quality is our goal! ask for sam yoder or dan esh free...
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THE LEDGER INDEPENDENT WEDNESDAY, 03.28.2012 | A5
TRUE BUILT BARNS 3 1/2 miles SE of Flemingsburg, Ky. on Rt. 32 (next to the Fast Track Shell)606-845-0540 • 1-800-710-4822Quality is our Goal! Ask For Sam Yoder or Dan Esh
Since 1991 RENT-TO-
OWN
FREE Delivery within 150 miles • www.trubuiltbarns.com
Our Buildings are ready for your Spring Cleaning
Get organzied and ready for
Spring with one of our buildings.
Available in many sizes.
Tonya Gray901 US Hwy 68, Suite 100
Maysville, KY606-564-7400
Across from McDonald’s
Call today for a free insurance protection review.
We’re your Shield.We’re your Shelter.ShelterInsurance.com
MASON County
KENTUCKY
OHIO
BRACKEN County
BROWN County
Brell & SonFuneral Home
Maysville’s Only Locally Owned & Operated
Funeral Home
606-564-3641 Palmer Funeral Home6264 Brooksville Germantown Rd.
Germantown, KY
606-883-3182www.palmerfh.com
METCALFE- HENNESSEY Funeral Home301 East 4th. St., Augusta, KY
606-756-2270www.mhfuneralhome.com
MOORE & PARKERFUNERAL HOMES
305 Elizabeth S., Augusta, KY
606-756-2101www.mooreandparkerfh.com
Hwy. 10, Brooksville, KY
606-735-2114www.mooreandparkerfh.com
Palmer Funeral Home6264 Brooksville Germantown Rd.
Germantown, KY
606-883-3182www.palmerfh.com
Meeker Funeral Home308 Columbus Street
Russellville, OH
937-377-4182www.meekerfuneralhomes.com
Wilson Home for Funerals, Inc.
35 West 2nd StreetManchester, Ohio937-549-3363
www.wilsonhomeforfunerals.comDavid K. Wilson Jane E. Wilson
Cahall Funeral Homes
204 W. State St., Georgetown
937-378-63841011 S. 2nd St., Ripley
937-392-1112
ADAMS County
Thompson-MeekerF U N E R A L H O M E
216 West Mulberry StreetWest Union, OH 45693
937-544-2133www.meekerfuneralhomes.com
ROBERTSON COUNTY
Funeral HomeHwy. 62, Mt. Olivet, KY
606-724-5000
LEWIS County
Barbour & Son Funeral Home
Tommy Barbour Billy BarbourRt. 10, Tollesboro, KY
606-798-3241
ROBERTSON County
FUNERAL DIRECTORYFor your convenience
CONVENIENTDIRECTORY
FLOWERS & PLANTS
MAYSVILLE
FLEMINGSBURGLasting
ImpressionsFlowers & Gifts
109 S. Main Cross(606) 845-0103 1-800-230-9800
564-9091
Grimes Greenhouse Nursery & Florist122 Metcalfe Rd.(606) 267-31411-877-476-0222
AUGUSTAAmy’s
Blue Daisy128 Main Street(606) 756-2821
www.amysbluedaisy.com
Maysville Flower Shop
177 E. 2nd St.564-3766
EWING
freshly cut and arranged by these fine florists
Carol Jean Flowers
inside Pet & Hobbies481 Moody Dr.606-564-6836
Reserve Your Directory Space Today!THE LEDGER-INDEPENDENT
Eagle’s Lodge139 East 2nd Maysville, Ky
564-4505MEMBERS ONLY
MODERN LAUNDRY& DRY CLEANING CO.
APPLIANCES & FURNITURE
McRobert’sFurniture Mart
16 W. 2nd
564-9848
AGING
Tom Clarke
Long Term Care Insurance
119 Sutton St. • Maysville, KY606-564-5527
LODGE
Moose Lodge11 E. 2nd St.Maysville, KY
606-564-5266Members & Invited Guests Welcome
Jewelry
46 W. 2nd St. Maysville, KY
606-564-5578
www.eatgallery.com
From all of your Downtown Merchants in Maysville, Ky.
LAUNDRY
-OUR 118th YEAR-Try our “Super Shirt” Service
Bring your Dry Cleaning with your shirts.
31 East 2nd St.Maysville, Ky • 564-5561
Thank You For All Your Business!
exquisite art treasures
151 East Second StreetMaysville, KY
606-564-0321
PAWN
LODGE
Danita’s CoiffeursHAIR SALON & BARBER SHOP
Evening & Saturday’s208 Market St. Maysville
606-564-0078
HAIR SALON
EYEWEAR & HEARING
HEARING AID CENTERFree Hearing Tests & Evaluation
103 E. Second St.Across From Domino’s Pizza
1-800-686-7410 or 564-3512
CATERING
Creative Cateringfor all Occasions!
Box Lunches • Drop Off Catering•Sit Down Dinner •Corporate Catering
CHRISTIAN STORES
49 West Second St.Maysville, KY
Tues.-Fri., 9-5 • Sat., 9-1
606-563-8449
BANQUETSThe Limestone
CenterNO RENTAL FEE!with catering purchase
Bernard Coughlin Blvd.
Maysville Community & Technical College
1755 U.S. 68Maysville KY 41056
606-759-7141 ext. 66120
COLLEGE
DENTISTS
Maysville’s Friendly Dentist
DR. JAMES E. ADAMS19 E. 3rd St.
564-9033
Hair Designers
MAYSVILLE
1321 Suite B US. Hwy 68 Maysville, KY
606-564-3635Hours: Wed. 9-5, Tues., Thurs., Fri. 9-6; Sat. 9-4
MAYSVILLE Marketsquare
606.759.5038HRS: Mon.-Fri. 10a.m.-7p.m.
Sat. 9a.m.-6p.m. Sun. Noon-5p.m.
Shoppes of Maysville223 Wal-Mart Way
606-759-0100M-F 9 -9 •Sat 9-6 •Sun 12-5
525 Tucker Drive
606•759.0405
Cindy Frankenfield, Owner836 Forest Avenue
Maysville, KY
606.564.5001MT. OLIVET
Shear TalentMain Street
606•724•5455
TOLLESBOROTonia’s
BEAUTY SHOP3534 W. KY 10, Tollesboro, KY
606•799•9199THESE SALONS ARE REACHING
OVER 29,000 POTENTIAL CUSTOMERS. YOUR BUSINESS
CAN DO THE SAME BY CALLING:
1-800-264-9091
THE LEDGER INDEPENDENT WEDNESDAY, 03.28.2012 | A5THE LEDGER INDEPENDENT | WEDNESDAY, 03.28.2012 OBITUARIES | A5
DEATHS LOCALLY
DEATHS ELSEWHERE
FUNERAL SERVICESTODAY
Clay Jolly — 1 p.m., Wilson Home for Funerals, Manchester, Ohio.
WEDNESDAY
Madge Todd — 11 a.m., Boone-Nickell Funeral Home, Flemingsburg.
THURSDAY
Glenn G. Huber — 11 a.m., Palmer Funeral Home, May’s Lick.
Carol R. Stout — Noon, Wilson Home for Funerals, Manchester, Ohio.
FRIDAY
Clair Kimball Jr. — 2 p.m., Cahall Funeral Home, Ripley, Ohio.
Michael L. Poynter — 1 p.m., Dickerson Funeral Home, Vanceburg.
MR. HUBERMAY’S LICK | Glenn G.
Huber, 70, of Huber Lane, May’s Lick, passed away Saturday, March 24, 2012, at Meadowview Regional Medical Center.
He was a self-employed mechanic, machinist and farmer.
His wife Rena Jewell Gul-ley Huber preceded him in death on Dec. 7, 2010.
Glenn was born in Maysville on Jan. 20, 1942, son of the late Charles V. and Ann Gordon Huber.
He was a graduate of May’s Lick High School and Lexington Technical School. He was a former member of the Army Re-serves.
Survivors include a daughter, Nicole Carswell (Tracy) Tolle of Fountain, Colo.; a son, Glenn (Kerri) Huber Jr. of Maysville; three grandchildren, Luke Carswell, Megan and Emily Huber; a sister, Joyce “Joy” (Larry) Coffey of Prescott, Ariz.; a niece, Tomeka Ogan of California; and a nephew, Will Coffey of New Mexico.
Services will be conduct-ed at 11 a.m., Thursday, March 29, at Palmer Funer-al Home in May’s Lick with Rev. Bill Boldt officiating.
Interment will follow in the Charleston Bottoms Cemetery.
Visitation is 6-9 p.m., Wednesday at the funeral home.
Memorials suggested to The Huber Grandchildren Scholarship Fund.
Condolences to www.palmerfuneralhome.net.
MR. KIMBALL ABERDEEN | Clair Kim-
ball Jr., 87, of Aberdeen, Ohio, went to be with the Lord, Monday, March 26, 2012, at Christ Hospital in Cincinnati.
He worked in sales, was a United States Army World War II veteran and a member of the Courts-Fussnecker American Le-gion Post No. 367 of Ripley, Ohio.
Mr. Kimball was born July 10, 1924, in Mount Orab, Ohio, the son of the late Clair and Edna (Wise) Kimball.
He was preceded in death
by his wife, Mary (Kearns) Kimball.
Mr. Kimball is survived by two daughters, Di-anna Canter and Patti Law (Jerry), both of Cincinnati; one son, Jerry Kimball of Aberdeen, Ohio; eight grandchildren; four great-grandchildren; one sister, Mary Alice Felix of Mount Orab, Ohio; three brothers, Paul Kimball and Glenn Kimball, both of Mount Orab, and Danny Kimball of Texas.
He was preceded in death by one son, Donald Lee Kimball.
Services will be held at 2 p.m., on Friday, March 30, 2012, at Cahall Funeral Home in Ripley, Ohio. Rev. Jim Rawlings will officiate.
Burial will follow in Charter Oak Cemetery in Aberdeen, Ohio with Military Honors provided by the Courts-Fussnecker American Legion Post No. 367 of Ripley. Visitation will be from 1-2 p.m., Fri-day at the funeral home.
Condolences may be sent to the family at: www.ca-hallfuneralhomes.com.
MR. POYNTER
GARRISON | Michael L. Poynter, 66, of Garrison, died Monday, March 26, 2012, at the Ohio State University Medical Center
in Columbus, Ohio.Mr. Poynter was born in
Ashland, March 6, 1946, the son of the late Clifton and Shirley DeBorde Poyn-ter.
He was a retired opera-tor-engineer for the city of Hamilton Ohio.
He is survived by his wife, Patricia Kamer Poynter; one son, Michael Poynter Jr. (Tonya) of Gar-rison; two grandchildren, Hayley Poynter and Chase Poynter; and one brother, Norman Poynter (Gloria) of Chattanooga, Tenn.
Besides his parents, he was preceded in death by one brother, Raymond Poynter.
Services for Michael L. Poynter will be held at the Dickerson Funeral Home at 1 p.m., Friday, March 30, 2012, with Rev. Al Owens officiating.
Burial will be in the Skid-more Cemetery. Pallbearers will be Jason Bentley, Wil-lie Willis, Kenny Eldridge, Danny Kamer, Wes Ferrell and Michael Poynter Jr. Chase Poynter will serve as an Honorary Pallbearer.
Visitation will be held at the funeral home on Thurs-day from 6-8 p.m., and on Friday from 9 a.m. until the hour of the service.
ANDREW DALTONAssociated Press
LOS ANGELES | Larry Stevenson, a skateboard maker who helped take the sport from an early 1960s kid’s gimmick often com-pared to the hula hoop to a respectable and eventually professional sport on par with surfing, has died.
Stevenson died at age 81 on Sunday at Ronald Rea-gan-UCLA Medical Center in Santa Monica, his son Curt Stevenson told The Associated Press.
The elder Stevenson had dealt with Parkinson’s Dis-ease since the early 1970s, and he’d been in a nursing home for much of the past decade. His death was first reported by the Los Angeles Times.
Larry Stevenson was a design innovator who de-veloped features still found on skateboards 50 years later and a businessman who was among the first to make professional and mass-produced boards.
But many skaters say his greatest achievement was getting the public to accept skateboards by perma-nently linking it to surfing, a sport that had become a national craze and was in-spiring movies and music.
“That freedom of being in the waves, he wanted to transfer that to land,” said Michael Brooke, author of the 1999 history of skate-boarding “The Concrete Wave” who often inter-viewed Stevenson.
“He basically was the godfather of skate culture. Before him, skateboards were toys.”
A Southern California native, Stevenson was working as a lifeguard in
Venice Beach in 1959 when he saw kids tooling around on mostly homemade boards with clay or metal wheels.
Before he started manu-facturing, he became a pioneer in promoting the sport through magazine pictures and stories, an element that would be almost as essential to skate culture as the boards themselves.
He pushed skateboarding in Surf Guide, a magazine he founded with a friend, showing pictures of skat-ers carving up sidewalks alongside surfers riding waves.
Stevenson then began designing and selling
boards with his wife out of their garage.
His first commercially produced board was known as the “Makaha Surf & Ski Skateboard,” in an attempt to link the sport to the slopes as well as the waves.
He used the Makaha name, taken from a Hawai-ian surf spot, for the com-pany he’d run for the next several decades.
Early skateboard innovator Larry Stevenson dies