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The Edwardsville Intelligencer from Edwardsville, Illinois • Page 7

Location:
Edwardsville, Illinois
Issue Date:
Page:
7
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

ScHirdoy, July 15,1972 EDWAJttoSVILLB INTELLIGENCER PtfMitaU 55--26 INVENTIONS WANTED; We develop, design, finance and place your idea or invention, patented or 'unpatented, to attention of our national manufacturer clients who seek new products. Cash sale or royalties possible. Write for free literature. Imperial, 2424 Hamilton Road, Arlington Heights, or call collect 312593-0260, Dept. No.

EM. Lett Found 57 57--15 I A A FROM GRANDVIEW. Year old black and white German Shepherd. Very friendly. Reward.

6563622. 57--15 POUND--BICYCLE. Call and identify. Reward expected. 6562945.

Dogs, Cats Other Pets 59 59-17 MINIATURE SCHNAUZERS, AKC Registered, champion sired. 2 male, 2 female, 6 weeks, Shots. $80.00. 345-4533. 59-ti PROFESSIONAL DOG GROOMING.

All breeds. Bathing, clippings. Michael Dickson 2889732 after 6 p.m. 59--19 BRITTANY SPANIEL PUPS. Wormed.

Males, $25.00. Females, $20.00. Phone 656-5112. If no answer, call 656-1778. 59-18 FIVE KITTENS FREE to a good home.

Days, 692-2550. Bonnie. FREE. SMALL BEAGLE TYPE DOG. Female.

1 year old. Housebroke. Good with children. Phone 656-2058. POODLES.

3 BLACK. 6 weeks old. $40.00 each. Phone 6332425. 59--17 2 FREE PUPPIES.

Mother: Cockapoo, father: Terrier. Call 656-8338 after 6. 59--17 HEADY FOR ADOPTION. 3 fluffy kittens. Black and striped.

656-3477. 59-18 REGISTERED A SHEPHERD. Female. 10 months old. For sale.

Call 887-4452. 59--18 FREE KITTENS! Call 656-1825. Public Sales 63 63--15 SKAGGS PUBLIC AUCTION. 101 Kell Worden. Opens Saturday at 12:00.

Auction 7:30. Consignments wanted. Phone 656-6033. Legal Publications 67 67-15 INVITATION TO BIDDERS Bids are requested for the construction of a new City park- Ing lot on Second Street, Edwardsville, Illinois. Plans and specifications are available at the Office of the City Clerk, Rosemary M.

Hubach, 400 North Main Street, Edwardsville, Illinois. Sealed bids to be received at the office of the City Clerk, Rosemary M. Hubach, 400 North Main Street, Edwardsville, Illinois until 4:30 p.m. 1 August 1972. Bid opening--Council Meeting --1 August 1972 at 7:30 p.m.

(July 13-14-15) 67--29 NOTICE Notice is hereby given on the pendency of a ifliit in the Circuit Court of Madison County, Third Judicial Circuit, Edwardsville, Illinois, wherein CAROLYN E. MYERS is Plaintiff and DONALD E. MYERS is Defendant, which suit is No. 72-D-770 in Chancery and is for a Divorce. The Defendant, DONALD E.

MYERS is to be served by publication. Default may be taken on or after AUGUST 18th, 1972 In the Courthouse, in Edwardsville, Illinois. WILLARD V. PORTELL Clerk of the Circuit Court Madison County Courthouse Edwardsville, Illinois J. LAWRENCE KESHNER Attorney for Plaintiff KESHNER WYSS 307 Henry Street Alton, Illinois 62002 (July 15, 22, 29) 67-22 PUBLICATION NOTICE IN THE CIRCUIT COURT, THIRD JUDICIAL CIRCUIT OF ILLINOIS, MADISON COUNTY, ILLINOIS.

LEROY SINKS and BETTY SINKS Plaintiffs, vs. MILES HOMES, INCORPORATED OF ILLINOIS, a Corporation, Defendant. No. 72-E-139. The requisite affidavit for publication having been filed, notice is hereby given vou.

MILES HOMES, INCORPORATED OF ILLINOIS, a Corporation, Defendant in the above entitled suit, that the said suit has been commenced in the Circuit Court, Third Judicial Circuit of Illinois, Madison County, Illinois, by the said Plaintiffs, against you praying for the removal of cloud on title, and for other relief; that summons was duly issued out of the said Court against you as provided by law, and that said suit is still pending. Now therefore, unless you, MILES HOMES, INCORPORATED OF ILLINOIS, a Corporation, the said Defendant, file your answer to the Complaint in said suit or otherwise make your appearance therein, in the Circuit Court, Third Judicial Circuit of Illinois, Madison County, Illinois, held in the Courthouse in the City of Edwardsville, Illinois, on or before the 10th day of August, 1972, default may be entered against you at any time after that day and a decree entered in with-the prayer of said Complaint. Dated July 5,1972. WILLAHD V. PORTELL Clerk EDWARD D.GROSHONG Knife-Wielding Passenger Shot By Bus Driver Tacoma, Wash.

(AP) A knife-wielding man who attacked five persons at a bua depot here Friday night was listed in critical condition today after being shot by a bus driver. The five all were listed ta satisfactory condition with stab wounds they suffered when the assailant suddenly attacked them on and off the bus, police said. Police identified the assailant as Alexander Murphy, 23, of Tacoma. They said he boarded the bus in Portland, with most of the other passengers. The Greyhound bus was scheduled to terminate its trip to Seattle after a Portland stopover.

Detective John Vejvoda said the attacker stepped off the bus behind Linda Gail Champman, 22, of Portland, then began stabbing her in the back. When she fell, Vejvoda said, the man went back aboard the bus and began attacking passengers. Those injured were identified as John S. Hopkins, 63, Seattle; Luceil Osvold, 75, Portland, and Frieda Kunz, 63, Portland. The driver of another Greyhound bus at the terminal, Virgil Powell, 57, of Tacoma, went into the bus and tried to hold back the assailant, but also fell from stab wounds, Vejvoda said.

The driver of the bus on which the attacks occurred was not present at the time, police said. Vejvoda said the assailant was shot when he turned to leave the bus and was met at the exit by gunfire from another bus driver, Harold Falgreen, 32, of Auburn, Wash. Falgreen, who was at the terminal after driving a metropolitan bus from Seattle to Tacoma, had carried a pistol in his travel bag and rushed to the scene, Vejvoda said. Cameras Taken Out for Fischer Reykjavik, Iceland (AP) Organizers of the world chess have made a new concession to Bobby Fischer, but the competition still appears to be on the brink of collapse. udmundur Thorarinsson, president of the Icelandic Chess Federation, said late Friday the hidden film cameras would be removed from the Reykjavik sports hall as demanded by the U.S.

challenger. But Thorarinsson also said the ruling would 1 stand that Fischer forfeited Thursday's second game to Russian defender Boris Spassky by refusing to appear because of the cameras. The third game is scheduled for Sunday afternoon. Fischer announced he would play only if the cameras were removed and if the forfeit were erased and the Sunday game was considered the second. Fischer's attitude complicated anew the financial arrangements for the competition and threatened to cost him much of the money he had pried from the organizers in a negotiations preceding the match.

Legal Publications 67 Attorney for Plaintiffs 227 West St. Louis Ave. East Alton, Illinois 62024 (618) 254-0147 (July 8-15-22) 67--15 CLAIM NOTICE STATE OF ILLINOIS IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE THIRD JUDICIAL CIRCUIT, MADISON COUNTY PROBATE DIVISION. IN THE MATTER OF THE ESTATE OF MAGDALENA STANKA, DECEASED, No. 72-P-317.

Notice is given of the death of the above. Date Letters Were Issued: June 20,1972. Executor: John P. Stanka of Route 4, Jerseyville, 111. Attorney: James Heil of Alton, El.

Claims against the estate may be filed in the office of the Circuit Court, Probate Division, County Courthouse in Edwardsville, Illinois, within 7 months from date of issuance of letters; and any claim not so filed is barred as to the estate inventoried within that period. Also, copies of claims must be mailed or delivered to the executor and to the attorney. WILLARD V. PORTELL Clerk of the Circuit Court (July 1-8-15) Area Deaths Hansel Infant Dies CAPRI ST.lOtlS PD. Both Open 7:00 Sfart Dusk Spend A Nite With James Bond "GOLDFINGER" "DR.

NO" "FROM RUSSIA WITH LOVE" Robert Hansel, Infant son of Mr. and Mrs. Joe Hansel of Worden, died at 4:27 p.m. Thursday, at birth, at Community Memorial Hospital, Staunton. The child it survived by a sister, Ton! Hansel, at home, and by paternal grandparents Mr.

and Mrs. Carl Hansel and-maternal grandparents Mr. and Mrs. Harry McGowan, all of Worden. The Williamson a Home, Worden, is In charge of arrangements.

There will be no visitation. Graveside services will be at 4 p.m. Monday at the Elmwood Cemetery, Litchfield. Richard Ross Hichard Ross, 77, of 843 Morton Place, an Edwardsville resident since 1924, died at 11 p.m. Friday at the Madison County Nursing Home.

Mr. Ross, a retired bricklayer, had been ill the past year. He was born Jan. 8, 1895 at West Point, the son of Mr. and Mrs.

William Ross. He was married April 13, 1942, in Overland, to Levada Weeks Leonard. Mrs. Ross died Jan. Judge Orders Wage Controls To Be Relaxed Washington (AP) A federal judge, in the first successful court challenge of President Nixon's economic stabilization program, has ordered a relaxation of wage controls that could benefit 14 million workers.

Union leaders had sought the decision. U.S. District Judge William B. Jones ruled Friday that the Cost of Living Council (COLC) was "in excess of agency authority" when it limited exemptions from wage controls to persons earning less than $1.90 an hour. The ruling meant the council could no longer use $1.90 as the figure beyond which wage raises have been limited to 5.5 per cent.

In granting a summary judgment in a suit brought by several labor unions, including the AFL-CIO, Jones did not set a new exemption figure. However, he cited a hour figure based on a Bureau of Labor Statistics study, which said this wage would provide the $6,960 considered adequate annual income for an urban family of four. The AFL-CIO estimated about 14 million workers are making between $1.90 and $3.35 an hour and thus will be granted exemption from wage controls. The Cost of Living Council had no immediate comment on the decision, but is expected to appeal the case. Paul Jennings, president of the International Union of Electrical, Radio and Machine Workers, hailed the decision as a "direct rebuttal to those who would deny the working poor a chance for equitable wage increases while food and other prices go unchecked.

"This decision clearly exposes the Nixon administration's intent to subvert the will of Congress," Jennings added. The lawsuit was based on amendments to the Economic Stabilization Act of 1970, which provide that "any individual whose earnings are substandard or who is amongst the working poor" should be exempt from wage controls. Jones said the figure is "without rational basis and frustrates the intent of Congress." He said Congress had decided that "wage exemptions should be based on a salary of $7,000 a year instead of the $3,000 figure used by the council. "Millions of low-wage earners, however, have been denied the exemption from wage controls to which they are entitled because of the administrative difficulties in recognizing such exemptions," Jones said in his 20-page decision and order. 27,1964.

Survivors are stepson, Erven Leonard of Edwardsville, stepdaughter, Mrs. La. Verne (Berm'ece) DeCrevel of Greenville. Also surviving are four grandchildren and 10 great grandchildren. He was preceded in death by one grandchild.

Mr. Ross was a member of Veterans of Foreign Wars Post 1299 of Edwardsville, Veterans of World War I Barracks 977, Edwardsville, and of the Bricklayers, Masons and Plasterers Union Local 30 of East St. Lou- Is. Friends may call after 3 p.m. Sunday at the Weber Funeral Home.

Funeral services wiU'bo 1:30 p.m. Monday at the funeral home. Burial will be in Woodlawn Cemetery. Orian Metcalf Orian Metcalf, 68, managing editor of the Mt. Vernon Register-News, died Thursday of cancer.

His career' with the Mt Vernon newspaper spanned 50 years. Mr. Metcalf started with the newspaper in 1922. He worked in advertising and circulation and was managing editor for the last 35 years. He underwent surgery for cancer three years ago and again about three months ago.

Mr. Metcalf served several years on the Mt. Vernon Grade School Board, including a term as president. He has served with the Southern Illinois and the Illinois Associated Press editors associations. Visitation will be this evening at the Myers Chapel in Mt.

Vernon. Services win be at 2 p.m. Sunday in Myers Chapel. The family has suggested donations to the Jefferson County Cancer Society in lieu of flowers. Mildred White Mrs.

Mildred Marie White, 63, of Collinsville, died at 8:55 p.m. Friday in Belleville Memorial Hospital, Belleville. She was a retired waitress and former owner of the Horseshoe Lounge in Collinsville, Mrs. White was born Nov. 12, 1908, in Lutesville, daughter of the late Henry Alonzo and Nellie Mae Francis Morris.

She is survived by-a daughter, Mrs. Shirley M. Seib of Collinsville, sons, Donald L. White of' Caseyville and Robert G. White of Dublin, and 13 grandchildren.

Brothers, William W. Morris of Edwardsville, John E. Morris of St. Louis, and Raymond Morris of New York state, and sisters, Mrs. Arnold (Alma) Zorn of Mayville, Mrs.

William (Frances) O'Connell of Pekin, and Mrs. Raymond (Mary) Briggs and William (Alpha) Logan, both of Granite City, also survive. Mrs. White was a member of Bartenders and Waitresses Local 755. In addition to owning the Horseshoe Lounge, she also had worked at the Tattletale and Pines lounges.

She most recently worked at Sunset Lanes in Pekin. Friends may call at the Herr Funeral Home in Collinsville after 2 p.m. Sunday. Services will be held in the funeral home at 2 p.m. Monday, with Rev.

Dave Gronemann officiating. Burial will be in St. John's Cemetery, Collinsville. Sen. Thomas Eagteton returned to Missouri after being chosen as Sen.

George McGovern's running mate for the 1972 campaign. Gospel Singer Joe May Dies Cairo, Ga. (AP) Gospel singer Joe Wesley May, better known as Brother Joe May, died in a hospital Friday at age 59. May, of East St. Louis, was in Cairo for a concert when he was stricken Thursday afternoon.

He died in a Thomasville hospital of a stroke, doctors said. His body was taken to Clyde's Funeral Home in Cairo and a memorial service hi Cairo was planned for Sunday. The body was to be-shipped to East St. Louis Sunday-night. Tom Eagleton Thrilled to Be Running Mate Kansas City (AP) Sen.

Thomas a "between euphoria and terribly tired," says he is surprised that he was tapped for the Democratic vice presidential nomination. "I never expected to be part of the ticket. I'm thrilled and honored," Eagleton" told a cheering airport crowd as he returned to his home state Friday night from the Democratic National Convention in Miami Beach, Fla. "It's going to take enthusiasm," Eagleton said of the that he and Sen. George McGovern of South -Dakota, the a i presidential nominee, will wage in their effort to capture the White House from President Nixon.

But he added, "There's no doubt in my mind that Sen. George McGovern will be in the White House." Some 400 supporters turned out at Kansas City Municipal A i Eaeleton. He addressed the gathering for several minutes, talked wita newsmen and then visited a few friends at a private home here for a few hours before retiring early for what he said was a much-needed rest. He had a speaking engagement today before the National Audio-Visual Association at a a i Muehlebach. He planned to fly to Washington immediately afterward.

The 42-year-old freshman senator acknowledged that such forces as labor and the old-line Democrats were vital in the campaign. He said he expected eventual strong support from labor. "The Democratic ticket is perhaps not all some labor leaders wanted it to be," he said, but added he felt the comparison between the Republican and Democratic slates would prompt strong support for his party's nominee. (AP Photo) Key McGovern Organizer to Be Democratic National Chairman REAL ESTATE TRANSFERS Neaman Siade to Arthur Eardley lot 4 in Adams subd in Collinsyille. Stamp is $31.50.

James Stevenson to Lantz Homes Inc lot 7 blk 25 LeClaire in Edwardsville. Stamp is $14.50. New York Times News Service and Associated Press Beach The Democratic National Committee chose as its chairman Friday Mrs. Jean Westwood of Utah, one of the key organizers of Sen. George McGovern's successful pursuit of the party's presidential nomination.

She is the first woman ever selected to head a major party organization. Then, in a fitting coda to a national convention full of surprises, the i brushed aside McGovern's recommendation for i chairman, Pierre Salinger, and chose instead Basil Patterson, New York's new national committeeman. Patterson, a former state senator, is the first black person to serve at the top level of a national party. Appearing before the committee, McGovern said that Lawrence F. O'Brien, the national chairman for the last two Walker Sees Daley Backing For McGovern Chicago (AP) Daniel J.

Walker, Democratic candidate for governor, says he expects Mayor Richard J. Daley to help produce a November victory in Illinois for Sen. George S. MeGovern. "I think he (McGovern) can win if he carries on the same kind of people-to-people campaign he did in the primaries," Walker said at a news conference Friday.

He added that he expects Daley to support McGovern just as the mayor said he would support Walker after Lt. Gov. Paul Simon, Daley's preferred candidate for governor, was defeated in the March 21 primary. Daley was ousted as a delegate to the Democratic National Convention on a challenge led by Alderman William Singer. Daley has not discussed the ouster or the choice of the McGovern- Eagleton ticket.

At the news conference Walker released a financial statement listing his net worth a's $244,700. His 1971 income was years, who also served 1 as convention chairman, had "reached a judgment that he will not stay on for another term." O'Brien, who held the chairmanship for 2i4 years, had led the presidential campaigns of Lyndon B. Johnson in 1964 and Hubert H. Humphrey in 1968. He was postmaster general under Johnson after being in charge of congressional liaison during the John F.

Kennedy administration. But it was learned from other sources that O'Brien had in fact agreed Friday morning, as the result of-the last in a series of appeals from the nominee, to reconsider his decision to step down. When McGovern bore the news of O'Brien's decision back to his staff, however, several of them expressed suspicions that O'Brien would try to take over the fall campaign and argued that the chairman should be a woman. The South Dakotan and O'Brien agreed that perhaps it would be better to go ahead with the selection of Mrs. Westwood, O'Brien, who has played a prominent part in party affairs for 15 years, was said by intimates to be miffed that McGovern would push so hard to persuade him to stay without first settling matters with bis aides.

Mrs. Westwood's active political work began in 1954 when she became a voter district vice chairman. She made an unsuccessful bid in 1964 to become national committeewoman from Utah. She was appointed to the position in 1968 and later was elected to a full term. DOUBLE WESTERN B-B-Q SUNDAY JULY 16 12:00 Noon 12:00 Midnire CORRAL GARDEN Beef Chicken Sweet Corn Hot German Potato Salad Baked Beans Carrol Lee The Blue Moons--6-10 p.m.

DANCING TO MIDNIGHT CANDLELITE "DINING IN AIR CONDITIONED COMFORT" Char-Broiled Steaks and Chops Live Lobster 288-7319 S. MAIN ST. GLEN CARBON (formerly Lew Gilbert's Furniture) Will Be Open For Browsing SUNDAYS -1 to 5 P.M. 410 Plata 485-7776 Ethan Allen American Traditional Interiors IDE? 5 ACADEMY AWARDS Including Best Picture Best Actor Best Director NOW SHOWING 6 MORE DAYS Continuous Saturday Sunday from 1 p.m.--Doors Open 12:30 GENE HACKMAN "BEST ACTOR" "THE NIFTIEST CHASE SEQUENCE SINCE SILENT 20tt Century-Fox preterits THE FRENCH CONVECTION IN THE GREAT TRADITION OF AMERICAN THRILLERS. Today and Sunday at 1:10 3:10 5:10 7:10 9:10 Monday at 7:10 9:10 Doors opm Monday at.

6:30 1622 WASHINGTON 465-7032 ALTON'S FINEST.

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About The Edwardsville Intelligencer Archive

Pages Available:
172,747
Years Available:
1869-1977