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The Pantagraph from Bloomington, Illinois • Page 16

Publication:
The Pantagraphi
Location:
Bloomington, Illinois
Issue Date:
Page:
16
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

16 rnt.rsih, ltliioiiilntn, Saturday, Nov. CENTRAL ILLINOIS DEATHS RIJ Dl I Funeral Hmc in Lincoln with the Onaid V. WHO o. K. Itennett officiating.

II ftrtV irCl PrttVlllt V.ln I 1. Croix Rike, 68, formerly of Lt Roy. oiM'crmeiery at New Holland. Tnunday lit tat Orange. N.

J. my call at the funeral at- I. ltta In 111 t- I home ancr jo p. n. Mmnwy.

si wai brn In Ritwdwell, g. 1KX3. the diiuchcr ol ic wii uuin wn. Roy. the of Wllbert and Loul.

VanAtta Hike. He married Md- dred Nate In 1D2(. Surviving are hit wife, a on, Rimald. Seafoitl. N.

dauuh-k Iirr, field, N. a lier, Mr. Flor- I enre Keenan. Le Roy: a brother, Wilbert, New York, N. Y.i and A I IVoimsod Now First Methodist Church at Lc Roy 1 i U.N.

Secrcfary Honored Le Koy Methodists Vote New Church Reunited Syracuse, N. Y. MO Mrs. Elconorc Vulcano (left) of Syracuse hugs her daughter, Judith Harbach. 14, whom she had not seen since the mother left East Berlin 13 years ago.

The girl fled across the Iron Curtain this year after her grandmother died. $185,000 Project Will Start in 1962 I MY fwrrfrn and mem bers of Fint Methodist Church have voted to build a new church that will cost JISj.OOO, it was an nounced Friday miin-u iiiwn. fmir crandchildrrn. He wa a veteran of notn wmm War I and World War II. He wat a retired Innurame uilcsman.

Louli H. Mav STANFORD H'NSt Ijouu llrnrv Mav. 62. a former resident i( Sunfoid, died Wednesday at M.ulrxia. Calif.

His graveside funeral will be at iU. PliiKiiinl rmfrv nrar c. at tn Mnivtav. was born March 19. at ites More, me son 01 It I 1 Ui Mni Croree If.

and Nancy Llovd Mav. He farmed rear Maniora irom 19.12 to 1933. Since that time he had lived in Washington, Oregon and California. Surviving are a daughter, Mrs. Henrietta Canopy of Minler, and three grandchildren; and two sisters and three brotheriin Vir ginia.

Martin Luther Cook uvsai Luther Cook, 75. died at 7:15 MACKINAW (PNS) Martin Thursday at the home of Mill rtttj i in. va 1 1 i nephew. John Lay In Tre- mont. wr.

uxk, who a sunerea fi-om a heart ailment for a num ber of yean, was stricken while visiting his nephew. lie was brought to tlie Ilnrnsel Saturday at the funeral home. He was born July 29. ir i-ecr crccit nmnsiup. mr a.

ii Davis, rnxton; Mrs. j-aui jh-iiim-i The project was presented by'Hn(j Colfax; Mrs. Hazel ac and Fffie Gallagher Brown. wai mnrried In Lincoln Ken. jooj, to Kbt-nrzer Douiilaa, who giro in jjjj.

she lurvlved by two mr Hubert of LaGrance and Merle of Maon City; two alsier. Mm. Ia hel White of South Rome. III. and Mlna Prown, reorfft; and two grandchildren.

John O. Thompson Thompson. 73. a rrtlied I'rKin lutrhrr dird of a hert attack al 1 4 p. m.

Thursday at hit home, 1 107 S. wirth. Jim funeral will be at 2 p. m. Saturday at the Trenton Funeral 1 1 Tim Pim- jut Andrew 'will officiate, and burial will be In Lakeside cemetery.

I ii. 1,1 tu uii horn Aue. 4. IR. at Sigel, a son of John W.

and Knte Achenhrenner Thompson. He married Nena Griffith Oct. 23, 1936, at Qulnry. Surviving are his wife: a daughter. Mrs.

Kathrvn Schaumleffel. and a son, Robert, Tekin; a atep- son. Gerald Dale Azusa. a brother, Charles Te-kin; three grandchildren. Mrs.

Ruth Coryell Pr.KIN trM wrs. r.uin vui js Pcorin; formerly ot renin, aiea. 3 a. m. rway ai i cmn rial Hosnital.

She was taken to the Abts Mortuary. Chm-u of 1-iA tvimelfc Funert uomc Mri'Timm was bom May 16 inn? Rt Emden. a son of John P. er and a brother preceded him in death. 1 I T-: lie was a mcmucr ui uic niM 3aptist church Paul Coddinqton LINCOLN (PNS) Paul L.

Coddington, 61. 702 Peoria Lincoln, died at 6:40 a. m. Friday 10:30 a. m.

Monday at the Holland and Barry Funeral Home, the Rev. II. Sheldon Pattison officiating. YYxcnAs mav call at the Holland L. v'ru, n- of, ni.

Sunday. 11 Lincoln Aug. iiiuu. me son oi ireancK ana CONCRETE MEMORIAL FOR WALL VICTIMS BERLIN VP) An organization called "Indivisible Germany" dedicated a memorial Friday to the victims of the wall the Communists have built across Berlin. The memorial was built near the Brandenburg Cate, 150 yards from the wall itself.

The memorial, made of the same concrete block material as the wall, bears the inscription "Your Irec-dom is our cause." The organization urged West Berliners to lay flowers at the monument Sunday, since the Commu-nists are not permitting them to visit cemeteries in East Berlin. Sunday Is Germany's Memorial Day. Funeral home where services wir Lawrence 1 1 mm be mid at p. m. aunnay.

ine pym ipsi Ijiwrencr n.i.-... v'u. fcK1: J'3' a I 11 HOSPITAL NOTES f.insOX tLMVMTY tttvm rtTY (PNS) Ad mitted: Mrs. Katherlne Baker, Ed ward Fasking, Gibson City. Dismissed: Mrs.

Lynn Bottles and son. Miss Lelia Cendcr, Mrs. Judy Craig, Gibson City: James fjRowciiif Mclvin. 1 tvini LINCOLN (PNS) Admit ted: Mrs. Flora Ferguson.

Lawn dale: Francis Hill. Mrs. Ruth Mil ler, Mrs. Rolert Oltmanns, Mrs rinrHn Dismissed: Mrs. Wade Nicotic- mu.

Ma.son City; Mrs. Vincent fiynn and son, Atlanta; Mark Flntrhcr. Mrs. Vernon Reichle and daughter. Lincoln; Mrs.

Carl IHcrnck; Opal Carlson, Chicago. ST. JAMES TONTIAC (PNS) Admitted: Miss Marcia Ervin, Minonk: Robert G. Tauber, Cullom: J. Perry, Mrs.

Homer A. Reed, Paul Brashear, Pontiac; Joseph Barry, Forrest. Dismissed! Miss Marcia Ervin, Minonk; Rolcrt G. Tauber. Cul lher.

Cul- lorn; Mrs. Uilhemina Gnswold, Laurence J. Klein, Mrs. Lena Rush. Lloyd Pulliam, Clifford Shiiffer, Mrs.

Rose Murabito, William Boone, Pontiac; Mrs. Fred Shelton and daughter, Emington; Mrs. James Parsons and son. Sau- Kdwtn nieinscnmicii, ni noiimwTl.Mi.,i.i.".. Piiv! Mr Mason.

Mrs. -y "nn lmprt 'Timm 54 of 1'J13 warKei aiea ai Jf" 'lliamS CnnlC SMmat' lnsUe Bible Church 'j 1:50 a. m. Friday at Prkin Me Atlanta. ciate.

Rur.al will be In he Macki-1 moria, rnlrrod tl.r pissed Mrs. Haze I Dono van, ComPtPry where the Amor- ita, 28 and had been in Mason City Legion will be in charge of npalth five yrarg. Waynesv lle; Llwood Van vufiatinn will hecin at 1 o. m. the building committee lor churcn wim me ncip 1 1 1 1 1 nf Hu hitoctural firm of Jack son and Cook.

Champaign, at the quarterly conference this week. Dr. William'w. Wohlfanh. district superintendent, presided at the conference.

The new ce covering ap and nllrv narkinz facilities on the other three sides of the structure. The proposal calls for a stone structure, with major facilities on ground level with primary entrance in thr midde of the west siae. Only the hrfttinff system and mall nnrtion of the younger church school classes will be lo- cated in a Dutch basement on the split level north end. An A type mnt linn will mark the nave, fel lowship hall, and chapel. Function- pmximatrlv 17,000 squaiC feet ono seating capacity of 221 will be erected on the half block, a part of which is now occupied by me cone Jcgatlon1 present church.

r.VLin will bo lo- 'a mn. I aim Vn llll- innui mv nt s.innlrmentrd by street i Athens: John u. l-nnce, irs. j.os- visitation will start at 7 p. m.

Speed Up Aid To S. Viet Nam Loyalty Sunday Rites At Trinity Lutheran Trinity Lutheran Church will u-u Sun. uwiu unit- nj'imvn. 8 01 and mil a unuui' vu'iiu mutt ter. Mrs.

Ruth Berry man. an dihornp. a gon Donald. England; four grandchildren, all of Macki- nvo sistPrS( jrs. um0 rswiun.

naw. Mrs. Edna Whitacker. At- His parents, a daughter four a cranddaughter. His moth- 10:30 a.

m. and 6:30 p. m. ejMc.Namara said Friday the Lnlted I cnift'iini ihc rlimax States sneeded ud deliveries Vancouver W') A new street sign erected in the Vancouver suburb of Burnaby honors the late Daff llammarskjold. United Nations secretary-general who was killed in a plane crash in the Congo.

BLOOMINGTON-NORMAL DEATHS ally planned, most areas will navejj0bb.s. Lmden; George Williams, Mrs. Clara Searles Th funeral ot Mrs. u.ira Wl" a dual purpose. The project is a continuation oi a profn-am entered into IS months ago when the financial campaign for three years began.

It is designed to improve all facilities for religious education. Christian in-lowship and worship. The congre gat ion has a membership of 587. Construction work on tlic build Rockford Man Pays $20,000 Tax Fine CHICAGO AV- Ward M. Van- derpool.

50. Rockford, 111., was fined JO.OIHJ ana JJiailU UII mil. veais' probation by federal judge fined $20,000 and piarca on mice Metzicr Memorial Home, who ))rcin ne.xt year officiating. I S. McCun: will ocum Burial will I in Charles of G0." W.

Gra A 0 I nf Seminary and Kdward and Dan vi Iviih nt home: three daugh- Smith )f 1027 E. irinrir and ltirold of New York ivlcil in death bv his father and two brothers I.Mr. was a member of Park M. h. Church.

Foresee Downturn In Unemployment vAcinvr.TON. D. C. (P The labor Department reported signs Friday that this month may bring the long awaited downturn in the unemployment rau I Adcll Lunn Coddington. He wasjf-riday or thc fourth consecutive married in Feb.

4. WASHINGTON. D. C. Secretary of Defense JtOoert f.

oi muuary aia 10 vn He told a news conference dis cussions are under way on po-sihlc additional aid to the South Vietnamese, hard pressed by what he termed Communist infil- ratinn from the north. for the Berlin buildup, the 'sprITtary "Wt, naVe no pres- i fnt pians ior rBiiinK any auuiiiun al larce numbers of men from the National Guard or reserve to active duty." The buildup which began last summer is "proceeding at least as rapidly as we planned, 1.1c-'Namara said. Panama MaKeS Treaty Demand tiAVAMl i Tim Vatinnnt Assemi.iy inureaiy n.gm uiian. mously demanded a new treaty with the United States whici would fix a date for the United States to turn over the waterway to Panama. The assembly resolution was adopted within 21 hours of the publication of correspondence between Presidents Kennedy and Roberto Chiari on negotiations for a new treaty.

Chiari on Sept. 8 had written Kennedy that their governments should try again to resolve longstanding differences over tlie Canal zone. NATO Honors Sam PARIS The late Speaker Sam Rayburn was honored i nday ui .11. auu 1.111111a married Bessie O'Brien Aug of the church fall stcwarasnip program. Liturgist for tlie services will be Vicar Richard G.

Kapfer, with Er nest A. Prochnow. direclor ot mu- c. The Trinity Choir will sinr at hnth morninu services. The Rev.

Ernest L. Gerikc will speak at each! service. The Rev. Kurt L. Ioscn i i ill attn inKci, hssimiii mi.

participate in the services. Invasion Jitters Again Beset Cuba HAVANA New clash-j bctwrfn Castro foes and civil militia units were reported Cuba braced Fidel Castro -r flicrmeu new inma- i atrtrrecs nn Invasion litters spread in Ha vana after articles in the government press quoted Montevideo Communist sources as saying "at tack is imminent." The same rumors were broadcast in Moscow's English-language service. Harvard Woman Baking Champion WORCESTER, MASS. Maynard A. McCullough of Harvard, 111., was awarded first prize in the bread baking division i Oia Wllll lit I UMIUII U1111K-1 lull- a- 'm Vri.

vjmiitiv vwn. day night. Her recipe also was Julius H. ner Inday aitermisnop, Joiiet pleading guilty to income tax evasion charges. Vanrlnrnnrvl owner of the CC Mac Co.

in partnership with his wife was charged wnn iaiiure 10 fnHnrat taxes on company and personal income totalling $129,271 in 1952. Thursday at Brukaw Hixspital. Mrs. a i 'u ni-u Blomoington 11 Jfars. She was nrlr Lincoln ct.

3. 1873. a vvAnW ynH Vic tonne Jacquin lieise. She was jnarried to illiam Soarlcs of Chi-Tlie only mr ivors are several Hirers aiid nrphews. She was preceded in death by her husband, four Fislcrs and five brothers.

Mrs. Searles was a member of the Disciples of Qinst Church. Otto E. Schulz The funeral of Olto E. Schulz.

60 of 3 W. Kclsey will he at 1:33 p. m. Monday at Hie Siamper Mcmorial Home, wilh the Rev. J.

Cotherman officiating. Burial will be in Maple Grove Cemetery at Farmer City. Friends may call at the memorial home after 7 p. m. today.

Mr. Schulz died at his home at 4 AO p. m. Thursday. He was born June 11, the son of Olio I.

ami Nettie IVifcr Schulz. wa? married Oct. 17. 19JC to Mildrt Dcnison in Wapella. Sumving arc his wife; mother at 302 W.

Tanner; seven sons. David of 512 E. Lindsev of 403 E. Jackson, Bill Iee oflll E. Olive.

Robert of Morris. Richard of 1013 W. DEER SEASON'S NO TIME TO HIDE IN BUSH FT. LEONARD WOOD, MO. Two escapees from the post stockade Friday made the mistake of hiding in a wooded area during deer hunting season.

One of them was shot by a hunter who took him for a door- c. Wounded was Pvt. Sfanley F. Troon, 18, of St. Louis, Mo.

He was taken to the post hospital. His companion, Pvt. Dennis Lee, 20, of Chicago, was not wounded. Jarrctt Iverson, 31, of Redmond, told authorities he saw something move in some brush while doer hunting and fired one shot at it. Iverson said he heard a scream just after he fired.

judged best of show. i oy a momeni suence me n-First award for cake went to ing session of the North Atlantic Mrs. Homer Motsinger of Salem, jTreaty Organization for her chocolate cake. ians congress. brothers and a sister preceded Mr.

Cook in death. He was a member of the Chris nan -nurcn hi Md.uii, Emery Whisler Post. American, Legion, at Mackinaw. Mr. Look, a retired railroad employee, was a veteran of World War I.

Alvah R. Storey WAPELLA The funeral Alvah R. Storey, 67, will be at 1:30 n. m. Sunday at the FUlien and Eoos Chapel in Clinton.

The Rev. Clarence Hamm will oifici Rev. Clarence lliimm will omci ate, and burial will be in Clinton Park Cemetery. 1Ji lny.n .1 I Frt vi.siiaiiun win ut-giii oi v. 1W J-Vfh.

Veins' Itosnital at Dwieht Thursday He was born at Wapella, a son of M. W. and Emma Thorp Storey. IS. 1920 Surviving are his w.ife; a son, Emmett, at home; two daughters, r.eralHinp at home: Mrs.

Emma Gronewald, Springfield; a brother, Joe, Wapella; four grandchildren. Three brothers and two sisters preceded him in death. Mrs. Kammeyer BELL-FLOWER (PNS) Mrs. Marie Kammeyer, 80, of Cincinnati, a former resident of the Mansfield.

Rellflower area, died at 6 p. m. Thursday at Bethcsda Hos pital in Cincinnati. She had been ill several weeks. Visitation will beein Sunday aft- 'emoon at the Stensel Funeral Home in Mansfield.

Her funeral will be at 2 p. m. Monday at Immanuel Lutheran Church at Osman. The Rev. E.

H. Beckmeyer will officiate, and bur ial will be in Bellflower Township Cemetery. Mrs. Kammever was born 5, 1881, at Sunman. a daugh ter of Henry and Sophia Schwear.

She was married June 1, 190-1, to William Kammeyer. He died in April, 19-19. Snrvivim. ere four daughters, Ann Harris, Mrs. Hilda King and Miss Zelma, Cincinnati; Mrs.

Lucien Doss, Atlanta, three sons. Clarence. Bellflower: Alvin and Virgil, rural Mansfield: 13 grandchildren. A brother and a sister alo preceded her in death. Mrs.

Mary Rhoda niKNOA (PNS) Mrs. Mary Rhoda. 81. died at her home at lo: a. m.

Friday. Her funeral will be at 2 p. m. Sunday at St. Paul Lutheran Church.

The Rev. Waiter Schultz -ii Uiini'. ti-iil Kn Will OHlC-cUC, 1UU UL.ua. -rv in Chenoa Cpmeterv. Visitation will beein at 3 p.

m. today at the Pils Memorial Home. Mrs. Rhoda was bom Nov. 14.

1877, in Chenoa, a daughter of Christian and Elizabeth Scif Schncckenburger. She was mar ried to Charles Pvhoda June 1897. He died last April 8. Surviving are two daughters. Mr Tarl Wendlirs and Miss Ver- 9' Kdwin.

tnenoa: granacnuuivn. rrandchildren. A son. th.re brothers and three sisters She was a member of St. Paul's rioiinUt x- i UNC0I.N Ne Jane 0'- land ed at p.

m. Thursday at Abraham Uncoln Hospital in Ht funeral ill be at 2 p. m. at the Holland and Barry 1 nemin; Mrs. Jerome Roche and FAIKM'RY FAIRBURY (PNS) Admit.

ted: Mrs. Frances Hirstein, Cul lom; Mrs. Margaret Warbinton, Saunemin: Mrs! Dolores Hines. Jesse Brickey, Fairbury; Lena Walgast, Danforth. Dismissed: Mrs.

Oma Goembel, Miss Mary Susan Perry, Mrs. Ka tie Haab. fairbury: Raymond Nickerson, Saunemin. Prince Souvanna Bows to West VIENTIANE. LAOS (UPI- N'eutralist Prince Souvanna Phouma bowed Friday to pro-Western demands that three way alks on forming a Laoiian coal'-lion government be held in and not in rebel territory as lie had insisted.

Both So a premier- designate for the new cabinet, and pro-Western spokesman Gen. Phoumi Nosavan were ODtimistic about the prospects for agree ment. But diplomats warned tnat many problems remain unsolved. The talks are scheduled to be gin in Vientiane Nov. 24.

Gamble's Hubby Dragged to Jail NEW YORK (LTD Roman-ian-born ex chauffeur Andre Por- umbeanu, protesting he was "a sacrificial lamb, was dragged off to jail in handcuffs Friday for einninir wilh teen ace Remington typewriter heiress Gamble bene- diet last year. Porumbeanu. 3G. returned here alone from Europe, via Canada and Bermuda, to clean up a few- legal loose ends alimony pay ments to his first wife and a confrontation with the judge who ordered him to stay away from Gamble back in February, 1960. Farmers Besiege Swiss Parliament RFr.V SWITZERLAND CP a Parliament "ul'a'r two hours Friday, repeatedly I ij nl 1 1 "fiv vv U.nl mrt hi I if Tf iniurrd before police finally dis TVFrai i xji; nnr irijuinu: persed the rioters with tear gas.

fire hoses. Police rstim-tri! 3 000 farmers oo' part in the ov.ng. The farmers were rg fr hichcr food pnres. It wa Si smcc a genera! in 1315. iiuiun, s-iimic: ihwic anu daughter, Flanagan; Mrs.

Lillianille 1 1930 to Genevieve Stufflcbeam, who. Survives. lie is also survived bv two dauch e.ii. iinw Rentnn. and Mrs.

Johnson. of Birmingham, one sister, Mrs. J. L. Gordon of Rockford, and four grandchildren.

He was a member of the First Methodist Church in Lincoln. Herbert Suchert TREMONT Herbert Suchert. 55, died at 9:20 a. m. Friday fit Hopedale Hospital where he had been a patient five months.

His funeral will be Sunday at 2 p. m. at the Davis Mortuary in Tremont, the Rev. August Bolligor offieiatinc Burial will be in the Apostolic Christian Church ceme tery. Visitation begins Saturday afternoon at the mortuary.

He was born in Tremont, March 16, 1906, the son of Earnest and Augusta Schilling Suchert. He never married. Surviving are four sisters, Mrs. Mary Unsickcr, Mackinaw; Mrs. Chris Dimmig.

Walnut; Mrs. Leah Hoffman, Tremont; Mrs. George Firth, Delavan; and two brothers, Edward and William, Tremont. His parents and three brothers preceded him in death. He worked as a carpenter for the past 30 years.

Savannan Held In Father's Death SAVANNA Roger Chase, 21, of Savanna, was held in the Carroll County Jail Friday on a manslaughter charge as the result I. AlKn-l uir Uvrtui VI 1113 51 af(pr a ht ou1side a tavern. I Vnn, r.f fhr peace, held young Chase to the grand jury under bonds of $10,000. An inquest jury reported it could not fix responsibility for the father' death, attributed to a rup tured spleen and internal bleed ing. Man To Speak at Hopedale HOPEDALE (PNS) Nor man Dorstine of Elkhart.

will lb curst sneaker at fall missionary' day semces to be held Sunday at the Hopedale Mennonite Church. The morning topic will be "The Church and World Trends." Sun 'dav exrning a children's meeting for evenirt's I lJ Glven cl ln sr.onary bankt art to be timed in at this meeting. fc wS' 5 t. 't 1 i 4 1 Vil Keep An Even Keel Seattle Sen. Henry M.

Jackson, left, gestures as he talks of flying while escorting President Kennedy to an airplane at Seattle's Boeing Field as the President departed for Phoenix. Tow to Safely A' The ol-foot sloop Rowdv (rij.ht) bolis alor.R in the choppy -atc-rs of Lake Krie at the end of a towline from th U.S. Coa-t Gtprd Cutter (left). Tlie crai.n carrier Erito.doc (foreground) follows the tow to break the force of Lhe waves..

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Years Available:
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