The Courier-Journal from Louisville, Kentucky (2024)

VJkrn THE COimiEK-JOURNAL, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 19, 1985 New device called boon for heart-attack victims Breathitt hosPital 18 approved as board reverses a 1983 vote iff Atsocltttd Prew WEST LAFAYETTE, Ind. A pocket-size electrocardiograph developed by Purdue University researchers may help save the lives of more heart-attack victims, the researchers say. The portable device could be used to make an on-the-spot diagnosis of the cause of irregular heartbeats, said Leslie A. Geddes, director of Purdue's Biomedical Engineering Center. "Often, a standard-sized ECG is not available at the scene of an emergency, so patients must be taken to a hospital for diagnosis and care," he said in a recent interview.

"With our new device, medical workers can diagnose the problem at might someday help doctors and nurses carry out routine procedures, Geddes said. Eventually, he said, the device "will be the logical accompaniment to the physician's stethoscope." Clinical testing of tiie device will begin next year in Indianapolis. Copies of the prototype are being manufactured by two companies in Purdue's Industrial Research Park, the Medical Engineering and Development Institute and CTS Electronics. The research project at Purdue originally was funded by the National Institutes of Health and is now supported by the Indiana Corporation for Science and Technology. Continued from Page 1 pened for "the people of the middle Kentucky River area." He said residents of the four counties have suffered from insufficient medical services for many years.

The certificate of need board turned down a similar request in May 1983; the governor has appointed several new members since then. Financing for the hospital will come from an industrial revenue-bond issue sponsored by Breathitt Fiscal Court, Maggard said. In other action, the board approved: Requests by Lourdes Hospital in Paducah to establish a $1.1 million cardiac catheterization unit and a $164,070 project to add 10 physical-rehabilitation beds while removing 10 acute-care beds. A $731,146 cost overrun of a construction project at Western Baptist Hospital in Paducah. A $1.6 million expansion of County Hospital.

Construction of a $6 million psychiatric and chemical-dependen- cy unit at Lincoln Trail Hospital in Radcliff. Construction of a $1.6 million chemical-dependency treatment fa-" cility at Heartland Recovery Hospital at Elizabethtown. Construction of a $3.7 million physician office building at Hazard Appalachian Regional Hospital. Replacement of equipment at Baptist Regional Medical Center in Corbin, at a cost of $1.9 million. A $4.1 million addition to a current expansion project at Shriners Hospital for Crippled Children in Lexington.

Total cost of the project will be $20 million. Construction of an addition to the Cardinal Hill Hospital in Lexington. With renovations, the total cost of the project will be $6.2 million. The addition of 31 rehabilitation beds at the Amelia Brown Fra-zier Rehabilitation Center in Louisville at a cost of $482,980. Establishment of a primary-care center in western Louisville by A.

C. Medical at a cost of $600,000. Construction of an ambulatory-care center by King Urgent Care, affiliated with King's Daughters Hospital in Ashland. Lottery idea pushed as a way to fund Medicaid services the scene and initiate emergency treatment, such as cardiopulmonary resuscitation or defibrillation, immediately." In most cases, early diagnosis and treatment can improve heart-attack victims' chances for survival by as much as 50 percent, he said. An electrocardiograph records the electric currents generated by the heart "With an ECG, medical workers can distinguish between cardiac arrest, (which is) a sudden stoppage of effective heart action, and ventricular fibrillation, where heart action becomes irregular and disorganized.

The two conditions require different emergency treatments," Geddes said. Sen. Michael R. Moloney, a Lexington Democrat and a member of the committee, said of the many suggestions to spend surplus money that it can't be done. Surplus funds are "one-time money," he said.

Moloney also questioned how appropriate it is for nursing homes to use Medicaid reimbursem*nt to pay dues to a professional organization. "That is a very small percentage," said Jack Wells, president of the association. (Judy said nursing homes pay $27.10 per bed each year for dues to the association.) Wells suggested what he called a "workable solution" to the Medicaid problem, including stricter eligibility requirements, elimination of transfer of assets to become eligible for Medicaid, a change in the Homestead Exemption Act to allow liens against property to recoup expenses, and removal of "any and all" obstacles that hinder long-term care insurance. Dr. Clifford Kerby, the mayor of Bowling Green bank donates $37,000 to Capitol Arts Center Associated Press BOWLING GREEN, Ky.

American National Bank and Trust Co. has donated $37,000 to the Capitol Arts Center to help retire its construction debts and underwrite a concert, officials said yesterday. Robert Aldridge, the bank's president and chief executive officer, said $30,000 has been pledged over three years to the center's debt retirement fund. He said $5,000 more would go to underwrite an Oct. 8 found in Tennessee barn Continued from Page 1 operation of nursing homes." "I don't like to see the majority of the blame put on providers" of services, she said.

Mrs. Jones said the cutbacks have hurt, and it is "hard to get Medicare" to pay for skilled care. "Be sure you know the problems you're faced with," Mrs. Jones urged the committee. That drew applause from the audience, which included families of nursing home patients.

Joyce Johnson of Louisville told the committee about a family member who exhausted personal resources to pay for nursing home care and now is on Medicaid. She suggested that state surplus money be used to help solve the cri sis until an answer is found, i "Consider those who have to go to other states or to inferior care because of the cutbacks," she said. "There are no solutions, but listen to those who are on Medicaid or will be." Three bodies Associated Press HARTSVILLE, Tenn. A two-week search for three men, one a former Glasgow, resident, led police to their shallow graves in a barn Tuesday, and authorities have charged two men with murder, officials said yesterday. The Macon County Sheriff's Department identified the victims as Larry G.

Jones 38; his son Larry G. "Mickey" Jones 17; and Kenneth Summers, 17, the elder Jones' nephew. Mickey Jones was a former resident of Glasgow, but at the time of their deaths all three victims lived in Macon County. The owners of the Trousdale Anderson boy, Prom Staff and Special Dispatches LAWRENCEBURG, Ky. An Anderson County teen-ager was killed Tuesday when the tractor he was driving overturned on Kays Road about 20 miles west of Lawrence-burg, according to a spokesman for the Anderson County Police Department Marcus Brent Drury, 14, of Kays Road, was pronounced dead at the KENTUCKY DEATHS County farm where the barn was located, Hubert Ward 60, and his son, Lawrence Ward, 30, were arrested Tuesday and charged with first-degree murder, Trousdale County Assistant District Attorney John Wootten said.

The men, found bound and shot, had been missing for two weeks and were last seen leaving Lafayette in Macon County in a pickup truck Sept. 3, District Attorney General Tommy Thompson said. Officials said the men probably were killed the afternoon they disappeared. "Marijuana was supposedly grown on the farm," Wootten said. "The 14, is killed in tractor accident The new device, called a personal arrhythmia monitor, is about the size of a hand-held calculator and runs on two batteries.

It is automatically activated when pressed against a patient's chest Heart activity is measured by two electrodes and appears on a liquid-crystal display. The device records and stores the ECG display, allowing medical workers to stop, expand or move the display backward to study heart activity in more detail, Geddes said. "It is also possible to transfer the stored ECG to an appropriate recorder for permanent record-keeping," he said. In addition to its use as a rescue tool, the portable electrocardiograph Berea, said he has watched the Medicaid program "grow into the monster we now have. We can't afford it any longer." The biggest expense, Kerby said, is abuse of emergency rooms, which are used like "convenience stores." Requiring patients to pay part of the tosf would reduce the use of emergency rooms as doctors' offices, Kerby said.

Dr. Richard Hench of Lexington, who is vice president of the Kentucky Medical Association, suggested that Medicaid should be oriented more toward outpatient and home health care and less toward hospital and long-term care. Others agreed, and also suggested expanded coverage for children and increased reimbursem*nt fees for doctors, speech-language pathologists and audiologists. Lelar Barney of Louisville, a member of the Health and Welfare Action Committee, said she would like to shooting started over a possible theft of marijuana." He said authorities were looking for marijuana growing on the farm, but he did not think they had found any. "We're still searching and looking.

It's a pretty good size farm. I couldn't give you the acreage." The pickup, which belonged to the elder Jones, was found Sept. 7 on a road about two miles from the farm, Thompson said. Its windows had been shot out and traces of blood were in the front seat and traces of marijuana were in the bed, he said. Macon County is on the Kentucky line south of Glasgow.

Trousdale County is on Macon County's southern border. derson County; a sister, Peggy Winkler of Louisville; a brother, Ricky Drury; and his grandparents, Dorothy Coulter of Bloomfield and Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Drury. The funeral will be at 2 p.m.

tomorrow at Fairview Christian Church in Anderson County, with burial in the church cemetery. Visitation is at Huddleston Funeral Home. injures another pickup truck hit Clifton's eastbound automobile at 10:20 a.m. Riegler was listed in serious condition at University Hospital in Cincinnati. Police said the accident is still under investigation.

Clifton, a native of Covington, was a truck mechanic for Black's Tractor Trailer Repair in Cincinnati. Survivors include his mother, Cla-rine Clifton; a sister, Stella Clifton; and two brothers, David Clifton of Bromley and Pete Clifton. The funeral will be at 2 p.m. tomorrow at Hamilton-Stanley Funeral Home, with burial in New Bethel Cemetery. Visitation at the funeral home will be after 4 p.m.

today. Larry Dennis Mask 34, of 1771 Lee St. Funeral, 2 p.m. Friday, New Jerusalem Baptist Church, 1613 Beech St. Visitation at Rowan Grevious Mortuary, 1400 Beech will be after 2 p.m.

Thursday, and at the church after noon Friday. Mary Louise Mattingly, 45, of 2516 Griffith St Funeral, 10:30 a.m. Friday, Schoppenhorst Underwood Funeral Home, 1832 W. Market St Visitation will be after 9 a.m. Thursday.

Vivian Stanley Morris, 74, of 6505 Elmwood Ave. Funeral, 1 p.m. Friday, Ratterman's, 4832 Cane Run Road. Visitation will be after 11 a.m. Thursday.

Eula Nancy Shrewsbury Newton, 94, of 1805 Kingsford Drive, a native of Breckinridge County, Funeral, 11 a.m. Friday, Owen Funeral Home, 5317 Dixie Highway. Visitation will be after 11 a.m. Thursday. Gladys M.

Powell, 74, of 137 10 Abbey Road, a native of Grayson County. Funeral, 11 a.m. Friday, W.G. Hardy Valley Funeral Home, 10907 Dixie Highway. Robert L.

"Red" Richie, 43, of 4309 Belrad Drive. Funeral, 11 a.m. Friday, Wilford E. Payne Funeral Home, 4119 E. Indian Trail.

Visitation will be after 10 a.m. Thursday. David Robinson, 71, of 4012 Dupont Circle. Graveside service, 11 a.m. Thursday, Zachary Taylor National Cemetery.

Arch L. Heady Hikes Point Funeral Home, 4109 Taylorsville Road, is in charge of arrangements. see a more flexible Medicaid program. Dr. Gertrude White Coleman of Louisville, who is with the Black Women for Political Action group, told the panel that it is important that indigent people have medical care.

She also advocated a lottery to finance Medicaid. The hearing, held in the Civic Center, drew about 160 people. Job Corpsman injured in game dies at hospital Associated Press BOWLING GREEN, Ky. One of two football players critically injured in a collision during a weekend football game has died, a hospital nursing supervisor said. Leland Fasion, 20, of Memphis, died Tuesday night at The Medical Center in Bowling Green, she said.

The cause of death was not released. Doctors reported no improvement in the condition of Kenneth Booze, 20, who is at The Medical Center. Booze and Fasion received severe concussions in a tackle during a football game between two Job Corps center teams Saturday. Fasion was a trainee at the Great Onyx Job Corps Center near Cave City. Booze, from Canton, attended the Earle C.

Clements center in Morganfield. Services set today for John F. Wilson, retired architect Associated Press LEXINGTON, Ky. Services for' John Freeman Wilson, a retired architect and engineer who designed buildings throughout the state, will be held today. Wilson, of Lexington, died Tuesday at Good Samaritan Hospital after a long illness.

He was 88. He was chief architect for many building projects around the country. Those in the state include the Lexington Blue Grass Army Depot near Richmond, Fort Campbell on the Tennessee border and Camp Breckinridge in Union County. He was the chief architect for most of the buildings at Union College in Barbourville, many elementary and high school buildings in the state, dormitories at the University of Kentucky and the Oleika Shrine Temple building in Lexington. He retired about 12 years ago.

Tractor accident kills man in Jackson County NORMAN, Ind. (AP) Irvin H. Cummings, 69, was killed when his tractor overturned about 12 miles west of Brownstown in Jackson County, police said. Authorities said the left wheel on Cummings' tractor hit a stump and overturned about 4 p.m. Tuesday, pinning him underneath.

Essie Shacklett, 54, of 509 Ballard Court, a native of Morgantown. Funeral, 11 am. Friday, G.C Williams Funeral Home, 1935 W. Broadway. Visitation will be after 7 p.m.

Thursday. Lyndon E. Shrader, 86, of 1121 Longfield Ave. The funeral will be Friday at Arch L. Heady Southern Funeral Home, 3601 Taylor Blvd.

Visitation will be after 9 a.m. Thursday. Elizabeth McMlckens Smith, 88, of Mount Lebanon Nursing Home. Funeral, 10 a.m. Saturday, Rowan Grevious Mortuary, 1400 Beech St.

Visitation will be after 7 p.m. Friday. Armor Hugh Piatt Taylor, 80, a native of Campbell County. Funeral, 10 a.m. Friday, Highlands Funeral Home, 3331 Taylorsville Road.

Graveside service, 1 p.m. CDT Saturday, Fern-wood Cemetery in Henderson. Visitation will be after 7 p.m. Thursday. Samuel Thomas II, 60, of 123 N.

Longworth Ave. Funeral, 11 a.m Friday, Emmanuel Baptist Church, 3815 W. Broadway. Visitation at A. D.

Porter Sons Funeral Home, 1300 W. Chestnut St, will be after 1 p.m. Thursday, and at the church after 9:30 a.m. Friday. Beatrice Twogoode, 77, of 233 Cecil Ave.

Funeral, 2 p.m. Friday, G. C. Williams Funeral Home, 1935 W. Broadway.

Visitation will be after 7 p.m. Thursday. Mae Elizabeth Hunt Wolff, 85, of Rose Anna Hughes Presbyterian Home Inc. Funeral, 10 a.m. Thursday, O.

D. White Sons Funeral Home, 2727 S. Third St Collision kills one Verona man, From Staff and Special Dispatches VERONA, Ky. A Verona man was killed and another was injured Tuesday in a two-vehicle accident on KY 14 near Verona, Boone County police said. concert by Lionel Hampton and $2,000 will be given to support the 1985-86 Capitol Center series.

Citizens National Bank had earlier pledged $30,000 to help reduce the center's $240,000 construction debt. Aldridge called the donation "an investment in the cultural future of our south-central region" and chal- lenged other financial institutions and industries to donate money to I the center. 1 p.m. Saturday, Woodsonville Baptist Church. Visitation at Stearman Fu-neral Home will be after 6 p.m.

Fri- day. OWENSBORO Oliver S. Flowers, 94, died here Tuesday. Funeral, 10 a.m. Thursday, James H.

Davis Funeral Home. OWENSBORO Joseph B. Thompson 87, died here Wednesday. His wife, Annabelle, survives. Funeral, 10 a.m.

Friday, St. Mary Magdalene Catholic Church. Visitation at Haley-McGin- nis Funeral Home will be after 2 p.m. Thursday. OWENTON Gertrude Thorn- ton Porter, 86, died Tuesday in Oak- 1 ley, Ohio.

Funeral, 11 a.m. Friday, I McDonald Main Street Funeral Home. Visitation will be after 4 p.m. Thursday. PADUCAH Thomas Riedfort, 33, died here Tuesday.

His wife, Su- san, survives. Funeral, 10 a.m. Fri- day, St. John Catholic Church. Visi- tation at Roth Funeral Home will be after noon Thursday.

PADUCAH Thelma Jones, 83. died here Tuesday. Her husband, Boyd, survives. Funeral, 3:30 p.m. Friday, Roth Funeral Home.

Visitation will be after 5 p.m. Thursday. PADUCAH Everett Burchard, 92, formerly of Paducah, died Monday in Louisville. His wife, Esther, survives. Funeral, 2 p.m.

Thursday, Margaret Hank Cumberland Presbyterian Church. Lindsey Funeral Home is in charge of arrangements. PERRYVILLE James "Tom- my" Kern, 66, formerly of Perry- ville, died Tuesday in Land O'Lakes, Fla. Funeral, 11 a.m. Friday, Wilder Funeral Home.

Visitation will be after 7 p.m. Thursday. PRINCETON The funeral for N. B. Cameron, 88, will be at 1 1 a.m.

Thursday at Morgan's Funeral Home. Visitation will be after 9 a.m. Thursday. He died Monday in Marion. PRINCETON Sam Elliott, 88, died here Wednesday.

Morgan's Fu neral Home is in charge of arrangements. SHELBYVILLE Geneva Stucker Whitehouse, 89, died; Wednesday in Louisville. Funeral, 2 p.m. Friday, Hall-Taylor Funeral Home. Visitation will be after 2 p.m.

Thursday. SOMERSET Herbert Owen, 86," died here Tuesday. Funeral, 2 p.m." Thursday, Burnetta Baptist Church. Visitation is at Somerset Undertaking Co. SOMERSET James Robbins, 41, formerly of Somerset, died Monday in Dayton, Ohio.

His wife, Vel-" ma, survives. Funeral, 1 p.m. Fri' day, Bethany Baptist Church. tion at Somerset Undertaking will be after 5 p.m. Thursday.

SOMERSET Gertie Sweet, 76, Route 3, Nancy, died Wednesday in Covington. Funeral, 11 a.m. Friday, Somerset Undertaking Co. Visitation will be after 6 p.m. Thursday.

SOMERSET Jeter Prltchard Wallln, 86, Nancy, died Wednesday in Lexington. His wife, Montie, survives. Funeral, 2 p.m. Friday, White Oak Baptist Church. Visitation at Pu- laski Funeral Home will be after 6 p.m.

Thursday. TOMPKINSVILLE Riley Kenneth Kerr, 60, formerly of Tomp-kinsville, died Tuesday in Indian- apolis. His wife, Sarah, survives. 1 p.m. Friday, Strode Funeral Home.

Visitation will be after 2 p.m. Thursday. TOMPKINSVILLE Lois Britt Bradshaw, 71, formerly of Tomp-kinsville, died Monday in Texas. Funeral, 2 p.m. Thursday, Yokley Funeral Home.

Scholarship fund will honor Paxton BARBOURVILLE August Warren, 64, Mills, died there Monday. His wife, Phyllis, survives. Funeral, 2 p.m. Friday, Hopper Funeral Home. Visitation will be after 6 p.m.

Thursday. BENHAM Ed Cornett, 45, Gordon, died Tuesday in Lexington. Funeral, 1 p.m. Friday, Kings Creek Freewill Baptist Church. Visitation at the church will be after 11 a.m.

Thursday. Tri City Funeral Home is in charge of arrangements. CADIZ Edgar Benny Taylor, 73, Route 5, Cadiz, died here Tuesday. Funeral, 3:30 p.m. Thursday, Goodwin Funeral Home.

CAVE CITY Jewell Allen, 68, died Monday in Nashville, Tenn. His wife, Mildred, survives. Funeral, 2 p.m. CDT Thursday, Bob Hunt Funeral Home. COLUMBIA Edd Redmon, 29, died here Tuesday.

His wife, Connie, survives. Funeral, 10 a.m. Friday, Free Union Separate Baptist Church. Visitation at Stotts-Phelps-McQueary Funeral Home will be after 9:30 a.m. Thursday.

CUMBERLAND Margie Eu-lene Hale, 46, died Wednesday in Lexington. Funeral, 1 p.m. Saturday, Parker Funeral Home, with burial in Resthaven Cemetery in Corbin. Visitation at the funeral home will be after 6 p.m. Thursday and after 9 a.m.

Friday and Saturday. DANVILLE Nell Hoover Durr, 80, died here Tuesday. Funeral, 11 a.m. Friday, SS. Peter Paul Catholic Church.

Visitation at Stith Funeral Home will be after 1 1 a.m. Thursday. HENDERSON Grace Rhoads Farley, 86, died here Tuesday. Funeral, 10 a.m. Thursday, Benton-Glunt Funeral Home.

HOPKINSVILLE D. Wright, 64, died Wednesday in Nashville, Tenn. Funeral, 11 a.m. Friday, Hughart Beard Hopkinsville Funeral Home. Visitation will be after 4 p.m.

Thursday. IRVINGTON Lillle Mae Priest, 66, died Tuesday in Hardins-burg. Her husband, Richard survives. Funeral, 2 p.m. EDT Friday, Irvington Cumberland Presbyterian Church.

Visitation at Alexander Funeral Home will be after 1 p.m. EDT Thursday. LAWRENCEBURG Roger Francis Ross, 51, Route 1, Law-renceburg, died Tuesday in Lexington after an illness. Funeral, 10 a.m. Friday, Gash Funeral Home.

Visitation will be after 4 p.m. Thursday. LEITCH FIELD Sina Carroll, 83, Anneta, died here Tuesday. Funeral, 2 p.m. Friday, Watkins Funeral Home.

Visitation will be after 11 a.m. Thursday. MADISONVILLE Lena Van-noy, 79, died here Tuesday. Funeral, 10 a.m. Thursday, Harris Funeral Home.

MANCHESTER Rhoda Barrett, 83, Road Run, died here Tuesday. Funeral, 10 a.m. Friday, Road Run Church of Christ. Visitation at the church will be after 5 p.m. Thursday.

Britton Funeral Home is in charge of arrangements. MARTIN Kendall Moore, 82, Garrett, died there Tuesday. Funeral, 10 a.m. Friday, Stone Coal Regular Baptist Church in Garrett Visitation at Hall Funeral Home will be after 8 a.m. Thursday, and at the church after 3 p.m.

Thursday. MAYFIELD Gaylon Winn, 84, died here Wednesday. Funeral, 1:30 p.m. Friday, Byrn Funeral Home. Visitation will be after 4 p.m.

Thursday. MUNFORDVILLE Willie Lee Bradley, 61, Route 1, Hardyville, died Tuesday in Glasgow. Funeral, 1 Associated Press PADUCAH, Ky. A scholarship fund will be established at a Paducah bank in honor of Jack Paxton, the editor of The Paducah Sun who died last week. Paxton died Saturday when a small biplane he was piloting crashed in a field near Paducah.

Paxton, 46, returned to Paducah LOUISVILLE AREA FUNERALS scene by Anderson County Coroner Woody Gash. Police said the accident occurred about 6 p.m. when a round bale of hay on the back of the tractor apparently shifted, causing the tractor to overturn. Drury was a native of Anderson County and a student at Western Anderson High School. Survivors include his parents, Marcus and Emma J.

Drury of An Raymond L. "Buzz" Clifton, 27, died at the scene, Boone County Deputy Coroner Clinton Shields said. Police said Carl A. Riegler, 22, of Verona, was driving west when his in 1976 to edit his family's newspaper after a career as an NBC-TV network correspondent covering the Vietnam War and other major stories throughout the world. Details of the scholarship have not been worked out but contributions may be sent to P.O.

2600, Paducah, Ky. 42201. Rebecca Walker Estes, 69, of 3303 Janella Road, a native of Nell. Funer-f, 11 a.m. Thursday, Owen Funeral Jome, 5317 Dixie Highway.

Anna S. Woodward Evans, 86, a native of Germantown. Graveside service, 11 a.m. Thursday, Frankfort (Ky.) Cemetery. Pearson's is in charge of arrangements.

Mary Alice Garrett, 62, of 225 N. 37th St. Funeral, 1 p.m. Friday, Shawnee United Methodist Church, 42nd and Duncan streets. Visitation at Schoppenhorst Underwood Funeral Home, 1832 W.

Market will be after 9 a.m. Thursday, and at the church after 11 a.m. Friday. Douglas Green, 45, of 1017 W. Market St Graveside service, 10 a.m.

Thursday, Portland Cemetery. Schoppenhorst Underwood Funeral Home is in charge of arrangements. Ida Bell Llpsey Harned, 66, of 3009 Teakwood Circle, a native of Stephens-burg. Funeral, 10 a.m. Saturday, Ste-phensburg (Ky.) United Methodist Church.

Visitation at Ratterman's, 4832 Cane Run Road, will be after 9 a.m. Thursday and Friday. Marvin P. "Skip" Kinslow, 49, of New Albany, Ind. Funeral, 11 a.m.

Friday, Ratterman's, 2114 W. Market St. Visitation will be after 10 a.m. Thursday. William "Snook" Kinzer, 67, of 2003 W.

Broadway. The funeral was held Wednesday at Dennis V. Lyons Funeral Home, 2816 Virginia Ave. Judy Byrd Spiehs Barton, 36, of Corydon, Ind. Memorial services, 7 p.m.

Thursday, Crandall (Ind.) United Methodist Church, and 7 p.m. Friday, Kenwood United Methodist Church, 7032 Southside Drive. Beanblossom-Ce-sar Funeral Home in Corydon is in charge of arrangements. Arthur E. "Bud" Blansett, 75, of 12427 Steedland Drive.

Funeral, 2 p.m. Friday, O. D. White Sons Funeral Home, 2727 S. Third St.

Moneta Myers Chinn, 77, a native of McHenry. Funeral, 11 a.m. Thursday; Ridgewood Baptist Church, 6209 Greenwood Road. Owen Funeral Home is in charge of arrangements. Eugene A.

Craycroft, 72, a native of Meade County. Funeral, 10 a.m. Friday, Most Blessed Sacrament Catholic Church, 3509 Taylor Blvd. Visitation at Arch L. Heady Southern Funeral Home, 3601 Taylor will be after 2 p.m.

Thursday. Garnett E. Darst, 76, of 822 Sylvia St. The funeral will be held Friday in Middleport, Ohio. Arch Heady Son Funeral Home, 1201 E.

Oak was in charge of local arrangements. Jane Marie Perkins Davis, 74. Funeral, 11 a.m. Saturday, W. G.

Hardy Valley Funeral Home, 10907 Dixie Highway. Visitation will be after 5 p.m. Thursday and after 9 a.m. Friday. Walter L.

Dizer, 60, of 1315 Hemlock St Funeral, 11 a.m. Thursday, Christ Refuge Church, 2709 Virginia Ave. Hathaway Clark Funeral Home is in charge of arrangements..

The Courier-Journal from Louisville, Kentucky (2024)

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