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The Daily Chronicle from De Kalb, Illinois • Page 2

Location:
De Kalb, Illinois
Issue Date:
Page:
2
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

2 DAILY CHRONICLE DeKolb, Illinois, Thur sday, Feb. 22, 1 973 Cliff there's Market reports U.S.-China plan, liaison offices Stocks of Local Interest The latest market report is provided by Loewi William Nelson registered representative in DeKalb. After each company name appears the previous trading day close and noon today figures. (Continued from Page 1) tisfied with it. I think the city manager will never work with the council and vice versa.

It's been a fouled-up deal from the word "go." What seems to be the problem? Cliffe I don't know. I think that it lies with the city manager. The council doesn't get sufficient information from the city manager. When it comes to a meeting that should last an hour, it last four hours. coffee room is always full and the secretaries do all the work.

And that's fact. Where should the city spend its portion of federal revenue sharing? Cliffe I think it should be used on the water drainage problem and on a third fire station. We have the property for a fire station. This is the time to build because construction won't get any chaper, NEXT: Howard Elliott of the fifth ward. JOL1ET, III.

(UPI) Livestock: Cattle 25, not enough to establish market. Hogs 500; steady to 50 higher; No 1-2 210-225 lb 38.50-39.00; No 1-3 210-240 lb 37.25-38.00; No 2-4 270 lb 36.75. Friday estimated receipts: cattle 1000; hogs 700. CHICAGO (UPD-Cheese: Processed loaf 65-75; single daisies 72-77W; Swiss blocks 80-100 lb Grade A-81'4-85'i. CHICAGO (UPI) -Midwest cash eggs: Steady; prices unchanged; large 46; medium 41; standard 41; small 36; checks 27H.

Prev. Prev- Day Noon TNn Close Today lose Today Anaconda 21 21 ol'" 50 5l'-i Richardson 15 1.5 Chrysler 2fi'. W', Exxon Corp: 89 Comm Kd.sun 34', 34', Sundstrand 25 25 Cul is-i 15-. Swift Co. 34 34 Com.

Tel 22 20 U. S. Steel 30 30 Del Monte '2m 20. Wurlit.er 13 13 Essex Inter 45 44 Bid and Ask Kleclnc tiU'i 67 Barber Greene 12 12 Motrin. 74 74 DeKalb AgRes.

59 Gen. Id 28 28 Duplex 9-9 NIGas 27 26 Wolohan. 16V I7'i Wanted: inspector Cortland-DeKalb Yards, Inc. Corn $1.51, Soybeans $6.20, Oats 85 cents Livestock Markets Nixon visited China one year ago, the United States and China today announced plans to open liaison offices in each other's capitals, and China said it would release two American prisoners of war held since the mid 1960s. "Our contacts with the People's Republic of China have moved from hostility towards normalization," Presidential adviser Henry A.

Kissinger told a White House news conference after announcing the agreements. Kissinger said the Chinese would release within the next few weeks two American pilots -Lt. Cmdr, Robert J. Flynn of Salt Lake City and Air ForceMaj. Philip Smith of Victor They were- -shot down over China in 1967 and 1965 The liaison offices, to handle trade and other matters, would be just one step short of full diplomatic recognition.

It would mark the first time since the Communists came to power in China after World War II that Washington has had a formal working contact with Peking. And the Chinese have also agreed, Kissinger said, to review later this year the espionage sentence being served by the only other American being held in China -CIA agent John Downey, captured during the Korean War. Kissinger said the United States would continue its diplomatic recognition of the Nationalist Chinese government on Taiwan, but added that Washington would review its troop levels there. He hinted there may be troop reductions in store for Chiang Kai-shek's island off the China coast, but said any suck, move would be due to reduced hostilities in Vietnam -not to increased contacts with Mainland China. Kissinger, who returned earlier this week from five-day visit to China called establishment of the liaison offices the closest formal contact the two governments could have short of complete diplomatic recognition.

(Continued from Page 1) surrounding the County Home on a -c-asb-rent-basiSr-Thefv4n November, a previous attorney general's ruling was cited which said the practice was illegal. Assistant state's attorney Doug Engel told the board, however, that there was no law that the county can't rent the farm for cash, was just an attorney general's opinion. Engel noted that the attorney general's opinion was based on a very old court decision. The farm had already been leased to George Madison, Genoa. The question before the board was will it be for cash, rent or sharecropping -splitthg the expenses and revenues or losses.

Rented for cash, the farm would return $5,400 to the county under sharecropping, the land has returned $2,800 a year. Castle said it was hard to believe a citizen would institute a taxpayer's suit against Tabor and Members Chicago Board of Trade Chicago Mercantile Exchange OFFICIAL USDA MARKET ADVANCE LIVESTOCK FOR FEB. 23 Cattle Hogs Kansas Citv 100 2,000 Omaha 600 4,000 Total 5,300 23,000 Week Ago 5.B00 24,800 Year Ago 5,700 27,200 USDA LIVESTOCK SLAUGHTER UNDER FEDERAL INSPECTION, YESTERDAY Cattle Hogs Yesterday 121,000 299,000 Week Ago 117,000 272,000 Year Ago 0 124,000 339,000 DRESSED BEEF TRADE YESTERDAY STEER BEEF Choice 6-800, 67.50. steady to 50 cents higher. HEIFER BEEF Choice 5-700.

66.00,steady. CHICAGO MERCANTILE LIVE CATTLE WASHINGTON (UPI) In the most far reaching- agreement since President Hospitals 4 DeKalb ADMITTED Thomas Jor-gensen, Mrs. Hugo Urquizu, Penny Cotter, daughter of Mrs. Margaret Cotter, Jennifer Nedza, Mrs. Robert Dinwiddie, Ray Preston and Mrs.

Watten Schade, all DeKalb; Mrs. Edward Forth and Kathryn Green, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Merle Greene, both Sycamore; Mrs. Roger Stark, ef Mrs.

Robert Finley, Maple Park, and Willard Berg, Lee. DISMISSED Stafford Nelson, Ernest Hanson, Craig Hammett, son of Mr. and Mrs. Clifford Hammett, Mista Hamby, daughter of Mr. and Mrs.

Charles Hamby, Julie Jossendal, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. John Jossendal, Brian Sil-verstein, son of Mr. and Mrs. Gil Silverstein, 'Mrs.

Gerhard Ziegler and Nick Tepovich, all DeKalb; Jack Arends and Mrs. Roger Gaskins and daughter, Sycamore, and Mrs. Lillian Fisher, Kingston. camore ADMITTED Doyle Spencer, Robert McCoy, Barbara Shafer, James Bellinger, Thelma Whitney, Sycamore; Wilfred Hinkle, Genoa; David School, Claudis Wilhoit, DeKalb; Clarence Huey, Kingston. DISMISSED Cecil Caldwell, Sycamore; Robert L.

Smith, Clinton. Lyons, DeKalb; Jean Hughes, Genoa; Sharon Blahnik. Maple Park; Mrs. Gary Peppers and son, Belvidere. Rochelle ADMITTED Mrs.

Marvin Murray, Chana; Lois Underwood Compton; Talmadge Wheeler, Rocltford; Mrs. Inga Rochelle. DISMISSED Mrs. Robert Sanders, Robert Schnorr, both of Rochelle; Mark Meurer, Ashton. Sandwich ADMITTED Jewell Tate, Yorkville; Mrs.

Merr Abott, Sheridan; Lucetta Kinney, Le-land; Mrs. Antonia Salinas, Millington. DISMISSED Brian Mac-Donald, Sheridan; Leah Ober-man, Blanche Shambaugh, Mrs. James Corbitt, Frank Sn ell, Forrest Tooley, all of Sandwich; Raymond Smiley, Waterman; Mrs. Stanley Mack, Byron Shuldt, both of Hinckley; Terry Barney, North Aurora; Mrs.

Eugene Shia-yario, Leland; Mrs. Donald Barnes, Piano. Today's obituaries AS OF 11:30 A.M. Opening High Low Last April 44.40-50 44.55 44.15 44.32 June 41.85-90 44.90 44.62 44.72 Aug 43.85-90 43.90 43,60 43.72 Oct 42.90-95 42.95 42.60 42.65 CHICAGO MERCANTILE LIVE HOGS AS OF 1 1:30 A.M. Opening High Low Last April 34.75 34.87 34.60 34.72 June 35.40 35.52 35,30 35.40 -July 35.47.

35.50 35.25 35.30 Oct. 29.35 30.20 29.35 29.55 Some of the department heads have been given too big of raises and if you want economy in government you'd bet-, ter start locally, I think there was $55,000 given out in raises and now they have to bring professional negotiators to deal with the working people of the city. I don't believe in that. I believe the working; man should have just as good chance as a department head. I think they haven't dealt fairly with guy who does a job for the city.

We're hop-heavy with administrators in city hall. The the county for returning more money to the county through cash rent than it could -tbrough-sharecroppingr The county agreed to use Kane County's computer to make out checks for some 400 county employes. Some $1,000 was set aside for a year's worth of service. In highway matters, a grand total of 1,9 miles of Rich Road that part of it between N. First Street and Annie Glidden Road was accepted by the County in a transfer from DeKalb township.

The stretch will be officially designated as County Highway 33. Some $6,000 was transferred from contingency fund to cover cost of the "police car that wasn't supposed to be." The December County Board authorized only replacement of four existing patrol cars and one additional car for Chief Deputy Joe Sale-mi. But by the time of the meeting it was too late to cancel an order for the sixth car, which had been made in No he retired from active service Dec. 31,1949. Mr.

Lewis married Olive Gunderson in Sandwich. They have lived in rural Sandwich since returning here in 1950. His widow survives; also a son, Walden S. Lewis Omaha, two daughters, Helen Gibson, Park Forest and Mrs. Charles (Barbara) Weigel, Houston, 12 grandchildren and one great-grandchild; also a sister, Dorothy Simmons, Casper, Wyo.

He was preceded in death by his parents, two brothers and a sister. Funeral services will be at 1:30 p.m. Friday at the Jones-Foresman Funeral Home, Sandwich. An 'Army chaplain from Ft. Sheridan will officiate.

Burial will follow in Oak Ridge Cemetery. There will be no visitation. V. L. Folena Valentine L.

Folena, 50, of DeKalb, died Feb. 21 at Dixon. Mr. Folena was born Feb. 20, 1923, in DeKalb, the son of Mr.

and Mrs. Louis Folena. He is survived by two sisters, Mrs. Robert (Gloria) Dougherty, and Mrs. Gene (Madelyn) Ellis, both of DeKalb; two nephews and.

a niece; also several aunts and uncles. He was preceded in death by his parents. Mr. Folena was a member of St. Mary's Church, DeKalb, where the funeral service will be held at 10 a.m.

Friday with the Rev. Harold Nilges officiating. Burial will follow in St Mary's cemetery. 1 There will be no visitation. Charles G.

Seidel ELGIN Judge Charles G. Seidel, 79, of 929 Brook NOMINATED FOR 7 CHICAGO (UPI) Grain range: Pedestrian injured A pedestrian crossing Carroll Avenue, near the NIU Center, about noon Wednesday was struck by an automobile but received only minor injuries. DeKalb police said Albert Peruzzo, 21, an NIU student from Berkley, apparently was crossing the street in the middle of a block and from behind a parked car, when he was struck by a car driven by Richard Loefgren, Rochelle. Peruzzo was taken to DeKalb Public Hospital by ambulance, but was treated and released. Police said Loefgren was driving without a valid driver's licence.

Roy A. Eason ELBURN Roy A. Eason, 87, of rural Elburn, died Feb. 20 at Community Hospital in Geneva. Mr, Eason was born Jan, 20, 1886, in Millington, the Son of Alexander and Helen Dayton Eason.

He was married to the. former Viva Beelar on March 28, 1943. Mr. Eason had barbered in the Aurora area until the mid 1960s. He was a member of the Claim Street Baptist Church in Aurora.

His widow survives, also several cousins in the Piano area. Private funeral services were held at 2 p.m. today at the Conley Funeral Home in Elburn. The Rev. Richard Adamson of the Claim Street Baptist Church officiated and burial took place in Blackberry ceme'tery, Elburn.

Vols Conley Kohout LITTLETON. Colo. Lois Jean Conley Kohout, 45, died Feb. 19 in Porter Memorial Hospital at Denver, Colo. She was born Dec.

27, 1927, in Sycamore, the daughter of Oliver and Hazel Brace Conley and spent most of her youth in Sycamore, attending the Sycamore schools. She was married to Rudolph Kohout in Hinsdale, III. He survives; also a stepdaughter, Joyce Kohout of Littleton; her stepfather, Harold Parker, Sycamore; a stepbrother, James R. Parker, DeKalb; a sister, Mrs. Frances Hopkins, Kirkland; and a halfsister, Mrs.

Nancy Mulligan of Fond du Lac, Wis. She was preceded in death vember after law enforcement committee, authorization. Budget wrannngs atllie D.e. "cembermeeting produced a resolution to cut out the sixth car. The finance committee had suggested at a previous meeting that the car be used only for transport of prisoners, allowing the cars to last longer.

Purchase of sheriffs radio communications equipment costing $72,976 was formally approved from the Motorola Corp. Finance committee chair man Clarence Louderback, Genoa, announced that $426,000 received back from federal government has been invested and is earning interest. $700,000 will be received by the end of the year. Among claims approved by the board since thos-e ap- proved at the Jan. 17 meeting were $971 in expenses result-, ing from the civil rights violation suit in a Chicago federal court which ended Feb.

7. Elgin, died Feb. 22 at St. Joseph Hospital in Elgin. Judge Seidel was born Sept.

29, 1893, in Elgin, the son of the late Frank and Carrie B. Gault Seidel. Except for service in the U. S. Navy in World War I he has always made his home in Elgin.

At the age of 47 he gained 'a reputation as a trial lawyer and shortly thereafter began his public career. He served on the bench as judge for the Geneva Court House fof 21 years and was elected Chief Judge of the 16th Judicial Circuit Court for Kane, Kendall and DeKalb counties from 1963 to 1973. He ilso-Sat in on invitation in Stale Court in Chicago. Survivors include his widow, the former Helen M. Graham; a daughter, Joan M.

Seidel at home; and a brother, Wilbur of Elgin. The funeral service will be at 1 p.m. on Saturday at the First United Methodist Church, Elgin, with the Rev. Carleton C. Rogers, DD, officiating.

Burial will follow in Lake Street Memorial Park. Friends may call after 1:30 p.m. on Friday at the Wait-Ross-Allanson Funeral Chapel. 51 Center Elgin. The following calls were answered by the DeKalb Fire Department within the past 24 hours: 8:50 a.m.

Ambulance call from north Glidden Avenue to DeKalb Public Hospital. 12:01 p.m. Ambulance call from Carroll Avenue, near Lu-cinda Avenue, to DeKalb Public Hospital, 7:00 9:30 ACADEMY AWARDS cotoR ooiar 7:15 9:45 COLOR Oeluit United Johnson" 7:30 Sirens High Low Close Prev. Wheat Mar 249 235 249 239 May 242 229 241 232 Jly, 228' 216 228 219 Sep 225 214 225 216 Dee 227 214 227 217 Com Mar 171 165 171 166 May 163 155 163 157 Jly 155 149 1 55 150 Sep 152 143 152 144 Dec 144 138 144 139 Mar-74 147 142 147 142 Oats (old) Mar 93 90 92 91 May 93 89 93 91 Jly 90 87 90 88 Oats (now) Mar 92 90 92 90 May 93 88 93 91 Jly 89 87 89 88 Soybeans Mar 623 604 623 611 May 585 565 585 570 Jly 551 528 547 541 Aug 530 509 526 524 Sep 460 449 456 460 Nov 402 392 298 406 Jan 398 388 396 403 Mar-74 398 388 395 402 NEW YORK (UPI) Stock prices skidded in moderate trading today as investors reacted to negative news. Trading on the New York Stock Exchange was moderate.

Shortly before noon, the Dow Jones average of 30 selected blue chip industrials de-' clined 6.85 to 967.49. Declines topped advances, 856 to 354, among the 1,565 issues on the tape. The two-hour volume totaled about 6,800,000 shares compared to 7,210,000 shares traded on Wednesday for the same period There was little to cheer investors as the government issued a report that said retail food prices leaped 2.1 per cent last month-the fastest pace in more than 20 years. The government also said real spendable weekly earnings dropped 1.1 per cent in January. On the Big Board, gold mining issues reacted to the soaring gold price.

Campbell Red Lake Mines gained Dome Mines 1H and American South African 1. CHICAGO (UPI) Wheat was mixed, corn irregularly higher and soybeans substantially higher at midmorning today on the Board of Trade. Prices at 10:35 a.m.: Wheat Mar 2.56 up 6V, May 2.49up8,i;Jly2.36,4up8'. Corn Mar 1,73 up May 1.65'Jup2'i;Jly 1.58','iup3. Soybeans Mar 6.38H up 15; 6.00 up 15; Jly 5.61 up 15.

Daily Chronicle NORTHERN ILLINOIS PUBLISHING CO. DEKALB ILLINOIS 601 15 Telephone Published every evening except Sunday and these holidays: New IA CJG17 STAR IS BOHrJ! by her parents, a brother and a sister. Graveside services will be held at 10 a.m. Friday at Evergreen Cemetery, 87th and Kedzie, Chicago. the Sheeny Funeral Home, Chicago.

Albert Nerborig Albert Nerbovig, 81, who made his home with his daughter at 312 E. Sunset, DeKalb, died Feb. 20 attheOsseo, Wisconsin, Hospital. Mr. Nerbovig was born in Wisconsin.

He married the former Anna Johnson who preceded' him in death in March of 1966. He is survived by' his daughter of DeKalb, Dr. Marcella Nerbovig, a member of the faculty of the college of education at NIU; also two brothers on the west coast. The funeral service is at 1 p.m. Friday at the Ostedahl Funeral Home at Osseo, Wis.

Burial will take place in Osseo. Walden F. Lewis SANDWICH Col. Walden F. Lewis, 74, of rural Sandwich, died Feb.

21 at Sandwich Community Hospital. Col. Lewis was born Aug. 11, 1898, in Sandwich, the son of Dr. James and Dora Sharp Lewis.

He entered military service in April of 1917 and served in the Sixth Marine Division in World War I. After attending the University of Illinois he was commissioned Second Lieutenant in the U.S. Army. Infantry Division in 1921. In 1946, after World War II he was promoted to the rank of Colonel which he held when been treated for cancer of the pancreas and liver, from which he had been suffering since last fall.

The former governor underwent surgery in New York in October for the malignancy and had been recuperating at; his winter home here. He was hospitalized Feb, 9 and his condition became critical last week. Crisis Line 758-6655 We'll listen ond try to help 24 hours doy. CONFIDENTIAL, ANONYMOUS Elftfess THEATRE EGYPTIAN Feature 7:20 9:20 JOHN IWlEfNE nNN'MnncnET ROD TflElLDn THE TflHIN nnPBERS IpGl Paneviston Technicolor I Ffm irnt fNt HOLDING OVER! 2nd SMASH HEX Doors Open 6:45 p.m. LADY SNGS THE BLUES WAMOUKfT POlM V.

A i Rockefeller dies "DIANA ROSS HAS TURNED INTO THIS YEAR'S BLAZING NEW MUSICAL ACTRESS!" -Gen Shalit, NBC-TV "DIANA ROSS DELIVERS THE KIND OF PERFORM ANCE THAT WINS OSCARS I'-PeterTravtrs, Readers Digest (EDU) ACADEMY AWARD NOMINEE "tel Actress" OF THE YEAR! PEORIA, III. (UPI) Lives- lock: Cattle volume insufficient to establish market. Hogs strong to ,25 higher; No 1-2 200-240 lb few 190 lb 38.00-38.50; No 1-3 200-260 lb 37.50-38.00; No 2-3 260-280 lb No 2-4 300-350 lb 34.50-35.50. SWIFT COMPANY Rochelle, Illinois HOG MARKET: TOP 37.00; 180-200 36-40 Lean Cuts 35.00-36.00; 200-230 36-40 Lean Cuts 36.25-36.75; 230-250 36-40 Lean Cuts 35.75-36.25; 250-270 36-40 Lean Cuts 35.25-36.75. SOW MARKET: 350down 34-38 30.25-30.50; 350-500 34-38 28.25-29.50.

CATTLE MARKET: Choice Steers 1000-1250 42.75-44.50; Good Steers 1000-1200 Choice Heifers 900-I050 42.75-44.00; Good Heifers 900-1050K 41.75-42.75; Utility 29.00-34.00; Canners Cutters 28.50-32.50. Millard H. thorsen Shobbona, III. Phone 824-2618 I xf' FUNERAL HOME PALM SPRlNGS.Calif, (UPI) Winthrop Rockefeller, former governor of Arkansas and grandson of legendary oil tycoon John D. Rockefeller, died today at the age of 60.

A spokesman said Rockefeller died at 8:30 a.m. PST at Desert Hospital here. He had lasTfayl 'TetelTTllHe" 7:00 A 9:00 Year's, Memorial Day, Independence Day, Labor Day, Thanks- Weather TeCOTil giving Day and Christmas. No 9am issue if hojiday is observed on Sat- ZZZ "IZ Feb 22 urday or Monday. TmmmZZlZZZl 24 Barometric 29.90" Second class postage paid at De- Barometric falling Kalb, Illinois 601 15.

Relative ...70 SUBSCRIPTION RATES Precipitation for the 24-hour Home delivery $175 monthly, period ending at 4 30 p.m. yester- Mail subscriptions not accepted day was a trace of drizzle. where carrier and Motor Route Accumulation for 1.04" delivery service is maintained. By Accumulation for 2.36" mail Inside the DeKalb retail trad- High temp, yes ...32 at 3 a m. ing lone; 6 months 1 year High 1 year 25" $19 00.

By Motor Route Delivery 1 Record 1943 year By mail outside the Low yesterday 10:30 p.m. DeKalb retail zone; 6 months, Low 1 year 1 1" 1 year $30.00. All mail sub- Record 1936 scriptions payable in advance. Mean 25 mm STARTS TOMORROW! THE MIRISCH CORPORATION IWArvOJM PCTURES CX)RPC DIANA ROSS IN IAD SINGS THE BLUES' olso staffing BILLY DEE WILLIAMS co ster Richard pryor 2 Shows At and Af P.M. AiifjUMUaBiiiywiDto Artists COLOR 1 Ice xxkitiwoi is.

ncxra oc too VLast day! "Jeremiah.

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Years Available:
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