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The Pantagraph from Bloomington, Illinois • Page 6

Publication:
The Pantagraphi
Location:
Bloomington, Illinois
Issue Date:
Page:
6
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

Six Pantarraph, Bloomlnjjton. 111.. Jcme 5. 1958. El Paso Lets Contract CENTRAL ILLINOIS DEATHS p-wnwmm ni.iiji.nu.

mmum urn .1 iwimiwmwwmmmwmmmmmmwwmw VY r. YVY Yy 4 VV jY Y'S" 'J i For Street Repairs day at his home in Elmwood Park i r-, i EL PASO (PNS) Decision to i tee are. to investigate a catch ba- of a heart attack. His funeral will be at 11 a. buy a new car for the police do- sin in the east business block partrnent and announcement of the 'hich is in need of repair.

It was Friday at the Thierry Funeral H. W. Slick I PEKIN (PNS) Howard William Slick, 42, of Melrose, formerly of Pekin, died of: a heart attack while playing golf at 7 p. m. Tuesday at Melrose.

Home in Wenona, with the Rev. letting of a contract for 22 blocks i reponea inai rcgraomg me area of street improvement were the a Lhe rear oI business houses in major items of business at the the center block, repair of a catch meeting of the City Council Mon- oasm ana spreaciing crusaea rocK. day evening. I had eliminated a persistent drain- William Graham officiating. Burial will be in St.

Mary's Cemetery. He was born. Nov. 24. 1909, in Wenona, a son of William and Gertrude Nelson Hoskins.

He married Virginia Flahaven June 27, 1936,, in Wenona. They moved He was personnel director for for Transitron Electronic Corp. at The April decision to purchase age problem. new tires lor the present police! rwn4 npn-stmiauvc uic I -A 1 Melrose. Visitation will at 7 p.

m. Friday at the Kuecks Funeral from Wenona to Chicago in 1939. car was rescinded after an extend-! National Aiuminate Corporation ed discussion of the cost of rent-! Presented some information reins a car for police use. Mayor i a proposed program de-William Maxey voted "yes" on thej signed to alleviate a mineral de-rescinding motion to break the tie, Psit fte citv supply He was a South Shore Railroad employee. Surviving are his wife; a broth and also gave his ar-Droval to the i "n-cn is a problem io nome laun Chuck Long er Louis, Rockford; two sisters, Atv Vint Tint effort th mialitv Home.

Arrangements are still in-i complete. Mr. Slick was born May 21, 1916, in Tazewell County, the son of Roy and Emma Wasson Slick. He married Arlene Hovey June 5, 1943, in Texas. They had two children, a daughter, Nancy, and a son, Bill.

He attended Carthage College following motion to purchase a new car, the vote again being tied. Mrs. Clarence Reichman, Wash of the water for drinking purposes. Several factors contribute la the Navyman Long Serves i'' X'NM v' W-' ington; Mrs. William Weber, Peru Frederick McLemore $13,213 BID condition, the speaker said, but In Mediterranean Area R.

A. CulLnan and Sons of Tre- the ma tor one seems to be an inv Chuck Long signalman third MASON CITY (PNS) The and graduated from University of class aboard a Navy destroyer es remains of Frederick McLemore, Illinois. Mr. Slick is a veteran of World War II. He had lived in cort, is participating in a four month cruise in the Mediterranean mont received the contract for proper balance between the min-the resurfacing of 22 blocks, the eral content of the water and the project to be paid from motor fuel materials used in the water soften-tax.

The bid was 513.213.23. ing process. Wages of city employees on an( PROPOSES TEST hourly basis were raised from: si tw fc.r vi rr Proposed a senes of tests to lormeriy or Aiason city, wno died in California May 18, will be the east since his marriage. area. brought here for Mason City Cem He is survived by his wife and etery graveside services at 1:30 The sailor is a son of Mr.

and two children, at home, and his p. m. Thursday with the Rev. F. C.

mother, Mrs. Emma Slick, of Pe Stelzriebe officiating. Mrs. C. H.

Long of 161 Hoiton Homes. Recently home for a 10 day leave, he is now aboard the a proporuon- hour parking limit was extended installation of kin. He was preceded in death by ing pump to feed the proper min-' erals directly into the well, the his father. USS Cromwell. north from Front Street to the al-j ley on Central, Elm and Sycamore 4 To Attend addition of other minerals as the Baptist's Ohio north half of each of those blocks.

tests indicated were needed with Fines of J16S for 72 traffic viola- checks tions were paid during the month. Cost rof Lhe Three residents requested II" would "dditon to YYu the 5300 annual fee for technical COURT NOTES LOGAN COUNTY. COUNTY. COURT Washington, D. C.

() Ezra Taft Benson pretended to be a hungry Secretary of Agriculture Wednesday as he tackled a 40 inch hot dog as part of buildup for National Hot Dog Week. Paul Gilmore, 9, and his 11 year old sister, Carol, of Silver Spring, help Benson. GOLD OR COLD-DOG STILL 'HOT Benson Enlisted by Packers To Kick Off Hot Dog Month Convention Barne O. Karr CLINTON (PNS) Bame O. Karr, 62, of Crete, formerly of Clinton, died at 1:30 a.

m. Wednesday at Illinois Central Hospital in Chicago. He was a retired railroad employee. His funeral will be at 2 p. m.

Friday at the Pullen-Boos Chapel. The Rev. Caspv Allen will offi LINCOLN (PNS) Estate of James service. No action was taken on the proposal. Routine bills for wages, supplies and services were allowed.

Four representatives of First W. Cowan, oetition to orobste will filed. Mrs. Mrrtle Cowan and Fan-is Cowan named executors. Property values listed as undetermined.

Bapti6t Church plan to leave June moval of a tree which would permit widening a driveway. The street superintendent was instructed to comply with the requests as time permits. The streets and alleys commit- 11 for Cincinnati, Ohio, to attend the American Baptist Convention (Spinning tops was a diversion! 2,500 years ago. More than 4.000,000 Americans fish in salt waters annually. ciate.

Burial will be in Memorial June 12 to 17. Park Cemetery. Those going will be the Rev. Ru He was born Sept. 17, 1895, at dolph Loidolt, pastor; the Rev i i we can have our gloves and eat press agent was fluttering around the fringes of Benson's newssnack Wapella, the son of Or a and Eliza Orville Kool, assistant pastor, and them, too.

beth Whitehead Karr. On Jan. 21 Is there no end to American in conference, eager to pass along 1923, he married Pauline Walden these facts: genuiry? And why hasn't the meat at Bloomington. They had one packing industry found out the No one knows who invented the son, Ora Clayton Karr of Crete By ARTHUR EDSON WASHINGTON, D. J-The lowly hot dog moved into governmental big leagues Wednesday.

With a pomp and circumstance, Secretary of Agriculture Ezra Taft Benson was given a gold hot dog for his desk, and a 40-inch real hot dc, for his mouth. All this was an attempt by the name of this benefactor so that he hot dog, but in 1601 the German Mr. Karr is survived by a son may be suitably remembered? Dr. and Mrs. Shelby Aubuchon of 414 E.

Grove St. Mr. Loidolt said Tuesday that one of the major discussions of the convention will be whether to move American Baptist headquarters to Chicago or to leave them in New York in the 521,800.000 Inter-Church Center, being built near the Columbia University campus. Butchers Guild came up with a Ora, Clinton; a 6ister, Mrs. Pearl beauty that would have startled MANY NAMES Snook, Clinton; five grandchil not just Benson but the whole Ei dren.

He was preceded in death Hot dogs have more aliases senhower administration. That U-sA fTN by his wife and three sisters. man racketeers. In the South they sausage was more than a half may be redhots. In New York American meat packers to remind us that just around the calendar mile long and weighed 885 Frederick Peters Jr.

they may be franks except The new building, which has been partially financed by a Rockefeller grant and the New around Rochester and Syracuse corner is July, National Hot Dog pounds. DEBUT IN '04 LINCOLN (PNS) Frederick where they go in for pale dogs and Month. Hot dog! Sherman Peters 54, of Sacra York Life Insurance will be call them white hots, or around Also, the best U.S. effort falls Well, Benson accepted the gold hot dog and said: "The hot dog national headquarters for Ameri New York City where they are mento a former Lincoln resident, died Tuesday at Nor- far short of that. An Indiana meat can churches.

It will have 440,000 often called coneys. Wieners and packer once made a 7-footer to walk, Calif. square feet of office space for af has become more or less a sym bol of good eating." ORIGIN UNKNOWN frankfurters still remain their formal, or fancy dress, names. His funeral will be at 10 a. m.

celebrate the opening of a Peru, filiates of the National Council of doggery. Churches of Christ of the USA. Saturday at the Fricke Memorial Home, with the Rev. L. II.

Appel Then, while photographers went Mr. Loidolt said the American vM Tl It vY A The first American-style hot dog appeared at the St. Louis Fair in 1904. The concessionaire hit on the officiating. Burial will be in Lake Bank Cemetery.

Baptist Convention will have to decide whether its headquarters to work furiously, he dutifully bit off one end of the enormous, cold hot dbg, and chomped away with splendid idea of passing out white Friends may call at the funeral If you are an average person, you will eat 62.4 hot dogs this year. Why you won't eat the other .6 is a statistical mystery. Collectively, we eat 800,000 miles of hot dogs annually. Now, a final question. Was Benson's desk dog really gold? "Not really," said, the publicist.

should be centrally located in Chicago or part of this new project. a moderately rapturous exDres gloves with each dog, so patrons home after Friday afternoon. wouldn't soil their hands. The He was born Jan. 21, 1904, at If they are left in New York, regional offices may be 6et up in trouble was, too many customers Lake Fork, a son of Sherman and walked off with the gloves.

Sarah Carolton Peters. Chicago and on the West Coast. sion. If the hot dog is worthy of Cabinet-level attention, isn't it time we learned something of its case history? To no one's surprise, a packer So the concessionaire'6 brother, Surviving are four sisters, Mrs, "This one is gold plated, and will cost us around 525. I priced a Eliza Gasaway, of Latham; Mrs.

The American Baptist Convention comprises 6,500 churches with' a total membership of more than lVa million. The 1959 annual meet-! a baker, thought up the hot dog bun, to protect our fingers. Now solid gold one. Came to 514,000." Ida Sandelbun, Mrs. Dora Master- ing win be in Des Moines, Iowa.

Voice Sudenis son and Miss Margaret, of Lincoln. He was a member of the Lin coin Christian Church. Free Methodists To Hear Official Reunion Dates Plan Recital Mason City Man Injured By Tractor Lester Hoskins Vickery School Sunday at Ren-' frew Park in Dwight with potluck dinner at 12:30. Mrs. John Welch Voice students of Mrs.

Lloyd WENONA (PNS) Lester Hos- Wilson will sing their annual The Rev. Lester Banning of Rushville, district superintendent of the Free Methodist Church, will speak at services Friday, Saturday and Sunday at the Bloomington Free dist Church. spring recital at Fellowship Hall I15' 43 died at 2 a- m- Wedne charge MASON CITY (PNS) Donald Skaggs, 25, a state highway department worker, was seriously Services will be at 7:30 p. m. of the First Christian Church at 8 p.

m. Sunday. Students being presented are Miss Alene, Miss Carol and Miss Maxine Berry, who will sing trios as well as solos. Miss Fern and Miss Winifred Ensminger, Miss Melanie Cade, Miss Linda Ball, Friday and Saturday and 10:45 a. m.

Sunday. injured north of town Wednesday afternoon when he was run over by a tractor. Skaggs was cutting weeds along Miss Joyce McClure, Miss Judy Hospital Group Gets $200 Check the road when a piece of material became stuck on the sickle. He Wasson, Miss Jean Denny, Miss Janice Hoffman, Miss Lurena Hui-singa, Miss Eunice Ann Thomas GP 03D(3? LINCOLN (PNS) Mrs. Wayne and Miss Connie NeiL Harris, president and Mrs.

Lea- climbed off the tractor and when he walked in front of it he was run over. He was taken to Memorial Hospital in Springfield with lacerations on the lower part of his body. Mrs. Margaret Covey, Mrs. Ida mond Poynter, of Elkhart unit of St.

Clara's Hospifal Auxiliary, at a meeting Monday night presented a check for 5200 to Mrs. Carl Mae Stanish, Mrs. Dorothy Peiffer and Ivan Ryan, John Frantz, Ted Hayes, Jerry Bryant, Jim Har-desty, Dennis Carnine and Leslie W. Hembrieker, president, for the Snack Bar fund. Wilson also will appear.

Mrs. Dwaine Kretzinger was ap Accompanists are Mrs. Ruth Violating Lake Safety Code Costs Youth $9 A Bloomincton vouth was fined pointed chairman of the committee to arrange the commemora Jones, Mrs. Margaret Miller, Miss Linda Ball, Miss Fern Ensminger, tion of the auxiliary's first anniversary. Mrs.

Robert Pokorski made a 1 hi VY i -a v. f- -i faii i ti i ft i ijwi -nrr frrir 1 1 on rrnTtw 1 1 -1 i i tv v-ti i hi -jf-TurnffinT ifufrin1- vmiu irn-nn 'r- Ljr- 'i fi L49 2.9 8 Miss Norma Watkins, Jerry Alvey and Mrs. Wilson. Miss Barbara Stumm, flutist will accompany Miss Joyce McClure. 59 in police court Wednesday for violating the city's new lake safety code.

James S. Raymond, 13. of 607 S. Lee St. was assessed the fine report on the formation of a new unit in Hartsburg-Emden with 26 members.

Marriage Licenses The auxiliary members assisted LJNCOIJf (PNS) Marriage licenses have been issued here to Robert W. on a charge of failing to have life preservers in his boat. He was arrested Tuesday by Clarence Blackmore, Lake Bloomington policeman. in the Red Cross Canteen Monday serving meals to the National Guard and workers in the Mount Pulaski emergency. Vefi and Naomi Johnson, both of Lincoln: Franklin William Johnson of New Holland and Joan Arlene London, of Lincoln.

Come one, come all! Enjoy" the'stylings'of Dan River, Galey Lord and other headliners, as they team with our own Towncraft in pure sport shirt artistry I Thrill to the shimmer of our unusual metallics! Marvel at the stellar performance of Penney-tested Wash'N Wears! See them all and more at Penney's! Here are just a few highlights: Buttondown Striped Cotton 1.93, Cotton'N Silk Dan River Sheere 1.9S, Lustrous Air Jet Acetates 2.93, Fashion-Trim Cottons 2.98 DRESS-UP TROPICALS Machine or Drip Dry Either way, Penney's crisp DacronfH)-Rayon shadow weaves Iron smooth as silk with a mere touch-up and they're tropical tailored in 8 smart shades. I I Seamless tubing through- (pi3fiW(iii)Miaiaa I I 1 I Weatherproof baked II Hl.i i JiWir enamel finish on entire I I We don't believe that any store in America can equal this value in a play gym! The biggest the sturdiest the safest packed with i more play fun than any gym anywhere near the price. But quanti- 1 I I I K. 1 ji ties are limited, and we may never be able to repeat the offer at 'jg 'r 1 this price. Easy assemble.

Get yours NOW! at STERN'S. X9fcTf2. fijV YaVZYIiI ffiT I in I I i (WASH'N WEAK j.Y sfmmM I III I 1 -jr Kr- 695 28 to 12 SHOP PENNEY'S you'll live better, you'll save!.

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About The Pantagraph Archive

Pages Available:
1,649,418
Years Available:
1857-2024