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Belvidere Daily Republican from Belvidere, Illinois • Page 4

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Belvidere, Illinois
Issue Date:
Page:
4
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'4 IklvMcre Daily RepubTieATT, Wednesday, Mar. 11, 1062. Cji2l Dmmmio A ha Taa-! Rich Wife Deprives Man Downoy, Starnes Honored By lllini! CHAMPAIGN 'AP) Dave By J. R. Williams In Popular Chicago Sport- record because the law requires each deputy to take an oath, i The special deputies are distinct from deputy coroners who work full time for the coroner's office, preside at inquests and Investi Food Available In For, Cuba, WASHINGTON (AP) Cubans now, tightening their belts tor a food rationing program could grow lat if they had access some ot the foodstuffs which still can be exported to them from the United States, I CA' The Commerce Department has, a.

whole pige Irt rulatlon listing foodstuffs that can be shipped to Cuba items like meat and meat products, animal oils and fats, clieeseoatmeal, breakfast vegetable oils, canfed vegetable's and prepared mixes. In general, the list contains pre- pared or processed foods. Some of the items like lard and cooking oilsre Included In the food rationing plan Cuban Prime Miiiistpr Fidel qastro is ij launching nejt week. The State; Department blamed Cuba's food problems on Castro's Communist system. It described 1 as ridiculous his charges that the 4 United States has caused the Cu- ban food NOPS-AU I BftMT TKAIM I A fMAFKAIPITVJOlJU? PUNtr I WOOLPWT WEEP WAWT NOTMIW7 AN' AM' ff THAT'S ALL THERE OM I TO WANT SUMPIM AW HOPE VOU'LL Downey and Bob Starnes were honored by the Illinois basketball team Monday night at the 'annual Cliampaign-Urbana Kiwanis banquet.

Downey, a junior from Canton and the team's leading scorer and rebounder, was named the most valuable player of this year's squad and Starnes, a Chicago junior; was hamed captain the 1962-63 team. -Downey scored 415 points for a 20.2 average. Starnes, a hustler and rebounder, didn't a starter until mid-season and av-. eraged 11.5 points a game; Pick Easrerbrook Idaho Assistant MOSCOW, Itiaho (APA former Illinois quarterback, John Easterbrook, is the third assistant football "coach to be named by Dee Andros, new University of Idaho grid coach. Easterbrook, 23, named Monday, coached the Illinois freshmen and backt'ield last season after three years as qua'rterback the school.

NOTICE Due to death in the Immediate family, no deliveries will be made after Thursday, andclosed all day Friday. CITY FUEL SUPPLY CO. Madvt. JOB PRINTING-DIAL 4410 i PEEAMER 1 Of Happine ss By HAL BOYLK NEW YORK r) Do you want to marry a really wealthy worn- an? Many poor but honest young men today say they do. But the empty-pocketed young fellow who yearns to Ihrow in his marital lot with financially loaded lady just doesn't realize the trouble he'd know.

No poverty of purse is as hard for a real' man to bear as the spiritual poverty that comes with being a rich woman's toy. Let me give you a true-life example. Only the names and a few circumstances have been changed. Mark was a big, handsome, gay, witty, 'charming young fellow. Smart, too.

The exePHjives in his business firm saw a real for him. Then Dolly met him. Dolly was beautiful possessive and rich. Not just ordinary rich. Real rich.

Mark and Dolly fell deeply in love. And Dolly, who always got what, she wanted, decided that what she wanted most was Mark. Finally, she bluntly asked him why he hadn't proposed. He explained he couldn't support her in the way she liked to live. "What's money?" she asked lightly.

"I've got more than we could spend In 10 generations." She kept after him and so, de: spite Mark's qualms, they were married! Mark kept on working. But after a year the life of a housewife began to bore Dolly" She liked tQ travel. She talked Mark into quit ting his job, gave him a big checking account of his own so he'd have a feeling of freedom. Soon they were moving solely in Dolly's fast international set. Mark seldom saw any of his old friendis.

ir Some years later I traveled to a city in which they had one of their mansions. Mark drove up and beeped the horn of an expensive cream-colored convertible. "Dolly gave it to me for my birthday," he said. Mark looked tired, heavier and dissipated. He explained he had developed chronic ulcers.

On the drive to his home he said he was desperately unhappy, that wife's money had become a burden, that he felt he had lost his own self-respect and the respect of others. When 1 asked him why he didn't get a divorce, he said, "I'm still in love with The three of us had a gay eve- I guide to Buyer's VOTE FOR 1 0 FRED REIAN For State Representative Republican Candidate nln at a night club. Put Mark danced wltl th a woman Dolly didn't like, there was a bitter quar rel on the way home. 1 1 was preparing to leave the next morning, and Mark came Intoi my 1 room wearing the expression of a whipped dog. He said he'd ride to the airport with me in a cab.

"1 thought you were going to drive, me in that fancy new convertible," I said, surprised. "I can't," said Mark. took it away from me this morning for dancing with that woman last night," ti It wasn't many months after that I read of Mark's death. Somehow it didn't startle me. It was the only way Mark could "escape the misery that went with Dolly's money.

SCOUl NOTES TROOP J96 We met at Perry school. Mrs. Perkins collected dues and took attendance. Then we went to the gymnasium to celebrate the 50th anniversary of Girl Scouts. All Girl Scouts and Brownies were invited.

We opened with the flag ceremony. Then we all took turns singipg songs. Then we had our treat which was cake and punch. Then we went home, Ruthann Gamlin, scribe TROOP 103 We collected dues and Debby Lungstrom brought the treat. Theji the Brownies and Girl Scouts made a centerpiece for the people at Maple Crest home.

It is for St. Patrick's Day. Ellen Ungs, scribe READ THE ADS IT PAYS! Primary April 10, 1962 8 a 8 tt LUXURY UNLIMITED luxury cars, Thunderbird ance, in distinction, four 'a a a LAtMMMMlMBanMM of at TOP PERFORMER full-size cars. Available Salaxie will outperform Boone DeKalb Counties Opposes Cook County Control Protects Individual Rights Appreciates Our Liberties Air Force Veteran Yon ran vote for him with the assurance that your Interests will le affiled diligently In Springfield. CTnCAGO KAPl-Kadgering office-holders who, special badges is a popular Chicago sport those days.

The game started when newspapers snoted that the Cook County enrpner. Dr. Andrew Toman, hurl issued ,177 badges, silver- plated ariil costing $3.74 each, to persons identified as special dep uty coroners. Who are those deputies, the newspapers asked. Toman evaded the question at first but under pressure made the names public.

He said they included persons he might call on for help, without re-muneration in coroner's edises, experts to serve on juries, persons who assisted his office and some of Toman's boyhood friends: One of the holders was Titus Hiffa, millionaire biard chairman of Webeor, who said he had to "be nrraind morgues and hos pitals frequently in connection with his work. Two brothers, holders of Toman badges, were accused of using them in connection with the purchase of vehicle licenses in Melrose Park. They are Gary and Howard Korer of Skokie who turned, in their shields. Their father, whom Toman described as "a nice old guy," kept his. Some of Toman's deputies are newspaper reporters.

One said the badge gives him access to news of value to the coroner. Toman made public his list after the state's attorney, Daniel P. Ward, gave an opinion that the names were a matter of public JFK's Mother Is Resting Well BOSTON (AP) Mrs'. Joseph P. Kennedy, 71-year-old mother of President Kennedy, was reported resting comfortabiy today at St Elizabeth s51" Hospital following a hernia operation.

The operation was performed Monday by Dr. Roy J. Heffernan, a gynecologist and Kennedy fami ly physician. He said Mrs. Kennedy withstood the hour-long op eration well.

After an afternoon visit, the doctor reported she was in excellent condition. There were no signs of malignancy, he The wife of the former ambas sador to Great Britain had been troubled by a pelvic hernia. She has been under treatment by Dr. Heffernan since last September. Mrs.

Kennedy delayed having the operation because of the condition of the former who suffered a stroke at Palm Beach, Fla. He is convalescing now in Palm Beach. Edward M. Kennedy, youngest brother of the President, and his wife, Joan, "visited the hospital several "hours" after the operation. Private Detective Is Checkers King PEORIA, HI.

(AP) John I. Howe is a man who moves with confidence and jumps to a conclusion. Howe displayed his style in a prolonged eight-game battle with Lavern Dibble Of Rockford for the Illinois state checkers championship. Howe, a Chicago private detective, fought Dibble, defending champion to seven draws before winning the final games in 102 moves which took nearly two hours. It was the third stafe chainpi'ir'- ship for Howe, who is 64.

He emerged victorious after 19'i hours of playing in which he torn-peted in more than 40 games. "You have to play at least 10 years to he an expert," said Howe, who saitj he plays about 20 games a He won his first state checker title in 1920 and repeated in 1960 Study Proposals For Expressway CHICAGO (AP The Illinois Division of Highways is studying proposals for a north-south expressway on Chicago's West Side, Roger Nusbaum. deputy chief of the division, said Tuesday. The proposed 11-mile expressway would roughly parallel Cicero Avenue from the Northwest Expressway to the planned Southwest Expressway in the vicinity, of Airport. Such a roadway could cost up to $150 million, Nusbaum said, and would be financed primarily by the federal government as part of the Interstate system.

I A VOTE FOR TIIIJKE VOTES. UE1MAN. ONE GIVE Out Our Way GMC Stages Science Show For Students A automobile which nms on power furnished by the tsun. syn- a- i uwuc mooer manuiacturea in a pop bottle in 60 seconds, and an exploding wire which can launch a ping pong ball across the width of a gymnasium. These were some of the demonstrations viewed by sixth, seventh and eighth grade students at Washington school Monday afternoon as the General Motors corporation presented its Previews of Progress science show in the school gym.

Jim jPok, science lecturer for the show? UioroUgMy -entertained hiS' ranisTflSTre audience' of students tai possibly might have tuAefi' some1 yoimg mthd toward the field of science as a career, which is the show's objective. Coo and a companion who normally accompanies bim, but was ill Monday, are one of seven team wfeSeW 4ourt the United States pre senting the free Previews of Progress show to schools service clubs and other interested organ isations, iney average 10 shows per week in schools alone. Since last June, Cook and his partner hart visited 32 states. One of the highlights of the show was the GM Sunmobile, the miniature car tbtrt actually runs on the power of the sun. It depends upon tight photoelectric cells located on jts hood for "its operation.

These cells convert light energy into elec-frftal in turn powers small electric motor to move the tar. In addition Jo sun power, the Previews audience saw a visual history of the jet engine itf "capsule" form. Beginning with" a working Smodel of the first jet which dates ack to 200 B.C., this sequence was jelimaxed by the running of a miniature gas turbine engine with a non-jniniature- roar. This type of engine may power automobiles of tomorrow. Cook explained.

1 The students were intrigued by a demonstration of a new foam plastic being used for crash pads in aircraft and automobiles. The lec-Jturer actually made the material 4in four minutss and demonstrated i its cushioning qualities by bouncing an egg off fronvfe height of four feet. Science proves quicker than a 'magician's sleight of hand in the Reviews sequence" in which synthetic rubber is produced in only ,60 seconds. The demonstrator sim- mixes two liquids in a poo bot- and a frothy glob of rubber 15 ilime the volume of the bottle find good RESTAURANTS galore in the YELLOW PAGES of your Telephone Directory VOTE BO. CAM-T A THBM0UNPW1TK 1 A4C0 'iALtAMT NORSK, AFTE A I WITH TME MOLttOP I COTTONTAIL.

A SAVIN AMP TMe RABBIT -A ALOWd V-" poor THE gate deaths, from unnatural causes. From the coroner the.r newspapers turned "their attention to the sheriff, Frank G. Sain, who has 65 special deputies. He announced he would not make their names public because it might put them in underworld jeopardy. Many of his deputies wear stars, he said, because, they must carry firearms to.

protect themselves or their businesses, jewelry shops, hotels in outlying areas, and the like. Publishing their names, he argued, would be giving hoodlums a list of likely prey. He did not resoond to. argument that hood lums would be unlikely to prey on folks who would shoot back. The sheriff, however, finally succumbed to pressure by Ward and released" the names of his deputies.

Sain's helpers included a press agent, two executives of a clothing firm and more reporters. The badgering of Toman and Sain moved Capt. Charles G. Sauers, superintendent of the Forest Preserve District to publish the names pf his 21 special deputies. All, he said, are skilled eques trians and their main job is to curb reckless horsebackery.

They carry no guns and cannot arrest anyone. In an emergency they can use their badges as spurs. EDDIE the EDUCATOR says Twint to thirty percent our able studenri art not measuring up to (heir potentials. These "under-achievers" must be challenged! Illinois Education Asiociation Chicago To Have New Skyscraper CHICAGO (AP)-The new dominating feature of Chicago's skyline is going to be the city's civic -center building, scheduled for completion in 1964. Rising 631 'a feet above a plaza in the Loop, the steel and glass courthouse-office building will be the city's tallest structure.

Mayor Richard J. Daley and the Public Building Commission said in a joint announcement Tuesday. At present, the city's tallest structure is the Prudential Build ing, 601 feet high. The $'b million civic center building, to be erected east of the City-County Bidding, will have only 31 stories but 18-foot ceiiTlnsir will givs added height, iMley said. YOUTH LENTEN SERVICES Every Thursday" Morning 8:00 To 8 :30 SOUTH BAPTIST CHURCH price special CREME SHAMPOO The shampoo With rhnlrnl II Pound heart of Lanolin O'BRIEN DOBBINS WALGREEN AGENCY Downtown Belvidere Wheel Balancing Muffler Service Road Service Towing $n59 i This Is Thunderbird-unique In all the world.

First of tx trim-she Is for the man who insists on the ultimate in luxury, in perform gleaming editions: Landau, Hardtop, Convertible, Sports Roadster. leaped out above it. "We seek through Previews to inspire more young people to make science their career and provide the trained talent -Americas must have to keep pace with the promise of the future," Cook explained after the show. "Our demonstrations dramatize the inquiring mind of all scientists which assumes that everything and anything can be improved- Pie-views hints at the tremendous secrets of power and energy that wait in the world of tomorrow to be unlocked by the young people of today who become Belvidere Auction Results Posted The following Belvidere auction report has been posted by the Federal-State Market News service for the week ending Friday, March 9. Receipts for the week included 188 cattle, 63 calves, 96 hogs, and 8 sheep.

Receipts for the previous week were 268 cattle, 92 calves, 54 hogs and one sheep. Cattle: Supply 55 stackers and feeders, 35 slaughter cows, 97i dairy cows and heifers, and a few slaughter bulls. Slaughter cows $.75 higher. Vealers $.50 higher. Stackers and feeders steady to $.25 higher.

Slaughter cows and bulls Util ity cows 15.90-17.90; cutter 15.00-17.- 40; canner 13.50-18.20; utility and commercial bulls 18.50-19.60. Veglers: A choice at 36.75; good 29.50-34.75; standard 26.00-29.50; cull and utility Stockers and feeders: good 625-1025 lb. stockers and feetler steers 20.80-23,80; medium 565-790 lb. good 580-775 lb. stocker and feeder heifers 18.00-22.70; good 300-325 lb.

heifer calves 22.50-24.25; few medium 400 lb. at 19.50." Dairy cows and heifers All grades of dairy cows 170.00-217.50 per head; replacement heifers 550- 825 lb. 16.00-19.60. Hogs Supply -22 feeder pigs and 6 bred gilts. Trade moderately active.

Feeder pigs steady. Feeder" pigs Good and choice 110-150 lb. feeder pigs 14.00-11.25; choice 35 'b. feeders 9.75 per head; bred 39.00-72.00 per head. Sheep: Few good 83 lb.

wooled slaughter lambs at 14.10; limited number cull to chuice slaughter ewes 3.25-4.50. READ THF ADS IT PAYS! ALMOST Me lv In Fields, Coffeyville, KaiL, p-pears here, but he was launched moments later dur" ing participation in bull-riding event in FL Worth, Tex. ft America's I When a woman fle post 50, her trippirxj becomes less liflW and more tontastW. Ogle McHenry CANDIDATE GIVES HIM YOUR THREE TO FRED 1 i Bclridere, I1L most Galaxie is the undisputed styling and performance leader ti the with a 405-hp Thunderbird 8 (coupled to a four-speed stick shift), America's costliest cars. Seven models including the styiieb Sunbnar.

complete car A MEW KINO Of CAR-. WITH THE WORLD'S NEWEST V-f Take your choice of two all-new Challenger V-8's. (They're ad snap, sparkle and smoothness!) Stretch your legs, don't worry about your hat-Fairla'ne's full-size. Quality's high. Price is to below many compacts.

Five exciting models. selection Whatever you're looking for in a car, look to the long Ford line. These are the cars with the features of the future that put you years ahead dollars ahead when you trade I AMERICA'S BEST SELLING COMPACT Its name is Falcon -and ifs the lowest-priced six passenger car on the American road. There are five models, exclusive of wagon. Choose the new 170 Special Six engine, or improved version of the Six that broke all records in the '61 Mobilgas Economy Run.

i fir STANDARD SERVICE For Sale 15" Cr 16" USED TIRES A iood Section Of 4 And Ply THIRTEEN WAQONS finest wagon collection eight Falcons, Including compact wagons. FROM AMERICA'S STATION WAOON SPECIALISTS Th assembled under one roof. Five full sued Ford wagons and three big. new Club Wagons thai are priced tvvw many standard Koxnar wxxoamm Brake Repair Universal Joints Replaced Shock Absorbers Replaced General Tfte-Up Work Guynn T. Board KEPI BUCAX CANDIDATE fXR SHERIFF BOOXE COUNTY Tuesday, grill 0,1962 Qualified By 8 Years Experience Yoar Vte Ami Kapimri Will B.

Apprrclatrl MANLEY MOTOR SALES CO. Pick-Up Delivery Service Genoa Rood and Route 20 LI 4-3831 Harry Hal versoh Bob Hulstedt 621 S. Stat.

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About Belvidere Daily Republican Archive

Pages Available:
203,950
Years Available:
1900-1978