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The Pantagraph from Bloomington, Illinois • Page 8

Publication:
The Pantagraphi
Location:
Bloomington, Illinois
Issue Date:
Page:
8
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

ranfagraph, Tuevlay, Sept. 11)39. 8 GLASS TABLE TOPS CENTRAL ILLINOIS DEATHS School for Girls Chief Gets Sack PLATE MIRRORS AUTO GLASS Mrs. Isabel Krumholj Brown Glass Palnf Co. a' V' Tr 1 ler, Mrs.

Vivian O'Connor, Springfield; a son, John Wrldon; two grandchildren, and a sister, Mrs. Alice Jenkins, Portsmith, Va. Two til W. Tnni M. (across moM thi rtaa STATION) eral is going back to a less permissive policy, and I think a longer confinement of runawaja is brothers preceded him in death.

He was a member of the Clin Firing Follows Escape Wave From Geneva ton Christian Church and the Odd Fellows Lodge. He was supervisor at one time from Dewitt Township and served on the Board of Re view for two terms. GENEVA on- Miss Mary was fired from her minerintendent of the 111! nois State Training School for r.irU Monday amid Indications METAMORA PNS) Mrs. Isabel M. Knimholz, 4S, died at the home of her sls'er in-law, Herman Noel, at 4:30 p.

m. Mondtiy. She was dismissed from St. Francis Hospital in Peoria erven weeks ago and hud been Savins at tt Noel home. She was taken to the Mason Funeral Home.

Funeral services will be held at 9:30 a. m. Thursday at St. Mary'i Church at Lourdcs. Burial will be In St.

Mary'a Cemetery. Visitation will stail at 3 p. m. Wednesday at the funeral home. The Rosary will be recited at 8 p.

m. Wednesday at the funeral home. She was born March 27, 1911, In Worth Township, the daunhterl of John and Louisa Schneider, Crehner. Si'e was married to John Krumholz on April 17, 1934, at Lourdes. Survivors ire her husband; three sons, Charles, Virgil and Roy A.

Shay DELAVAN -(PNSt- Rm A. Shay, 81, a retired died at 2:05 a. m. Monday ar Hopedale Hospital. He had been a patient there one week.

His funeral will be at 2 p. m. that there'll be tougher discipline of I Airport Granted Funds SPRINGFIELD (LTD, Funds totaling were released by Gov. Stratton Monday for work at three Illinois airports. All funds were earmarked for further developments, including construction costs, engineering, taxiway lights, and runways.

Recipients were: Sparta Community Airport, Randolph County, University ot Illinois Airport, Champaign, $123,800 and the at the institution. Mrt Reulah II. Maxwell, ior MICHIGAN PEACHES PRUNE PLUMS GRAPES Waalthy and Jonathan APPLES Arriving Daily DALE'S MKT. 2317 E. Oakland Avt.

Phont 5-7150 mer assistant to Misa Shaughnes- tSgirvg-. il 1 Wednesday at the Delavan Baptist Church, with the Rev. Richard the school lor aeunquem said she favors Increasing penai ties for those who run away. Robert Patton, chairman of the Chat From 10 Downing St. London ') President Eisenhower and Britain's Primp Minister Harold Mac-mil Ian, right, are shown in Informal pose at 10 Downing St.

In this setting in the prime minister's official residence, the two conducted a fireside chat which was televised for 20 minutes. (See story on page 1.) iMullin officiating. Burial will be in Prairie Rest Cemetery. The family requests that expressions of sympathy be made in the form of donations to the memorial fund of the church. I Illinois Youth Commission, an Du Page County Airport at West Chicago, $35,500.

nouneed in Springfield the dismis- i nf Miss Shauchnessy. He said Agricultural, domestic and In that 57 escapes from the mini dustrial consumption of water in He was born Sept. 24. 1S77 lnj Hopedale. a son of Henry andirUT Schweikert, former-Mary Kerr Shay.

He married Lo- of Lim-oln; daughter, Mrs. mum security Institution since June was the immediate cause of 'flower and Cropsey, died at i p. m. Sunday In Sarasota Me man Funeral Home where his funeral will be at 3 p. m.

Wednesday. Burial will be In Lexington the United States averages 1,100 gallons per capita daily. morial Hosnital after a heart at vena Belle Curtis. Dec. 17.

1901 in Wayne Hanson: three sons, Rich Dennis, and a daughter, Anna Louise, ail at home. Four brothers, Albert Edmond and John, all of Metamora, and Emil of Teo-ria. and four sisters, Mrs. Laura Buotanan, Lowpoint; Mrs. Hilda; oitKimu'KU'M.

nr j.ti nun sn) Edwin and Harry: two sis- hia action. HELD TOST I KM He said that Mrs, Shaughnessy had not "come up to my expecta Cemetery. Visitation will begin at 7 p. m. Tuesday at the funeral home.

near Delavan In Ht'. He retired trrSi Mrs Brownj Spring- and moved to Delavan In 1945. m- v.m Simmons tih- tack. He was a retired Illinois Central Railroad telegrapher and had moved to Florida three years ago from Champaign, where he had lived for 30 years. He will be brougtrt to the Owens He was born March rao at His wife died in 1906.

(ert.wUle; a brother, Harold H. riumb, Tampa, Mrs. frri-da Fandel, Metamora, and Mrs. Celia L'pdke, Peoria, also survive. are Tonti, a son of Thomas and Ella wo i auiStoll.

Alexander. Va. and Walter, Delavan: two dauch- Norman Holloway. He married (St VW I 3V c13Tb Mildred Culley April 3, 19a3, at She was a member of the Altar ten, and Raary Society of St. Mary's naw Mrs.

Mabel Payne. Macki-Mrs. Florence Hoffman, Del Funeral Home in Champaign. His funeral and burial will be In Nolden, Mo. Arthur G.

Paxton WIGHT (PNS) Arthur G. Paxton, 75. died at the home of a daughter. Mrs. R.

W. Patterson at Church. avan; two brothers, Donald, Los Surviving are his wife; two sons, Champaign. He was born Jan. 12, isrj in rvi Lexington; Harvey, liey- tions as a superintendent," but added: "She'i a good aocial worker and has the interest of the kids at heart." Mrs.

Shaughnessy told newsmen Patton'a action was a aur-prise to her. She aaid she was given no reason for her dismissal. She has been auperintendent at Geneva aince May 25, 1953. MORE FIRMNESS She said that Dr. Otto L.

Bettag, Dalton at 5 p. m. Monday. He Champaign. He married Mabel worth; two daughters, Mis.

Wal-Nichols. lace Fever, Lexington; Mrs. Bev- IS YOUR CHILD Angeles, Walter, St Louis, Homer Clay Coggini sister. Mrs. John Booth.

HOPEDALE PNS Horn- Atlanta: nine grandchildren, and er Clay Cogging, 68, died at 3:13 two great-grandchildren. a. m. Tuesday at the Forrest I He was a member of the Bap- Surviving are his wife; erlv Denney. Arrowsmiui; six had lived with his daughter the past three months.

His funeral will be at 2 p. m. Park Home. St. Francis Hospital, nst CTiurcn and had been a mem sons, a i a t-nampaiKn; Richard L'rbana; two grandchildren: a brother, George, St.

in Peoria, where he had been tiWr or tne international Order of nursuay 11 grandchildren; five brothers, Carl, Hammond, Harry and Ernest, Ottawa; Felix and Jesse, Verdun; a sister, Mn. Charlotte Raines, Ottawa. A GOOD READER? There has been much said on this subject. Facts are, that many a child is a poor reader because of poor vision. Bring your child to Dr.

Berns for a clinical eye examination and glasses that will help him overcome the difficulty. tij fr.i- II. haA hw UM lei ows lor 30 vears. He nic irv. wiueu i-h Louis, a sister, Miss Alice, Washington, D.

C. a memoer ot the Fckm KnirhU oi cieim. ouutu state welfare director, naa xoia Pythiaa Lodge for 43 years. in failing health several years and had suffered a stroke Aug. 6.

Funeral services will be held at her he would welcome her appli His Barents, two brothers, two Mr. Besore as a member of the Lemeiery ai vemiia. He was born May 13, 1S84 on a Bellflower Masonic Lodge. farm in Goodfarm Township. Mrs.

Marie Hansen r.nmdv Countv. a son of John and sisters and two ions preceded him in death. Mrs. Mattie Hiither LE ROY Mrs. Mattie Hiither, DWIGHT- (PN3) Mrs.

Ma- Murnhv Paxton. He 3r ii GtJiro 2:30 p. m. Thursday at the Davis Mortuary here. Burial will be in Shiloh Cemetery.

Visitation will start Wednesday afternoon at the mortuary. The family has requested that ne Hansen. 84. died his eary ijfe i Goodfarm 7:30 a. m.

Tuesday at St James ToWnship and in 1925 he moved Hospital Pontiav where she had he lived for sev- cation for any of several jobs in his department. The Public Welfare department wMch operates state hospitals, has no correctional institutions. Mn. Maxwell told reporters she feeis that in her view, officials "may have to be a little firmer and more consistent in disciplining girls who break away." She aaid that "Education in gen He served as station agent in Bellflower in the late 1920s, going from here to Champaign. Harvey E.

Holloway LEXINGTON (PNS) Harvey E. Holloway. 54, died at 9:15 a. m. Monday at St.

Joseph Hospital, Bloomington. He was brought to the Mussel- 72, died at 11:10 p. m. Monday at St. Joseph's Hospital where ahe been a patient since Aug.

20. She' rn, moved to expressions of sympathy be made j)rfn in fa lin? hea'rh jincf nu indr lir uwlipH i me- had been a patient one day. December and had lived with a cnHnjc at Long Garage. He mar-daughter. Mrs.

Lena Beyer, for ronnell. Sent. 9. 1906 She was brought to the Stensel Funeral Home. Arrangements are incomplete.

the lorm oi comnouuoni 10 charities. He was born April 1. 1S91, In Hopedale Township, the son of the part year. at Chicago. She died in 1943.

Funeral services will be held at Surviving are three daughters, Frank and Mary Sands Coggins. Mrs. R. W. Patterson, Dalton; Mrs.

Mildred Terpstra. Mrs. Gay 2 p. m. Thursday at the Von Qualen Funeral Home.

The Rev. E. F. Lipscomb will officiate. Burial will be in Oak Lawn Ceme Tease, Chicago: a brother, Charles.

Dwight; three grandchil tery. dren and three great-grandchil Visitation will start at 3 p. m. dren. Wednesday at the funeral home.

He married Edna May Mitchell on April, 24, 1917, at Pekin. Survivors are his wife; a daughter, Mrs. Howard Woods of Delavan, and two grandchildren. A sister and a brother preceded him death. During his lifetime he had been a carpenter, a church janitor, a school bus driver and a part-time coach at Hopedale High School.

He spent his entire life in the His parents preceded him In She was born Feb. 5, 1875, in Seneca, the dauchte- of Trfmos death. Howard Besore BELLFLOWER (PNS) Howard W. Besore, 67, of Sarasota, a former resident of Bell- and Elsie Johnson. She was married to Hans C.

Hansen who died in 1910. She was married to Andrew Hansen April 5, 1919. He ADRIAN'S FACTORY OUTLET Hopedale and Delavan communities. He was a member of the Methodist Church and of the Hopedale Odd Fellows Lodge. Hugo G.

Emeis CLINTON (PNS) Hugo G. Emeis, 79, a retired Springfield druggist, died at 4:40 p. m. Monday at John Warner Hospital. He had been a patient there 10 days.

He was taken to the Pullen and Boos Funeral Chapel and will be taken to Hill and Fredericks Inc. died in 1946. Survivors are a son, A. J. Han-' sen of Bloomington; two daughters, Mrs.

Beyer of Dwight and Mrs. Louise Nevin of Joliet; three sisters, Mrs. Anton Bak of Storm Lake, Iowa; Mrs. Hans Smith of Bloomington and Miss Drea Johnson of Dwight; nine grandchildren and 19 great grandchildren. She was preceded in death by two sons and a daughter.

i Ernest F. Wagner KEMPTON -(PNS)- Ernest F. SHOES Children's Shoes $3.95 $0.99 Value Mortuary at Davenport, Iowa. Arrangements are incomplete. He was born June 10, 1880, at Davenport a son of Hugo A.

and Linda Harding Emeis. His wife, Iva, died in 1920. Surviving are two sisters, Miss Fanny L. Emeis, 121 W. White Wagner, 66, a semiretired farmer and carpenter, died at la.

m. Monday at St. James Hospital in Pontiac. He had been il) three months. His funeral will be at 2 p.

m. Wednesday at St. John's Lutheran Church in Cullom. with the Rev. .1 E.

L. Serr officiating. Burial will Sturdy Saddle Oxfords Sport Shoes be in West Lawn Cemetery, Cullom. with whom he made his home; Mrs. Alice M.

Schmacher, Kansas City, a brother, Amo Emeis, Davenport, Iowa. He was in business for himself as a druggist in Springfield. He $8-95 CiQO later worked for a Springfield Drug firm, rie moved to Clinton two months ago. William O. Blue Value Ta" C.

B. Si AA widths Dress Flats of Famous Brands $8.95 to $10.00 Values He waa born Oct 28, 1892, near Kempton, a son of Mr. and Mrs. I Henry Wagner. Surviving are three brothers, August and Clarence, Kempton; Herman, Cullom.

A brother and sister preceded him in death. He was a member of St. John's Church. Clyde M. Stoll LINCOLN (PNS) Clyde M.

Stoll, a native of Lincoln, died Sunday in Seattle, accord CLINTON (PNS) William O. Blue, 74, of 514 5. Monroe a retired farmer, died at the John Warner Hospital at 3:15 p. Monday. He taken to the Herington Funeral Home.

Arrangements are Young eyes need good light: incomplete. He was born in Texas Township, May 17, 1885, a son of Urish and Jennie' Eckert Blue. He married Lela McCann, March 1, 1917 at Clinton. Surviving are his wife; a daugh- ing to word received by relatives. He was born May 24, 1888 in Lincoln, a soon of the late Malhias and Alice Stoll.

His father a cigar maker served as mayor of Lincoln. Surviving are his wife, the for- Children's Tennis Oxfords $3.95 CAOO '2 Value Building Supply Center vjlih vjgII pfannsd ligfafeg 8 Good Boys' Men's Shoes S.95 Now! Lowtr Prices Than 3-Track, Qualify Aluminum COMBINATION WINDOWS! EXTRUDED. HEAVY GAUGE LOW IN COST! FREE measuring and estimating service! We install, or you can do it yourself! Young minds need a place to 'study and priceless young eyes need the best in study lighting. The placet To develop proper study habits educators say it should be quiet, secluded and well lighted. A desk! in the child's bedroom is ideal if space permits.

The light Not just any lamp can qualify as a study' lamp. Scientific correct lighting standards call for a lamp that gives soft but ample light about twelve inches' from the table, without glare or shadows. We have a good selection of correctly designed study lamps for you to choose from. Come in and pick one out Ladies' Dress Shoes Famous Brands $10.00 to $20.00 Values 53 5j99 to 5A Widths 4 to Lengths ADRIAN'S FACTORY OUTLET SHOE SERVICE 608 N. Main St.

NO MONEY DOWN Low Monthly Payments III t' 4 1 1 Call 4-3261 I today. Remember, your child's eyesight is priceless SALE! ALUMINUM WINDOWS 9 3-Track, Combination Only H4.50 New Lightolier "S'ght-Savtr" study lamp hat diffujer bowl for ye-eating, glar-frt light. $14.95. Only 95t down, bolonct monthly. good light is cheap.

Stop In or ILLINOIS POIHEQ COMPANY SCHVULST Lumber Coal Co. 1 416 S. Robinson PANTAGRAPH PHONES-4-3041.

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Pages Available:
1,649,374
Years Available:
1857-2024