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Freeport Journal-Standard from Freeport, Illinois • Page 15

Location:
Freeport, Illinois
Issue Date:
Page:
15
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Wednesday, October 15, good 30.00-35.50. Hogs 2.50-3.00, instances 4 4.00, lower; No 1-2 200-230 lb 59.50-60.00, instances 58.50-59.00; No 1-3 200-240 lb 59.00-59.50, some 58.00-58.50; No 2-3 240-250 lb 57.50-58.00, 250-280 lb 55.50-57.50; No 3-4 280-300 lb 53.50-55.50. JOLIET, Ill. (UPI) Livestock: Cattle steers lower; heifers mostly steady, instances 50 lower; choice and prime steers 50.00-51.75; choice 47.00-51.00; good and choice 43.00-48.00; good 39.00-43.00; high choice and prime heifers 47.75; choice including some prime 44.50-47.50; good and choice 40.50-44.50; good 36.50-40.50; no canner or cutter cows. Hogs 2.50-3.00 lower; No 1-2 200-230 lb 59.50-60.00; No 1-3 200-240 lb 59.00-59.50; No 2-3 240-260 lb 58.00-59.00, 260-270 lb 57.00-58.00.

Thursday estimated receipts: 25 cattle, 1,000 hogs. Page 16 Freeport (Ill.) Journal-Standard, Wednesday, October Stock Market Report NEW YORK (UPI) A rally attempt erased early losses and sent prices higher in moderate trading on the New York Stock Exchange. The Dow Jones industrial average, which had lost more than a point in the first hour, was ahead 4.41 to 839.66 shortly before noon EDT. Advances pulled ahead of declines, 552 to 510, among the 1,543 issues crossing the tape. Two-hour volume amounted to roughly 6,700,000 shares, compared with 9,420,000 shares exchanged: in the same period Tuesday.

There was no news to account for the buying action, but Wall Street observers have predicted rally attempts would occur despite the market's apparent inability to sustain a strong advance. The glamors paced the rally with the blue chips also attracting some buying interest. Kennecott Corp. led the actives, off to 31 on 83,200 shares. Kaufman Broad Inc.

was second, unchanged at on 79,300 shares. Polaroid followed, up to on 69,000 shares. Among the glamors, Digital Equipment climbed and International Business Machines IBM announced price reductions on monthly rentals on its copiers. Xerox picked up on news it had entered a tentative agreement with Honeywell under which Honeywell would service Xerox computers. Honeywell added The oils turned in a mixed performance.

Halliburton lost Superior Oil 1, and Mobil A news report said Mobil is considering selling part of.its gas concession in Sumatra. Standard Oil of Ohio gained and Natomas and apiece Prices were mixed in slow trading on the American Stock Exchange. John Harland paced the actives, up on 50,300 shares. G.P. Putnam was second, up 1 59 on 14,300 shares.

Inflight Services followed, off on 11,300 shares. 11 A.M. Quotes Courtesy of Edward D. Jones Co. 11 N.

Van Buren Ave. -Telephone 233-3118 American Motors Corp. Chrysler Corp. Colt Industries, Inc. Commonwealth Edison Commonwealth.PFD XX Crum Forster bid asked Exxon Corp.

Ford Motor Co. General Electric Co. General Foods Corp. General Motors Goodyear 21 Gould Inc. 29 Holiday Inns Honeywell Inc.

32 Household Finance Corp. IBM International Harvester 3M Co. Newell Companies bid asked Northwestern Steel Wire RCA Sears Sundstrand Corp. Texaco, Inc. U.S.

Steel Corp. Westinghouse Electric Corp. 13 Woolworth Produce CHICAGO (UPI) Midwest gradble nest-run eggs: Firm; prices unchanged to' up large 49 unch; medium 47 up small 36 unch; breaking 46 up checks 38 unch. Grain CHICAGO (UPI) Wheat was irregularly lower; corn mixed and soybeans higher at midmorning today on the Board of Trade. Prices at 10:35 a.

Wheat Dec 4.11½ off Mar 4.26½ off May 4.31 off Corn Dec 2.96½ up Mar 3.03½ off May 3.06¾ up Soybeans Nov 5.35¼ up Jan 5.46½ up Mar 5.56 up Livestock PEORIA, Ill. (UPI) Livestock: Cattle few sales steers and heifers weak to 50 lower; choice steers 46.00-49.00; good and choice 44.00-47.00; good 37.00-44.00; choice heifers 42.00-47.00; good and choice 35.50-44.00; Weather NORTHERN ILLINOIS-Fair and cooler tonight. Mostly sunny and a little warmer Thursday. Low tonight in the upper 30s. High Thursday in the mid 60s.

(Official 7 a.m. Freeport weather readIngs are taken at the city's wastewater treatment plant on South Hancock Avenue for the National Weather Service.) TEMPERATURE Unofficial noon temperature 54 Past 24 hours: high 81, low 52 Year ago today: high 54, low 32 Records for date: high 85, low 18 PRECIPITATION Past 24 hours .05 inch Month to date .05 inch Normal for Oct. 2.67 inches Year to date 22.71 inches Normal to Nov. 1, 32.16 inches Sunrise, 7:09 a.m. Sunset, Extended Forecast: Variable cloudiness Friday through Sunday with a chance of showers around Saturday.

A slight cooling trend with temperatures lowering. High in the 50s and low 60s, low 35 to 45 by Sunday, Daily It Is a principle of American justice that an individual Is always presumed Innocent until proved guilty and a report that anyone is charged with an offense cannot be construed as proof that he committed the offense. We rely upon official records for the information published in this column. Accidents A Stephenson County Highway Department truck driven by Wesley P. Morrison, Freeport Route 2, rolled back from a stop sign and hit the front of a Freeport Journal-Standard car driven by Eric Raynard, 611 W.

Stephenson at Scioto Mills Road and Illinois 26 Tuesday afternoon. A car driven by Robert Lena, hit the rear of a stopped car driven by Deborah Martin, Mount Morris, on South West Avenue south of Youngs Lane Tuesday afternoon. An unidentified vehicle damaged a parked car owned by David. R. School, 301 W.

Ringold in the Empire School parking lot Tuesday afternoon. S. West Ave. and W. Cleveland St.

was the scene of an accident Tuesday afternoon when a car driven by Edward Halzel, 723 E. Iroquois attempted to pass a car driven by Lori Madden, 66 N. Stewart and the Madden car turned into the other car. Halzel was ticketed for failure to exercise his drivers duty. Cars driven by Edna Rothstein, Freeport, and Joseph Willy, 320 N.

Galena collided at N. Walnut Ave. and W. Douglas St. Tuesday morning.

Wesley Erbe, Pecatonica, was backing his car at the Drive-In, 1130 S. Galena when i it struck a parked car owned by Melvin Williams, 641 E. Stephenson about noon Tuesday. Arrests William Wire Winslow, was arrested Tuesday morning on charges of theft of license plates, making a false accident report and disorderly conduct. Harold Rinehart, no address given, was arrested Tuesday night on charges of transporting liquor with a broken seal and driving after his license was suspended.

Circuit Court CRIMINAL CASES Debra J. Robinson, 535 E. Iroquois was found guilty of aggravated assault and was sentenced to serve 10 weekends in the Stephenson County Jail and was placed on probation for 18 months. On July 21 she pointed a knife at Mary DeGan, 2 Pleasant Lane. Gary Schmelzer, Freeport Route 3, was fined $20 and ordered to pay court costs for drinking in public.

He was also fined $25 for violation of probation. He was arrested after an incident Oct. 1. William Jimmie Dickens, 522 N. Willow was placed on four months additional probation Tuesday by Circuit Judge Everett Laughlin for not reporting to his probation officer.

He was placed on two years probation for forgery in March. Bruce Fargher, 1256 S. Oak was placed on probation for one additional year for not reporting to his probation officer. He was placed on three years coation on a drug charge in November 1974. Larry Fargher, 205 N.

Third had his probation extended for one year for failing to report to his officer. He was placed on two years probation in February on a drug charge. Traffic Cases The following cases in the traffic division of Circuit Court include fines and costs: Geroge E. Hiveley, 1228 S. Seeley speeding, $17 paid; Merle R.

Masters, 17 E. Roosevelt speeding, $16 paid; David L. Marsh, 716 S. Park speeding, $15 paid; Gary E. Voss, 1402 S.

Burchard speeding, paid; Leroy T. Stark, 703 N. Warren speeding, $25 paid, no mirror, $25 paid. Randall S. Baker, 305 Lorraine Drive, speeding, $15 paid; Alfred S.

Reitman, Rockford, speeding, $15 paid; Jon A. Jacobs, 1215 Hillcrest Drive, speeding, $20 paid; Brenda S. Wurster, Elizabeth, speeding, $15 paid; James L. Shover, Rock Falls, muffler violation, $15 paid; Richard S. Lena, speeding, $15 paid; Leroy D.

Fischer, 2040 W. Laurel failure to yield the right of way, $15 paid. Michael J. Reid, 826 W. Chestnut muffler violation, $15 paid; Lee E.

Euler Ridott, permitting an unauthorized person to dirve, $25 paid; Joann Euler, Ridott, stop sign violation, $15 paid, no driver's license, $25 paid; Bruce B. Brei, 745 E. Wyandotte stop sign violation, $15 paid; Veronica E. Wyle, Plainfield, speeding, $16 paid; Adam Fry, Rockford, speeding, $15 paid. Laurie J.

Meyers, 420 Prospect Terrace, improper turn, $15 paid; Henry TerHark, Freeport Route 4, improper turn, $20 paid; Michael A. Bauch, 2016 Towne Drive, failure to yield the right of way, $15 paid; James H. Buffington, Forreston, traffic signal violation, $20 paid; Melody Pleper, 620 S. 17th speeding, $25 forfeited. Jill E.

Doden, 808 W. Jefferson negligent driving, $15 paid; Daniel L. Balkema, 1431 S. High improper start, $15 paid; John R. Schuldt, Elizabeth, speeding, $15 paid; Dena G.

Chamberlin, 1012 S. Chicago speeding, $19 paid; James P. Kuhse, Lena, speeding, $17 paid; Viola C. Fetscher, Freeport Route 4, speeding, $15 paid; Joyce L. Hodson, Ridott, speeding, $15 paid.

Kimberly Long, Mount Carroll, lane jumping, $15 paid; Vernon D. Mills, 49 Greenfield Drive, speeding, $17 paid; Karen D. Kasper, 2040 W. Laurel speeding, $21 paid; Gladys I. Wieck, 627 S.

Burchard speeding, $17 paid; Kathy A. Graff, 1436 W. American speeding, $16 paid; Leon J. Pieper, 725 Bradmar Drive, speeding, paid; James M. Derenski, 274 Park Crest Drive, speeding, $16 paid.

Howard W. Carlson, San Bernadino, speeding, $18 paid; Darrell R. Veith, 726 W. Chestnut speeding, $29 paid; Edna W. Rice, 49 Greenfield Drive, speeding, $15 paid; Bankruptcies Charles W.

and Sharon L. Rubright, Oregon, filed separate petitions in Federal Court here. He alleged liabilities of $4,591.25 and assets of $1,827 and is a laborer. She alleged liabilities of $4,590.35 and assets of $1,770 and is a housewife. Doris E.

Johann, formerly known as Doris E. Tillman, Rockford, filed a petition alleging liabilities of $6,738 and assets of $650. She is a housewife. Thomas E. Whitehead, also known as Tom Edwards, Belvidere, filed a petition alleging liabilities of $6,163 and assets of $300.

He is employed by Kentucky Fried Chicken. Herman Harris, Rockford, filed a petition under the wage earner's plan alleging liabilities of $2,494 and undetermined assets. Willie J. and Margaret B. Singletary, Rockford, filed a joint pettion under the wage earner's plan alleging liabilities of $2,062.85 and undetermined assets.

Construction Dies At Job John P. Soldati, 26 of 820 S. Carroll suffered an electrically induced fatal heart attack Tuesday while working in the Freeport Memorial Hospital addition, officials say. Stephenson County Coroner W. R.

Cramer said Soldati, an employe of Nelson Pipe Co. of Rockford, was standing on an 8-foot step ladder working on a pipe in the hospital annex boiler room. Investigations showed Soldati apparently leaned forward and touched a bare wire with an exposed portion of his lower back. Freeport pathologist Dr. Francis Tucker told Cramer the young man's heart was in perfect condition.

An autopsy was performed today. Authorities believe the 110 volts carried in the electrical line was enough to induce a fibrilation which could produce a heart attack, Cramer said. Soldati was pronounced dead in the hospital's emergency room about 10 minutes after the accident. Obituary Mr. Soldati was born June 19, 1949, in Freeport, the son of Frank and Marion (Bonebright) Soldati.

He married Cynthia Jensen June 30; 1973, in Freeport. He was a Vietnam War veteran and a member of St. Joseph Catholic Church. Survivors include his widow; his parents of Rockford; and two sisters, Mrs. Michael (Caroline) Lovelace, and Freak Accident Injures Man Outside Micro Scofield, 1008 S.

Float was injured in a freak accident outside Micro Switch plant four on South Walnut Road this morning. Stephenson County Sheriff's deputies reported Scofield was bending over near the glass crusher when he felt a twinge he later described as like the flick of a finger on his forehead. When he saw blood dripping to the ground, he became more concerned. Apparently, Scofield was creased by a .22 bullet, deputies reported. The two-inch gash above his right eye is a perfect line which would most likely be formed by a bullet, deputies said.

The glass crusher was not operating and he did not hear a sound, he told them. He was treated by the plant nurse. The injury did not require stitches, said. Business Briefs Valida Pieper, 749 E. Center and Dorothy Katzenberger, Shannon, were honored this week for 20 years of service with Structo Division, King-Seeley Thermos Co.

They were presented with engraved watches by F. W. Voss, president and general manager. Ray Vander Zanden, former feed department sales manager for Stephenson Service Company in Freeport, has been named manager of sales training for FS Services. TV Report Shows How Scientists Trace Ca ancer- Elements By JOAN HANAUER NEW YORK (UPI) New Jersey is the most industrialized state in the Union.

It also leads the country in certain types of cancer breast cancer, lung cancer, bladder cancer, intestinal and rectal cancer all are abnormally high, according to the National Cancer Institute. Is there a connection? CBS Reports says yes in a program titled "The American Way of Cancer," narrated by Dan Rather, to be aired tonight from 9-10 central time. The program establishes a link Bank Appoints 2 New Officers Two new officers have been appointed by the First National Bank of Freeport on action by the board of directors. David M. Kemp, 55 N.

Sunset is now assistant cashier and Emel Uner of Lena is installment loan officer. Kemp, who joined First National in November 1974 in the auditing department, is heading the personnel department of the bank. Kemp, who is married, graduated cum laude from Texas A I University, with a degree in political science. Uner joined the bank in December 1972 as a management trainee. He will.

handle all phases of consumer credit and assist with Master Charge operations. Uner is married and his two children. He graduated from Western Illinois University and is an Army veteran. Iceland's Extension Of Fishing Waters May Bring A 'Cod War' REYKJAVIK, Iceland (UPI) Iceland Premier Geir Hallgrimsson said Tuesday his government will extend the country's fishing limit from 50 to 200 nautical miles immediately because "our livelihood is at stake." "The fish stocks around Iceland are in such danger that it is not possible for us to wait with the extension," Hallgrimsson said in a nationally broadcast speech. "We must be able to control the fishing in Icelandic waters and preserve the fish stocks so we can exist," he said.

A foreign ministry spokesman said the decision could mean another "cod war" with Great Britain. 1975 Worker Site Miss Laura Soldati, both of Rockford. Services will be Friday at 9:30 a.m. in the Schwarz Funeral Home and at 10 a.m. in St.

Joseph Catholic Church. The Rev. William A. Budden will officiate. A Scripture service will be read at 7:30 p.m Thursday.

Burial will be in Chapel Hill Cemetery. Visitation is set for 4 to 5 p.m. and 7 to 9 p.m. Thursday. A memorial fund has been established.

Deaths Drug Firm Recalling Birth Control Pill Because Of Less Dosage RARITAN, N.J. (UPI) Ortho Pharmaceutical Co. is recalling a birth control pill used by 150,000 women because it may contain less than the prescribed dose of estrogen, the chief ingredient in "Modicon" pills. "It is not known if this reduction in estrogen lowers contraceptive effectiveness," a company spokesman said Monday, adding that other oral contraceptives on the market contain less estrogen than Modicon pills. He said the firm, a division of Johnson Johnson, was recalling voluntarily Modicon pills marketed since January.

Tests showed the pills may have been exposed to strong light that affected them. He said the recall was ordered after tests on 10 or 12 packages of pills showed they contained less estrogen. "Women taking Modicon are advised to continue doing so and to consult their physician so a substitute product can be prescribed," the company recommended. The spokesman could not say exactly how many pills would be recalled but said 150,000 of the estimated 10 million women using the birth control pill are using Modicon. 64 Encephalitis Cases Reported In Illinois Bring Total To 456 CHICAGO (UPI) Sixty-four more cases of encephalitis, both probable and confirmed, were reported in Illinois over the past four days, the state Public Health Department said Tuesday.

Another eight cases previously listed as probable were put in the confirmed category. The new cases brought to 456 the total number of cases reported in the state since the outbreak of the disease Aug. 7. Of the new cases, 42 were confirmed and 22 were listed as probable. A department spokesman said the warm weather in the Chicago area should not bring an increase in cases the mosquito-transmitted disease.

"Certainly it gives us cause not to let down on the precautionary warning in the evening hours as long as there's a chance of mosquitoes being out," he said. "But we don't think there will be too many new cases. The cold weather we've already had has slowed them down." Man Saves Woman's Life By Leaping Onto Tracks Before Train Passed LONDON (UPI) John Parsons jumped in front of a speeding commuter train to save the life of Maureen Jones, who had fainted and fallen onto the tracks. Both were sideswiped by' the train and seriously injured. Rush hour passengers at Penge station screamed when they saw Mrs.

Jones, 27, fall in the path of the train. But Parsons jumped onto the track and dragged the woman clear. The train struck both, causing critical head and back injuries to Mrs. Jones, and leg injuries to Parsons. Passengers and railway workers told of Parsons' "incredible bravery." "But for him the woman would have been cut in half," a railway clerk said.

Philadelphia's Mayor Will Conduct Re-Election Campaign On Crutches PHILADELPHIA (UPI) Mayor Frank L. Rizzo, who went to a oil refinery fire to "make sure nobody was hurt," will conduct his re-election campaign on crutches. Rizzo, 54, suffered a fractured right hip when he collided with a bodyguard while fleeing an explosion Sunday at the Atlantic Richfield Co. refinery in south Philadelphia. He was listed in satisfactory condition, following an 85-minute operation at Habnemann Hospital to have a stainless steel pin inserted in his hip.

"I go down to make sure nobody was hurt and I get hurt," Rizzo told his wife in his hospital room. Mexican Burglars Tunnel Into Bank TUXTLA GUTIERREZ, Mexico (UPI) Thieves using picks, shovels and oxygen masks dug 130-foot-long tunnel from the basement of a vacant store into a bank vault and escaped with $10,800, police said. When a cashier at the Banco Nacional de Mexico opened the vault early Monday morning, he discovered a foot-wide hole in the floor. The opening led to a tunnel which ended in a vacant store nearby. Police were looking for an unidentified person who rented the store five months ago.

Tuxtla Gutierrez is the capital of Chiapas state, 650 miles southeast of Mexico City. Adelbert Asmus GALENA-Adelbert Asmus of: Galena died Tuesday morning in the nursing wing of Galena Hospital. He had been manager of Northern States: Power Company for 30 years, retiring: in 1950. He was born Nov: 16, 1888, in Jo Daviess County, the son of Charles and Emma (Bench) Asmus. He married Emma Childs May 18, 1915, in Galena.

He was a member of the First Pres-: byterian Church of Galena, Miners; Masonic Lodge, Tebala Shrine and: Consistory and had been a member of: the Galena Cemetery Board for many years. Funeral service will be at 2 p.m.. Friday in the Steinke Funeral Home: with burial in Greenwood Cemetery. There will be no visitation. Memorials: may be given to Greenwood Cemetery.

Survivors include his widow; two daughters, Mrs. Martin Granning of Sun City, and Mrs. Leland San-: derson of Galena; and one granddaughter. Joseph E. Brown LENA-Joseph E.

Brown of Lena died Tuesday afternoon in Freeport Memorial Hospital after an extended illness. He farmed in West Point Township until 1958, when he moved to Lena. There he owned and operated the Lena Shoppers' Guide for 15 years. He was born May 3, in Stephenson County, the son of John and. Mary (Lapp) Brown.

He married Mersena Jensen on March 21, 1922, in Iowa. She died in 1968. Mr. Brown was a member of the Good Shepherd Lutheran Church in Lena. Funeral service will be at 1:30 p.m.

Friday in Leamon Funeral Home, Lena. The Rev. Franklin C. Samuelson will officiate. Burial will be in Chapel Hill Cemetery, Freeport.

Friends may call after 2 p.m. Thursday. Surviving are two sons, Robert of Lena and Donald of Warren; five sisters, Mrs. Hazel Stevens of Lena, Mrs. Edwin (Ethel) Haase of Warren, Mrs.

William (Edna) Cedarholm of Woodbury, Mrs. Howard (Genevieve) Tessendorf of Pearl City and Mrs. Anna Mary Heisler of Freeport; five brothers, John R. of Stockton, Frederick of Janesville, Edgar of California, David of Lanark and Earl of Virginia; and six grandchildren and seven great-grandchildren. He was preceded in death by two brothers.

A memorial fund has been established. FUNERAL DIRECTORY (A Television Review) between chemicals and cancer, and it is frightening to learn how asbestos inhaled at a factory 20 to 30 years ago has caused the deaths of a third of the people who worked there. It is even more frightening to read how the foods you and your family are eating today may carry the seeds of death. Not only do scientists worry about the presence of trace elements of known cancer-causing substances, and about other chemicals which eventually may prove to be carcinogens, but there also is the problem of ingesting two individually harmless substances that combine in the body to produce a third, and cancer-causing, chemical. When factory workers of several decades worked with materials that eventually would be their killers, no one knew it.

When substances were added to feed grain, or sprayed on Personal Growth pointments under state law, rejected Suloway's nomination the first time July 3 System Instructor Giving Two Talks Philip Burns, an instructor in transcendental meditation, will give two free lectures on TM next Tuesday. He will speak at noon at the Higland Community College learning resource center, room 210, and at 7:30 p.m. at the Freeport Public Library meeting room. Burns, who is president of the International Meditation Society of Rockford, will describe the potential of TM for personal growth and self-development. Transcendental meditation is a natural mental technique practiced twice a day for 15 to 20 minutes to give greater energy for more purposeful activity.

Gov. Walker Rejects Daley's CTA Appointment SPRINGFIELD, ID. (UPI) Gov. Daniel Walker, still feuding with Chicago Mayor Richard J. Daley over the proposed crosstown expressway, Tuesday rejected for the second time Daley's latest appointment to the Chicago Transit Authority Board.

Daley nominated Marshall Suloway for the second time last week. Walker, who must confirm the mayor's ap- crops, or added to foods, no one at first realized they could be dangerous, could be killers. But, as CBS Reports points out, in the past 25 years our cancer mortality rate has increased more than 20 per cent, and its victims are not limited to the old. "It is the number one killer disease of children under 15 and of women between the ages of 25 and 64," the broadcast notes. If, armed with these statistics, we allow ourselves to be poisoned for the sake of profit and convenience, perhaps we deserve our fate, Vandalism Poses Threat To Trains Vandals breaking railroad signal locks and initiating the signals at the Milwaukee Road installation off South Hancock Avenue are creating a dangerous situation, police said.

Apparently someone has been breaking the locks off a manual interlock signal, it was reported to police Monday. "Breaking the lock off and operating the lights could cause a serious train accident," police said. Several locks have been broken off recently and damage has been estimated at $200. NEW at the DAIRY DREEM Now Serving Delicious, plump and savory HOT DOGS! Along with your favorite Dairy Delights. They're enough to make a meal in themselves.

TRY 'EMI BURKE-TUBBS FUNERAL HOME Cor. N. Walnut and W. Galena Phone 232-0613 SCHWARZ FUNERAL HOME 816 South Galena Avenue Phone 235-7371 G. T.

Schwarz, W. R. Cramer FRIDAY SOLDATI, John 9:30 a.m. at the Funeral Home; 10 a.m. at St.

Joseph's Catholic Scripture Service 7:38 p.m. Thursday at the Funeral Home. Friends may call from 4 to 5 and 7. to 9 p.m. Thursday.

A memorial has been established in bis memory. WALKER MORTUARY 321 West Main Street Phone 232-2136 THURSDAY STAAS, Pansy Marie, (Mrs. Walter); 1:50 p.m. at the Mortuary. Friends may call after 4 p.m.

Wednesday. HOUSE PLANTS Pots Hanging Plants Potting Soil Fertilizer Wall Ceiling Hooks Plant Books For all your plant needs LANG'S GARDEN CENTER 425 W. South 232-9711.

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About Freeport Journal-Standard Archive

Pages Available:
300,109
Years Available:
1885-1977