Tena Roller, left, and her son, 14-month-old Nathan Lee Roller, take a moment from their stroll through the Brook Haven Trailer Park in Lebanon, Ky., to visit with her husband, Nathan Scott Roller Wednesday morning."That little fella's the pride of my life," Nathan Scott Roller said of his boy, Nathan Lee, 14 months. The younger Nathan was dropped into his daddy's lap at the Brook Haven Trailer Park in Lebanon, Ky., with a bottle attached to his lips just before bedtime. "Here you go," Nena, Nathan's wife, said. "Clean and fresh."
The making of brownies becomes a community project in the kitchen of Tena Roller, of Lebanon, Ky., far right, Wednesday night. Mary Black, left, and her daughter, Ashley, 9, helped out in the process by reading the recipe and adding some of the ingredients to the mixing bowl. Ashley and her sister Gladys, 3, took care of the leftover batter.Pillows stacked at the ready, Gladys Black, 3, sleeps in after a late night of moving. Her family was in the midst of moving to a new mobile home down the street at the Brook Haven Trailer Park in Lebanon, Ky.Besides the solemn service they provide to deceased veterans, Marion County Veterans Honor Guard members, from left, Paul Powell, George W. Battcher, Ernest C. Taylor and Francis Bland also share in a common bond of comraderie when they get together.With the help of Kathy Isaacs-Smith, left, and Milton Blair, Elsa Johnson of Lebanon, Ky.., makes her way to the Transit Authority of Central Kentucky's van Wednesday morning. Johnson uses the TACK pick-up service regularly to get to her day care provider.