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Bank of Cadiz-7, Burke- Department of Fish and Thomas-10 Devoted To The Best Interests Of Cadiz and Trigg County VOLUME 91 NUMBER 28 CADIZ, TRIGG COUNTY, KENTUCKY, THURSDAY, JULY 13, 1972 ONE SECTION, 12 PAGES PRICE 10c Z o o m B o o m Cadiz potential site for lake area airport “A new facility should be con­ District meeting in Cadiz last week, In order to best serve the com­ Broadbent and Woodruff Fields structed to serve Cadiz and Lake as were projected plans for some munity, the airport should be built could be relieved. Barkley State Park, replacing the other area cities. by 1975, according to the report. At present reliance on private the present time, Marion and Cadiz He explained that the cost would facilities at Broadbent Field and Chappell Wilson, Cadiz attorney, are being proposed for the site of be shared by the federal govern­ Woodruff Field in Trigg County. who serves as secretary of the the airport. ment and the state and local area. Development of this new Basic Pennyrile Area Development He added that the federal govern­ REV. LEONARD YOUNG, pastor of Mt. Pleasant Baptist Church, hoists a shovelful of dirt Utility (permitting general District Council, said that The report stated that by 1980 the ment would pay 50 percent and the into the air during groundbreaking ceremonies at the church Sunday. A large number of aviation) facility will cost $510,000, specifications for an airport in the airport could expect to handle state and local government church members, deacons and trustees gathered on the west side of the church, which is and will serve an anticipated 2,900 Trigg County area were stipulated together would have to provide 50 annual operations in 1990.” approximately 2,100 operations, by located in the Blue Spring community, for the special service. in the study. 1985 approximately 2,500 and by percent of the funds. These long-reaching plans for an 1990 approximately 2,900. airport in the Cadiz-Lake Barkley He added that according to the In other areas, the state airports area were suggested in the Ken­ report, the airport should be 3,500 Wilson said that a minimum of 75 study predicted that the tucky Airport System Plan, a feet in length, should be paved, acres of land will be needed for the Madisonville air traffic would more booklet prepared by Spindletop should have adequate lighting for airport to allow enough room for than double Hopkinsville’s air Research, Inc., Lexington, for the night operations, should have gas approaches. He added that if the traffic by 1990. Kentucky Department of facilities, as well as tie down and airport is built in the wrong place, a Aeronautics, the Kentucky storage facilities and other related place without enough flat land, the Program Development Office and services. facility will not be able to expand or According to the study, each of the Federal Aviation Ad­ grow. the two areas recorded 9,000 flights ministration. Wilson added that this proposed at their present airports in 1970. airport would be able to handle Wilson said that with the con­ But, it predicted that Madisonville The study was discussed at the, planes as large as small corporate struction of a basic utility airport in would be recording 40,000 flights by Pennyrile Area Development jets. this area, the present load on 1990 to only 17,000 for Hopkinsville. David Shore named to two advanced offices with Pennyrile Area Development District David Shore of Cadiz has been development of planning and trans­ State University and resides in formed his duties in his previous named Assistant Director and Pro­ lating these plans into action. Cadiz with his wife, Barbara, and capacity with the District, and we gram Officer of the Pennyrile Area their two daughters. are confident he will continue to be Development District, it was an­ an asset to the organization. We are ROBERT LANCASTER, center, chairman of the building committee and a trustee of Mt. nounced from Hopkinsville by W. F. very pleased to announce his Pleasant Baptist Church, raises a shovel filled with dirt during ground breaking ceremonies Edmunds, PADD Executive “David has very capably per- promotion,” Edmunds said. at the church Sunday. Other members of the building committee are, from left to right, Paul Committee Chairman. Stallons, song leader, Leonard Young, pastor of the church, Lancaster, Clinton Stallons, treasurer,^" nd Bethel Baker, deacon. — Photos by Kelly P’Ppol. Shore, 36, who has served as an Farm Bureau directors meet, Economic Planner for PADD since November 1969, will assume the duties of assistant to PADD plan big meeting next month Executive Director, John Adams, Mt. Pleasant congregation and Program Officer on July 15, Committees have been ap­ year, from Memorial Day to Edmunds said. Shore’s promotion pointed, members have been to the new post came on action of Labor Day. He added that notified and plans are getting exempting the Eastern Time the PADD Executive Committee well underway for the Trigg breaks ground for building last week. Zone from the savings time County Farm Bureau’s annual could not be done by a special Mt. Pleasant Baptist Church, members, Thomas Fourshee, who minister. The two preceding him David Shore meeting, which is scheduled for The Pennyrile Area Development session of the Kentucky General Trigg County’s oldest religious was the low bidder. According to include Bro. J. R. Guess, December Saturday, August 12, at the District, one of 15 in the State of Assembly, but would have to be society, which was formed near the the contract, the building is ex­ 1941 to May 1963, and Bro. J. M. The Program Officer must be Trigg County High School. done by Congress. He said that pected to be completed within Kentucky, comprises the counties site of Jefferson and Jones’ Mill in Burgess, January 1920 to November familiar with a wide range of he felt changing the state of 1810, held groundbreaking eight months. 1941. of Christian, Todd, Trigg, Hopkins, Federal Assistance Programs and Muhlenberg, Caldwell, Crittenden, At the monthly meeting of the Kentucky or even part of the ceremonies Sunday, July 9, sym­ be able to provide technical local Farm Bureau directors Lyon and Livingston. It serves as assistance to the District localities state from Daylight Savings bolizing the beginning of con­ The oldest male member of the and their wives Thursday night, Time would be confusing and struction on a new church building. The building will include an the Regional Clearing House for the and communities in establishing church is J.R. Mize, 89, and the July 6, members toured the new would hurt businesses and auditorium, which is expected to oldest woman member is Mrs. planning, coordination, and their goals and objectives. He is seat 300 persons, and a two-story development of State and Federally facilities at the Trigg County tourism across the Common­ Marvin (Bessie) Baker. Mr. Mize also responsible for implementing High School and Elementary The new building will be located section behind the auditorium for financed programs and projects the A-95 Summary Notification and wealth. just west of the old one in the Blue and Mrs. Baker were baptized School and agreed to pursue the Sunday School rooms. during the same service. within the nine-county area. Review, through which programs Springs community. are processed to insure that pro­ idea of having the events for the Broadbent announced that the Bro. Leonard Young, the third The youngest member is Mark jects do not overlap or conflict with annual meeting in the new Little directors had set up two dif­ Theater. The contract for the building has pastor serving the church in more Lane, 9, who was baptized into the As Program Officer, Shore will other developmental plans of the ferent commodity divisions for been let to one of the church than 50 years, is the present church last Sunday night. assist Executive Director, John nine-county District. Trigg County, soybeans and Adams, in promoting the multi­ Prior to the school tour, the tobacco. He added that a dairy county concept and approach to Shore is a graduate of Murray members discussed several commodity had not been set up matters which have taken place because of the scarcity of dairy Congress studies Ft. Campbell since the last regular meeting. farmers in Trigg County. Smith D. Broadbent, III chairman of the directors, told Frank McAtte of Route 5, the group that he had sent a Cadiz, was named chairman of Stubblefield pledges to keep 101st at home telegram to President Richard the Soybean Action Committee Nixon on June 23 urging him to and James R. Redd, Route 1, An aide for Representative Frank uproot the 101st or lessen the ap­ The airborne division returned to The Army replied that the in­ committee investigating military see that price controls are not Cadiz, was named chairman of Stubblefield said Friday that the propriations for the expansion of i his area in April after a five-year vestigation considered only “a appropriations, says that no plans placed on farm products. the Tobacco Committee. Congressman would vigorously the facilities.” 'our in Viet Nam. When they left, limited number” of the factors. The are being made to tell the Army oppose any change in the long range the men were basically a paratroop major point in favor of Ft. Camp­ where to put a major unit. Broadbent said that he had The members discussed plans involving the return of the The statements were made in division with only 90 aircraft. Now, bell, besides the fact that it is the also written Governor Wendell Farm Bureau Day at the 101st Airborne to Ft.
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