Beginning March 2nd, 2020 the Mailing Lists functionality on RootsWeb will be discontinued. Users will no longer be able to send outgoing emails or accept incoming emails. Additionally, administration tools will no longer be available to list administrators and mailing lists will be put into an archival state.
Administrators may save the emails in their list prior to March 2nd. After that, mailing list archives will remain available and searchable on RootsWeb
Posted on: Floyd County In. Query Forum
Reply Here: http://genconnect.rootsweb.com/gc/USA/In/Floyd/996
Surname: Birkenmeyer, Berkenmeyer, Ackers, Akers
-------------------------
Seeking desendants of George Berkenmeyer, born in Louisville, Ky. on Aug.
9, 1857, moved to Indiana and married Veronica Weidner. Veronica died in
1921 in Louisville. Also any information about his parents Joseph Birkenmeyer
and Mary Acker ( Aker ). Thanks.
Posted on: Floyd County In. Query Forum
Reply Here: http://cgi.rootsweb.com/~genbbs/genbbs.cgi/USA/In/Floyd/995
Surname: Jenkinson, Brown
-------------------------
Searching for info on death and possibly marriage of my ggg-grandmother
in Floyd county. Her birth name has been given as Sophrone (or Sophrinia)
Elizabeth Dodgin (or Heston). She had at least two sons with William Jenkinson
outside of IN. She was born c.1850 and died after 1908 (listed as living
in New Albany then, with last name Brown). Supposedly William died c.1900.
There is a possibility Dodgin and Heston could also be other married names.
She also has been listed as being born in either VA or Scotland.
Posted on: Floyd County In. Query Forum
Reply Here: http://cgi.rootsweb.com/~genbbs/genbbs.cgi/USA/In/Floyd/994
Surname: Whiteman, Bostock, Sharp
-------------------------
I am related to William Whiteman and Chinelsa Sharp. They are my 2nd great
grand parents through a more mainline Bostock branch starting with Daniel
Boone Bostock and his wife Katie C. Whiteman. They are my great grandparents.
All these and more all lived and died in New Albany, Floyd County, Indiana.
Send an e-mail to exchange other information.
Posted on: Floyd County In. Query Forum
Reply Here: http://genconnect.rootsweb.com/gc/USA/In/Floyd/993
Surname: Graff, Perry, Fein
-------------------------
John B. GRAFF born abt 1820 in France. Married January 1845 in New Albany,
Floyd Co, IN to Mary Louisa PERRY (born abt. 1825 in France - parents Stephen
& Mary L. Perry). John and Mary had the following children:
1-Amelia Graff, born abt. 1847 Floyd Co, IN
2-Mary Louisa Graff, born abt 1848-49, Floyd Co, IN
3-Charles Henry Graff, born Oct 1850, Floyd Co, IN
4-Josephine Graff, born abt 1852, Floyd Co, IN
5-John P. Graff, born abt 1853, Floyd Co, IN
Mary Louisa Perry wife of John B. Graff died abt 1854. John moved to Evansville,
IN (without his 5 children) and is found in the 1870 census with a new
wife, Elizabeth, born Germany. He and Elizabeth moved to Jefferson Co,
Louisville, KY in the 1880 census and had a child Elizabeth Graff. The
eldest son, Charles Henry GRAFF moved to Louisville, Kentucky abt 1870
and started a family with his wife, Mary Ellen "Pollie" RILEY.
Thanks.
Posted on: Floyd County In. Query Forum
Reply Here: http://cgi.rootsweb.com/~genbbs/genbbs.cgi/USA/In/Floyd/992
Surname: RUSSELL
-------------------------
I am looking for information on Samuel Russell b 1823 who married Thursey
Russell b 1823 in June 10, 1842 in Floyd County. I have found them in the
1860 Census in Floyd. I would like any information anyone may have to this
family. I am very interested to find out who Samuel's parents were and
where they were from.
>This artical from the Courier Journal was sent to the Jefferson
>County, KY page. It is very interesting.
>From: "JOHN M SIMMONS" <MAXRAM(a)prodigy.net>
><KYJEFFER-L(a)rootsweb.com>
>
>
>
>Wednesday, July 7, 1999 L O C A L N E W S
>
>
>
>Local News Index | Local News Archives
>C-J Extra | The Courier-Journal Home Page
>
>
>Snag on military headstones upsets groups
>Cemetery's receiver, judge balk on new bid to acquire markers
>
>By DARLA CARTER, The Courier-Journal
>
>
>
>Two groups trying to acquire dozens of military headstones for a memorial
>near Greenwood Cemetery are upset because a judge and the cemetery's
>receiver won't accept a new proposal to release the stones.
>
>The dispute involves about 100 headstones discovered in a shed at the Hale
>Avenue cemetery last year by the West End Neighborhood Cemetery Association,
>a group of volunteers who help clean up and mow the graveyard.
>
>After a Courier-Journal story on Jefferson Circuit Judge Ken Conliffe's
>refusal to release the stones because of confusion about their own-ership,
>the National Cemetery Administration began trying to solve the problem.
>
>The agency, which is part of the Department of Veterans Affairs, contacted
>receiver Maurice Phillips and told The Courier-Journal that it would be
>willing to write a letter to Conliffe saying that it owns the stones and
>would support the release of the stones to Marine Corps League Detachment
>729. That group has been working with the West End group on plans for the
>memorial.
>
>But Conliffe, who heard about the proposal from a reporter, puts no stock in
>the VA's claim of ownership, though it provides such stones for qualified
>veterans' graves.
>
>"Whether they write or say they give up ownership, I don't know they have
>ownership," the judge said.
>
>If someone wants to litigate the ownership, "that's fine," he said. However,
>"I'm not going to flip a coin and say, 'You take all these stones.' . . . We
>don't own the cemetery, and we don't own the stones."
>
>Conliffe said the receivership's role is strictly to preserve the cemetery
>and keep it maintained.
>
>Complicating the situation is the cemetery's history: Greenwood has been
>embroiled in receivership and a lawsuit for several years.
>
>The board of the Louisville Crematory and Cemeteries Co. that operated the
>cemetery resigned about 10 years ago after allegations of illegal
>practices -- such as burying more than one body per grave -- at Greenwood
>and one of its sister cemeteries, Eastern, on Baxter Avenue.
>
>Conliffe is the judge in a lawsuit brought against Louisville Crematory by
>some concerned families after the allegations surfaced.
>
>That lawsuit is still tied up in court, and Conliffe said it's unlikely that
>the stones would be released until the litigation is resolved.
>
>"I'm trying to litigate a case, and that's my only function with this
>matter," he said. ". . . That's not over yet, so until then, we're
>maintaining the status quo."
>
>That's not acceptable to the Marine group, which plans to talk with a lawyer
>about its options, said Commandant Roy Thurman.
>
>He said he doesn't understand the opposition, since the stones have been in
>storage for years, and he doesn't see how the judge can leave things as they
>are. "They've done nothing with these headstones. We have brought it out to
>the public that these headstones were found in a shed and that these are
>veterans buried in the cemetery."
>
>The veterans' graves are scattered among Greenwood and Eastern sites. Some
>may also be in another sister cemetery, Schardein, Phillips said.
>
>___________________________________________
>
>
>
>Saturday, July 17, 1999 L O C A L N E W S
>
>
>
>Local News Index | Local News Archives
>C-J Extra | The Courier-Journal Home Page
>
>
>Families' claims against 2 Louisville cemeteries restored
>Insurer must pay over reused plots, care of remains
>
>By ANDREW WOLFSON, The Courier-Journal
>
>
>The findings were shocking when the Kentucky attorney general's office
>announced them 10 years ago: As many as 48,000 people may have been buried
>in previously occupied graves in Eastern and Greenwood cemeteries in
>Louisville.
>
>Some graves were found to contain the remains of as many as six people, and
>ashes were found that never had been buried.
>
>Three company officials who ran the cemeteries during the 1980s were
>indicted on charges of abusing corpses and reusing graves, but the charges
>were dropped when they agreed to enter a diversion program. And a lawsuit
>filed in 1990 by families who had loved ones buried there has languished for
>years.
>
>But yesterday, the Kentucky Court of Appeals breathed life back into their
>suit when it held that the insurance company for Louisville Crematory and
>Cemeteries Co. must cover some of the claims.
>
>The court reversed Jefferson Circuit Judge Ken Conliffe, who had ruled that
>the policy issued by Employers Insurance of Wassau excluded "willful
>violations" of state laws.
>
>The Court of Appeals ruled 3-0 that the exclusion didn't apply because the
>managers of Louisville Crematory were never convicted on the charges.
>
>"This sounds like good news," said Lawrence R. Handley Sr., who moved his
>wife's remains from Eastern Cemetery on Baxter Avenue after state
>investigators told him in 1989 that four other bodies were found buried at
>the same site.
>
>Handley also said he paid as much as $5,000 for 10 plots that his family has
>been unable to use since the cemetery closed after the allegations surfaced.
>
>Eastern was put in receivership in 1989 because of widespread mismanagement,
>including sale of already-occupied graves and removal of corpses and
>memorials. Ashes from cremations were found in a storage shed. An estimated
>4,000 plots that were bought in advance could not be used.
>
>Writing for the appeals court, Judge Joseph Huddleston of Bowling Green said
>the indictments of the three employees did not prove that they committed a
>crime, which would have been excluded under the policy.
>
>J. Leonard Rosenberg, one of the plaintiffs' lawyers, described the ruling
>as a mixed victory.
>
>The court said the plaintiffs could recover for emotional distress but not
>for property damage. That could mean that the receiver appointed to restore
>the cemetery might not be entitled to damages, Rosenberg said.
>
>
>THE COURT
>also held that the policy covers only the years 1983 to 1987, even though it
>found "compelling evidence" that Louisville Crematory engaged in overburial
>for more than 75 years.
>"The opinion is favorable to a degree, but not totally in our favor, and it
>still leaves a lot of questions unanswered," Rosenberg said.
>
>Both sides could ask for a rehearing or for the state Supreme Court to
>consider the case; Anne W. Miller, one of the insurer's lawyers, declined to
>comment.
>
>Handley, 76, who lives on South 40th Street, said he buried his wife Lula
>Mae at Eastern in 1985, then had to move her body to another cemetery when
>he learned "they buried her on top of four other people."
>
>Yesterday's ruling could eventually help resolve another controversy at
>Greenwood Cemetery, where about 100 military headstones were found in a
>shed, never having been put on graves.
>
>A community group, the West End Cemetery Neighborhood Association, has been
>raising money to erect a memorial incorporating the headstones near the
>cemetery at 41st Street and Hale Avenue. But ownership of the stones is in
>dispute, and Conliffe has said it was unlikely they would be released until
>the litigation is resolved.
>
>The suit was filed in February 1990 by Joyce Martinez and Margurite L.
>Brookings, and the plaintiffs later asked that it be certified as a class
>action on behalf of all families who bought plots or have relatives buried
>in the cemeteries. That motion is pending, Rosenberg said.
>
>
>EASTERN AND
>Greenwood were essentially abandoned in 1989 after the the attorney
>general's office announced that thousands of people had been buried in used
>graves and that some remains were found above the ground.
>Volunteers have tried to maintain the cemeteries, and in 1997 Conliffe
>appointed Omnia Church of God as the receiver of the cemeteries. Maurice
>Phillips, its sole officer, could not be reached for comment.
>
>The two cemeteries served mostly the poor and middle class; they came under
>scrutiny after a gravedigger reported that "98 to 99" percent of the 650 to
>700 graves he dug a year at both cemeteries already contained human remains.
>
>Charged were Charles Alexander Jr., who had been executive director of
>Louisville Crematory; Clifford Amos Sr., former president of its board; and
>Robert Copley, former vice president.
>
>The state dismissed the charges because the defendants were elderly and had
>never been in trouble before, a prosecutor said in 1991. The defendants also
>had challenged the search of Eastern without a warrant.
>
>
>
>Conliffe said he is concerned that if he released the stones to the Marines
>or residents, someone else might step forward later to claim them.
>
>He also noted that Phillips says he is working to get the stones placed on
>the graves.
>
>Phillips said he and researchers have pinpointed most of the grave
>locations -- on paper. He also said he is trying to acquire federal and city
>money to map the cemetery, which would help identify the graves.
>
>"By law the monuments are to be used to mark the grave of a veteran,"
>Phillips said.
>
>But Veterans Affairs officials say that the stones could be used in the
>memorial by adding the words "in memory of" to the stones, said David
>Schettler, director of operations in the memorial program services
>department of the National Cemetery Association, an arm of Veterans Affairs.
>
>A plaque would be erected at the memorial site explaining the memorial's
>history and saying there was difficulty locating the graves, Schettler said.
>
>If the actual graves were pinpointed later, Veterans Affairs would provide a
>traditional headstone to mark the graves, Schettler said.
>
>"I think it's been long enough," Schettler said. "A lot of those graves were
>from the . . . '60s and weren't marked.
>
>"I don't want to waste these 100 headstones and have these veterans not even
>honored at all by having these stones in maintenance sheds," he said.
>
>However, Steve Westerfeld, a spokesman for Veterans Affairs, stressed that
>the department isn't demanding anything, simply putting forth an idea for
>all of the parties to consider. "All we're doing is providing an option," he
>said.
>
>Phillips said that as far as he is concerned, "the monument is a moot point.
>Somebody had a daydream."
>
>Wanda Hoosier, head of the West End Neighborhood Cemetery Association, said
>the group will discuss the situation when it meets tomorrow. If the stones
>"have to sit there, they have to sit there, but it won't be because we
>didn't try," she said. "It'll be because of the judge and the receiver."
>
>But Thurman said they won't give up. With or without the stones, he said,
>"We are going to recognize these veterans who gave their life for our
>country, and we're not going to let our country forget them."
>
>____________________________________________
>
>- Michele
>
>
>==== KYJEFFER Mailing List ====
>The Jefferson County, KY History and Genealogy page is part of
>USGenWeb and ALHN which are not-for-profit Projects.
>
>==============================
>Personalized Mailing Lists: never miss a connection again.
>http://pml.rootsweb.com/
>Brought to you by RootsWeb.com.
__________________________________________________
Do You Yahoo!?
Talk to your friends online with Yahoo! Messenger.
http://im.yahoo.com
Posted on: Floyd County In. Query Forum
Reply Here: http://cgi.rootsweb.com/~genbbs/genbbs.cgi/USA/In/Floyd/991
Surname: Minton, Ball, Chadwell, Peters
-------------------------
Janet,
My grandmother, Julia Minton b. 1914, is d/o George Bradley Minton and
Lucy Ann Minton. George Bradley Minton b. 1887 s/o William M. Minton and
Eliza Peters. Lucy Ann Minton b. 1880 d/o John Minton and Susannah Chadwell.
Lucy had a brother named Evan Minton. William and John Minton both sons
of Ebenezer Minton and Barthenia Ball. Eb and Theny Ball Minton and their
family moved to Clay Co, KY from Lee Co, VA around the 1870's. Some members
later moved to Laurel Co, KY, including Evan Minton. Laurel Co borders
Pulaski Co, Ky. Would like to contact you about the Minton family to see
if there is any connection to the Floyd Co, IN Mintons.
Posted on: Floyd County In. Query Forum
Reply Here: http://cgi.rootsweb.com/~genbbs/genbbs.cgi/USA/In/Floyd/990
Surname: Martin, Howe, Biggs, Mitchell
-------------------------
Elizabeth J. Biggs b. 1812 VA or TN moved to Floyd Co. IN from Hawkins
Co, TN with her husband John Howe b. 1821 sometime between 1840 census
in TN and 1850 census in IN. Elizabeth possibly 1st married to Hiram Reynolds
and next marriage to Thomas Martin, Jr. Children by Thomas Martin were
William b. 1831, Andrew? b. 1833, John N. b. 1836 and 2 daughters. She
married John Howe after Thomas Martin's death(?), possibly in TN. John
Howe, Elizabeth, Andrew(?)and John N. are in the 1850 Floyd Co census at
New Albany but not the 1860 census. John N. Martin m. Amanda Jane Mitchell
Sept 8, 1857 in Floyd Co, served in the war 1863 to 1865. Need info about
ancestors of Thomas Martin and Elizabeth J. Biggs, the daughter's names,
the whereabouts of John and Elizabeth Howe family and John N. and Amanda
Martin family in 1860. Would like to contact anyone connected with these
families.
Posted on: Floyd County In. Query Forum
Reply Here: http://cgi.rootsweb.com/~genbbs/genbbs.cgi/USA/In/Floyd/989
Surname: Meschendorf, Lurding, Schechtman, Stockhoff, Bader
-------------------------
I am looking for any information on these families. Christine Schechtman
Meschendorf emigrated from Hannover, Germany in 1873 with her 4 sons: Henry,
Diedrich, John & Herman Meschendorf. They ended up in Louisville, Ky. I
am not sure where they were before that. Anything on any of these would
be greatly appreciated! Thanks.
Posted on: Floyd County In. Query Forum
Reply Here: http://cgi.rootsweb.com/~genbbs/genbbs.cgi/USA/In/Floyd/987
Surname: Puckett, McDowell, Argabright
-------------------------
Looking for info on George Robert Puckett. Lived in IN for 48 yrs. M. and
div. Hazel Marie Berninger in Phila. PA 2 ch. Ruth and Barbara, in PA.
Born in Floyed Co. VA. Mother Missouri Arabright, father George Puckett
sibs. Vivian, Clinton,Dewey. Vivian married a McDowell moved to CA. Any
info greatly appreciated. Search ios for my mother. Had little contact
with her father George R. Thanks! Elizabeth
Posted on: Floyd County In. Query Forum
Reply Here: http://cgi.rootsweb.com/~genbbs/genbbs.cgi/USA/In/Floyd/986
Surname: Wheeler
-------------------------
Am looking for Logan Wheeler father of James (Jim) Wheeler. Have newspaper
article from 1890 stating death of James Wheeler "son of Logan Wheeler".
Through research found a Logan Wheeler born around 1827 & married in 1852
in Floyd county Indiana. Any info would be appreciated. thanks! Marena
Morotn e-mail: jmorotn(a)dycon.com
Posted on: Floyd Co. In Obits Forum
Reply Here: http://cgi.rootsweb.com/~genbbs/genbbs.cgi/USA/In/FloydObits/278
Surname: CRUMP
-------------------------
New Albany Tribune 16 Feb 1968 p19 c3:
The funeral for Hobert CRUMP, Sr., 69, who died 3:40 a.m. Thursday in Floyd
Memorial Hospital . . .
Funeral Home: Seabrook
Cemetery: Graceland Memorial Park
Other: Lived at 2227 Willard Ave., New Albany, IN
Posted on: Floyd Co. In Obits Forum
Reply Here: http://cgi.rootsweb.com/~genbbs/genbbs.cgi/USA/In/FloydObits/277
Surname: ZANONE
-------------------------
New Albany Tribune 16 Feb 1968 p19 c3:
The funeral for Mrs. Mary B. ZANONE, 90, who died 4 a.m. Thursday in Floyd
Memorial Hospital. . .
Funeral Home: Seabrook
Cemetery: Fairview
Other: Lived at 710 W. Commom Avenue, New Albany, IN
Posted on: Floyd Co. In Obits Forum
Reply Here: http://cgi.rootsweb.com/~genbbs/genbbs.cgi/USA/In/FloydObits/276
Surname: DEAN
-------------------------
New Albany Tribune 16 Feb 1968 p19 c3:
L. Wilbur DEAN
Theh funeral for Wilbur DEAN, 75, who died Wednesday at the Martinez Veterns
Administration Hospital in Martinze, CA, will be tomorrow at 1 p.m.
Funeral Home: Mullineaux
Burial: Fairview Cemtery
Other: Native of New Albany
Posted on: Floyd Co. In Obits Forum
Reply Here: http://cgi.rootsweb.com/~genbbs/genbbs.cgi/USA/In/FloydObits/275
Surname: HOFFMAN, HOFMAN
-------------------------
New Albany Tribune 16 FEB 1968 p10 c4:
John HOFMAN, 91, died 8 p.m. Thursday at Floyd Memorial Hospital. He lived
at 401 W. Marked St.
Funeral Home: Kraft
Burial: Greenville Cemetery, Greenville, IN
So Many of us in Southern Indiana and Kentucky can trace our roots to
Germany that I thought some might like to see this atlas.
Keith Kurtz
The Atlas des Deutschen Reichs by Ludwig Ravenstein is relatively rare in
libraries of the United States. Memorial Library at the University of
Wisconsin-Madison selected the 1883 copy in our collection as one of our
first digitization projects because of its usefulness for genealogists. The
atlas helps in tracing the roots of families with origins in any part of the
German empire from the late nineteenth century to the early twentieth
century. Besides Germany, the maps of this atlas also cover the bordering
portions of present-day Austria, Belgium, the Czech Republic, Denmark,
France, Hungary, Lithuania, Luxembourg, the Netherlands, Poland, the Russian
Federation, Slovakia, and Switzerland. Due to the large scale of its maps
(1:850,000) and its thorough gazetteer of place-names, one can locate even
small towns and villages on the maps in the Ravenstein atlas. A special
feature is the marking of the locations of churches on all of the maps as
well as one special map with an accompanying table giving statistics on the
religious denominations found throughout the German empire down to the
Regierungsbezirk and Kreis governmental units.
http://www.library.wisc.edu/etext/ravenstein/
==== COOK-CO-IL Mailing List ====
Please Visit the Cook County ILGenWeb Genealogy Website sponsored by
RootsWeb:
http://www.rootsweb.com/~ilcook/
_________________________________________________________
Do You Yahoo!?
Get your free @yahoo.com address at http://mail.yahoo.com
Posted on: Floyd Co. In Obits Forum
Reply Here: http://cgi.rootsweb.com/~genbbs/genbbs.cgi/USA/In/FloydObits/274
Surname: EULITT, RUSH, NOLOT
-------------------------
New Albany Tribune 11 Dec 1939 p 1 c4
Mrs. Mary EULITT Dies in Residence
Mrs. Mary Ann EULITT, 82, died at 1:45 oclock Monday morning in the residence,
521 West Spring Street. She is survived by two daughters, Mrs. Earl RUSH
and Mrs. Mabel NOLOT, bot of Jeffersonville. The body is at the Shrader
Chapel, 1715 East Oake Street, where it will remain until funeral services
at 2:30 oclock Wednesday afternoon in the Advent Christian Church. Burial
will be in Fairview Cemetery.
Posted on: Floyd Co. In Obits Forum
Reply Here: http://cgi.rootsweb.com/~genbbs/genbbs.cgi/USA/In/FloydObits/273
Surname: POPP, HENDERSON
-------------------------
New Albany Tribune 11 Dec 1939 p 1 c3
Miss Gertrude POPP, Clark County, Dies
Miss Gertrude POPP, 41, a resident of Clark County near Bennettsville,
ten miles northeast of this city, died at 7 oclock Monday morning at the
Clark County Memorial Hospital, Jeffersonville.
Survived by her mother, Mrs. Frances POPP; two brother, Louis G. POPP of
Sellersburg and Raymond F. POPP of Henryville, and a sister, Mrs. John
HENDERSON of Charlestown. She was a member of the St. Josephs Cathollic
Church, Clark County. Funeral services: 9 oclock Wednesday morning in
St. Josephs Church, burial in the church cemetery.
Posted on: Floyd Co. In Obits Forum
Reply Here: http://cgi.rootsweb.com/~genbbs/genbbs.cgi/USA/In/FloydObits/272
Surname: BLUNK, CRUMP, FEIN, SIMS, APPELGATE, FOBINSON, ROBINSON, EMILY
-------------------------
New Albany Tribune 11 Dec 1939 p 1 c3
Funeral Tuesday for Mrs. CRUMP
Funeral services for Mrs. Emma CRUMP, 69, widow of Edward, will be helad
at 2 oclock Tuesday afternnon at the New Middletown Methodist Church,
with burial in the church cemetery.
/
. . . Mrs. CRUMP died at 7:45 oclock Saturday night at the residence of
a brother, J. G. BLUNK, 715 Cherry street. Surviving also are three sons,
Hobart, George and Roy CRUPM; two daughters, Mrs. Viola FEIN and Mrs. Lillie
FOBINSON; two brothers, Walter and Ward CRUMP, and three sisters, Mrs.
Mary EMILY, Mrs. Miller SIMS, and Mrs. Margaret APPLEGATE.
Posted on: Floyd Co. In Obits Forum
Reply Here: http://cgi.rootsweb.com/~genbbs/genbbs.cgi/USA/In/FloydObits/271
Surname: CRUMP, LEFFLER, HOUSE
-------------------------
New Albany Tribune 21 Mar 1978 p3 c4
CRUMP, George
George CRUMP, 75, who resided at 611 W. 7th St., died at 3 a.m. Tuesday
at his residence. He was a native of Harrison County and was a retired
from the restaurant business.
Survivors include: wife, Mrs. Iva B. LEFFLER CRUMP; daughter, Mrs. Delores
HOUSE of New Albany; sons Kenneth and Donald, both of New Albany; 14 grand
children; eight great-grandchildren.