operation is approximately 1.0 miles south from Mink
Branch Road junction with Ky. 979 and
located 0.5 miles east of Mink Branch.
The latitude is 37• 26' 14". The longitude
is 82° 39' 47".
<3> The proposed operation is located
on the McDowell U.S.G.S. 7 1 2 minute
quadrangle map. The surface area to be
disturbed is owned by: Mink Branch
Coal Company, Inc., Craynor, Ky.; Jay
E. Evans, Craynor, Ky.; Cephus McKinney, Craynor, Ky. The operation will
underlie land owned by : Mink Branch
Coal Co., Inc., Craynor, Ky.; Jay E.
Evans, Craynor, Ky.; John B. Evans,
Craynor, Ky. ; Kelly Hamilton, Craynor,
Ky.; Cephus McKinney, Craynor, Ky.;
Walker Tackett, Craynor, Ky.; Gary
Newsome, Craynor, Ky.; Blaine Slone,
Craynor, Ky.; Pearl Gillispie, Craynor,
Ky.; Boo Mitchell, Craynor, Ky.
(4) The application has been filed for
public inspection at the Department for
Surface Mining Reclamation and Enforcement's Prestonsburg Regional Office, 431 South Lake Drive, Prestonsburg, Ky. 41653. Written comments, objections, or requests for a permit conference must be filed with the Director
of the Division of Permits, 6th Floor,
Capital Plaza Tower, Frankfort, Kentucky 40601.
This is the final advertisement of this
application; all comments, objections,
or requests for a permit conference
must be received within thirty (30) days
of today's date.
lt.
The Floyd County Times
NOTICE OF
INTENTION TO MINE
NOTICE OF
INTENTION TO MINE
NOTICE OF
INTENTION TO MINE
NOTICE OF
INTENTION TO MINE
Pursuant to Application
Number 498-0168
In accordance with the provisious of
KRS 350.055, notice is hereby given that:
Hawkeye Coal Company, 1200 First
Security Plaza, Lexington, Ky 40507,
has filed an application for a permit for
a surface mining and reclamation
operation of approximately 207 acres
located SE of Endicott in Pike County
and Floyd County.
The proposed operation is approximately 5 miles SE from State Route
194's junction with Buffalo Creek Road
The latitude is 37', 39', 30". The longitude
is 82', 36', 06". The surface area is owned by Wanda Spears, Sellard Heirs,
Hawkeye Coal Company, Roscoe
Blackburn, Ray Taylor and Georgia
Blackburn.
The proposed operation is located on
the Thomas U.S.G.S. 7t2 minute quadrangle map. The operation will use the
mountaintop removal and contour mining methods with associated hollow fills.
The application has been filed for
public inspection at the Department for
Surface Mining Reclamation and Enforcement's Pikeville Regional Office,
P.O. 2289, Pikeville, Ky. 41501. Written
comments, objections, or requests for a
permit conference must be filed with the
Director of the Division of Permits, 6th
Floor, Capital Plaza Tower, Frankfort,
Ky. 40601.
NOTICE OF
INTENTION TO MINE
Pursuant to Application
Number 8:!6-50:10
In accordance with the provisions of
KRS 350.055, notice is hereby given that
Hayes, Inc., Box 159, Betsy Layne, Kentucky 41605, has filed an application for
a permit for an underground mining
operation. The proposed operation will
affect a surface disturbance of 5.25 acres
and will underlie an additional 38.,75
acres located 2.25 miles southwest of
Grethel in Floyd county.
The proposed operation is approximately .25 miles southwest from Rt.
2030 junction with Stonecoal Hollow Rd.
and located 75 feet south of Little Mud
Creek. The latitude is 37' 28' 06". The
longitude is 82' 41' 26".
The proposed operation is located on
the McDowell U.S.G.S. 71 2 minute quadrangle map. The surface area to be
disturbed is owned by Elkhorn Coal
Corp.
The operation will underlie land owned by Elkhorn Coal Corp. This operation
will affect an area within 100 feet of
public road Rt. 2030. The operation will
not involve relocation of the public road.
The application has been filed for
public inspection at the Department for
Surface Mining Reclamation and Enforcement's Prestonsburg Regional Office, 502 South Lake Drive, Prestonsburg, Kentucky 41653. Written comments, objections, or requests for a permit conference must be filed with the
Director of the Division of Permits, 6th
Floor, Capital Plaza Tower, Frankfort,
Kentucky 40601.
2-22-3t.
Pursuant to Application
NumbE'r 6:16-5055
I< 1 l In accordance with the provision
of KRS :3!10 055, notice is hereby given
that B J & L Coal Company, Inc.,
Craynor. Kentucky 41614, has filed an
application for a permit for an underground mining operation. The proposed
operation will affect a surface disturbance of 1.72 acres and will underlie an
additionall92.60 acres loC"qted 0.5 miles
southwest of Cra.J,<~Wt m Floyd county.
<2 J The !)"opOs'ed operation is approximately 1.50 miles southwest from Mink
Branch Road junction with Ky. 979 and
located 1.50 miles in Mink Branch. The
latitude is 37° 25' 54". The longitude is 82'
40' 29"
<31 The proposed operation is located
on the McDowell U S.G.S. 7 1 ~ minute
quadrangle map. The surface area to be
disturbed is owned by: Chester Newsome, Teaberry, Ky. The operation will
underlie land owned by: Chester Newsome, Teaberry, Ky.; Blame Slone,
Craynor, Ky.; Joseph Mimng Co., Inc.,
l\lcDowell, Ky.; Sie Hall, Craynor, ({y.;
John Hall, Craynor, Ky.; Donna Terry,
Teaberry, Ky.
(4) The application has been filed for
public inspection at the Department for
Surface Mining Reclamation and Enforcement's Prestonsburg Regional Office, 431 South Lake Dnve, Prestonsburg, Ky. 41653. Written comments, objections, or requests for a permit conference must be filed with the Director
of the Division of Permits, 6th Floor,
Capital Plaza Tower, Frankfort, Kentucky 40601.
This is the final advertisement of this
application; all comments, objections,
or requests for a permit conference
must be received within thirty (30) days
lt.
of today's date.
Pursuant to Application
Number 036-8031
In accordance with the provisions of
KRS 350.055, notice is hereby given that
Hiller Fuels, Inc., Star Route 2, Auxier
Road, Prestonsburg, Ky. 41653, intends
to transfer its permit to NERCO-Hiller
Coal Company, 4225 Malsbery Road,
Cincinnati, Oh. 45202 for a permit for a
crusher, washer, loader coal processing
facility affecting 7.78 acres located 0.5
miles south of Samson Station in Floyd
-County. The proposed facility is approxlmlltely 0.5 miles south from KY 1210's
junction with KY 404 and located at
Johnson Fork of Caney Fork. The latitude is 37° 26' 21". The longitude is 82'
50' 42". The surface area is owned by
Myrtle Johnson, Henry Johnson, C & 0
Railway <CSX Minerals).
The proposed operation is located on
the Martin U.S.G.S. 71~ minute quadrangle map.
The application has been filed for
public inspection at the Department for
Surface Mining Reclamation and Enforcement's Prestonsburg Regional Office, Prestonsburg Kentucky. Written
comments, objections or request for a
permit conference must be filed with the
Director of the Division of Permits, 6th
Floor, Capital Plaza Tower, Frankfort,
Kentucky, 40601.
All comments, objections and/or request for a permit conference must be
received within fifteen (15) days of today's date.
3-7-3t.
Pursuant to Application
Number 836-0085
In accordance with the provision of
KRS 350.055, notice is hereby given that
Renegade Mining, Inc. 2885, Pikeville,
Ky. 41501, has filed an application for a
permit for an underground mining ope- •
ration. The proposed operation will affect a surface disturbance of 16.37 acres
and will underlie an additional 64.85
acres located 1.50 miles southeast of
Osborn in Floyd county.
,
The proposed operation is approximately 1.0 miles northeast from State,
Route 1426 junction with Bush Branch
and located 0.25 miles northeast of Bush'
Branch. The latitude is 37' 28' 22". The
longitude is 82• 35' 41 ".
The proposed operation is located on
the Pikeville USGS 71h minute quadrangle map. The surface area to be disturbed is owned by Osborn heirs. The operation will underlie land owned by Osborn
heirs, Estill Salisbury, L & J McClanahan, Ruth & Green Tackett.
The application has been filed for
public inspection at the Department for
Surface Mining Reclamation and Enforcement's Prestonsburg Regional Qfice, 503 South Lake Drive, Prestons- •
burg, Ky. 41653. Written comments, objections, or requests for a permit conference must have attached a copy of
the newspaper clipping and must be
filed with the Regional Administrator of
the Prestonsburg Regional Office, 503
South Lake Drive, Prestonsburg, Ky.
41653.
This is the final advertisement of this
application; all comments, objections,
or requests for a permit conference
must be received within thirty (30) days
of today's date.
3·7·2t. -
This is the final advertisement of this
application; all comments, objections,
or requests for a permit conference
must be received within thirty (30) days
of today's date.
lt.
NOTICE OF
INTENTION TO MINE
Pursuant to Application
Number 636-5039
I< 1) In accordance with the provision
of KRS 350.055, notice is hereby given
that T & N Coal Company, Inc., Grethel.
Ky., has filed an application for a permit for an underground mining operation. The proposed operation will affect
a surface disturbance of 1.91 acres and
will underlie an additional 132.94 acres
located .5 miles southwest of Craynor in
Floyd county.
<2l The proposed operation is approximately 1.5 miles south from Mink
Branch Road junction with Ky. 979 and
located 1.5 miles in Mink Branch. The
latitude is 37' 25' 54". The longitude is 82'
40' 29".
<3l The proposed operation is located
on the McDowell U.S.G.S. 7 1 2 minute
quadrangle map. The surface area to be
disturbed is owned by: Blaine Slone,
Craynor, Ky . ; Dennis Reynolds,
Craynor, Ky.; Jack Hamilton, Craynor,
Ky. The operation will underlie land
owned by: Blaine Slone, Craynor, Ky.;
Hazel Hamilton, Craynor, Ky.; Dennis
Reynolds, Craynor, Ky.; Jack Hamilton,
Craynor, Ky.; Joseph Mining Company,
Inc., McDowell, Ky.; T & N Coal Company, Inc., Grethel, Ky.; David Akers,
McDowell, Ky. The operation will effect
an area within 100 feet of public road
Mink Branch. The operation will not involve relocation of the public road.
(4) The application has been filed for
public inspection at the Department for
Surface Mining Reclamation and Enforcement's Prestonsburg Regional Office, 431 South Lake Drive, Prestonsburg, Ky. Written comments, objections, or requests for a permit conference must be filed with the Director
of the Division of Permits, 6th Floor,
Capital Plaza Tower, Frankfort, Kentucky 40601.
This is the final advertisement of this
application; all comments, objections,
or requests for a permit conference
must be received within thirty (30) days
lt.
of today's date.
- - - ---------
NOTICE OF
INTENTION TO MINE
NOTICE OF
INTENTION TO MINE
Pursuant to Application
Number 436-0123
( 1) In accordance with the provisions
of KRS 350.055, notice is hereby given
that Omni Natural Resources, Inc., Rt.
6, Box 11-G, Manchester, Kentucky,
40962, has filed an application for a permit for a surface coal mining and
reclamation of approximately 16.2 acres
located 1 mile northeast of Hippo in
Floyd county.
(2) The proposed operation is approximately 11'2 miles north from state Route
SSO's junction with Prater Fork County
Road and located at the head of Prater
Fork of Brush Creek. The latitude is 37'
32' 27". The longitude is 82° 50' 48". The
surface area is owned by Morton Allen
heirs <mining and haul road) and
Gladys S. Allen, Aldred G. Allen Volney
Allen and Denneth F . Allen <h~ul road
only).
(3) The proposed operation is located
on the Martin U.S.G.S. 7~'.! minute quadrangle map. The operation will use the
contour and auger method of mining.
The application also includes a proposed land use change from the
undeveloped land premining land use to
a hayland or pasture post-mining land
use.
( 4) The application has been filed for
public inspection at the Department for
Surface Mining Reclamation and
Enforcement's Prestonsburg Regional
Office, 431 South Lake Drive, Prestonsburg, Kentucky 41653. Written comments, objections, or requests for a permit conference must be filed with the
Director of the Division of Permits, 6th
Floor, Capital Plaza Tower, Frankfort,
Kentucky 40601.
This is the final advertisement of this
application; all comments, objections,
or requests for a permit conference
must be received within thirty <30) days
of today's date.
lt.
Pursuant to Application
Number 636-5040
I< 1>In accordance with the provisions
of KRS 350.055, notice is hereby given
that T & N Coal Co., Inc., Grethel, Ky.
41631, has filed an application for a permit for an underground mining operation. The proposed operation will affect
a surface disturbance of 0.76 acres and
will underlie an additional 73.87 acres
located 0.5 miles south of Craynor, Ky.
in Floyd county.
<2> The proposed operation is approximately 1.50 miles southwest from Mink
Branch Road junction with Ky. 979 and
located 1.50 miles in Mink Branch. The
latitude is 37' 25' 54" . The longitude is 82'
40' 29".
<3> The proposed operation is located
on the McDowell U.S.G.S. 7 1 2 minute
quadrangle map. The surface area to be
disturbed is owned by: Blaine Slone,
Craynor, Ky. The operation will underlie
land owned by : Blaine Slone, Craynor,
Ky.; David Adkins, McDowell, Ky .,
Chester Newsome, Craynor, Ky . ;
Joseph Mining Co, McDowell, Ky.
<4 J The application has been filed for
public inspection at the Department for
Surface Mining Reclamation and Enforcement's Prestonsburg Regional Office, 431 South Lake Drive, Prestonsburg, Ky. 41653. Written comments, objections, or requests for a permit conference must be filed with the Director
of the Division of Permits, 6th Floor,
Capital Plaza Tower, Frankfort, Kentucky 40601.
Leonardo Da Vinci could draw with one
hand and write with the other, almost
simultaneously.
Section Three, Paae Six
This is the final advertisement of this
application; all comments, objections,
or requests for a permit conference
must be received within thirty (30) days
lt.
of today's date.
"Where the deer and the antelope
play" characterizes the Old West, right?
Not so, insists the March Reader's
Digest. That's not an antelope, its a
pronghorn- combining features of the
goat, sheep, giraffe, antelope and deer.
NOTICE TO CUSTOMERS OF
AUXIER WATER COMPANY OF
PROPOSED RATE CHANGES TO
BE FILED WITH THE PUBLIC
SERVICE COMMISSION
FEBRUARY 29, 1984.
PROPOSED RATES PER THOUSAND
lst thousand
$8.50
2nd thousand
4.75
Next 6 thousand
4.00
Next 6 thousand
3.25
Over 14 thousand
2.50
Minimum charge
8.50
The rates contained in this notice are
the rates proposed by the Auxier Water
Company. However, the Public Service
Commission may order rates to be
changed that differ from these proposed rates. Such action may result in rates
for consumers other than the rates included in this notice. Any corporation,
association, body politic or person may
request leave to intervene by motion
within thirty (30) days after notice of the
proposed rate changes is given. The motion shall be submitted to the Public Service Commission, 730 Schenkel Lane,
P.O. Box 615, Frankfort, Kentucky,
40602, and shall set forth the grounds for
the request including the status and interest of the party; and that copies of the
application may be obtained by contacting the applicant at Auxier Water Company, P.O. Box 99, Auxier, Kentucky,
41602.
2-22-3t.
NOTICE OF
INTENTION TO MINE
Pursuant to Application
Number 880-0018
( 1) In accordance.with the provisions
of KRS 350.055, notice is hereby given
that Martin County Coal Corp., Rt. 40,
Box 82-A, Inez, Ky. 41224, has filed an application for a combination permit for
surface and underground coal mining
and reclamation operations. The proposed· operation will affect a surface
disturbance of 475.0 acres in Martin
County and will underlie an addjtional
64.0 acres in Martin County, 2'Lo acres
in Pike county and. 5.1:0 acres in Floyd
county located l 1/2 miles northeast from
Brushy Fork road's junction with Ky.
Hwy. 194 at Thomas, Pike Co., Ky.
(2) The proposed operation is approximately 1112 miles northeast from
Brushy Fork road's junction with Ky.
Hwy. 194 at Thomas, Pike County, Ky .
and located on Wolf Creek, Cow Fork of
Wolf Creek, and Pesley Fork of
Maynard Fork of Wolf Creek in Martin
County, Ky . The latitude is 37" 41' 34".
The longitude is s2• 33' 13".
(3) The proposed operation is located
on the Thomas U.S.G.S. 7 1h. minute
quadrangle map. The operation will use
the contour strip and auger with hollow
fills, and underground method of mining. The surface area to be disturbed is
owned by Pocahontas Kentucky Corporation. The operation will underlie
land owned by Pocahontas Kentucky
Corporation, Mintie Blackburn, and
Lacy Marshall. This application also includes a proposed land use change from
the forestland pre-mining land use to a
combintation
forestland
and
pastureland post-mining land use.
(4) The application has been filed for
public ins~ction at the Department for
Surface Mining Reclamation and Enforcement's Prestonsburg Regional Office, 503 South Lake Drive, Prestonsburg, Ky 41653. Written comments, objections, or requests for a permit conference must be filed with the Director
of the Division of Permits, 6th Floor,
Capital Plaza Tower, Frankfort, Ky.
40601. Within 30 days of the final weekly advertisement. The written comment,
objection, or request for a conference
must reference in above permit applica2-22-3t.
tion number.
PUBLIC NOTICE
The deadline for buying City Auto
Stickers in the town of Wayland at the
cost of $10.00 each is March 15, 1984. A
penalty of $2.50 will be added after that
date on each sticker.
All Wayland city tax is due by the 15th
of March with a penalty of 2% added on
the tax after that date . The City Clerk's
office is open to the public on Tuesdays
from 9 a.m. until 1 p.m.
MARY BRADLEY, City Clerk
NOTICE OF
INTENTION TO MINE
Pursuant to Application
Number: 860-5023
In accordance with the pr~>Visions of
KRS 350.055, notice is hereby given that
National Mines Corporation, Box 12022,
101 East Vine Street, Lexington, Ken-.
tucky 40579, has filed an application for
a permit for an underground mining
operation. The proposed operation will
affect a surface disturbance of 3.13 acres
and will underlie an additional 135,49
acres located 2.7 miles southwest of Garrett in Knott county.
The proposed operation is approx:
imat~ly 2.0 miles southwest from Route
55o junction with Route 7 and located o.7
miles southeast of Jones Fork. The latitude is 37' 26' 37". The longitude is 82'
50' 05".
The proposed operation is located on
the Wayland U.S.G.S. 7 1 2 minute quadrangle map. The surface area to be
disturbed is owned by Glen Click. The
operation will underlie land owned by
Glen Click, Barbara Conley, Gordon
Howard, Arnold Fitch, National Mines
Corporation, Charles and Juanita
Thornsburg, James and Francis Allen.
This application also includes a proposed land use change from the forest land
pre-mining land use to a pasture land
post-mining land use. The operation will
affect an area within 100 feet of public
road Triplett Branch. The operation will
not involve relocation of the public road.
The application has been filed for public inspection at the Department for Sur.face Mining Reclamation and Enforcement, Jackson Regional Office, Howell
Heights Building, Route 2, Box 500,
Jackson, Kentucky 41339. Written comments, objections, or requests for a permit conference must be filed with the
Director of the Division of Permits, 6th
Floor, Capital Plaza Tower, Frankfor~,
Kentucky 40601.
This is the final advertisement of this
application; all comments, objections,
or requests for a permit conference
must be received within thirty (30) days
of today's date.
lt.
NOTICE OF
INTENTION TO MINE
Pursuant to Application
Number 836-5028
In accordance with the provisions of
KRS 350.055, notice is hereby given that
Powell Branch Coal Company, P.O.
Drawer 367, Harold, Kentucky has filed
an application for a permit for an underground mining operation. The proposed
operation will affect a surface disturbance of 10.28 acres located 112 mile southwest of Tram in Floyd county. The mine
will underlie an additional 198.49 acres
located 1.2 miles southwest of Tram. The
latitude is 37' 33' 55". The longitude is 82'
38' 55".
The proposed operation is located on
the Harold U.S.G.S. 71~ minute quadrangle map. The surface area to be disturbed is owned by Emmett Lawson and
G.C. Blair. The operation will underlie
land owned by Emmett Lawson, S.
Thurman Harvel, G.C. Blair, Eugene
Lawson, James A. & Archie B. Dale,
Mrs. H.D. Gibson, John & Dora Kidd,
Samuel, P .T., & Rozina Lewis, Marvin
& Marie W. Lewis, Alex Gardner, and
Clay Justice.
The application also includes a proposed land use-change from the Mountain Terrian pre-mining land use to a flat
bench post-mining land use. The operation will affect an area within 100' of a
public road, Powell Branch Road. The
operation will not involve relocation of
the public road .
The application has been filed for
public inspection at the Department for
Surface Mining Reclamation and Enforcement's Prestonsburg Regional Office, Prestonsburg, Ky . 41653. Written
comments, objections, or requests for a
permit conference must be filed with the
Director of the Division of Permits, 6th
Floor, Capital Plaza Tower, Frankfort,
Kentucky 40601 .
2-29-3t.
NOTICE OF
INTENTION TO MINE
Pursuant to Application
Number 436-5180
In accordance with the provisions of
KRS 350.055, notice is hereby given that
Buck Coal, Inc., Branham Village, Star
Route 2, Prestonsburg, Ky. 41653, has filed an application for a permit for an
underground mining operation. The proposed operation will affect a surface
disturbance of 8.23 acres and will
underlie an additional 435.79 acres
located 3 miles east of East McDowell
in Floyd county.
The proposed operation is approximately 2 miles southwest from St. Rt.
979's junction with Hamilton Branch Rd.
and located 0.1 miles south of Left Fork
of Hood Fork. The latitude is 37° 26' 36".
The longitude is 82' 41' 15".
The proposed operation is located on
the McDowell U.S.G.S. 7% minute quadrangle map. The surface area to be
disturbed is owned by David Akers.
The operation will underlie land owned by David Akers, Mary Howell,
Joseph Mining Co., Blane Stone, Chester
Newsome, Kelly Hamilton, Sie Hall,
John Hall, Donna Terry.
The application has been filed for
public inspection at the Department for
Surface Mining Reclamation and Enforcement's Prestonsburg Regional Office, Prestonsburg, Ky. Written comments, objections, or requests for a permit conference must be filed with the
Director of the Division of Permits, 6th
Floor, Capital Plaza Tower, Frankfort,
Kentucky 40601.
3-7-3t.
NOTICE OF
INTENTION TO MINE
Pursuant to Application
Number (436-8000)
(1) In accordance with the provisions
of KRS 350.055, notice is hereby given
that Bailey Mining, Box 177, Bypro, Kentucky 42612, has filed an application for
a permit for a washer coal processing
facility affecting 9.0 acres located 1.5
miles south of Weeksbury in Floyd
county.
(2) The proposed facility is approximately 3.5 miles south from Hwy. 122
junction with Hwy. 466 and south of Left
Beaver Creek. The latitude is 37-18-32.
The longitude is 82-42-{)4". The surface
area is owned by Collins and Mayo.
(3) The proposed facility is located on
the Wheelwright U.S.G.S. 7% minute
quadrangle map.
(4) The application has been filed for
public inspection at the Department for
Surface Mining Reclamation and Enforcement's Prestonsburg Regional Office, 431 South Lake Drive, Prestonsburg
Kentucky 41653. Written comments, objections, or requests for a permit conference must be filed with the Director
of the Division of Permits, 6th Floor,
Capital Plaza Tower, Frankfort, Kentucky 40601.
2-29-3t.
PUBLIC NOTICE
On February 29, 1984, Secretary of the
Cabinet summoned Left Beaver Coal
Company, P .O. Box 159, Drift, Kentucky
41619, to appear at 10:00 a.m. on Thursday, March 29, 1984, in Room Gil of the
Capital Plaza Tower, Frankfort, Kentucky, to determine if surface mining
permit No. 236-8021 should be revoked or
suspended.
Any person may petition in writing for
leave to intervene in this proceeding
pursuant to the procedure set forth in 405
KAR 7:090E Section 11. The petition
should be sent to the Docket Coordinator, Office of General Counsel, Fifth
Floor, Capital Plaza Tower, Frankfort,
Kentucky 40601.
lt.
ADVERTISEMENT FOR BIDS
The Floyd County Fiscal Court at its
regular meeting on February 17, 1984,
authorized the County Judge/ Executive
to advertise for bid at the next election
to be held in 1984 for the Primary
<whether it be in May or August), the
printing of the ballots to be used in the
voting machines here in Floyd County.
All interested persons may contact the
County Judge/ Executive for the necessary specs. The Court reserves the right
to reject any and all bids.
FLOYD COUNTY
JUDGE/ EXECUTIVE
John M. Stumbo
2-22-3t.
NOTICE
It has come to the attention of the
Prestonsburg City's Utilities Commission that persons are using fire hydrants
that have been set out in the county for
their own personal use, such as watering their cows, filling swimming pools,
filling their wells, washing down their
business places, parking space and
sprinkling water in front of business
places and homes to keep down dust. In
the future we ask all people to report
anyone using fire hydrants for any
unathorized use other than fighting a
fire. An estimate of over 300,000 gallons
of water was used to fight the fire at the
Allen Lumber Company on Saturday
February 25, and the water and fire
hydrant used belonged to the Prestonsburg City's utilities and without this
water and hydrant many more business
places and homes could have been lost.
The Prestonsburg City's Utilities has to
maintain these hydrants from now on at
no expense to the property owners. Also,
the water used to fight fires is not charged for as this is a free service to the
Community. In the future if this practice
of unauthorized use is not stopped we
will remove the fare hydrants. The Prestonsburg City's Utilities Commission is
not required to furnish any fire protection or fire hydrants out of the City limits
of Prestonsburg. Thank you.
PRESTONSBURG CITY'S
UTILITIES COMMISSION
Bill H. Howard,
Superintendent
3-7-2t.
NOTICE OF HEARING
Notice is hereby given that a hearing
will be held on the 8th day of March, 1984
at the hour of 1:00 p.m. in the Conference
Room of the Floyd County Annex, Prestonsburg, Kentucky. The purpose of this
hearing is to determine if Thelma
McAskill, a resident of P.O. Box 69, Garrett, Kentucky 41630, should receive an
entertainment license. All interested
parties should be present.
ARNOLD TURNER, JR.
Floyd County Attorney
lt.
NOTICE OF HEARING
Notice is hereby given that a hearing
will be held on the 8th day of March, 1984
at the hour of 1:00p.m. in the Conference
Room of the Floyd County Annex, Prestonsburg, Kentucky. The purpose of this
hearing is to determine if Jeff Mullins
and Archer Boyd, residents of Stanville,
Kentucky 41659 should receive an enter
tainment license. All interested parties
should be present.
ARNOLD TURNER, JR.
Floyd County Attorney
lt.
NOTICE OF HEARING
Notice is hereby given that a hearing
will be held on the 8th day of March, 1984
at the hour of 1:00 p.m. in the Conferenc
Room of the Floyd County Annex, Prestonsburg, Kentucky. The purpose of this
hearing is to determine if Brenda
Tackett, a resident of Box 580, Galveston, Kentucky 41629, should receive an
entertainment license. All interested
parties should be present.
ARNOLD TURNER, JR.
Floyd County Attorney
lt.
NOTICE OF HEARING
Notice is hereby given that a hearing
will be held on the 8th day of March, 1984
at the hour of 1:00 p.m. in the Conference
Room of the Floyd County Annex, Prestonsburg, Kentucky. The purpose of this
hearing is to determine if Delmar F.
Johnson, a resident of P .O. Box 125, Hi
Hat, Kentucky 41636, should receive an
entertainment license. All interested
parties should be present.
ARNOLD TURNER." JR.
Floyd County Attorney
H.
�Wednesday, March 7, 1984
The Floyd County Times
Celebrate Birthdays
Panel Okay's Bills Affecting
Both School Boards and Pupils
By MARY ANN ROSER
<In The Lexington Herald-Leader>
Two bills that could have a dramatic,
effect on Kentucky school boards and
students were endorsed last week by the
Senate Education Committee.
The more controversial measure,
Senate Bill202, would allow the state to
intervene in "academically bankrupt"
school districts. The committee voted 6-1
in favor of the bill.
SB 169, which won unanimous approval, would require the testing of
dents, with remedial help for pupils
'ho fail to master basic skills. It would
cost an estimated $25 million over a twoyear period.
Both measures, included in budget
packages proposed by Gov. Martha
Layne Collins and Superintendent of
Public Instruction Alice McDonald, now
go to the full Senate for a vote.
McDonald and several others, including Lexington attorney Edward
~iehard, chairman of the Prichard
11bmmittee on Academic Excellence,
urged passage of both bills.
"This legislation will go far and
perhaps farther than any single
legislative proposal to bring about accountability,'' Prichard said, referring
to SB 202. "It won't cure all the ills ...but
it will put school districts on the way to
improvement "
If the bill is passed, the state-for the
first time- could force academically
ficient school districts to improve,
McDonald said.
Don't Be Satisfied With An Old
Flat Root shoe box looking trailer
COME TO
CHEAP'S
In Flemingsburg, Ky. and choose
from more than 80 new mobile
homes that look like and are built
like homes
CHEAP'S have Bargains
like these:
12 1r 14 Wldes
House Type Construction
Double Wldes
House Type Construction
14x80- and Expando-
If you buy a new home and
Don't consider Cheap's prices
and quality, you'll lose money.
Don't be misled. No dealer In Kentucky has the quality and selection that
you Will tlnd at CHEAP'S.
FREE
300 Mile Delivery and set up
on foundation. We Trade For
Anything 0t Value
Open After Church on Sunday
For Your Inspection
CHEAP'S
Flemingsburg, Ky.
Phone 606 845-2261
:l-7·13t .
Section Three, Paae Seven
Under current laws, the state sets
academic requirements but cannot force
districts to meet those standards,
Prichard said. "You gave us the hole but
not the doughnut," he said.
What the bill would do is give the state
"a management structure and clear-cut
way to hold districts accountable,"
McDonald said.
Under SB 202, a school district that
does not meet the state's academic performance standards would be required
to work with the Department of Education on an improvement plan. The
department would monitor the school
district and offer assistance in complying with the plan, McDonald said.
But if a district fails to cooperate, the
state superintendent and Kentucky
Board of Education would be empowered to intervene in the local
district.
In extreme cases, state officials could
remove the local board and
superintendent.
If taxpayers are going to be asked to
' 'dig down into their pockets to contribute to a school system," they deserve
SB 202, Prichard said.
The state Department of Education
already has the personnel to do the job,
McDonald said.
Asked how the department would
identify deficient districts, she said a
variety of factors- including student
test scores, dropout rates and attendance records- would be considered.
Representatives of the groups that
would be affected by the legislationWilliam Nallia, executive director of the
Kentucky Association of School Administrators, and Larry Powers, director of governmental relations for the
Kentucky School Boards Associationsaid they were not opposed to the bill.
" It is in much better form now than
it was originally," Powers said after the
meeting. Initially the bill would have
held individual board members and
superintendents personally liable for
deficiencies, he said.
And Nallia told the committee that SB
202 would "contribute greatly to causing
local districts to pull themselves up by
the bootstraps."
SB 169 would have a similar effect,
McDonald said. The testing bill goes
hand-in-hand with the " academic
bankruptcy'' proposal, she said, because
it would establish how well students are
learning.
Under SB 169, the state Department of
Education would set a " minimum level
of basic skills" to be achieved by all
Kentucky students. Pupils in grades
three, five, seven and eight would be
tested on those skills each year, and
those who have fa iled to master basic
skills would be placed in remedial
programs.
The testing program, scheduled to
take effect in the 1985-86 school year if
approved, also would require eighthgraders to master the skills as a basis
for promotion.
" We can no longer afford to let our
children drift from grade to grade,"
McDona ld said.
The testing would not replace the
Comprehensive Test of Basic Skills, a
nationally standardized test given to
students in grades three, five, seven and
10.
In other action, the committee approved SB 223, which would require local
school board members to have high
school diplomas and report election contributions to the Kentucky Registry of
Election Finance.
8 DAYS
LEFT!
ONE WEEK
IT'S THE
REMAINING!
FINAL WEEK
OF JENNY WILEY'S GREAT
DAYS
-0LEASING
BEAT THE DEADLINE-COME IN NOW!
Mr. and Mrs. John Henry, of Minnie,
celebrated birthdays at the home of Mr.
and Mrs. Lloyd Gullett, of Paintsville.
Relatives attending: Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd
Gullett and son, Lloyd Calvin; Mr. and
Mrs. Kenneth Henry and son Kevin,
from Minnie; Mr. and Mrs. Jack Hill
and son Matthew, of Chillicothe, Ohio ;
Mrs. Karen Brown and Nicole, of Columbus, Ohio; Phillis and Lisa Henry, of
McDowell; and Lenore Gullett, of
Paintsville.
DEALS WILL NEVER BE BETTER!!
HURRY!
Since December 1982, 23 drivers of the
United Parcel Service facility in Prestonsburg have not had a single accident
among them while on the job. That
equals more than 5500 driver-days, one
of the best in the history of the nationwide package delivery company.
"We place great emphasis on safety
in all of our operations, but this record
is exceptional," said Bob Johnson, who
manages the Prestonsburg center. "It's
amazing to think of all the hours these
people have spent on the road, day in
and day out, in good weather and bad,
without so much as a scratch or dent."
The top driver of the group is Barney
Walker, of Prestonsburg, who has gone
mroe than 16 years without an accident.
Other leading individual performances
include Manual Howard, of Salyersville,
with 13 years safe driving ; Harvey
Underwood, of Paintsville, with 12
years, and Henry Welch, of Salyersville,
with 10 years.
$250~~
$133° 0 :,~
48-MO.
• 15,000 MILES PER YR.
*
$12,500
4-SP. STD. BED
JENNY WILEY MAKES
YOUR FIRST PAYMENT!
SEE OUR NEW DISPLAY OF
CUSTOM VANS BY
VAUEY VANS & CEDAR CREEK.
/1J..1t""-t~'!~.111......._
HURRY!
• 25650 PICKUP
DELIVERS ANY NEW
ON LEASE!
LEASE A N~W
TOYOTA VAN
~~~HASE
P'burg UPS Center
Reaches Safety Mark
NOW THRU MARCH 15.
• 4X4's
• SRS's
• XTRA CABS
WE MUST
l£ASE 30
CARS BY
• WE ALSO HAVE A GMC JIMMY (LOADED)
a 1984 Cherokee GMC Pickup (auto),
a New 1983 Chevy Pickup (auto).
e~~~~~1MARCH 15!
SEE THE NEW TERCEL
414 WAGON!
CALL THE
BARGAIN
CHAMPION_!
• 1983 CELICAS••• $8,995
2 IN STOCK (LOADED), $10,25q
• 1981 CRESSIDA
• 1981 CELICA
• 1982 COROLLA SR5
886-3861,
AND OTHERS!
Billy and Dallas.
Buy a Curtis MaU1es rnv and get our
4 year warranty until next Leap'tear!
CARD OF THANKS
The family of Fred Hall takes this opportunity to thank everyone for their
help in the loss of our loved one: those
who sent food and flowers, prepared the
grave or just spoke comforting words.
We deeply appreciate you alL A special
thanks to the F a mily Home Care operator, Liddie Hall, and the Ha ll Funeral
Home for being so kind.
THE FAMILY
lt.
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Footnotes
-
'By HAROLD COOLEY
Smoking is a habit with little or nothing to recommend it. Yet stopping is seemingly almost impossible
once the habit has seized you. The withdrawal symptoms are very real. Since the craving for nicotine seems
to settle in the kidneys, one very real aid in stopping is a
small, white pill containing lobeline sulphate. By taking
this pill according to the package instructions, it helps
displace the nicotine collected in the kidneys. It flushes
it away, replaces it with a non habit forming product
and eliminates the desire for cigarettes. The package instructions also suggest taking regular and frequent
showers to wash away the nicotine that is expelled
through the skin surface and pores.
Our pharmacists at COOLEY APOTHECARY are
proud to enjoy our outstanding r eputation for furthering
and maintaining the highest ethical standards of our
profession. As a result we have found over the years that
many of our customers recommend us to their
neighbors. When your physician prescribes medication
for you or a member of your family have him call us. We
are located at No. 2 Town Center Bldg., 886-8106. Master
Charge and Visa . Hours : Mon.-Fri., 9-5:30, Sat., 9-4.
HANDY HINT :
Lobeline sulphate is said to have an astounding effect on smoking habits .
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HOME ENTERTAINMENT CENTER
�Wedneeday, March 7, 1984
The Floyd County Times
(',\JW OF 1'11,\NKS
GIVE SOMEONE A LIFT
.1END A BOUQUET OF BALLOONS
ALL OCCASIONS- DELIVERED
The family of Gilda Crager wishes to
thank all who were so kind and con
siderate during our time of grief. We
want to thank those who sent food and
flowt:>rs and the nurses and staff at the
1\lcDowelt Appalachian Regional Hospi·
tal for their help. We especially thank
the ministers. Weyman McGuire. Bud·
dy Jones. Mabry Holbrook. and the Hall
I<~uneral Home for being'so kind. All
your kindnesses were greatly appreci·
a ted
JOIN IN, LEARN, ENJOY
Introduction to Stained Glass
Instructors: Bill and Kris Creech
Beginning Tuesday, March 15
7-9 p.m.-Six weeks
PRE-REGISTER NOW.
Location: The Bridges COld Hall Bros. Funeral Homel Martin
COME AND SEE OUR ASSORTMENT OF STAINED
GLASS, WINDOWS, LAMPS, AND UNIQUE COLLECTABLES.
OPEN 9-5 WEEKDAYS-CUSTOM AND REPAIR WORK AVAILABLE
For more information call 285·9888
Sponsored by:
Christian Appalachian ProJect
2·29·21.
Section Three, Paae Elsht
KMA Joins in Fee Freeze
The president of the Kentucky
Medical Assoctation, James B.
Holloway. Jr .. M.D., announced last
week that KMA applauds and joins the
American Medical Association in urging
physician members to freeze their fees
for a one-year period .
"I know that many of our members
have already demonstrated their com·
mitment to keep patients' bills as low as
possible. Our announcement today is a
continued opportunity for Kentucky
physicians to demonstrate that we are
willing to do everything we can to hold
down escalating health care costs,"
Holloway said. The KMA President
stated that Kentucky physicians have
historically been committed to providing
their patients cost effective care of the
highest quality.
In the past year and a half, when
many Kentuckians became unemployed
or uninsured, physicians, through their
county medical societies and individually. established programs to provide such
patients with low cost or no cost health
care. "I urge all Kentucky physicians to
lake into account the financial cir·
cumstances of their patients---e;pecially
the unemployed, uninsured and
elderly- and to accept reduced fees
when warranted," Dr. Holloway said.
In making these announcements,
Holloway said, "Some five years ago,
this Association urged its members to
keep their fees below the cost of living
mdex. Subsequently, we advised our
members on methods to lower health
care costs: we helped organize the Ken·
tucky Voluntary Effort on Health Care
Costs : we encouraged the formation of
health care coalitions: and. through our
corporate visitation program. we visited
industry officials across the state and of·
Cered advice and assistance on health
care cost programs. More recently,
special programs have been set up for
the unemployed and uninsured. Today's
announcement is a way of saying our
commitment is as strong as ever, and
our efforts are ongoing."
Dr. Holloway pointed out that while a
physician fee freeze is significant and
will have some effect on overall costs,
physician fees remain a small portion of
total health care expenditures, con·
stituting only 19 percent or less of all
health care costs.
Food Co-op Is Formed
To Serve 3-County Area
Those mterested in getting high quality food at excellent prices may be interested in the "Good Day Food
Cooperative".
The purpose of the food C()-()p is to provide high quality foods at the lowest
possible prices. Foods that are available
through the co-op are a wide selection
of cheeses, natural bakery products
made from whole grains or unbleached
white flour, fresh produce, a selection of
natural juices <unsweetened), natural
peanut butter, raw honey, maple syrup,
unrefined oils, dried fruits, nuts, seeds,
beans, whole grains, whole grain flours,
natural chips, crackers, herb teas and
vitamins. In some of the above items a
selection is offered between organic and
non-organic.
The cooperative is a not-for-profit
organization. A small, one time
membership fee is charged and members, in turn, only pay 5% to 10% above
cost on all co-op purchases. Orders are
placed at monthly meetings and food
can be picked up one to two weeks later.
Food stamps are accepted according to
food stamp regulations.
For more information call, in Floyd
county, 285·9357 between 12 and 6 p.m.;
in Johnson county, 7~. after 6 p.m.;
in Pike county, 432-2232, between 2 and
8p.m.
Bright Eves• gourmet cat food has added protein and
vitamins to help give your cot bright, sparkling eyes. And
special oils to help give him a rich shiny coat. cats love 11!
Correction to Obituary
Of Mrs. Ethel C. Bailey
In the report of the death of Mrs. Ethel
Collins Bailey in last week's Times, the
names of her parents were incorrectly
listed. She was the daughter of Mrs.
Dollie Spradlin Collins, of Melvin, and
the late Henry Collins.
We regret the error.
PRICES EFFECTIVE MAR. 7 THRU MAR. 11.
WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO ·LIMIT QUANTITIES
AND CORRECT PRINTING ERRORS.
age
TV DINNERS ... :....
50000 126024
~-------------------------------------------~
7ge
FACIAL TISSUE ..
$16
9
MORTON POT PIEs2/89c COOKIES ............ .
$14
9
$ 219
PEANUT BUTTER ..... .
TENDERLOIN ..... .
19
3/$1
ARMouR TREET $1 .
BISCUITS ......... .
$4
09
4/$1
POTTED MEAT ..
INSTANT COFFEE .....
2/89C
$129
VIENNA SAUSAGE ..
AJAX DISH LIQUID
7
g
e
PERFECTION FLOUR ..age
TUNA IN OIL ........
$1
09
age
LOG CABIN MEAL ......
BATH TISSUE .....
11-0Z. MORTON
175-CT. KLEENEX
19-0Z. NABISCO CHIPS AHOY
19-0Z. JIF SMOOTH
12-0Z. CHICKEN
TEXAS STYLE
18-0Z. MAXWELL HOUSE
22-0Z. BTL.
·
3-0Z. ARMOUR
5-0Z. ARMOUR
6-0Z. STAR-KIST
4-ROLL PKG. WHITE CLOUD
5-LBS.
EXTRA-STR£NGTH
TABLETs
TYlENOL
60-CT
$3.49
�Wednesday, March 7, 1984
Section Four, Paae One
The Floyd County Times
COKE, DIET COKE,
8/16-0z.
TAB, SPRITE ................. ~~~~~~---·
59
$
PLUS
DEPOSIT
$119
HOllY FARMs-GRADE A
DRUMSTICKS ....
u..
9C
PICNIC SHOULDER.... 9 u..
$
1
19
PATTIES .. .. ..... . .. .. .. .
WHOLE SMOKED
KINQSFORD-BF, VEAL
CHUCK, PORK
·.
Lb.
PUTTER STYLE
SLICED BACON..
U.S.D.A. CHOICE
CHUCK STEAK...
WILSON'S CORN KING
$13 9
Lb.
$13 9
Lb.
89 C
CHUNK BOLOGNA .....
Lb.
99
WIENERS ............ .
12-0Z. WILSON'S CORN KING
C
C
NECK BONES ......49u..
FRESH PORK
CALIFORNIA
.
HEAD
LEnUCE
sgc
GOLDEN RIPE
BANANA
4lBS.$1
4
9
C
PEARS... ...... LB. ~
WASHINGTON
PORK STEAK .. $11 80
$1280
PORK CHOPS ..
$1680
PORK CHOPS ..
1
ASSORTED
CENTER CUT
SO EXTRA
SO EXTRA
FREE QUALITY STAMPS
FREE QUALITY STAMPS
WITH THIS COUPON AND PURCHASE OF
2-8-PAK PKGS. CASEY'S
MBURGER or HOT DOG au~~·
\\~
WITH THIS COUPON AND PURC:HASE OF
WITH THIS COUPON AND PURCHASE OF
1-16-0Z. BOX PREMIUM
SALTINE CRACKERS
ANY PAIR NO NONSENSE
HOSE
SO EXTRA
200 EXTRA
FREE QUALITY STAMPS
WITH THIS COUPON AND PURCHASE Of
'
ANY 2 BOXES LITTLE
DEBBIE'S SNACK CAKES
'\~~ )
FREE QUALITY STAMPS
WITH THIS COUPON AND PURCHASE OF
r $50 ORDER OR MORE
FLORIDA
69
CELERY......
c
~
�Wednesday, March 7, 1984
Monroe Duff
Monroe Duff, 74, of Hueysville, died
Friday at the McDowel Appalachian
Regional Hospital following a long illness.
A retired miner and farmer, he was
born January 1, 1910 in Breathitt county, a son of the late Zach and Nancy
Neace Duff.
He is survived by a daughter, Mrs.
Dorothy Hatfield, of Grand Rapids,
Mich.: two brothers, Rev. James Duff
and Green Duff, both of Hueysville;
three sisters, Mrs. Lula Sexton, of Garrett, Mrs. Becky Ann Wooten and Mrs.
Dulcine Allen, both of Dwarf, and two
grandchildren.
Funeral services were conducted at10
a.m. Sunday at the Church of God at
Garrett, with ministers Hobert Hurt and
Chester Halton officiating. Burial was
made in the family cemetery at Hueysville under directions of the Hall Funeral
Home
Pallbearers were Harold Duff, Wade
Duff, Gordon Lafferty, Bobby Sexton,
Larry Sexton, and Willie Duff.
Richard D. Samons
Richard D Samons, 73, of Martin,
died Friday, at Our Lady of the Way
Hospital, Martin, following a long illness.
He was born February 25, 1911 at Martin, a son of the late Malcom and Ann
Jarrell Samons. He was a retired coal
miner. a member of the U.M.W.A., and
was also a member of the Church of
Christ for 30 years.
He is survived by his wife, Shirley
Crum Samons; a son, Richard Samons,
Jr., of Martin; six daughters, Evelyn
Hall, Melvin, Anna Mae Miller, Lora
Samons, Louvina Samons, Nancy Jean
Amburgy and Betty Lou Dutton, all of
Martin; 14 grandchildren and seven
great-grandchildren.
Funeral services were conducted
Monday at 11 a.m at the Arkansas
Church of Christ with the Revs. Bennie
Blankenship and Tommy Spears officiating. Burial was made in the family cemetery at Arkansas Creek, under
direction of the Hall Funeral Home.
Vina Pack
Funeral services were conducted Friday at 10 a.m . at the Hall Funeral Home
Chapel, for Vina Pack, 83, of Drift, who
died last Wednesday, at the Riverview
Manor I\ursing Home, following a long
illness.
A daughter of the late Stanley and
Minerva Stanford Pack, she was born
March 24, 1900 in Johnson county.
Survivors include a brother, John
Pack, and two sisters, Mrs. Zina Sexton,
and Mrs. Lizzie Shelton, all of Drift.
Elder Woody Pack officiated at
funeral services and burial was made in
the Drift cemetery.
114 Give Blood
At Center, Here
During the month of January there
were 114 donors at the Prestonsburg
Donor Center. Top honors go to the Prestonsburg Job Corps Center with 29
donors and The First Commonwealth
Bank with 22 donors. Thanks is also extended to the following groups for their
continued support: the Shriner's Trail
70's and Sons of the Desert, McDowell
First Baptist Church, Brandeis, Mine
Safety and Health Administration. the
Prestonsburg Kiwanis Club. Prestonsburg City Employees, the Prestonsburg
Fire Department, Our Lady of the Way
Hospital, Cabinet of Human Resources,
IGA Supermarket and 36 individuals
who donated directly to the Floyd County program.
The students at the Job Corps Center
earned their thirteenth concert, January
17. To date they have donated 570 pints
of blood. Thanks and congratulations to
the following: Robert Guiton, William
Leonard, Jerry Owens, Henry Richardson, Russell Adams, Henry Richardson,
Kenneth Thompson, James Floyd,
Stephen McKinney, Brian Sargent,
William Burchett, David Stearns, Eddie
Stephens, Willie Anstead, Mark Mills,
Ricky Johnson, Edgar Debosky, Tim
Reynolds, Bennie Fitch, Greg Williams,
Jan Long, Frank Potter, Bobby Mullis,
Jeffery Fitch, Jeffery Ford, Ronald
Roth. Jeffery Arnett, Scott Brady, David
Merritt, i\'ick Anderson, Brian Hoff,
Frank Lindsey, Mike Lee, James
Rivers. Welton Bush, Floyd McDonald,
Jerry Owens, Billie Yeubanks, William
Leonard, Shannon Blakey, Eddie Biford
and Paul Pittman.
The Prestonsburg Donor Center is a
part of the Central Kentucky Blood
Center which serves in forty-four counties and supplies the forty .hospitals in
Central and Eastern Kentucky. There is
a need for 170 donors every day in this
area to maintain an adequate supply for
the patients.
If you have never donated, the hardest
step is making the first appointment.
Your blood donation means a better
chance for life and quick recovery by
some patient.
The Floyd County Times
Obituaries
Lemon Mullins
Lemon Mullins, 53, of Dema, died
Thursday at the University of Kentucky
Medical Center, in Lexington, following
a long illness
He was a son of Troy and Nebraska
Gibson Mullins, of Dema, aod was born
March 20, 1930. He was employed as a
diesetter with Fisher Bodies Division of
General Motors in Fairfield, Ohio.
In addition to his parents, he is survived by two sons, Gary and Timothy Lee
Mullins, both of Okeana, Oh ; a daughter, Mrs. Saundra Stivers of
Shelbyville; six brothers, Elme~ and
Homer Mullins, both of Mousie, Charles,
Larry, and Michael Mullins, all of
Dema, and Glen Mullins, of Hindman;
six sisters, Mrs. Willa Dean Willis, of
Dayton, Oh., Miss Opal Mullins, Mrs.
Glenda Fay Hall, and Mrs. Maxine Cox,
all of Dema, Mrs. Wanda Brosamer, and
Mrs. Versie Mae Williams, of Huntington, Indiana, and six grandchildren.
Funeral services were conducted Sunday at 10 a.m. at the Dry Creek Regular
B~p~ist Church with Regular Baptist
m1msters officiating. Burial was made
in the Whitt Martin cemetery at Dana
under direction of the Hall Funeral
Home.
Bobby Ray Henson
Bobby Ray Henson, 48, of Ligon, was
killed last Wednesday afternoon when
his car struck a tree after leaving Ky.
979 about a half mile south of Beaver.
Henson died at the scene of the accident
which occurred around 4:30p.m., according to state police at the Pikeville post.
Born July 15, 1935, he was a son of
Oscar Henson, of South Bend, Ind., and
Mrs. Loucreasy Slone, of Ligon. He was
employed as a coal truck driver.
In addition to his parents, he is survived by one son, Stanley Henson, of
Beaver; five daughters, Kimberly
Dawn, Constance Lee, and Lillian Renee
Henson, all of Beaver, Drema Jo Henson, of Pikeville, and Tonya Kay
Barnett, of Salyersville; two brothers,
Ronnie Henson, in Germany, James
Henson, of Ligon, and four grandchildren.
Funeral services were conducted at 10
a.m., Saturday, at the Samaria Regular
Baptist Church at Teaberry by Regular
Baptist ministers. Burial was made in
the Burton cemetery at Ligon undel
direction of the Hall Funeral Home.
Troy Sparkman
Troy Sparkman, 83, of Pippa Passes,
died Monday, February '1:1, at Our Lady
of the Way Hospital, Martin.
A disabled miner and a minister of the
Mt. Olive Regular Baptist Church, he
was a son of Billy and Catherine Jacobs
Sparkman.
Surviving are, five sons, George
Sparkman, of Taylor, Mich., Harlis
Sparkman, of Detroit, Mich., Ishmel
Sparkman, of Kendallville, Ind., Sampy
Sparkman, in Indiana, and Vansel
Sparkman, of Garrett; four daughters,
Inis Jacobs and Vina Tuttle, both of Garrett, Allie Jacobs, of Estill, and Allene
Slone, of Hindman; one brother, John
Sparkman, of Pippa Passes; a sister,
Allie Bentley, of Lackey; 38 grandchildren and 21 great-grandchildren.
Funeral services were held at 1 p.m.
last Friday at the Mt. Olive Regular
Baptist Church with Regular Baptist
ministers officiating. Burial was made
in the Isom Slone cemetery at Pippa
Passes under direction of the Hindman
Funeral Home.
James Meade
James Meade, 56, of Louisa, died
Wednesday, February 29, at the
Humana Hospital in Louisa, following a
short illness. He was born June 14, 1928
in Harold, Ky., and was a son of the late
Hibbert and Kit Mulkey Meade.
He is survived by his step-mother,
Imogene Meade, of Columbus, Ohio;
three brothers, Robert and Ray Meade,
both of Louisa, Denver Meade, of
Chillicothe, Oh.; two half-brothers,
Dewey Joe Meade, of Lucasville, Oh.;
Gordon Meade, of London, Oh ; one
sister, Tiny Callahan, of Columbus, Oh.;
seven half-sisters, Linda Sue Miller, of
Lancaster, Oh., Ressie Case, of Ashville,
0~ .. _Delvia Slone, of Huntington, West
V1rgmia, Sylvia Akers, of Louisa, Hrenda -kay-Gaines, Wanda Meade, and
Dorothy Jean Watson, all of Columbus,
Ohio
Funeral services were conducted
Saturday, at 10 a.m. at the Little Salem
Regular Baptist Church at Dana, with
ministers of the church officiating.
Burial was made in the Layne cemetery
at Harold, under direction of the Hall
Funeral Home.
A rodent's teeth never stop
growing. They are worn
down by the animal's constant gnawing.
Marie Hancock
Marie R. Hancock, 76, of Betsy Layne,
died Friday, at Our Lady of the Way
Hospital, following a long illness.
She was born November 4, 1907 in
Floyd county, and was a daughter of the
late J.C. and Celestia Eley Roberts.
Preceded in death by her husband,
Herbert Hancock, in 1968, she was a
member of the Church of God at Water
Gap.
She is survived by three sons, Thomas
E. Hancock, of I vel, Clyde F Hancock,
of Pomona, Calif., Bobby R. Hancock,
of Betsy Layne; a daughter, Mrs. Jacqueline Cline, of Domansville; a brother,
Warren G. Roberts, of Lima, Ohio; five
grandchildren, two step-grandchildren,
seven great-grandchildren and two
step-great-great-grandchildren.
Funeral services were conducted
Monday at 11 a.m. in the Hall Funeral
Home Chapel with Rev. Elmer Davis
and Claude Goble officiating. Burial was
made in the Davidson Memorial
Gardens at Ivel, under the direction of
the Hall Funeral Home.
Nannie Hall
Nannie Hall, 38, of Craynor, died
Wednesday, February 29, at the Pikeville Methodist Hospital following a
short illness.
Born September 18, 1945, a daughter
of Orbin Moore, of McDowell, and the
late Martha L. Moore, she was a
member of the Independent Baptist
Church.
In addition to her father, she is survived by her husband, Rudolph Hall; three
daughters, Kathy Moore and Janet Harrington, both of McDowell, Ky., Angie
Conn, of Dana, a brother, Charlie Moore,
of Bainbridge, Indiana; two sisters, Anna Rose Bentley, of McDowell, and
Augustine Frabutt, of Ashtabula, Ohio,
and two grandchildren.
Funeral services were conducted Friday, at 10 a.m. at the Little Ros~
Regular Baptist Church at McDowell,
with Regular Baptist ministers officiating. Burial was made in the Jack
Hall cemetery, McDowell, under direction of the Hall Funeral Home.
Dorthey Stanley
Former Betsy Layne resident, Mrs.
Dorthey Stanley, 50, of Detroit, Michigan, died Friday at the Providence Hospital in Southfield, Michigan, after an
extended illness.
She was a daughter of the late William
and Roxy Workman Hall, and was born
April 10, 1933 at Betsy Layne.
Survivors include her husband, Lear
Stanley; a son, Robert Stanley, and a
daughter, Linda Stanley, both of
Detroit; three brothers, Billy Hall, of'
Betsy Layne, Lloyd and Claude Hall,
both of Indiana; two sisters, Mrs.
Rozella Hall, of Betsy Layne, and Mrs.
Ormagene Holbrook, of Melvin.
The Rev. Cohen Campbell officiated
at funeral services conducted 10 a.m.
Tuesday, at the Calvary Baptist Church,
at Betsy Layne. Burial was made in the
Davidson Memorial Gardens, at Ivel,
under direction of the Hall Funeral
Home.
Vanderp_ool Victim
At David, Monday
The ninth mine-related death in the
state occurred Monday, when James
Monroe Vanderpool was electrocuted
outside a mine of the Nerco-Hiller Mining Company at David.
The accident is reported to have happened when Vanderpool, a foreman at
the mine, withdrew an aluminum rod
from a container causing it to come in
contact with a power line.
Born at Hippo, May 26, 1951, he was
a son of Monroe and Mary Smith
Vanderpool.
In addition to his parents, he is survived by his wife, Jacqueline Wireman
Vanderpool; four brothers, Fred, Clyde,
and Carl Vanderpool, all of Hippo, and
Lowell Vanderpool, of Willard, Ohio, and
a sister, Mrs. Jewell Cook, of East Bernstadt, Ky.
Funeral services will be conducted
tomorrow <Thursdayl.at 10 a.m. at the
Philadelphia Regular Baptist Church at
Hippo by Regular Baptist ministers, and
burial will be made in the Vanderpool
cemetery at Gunlock under direction of
the Hall Funeral Home.
Phone 886-2774
RON LAWSON, Broker
Phone 886-9100 • Pikeville 432-0194
Jonas Hamilton
-WANTEDLady to live In, do light house keeping
and core tor elderly lady (not Invalid).
New home, nice location, good pay.
886-8961
SANDY VALLEY
MONUMENT
& BUILDING STONE CO., Inc.
874·2273 • ALLEN, KY.
Mrs. Myrtle Galliher
"THE AREA'S OLDEST ESTABUSHED
MONUMENT RIIM."
Mrs. Myrtle Galliher, 63, of Sunbury,
Ohio, died Sunday at her home.
A member of the Little Ruth Old
Regular Baptist Church in Marengo,
Ohio, she was a licensed practical nurse
with the Sunbury Nursing Home. She
was twice married, first to Azzie Hall,
who died in 1958, and later to Harlow
Galliher, who preceded her in death in
1978.
She is survived by her mother, Mrs.
Mary Jane Hunter, of Sunbury; five
sons, Bill Galliher, Gary and Gene Hall,
all of Sunbury, Steve Hall, ofjlew London, Oh., and Elmer Hall, of G'Renwich,
Oh.; a daughter, Mrs. Shirley Ann
Leisure, of Columbus, Oh.; three
brothers, B.J. Hunter, of Centerburg,
Oh., Craig Hunter, Jr., of Milvia, Ky.,
and Marvin Hunter, of Sunbury; five
sisters, Pearl Carroll, of Sunbury, Barbara Sue Kidd, of Harold, Virginia
Green, of Sunland, Calif., Gergie
Mature, of Michigan, Verlie Roese, of
Columbus, Oh.; 19 grandchildren and six
great-grandchildren.
Funeral services were conducted
Tuesday at the Devore Funeral Home at
Sunbury with the Rev. James M. Curry
officiating. Burial was made in the Sunbury Memorial Park.
Family house with three bedrooms, two baths and family room with coal/wood
b..-ninc sto.e.
PRIME COMMERCIAL PROPERTY
James P. Wells, 72, formerly of Floyd
county, died February 28, at the Porter
Memorial Hospital in Valparasio, Indiana, following an extended illness.
Born April 6, 1911, in Harlan county,
he was the son of the late Preston and
Mary Jane Wells and was a retired
miner.
Surviving him are three sons, David,
Halford, and Paul Wells, all of
Valparasio, Ind.; three sisters, Stady
Howard, of Harlan, Oma Hill, of
Cumberland, and Ella Edwards, of
Lackey; eight grandchildren, and one
great-grandchild .
Funeral services were conducted
Saturday at the Tri-City Funeral Home
chapel at Benham. Kentucky. Burial
was made in the Maggard cemetery in
Letcher county.
Herbert Bean, said to be about 90
years old, who was a former water well
driller in the Betsy Layne area, died last
Wednesday in a nursing home in Barboursville.
The body had not been claimed at Hall
Funeral Home as of yesterday afternoon, <Tuesday), and graveside services
and burial will be made in the Martin
cemetery, Thursday.
lust off U.S. 23 at Stanville. Lots of potential for various uses. If you have a
plan, tlis could be the land. Approximately three acres with 446 front feet. Call
for more information.
BEST QUAUTY MEMORIALS
QUICK, EFFICIENT SERVICE
AND INSTALLATION
SEE OUR LARGE DISPLAY OF
COLORED 8r GRAY GRANITES
Five-room house, priced under $20,000, with hilltop view.
REDUCED! REDUCED! Lovely home consisting of fo..- bedrooms, 2Y. baths,
l80C)-sq. feet of living space, and two-car prage, on 1.25-acres.
LOCATED ON OLD U.S. 23
IN NEW ALLEN
- -t!
WANTED!
Donations for S.A.F.E.-Spouse Abuse Center
(Shelter tor the Abused and Family Emergencies)
Jim Wells
Herbert Bean
47 SOUTH WE DRIVE • PRESTONSBURG
•
Jonas Hamilton, 50, of Homer,
Michigan, formerly of Teaberry, died
Tuesday, February 28, in the Oakland
Memorial Hospital at Marshall, Michigan, following a short illness.
He was born April2, 1933 in Teaberry,
and was a son of the late Andy and Stella
Newsome Hamilton. He was a grinder
for the Brooks Foundry.
He is survived by his wife, Dina
Newsome Hamilton; three sons, Roy
and Otis Hamilton, both of Homer,
Michigan, Ralph Hamilton, of Battle
Creek, Mich.; three daughters, Mrs.
Carol Hamilton, Mrs. Peggy Hamilton,
and Miss Wanda Hamilton, all of
Homer, Mich.; six brothers, Nelvin and
Foster Hamilton, both of Teaberry, Clement Hamilton, of Grethel, Andy Hamilton, Jr., Gratho Hamilton, and Stonie
Hamilton, all of Albion, Mich.; two
sisters, Mrs. Marie Faye Hamilton, of
Teaberry, Mrs. Caretta Hamilton, of
Homer, Michigan, and nine grandchildren.
Funeral services were conducted
Saturday, at 10 a.m. at the home of John
B. Hamilton, Teaberry, with Regular
Baptist ministers officiating. Burial was
made in the Family cemetery, at Teaberry, under direction of the Hall
Funeral Home.
• 4 sets bunk beds
• 4 bedside tables
or
···
I. . .
m::::::
••••••
•····•
CARTER FUNERAL HOME
Section Four, Paae Two
• 8 single beds
• Dlnelle set tor 8
• Radio
• 4 chests or dressers
• Television
• Desk and chair
• Any item needed to set up a comfortable home
• ALL DONATIONS ARE TAX DEDUCTIBLE •
FOR PICK-UP CALL 886-8546 (8 TO 4:30),
886-8572 OR 886-8928, EXT. 52 AFTER 5:00 P.M.
······
I.·.·.·.
m
::::::
·!·!·:
•·•···
�•
The Floyd County Times
Wednesday, March 7, 1984
Section Four, Pase Three
-·-~
Located on Depot Road in Paintsville. Hours: 7:30 a.m.-5:00p.m., Sat. 7:30-1:00
ALL SALES STRICTLY CASH!
DELIVERY AVAILABLE AT
Sorry , No Other Lumber Dealers Plea !>e 't
SLIGHT ADDITIONAL COST
We Reserve The Right To Limit Qua ntiti es .
~~::==:=~--:::::~=:?~~~~=-=----. --~·::.....---:-~--=-.-~~~ ·---;-----=· 6t?£s-=;_~
... 1Andersen
10'
8'
Size
12'
14'
16'
I
•
2x4Con. KD
1.42 1.78 2.14 2.49 2.85
2x6Con. KD
2x8 Y.P. KD
2.14 2.68 3.22 3.75 4.29
2.98 3.72 ,,,46 5.21 5.95
2x10Con. KD
3.99 4.98 5.98 b.98
2x4x7 85 8
Canst
$1
KD
\I
v2
..
30% Off
Sheathing •...••..... 5 2.89
', · Tuff
PRESSURE TREATED LUMBER
14'
OurStock
INSULATION
PRODUCTS
· Cla(k Storn•
23
1 x12 Sheathing •••••••• Per Lin . Ft. • 29 1/2
1 x10 Sheathing •••••••• Per Lin . Ft. •
Rlnsulat ;•'a
Sheathing •.......... 5 5.65
16'
8'
10'
2x4 Treated
1.79
2.33
3.16
3.68
4.2CJ
2x6Treated
2.77
3.45
4.92
5.74
6.64
2x8Treated
3.89
4.98
7.65
2x10Treated
5.3CJ
6.98
8.80 10.25
8.74
11.88
4x4 Treated
3.6CJ 4.98
1.6CJ
7.84
8.96
12'
. .
7.97
Precuts •••••••••••••
Size
~
Andersen
Windows
5 8' Tuff R hsulot'''Cl
5
6.72
Sheathing ......•.... 6.75
3
4 " Tuff
Rlnsulot1"0
Sheathing •••..•..... 5 7.1 q
3 '." K .B R 11
Fiberglass •..••• P0r S·1
1•
.14
6 ' K . B. R 19
Fiberglass ••..••. p,, sq , •• 24
2.66
:
Fiberglass
12-2 Wire With Ground •••••• 250 Rolls 5 19.88
2x3 Metal Wall Box ••.••••••.•••••••• 69
• 4x4 Octagon Metal Box ••••••••••.•••• 86
100AMP14Circulf
Breaker Box ••..•••.••.••• with cover 5 48.44
200 AMP 30 Circuli
Breaker Box ••••••••••••• with cover 5 116.96
,;.,:~KEL B!~EBOA!~ HEA~~.~5
l \:
J ) '23.48 $28.35 '32.49 '39.7
All Colors
Shingles Bundle
5
Square ••••
s6.66
19.98
151b.
Felt •••••• • Rou8.88.
Galvanized Roofing
26" -~V
7'
I
8'
12~
10'
14'
3.99 4.99 6.19 7.59 8.79
l'-ll\lll1tBIJIIIIl11 rt"\1tfl
./
PANELING
11\\MJ .f&1 IJJD•ti\1 ~l\VIJ-IriA"fj IIRf/A\11
•
ROOF
COATINGS
Prefintshed
Inside Corners ••.••••.•.... 95e
8
5-Gal . Fibered
Roof Coating ••
5-Gal . Mobilastic
Prime Siding ••••••• $4.88
White Insulated Single Hung~\ luminum Windows W /Screen
Nindow
Rough Opening
Price
2030
1'11-7/8"x2'11-3/4"
$39.98
2830
2'7-7 /8"x2'11-3/4"
$47.55
2044
1'11-7/8"x4'3-3/4"
$47.29
2844
2'7-7 /8"x4'3-3/4"
$58.84
~030
2'11-7 /8"x2'11-3/4"
$51.39
3044
2'11-7 /8"x4'3-3/4"
$61.28
II\\MJ·f~11JrD•II\II~\81JI --IA~fllf/1\11
DOORS
Birch Prehung Doors (With Casing) 1/6 thru 3/0 ••••••• $50.89
'
111\tiJJ. . .IWf,.la\t.I.M~ ~JiaiA~fj
:-- -_~ w--_
12· a(.
$12.69
7/16"
Waferboard ••• $5.88
•
BIG SAVINGS ON
5
Fibered Alum.
5
9.88
33.33
PLUMBING
Fiberglass Tub Units •••••••••••..••.•••••••• (All Colo rs)5 195.00
White" A" Grade Closet Combination ••••••••••.••.•• '39.25
40 Gal. Elec. Water Heater ••••••••.• w tnsutoflon K•r($14 'IS Value) '106.45
30 Gal. Gas Water Heater ..•.••••.•. w tnwto110n Kt1 1St4 95 vatuc 1 s 109.85
500 Gallon Septic Tank •••••••••••••••••..••••...••• '128.88
4"x10' Solid & Perf. Plastic Pipe •••...•••••••••••••• PerJT 5 2.10
Lavatory Faucet ••••..•••••.••••••••••••••••••• w Pop·Up '22.46
Sink Filler .•.......•..•• • • • ••• • •. • • • ••••.••.••. w Spray '25.59
Tub & Shower Filler •.••..••..•..•...••••••••••••••.• 5 32.25
1 Gal.
INOLJSTR I F S
Nails ................ $14.89
PLYWOODS .
40% OffList
STA-RITE
No 8 CC 5Ll lb box
-v
VANITIES
5 8"x4x8
Pine •••••••••
*
13/0 & 2/8-6 Panel Metal Clad Unit ..•.•..•.. : •...••
$99.98
:3/0 & 2/8-9 Lite Metal Clad Unit •••••••••••.•••••••• $139.98
3/0 & 2/8 Diamond Lite Prehung •••••••....•••••••••• $67.89
3/0 & 2/8 Step Lite Prehung •••••••.•••••••.••••••••• $78.89
,6/0 Insulated Glass Sliding Door •••.••••••••••••••• $144.44
Patio Door Screen •••••.••.••.••...•.•••.•.•••••••• $23.75
6/0 Atrium Patio Door ••••••••••••...•••.•••••••••• $399.85
Atrium Screen •.••.•....•........•.•••••••••••••••• $29.65 ,
3/0 & 2/8 Self Storing Storm Door ••••••••••••••••••• $44.99
13/0 & 2/8 White Cross Buck Storm Door ••••••••••••••• $65.99
2/8 Full Louvered Byfold ••••••••••••••••••••••••••• .• $33.65
4/0 Full Louvered Byfold ••••••••••••••••.••••••••••• $53.95
5/0 Full Louvered Byfold •••••••••••••••••••••••••••• $59.50
ltll/~\,l\_1.~11l\III1UJ 11111)11
Prefinish Moldings
7 16"x 12' x16
Wood Double Hung Windows, Insulated Glass
Glass Size
Rough Opening
Price
20x16
2'2"x3'6"
$51.98
24x16
2'6"x3'6"
$'58.98
28x16
2'10"x3'6"
·$ 62.98
32x16
3'2"x3'6"
$67.98
24x24
2'6"x4'10"
$70.98
28x24
2'10"x4'10"
$73.98
Wood Bow Windows, Insulated Glass
Series
Rough Opening
Price
No. 33
5'11"x4'9-7/8"
$249.95
No. 43
7'9"x4'9-7 8"
$333.55
Storm Windows- 2 Tracks- Standard Size •..•••••...• $16.89
***********
1•1'
SIDING
WIN DO WSll'all\IIJIIB'J 1\111)11 rt"\ltfl
Lauan Prehung Doors (With Casing) 1/6 thru 3/0 •••••• $34.89
Red Oak ••••••••••••• • • • • • • • • • • • 1 8 Hardboard $4.88
Spice .• •••••••••••••••••••••••••••• 1 8" Wood s6.49
Mohave ••••••••••••••••••••••••••• 3Mi1Wood '7 .75
Brandy Birch •••••••••••••••••••••• 5 32"Wood s7 .99
Rustic Birch ••••••••••••••••••••••• 5 32"Wood s8.59
Oak Grove Laurel ••••••••••••••••• 5 32 'Woods8.56
Gulf Cypress •••••••••••••••••••••• 5 32"Woods8.88
Nutmeg Burlux •••••••••••••••••• 5 32· wood$10.25
Country Roads Autumn ••••••••••• s 32 wood $10.59
8' Prefin1shed
Outside Corners •••••.... s1.29
~ · ~~-==~--~_-- -~-;y;:<·~- ~,
1\lf/~\, 1\-11'-ll,IIIIBJ1\111)11 rt"\1tfl"v.,j
ROOFING
ELECTRICAL
March 10
thru
March 17, 1984
Sta-RitePump • .•... • • • 3 4HP DeeporSholloww lonk $224.44
Sta-Rite Pump. •. • • • • • • <..ub""''"blr~ 3 4HP w ConrroiBox $288.66
Sta-Rite Pump •••• • • • • <..ubrn"'"bt .. 1 2HP VJ Control Box $244.44
rt'\JC
B• 'J'J
!N() f
,
�..
Wednesday, March 7, 1984
Section Four, Paae Four
The Floyd County Times
(Reproduced below is page 8 of the 21st issue of The Floyd County Times
published Nov. 4, 1927)
•
FLOYD COUNTY TIMES
PAGE EIGHT .
'"'' c: A& !.
--VOTE FOR--
-Political Adv.
Fitzpatrick For State Senato.r
OBITUARY OF MRS.
SAMUEL M. RICE
__
~.
EAST POINT
Lackey School News
What Kind of Water
ARE YOU USING!
<Last week's con·espondence)
!Last week's correspondence)
The biology class was out on a field
Rev. Angell, of Tenne.;.;ee, 1s con-. Mrs. Samuel M. Ri~, nee Miss sarah
ductipg a revival here and is preach- F. Price, daughter of Hamilton and trip Monday afternoon.
1
ing some wonderful sermons. The Rev- 'Eveline Price, of Oil Springs, Ky., was
The Science Club is preparing a proerend Parker, of Paintsville will have I born December 26, 1864, died October gram for Friday, October 28. The..even-··
charge of the dedication Sunday.
126, 1927, aged 62 years and 10 months.
ing·s prog.ram is for the com_munity.
Mrs. G ..B. Hughes and children, of
She was married to Samuel M. Rice
Garrett s basket~all team 1s schedul1
Carver, were here recently, ca!lmg on October 16, 1879. To this union were jed to play Lackeys boys Saturday, Oc- I
friends and relatives.
I born five children: Mattie Lee Rice, tober 29.
I
Mrs. Malcolm Hager, Mrs. L~cy H3.fs.·tAugust 30, 1880; Prank F. Rice, NovemThe boys and girls of .La.ckey High j
mon and Mrs. George Robmson were be:- 1, 1882; Lee Roy Rice, January 23, School were out for a p1cmc last Sat1
shopping in Paintsville Monday.
t895; Marvin Rice, October 15, 1896, urday afternoon. Messrs. Ishmael Trip- l
Those from here who attended the who only liveft 15 days; Orban D. Rice, lett and T. W. Eversole and other ·
party given by Miss Louise Johnson, of , September 11, 1901.
teachers were with' them and reported
Hager Hill. Saturday mght, were Miss- t Her beloved husband departed this an enjoyable time.
es Louise Baldridge, Grace Elkins, ~lary ·life November 6, 1906, aged 47 years, 6
A s•udy,-hall has been organized for 1
1
Badgette, Mildred Music, Norma :Moles, months and 24 days.
the students here at night. The stuMessrs.. Jimmie Baldridge, Glenn and
She leaves to mourn her loss three dents have the privilege of coming to
THE FOLLOWING IS A COPY OF A LETTER FROM DR. STEELE, DIRECTOR OF
Floyd Moles, Virgil Bowling and Fran- sons, Frank, Roy and Orban, and one the school building and studying for a ·
THE KENTUCKY STATE BOARD OF HEALTH:
cis Harmon.
~ daughter, Mrs. J. M. Morell, of Pres- period of two hours. The study hall is
Fr&ok Moles' health is in a serious tonsburg, Ky.; also two brothers, Clint under supervision of Ishmael Triplett,
Prestonsburg, Ky., October 31st, 19.27
condition. He returned to Martinsville, Rice, CO'f!eyville, Kansas, Winnie Price, principal of Lackey School. The Ulan I
To
the
Honorable
:l\layor
and
Council,
Ind., Monday.
of Oil Springs, Ky., and five · sisters, . promises valuable results.
,
1
Mnl. J. H. Smith returned Saturday Mrs. Leander Patrick, of Paint Lick,
MlSs Amma Robinson was called to 1
Prestonsburg, Kentucky.
from Cincinnati, Ohio.
Ky.; Mrs. Sherman Rice, o! swamp Dinwood on account of the illness of
After having -made a car~ful inspection of your city water supply, we find that
Mrs. J. Moles and sons Francis were Branch, Ky.; Mrs. David Rice, of Den- , her mother.
it
is
Yery· unsafe for use by the people, and -urge that immediate steps be taken to remedy
here saturday, the guests of Mrs. s. M. ver, Ky.; and Mrs. w. H. Herald, of, Four students, Ervin Conley, MarMusic.
Pennsylvania.
guerite Conley, Ella Triplett and Noria I
this condition.
Miss Edith Green came home TuesShe became a member of the Liberty Triplett, are attending high school
We recommend a model\{\ filter plant to be installed as early as possible.
day evening. She has been In the south Baptist Church shortly after her mar- here. They are walking from up on .
almost three years.
riage, and lived a devout Christian, a Jones Fork, Knott county, but are do- :
We do now condemn said water supply, but do not advise cutting off the w~.,
1
Delbert Perry, of Paintsville, was here · devoted wife and a loving and a.ffec- ing excellent work.
:
but as an emergency measure we urge that all possible precautions be taken to see tha.t all
Tuesday.
I t1onate mother. That she was htghly
l
water from said city supply b'3 boiled before being used for drinking, OR FOR ANY
Mr. and Mrs. Earl Blair ha\'e built a respected and greatly loved was demon- PIPE LINE FOR NEW
!
HOUSEHOLD PURPOSE, waJ!> ing vegetables, utensils, etc.
nJoe Uttle home on the w. w. Green 1 strated by the infiuence which she
GAS LINE INTO TOWN
~1. and a~e now residing there. wielded.
A carload of pipe has arrived and Is
l\1. W. STEELE, a Director
;~ sold their property in Paintsville !
__
being unloaded for the gas line to be
Kentucky State Board of Health.
~'beorge Lewis
ILLYENE JEWEL RICE
laid from Prestonsburg to the LouisLevi George is some better.
Illyene Jewel Rice, daughter of Le- ville Gas and Electric Company line,
GRANT RICE, Director
· roy and Beatrice Rice, born December from which gas is procured for this
Floyd County Health Department.
Chevrolet Begins Factory
18, 1922, died october 26, 1927, aged four place.
:
----------------·----Construction In Atlanta years, 16 months and 18 days. She was
-an qnly child and the jewel of the
De~it, qct. 31.-An indication that home and leaves to mourn her loss, a
-(be . . .mobile industry is looking for- heart-broken father and mother, and a
IIALLOWE'EN
ward toward increasing prosperity was host c;,f friends.
Monday night last, Hallowe'en was
DOted here today with the announce- I
duly observed with the usual celebra-.
WE ARE THE ORIGINAL FILTERED WATERVANDIDATE.S; AND PLEDGE·
ment by the Chevrolet Motor Company
tions, although of a more sane nature
OUR EFFORTS FIRST OF . ALL TO THAT END. ·OUR NEW HIGH SCHOOL
that C{)nstruction will start immediatethan usual. Everybody, being possesseli
BUILDING MUST HAVE FILTEREB WATER. Even if we would take a chance t,}n
lJ on a new Chevrolet assembly plant
-of the spirit of the occasion, joined in
our own lives and health, WE CANNOT AFFORD TO DO SO WITH THE 'LtVE8 AN&
1D Atlanta.
GHOSTS' SHENANIGANS
the sports, masquerading in•such garbs
HEALTH OF OUR CHILDREN.
The Atlanta plant has been made
!vel was paraded on Hallowe'en night that one could not tell to whm'n he was
YOU HAVE KNOWN US MANY YEARS; and KNOW THAT WE WILL CARRY
QeeeSS&ry to adequately meet the re- by the worst mob of "ghosts" in its his- talking from "Adam's of! ox." Only 1
qutrements of the rapidly growing de- ! tory. A calf, a table cloth, and parts of mischievous pranks were played and
OUT OUR PROMISES.
mall<! for Chevrolet cars in the South butldings were painted with "black oil nothing of a damaging nature was done
and at the same time to relieve the by the mob of "spooks." W. D. Steele, to property, save the usual advertising
Clnctnnati plant, which has been op- 1 teacher here, on going to the school placed on store tronts and show win- 1
erating on an overtime basis to care found the coal scattered, parts of seats dows.
Your Friends and Next City Councilmen
for southeastern· business as well as scattered and an outbuilding turned
__
that from more immediate territory.'' over the hill. After finding out the I
FIRE AVERTED
CITY IMPROVEMENT TICKET
The Atlanta plant will serve particular- families represented in this mischievous
On last Sunday morning shortly afly Georgia, Florida and parts of Ala- party, he notified the heads of some of ter dawn, at Lackey, the alarm of fire
A. C. CARTER
CURTIS MAY
bama and South Carolina.
these families, who replaced 'the out- went forth, when it was discovered
DAVE RICHMOND
B. M. SPURLOCK
When completed e:!rly next s;J::ing building.
. that the city "bastile" was on fire.
CHAUNCEY HYDEN
BALLARD BRANHAM
tbe. plant wlil represent an investment
! Timely arrival of the bucket brigade
1
--------------of more than $2.500,000, covering acreG . C. See was in Allen last week.
~oon subdued the flames, which in a
age, buildings and equipment. Thirty- I W. D. Steele was in Prestonsburg very few moments would have envel- ,
VOTE UNDER THE BEE HIVE, AND W A TC.H THE FILTERED WATER FLOW!
1
one acres of ground have been taken Monday on business.
oped the entire business part of the
over for the Atlanta layout. Building
W. K . Steele, Sr., was in !vel Tues- town. For a little while it looked as if
plans call for 410,000 square feet of day.
the entire town woul,d be swept away,
~oor apace, including plants, office and
J . K . Stratton went to Betsy Layne but the h eroic efforts of the citizens juveniles of our public school enter- entire field. Several rigs are working, 1Coal Corporation at Fteminc. and ~·
driveway shed.
Tuesday.
soon brought the blaze under control tained with a program both instructive and a new one is being erected on cently took the prize for havinlr U.·
· The plant will be one of the largest
C. C. Hughes left Sunday night for and thus prevented a disastrous fire.
and entertaining, featuring the Hal- Jones' Fork, about two miles from \}ere, best-kept store of any of the cbaJn be-.
aDd Dnest of its kind in the south with Big Shoal, where. he is employed by the
-·longinl:' to the Elk Horn Coal ~·
'
• capacity of 350 cars a day. Work will James Hatcher COal Company as
BRIDGE PARTY
lowe'en season, with decorations and and the belief prevails that this locality · tion.
will prove a good strike. The produc- 1
__
be provid~ tor 1,200 people and the painter.
On 'J)lursday evening of last week costumes suitable for the occasion.
~ Will _exceed $8,000 daily.
I John Jarrell is cutt.ng up corn this Mrs. Dave Cooley had as her guests
mg w:!lls already here are belng well
VISITS HOME
1
Completion of the Atlanta proJect week.
Mrs. Chas. D. Schlegel, wife of our
COAL BUSINESS
cated for and the Pllll}Ping continues. : Rev. Henry Or11Dth and ,fNXlll1 ~
WUl provide the Chevrolet Motor COm- I
superintendent, Mrs. Tom Sexton and
All the coal mines in this secti':ln I
Sunday morning for a three weea·.;
pall)' with eight assembly plants thru- J HALLOWE'EN PARTY AT
Mrs. George Hay, of Wayland, and a
have been a little inactive during the
BRIDGE PAINTING
stay among friends and o. relatives
oat the country and an export plant at
PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH most enjoyable game of bridge proved
Our iron bridge spanning the cr.e ek Lowmansville, ~J&.
BJoamfteld, New Jersey. Domestic as- 1
to be the chief entertainment of the past two weeks, due to causes over
1
-.eeaalaly plants are located in Flint, 1 A Hallowe'en party was given at evening's gathering. Of course, the de- which the operators have no control, here to the railroad station is being I
'
•
-----------------------------------------------------
4 .
-
-
...
-
_ _ 4 ...
,~
Kentucky State Board of Health Officer Condemns Prestonsburg Water Su,,y
I
I
•
------
GLO
Did you ever try to take a bath just after a raiD~ Was ft reaDy
a bath or was .ft just a "MUD·WAllERT'
IVEL
WE SOLICIT YOUR SUPPORT
I
--
I
i
Presbyterian Church
Monday llcious refreshments served were part 1 but most of them are rather optimistic,
, evening, and the occasion was marked and parcel of the cx:casion and all pres- 11 as the outlook for the sale of domastic
· by a large attendance.
ent were highly pleased with the gath- I
: Prizes were awarded Mrs. Winnie F . ering, which 1a the first of a serie.; coal is quite promising throughout the
Johns tor her 006tume as Queen of planned tor the seuon. Others wm I entire country, md this gives sale for
1
Sheba; M1aa Mary Ellis as Queen of begin at di!Ierent times and places at the entire output of the mines in this
j Hearts, and Mrs. Dock Bowling for the the will of the club.
: section.
m06t comical 006tume.
1
-I1
OD.. NEWS
: Delightful refreshments were served.;
SCHOOL ENTERTAINMENT
Considerable activity Is noted 1n this
. Proceeds were $25.
1
Friday evening of last week, the
lOeb., Tarrytown, New York, Norwood, tbe
-obio. Oakland California, Buffalo, New
-.l.tt, .Janesville, Wisconsin, and St.
LDu1a. Mtsaouri. In addition Chevrolet
maintains manufacturing plants in Detrolt. Bay City, Saginaw, Flint and Toledo.
Mrs. H. l'. May, of Langley, was here
Wednesday doing some shopping
Jl
I
viii-
treated i;o a new coat of paint, brliht
Worth and Bernice BlaDteDShip,· Of
scarlet in color, adding greatly to the 1 Louisa, who have been busineas
appearance of the structut"e, as well as with us for the past week, re~
giving protection against evil weather. home Tuesday morning.
George Beic1enmiller, of BUD~
NEW BABY
W . Va., was a business caller bke PJ1,.
W. S. JUlltice, well and favorably day.
known in this county, Ia the proud
Mrs. Chas. Hughes returned Sa&ur...
father of a baby girl. Mr. Justice 1.a at day from Fleming, where she had
present store xnanager for tbe Elk Born several days, the guest of her~.
''RIGHT THE WRONG''
sWat
•
•
· - Political Adv.
FOR STATE SENATOR
•
�Wednesday,
March 7, 1984Tuesday ,
Marc h 13, 1984
«wednesday))
3/7/84
MOR NI NG
9 :00
1 :00
4:00
6:oo
(fj MOVI E: ' Queen
Bee' An school girl
goes to live w ith relatives and is a witness
t o a human triangle t hat
results in disaster. Joan
Crawford , Barry Sullivan , Betsy Palmer.
1955.
AFTERNOON
(fj MOVIE: ' The Take'
(!) ABC Afterschool Special 'Backwards : The Riddle of
Dyslexia .'
Frustrated
by his inability to write
or read, Brian Ellsworth
hides his undiagnosed
dyslexia by becoming
the class clown . (60
min .) [Closed
Captioned]
EVENING
18
o rn o
®18
rn
Qfj 00 News
(fj Andy Griffith
fB (I) MacNeil/Lehrer
News hour
@) CID Dr. Who
6:30 0
Cil fiD 00 NBC
News
0 Cil CBS News
18 (!) ABC News
(fj Carol Burnett
@)
CID Business
Repbrt
7:00 D Cil PM Magazine
0
®
Wheel of
Fortune
18 (!)People's Court
(fj Hogan's Heroes
fB
(I)
Kentucky
General Assembly
@) CID MacNeil/Lehrer
News hour
fiD CV Switch
7:30 0 ® Tic Tac Dough
0 Cil Family Feud
18
Jeffersons
(fj NBA Basketball:
Atlanta at Detroit
8:00 0
Cil fiD CV Real
People
0 Cil One Day at ·a
Time
18 (!) Fall Guy When
Colt arrests a convicted
murderer, the man·s
father kidnaps Jcidy
and threatens to blow
up a hospital. (60 min .)
fB ffi
CID National
Geographic
Special
'Return to Everest.' Tonight' s program presents a special t ribute
to Sir Edmund Hillary on
the 30th anniversary of
his climb of Mount Everest. (60 min .) [Closed
Captioned]
8 :30 0 Cil Mama Malone
(PREMIERE)
9 :00 0 Cil fiD CV Facts of
Life
0 Cil MOVIE: '10'1t's
a f antasy come true for
a middle-aged man
who relentlessly pursues
the
perfect
woman--and catches
her. Julie Andrews, Bo
Derek , Dudley Moore.
1979.
18 (!) Dynasty Alexis
tells Kirby the truth
about her mother and
Fallon receives solace
from Jeff. (60 min .)
[Closed Captioned]
fB (I) Ingrid
@l CID Secrets of a
Desert Sea
9 :3o
Night
Court
9:45 (fj
TBS
Evening
News
1 o :oo
st.
Elsewhere Dr. Craig is
livid when a TV docu-
TV
SCHEDULE
mentary casts him in an
unflatt ering light and
Rosenthal undergoes a
breast implant operat ion . (60 min. )
18 (!) Arthur Hailey' s
Hotel Peter is shocked
when he hears he's the
f ather of a f our-yea rold son and a singer
kicks a drug habit . (60
min .) [Closed
Capt ioned]
fB
(I)
Business
Report
@)
(ill
MOVIE:
'Bananas'
10:30 fB (I) Tony Brown's
Journal
11 :oo
18
News
(fj All In the Family
11 :30 0 (I) fiD 00 Tonight
Show
O®News
18 (!) Nightline
Catlins
11:45
CID Something' s
Got To Give
12:00 0
®
MOVIE:
'Jamaican Gold'
18 (!) Eye on
Hollywood
(fj MOVIE: 'Requiem
For a Heavyweight'
12:30 D (I) Late Night with
David Letterman
18 (!) Andy Griffith
1 :00 18
(!)
To
Be
Announced
2 :00 (fj MOVIE: 'That Man
In Istanbul' An FBI
agent , posing as an
unemployed stripper,
drags a playboy into
the hunt for a kidnapped atomic scientist. Horst Buchholz,
Sylvia Koscina, Mario
Adorf. 1966.
4 :30 (fj Rat Patrol
o rn
1:00
Suzanne Pleshette stars as
a journalist w hose life is more
int ri guing t han th e stories she
c overs on " Su zanne Pleshette
Is Magg ie Briggs," a1 nng
SUNDAY, MARCH 11 on
CBS.
3:30
CHECK LISTINGS FOR EXACT TIME
rn m rn
«thursday))
6:oo
@1 984 Compulog
MORNING
9:00
(fj
MOVIE:
'The
Young Warriors'
AFTERNOON
1:00
6:oo
CD
MOVIE:
'711
Ocean Drive' An ingenious racketeer employs many tricks to
outwit the big gambling
syndicate .
Edmond
O'Brien, Joanne Dru.
Donald Porter. 1950.
EVENING
o mo
®
m rn
t!fj (1) News
(fj Andy Griffith
fB (I) MacNeil/Lehrer
Newshour
@) CID Dr. Who
6:30 0
Cil fiD (1) NBC
News
0 Cil CBS News
18 (!) ABC News
(fj Carol Burnett
@)
CID Business
Report
7 :00 D Cil PM Magazine
Cil Wheel of.
Fortune
18 (!)People' s Court
(fj Hogan's Heroes
fB
(I)
Kentucky
General Assembly
CID MacNeil/Lehrer
News hour
Qfj (1) Appalachian
Encounters
7:30 D Cil Tic Tac Dough
0 ® Family Feud
Jeffersons
CD Sanford and Son
fiD 00 Lorne Greene's
Wilderness
8:00 0 CilliB (1) Gimme a
Break The Mayor falls
for Nell. (R)
0 Cil Magnum P.l.
·o
m
m rn
6 :30
18
(!) NCAA Basketball: SEC Tournament
(fj
MOVIE:
'The
Groundstar Conspiracy'
fB (I) Pearl and
Friends
@) CID Hindenburg:
Ship of Doom
8:30 0 (I) fiD 00 Family
Ties When Alex 's pal
discovers
he's
adopted, Alex helps
him cope with the
news.
9 :00 0 Cil fiD 00 Cheers
Diane's former boyfriend reappears on the
scene and suggests
9:30
that she and Sam double date with him and
his wife. (R)
0 Cil Simon & Simon
@) CID Mystery! 'Reilly:
Ace of Spies .' Reilly's
plot to overthrow Lenin
is imminent while the
Cheka as well as other
factions threaten the
audacious plan . (60
min .) [Closed
Captioned]
0 Cil fiD 00 Buffalo
Street
Blues
The
mayor forces Furillo out
of his precinct com mand and Joyce ignores death threats and
to
testify
agrees
against a murderer. (60
min .)
0 ® Knots Landing
(fj
TBS
Evening
News
@) CID MOVIE: 'The
Third Man' An American writer arrives in
Vienna to take a job
with an old friend ,
whom he finds has
been murdered. Joseph Cotten , Orson
Welles. 1950.
Bill
fB
ffi
Clarence
Darrow
Starring
Henry Fonda
1 o:oo
Hm
o rn m rn
11 :oo
- Movie WeekSUNDAY
(NBC) SUNDAY NIGHT MOVIE
3/8/84
m
o rn m rn
AFTERNOON
NEWSWOMAN
m
m
rn
o rn m rn
New York are beset by
every disaster includrng
strikes, storms. looters, robbers and demonstrators.
Jack
Lemmon, Sandy Dennis. 19 70
(ABC) SUNDAY NIGHT MOVIE
"THE SPY WHO LOVED ME" (1977) Roger Moore. Barbara
Bach. Curt Jurgens. Richard Kiel. James Bond must join forces
witll a Ru SSian agent to stop a mad shipping magnate from
destroy1ng the world.
MONDAY
(NBC) MONDAY NIGHT MOVIE
" HER LIFE AS A MAN" ( 1984) Robyn Douglass. Marc Singer,
Lara1ne Newman. Robert Culp. A true story about a struggling
young female reporter who d1sgu1sed herself as a man.
(ABC) MONDAY NIGHT MOVIE
" WHY ME?" ( 1984 ) Glynn1s O'Connor. Armand Assante, Craig
Wasson, William Windom. A young nurse experiences a near-fatal
auto~o b ile accident and courageously manages to put her life
and face - which has undergone more than 35 plastic operations - back together.
TUESDAY
(CBS) TUESDAY NIGHT MOVIE
" SECOND CHANCE AT LOVE" (1984) Elizabeth Montgomery.
Barry Newman. The story of a woman who has come to terms
w1th her blindness through stubborn Independence and a sense of
humor, and the challenges to her 1nsulated world posed by a man
who ioves her. and by a seeing dog named Emma.
WEDNESDAY
(CBS) WEDNESDAY NIGHT MOVIE
News
(fj Woman Watch
11 :30 0 (I) fiD (I) Tonight
Show
0 ® Trapper John,
M.D.
m Catlins
7 :30
8:00
.
&l (!) News
(fj MOVIE: 'Only Two
Can Play· A smalltown librarian embarks
on a series of amorous
with
a
escapades
board member's wife.
Peter Sellers, Mai Zetterling , Richard Anenborough . 1962.
12:30 D (I) Late Night with
David Letterman
0 ®MOVIE: 'Nakia'
A deputy sheriff is t."lrn
between his love for his
people and his duty as
a law officer. Robert
Forster, Arthur Kennedy, Linda Evans .
1974.
&l (!) Nightline
1 :00 18
(!)
Eye
on
Hollywood
1:30 18 (!)Andy Griffith
2 :00 18
(!)
To
Be
Announced
2:30 CD
MOVIE:
'The
Running
Man'
A
young widow discovers her husband has
schemed to defraud the
insurance company b_y
finding he is not dead.
Lee
Remick ,
Alan
Bates,
Laurence
Harvey. 1963 .
4:15 CD Rat Patrol
4 :45 CD World/large
((frid~
3/9/84 .
MORNING
9:00
(fj MOVIE: 'The Outof-Towners' A man
and his wife on a trip to
MOVIE:
'The
Doomsday Flight' A
bomb 1s hidden aboard
a New York-bound jet
liner. Jack Lord, Va n
Johnson , Edmond O' Brien. 1966.
fB (I) New Shapes in
Education
- EVENING
o rn o
®
fiD (I) News
m rn
(fj Andy Griffith
fB (I) MacNeil/Lehrer
Newshour
@) CID Dr. Who
0 (I)
(I) NBC
News
O®CBS News
&l (!)ABC News
CD Carol Burnett
@)
CID Business
Report
D (I) PM Magazine
0
®
Wheel of
Fortune
&l (!)People's Court
CD Hogan' s Heroes
fB
(I)
Kentucky
General Assembly
@) (ill MacNeil/lehrer
Newshour
Qfj (I) Goins Brothers
D (I) Tic Tac Dough
0 ® Family Feud
18
Jeffersons
CD Sanford and Son
fB ffi Comment on
Kentucky
Qfj (I) This Week in
Country Music
0 (I)
00 Master
0
®
Dukes of
Hazzard When hijackers swipe a truckful of
auto
parts, Cooter
'confesses ' to protect
a pal and lands in jail.
(60 min .)
&l (!) NCAA Basketball: SEC Tournament
CD NBA Basketball:
Portland at Atlanta
m
rn
12:00
SATURDAY
(CBS) SATURDAY NIGHT MOVIE
"MICKEY SPILLANE'S MIKE HAMMER 'MURDER ME, MURDER YOU' " ( 1984 ) Stacy Keach, Tanya Roberts, Don Stroud.
The hard-hitting private eye Mike Hammer protects the daughter
he never knew and discovers why her mother died.
o rn o ® m cv
7 :00
CD
m
m
m
Washington
Review
s:3o
mmm
m
®
CID
Wall
Week/
Street Week
9:00
D 00 m 00 legmen
0 ®Dallas J .R. operates behind the scenes
to further enmesh Cliff
in a financial situation
he can use to his own
advantage. (60 min .)
fB (I) I Feel a Song
Comin' On!
@) (ill Session '84
9:30
@) (ill I Feel a Song
Comin' On!
1 0:00 0
(I) fiD (I) New
Show
0 ® Falcon Crest
Melissa pays a price for
trading her son for
power and Terry suffers backlash from her
wicked past . (60 min.)
1 0 :1 5 (fj
TBS
Evening
News
11 :oo o
o oo m m
Qfj C2) News
11 :30 0 (I) fiD 00 Tonight
Show
0 Cil MOVIE: 'Three
on a Date' Four couples, winners on a TV
game show, set off on
a madcap dream holiday in Hawaii . June Allyson, Ray Bolger, Rick
Nelson . 1978.
(fj Catlins
@)
CID
MOVIE:
'Oklahoma!' A cowboy' s girl goes to a
dance and falls in love
with a hired hand . Gor-
rn
�(
(
(
don McRae, Shirley
Jones, Eddie Alben.
1955.
12:00 &l (!) News
m Night Tracks
12:30 0 Cil
CI) Friday
Night Videos
&l (!) Nightline
1:00 &l
(!)
Eye
on
Hollywood
1:30 &l (!)Andy Griffith
2:00 0 Cil News
&l
(!)
Pentecost
Today
2:30 &l
(!)
To
Be
Announced
m
FORD HOSTS
Former President Gerald
Ford, an avid skier, hosts the
American Ski Classic from
Vail, Colo .. which NBC airs on
SUNDAY, MARCH 11.
CHECK LISTINGS FOR EXACT TIME
«saturday»
@)1984 Compulog
3/10/84
MORNING
5:00
5:30
6:00
6:15
6:30
7:00
7:30
m
Night
Tracks
Cont'd
&l (!)Rev. Pete Rowe
&l (!) Farm Digest
TBS
Morning
News
&l (!)Forum 19
0
Cil
Saturday
Report
D Cil T.V. Classroom
&l (!)Town Crier
0
Cil
Joy
of
Gardening
D
Cil
Captain
Kangaroo
&l(!)Omni
m Between the lines
m CID Market to
Market
0 Cil Bugs Bunny &
Friends
&l (!) ABC Weekend
Special
Romper Room and
Friends
CID Great Chefs/
San Francisco
.m
m
m
8:oo
o
rn
m
12:00
12:30
1 :00
o rn m rn
1 :30
m
2:00
4:30
5:00
5:30
6:00
6:30
7:00
7:30
8:00
3:30
4:00
m
m
0 Cil D (])News
8:30
has involved him in a
mini-crime spree. (A)
9:00 0 Cil €D CI) We Got It
Made Mickey decides
to fight back when she
learns that David's new
girlfriend is trying to get
her fired.
D Cil Airwolf When a
famous Nazi hunter IS
murdered, his daughter
gets Stringfellow and
Dominic involved in her
plans for revenge. (60
min.)
&l (!) love Boat Go-
m
m
Soap Beat
m
World Championship Wrestling
fB (]) Impossible
Dream: Balloons Across the Atlantic
CID Dr. Who Movie
€D CI) At The Movies
0 Cil €D CI) NBC
News
D Cil Concern
&l Q0 Dance Fever
fB ffi Woody Guthrie:
Hard Travelin'
0 (1) Dance Fever
D (]) Hee Haw
&l QO Solid Gold
m CID Dr. Who
m (I) Jamboree
0
Cil
Coping/
Medical Emergencies
m Down to Earth
(PREMIERE) A wellmeaning but slightly
zany angel arrives from
Heaven and creates
chaos in the lives of a
widower and his three
children. Carol Mansell.
Stephen Johnson.
0 Cil €D CZ) Diff' rent
Strokes
D (]) Garfield on the
Town Garfield discovers his long-lost family
when he accidentally
falls out of Jon's car.
&l (!) T.J. Hooker
MOVIE: 'Monte
Walsh' The changing
face of the modern
West causes some
unexpected and often
uncomfonable adjustments in the lives of the
men who are a pan of
it. Lee Marvin, Jeanne
Moreau. Jack Palance.
1970.
fB (]) Best of live
from the Grand Ole
Opry
CID Session '84
0 Cil
CI) Silver
Spoons First of 2
pans. Ricky discovers
that a friend's mother
used to be an old flame
of his father's.
D (]) B. Bunny
Mystery Special Bugs
discovers that a series
of mistaken identities
m
m
3:00
m
m
m
2:30
State
&l QO Professional
Bowlers Tour Coverage of the $125,000
King Louie Open is presented from King Louie
West, Overland Park,
KS. (90 min.)
fB (]) GED Series
CID Golden Spin
Fig. Skating
fB ffi GED Series
® From Star Wars
to Jedi
&l Q0 Wide World of
Sports
m Fishin' w/Orlando
Wilson
fB ffi Firing line
Motorweek Illustrated
EVENING
m
m
m
m
NCAA Basketball: Metro Conference Championship
&l QO America's Top
Ten
fB
(])
Business
Management
CID Washington
Week/Review
Paul
Duke is joined by top
Washington journalists
analyzing the week's
news.
0 Cil €D (2) Thundarr
&l
Q0 American
Bandstand
fB (]) Here's to Your
Health
m CID Wall Street
Week Louis Rukeyser
analyzes the '80s with
a weekly review of
economic and investment matters.
0
Cil All Star
Wrestling
fB ffi Here's to Your
Health
CID Family Portrait
€D CI) Wild Kingdom
&l QO love Connection
MOVIE: 'Downhill
Racer' An ambitious
American ski bum replaces another skier InJured in pre-Olympic
competition and becomes a superskier.
Roben Redford, Gene
Hackman,
Camilla
Sparv. 1969.
fB (]) Focus on
Society
CID Family Portrait
€D
(I)
Kentucky
Afield
0 Cil NCAA Basketball:
Southeastern
Conference
Championship
D Cil Dorai-Eastern
Open Golf Coverage of
the third round is presented from the Doral
Country Club, Miami,
FL. (2 hrs.)
&l Q0 NCAA Basketball: SEC Championship
fB (]) Focus on
Society
CID Making It
Count
€D CI) NCAA Basketball: Teams to be
Announced
fB (])American Gov't
Survey
CID Making It
Count
fB (])American Gov't
Survey
m CID Vietnam: A
Television History
Cimarron Strip
fB (]) Another Page
0 Cil €D (I) NCAA
Basketball:
Marquette at DePaul
0 (]) NCAA Basketball: UCLA at Oregon
m
m
m
0 (])
m
rn
Flintstone Funnies
D (]) Charlie Brown
& Snoopy
&l (!) Monchhichis/
little Rascals/Richie
Rich
m Starcade
CID Doctor In the
House
8:3o
shirt
Tales
D
(])
Saturday
Supercade
m MOVIE: 'Santiago'
A mercenary encounters adventure in the
danger-ndden jungles
of Cuba. Alan Ladd,
Lloyd Nolan, Chill Wills.
1956.
m CID Fawlty Towers
9:00 0 (I) €D (I) Smurfs
&l (!) New Scooby/
Scrappy Doo
m CID Good Neighbors
9:30 D (]) Dungeons and
Dragons
&l (!) Pac-Man/Rubik
Cube Hour
9:45
CID Dave Allen at
Large
•
1 0:00 D Cil Tarzan: lord of
the Jungle
10:15 m CID Dad's Army
10:30 0 ® €D (I) Alvin &
the Chipmunks
D Cil Addams Family
(!)Littles
m MOVIE: . 'The
Spiral Road' A dedicated young doctor is
sent to Batavia to fight
jungle
leprosy
and
witchcraft
horrors.
Rock Hudson, Burllves,
Gena Rowlands. 1962.
fB (]) Dealing w/
Social Problems
1 0:45
CID House For All
Seasons
11 :00 0 Cil €D (I) Mr. T
D (])let's Go To The
Races
&l QO Puppy/Scooby
Doo Show
fB (]) Bits and Bytes
11 :1 5
® All New This
Old House
11 :30 0 Cil €D (I) Amazing
Spiderman/lncredible
Hulk
D (]) Fishing w/
Roland Martin
m
ffi Business
Management
AFTERNOON
fB
pher reveals a masseuse's true identity, a
passenger seduces a
mermaid and a young
boy joins his grandmother for what may
be their last time together. (60 min.)
(Closed Captioned]
9:30 0 Cil €D CI) Mama's
Family Mama and Naomi go to coun and sue
each other when Mama
ruins Naomi's new vacuum cleaner
fB
Cil
Country
Memories with Willie
Nelson
10:00 0 Cil €D CI) Yellow
Rose Rose Hollister returns to Texas and
finds that she and
Chance have become
targets of Hollister's
paid assassins. (60
min.)
0 Cil Mickey Spillane's Mike Hammer
Mike is forced to gun
down an ex-cop who is
on a shooting spree in a
restaurant. (60 min.)
&l (!) Fantasy Island
An out-of-favor rock
star thinks having a
baby will solve her
problems and a World
War II pilot wants one
more dogfight. (60
min.)
[Closed Captioned]
TBS
Evening
News
11 :00 0 Cil D (]) News
&l QO ABC News
Unknown War
fB (]) Kingston Trio
m
m
Realistic rape boosts
integrity of 'Search'
By Connie Passalacqua
"Search for Tomorrow,"
one of daytime's basement-rated soaps, took a
giant step up to integrity, if
not popularity, last month
when it aired a special
documentary-style episode
in which Sunny Adamson
(Marcia McCabe)
was
raped by her TV news coanchorperson Jack Benton
(Jimmy Clark).
Because the two knew
each other. Sunny 1s having
a nightmarish time proving
that the assault was actually rape. The story line
examines almost every
angle of th1s "confidence"
or "acquaintance" rape
without the usual soap
opera melodramatics.
Treat1ng the subject seriously is the aim of both the
show's producer, and its
writers. Gary Tomlin and
Jeanne Glynn. The writers
consulted extensively with
authorities at New York
Women Against Rape, a
counseling and referral
serv1ce.
' 'Search' is prov1ding
an in-depth portrayal of
what a woman has to go
through to prosecute a
rapist." says Stephanie
Roth, a program coordinator oi the Center. who was
one of those consulted .
"She has to go to the
police, and usually winds
up being Interrogated as
though she is the crim1nal
herself."
and
Friends:
A
Reunion
€D CI) Music Magazine
11:15 &l (!)News
11 :30 0 (I)
CI) Saturday
Night live
0
(])
MOVIE:
'Stagecoach'
&l QO Music Magazine
12:00 &l (!) Black Music
Magazine
Night Tracks
® MOVIE: 'The
Moonraker' This coun
intrigue revolves around the swashbukllng
adventures of Charles
Stuan and his followers. George Baker, Sylvia
Syms,
Marius
Goring. 1957.
12:30 &l
(!)
To
Be
Announced
1 :00 0 (I) MOVIE: 'Here
Come the Waves' A
musical-comedy about
Navy men and women.
Bing Crosby, Betty Hutton,
Sunny
Tufts.
1944.
&l (!) Rockford Files
2:00
Night
Tracks
Cont'd
m
m
m
m
«sunday))
3/11/84
MORNING
Marcia McCabe
5:00
6:00
6:15
6:30
So far, the show has portrayed Sunny facing such
humiliation. Miss McCabe,
who has always winningly
portrayed the forthright
and intelligent Sunny, has
been doing a fine job playIng this story line with great
d1gnity.
Maintaining the emotional stability of the character
IS another of the writers'
a1ms. Says Tomlin, "I wanted a story 1n wh1ch a woman was not necessanly rescued from a situat1on by a
'white kn1ght' - but rescues herself. She gets out
of 11 and copes w1th 11. Not
that she doesn't have help
- but she IS not rescued
She rescues herself."
If the show cames over
such dignified and sensitive
work into some of its other
story l1nes,
perhaps
"Search for Tomorrow"
1tself can be rescued from
1ts low-rated status.
&)(!)Rev. Pete Rowe
m News
&l (!)Time to Shine
m Week/Review
0 (I) TV Chapel
D Cil Better Way
&l (!) What Does the
Bible Say?
TBS
Morning
News
0 (I) Music and the
Spoken Word
D Cil Jerry Falwell
&l (!) Roger Sparks
Religion
m World Tomorrow
6it ® MOVIE: 'Dr.
Gillespie's New Assistant' Three young
interns compete for the
honor of working with
Dr. Gillespie. Lionel
Barrymore, Van Johnson, Susan Peters.
1942.
€D CI) Time for
Refreshing
0 (I) Fountain of life
&l (!) James Robison
It Is Written
0 (I) Hour of Power
D
(]) Day of
Discovery
&l QO Jerry Falwell
Cartoon Carnival
fB (]) Sesame Street
[Closed Captioned]
CID Wild America
m CI) Gateway
Gospel
m
7:00
7:30
8:00
m
m
m
�(
HER LIFE AS A MAN
Robyn Douglass portrays a
reporter who disguises herself
as a man in order to get a
sportswriting job in "Her Life
as a Man," airing MONDAY,
MARCH 12 on "NBC Monday
Night at the Movies."
CHECK LISTINGS FOR EXACT TIME
@)1984 Compulog
8:30
0
(I) Oral Roberts
and You
Christ for the
World
I& Starcade
fiB (l) Biblical Viewpoint
9:00 0 (I) Rex Humbard
0 (]) Sunday Morning
18
(!)
Kenneth
Copeland
I& leave It to Beaver
fB ffi Sesame Street
[Closed Captioned]
&l
(ll)
National
Geographic
Special
'Return to Everest.' Tonight's program presents a special tribute
to Sir Edmund Hillary on
the 30th anniversary of
hts climb of Mount Everest. (60 min.) [Closed
Captioned]
fiB (I) Sunday School
9:30 0
(I)
Kenneth
Copeland
I& Andy Griffith
fiB (I) Rev. R.A. West
10:00 18 (!) Rev. R.A. West
I& Good News
fB ffi Mr. Rogers'
Neighborhood
6) ® Nova 'Will I
Walk
Again?'
Tonight's program explores the chances for
cures to paralyzing
spinal injuries. (60 min .)
[Closed Captioned]
fiB (l) Big Creek
Baptist
10:30 0 (I) Dr. D. James
Kennedy
0 (]) Ernest Angley
18 ill Jimmy Swaggart
I& MOVIE: 'flying
Tigers' While fighting
the Japanese in China
during World War II, a
squadron leader and
his buddy vie for the affections of a nurse.
Wayne,
Paul
John
Kelly, Anna Lee. 1942.
fB
00
Electric
Company
1 1 :00 fB 00 Sesame Street
[Closed Captioned]
6) (ll) Nova 'The Miracle of Life.' Tonight's
program presents the
chain of events which
turns a sperm and an
egg into a newborn
baby . (R) (60 min.)
[Closed Captioned]
fiB (l) Leonard Repass
1 1 :30 0
(]) Bill Dance
Outdoors
0 (]) Viewpoint
18 (!)World Tomorrow
fiB (l) Rev. R.A. West
AFTERNOON
0 (])
12:00
0 (]) At Issue
0 (]) NCAA Basketball Special 'The Road
to Seattle.' Today's
program reviews the
1983-1984
college
basketball season and
looks at some of the
teams likely to be invited to the upcoming
NCAA
Basketball
Championship.
(60
min .)
18 (!)This Week with
David Brinkley
fB (]) Glory of the
Garden
&l ® Sesame Street
[Closed Captioned]
fiB (}) Old Time
Gospel
1 2 :30 0 (])Meet the Press
C& High Chaparral
1 :00 0 (]) Bowling
0 (]) NCAA Basketball: Michigan State
at Iowa
18 (!) Biblical Viewpoint
fB 00 Capitol Connection
&l (ll) Victory Garden
fiB (l) American Ski
Classic Gerald Ford
hosts highlights of the
men's slalom and giant
slalom
competitions
from Vail, CO. (60 min.)
1 :30 18 (!) Virgil Wacks
Presents
I& U.S. Olympic
Invitational
Track
Meet
fB (§) Business of
Management
&l
®
Working
Women
2:00 0 (I) NCAA Basketball: Atlantic Coast
Conference
Championship
18 ill American
Sportsman
fB (]) Business of
Management
&l ® MOVIE: 'South
Pacific'
A
young
American Navy nurse
and a Frenchman in Hawaii find romance during World War II. Mitzi
Gaynor,
Rossano
Brazzi,
John
Kerr.
1958.
fiB (l) NCAA Basket-
(
9:30
REMINGTON STEELE
10:00
whether
marriage
would be the bliss they
think it would be. (R) (2
hrs.)
[Closed
Captioned]
0 (]) Alice Tommy
cons1ders g1ving up
school and becoming a
professional gambler
0 (])
Trapper John,
M.D. An inept detective 1s hospitalized and
manages to help solve
a cnme mvolving an in
house drug nng. (60
min)
m Sports Page
Bits and Bytes
10:30 C& Oral Roberts
1 1 :00 0 (]) Q (]) News
I& Jerry Falwell
Laura Holt
(Stephame
Zimbalist) and Remmgton
Steele (Pierce Brosnan) solve
mysteries together on NBC's
"Remington Steele," ainng
TUESDAY, MARCH 13.
FB m
CHECK LISTINGS FOR EXACT TIME
@)1984 Compulog
CID
MOVIE:
'Lavender Hill Mob' A
timid bank clerk leads a
gang of robbers. Alec
Guiness, Stanley Holloway. 1952
fiB (l) It's Your
Business
11 :30 0 (]) MOVIE: 'The
Ghost
Breakers'
We1rd happenings 1n a
'haunted' castle are designed to scare off the
rightful heiress. Bob
Hope. Paulette Goddard, Paul Lukas. 1940
0 (]) This Week in
Country Music
18 (!)ABC News
&l
ball: Teams to be
Announced
2:30 18 (!) love Connection
I& NBA Basketball:
Atlanta at Milwaukee
fB (§) Focus on
Society
3:00 0 (]) Dorai-Eastern
Open Golf Coverage of
the final round is presented from the Dora!
Country Club, Miami.
FL. (2 hrs., 30 min.)
18 (!)Movie
fB ffi Focus on
Society
3:30 fB (]) Making It
Count
4:oo o
m
m
rn
SportsWorld Today's
program features an
IBF junior middleweight
championship bout between Earl Hargrove
and Mark Medal and
World Cup Skiing. (2
hrs.)
fB ffi Making It
Count
4:30
fB ffi Social Prob-
4:45
5:00
C& Sports Close-up
18 (!) Rev. Cecil
lems/Ciassrm.
Vaughn Special
m Candid Camera
fB CIJ All New This
Old House
&l CID MOVIE: 'You're
in the Navy Now' A
Navy crew is assigned
to test-run a new steam
engine in a tiny patrol
craft during World War
II. Gary Cooper, Jane
Greer, Jack Webb.
5:30 0 (]) NCAA Pairings
Special Gary Bender
and Brent Musburger
report on the 53 teams
selected for the NCAA
Basketball
Tournament.
C& Undersea World of
Jacques Cousteau
5:45 fB 00 Woodwright's
Shop
EVENING
6:00
0 (]) 0 (])
News
&l (!) Star Search
fiB Cil Bill Francis
6:15
Telewaves TV flashes
6:30
By Andy Noble
FARRAH RETURNS- Farrah Fawcett, in her return to
TV, plays a madam and Beau Bridges plays a G-man 1n
"The Red Light Sling," a CBS-TV mov1e airing next
month. The film, based on a true story, recounts the FBI
undercover operation that used a real bordello to snare an
underworld leader. The film marks M1ss Fawcett's f1rst TV
appearance s1nce the 1981 miniseries "A Murder in
Texas."
MORGAN'S BOMB - Morgan Fairchild best known
for her role as sultry Constance Carlyle on "Flamingo
Road," will play the leader of an international terrorist
gang in "Time Bomb," a CBS-TV movie airing Sunday
March 25. Her gang attacks a supposedly secure truck
designed for hauling hazardous waste materials that IS
operated by a team of "suicide jockeys," played by
Joseph Bottoms, Merlin Olsen and Billy Dee Williams.
FATAL VISION - "Fatal VISIOn," the best-seller by
Joe McGinnis about the sensational murder case involving former Green Beret Dr. Jeffrey MacDonald, will
become an NBC miniseries during the 1985-86 season.
MacDonald was convicted nearly 10 years after the murder of his pregnant wife and two young daughters 1n their
Fort Bragg, N.C., home.
MacDonald still claims h1s family was slain by "drugcrazed hippies " The teleplay w1ll be written by John Gay.
whose credits include TV adaptations of "Ivanhoe" and
"The Hunchback of Notre Dame."
RELIGIOUS DRAMA - Anthony Hopkins and Robert
Foxworth will star in ·'Peter anci Paul." a two-part drama.
which CBS rebroadcasts Tuesday, Apnl 17 and Wednesday. April 18. Hopkins plays Paul. the Apostle to the
Gentiles, while Foxworth IS cast as Peter. the rock of the
Christian Church. The cast also 1ncludes Eddie Albert,
Raymond Burr, Jose Ferrer, Jon Finch and Jean
Peters.
7:00
8:00
Gardening
fB ffi Great Chefs/
San Francisco
NBc
News
0 (]) CBS News
I& Wild World of
Animals
First
Camera
0 (]) 60 Minutes
18 (!) Ripley's Believe
It or Not!
I& Best of World
Championship Wrestling
fB ffi Nature 'The
Masterbuilders.'
Michael Richards examines a variety of bird
species during their
nestbuilding periods.
(60 min.) [Closed Captioned]
&l GD Back to
Stagedoor Canteen
0 (I) fiB (l) Knight
Rider Michael discovers an illegal plot by an
underwater explorer to
scavenge gold and
treasures from a sunken galleon. (R) (60
min.)
0
(])
Suzanne
Pleshette
Maggie
agonizes over the fact
that she can report
other people's experiences but she can't
write about her own.
18 (!) Hardcastle &
McCormick Conclusion. After the Judge is
presumed dead, killers
set out to capture
McCormick. (60 min.)
I& MOVIE: 'Scalawag' A one-legged pirate, an innocent young
boy and h1s sister
search for gold dub-
o rn m rn
o m m rn
loons. Kirk Douglas,
Mark Lester, Neville
Brand. 1973.
fB 00 Rosemary
Clooney, with love
&l (ill Nature 'The
Missing Monsoon.' Tonight's program captures the will to survive
life-threatening
odds
during monsoon season in northern India.
(60 min.) [Closed Captioned]
8:30 0 (]) Four Seasons A
fantastic stunt by Pat
prompts Ted to question his own capabilities.
9:00 0 (I) fiB (l) MOVIE:
'Little Darlings' Two
g1rls bet on who will
lose her innocence
first. Tatum O'Neal,
Kristy McNichol, Matt
Dillon.
0 (]) Jeffersons
18 CIJ MOVIE: 'The
Spy Who Loved Me'
James Bond teams up
with Russia's top agent
to find two submarines
that disappeared at
sea. Roger Moore, Barbara Bach, Curt Jurgens. 1977
m
m m ®
Masterpiece Theatre
'On Approval.' Two
unmarried
couples
spend a month on approval
to
decide
fiB
00
MOVIE:
'Murder One, Dancer
0' A private investigator's efforts to clear
himself of manslaughter leads to his involvement in a Hollywood
scandal. Robert Blake,
Robin Dearden, Sandra
Blake. 1983.
11 :45 18 (!) Forum 1 9
12:00 0 (])Face the Nation
18 (!) Pentecost
Today
I& Open Up
12:30 0
(])
MOVIE:
'Melody of Hate'
18 (!) Jim Bakker
1 :00 I& MOVIE: 'Three for
the Show' A wife, who
remarried when her
husband was reported
k1lled 1n action, is confronted by the first husband's return. Betty
Grable, Jack Lemmon,
Myron
McCormick.
1955.
1:30 18 (!)Star Search
3:00 I& MOVIE: 'Escapade
INN£11
By Joan Crosby
ruB£
CAESAR & CAROL - Sid Caesar is rehearsing for a
stage production that will use many of the old "Your
Show of Shows" sk1ts. Imogene Coca won't be working
with Caesar, but Carol Lawrence will. The first public
performances of the show are set for this spring in Fort
Lauderdale, Fla., and Atlantic C1ty. N J. If the show IS
well received, it may go to Las Vegas and then finally to
Broadway.
Alan Young, who
WHERE ARE THEY NOW? starred in "Mister Ed" as the owner of the talking horse.
IS appeanng in a Los Angeles version of the play "Mass
Appeal." Brian Matthews. who is seen on "The Young
and the Restless." co-stars in the two-character play.
The play is directed by Dick Gautier. who frequently
has guest spots on TV series. Martin Milner, formerly ot
"Route 66" and "Adam-12," has the same role as
Young in a version performed at a d;nner theater south
of Los Angeles.
FUTURE EVENTS Norman Lear is producing
"Heartsounds," a TV mov1e that will star Mary Tyler
Moore and James Garner. The drama tells the story of
a doctor who has a mass1ve heart attack and was then
forced to see the world of medicine through a patient's
eye
CBS airs the second annual Miss Teen USA pageant
from MemphiS on April 3. Michael Young and Morgan
Brittany host for the second year.
�i~
m
Japan' Two youngsters, one an Amencan
and one a Japanese,
search for the lost parents of the American
boy. Teresa Wright,
Cameron M itchell, Jon
Provost 195 7.
3:30
«daytirne))
4:00
m Varied Programs
Ci)(!) Rev. Pete Rowe
0 Cil NBC News at
Sunrise
0 Cil
Jimmy
Swaggart
TBS
Morning
News
6 :15 @) (ffi Varied Programs
6:30 D Cil News
0
Cil CBS Early
Morning News
Ci)
ill Assembly
Echoes
6:45 Ci) (!)ABC News This
Morning
@) ill) Weather
7:00 0 (]) I& CZ) Today
0 Cil CBS Morning
News
Ci) ill Good Morning
America
SuperStation Funtime
@) (ffi Varied Programs
7:30
I Dream of Jeannie
8:00
Bewitched
mweather
@) Gil Sesame Street
[Closed Captioned)
8 :15 fB (J) Instructional
Programs
8:30
I love lucy
9:00 D
(]) Braun and
Company
0 (I) Andy Griffith
Ci) ill Jim Bakker
Movie
@) Gil Instructional
Programs
I& CZ) 700 Club
9:30 0 (I) Here's lucy
1 0:00 D (]) Facts of life
0 (I) New $25,000
Pyramid
Ci) (!)700 Club
I&
CZ)
Diff'rent
Strokes
1 0 :30 0
(]) Sale of the
Century
0 (I) Press Your
luck
I&
CZ)
Morning
Stretch
11 :00 0 (]) I& CZ) Wheel of
Fortune
0 (I) Price Is Right
Ci) (!)Benson
Catlins
11 :30 0 (]) I& CZ) Dream
House
loving
Texas
AFTERNOON
4:30
mm
m
m
m
m
m
5:00
5:30
«rnonday))
3/12/84
MORNING
7:30
9 :00
m
1 :00
11 :45
12:00
12:15
fB ffi MacNeil/lehrer
6 :30
Newshour
@) (ffi Dr. Who
0 (]) I& CZ) NBC
News
0 Cil CBS News
Ci)(!)ABC News
Carol Burnett
@)
(ffi
Business
Report
0 (])PM Magazine
0
® Wheel of
Fortune
Ci) (!)People's Court
Hogan's Heroes
fB
ffi Kentucky
General Assembly
@) (ffi MacNeil/lehrer
Newshour
I& Cil How the West
Was Won
0 00 Tic Tac Dough
0 ® Family Feud
Jeffersons
Sanford and Son
fB
ffi
Educat.
Computing Profile
TV's
Bloopers and Practical Jokes Dick Clark
and Ed McMahon host
this look at scenes
for
never
intended
viewing by an audience . (60 min .)
0 (!) Scarecrow and
Mrs. King Amanda is
mistaken for Scarecrow and taken hostage by members of an
espionage ring. (R) (60
min.)
Ci) (!)Automan
MOVIE: 'The Wild
Geese' A band of mercenarres attempts an
12:30
m
7 :00
m
Ci) (!) Family Feud
D
0
m
11:30
m
MOVIE: 'Chief
Crazy Horse' Crazy
Horse followed a path
to destiny as the greatest of all the Sioux .
Victor Mature, Susan
Ball, John Lund . 1955.
EVENING
7:30
mm
m
8:oo o rn m rn
m
®
I&(]) News
m Andy Griffith
m Perry Mason
m
m
11:oo om o
I& CZ) News
D (]) Hot Potato
0 (I) I& CZ) News
m
m
6:oo o m o m m rn
m rn
m
(])News
(I) Young and the
Restless
Ci) (!) Ryan's Hope
I& CZ) Search For
Tomorrow
1 :00 0
(I) Days of Our
lives
Ci) (!) All My Children
Movie
I& 00 Sale of the
Century
1 :30 0 ® As the World
Turns
I& (I) Days of Our
lives
2:00 D (]) Another World
ill One life to live
@)
Gil
Electric
Company
2:30 0 Cil Capitol
ill) Jnstructional
Programs
I& (I) Another World
3:00 0 (]) Match Game/
Hollywood
Squares
Hour
0 (I) Guiding light
Ci)
(!)
General
Hospital
@) Gil Sesame Street
[Closed Captroned)
MOVIE: 'How to
Save a Marriage and
Ruin Your life' A
bachelor tries to encourage hrs unhappily
married friend to end
his relationship with his
mistress by becoming
involved with another
girl. Dean Martin, Stella
Stevens, Eli Wallach.
rmpossrble task rn Af·
rica . Archard Burton,
Roger Moore, Richard
Harris. 1978.
fB ffi Return of the
Great Whales
@) (ll) Great Performances 'Purlre · Melba
Moore, Robert Guillaume and Sherman
Hemsley star rn thrs
special television prod·
uction of Ossie Davis'
play 'Purlie Victorious.
9:00 0 (]) I& CZ) MOVIE:
'Her life as a Man' A
struggling female reporter disguises herself
as a man to land a job
as a sportswriter. Robyn Douglass, Marc
Singer, Robert Culp.
1984.
0 (I) AfterMASH
With Soon-Lee about
to deliver their first
child, the Klingers go
hunting for a bigger
apartment.
Ci) (!)MOVIE: 'Why
Me?'
fB ffi Great Performances 'Purlie.' Melba
Moore, Robert Guillaume and Sherman
Hemsley star in this
special television production of Ossie Davis'
play 'Purlie Victorious.·
(3 hrs.)
9:30 0
(!)
Newhart
George invites Dick to
join the local Beaver
Lodge .
1 0:00 0 Cil Emerald Point
N.A.S.
1 0:45
TBS
Evening
News
AFTERNOON
m
12:30
m
m
m
12:00
m
m
MORNING
5:00
5:30
6:00
Flintstones
@) ® Varied Programs
Battle of the
Planets
fB ffi Varied Programs
I& CZ) Match Game/
Hollywood
Squares
Hour
0 Cil Mr. Cartoon
0 Cil Hour Magazine
Ci) ill Rockford Files
Munsters
fB ffi Sesame Street
[Closed Captioned)
@l Gil 3-2-1, Contact
leave It to Beaver
@) ill) Mr. Rogers'
Neighborhood
I&
CZ)
To
Be
Announced
0 (]) B.J./Lobo Show
0 Cil Hawaii Five-0
Ci) ill Superfriends
little House on the
Prairie
fB ffi Mr. Rogers'
Neighborhood
@) ill) Sesame Street
[Closed Captioned)
I&(]) PTL Club
Ci) ill Tic Tac Dough
fB ffi 3-2-1, Contact
1 :00
2:30
mm
@) (ffi Great American
Gospel Sound
0 (]) I& Cil Tonight
Show
0 Cil Hart to Hart The
Harts become targets
for murder when they
find a fortune in gold
hidden on a sunken
yacht . (R) (60 min.)
Ci) ill Nightline
Catlins
Ci)
(!)
Eye
on
Hollywood
MOVIE:
'Suddenly, Last Summer'
A beautiful girl is committed to a mental institution after witnessing
the violent death of her
cousin . Elizabeth Taylor, Katharine Hepburn,
Montgomery
Clift.
1960.
Late
Night
with
David
letterman
0 Cil Columbo 'Last
Salute to the Commodore .' Columbo is puzzled when his main
suspect in the murder
of a yachtsman is found
dead. (R) (90 min .)
Ci) (!) Andy Griffith
Ci) (!) Alice
MOVIE:
'Enter
Laughing' A young
man enters show business against his parent's wishes . Jose
Ferrer, Shelley Winters, Elaine May. 1967.
m
m
o m m m
m
«tuesday))
3/13/84
MORNING
9 :00
m MOVIE: 'A Walk in
the Spring Rain' While
the husband is preoccupied with his writing
on their Tennessee vacation, the wife falls in
love with a mountain
man. Ingrid Bergman ,
Anthony Quinn, Fritz
Weaver. 1970.
AFTERNOON
1:00
mMOVIE: 'And Then
There
Were
None'
MAMA MALONE
Lila Kaye stars as the host
of an offbeat cooking show on
"Mama Malone," airmg
WEDNESDAY,MARCH14on
CBS.
CHECK LISTINGS FOR EXACT TIME
@)1984 Compulog
Ten people are invited
to an island and are
murdered one by one.
Louis Hayward, Barry
Fitzgerald, Walter Huston. 1945.
EVENING
high school reunion . (R)
@) (ffi Woody Guthrie:
Hard Travelin'
1o:oo D
6:oo o rn o rn m m
I& CZ) News
m Andy Griffith
fB (I) MacNeil/lehrer
Newshour
@) @ Dr. Who
6:30
0
(]) I& Cil
NBC
News
(I) CBS News
(!)ABC News
Carol Burnett
@)
(ll)
Business
Report
7:00 D (]) PM Magazine
0
(I) Wheel of
Fortune
Ci) ill People's Court
Hogan's Heroes
fB
ffi Kentucky
General Assembly
@) (ffi MacNeil/lehrer
News hour
I& CZ) At The Movies
7:30 D (]) Tic Tac Dough
0 (I) Family feud
C!J Jeffersons
Sanford and Son
I& Cil Headwaters
8:00 0 (]) I& CZ) A Team
0 (I) Mississippi
Ci)
(!)
Foul-ups/
Bleeps/Blunders
Portrait of America: New Mexico
fB (J) Nova 'The Miracle of Life.' Tonight's
program presents the
chain of events which
turns a sperm and an
egg into a newborn
baby. (R) (60 min .)
@) (ffi Wasn't That a
Time? The Weavers
8:30 Ci) (!) a.k.a. Pablo The
Rivera family becomes
angry when Paul makes
his family the butt of his
humor.
9:00 0 (]) I& CZ) Riptide
0
(I)
MOVIE:
'Second Sight: A love
Story'
A
woman,
through stubborn independence and a sense
of humor, comes to to
terms with her blindness and the challenges that lover poses
for her. Elizabeth Montgomery, Barry Newman, Nicholas Pryor.
1984.
Ci)
(!)
Three's
Company Jack goes to
great lengths to protect
Janet from a mysterious suitor. [Closed
Captioned)
Undersea World of
Jacques Cousteau
fB
ffi
Luciano
Pavarotti In Concert
9:30 Ci) (!) Oh Madeline
Madeline tunes up her
voice to teach Johnny
Mathis how to sing
when she thinks he's
the impersonator at her
0
m
m
m
m
m
m
11:oo o rn o
Cil
®
mm
l!fi(Z) News
All In the Family
@) (ffi Judy Collins:
This Is the Day
11 :30 0 (]) I& Cil Decision
'84
0 (I) Campaign '84
Dan Rather anchors
coverage of the Alabama, Florida, Georgia,
Massachusetts
and
Rhode Island presidential primaries .
Ci) (!) '84 Vote: Super
Tuesday
Catlins
11 :45 0 (]) CiB CZ) Tonight
Show
m
m
,..
m
rn
Compiled by the staff of the World Almanac
~JliJris 1.11.
m
m
CiB
Cil
Remington Steele
Ci) ill Hart to Hart The
Harts and Max are held
at gunpoint when a
murderer realizes that
Jonathan has evidence
linking him to the death
of a skier. (60 min.)
[Closed Captioned)
TBS
Evening
News
0
Cil Magnum P.l.
Magnum accepts a
case from five little girls
who want him to find
their missing teacher.
(R) (60 min.)
Ci) (!) Nightline
MOVIE:
'The
Stone Killer' A hardheaded cop tries to unravel an elaborate plot
to use Vietnam veterans to stage an underworld
massacre.
Charles Bronson, Martin Balsam, Norman
Fell. 1973
12:30 Ci) (!) Andy Griffith
12:45 D Cil fiB
Late
Night
with
David
Letterman
1 :00 0 (I) McCloud 'Fire!'
G) G) Alice
1 :45 IB MOVIE: 'Swimmer' A mi~dle-aged
man contemplates his
life while swimming
from pool to pool as he
traverses the Connecticut countryside. Burt
Lancaster, Janice Rule,
Kim Hunter. 1968.
3:45 G MOVIE: 'Count the
Hours'
12:00
1. Name the first University of Pittsburgh
player chosen in the 1983 NFL draft.
2. Name the second University of Pittsburgh
player chosen in the 1983 NFL draft.
3. Who had the most penalty minutes during
the 1982·83 NHL season?
4. Which pitcher loat the first game of the
1983 World Series?
5. Which pitcher won the final game of the
1983 World Series?
6. Name the two jockeys who have ridden
five Kentucky Derby winners.
7. Who led tl\e Chicago White Sox in RBis
during the 1983 season?
8. Name the first Boston Celtic player to be
chosen NBA rookie of the year.
9. Name at least two of the three New York
Yankee right-handed pitchers to be chosen World Series MVP.
10. Name the only New York Yankee left·
handed pitcher chosen World Series MVP.
,..
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�Wednesday, March 7, 1984
The Floyd County Times
To Observe 50th Anniversary
Moloney Insists on Budget
Including Severance Tax Shift
Mr. and Mrs. Everett Bradley, of Van Lear, will celebrate their golden wedding anniversary with an open house given by their children between 2 and
5 o'clock Saturday, March 17. at the Masonic Lodge, Second Street, Paintsville.
The Bradleys have four chtldren, ll grandchildren and five greatgrandchildren.
All relatives and friends are invited to attend. The couple request no gifts.
Play For Children Coming Here
The works of Swedish playwright Erik
Vos have seldom been produced on the
American stage. The Jenny Wiley
Theatre and the Elkhorn Coal Corporation are sponsoring a performance of
one of the first U.S. productions of Vos'
play for children, ''Professor Flarsky's
.:viiraculous Invention.''
The performance, to be held at 2 p.m.,
Sunday, March 18, in the auditorium of
the Pike Technology Building on the
May Heads Berea
Personnel Staff
Martin D. May, 41, formerly of Prestonsburg, has joined Berea College as
director of personnel.
May goes to Berea after 14 years with
the University of Kentucky's Personnel
Division where he served as a job
analyst, managed training, employment
and management development programs and, most recently, was employment manager for the Chandler Medical
Center.
Before joining the UK staff in 1969, he
was associated with the Monarch Life
Insurance Company and was an employment counselor with the Kentucky
Employment Services Bureau.
May earned an A.B. degree from the
University of Kentucky in 1965 and completed hts .:vi.S. in higher and adult
education at UK in 1978 with concentrations in organizatiOnal behavior, college
administration, personnel administration and staff development. He serves as
vice president of the association's Kentucky chapter.
He and his wife, Felicia, and children
currently live in Richmond.
At Berea, May replaces John 0.
Henry who has accepted a personnel
position at Indiana's DePauw
University.
A 1960 graduate of Prestonsburg High
School, !\lay is a son of the late Martin
Lee and Douglas Hopson May.
Section Four, Pase Seven
Prestonsburg Community College campus, marks the first stop on the regional
tour of the play performed by Virginia
Tech's Theatre Arts-University Theatre.
"The play centers on six eccentric
characters who become directly involved in the escapades of a miraculous
invention-a machine which doubles
people,'' said Kat Matassarin, the play's
director. The play explores the effects
of this wonderful machine on its inventor as well as the people who come in
contact with it.
The production incorporates lyrics
written by the author with original
music composed by Tom McLoughlin.
The music will exhibit a folk influence.
"I wanted music that was flexible," said
McLoughlin. "I wanted to be able to fit
the music to the actors' voices.''
McLoughlin will also create the sounds
the machine will make.
The machine itself posed a challenge
to designer John Saari. "I had to think
like Professor Filarsky in order to build
a machine he could have invented," said
Saari. "I used familiar, everday items
that the Professor might have found and
that the children will recognize."
"The Jenny Wiley Theatre is proud to
make this fine production available to
the youth of eastern Kentucky," said
Keith Stevens, managing director. "We
also wish to express our gratitude to the
Elkhorn Coal Corp., which is sponsoring
this production."
Transportation Cabinet officials were
told last Wednesday by Senate Appropriations and Revenue Chairman
Michael Moloney to prepare a budget
which would include the transfer of $47
million in severance tax Moloney said
it is apparent that the revenue is needed in the Road Fund, and present law
clearly requires the transfer.
Moloney's remarks were made during
testimony by Transportation Cabinet officials at the Senate Appropriations and
Revenue meeting on Transportation.
Moloney read KRS 143.090 which
states, "The department of transportation SHALL certify to the commissioner
of the department of revenue the
amount reqUired to pay the debt service
on the resource recovery road bonds.
The commissioner of revenue SHALL
transfer that money to transportation."
When asked by Moloney why this is
not anticipated in the budget "since the
statute says you SHALL," Secretary of
Transportation Poore responded by saying, "We're adhering to the Governor's
proposed budget."
Moloney said, "I'm surprised there
hasn't been a law suit filed. The
language is clear Are we saying that
Kentucky's word means nothing to bond
holders."
Previously, Transportation Cabinet
officials testified that the Road Fund will
be unable to meet essential services
without the $47 million in severance tax
or an amount equivalent to it.
The Governor's proposed budget
recommends funding for resurfacing at
less than one-third the amount requested
by the Cabinet. There are no funds for
major maintenance of the toll roads.
There are no funds for emergencies
and virtually no funds for 100 percent
state construction projects, including
funds needed for possible industrial access roads to attract new industry.
The budget recommends funding for
resurfacing at only $13.4 million in FY
'85 and only $4.1 million in FY '86. For
state construction the budget recommends only $4.6 million in FY '85 and $5
million in FY' 86. Compared to FY '82
construction figures, the state spent $28
million and in FY '83, $38 million. For
resurfacing in 1982 the state spent $38
ALLAN D.
HALBERT, M.D.
million and in 1983, $27 million.
Based on the $13.4 million resurfacing
budget, 358 miles of highway can be
resurfaced, State Highway Engineer
Robert Capito told the committee. "So
in 50 years," Moloney responded. "we
can resurface all our roads." Capito said
an 18-year resurfacing cycle would be a
good goal.
Poore agreed with Moloney that the
return of the $47 million to the Road
Fund would "take care of a lot of problems." Moloney asked, "Do you intend
to push for the $47 million?" " Yes,"
answered Poore, "I would certainly like
to have it"
Moloney also questioned the legality
of the administration's recent freeze
order and "service reduction plan" that
would divert funds from the Road Fund
to the State Police.
BOARD CERTIFIED IN FAMILY PRACTICE
Announces the relocation of his office to
DOWNTOWN MARTIN
IN THE FORMER DERMONT BUILDING
EFFECTIVE MARCH 5, 1984
Patients and Friends are invited for
OPEN HOUSE
Saturday, March 3, 1984
1:00 to 3:00p.m.
2-~2t.
BUSINESS IS
''VANTASTIC!
AT THE BARGAIN CHAMPION-
JENNY WILEY TOYOTA
JUST RECEIVED 2 TOYOTA VANS
$12,500
.
CASH DEALI
5-SPEED OR AUTOMATIC.
Now your Authorized valley van Dealer.
LEASE OR BUY.
'84 CHEVY VAN
JUST RECEIVED 2 CUSTOM
CEDAR CREEK CONVERSIONS
vanderbilt
conversion
Black or
Help for Diabetics
gray & red UNDER s20,000
The Kentucky Diabetes Control Program is conducting a series of free
classes to help the person with diabetes
understand more about the illness and
how to live a better life. The topics to be
discussed include diet, exercise, and
medications. The classes will be held at
the Floyd County Public Library from
1 to 3 p.m. on April 9 and 11.
If interested in attending, send your
name, address and phone number to Ky
Diabetes Control Program, Big Sandy
District Health Dept., P.O. Box 111,
Paintsville, Ky. 41240. For more information, call 789-3212.
LOW
$17,900
price!
COMPLETE
Luxurious
High Quality.
OPEN:
8 TO 6 PM.
Phone 886-3861
About 57 percent of Americans say they
believe in U FOs.
d
II
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CONTRACTORS
South Mayo Troil (Between Trail Blazers and Long John Silver's}
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No Purchase Necessary
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March 17th- St. Patrick's Day!
Patio Furniture To Be Given Away
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MONTHLY RATES
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court St., Prestonsburg, Ky. 41653
HOURS: Mon.-Fri. 9-5, ·Sat. 9-3
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RANDY WARD
400 SOUTH MAYO TRAIL
PIKEVILLE KY 41501
PHONE (606) 432· 1702
3·7-2!
,,
�Cancer Hopeline
•
The Floyd County Times
Wednesday, March 7, 1984
Section Four, Paae El&ht
The American Cowboy:
GARY HART
FOR PRESIDENT
Q. My husband is 67. and it seems like
so many of our friends who are around
his age have prostate problems. Two of
them this year have had cancer of the
prostate Is there anything he can do to
protect himself against cancer of the
prostate?
A Cancer of the prostate is the fourth
most common site of cancer, and it occurs most commonly among men over
65. There is no real protection, except
through early detection .a nd treatment
E\·ery man o\·er ~o should have a rectal exam as part Of his regular ph}SICal
checkup. since th1s is the only ay th1s
cancer can be spotted. )lore than half
of all pt:"osLatic cancers are discovered
while slill localized within the gen.eral
region of the prostate and the cure rate
for early prostate cancer is encouraging.
Nevertheless. cancer specialists are
working to 1mprove diagnosbc tech·
niques and new methods of treatment
are being tested.
For additional information about pro
state cancer including early symptoms
call or write the Cancer Hopeline at
1-800-4-CANCER/915 South Limestone
Street, Lexington, Ky. 40536-0084.
The Making of A Myth
By :\-IARY COMBS
(Smithsonian :'l>ews Service l
The former army scout assembled horeseman, and his Jove for an Eastern
this spectacle of real cowboys in 1882, schoolteacher. The Virginian was soon
He sits tall in the saddle. is shy with
and, Taylor says, "coupled their name produced as a play, and a stampede of
ladies. stern with villains and scornful
forever with reckless. hell-for-leather imitators followed. Among the immorof dudes He can hold h1s liquor and his
horseback ndmg and feats of skill and tals of the genre was Zane Grey's Riders
own in a fight with fists or sixshooters.
daring." Cody not only invented the of the Purple Sage ( t9l2J. the first in a
His best triend is his horse. He can burst
cowboy
superhero; he also introduced stnng of tales set in a West that ne'er
a bronco, lhro.,.. a steer. rope an\tlung
an important part of his wardrobe. the e.xisled Grey's fonnula for success ~,~:as
that 11oves. Kothing fences him in or ties
s1mple: "\'irgins, \'i llams and
tO-gallon Stetson hal.
him dov.m. except for the rare pretty
\'armints.·
The notion of the cowooy as crimmal
schoolmarm.
Wister dedicated 1'be Virginian to a
:aded in the mmd-1880s, possibly, Taylor
lie's the legendar~ American cowboy.
New York·born pcliticia:n and fellow
says.
.
because
fihe
bcoming
cattle
inand !oday he is as much a part of
Har vard graduate who had chosen the
dustry wanted a more positive image ror
Americans' image of themselves-and
cowboy as h1s hero and had h1mself
the public-and potential investors (By
the world's image of America-as he
1885. 44 percent of U.S. territory was come to 'personify-to foe and friend
has ever been m the century since the
devoted to raising cattle. l The cowboy alike-that bold image. He was Presim) thmakers went to work on him. The
now became a sort of rugged. overgrown dent Theodore Roosevelt, sometime calreal cowboys would be amazed.
tie rancher, leader of the Rough
boy scout.
The "golden" age of the original
The next step was apotheosis. The col- Riders-a Spanish-American War
cowboys was actually very brief, lasting
lapse of the cattle industry after the cavalry regiment composed of four comfrom the end of the Civil War to the late
brutal wmter of 1886 translated the panies of cowboys and one of elite New
1880s, when the collapse of the opencowboy into the realm of the noble Yorkers-and author in 1888 of Ranch
range system of cattle ranching forever
Life and the Hunting-Trail <illustrated
Indian-a vanishing American, a
changed the face of the American West
by Remington).
romantic
ideal
of
independence
and
harand the lives of the men who worker!
Roosevelt wrote of the moral strength
mony
with
nature.
To
a
nation
disilluthere. The reality of their Jives was hard,
sioned by civil war, horrified by the of the cowboy: " (He has] few of the
bone-wearying. backbreaking work. But
grim realities of factories and city slums emasculated milk-and-water moralities
reality seldom makes a very good story.
and fearful of socialism and the tide of admired by pseudo-philanthropists, but
Lonn Taylor. deputy director of the
does possess, to a very high degree, the
alien immigration, "the cowboy,"
!\lusuem of New Mexico in Santa Fe,
stern, manly qualities that are inTaylor
explains,
"embodied
all
of
the
old
guest curator of the Library of Congress'
In Floyd County, $8.00
American values, emergent...at a time valuable to a nation." Teddy's strategy
traveling exhibition, "The American
of "speaking softly and carrying a big
of national despair."
Elsewhere In Kentucky, $10
Cowboy," and co-author of the exhibition
stick"-or a Colt .45-fit the image.
Outside Kentucky, $12.50
By
the
1890s,
he
had
been
endowed
by
catalog by the same name, recently exThe cowboy theme was eagerly .taken
his Eastern admirers with all the virtues
Please note expiration da\:e
plored the creation of the cowboy
up by the infant film industry, hungry
Progressive
movement:
manly,
of
the
opposite your name on wrap·
myth-and the truth behind it-at alecself-reliant; virtuous, competitive <but for the action-packed potential of the
per or on yo~r copy of The
ture sponsored by the Smithsonian Inalways fair>, a free agent in the labor Wild West hero. The first series
Times. Becau. . of Increased
stitution Resident Associate Program in
0908·1915) featured "Bronco Billy"
market, dependent only on his own skills
mallln& costs, notices ol
Washington, D.C.
Anderson, whom Taylor describes as
for
employment.
Above
all,
Taylor
says,
subscription ·expiration are
For most of the years the real cowboy
the cowboy was seen as "100 percent "an athlete with a boyish grin and touslno
lonaer
mailed
to
was at work, the illustrated press either
Anglo-Saxon, embodying all of the ed hair who saved scores of heroines
subscribers.
ignored his existence or presented him
alleged
virtuous characteristics of that from bandits, runaway horses and fates
SubscriptioiiS m1y be mailed to:
as a drunken, rowdy desperado. The
worse than death." Tom Mix, Hopalong
ethnic
group." Ironically, the key
The Floyd County Times
first crack in this image, and hint of the
makers of the myth were a trio of Cassidy, Buck Jones and others were to
Box391
glory · to come, appeared when
Easterners-an artist, a novelist and a . fill similarly acrobatic boots.
Prestonsbura, Ky. 41653
Easterners got their first look at Buffalo
Meanwhile, the romantic cowboy
policitian.
Bill Cody's Wild West.
moved onto the screen as "the strong,
Frederic Remington's illustrations,
paintings and sculptures of the idealiz- silent man of action with an independent
but impeccable moral code." WilliamS.
ed cowboy <always white) paved the
way for all the other artists, including Hart fathered this tradition; his heirs informer cowboy Charles Russell, who cluded Gary Cooper, Randolph Scott and
followed him. Their work ornamented John Wayne.
A third type of cowboy hero owes his
dime novels, magazine stories, cowboy
existence to Texas A&M English promemoirs and poetry <often by writers
fessor John A. Lomax, who set out in
who had never seen a cowboy) churned
1907 to collect and preserve songs sung
out by the popular presses of America.
by cowboys. In his pioneering enAmong the authors painting the
thusiasm, Lomax accepted a lot of
cowboy in a romantic light was Owen
material that was bogus , and he
Wister, who wrote his first Western
substantially rewrote and sanitized
story for Harper's in 1891. Eleven years
many authentic lyrics that were vulgar,
later, h~ captured what was to be the
bawdy or downright obscene. But
essence of the myth in a tale of a noble
Cowboy Songs <1910) was uncritically
young cowboy, a crack shot and superb
accepted by a public already convinced
In celebrating February as American that an important part of a cowboy's job
was singing cattle to sleep. Professional
History Month each year, the Daughters
songwriters took up the theme, and the
of the American Revolution sponsor an
essay contest in the public and private singing cowboy was born.
"In the early '20s," Taylor says, "it
schools all over the United States. As the
was a poor [radio) station indeed which
theme is always centered around the
could not boast a Lonesome Cowboy, an
history of our country, the United States
Oklahoma Y odler or a Sagebrush Sam, "
of America, we Jearn more of our
singing Lomax songs or their own combackground. This year the Daughters of
the American Revolution are stressing positions. "By the onset of the '405, most
the Treaty of Paris and two subjects are Americans believed that a guitar was as
offered children in the 5th, 6th, 7th, and much a part of the cowboy's equipment
8th grades. (1) Discuss one or more as a rope or a horse." Some singers,
notably Gene Autry and Roy Rogers,
American handicrafts during the period
moseyed into the movies and thence to
of the Treaty of Paris 1783 (cobbler,
blacksmith, weaver, spinner, etc.) or (2) TV.
In the '20s and '30s, Will Rogersa peacemaker of the Treaty of Pariswrangler, cowboy, Wild West perJohn Adams, John Jay, Benjamin
former, movie star, political
Franklin, Henry Laurens, Thomas Jefcom menta tor-added the cowboy
ferson, etc. Some of these mentioned
philosopher to the roster of ideals and,
signed the Treaty of Paris, but there
like Teddy Roosevelt before him ,
were others who worked on the design
became America's image of what was
of the Treaty.
best in itself, a bridge between reality
and fantasy. In that same era, rodeo
Many artists were leaders in their
became a national spectator sport, and
field. West, Copley, Peale and Stuart are popular dude ranches of varying
some whose works are still highly priz·
degrees of authenticity made it possible
ed today. Benjamin West was famous
to actually live the fantasy. But the
for his painting of Penn's Treaty with Depression curbed such pursuits, and
the Indians. The Daughters of the the cowboy entertainer was soon pretty
American Revolution encourage you to much confined to movies and radio-and
study our American Heritage in the arts their youthful audiences.
field. Our citizens have contributed to
"As a result," Taylor says, "the
the world's treasury of art.
cowboy hero began to assume a fourth
aspect, one he was to wear all through
the 1940s and early 1950s: that of cowboy
father, moral preceptor to small
children." During the second World
War, mothers raising families alone
might chasten their children by saying,
"What would Gene Autry say if he saw
you do that?"
Soon, business began to appreciate the
commercial clout of little cowpokes.
Ralston Purina, sponsor of the Tom Mix
radio show <so successful it outlived the
star by a decade). created the Tom Mix
Ralston Straight Shooters Club. William
Althou~h amonat the smaJlest of
Savage, author of The Cowboy Hero,
our wildlife (the Least Shrew
summed it up neatly : "The cowboy sold
the cereal, the cereal was necessary to
tail and all is less than three
acquire the premium, and the premium
inches loml) this animal will eat
reinforced interest in the cowboy, which
meant, presumably, more listening and
at least its own wciatht in food
more eating and of course more dimes."
every day.
Other companies quickly joined in . "In
order to sell food to children, however ,"
Taylor says, "The cowboy had to
And c...:cn with a full bclh· it
reform He could no longer drink
wciaths only Y. ounce!
whiskey, chew tobacco or swear. "
The modern commercial cowboy isn't
•
so hobbled, though network TV has its
It•s not afraid of hi~ ~lame and it will even tackle pre}' as laratc as small fro~s
limits. The Philip Morris Tobacco Co.
which it captures h1· hamstrin~in~ them. In similar fashion it captures crickets
created him in the mid-1950s , in an ad
and atrasshoppers h1· bitin~ throu~h the joints of their hoppin~ leats so they
campaign designed to counteract the
·idea that filter-tipped Marlboro cigaretcan't escape.
tes were "sissy ." Now. cowboys
descended from the Marlboro man sell
most everythmg from jeans to hot tubs
Take a closer look at your lawn. The Least Shrew lives there in relatively
and men's cologne.
laratc numbers. Also take a closer look at )'our Kentucky income tax fonn. 81·
"The future forms that the mythical
donatin~ all or part of )'our tax refund to Kcntqcky's ~on-~amc \Vildlife procowboy will take are uncertain," Taylor
says, envisioning "the punk cowboy, the
atram }'OU support manaatcmcnt and habitat preservation for thinl!s as ~!rand as
computer cowboy, the Third World
caatlcs or as small as shrews.
cowboy, the astral cowboy None of
these could be farther from realitv than
the series of mythical cowboys that we
For more information, write:
have already created, yet all will be
equally important as reflections of
'J(~~Kcnt~cky Department of Fish and Wildlife - Frankfort. Kentucky 40601 ~
ourselves and our aspirations- which is.
after all, the function of a myth ...
Subscription
Rates Per Year
GREAT
YEARS
AND
UN IVERSilY of KENTUCKY
COMMUNJ1Y COLLEGE SYSTEM
,:~··NON-GAME NOTEBOOK ·t,~
·~
The Least Shrew
I
Don't underestimate this hungry little critter!
.\i/·
~
If you'd like to help-
Ned Pillersdorf or John Earl Hunt
886-9645
3-7·lt·
PACK JOINS SALES STAFF
AT CAMPBELL MOTORS
Malcom D. Layne would like to welcome
aboard as part of the crew, Chester Pack, of
Branham Village in Prestonsburg. Chet would
like to take this means to inform all of his
friends and former customers that he has
recently joined the sales staff of campbell '
Ford-Lincoln-Mercury- and Honda sales at Jvel,
Ky.
Chellnvires All of You To Stop By And See
Him ar Campbell's.
3-7-lt.
PROCLAMATION
OF THE
CITY OF PRESTONSBURG
WHEREAS: The Prestonsburg High School Blackcat
Basketball Team has just concluded one of
their best regular seasons in recent years;
and
WHEREAS : The Blackcat Basketball Team has been
crowned 58th District Champions; and
WHEREAS: The City of Prestonsburg wants to wish the
Blackcat Basketball Team much continued
success; and
WHEREAS: The City of Prestonsburg would like to show
their support to the Blackcat Basketball
Team; NOW
I, Harold W. Cooley, Mayor of the City of Prestonsburg, do
hereby proclaim the month of MARCH as PRESTONSBURG HIGH SCHOOL BLACKCAT BASKETBALL APPRECIATION MONTH in the City of Prestonsburg.
I ask that all of the residents of Prestonsburg enter into this
appreciation for the Blackcat Basketball Team.
Given under my hand this the 6th day of March, 1984.
Harold W. Cooley, Mayor
City of Prestonsburg
lt.
G&G Computer Sales
EAST POINT, KY.
Buy-of-the-Month!
MARCH 8-31, YOU CAN BUY A COMPLETE COMPUTER
SYSTEM AT AN UNBEUEVABLE PRICE.
COMPARE THE FOLLOWING COMPUTER SYSTEM
WITH ALL THE OTHERS AND SEE FOR YOURSELF:
,
1 TeleVIdeo 803 Computer with 64K RAM Memory, 14-lnch screen,
typewriter style keyboard. 2 disc drives with storage or !lOOK each,
and 132 column dot matrix printer that prints 120 characters per
second.
You also get, free with each computer system, word processing, electronic spread,
and graphics softWare...
$
2 995 00
ALL FOR ONLY
1
•
We ore the computer consultants with over 14 years· experience In the computer
field. Call us for your computer questions.
CALL DAY OR NIGHT-7 DAYS A WEEK 886·3667 or 789-6285
3·7-4t.
NUNNERY REALTY
RESIDENTIAL PROPERTY
ABBOTT MT.~verlooking Prestonsburg. Nice ranch with 3 bedrms, bath, liv. rm.,
din. nn., eat. in kit., sun room. Attached carport. Lg. lot with privacy patio. Priced
mid-SO's.
PR£STONSBURG- Mayo Addition at Lancer. 1500-sq. ft., brick ranch with 3
bedrooms, bath, living room, built-in kitchen, utility room, tarce family room with
stone fireplace. Central heat and air conditioning. Marilet priced in low 60's.
PRESTONSBURG- Bevins St. at L..~~. Nice two-bedroom home with living room,
eat-in kitchen, utility room,~\'\\.V.. Fully carpeted with central heat and air.
Recently remodeled. Good co'l.aon.
PRESTONSBURG- Prime riverilank lot located on Maple Ave. in town's most exclusive residential area.
MIDDLE CREEK, Near Clark Schoo~Approx. 2,000-sq. ft. of thing area, with 3
bedrooms, two baths, liv. rm., din. rm,, lg. fm. nn. with stone fireplace, blt.-in kit.
Lg. lot with public water and sewage. Marilet priced in tow 80's.
PRESTONSBURG- Located Central Ave. Four bedrooms, 2'h baths, blt.-in kitchen,
fm. nn. with fireplace, central heat and a.c., enclosed sun porch. Lg. swimming
pool and privacy patio. Much more. Call for additional details. Shown by appointment only. OWNER SAYS SELL. PRICED REDUCED! MAKE US AN OFFtR!
DAVID-Good condition. Nice thr~'f\\. ~om house with liv. rm., eat-in kitchen, one
bath. New alum. siding and ston\\t~ws. Landscaped lot. Owner says sell. PRICE
REDUCED!
PRESTONSBURG- Excellent commercial property located in heart of business
district 220 feet fronting South Lake Orin and Riverside Drive. Improved with
2,000-sq. ft. commercial garage and offices. Lot partially paved.
ACREAGE- 18.72 acres fronting Ky. 1428 between Abbott Mt. and East Point. Indudes rent house, garden area, 1nd mineral rights. Priced to sell in 20's.
DIXON NUNNERY,
Real Estate Broker, 886-6464, Day or Night
• WE BUY REAL ESTATE •
�Wednesday, March 7, 1984
Section Four, Paae Nne
The Floyd County Times
Complete Community Project
TOMORROW!! 12 NOON-12 MIDNIGHT
BUY NOW AND
sA.VEII..._.Thacker Furniture & Appliance Co.
Phone 432-2508 or 432-2509
LOCATED 7 MILES SOUTH OF PIKEVILLE ON U.S. 460,
EAST SHELBIANA AT THE MOUTH OF UPPER CHLOE
SHOP 12 SENSATIONAL HOURSI
YOUR ONLY OFFICIAL PARTICIPATING STORE
Students of Pauline Hick's third grade Social Studies class, at Clark Elementary, are shown with their recently completed model community project, named Kingtown. Each student drew a blue print and constructed a building for
the city.
The class is currently being taught by Vickie King, a student teacher from
Pikeville College.
••
U.S. 'feen Contestant
(Pboto by Sam Nelson I
Miss Kimberly Gale Prince, daughter
of Mr. and Mrs. Harry Prince, of Dwale,
has been chosen to be a finalist in the
1984 Miss Kentucky U.S. Teen Pageant
to be held in Bowling Green, April28,,pt
the Holiday Inn Holidome at 7:30p.m .
She is a sophomore at Prestonsburg
High School.
The Miss Kentucky U.S. Teen Pageant
• the official state final to the Miss U.S.
Teen Pageant to be held in Alabama, July 18.
TO AID FUND
FOR CRIPPLED CHILDREN
Mrs. Frances Pitts, Floyd County
Home Economist, reports that the Pike
County Homemakers are donating
crafts to be sold during "Hill Billy
j?ays," April12-14, with proceeds to be
• mated to the Crippled Children's Fund.
Mrs. Pitts adds that Floyd County
Homemakers are being invited to participate in this endeavor, and she asks
that persons who may have items to
donate, please call her.
The Treaty of Paris was signed
September 3, 1783. Three American
Commissioners, John Adams, John Jay,
Benjamin Franklin, and the British
representative, David Hartley, gave
•cognition to American independence
~hen they signed this definitive treaty
at the Hotel d'York in Paris. Join the
Daughters of the American Revolutions
in studying and celebrating this glorious
occasion.
• Trditional styling
e Simulated grained
oak finish
U of L Newsletter
Explains Legislation
Legislation is confusing. It is confusing to professionals ; it is confusing to
students. It is confusing to bankers, factory workers, retailers and educators.
It is even confusing to legislators.
In an effort to alleviate some of
legislation's confusion, the Government
Law Center, a unit of the University of
Louisville's College of Urban and Public
Affairs, is publishing "In the Hopper,"
a periodic newsletter ~fferinganalyses
and summaries of bills and resolutions
being considered by state legislators.
First published in December of 1981, "In
the Hopper" is published weekly during
General Assembly sessions and monthly
between sessions.
According to Dr. Dee Akers, director
of the Government Law Center, "In the
Hopper" serves to "reduce the
confusion- to simplify the legislative
process as much as possible." Because
of the increased responsibility of states
in the federal system and the increased
power of Kentucky's legislature, it is important that the " transactions of the people's business in the state capitol be
communicated .to-- the·- public in an
organized, regular and continuous
way."
"The legislature now plays a dominant role in the development of a multibillion dollar budget, and in the regulation of every phase of life of three million
Kentuckians. The citizen's only means
of self-protection from this kind of power
lies in being better informed about the
power struggles that go on in the
legislature." Although initially published as a service to state and county
legislators, " In the Hopper" is now
available to the public on an at-cost
subscription basis .
It is the goal of "In the Hopper"
publishers to become a reliable source
of legislation information to all of Kentucky's urban areas and to maintain a
viable legislature evaluation system.
Organizers expect to encourage better
legislation through " In the Hopper,"
especially urban impact legislation, and
to better advise both officials and
citizens on legislative action.
"The purpose of the newsletter's bill
analysis is to give people an understanding of the effect of each piece of
legislation in a non-technical way," said
Akers. " ' In the Hopper' also helps U of
L fulfill its urban mission by providing
a community service."
. 2·29-41.
NOTICE OF APPOINTMENT
Frank DeRossett. Clerk of the Circuit and District Court Offices do
hereby certify that the following persons have been appointed by the Floyd
District Court and qualify according to law and all persons indebted to the
said estates are entitled to file with the undersigned persons at the designated
~ - addresses within 6 months from date of appointment:
J,
Date
Approved
Anomey
Lennie Terry
btlll, Ky.
10-31-13
Han. Janet Stumbo
Prestonsbu11, ly.
Barba,. Mae Hall
Grethel, ly.
11· 04-13
13/P/266
Hertllel Hall
Gnthel, ly.
~
Hon. John D. Preston
Paintsville, Ky.
11-07-13
Han. W. Keith Shannon
Piknille, Ky.
Delores Gibson Baker
Wayland, Ky.
11 -07-83
Hon. Janet Stumbo
Prestonsburg, ly.
13(P/270
John E. Campbell
Garren, ly.
Nell Campbell
Garren, ly.
11 -09-13
Han. Janet Stumbo
Prestonsburt, ly.
Lila F...ncis O.louen
Allen, Ky.
11-09·83
Hon. Janet Stulllba
Prestonsburt, ICy.
Ja1111s 0. Spencer
Billy '- Jpenctr I.
llo1il.y J. Spencer
11 -11 -83
Hon. DaYid Barber
Prestonsbu11, ly.
13/P/273
ono Spencer
~ ~ Eeat Point, Ky.
lillian Edna Burd!eH
Auxier, ly.
Lort1 Merle Wells
11 -11 -13
A11xler, Ky.
13/P/276
£111- B. HoneyC11ft
Auxier, ly.
Emest Honeycutt
Auxier, Ky.
11 ·11 ·13
13/P I 277
Gertrvde Bradbury
Pnstonsbu11, ly.
laJIIIDncl Bradltury
Prestonsbu11, Ky.
11 -14·13
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Hi Hat, Ky.
Selmer I. Hew-n
11· 14-13
Hi Hat, Ky.
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Hon. Janet Stumbo
Prestonsbu11, Ky.
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�Wednesday, March 7, 1984
•
The Floyd County Times
Section Four, Pa&e Ten
SMOKED OR FRESH
PORK HOCKS
c
LB.
OPEN 8ro 10
PH: 478-52 5
HAROLD, KY.
EVERY DAY
TIDE
LAUNDRY
DETERGENT ...
CHUNK BOLOGNA ... LB.
$15 9
MORTON KING SIZE 19-0Z. BOX
CHICK./TURKEY/SALIS. STEAK
FROZEN DINNER ..
171-0Z.
BOX
2/7
9
C
MACARONI &CHEESE ....
H~·OZ. BOX KRAFT
ggc
MIRACLE WHIP ......... .
age
BEEF STEW ............... ..
24-0Z. CAN MORTON HOUSE
.
SCOTT LEADER
SELF-RISING
FLOUR .....~~a~:
6-ROLL PKG. WHITE CLOUD
$17 9
BATH TISSUE ............ .
79c
FRYING CHICKEN ....
89C
THIN-SLICED BACON .......
CUTUP
-
LB.
75
$
·
LB.
POTATOES
BONELESS
CHUCK ROAST
$1
5
89
APPLES .............. .
1
~~b.
•
3-LB. BAG
RED OR GOLDEN DELICIOUS
C
LB.·
59 C
CALIFORNIA
•
FREE DELIVERY WITH MINIMUM S20 PURCHASE
WITHIN 3 MilE RADIUS.
LETTUCE ...
-Lb.$119
ORANGES .. ~.~-~
HEAD
·•
•
•
•
4
The Drift Woman's Club held its
regular ll)eeting, Feb. 27, with vice
president Sophia Cahill presiding.
The nominating committee was
chosen with Anna Sue Stumbo, chairman; Cheryl Hall, Irene Reitz, Celia Little, and Sophia Cahill. The committee
will present names for new officers at
the next meeting. Plans were made for
a Bike-a -thon with proceeds going to St.
Jude's Hospital. Doris Lawson and
Cheryl Hall will be in charge. A contribution was made to Jenny Wiley
Drama Association. Anna Sue Stumbo
represented the club at a horse show
association meeting held recently at the
Floyd County Library. The Inter-Club
dinner will be held, April 16. The next
meeting will be March 19 with Shirley
and Velva Reed as hostesses, and the
program will be on public affairs.
Members present were Irene Reitz,
Sophia Cahill, Celia Little, Cheryl Hall,
Anna Sue Stumbo and Geraldine Ward.
Neil Moore. Jr .. recently celebrated
his third birthday at the home of his
parents, Neil and Sharon Moore, of
McDowell.
Neil and is guests were entertained by
two surprise guests. Bo Bo and Bashful,
the clowns .
Guests were his brother, Trent, his
sister, Jammie , Chris and Jus tin
Hopkins, Shawnna Shepherd, Michael
Osborne, Shenna Allen, John a nd
Heather Stewart, Wentz Stumbo and
Byron Hall.
He is the grandson of Mr. and Mrs.
Bennie Moore , of McDokwell, and Mr.
and Mrs. Pete Moore, of :\1innie.
Dr. Pigg To Address
M.O.M.S. Meet, March 13
M.O M. S (Mothers Organized for
Materna l Support) will meet Tuesday,
March 13 at 7:30p.m. at the Pikeville
P ublic Library. Guest speaker will be
Dr. James Pigg, obstetrician and Chief
of Obstetrics at Pikeville Methodist
Hospital. He will be speaking on
developing a rooming-in option for
Methodist Hospital's OB service. Time
for discussion a nd questions will follow
Anyone interested in rooming-in or s up·
porting other family centered opt10ns is
encouraged to attend the Ma r ch
meeting. M.O.M.S. meetings are open to
the public and DADS are always welcome too. For further information, con
tact Mary Montgomery at 432-1169 or
Kerri Luecke at 432 4460.
TRI COUNTY TV
• hove several used color
TV Consoles for sale
886·6474
PRICES EFFECTIVE THRU MARCH 11.
NOT RESPONSIBLE FOR PRINTER'S ERRORS
WE HAVE FEED FOR LIVESTOCK.
WE WELCOME FEDERAL FOOD STAMPS.
OWNERS, HAROLD & ANN COOLEY.
DRIFT
Three Years Old
AN ORDINANCE OF THE CITY COUNCIL OF THE CITY OF PRESTONSBURG PERTAINING TO FIRE SUBSCRIPTION RATES:
WHEREAS: The City Council of the City of Prestonsburg has realized
that there is a great need for fire protection in the area surrounding Prestonsburg ; and,
WHEREAS: The City of Prestonsburg is well-equipped and able to provide for local fire protection; and,
WHEREAS: The City is desirous of aiding and assisting the non-city
res1dents in their great need ;
NOW, THEREFORE, BE IT RESOLVED BY THE CITY COUNCIL OF
THE CITY OF PRESTONSBURG, AS FOLLOWS :
Section 1: The City of Prestonsburg hereby establishes a Fire Subscription Rate for residents of Floyd County within five (5) road miles from Prestonsburg Fire Station No. 1.
Section 2: The City of Prestonsburg agrees to respond to fire calls in the
county within five (5) road miles of station No. 1 with the 260 gallon capacity
mini-pumper and/or one of the City's 500 gallon front line trucks . The City
will respond to calls only when the safety and well-being of the residents
of the City of Prestonsburg will not be jeopardized. The City will respond
up to a maximum of six (6) firefighters to residential fires and up to a maximum of ten (10) firefighters for a business fire.
Section 3: The subscription rates are hereby established as follows:
1. Residential Fires $12.00 Bi-Annually
2. Business Fires •
a. 1200 square feet or less
- $45.00
bi-annually
b. 1200-2()()1) square feet
60.00
bi-annually
c. 2000-4000 square feet
75.00
bi-annually
d. 4000-8000 square feet
90.00 - bi-annually
e. 8000-12000 square feet
105.00
bi-annually
f. 12000-16000 square feet
120.00
bi-annually
g. 16000-20000 square feet
- 135.00
bi-annually
h. 20000-25000 square feet
- 150.00
bi-annually
i. 25000-40000 square feet
180.00 - bi-annually
j . 40000 or above
- 375.00 - bi-annually.
All busmesses that store volatile mateqals on their grounds will be charged Rate I under the Business Fire Rate.
All subscription fees will be paid bi-annually and all fees will be paid
in advance. If the fees are not paid in advance, the City will not respond
to a fire. The names of all subscribers will be posted in the fire station.
Section 4: The City of Prestonsburg Fire Department will respond only
to residential and business fires and will not respond to vehicle fires except in matters where life is involved.
Section 5: Subscription fees will be payable six (6) months in advance
to the City Clerk of the City of Prestonsburg. Fees will be due by the 15th
of the month preceding the six month time frame .
*Square footage of business will be the total square footage of the total
building including all floors or appendages.
Section 6: The City of Prestonsburg reserves the right to refuse potential subscribers for good cause if it would be unreasonable to service the
residence or business or if it would jeopardize the safety of the residents
of Prestonsburg.
Section 7: The funds realized from this subscription fee service will be
used to pay for the fire related services of a fire call. All surplus funds will
be placed in an Escrow Account for the future purchase of a fire truck and
fire fighting equipment to provide for additional coverage for city residents
and county subscribers.
Section 8: All potential subscribers shall be required to have their property inspected for approval by the City's Fire Inspector. The fire chief
shall make a recommendation to the City Administrator as to the desirability of offering the subscription to a potential subscriber. It shall be the duty of the City Administrator to approve or disapprove the potential
subscriber based on recommendation.
Section 9: The City of Prestonsburg does not assume any responsibility
for any damage that might be done in responding to a fire on the subscribers
property.
Section 10: All ordinances or parts of ordinances in conflict herewith are .
hereby expressly repealed to the extent of such conflict.
Section 11 : This ordinance will be in effect and carry the full force of
law upon adoption and publication.
HAROLD W. COOLEY
ATIEST:
Mayor
Sue Webb
City Clerk
3-7-2t.
$3 8 9
IDAHO
CALIFORNIA
ORDINANCE NO. 3-84
BONELESS
HORMEL
46-0Z. CAN STOKELY
1-ROLL PKG.
BEEF LIVER ................. LB.
69C
STEWING BEEF ........ LB.$198
10-LB. BAG SCOTT LEADER
$19 9
19
SELF-RISING CORN MEAL·
PO"RK STEAK:.......... LB.$1 .
FRUITY PEBBLES ..... .
22-0Z. BTL. DOVE
SLICED
CROCK MARGARINE ....... .
$149
age
TOMATO JUICE ......... ..
cmggc
DISH LIQUID ......~~~~~ ..
&gc
VIVA PAPER TOWELS ........
$109
EACH
$13 9
3-LB. BOWL IGA
16-0Z. JAR KRAFT
11-0Z. BOX POST
ARMOUR STAR
:l-7·21
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112 West Court St.
Prestonsburg, Ky.
437-4131
886-9952
i -11-12t.
PUBLIC NOTICE
(FIRE SUBSCRIPTION
SERVICE)
The City of Prestonsburg has began a Fire Subscription Service for residents
or Floyd County within five (5) rood miles or the main fire station, In Prestonsburg. The City will toke applications for this service until May 1, 1984. If
you are Interested In this service, please contact Davl~ Evans, City Ad·
mlnlstrator within the next sixty (60) days. Listed below ore the rates.
RESIDENTIAL - $12.00 - Bi-Annually
BUSINESS:
a. 1200 square feet or less - S 45.00 - Bi-Annually
b. 1200-2000 square feet
60.00- Bi-Annually
c. 2000-4000 square feet
75.00 - Bi-Annually
d. 4000-8000 square feet
90.00 - Bi-Annually
e. 8000-12000 square feet
105.00 - Bi-Annually
f. 12000·16000 square feet
120.00 - Bi-Annually
g. 16000·20000 square feet
135.00 - Bi-Annually
h. 20000-25000 square feet
150.00 - Bi-Annually
i. 25000-40000 square feet
180.00- Bi-Annually
j. 40000 and above
375.00 - Bi-Annually
For more Information, please call the City Administrator at 886·2335.
All propeny must be Inspected by the City before approval.
4
3-7·5t
�
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Floyd County Times 1984
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Dublin Core
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Floyd County Times March 7, 1984