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Mt. Vernon Register-News from Mt Vernon, Illinois • Page 13

Location:
Mt Vernon, Illinois
Issue Date:
Page:
13
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

FRIDAY, APRIL 1958 THE REGISTER NEWS MT. VERNON. ILLINOIS 13 Sec FLYING ANTS' WAICH Olll FOR COSTLY If RMITE Mt. Vernon Lumber Co. Phone 28 1 I Ml NIX- World's ICII tmilH control orqtintTcitton RED SPOT All Reduced In Price Some At Much As Half; Uddin Bruihci, Straptn Caulking Sandpiptr Buy All Your From BENOIST BROS.

HARDWARE a B'dwy Mt. ML BLUFORD Victor Wood returned Sunday niRht from Shamrock, Texas where he was called by the death of his uncle. Mr. and Mrs. Walter Frltsch and daughter Suzanne of Gibson City visited recently with his mother Mrs.

Andrew Fritsch. Mrs. Ella McCombs a former resident of Bluford who is patient in Good SamarltBn Hospital is reported as doing very woll. Dwight Esmon of Dix, spent last week with his grandparents Mr. and Mrs.

Earl Shouse. Visitors at the home of Mr and Mrs. Ernest Bell Sunday were Mr, and Mrs. Noda Bruce and children of Effingham, Mr and Mrs. Don Shelton and daughter of Carbondale, Mr.

and Mrs. Fred Shelton of Mt. Vernon and Mr. and Mrs, Ralph Huff. Mr.

and Mrs. L. R. Huffman of Fairfield spent Sunday eve nlng with Mr. and Mrs.

John Kovach. Mr. and Mrs. Earl Huff of Richmond, are visiting his mother. Mrs.

Martha Huff and READY-BUILT BARBECUE SPRING SPECIAL $5.00 Down Payment Delivers Installed. Balance $5.00 Per Month For 10 Months. Total Cost $55.00 Inc. Tax For FUN and SUN See JAX For Out Door Products READY BUILT BARBECUES PATIO BLOCKS STEPPING STONES PLANT BOXES FLOWER BOXES DRIVE-WAY TRIM LAWN BENCHES INCINERATORS OTHER CONCRETE PRODUCTS SEE OUR DISPLAY other relatives in this vicinity. MIM Gertrude Pepplt of trolia has returned home after vlsitinj? her parents Mr.

and Mrs, H. E. Pepple. Mr. and Mrs.

Jim Fitzgerald and children of Park Forest, Mr. and Mrs. Pat. Huff end sons of Champaign spent Easter weekend with their parents, Mr, and Mrs. A.

C. Relchman. Otto Nolta is apatient In the C. Hospital in Chicago, where hp underwent surgery last week. Mr, and Mrs, Donald Raiiv wator of Manteno visited Sat urday with Mr.

and Mrs. Tommy Rainwater. Mr. and Mrs, Carl Uine and children of Centralia visited their parents here Sunday. Mr.

and Mrs. Orville Huff of Palisades, have returned home after spending several weeks here. Visitors at the home of Mr and Mrs. Vern Whalen during the weekend were Mr. and Mrs Glen Whalen and children of Galesburg, Sgt, and Mrs.

Noel Whalen and children of Fort Leonard Wood, Mr. and Mrs Walker Butler and Mr. and Mm Ora Young of Watson, HI. Visitors at the home of Mr and Mrs. John R.

Howell Sunday were Mr. and Mrs. Edwin Borah of Sims, Amber Borah of St Louis and Mr. and Mrs. Howell of Bluford.

Rob Howell, who has been quite HI, is not so well at this time. Mr. and Mrs. Don Gregory and daughter of Paducah, were visitors here and in' Mar low with relatives over the weekend. Mr.

and Mrs. Archie Clemens and children and Bobby Rain water of Urbana, epent with their parents, Mr. and Mrs. H. E.

Pepple and Mr. and Mrs. O. A. Clemens.

Mr. and Mrs. Tommy Rain water and Mr. and Mrs. Ray Waller spent Easter with Mr and Mrs.

Henry Preaton near Freeburg. Mrs. George Eason of Cen tralia is spending this week with Mrs. Otto Nolta. Mr.

and Mrs. Dallas Talbert of Mt. Vernon visited Sunday afternoon with Mr. and Mrs. E.

Pepple. Mr. and Mrs. Harvey Lovin and children of Peoria visited during the past weekend with his parents, Mr. and Mrs.

H. Lovin and other relatives. Mrs. Clarence King and fam ily of Areola, visited friends and relatives here the past weekend. Mr.

and Mrs. Kenneth McClain and children of Michigan City, spent the past weekend with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Elton Cornwcll. The Chicago Symphony Orchestra waa founded by Theodore Thomas in 1890.

Botanical name of the is Pelargonium. Packages Sell Stuff HIT Wl Just In cits the Iron Curtain is getting to be a meaningless catchword, take a look at this section between Weat Germany and Communist-governed Czechoslovakia. Upper; A watchtower along the border, and the barbed wire fence that keeps the Ciechi in and the Germans out Lower: Communist soldiers lay to blast escapees. The photoe were made by a Radio Free Europe photographer from a bidden vantage point on free side. (lnttrnationH) By DOROTHY ROW AP Women's Editor Comes now mood packaging.

You mny think when you start out to buy a can of corn or a box of soap flakes that you are buying It merely because you need it, and the old box is emply. Not so, says pert, pretty May Bender, one of the country's few women industrial and package designers. "The package has to put you in the proper mood first to desire the product and then to shell out the cash for It," says she. "A soap flakes package, for instance should put you in a brisk, ener getic, housewifely mood, suggesting and cleanliness. A perfume package, on the other hand, must suggest a feminine, roman tic, frivolous mood.

It must make you feel a little self-indulgent and! even slightly reckless." Mrs. Bender lives in New Bruns wick, N.J., and is the mother of 6-year-old twins, Sanford and Les-j lie. As partner In the design sultant firm of Lane-Bender, she designs everything trucks to candy boxes. "Color probably is the most portant single factor in mood packaging," she says. "Certain colors put the buyer In the mood: for different products.

A pink package will make a woman want to buy a new bra, slip, nightgown or girdle, for instance. A black package is good only for sophisticated, high-fashion And you can't sell anything in a purple or an orange package. Don't ask me why." The package also should suggest what is inside It, says Mrs. Bender, who points to food packaging as an example. U.

S. Attorney Criticized By Bar Association New Atomic Submarine Has Shape Of A Shark GROTON, Conn. Wi Submarines, like history and women's fashions, repeat themselves. Fifty-eight years ago today, the U.S. Navy received Us first submarine.

It resembled a shark and had only one propeller. Next month the Navy will launch its newest atomic sub, the Skipjack. It also will look like a shark and have one propeller. But there's a whale of a lot of difference. J.

P. Holland's submarine of 58 years ago. the Holland, burned gasoline and could stay under water for less than an hour. It measured 54 feet. The Skipjack will cruise' under atomic power and will be able to circle the globe without surfacing.

It will measure 250 feel. But, In the design sense, the Skipjack and the Holland are not tar apart. Tn the years separating the Hoi land and the Skipjack. American submarines took on lines muchlMrs, Dog Blameless In $50,000 Suit like the torpedoes they fire Gasoline and diesel-powercd submarines could afford underwater cruising only as a part-time luxury. So they had to be designed with long, slim lines that catered to surface requirements.

Atomic power changed that. When the Skipjack is launched May 26, it will demonstrate the "new" shark trend in submarine design that began with the Holland. LOS ANGELES was another half-breed, not Bosco, that bit little Gary Hlnkle, a jury haa decided. Bosco, a 10-year-old was held blameless in a damage suit brought by Mr. and Allen Hlnkle, parents of 4- year-old Gary, Bosco's owners, Mr.

and Mrs. Donald Thompson of nearby Palmdale, maintained that the charge against their dog was a case of mistaken identity. Theltf- lawyer maintained that the plaintiff's description would fit nine dlV ferent types 'of dogs. Gary was attacked two ago in the garage of his home in Palmdale. The Hinkles now In Spokane, Wash.

Home of the World's Lowest Prices! MT. VERNON STORES ONLY I WALTONVILLE Phone 100 COAL AND MATERIAL CO. 18th St. and Water Works Road Phona 500 You will buying package liquor for pleas- ura at tha only super liquor store In Mt. non.

THE WOODEN iwpor Vor- INDIAN Free 100 12 Kinds of Imported Bear DRIVING DONT DUNK DRINKING DONT DRIVI CHICAGO Atty. Rob-' ert Tieken's disclosure of a grand jury witness list has been criticized by the Chicago Bar Assn. as a violation of professional ethics. In a report Issued by Its board of managers, the association Thursday attacked Tieken's action last October in releasing the names of 166 witnesses to be called in an investigation of the office of Frank Keenan, then Cook County assessor. Commenting on Tieken's action, the association noted, however, that he believed he was ''actin; in accordance with establishes practices of his office." Also, association said, Tleken acted on the "erroneous belief that canon 30 does not apply to public law officers." Canon 30 deals with public aspects of secret grand jury proceedings.

The report on Tleken, a Repub Mean, was, forwarded to Atty. Gen. Rogers, U.S. judges and committees of the American Bar Assn. Stephen A.

Mitchell, Chicago lawyer and former Democratic national chairman, brought the charge that the prosecutor vlolat ed canon 20. His was one of the names released by Tieken last October. No indictments resulted from the investigation, but Keenan was later convicted of evading person' al income taxes and he resigned under lire. Tieken contended that the dis closure was in accordance with procedure approved by former U.S. District Judge John P.

Barnes, allowing limited information to be disclosed in connection with such investigations. After Mitchell complained, U.S. District Judge Philip L. Sullivan issued an interpretation of the canon ruling barring advance dis closure of witness lists. Tieken has been mentioned as a prospect for appointment to the U.S.

Circuit Court of Appeals bench. PLANE LANDS ON HORSEMAN SAN JUSTO, Argentina Wl A. Piper Cub developed engine trou ble and made an emergency landing on a horseman. The rider, Humberto Cabrera, and his mount were killed. Pilot Jorge Breer and his passenger were only scratched and the plane was not damaged TOPS VALUE Our Used Cars are clean and ready to go and priced to suit you with LOWEST cost financing-We'll trade most late model Cars guaranteed for one full year.

GLENN "Shrimp" WILSON KEITH MILLS SEE ONE OF OUR SALESMEN TODAY! G. B. HOLMAN BERT HOLMAN GALE MONROE DAVEY NORRIS HARRY WILLIAMSON JR. HOLMAN EXTRA SPECIALS, SATURDAY. APRIL 12th 1954 Ford V-8 4-Door.

New tires, radio and heater. 1954 Chevrolet 2 Dr. New paint Heater. 1953 Nash 4-Dr. Sedan Overdrive Radio, haatar.

695 545 445 00 00 OO 1957 Chevrolet Convertible. Radio and haatar. 1956 Ford V-8 Pairlane 4-Door. Radio and haatar. 1955 Chevrolet Bel-Air V-l.

4-Door Sodan. Radio and haatar. 1945 1175 795 00 00 00 Miss Kay Leslie visited during the Easter holiday with her parents. The Free Will Baptist Sunday school had their Bnnual egg hunt for the children Saturday after noon at the home of James' Hicks. Then Sunday at 6 a.m.! Sunrise services were held with! Rev.

Louie Hanna preaching! the message. A good numberi attended and at Sunday school i there was an attendance of The Methodist church Sunrise; service was very Impressive and well attended. Miss Kay Leslie sang "Holy City" and Nelson McCormack sang "I Would Be Like Jesus." Rev. T. A.

Schaffer, the pastor, brought the message. Mrs. Marie Carson very graciously decorated the church with beautiful flowers, Immediately following the religious services those in attendance retired to the basement of the church where the ladies served a very delicious breakfast of bacon, eggs hot biscuits, butter, strawberry jam and coffee. Again Mrs. Marie Carson very graciously decorated the tables with beautiful flowers.

She also prepared a very impressive display of candles and rabbit figurines in keeping with the Easter story. A large crowd attended services at the Universallst church Easter with a good number of visitors coming from Filmore, Christopher and Wood River. Brother Earl Engle of Champaign brought the message and at the noon hour a very bountiful dinner was enjoyed by all. Mrs. Johnny Albritton and family of Chicago spent the Easter weekend with Mr.

and Mrs. Tobey Norris. Mrs. Alberta Bonaccorsl of Crystal Lake and Miss Edis Mannen of Chicago spent the Easter weekend with Mrs. Lora Mannen.

Sunday visitors at the home also were Mrs. Muriel McLafferty and family of Carbondale. Mr. and Mrs. Harold Bateman of Christopher visited his grandmother Mrs.

Reld Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Isom and baby of Mt. Vernon were Sunday afternoon visitors at Mrs.

Reed's also. Mr. and Mrs. Gordon Metcalf and daughter of Bonnie, Mrs. Mary Metcalf and Mrs.

Lela Loucks visited Sunday with Mrs. Agnes Metcalf. Mr. and Mrs. Ted Denham and daughter of Frisco" spent Sunday with Mrs.

Lucille Fagan. Mr. and Mrs. Bernard Kabatj brought their new daughter home from the hospital Monday, Mrs. Maggie Asbury of Sesser spent the weekend at the home of her daughter Mrs.

Kirby Rogers, Mr. and Mrs. Leslie Rogers and family of Pinckneyville. and Mrs. Maggie Asbury of Sesser spent Easter Sunday at the home of Mr.

and Mrs. Kirby Rogers. J. R. Long of Ft.

Leonard Wood visited his parents Mr. and Mrs. Hadley Long over the weekend. Mr. and Mrs.

Long visited in Kentucky with relatives over the weekend. large are the eyes in the Statue of Liberty? eye measures 2 feet 6 I inches across. LADIES NEW SPRING FOOTWEAR FLATS OXFORDS LOAFERS GLOVE LEATHER MOCCASINS Hundreds of pairs in all sizes and colors including whites. Your bast shoe values are at your Brokerage. 2 PAIR sKoo LADIES NEW SPRING FOOTWEAR POPULAR FABRIC CASUALS WIDOI AND FLAT HEEL STYLES Choose from now spring and summer styles In all sizes 4 to 10.

Wear thorn everywhere now through summor. 2 PAIR $Q00 ACTUALLY WORTH 59c FANCY DRESS PRINTS First quality of of full bolts. World famous brand name prints. Tremendous selection. yd.

CHOICE OF HOUSE LADIES' SPRING DUSTERS TOPPERS SUITS Newest styles, fabrics and colors. Values up to $24.99. REG. 42c VALUE PILLOW CASES Pino cases. typo First 128 muslin quality, mous name brand.

Stock up now, sale price. For 1 00 LADIES NEW SPRING DUSTERS TOPPERS SUITS Choose from a big selection of stylos, fabrics, colors and sizes. Values to $14.99. REG. $1.19 VALUES i Plastic Palls i Tote Bags You'll went one of each at this low sale While 100 last.

price 55 MEN'S REG. $29.95 NEW SPRING SUITS Ona and two-piece styles. All wools, rayon acatatas, dacrons. Regular and longs. Sizes 35 to 46.

23 9 i CHOICE OF HOUSE LADIES' 39c RAYON PANTIES Regular and extra sizes. Tailored and fancy stylo briefs and panties. White, tearose, pastels. 1 BIG GROUP 36" and 45" WIDE DRAPERY Bark cloths and rayons. Fancy prints and solid colors.

Close outs worth up to $1.00 a yard. yd. IRREG'S OF $1.00 FANCY THROW PILLOWS Round and square small size pillows with fancy fabric covers. While thay last. WE WANT TO TRADE COME IN TODAY Holman Motor Co.

KING CITY MOTORS PLYMOUTH Dl SOTO Expert Mechanics to Service All Makes of Automobiles. 1600 S. 10th 5810 215 N. 10th ST. MT.

VERNON, ILLINOIS HOME OF THE ALL NEW FORD PHONE 264 SPECIAL PRICES During Month of April On Combination Storm Doon Aluminum Awnings Free Estimates ATLA SEAL 17th Perkins-Phone 2708 BOY'S REG. $1.98 FANCY SPORT SHIRTS Long sleeve cotton shirts in sizes 6 to 14. Perfect for school wear. CHOICE $3.98 AND $4.98 LADIES' SPRING FOOTWEAR Choose from high stylo novelties, popular flats and oxfords. All sizes.

1 GROUP LADIES' VALUES TO $2.98 FOOTWEAR Broken size groups! Discontinued stylos for spring and summer wear. While they last. ILLINOIS BROKERAGE TWO BIG SUPER ST0HES IN MT. VERNON, ILLINOIS.

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About Mt. Vernon Register-News Archive

Pages Available:
138,840
Years Available:
1897-1977