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Dixon Evening Telegraph from Dixon, Illinois • Page 6

Location:
Dixon, Illinois
Issue Date:
Page:
6
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

Dottie DIARY Notes About People and Places You Know Phone 2-1111 Emma Scheible, Pauline Hinrichs and Mrs. Mary Turner, Dixon, will be among delegates attending the 9th annual state convention of the Licensed Practical Nurse Assoc, of Illinois, in the Hotel Leland, Spiinfield, March 19 to 22. Mrs. Scheible is president of Division 3. Other delegates from the Division are Mrs.

Barbara Corbett, Rockford; Mrs. Marie Boyce. Mrs. Margaret Barnum, Mrs. Gertrude Deutsche and Mrs.

Lillian Howe, Belvidere. Four hundred members are expected to register for the meeting. Among the speakers will be Gov. William G. Stratton and Emily C.

Cardew. Dean, School of Nursing, University of Illinois, Chicago. Student Day will be held March 20, with students from the Schools of Practical Nursing in Illinois meeting to adopt rules and form a conference of Practical Nurse Students under the sponsorship of LPX AI. -dd -------PRE-EASTER SPECIAL Permanents Complete, guaranteed. Alberta Clark's Beauty Shop, 410 N.

Ottawa. Phone 2-2302. dd-------- Mr. and Mrs. Dennis Fielding.

Anchorage. Alaska, are the parents of a daughter. Tanya Suzanne, bom Feb. 27. They also have a daughter.

Pandora, three years of age. Mr. and Mrs. John McCoy, Ohio, are the maternal grandparents, and Mr. and Mrs.

Lee Seidel, Franklin Grove, the paternal great-grandparents. Fielding is stationed in Alaska with the U.S. Air Force. dd -------Mrs. Iva Hutchins, Dixon, and her sister-in-law, Mrs.

Ruth Accola. Prairie Du Sac, have returned from a trip to Florida. dd-------- FOR IRATEST HAIR STILES and cosmetics call the Gladys Ireland Beauty Shop. Evening Appointments available. dd-------- Mr.

and Mrs. C. B. Seybert, Phoenix, are the parents of a daughter bom March 6 in Phoenix. Mrs.

Seybert, the former Nancy Ersfeldt. Amboy, was employed by the Borden Dixon, before moving to Arizona. Mr. and Mrs. Glenn Ersfeldt, Amboy, are the maternal grandparents.

dd -------Raymond B. Countryman, formerly of Dixon, has recently been appointed treasurer of the Signal Delivery Service Chicago. Countryman is married to the former Virginia Crom of Dixon, and has a daughter. The mans reside in Elmhurst. dd -------Have you entertained or traveled out of town in the past few days or will you be doing so in the near future? Are you entertaining or will you be having guests? If so, why not share your news with and her readers? Just phone 2-1111 and ask for Dottie or mail your news to this column, The Dixon Evening Telegraph.

dd -------Miss Donna Sue daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Don Sweet, Dixon, has pledged Alpha Chi Omega sorority at the State University of Iowa, Iowa City. Miss Sweet is a freshman. dd- ------Mr.

and Mrs. Paul Amould, 509 Boylston Loves Park, are the In Cincinnati on a night-club parents of a son, bom March 14, tour, she recently asserted that The Amoulds also have a son, her husband, Harry Karl, engin- Michael, two years of age. eered her kidnaping 14 months to Sleep' After Killing lAEC Chiefs Mom, Stuffing Body Under Bed Ordered MOUNDSVILLE, W. Va. (JR Police said a high school freshman told them had a hard time sleeping some after killing his mother and stuffing her body under his bed.

Dean Smith, 15, admitted the slaving in a written statement, according to Troopers H. E. Robinson and Jack Scaggs. The officers said the boy confessed to striking his mother, Mrs. Grace 39, with a hatchet OFFICIALS AND ALUMNI of Dixon High School took part in a conference on sehool- university relations at the University of Illinois Wednesday and Thursday.

Shown above, left to right, are (seated) Joe Jones, Principal Sheldon Bross, Guidance Director William Drake and Stan Scholl. Standing are Janet Sheaffer, Dave Heindel, Jeanne Johnston and Earl Godt. The faculty members cbnferred with former students to seek suggestions for improving high school preparation for college work. Spring Nears, But Winter Refuses to Quit CHICAGO Winter opened its final weekend in Illinois today with no signs of givirig ground to spring. Gray skies blanketed the state and there were snow flurries throughout the entire northern section.

Only in the southernmost counties were temperatures expected to fvarm to 40-degree levels, The Weather Bureau said the when they were alone in the family's trailer home last Saturday. The crime discovered Friday when a neighbor found the body, know wily I did police quoted Dean. just came over Marshall County Prosecutor Everett Cox said he would file a murder charge against the boy today. Mrs. Wims disappeared a week ago.

Dean told authorities she had driven away with two women in a black sedan. The officers said that after Mrs. body was found wrapped in a bedspread under his cot, the boy admitted the disappearance story was a hoax and said he had struck his mother as she lay in her bcd and then hid the body. Police Court Mum On Latest Kidnap Tale LOS ANGELES IP Actress Marie (The Body) McDonald is home with to questions about her new kidnaping story. Smiling and mink-clad, the actress was met by two attorneys and a crowd of newsmen as she stepped off an airliner Friday night.

Hunts Soviet Subs iii Atlantic Ocean ABOARD NUCLEAR SUBMARINE SEAWOLF in the sea around this atom-powered submarine may be a Soviet sub, lurking in deep waters off the Atlantic Coast. Tile Seawolf has been given the job of trying to find that Russian submarine, if it is there. It's the first time the Navy has ordered an atomic undersea craft to conduct what is very much like a war patrol. Routine Training Cruise When the Seawolf started out ago. Karl, a millionaire shoe iran- ufacturer-retailer, termed this Marie claimed two men naped her from her home, held her captive 24 hours and released her on the desert.

The county grand jury investigated but voted no indictments. Bvrd (Continued from Page I) companies 124 million dollars on 1957 taxes. That insurance bill was passed by the Senate last night, 61-19. but most of the debate revolved around the efforts to slash individual income levies and excise taxes on such things as automobiles. The Senate rejected by voice vote a proposal by Sen.

Douglas (D-Ill) to reduce excise taxes by $2,200,000,000. It also defeated, by a 64-19 roll call vote a proposed amendment by Sen. Yarborough tD-Tex) to raise individual income tax exemptions from $600 to $800 for the remainder of 1958. He estimated this would provide a reduction for taxpayers. Expedite Construction Just before quitting Friday night the Senate passed.

76-1, a resolution calling on the Pentagon to expedite construction of $1,715.000 OOO of military construction projects for whfich Congress already has voted funds. In the House, 13 Republican members of the Banking Committee announced they had voted unanimously to ask for prompt action on a $1,850,000,000 emergency housing bill passed bv the-Senate. Backers of this bill say it would boost by 200.000 the number of new homes planned this year. They estimate it would provide jobs for more than 500.000 persons. Meanwhile, the Labor Department's Bureau of Employmant Security announced figures indicating that the rate of unemployment increase has slowed, but not to the extent expected.

Joblessness Rises The bureau reported that joblessness among all workers insured under the unemployment compensation system rose by 14 OOO to a new record of 3.282.400 for the week ended March I. This was smallest weekly rise in recent weeks. But many workers have exhausted their jobless pay benefits. About two-thirds of the nation's workers are covered by the unemployment compensation system. The bureau also said initial claims by newly unemployed workers for jobless payments rose by 4,500 to a total of 440,400 in the week ended March 8, Oregon Church To Mark 110th Anniversary Pauls Lutheran Church will observe its 110th anniversary Sunday with Dr.

Armin George Weng, Ph. president of Chicago Lutheran Theological Seminary', as guest speaker. The cornerstone for the first Lutheran church building was laid in 1850. The Rev. N.

J. Stroh held the first Lutheran services in Oregon on March 16. 1848. Trustees of the church were Daniel Etnvre. Ernest J.

Reiman. Charles W. Haller. Nathaniel Swingley and Samuel B. Hanes.

A new church was built in 1892 at a cost of $9,000 which, with a pipe organ, came to a total of 11 000 The centennial was held March 16. 1948. A cornerstone for a new building was laid Aug. 25. 1957.

The building will be dedicated April 20. 1958. Youths Caught NEW HAVEN, Conn. caught five youngsters handed. They were writing the letters IRA in green paint on the side of a market.

IRA stands for the outlawed Irish Republican Army. At least one of the cops is an Irishman. And St. Patrick's day is just around the still, the kids had to rub every bit of green from the walls. from port, it was headed for a routine training cruise.

But an order. radioed to the sub a horns after it sailed, converted its mission into a hunt for an unidentified submarine -or believed sighted in this area. There would be no great surprise if this search eventually should identify the reported unidentified submarine as Russian. The subs of all major powers roam far. If they stay outside the territorial waters of a nation and commit no hostile act it be dif The Dixon Evening Telegraph Saturday, March 15, 1958 Page 6 James C.

Wadsworth, 23. Rt. 3, Dixon, was fined $25 and costs by Police Magistrate Lawrence E. Boos on a disorderly conduct charge after being arrested for pattern will extend through window peeping early today. Sunday with a slight upturn in I Frank Wolfe, 504 Peoria temperatures probable.

signed the complaint. rfi ii lo Hearing WASHINGTON lf) Atomic Energy Commission officials were called to Capitol Hill today to explain the A acknowledged error in reporting on detection of an underground nuclear test shot that caused a Nevada mountain to The unusual Saturday hearing was arrange by the Senate-House Committee on Atomic Energy. Rep. Durham (DNO), committee chairman, said his group wants to the background of an AEC announcement early this month that the Nevada test last September could be detected only 250 miles when seismological stations up to 2.320 miles away reported detecting it. The AEC amended the announcement a days later and Acting AEC Chairman Willard F.

Libby said the error entirely Sen. Humphrey Minni had questioned whether the error was entirely accidental. Libby, in testimony released yesterday by the Senate Disarmament subcommittee, gave some information about the underground test last fall. Deaths and Funerals Robert Riddell ROCHELLE (Special) Robert Riddell, 74, Creston farmer, died Friday night in Rochelle Hospital where he had been a patient for two weeks. He was bom in Creston on July 15.

1883, the son of John and Margaret Calhoun Riddell. He was fieult to drive them away or take married to Anna Vesta. He lived action against them. mo8t of his 11 we in Croton except The Seawolf isn't working alone J'ears sPent She is serving as command ship Minnesota. Happy Birthday Ray Johnson, March 17.

(Continued from Page I) York representative of the Civic Concert service, will arrive in Dixon Sunday to conduct the 195859 Dixon Civic Music Assoc, campaign. Campaign headquarters, in the Dixon Appliance 212 First1 will be open from Monday through March 29. Civic Music Assoc, officers have been busy at work the past several weeks in preparation for the campaign. Reports today were that renewals are already arriving. This shows how much Civic Music means to many.

Although renewals are arriving, several more campaign wo: hers are needed. To have a good Civic Music season there must be a successful campaign. Next week will be devoted to pre-campaign preparations, and the following week is The Week for Civic Music. Anyone interested in working with Civic Music is asked to visit headquarters. Ruben Varga, violinist, will appear in Dixon tonight presenting the fourth of this season's concert series.

B. J. S. of the search force, directing Hp fw. Agriculture Co.

for 15 He was a member of tile IOOF in His wife preceded him in death in 1944. Survivors are two sons Earl, Creston. and John. DeKalb; a daughter. Mrs.

George (Vera) Davidson, An atomic submarine has built- three brolhers, Abner. in, natural fealutes needed in Nachusa. iowa; Walter, Buffalo, anti-submarine work. It has high JeMe Wis speed underwater; it can dive far p.andchildren and lhre, grcat. ships and aircraft.

Cmdr. Richard B. Laning, skipper of the and a man who undersea warfare from Pacific campaigns of World War II, sits at the nerve enter of the search. Natural Features deeper than most conventional submarines; it can down for weeks; it is elaborately rigged with new detection gear; it is armed with target-seeking torpedoes. For reasons of security, details of the Seawolf's hunt has progressed to this point, or of the grandchildren.

Services will be held at 1:30 p.rn Tuesday in Unger Funeral Home with the Rev. Glenn Strang, pastor of the First Presbyterian Church, officiating. Burial will be in Woodlawn Cemetery, Creston. Friends mw call Sunday and THE MORNING AFTER By C. K.

WILLETT (intuiting Engineer REYNOLDS HIGH ROW I. KRS Cy VVinebrenner 174 Hagerty Art Horton Orville Stultz Roofer Anderson Calm Finned Walt 167 165 165 165 164 16.1 162 Dirk Ambrose Harold Moore ERO Ut AGI Jim Knox Richard a Feldkm Horace Hartman 161 AVERAGES 158 158 157 155 Monday evening in the funeral precise methods used. may not be pnme disclosed. For clays, the search has been long and painstaking. There have been a few possible contacts, faint tracings on sonar screens might or might not be i submarine.

But the images couldn't be classified in certainty. KSB Hospital Admitted: Mrs. Alta Boyd, Ervin Bolton, Dixon; Mrs. Sonia Scarbrough. Eldena.

Discharged: Mrs. Mary Moss, Mrs. Helen Kerley, Mrs. Harriet Giddings, George Smith, Mrs. Laverne Miller.

Dixon; Mrs. Rita Fisher and Mrs. Gertie Bingenheimer, Charles Otto, Amboy; Mrs. Winnie Fouch, Oregon, and Mrs. Doris Morrissey, Seliultheis Fined For Shining His Lights on Police Steve Schultheis, 20, Woodlawn this morning fined $25 and costs by Police Magistrate husband in 1942.

Mrs. Edward Zoeller REDONDO BEACH, Calif. Services were held at Torrance. for Mrs. Edward Zoeller, formerly of Dixon, who died in California March ll after a long illness.

She was bom in Dixon on Sept. 19. 1877. the daughter of Charles and Alida Hammarstrom and lived in Dixon until 1936 when she moved to Chicago. She moved to California in 1941.

She was a teacher for several years in Dixon schools before her marriage. She preceded in death bv Lawrence E. Boos on a disorderly conduct charge. Schultheis was arrested Feb. 23 when he was involved in an incident in which his cousin, Morris Schultheis, held eight police officers at bay with a 30-30 rifle when they tried to arrest him on a wife-beating charge.

Morris Schultheis is serving a six-month sentence at the State Penal farm, Vandalia, after pleading guilty to a charge of resisting arrest. Officers said they arrested Steve Schultheis after he drove up and down the street in front of Morris home, shining his headlights on the policemen, while Morris Schultheis sat in the darkened building with his rifle. Burstiuji at Scows Dispute Continues Over Remodeling U.S. Capitol Survivors are a son, William A. Zoeller.

Riviera, a daughter, Mrs. William T. Frances) Schell. Redondo Beach, and four grandchildren. Burial was in Green Hills Cemetery, San Pedro, Calif.

Maynard Kidd 153 VV (tai rn Dorothy Gorham 150 Janet Thomas IM Hobbs 148 Brewer 144 Ruth Mrypr 135 MIXED I.E AG CF. HIGH BOWLERS Men Ned Sack 196 Fred Spindrn 184 Ed 182 Ken Detweiter, Sr. 177 Dong Lloyd 173 VV omen Pearl Detweiler 155 Ruth Marshall 150 Edith Davis HS Florence Prindaville 149 Katy Kelly 144 Mary Jayne Spinden 144 NEXT WEEK MU EDI I Sunday, Mar. 16 to Saturday. Mar.

22 LINCOLN LANES I.E. AG CE vs. Medics; Jets vs. Rraves: Also vs. Odds Ends; 1 Owls va Recs: Rebels Burrotails.

SI NR BIRD LEAGUE vs Warblers. Nite- hawks vs. Orioles: Easies vs Bluebirds Pelicans vs. Larks: Robins vs. Wrens MON EE VI.I 7 -8-6: 20-7; 16-17: 15-18.

19-14; 9-1-13; 2-12: 3-11 4-10 5-9 TC KS 7 8-6: 20-7: 16-17: 15-18; 19-14 2-12: 3-11: 4 IO; 5 9 LEALI 6 3-7: 6-4 5-10: 1-9 VV EDN F.sDAY—FUE EM VV GIRLS 9-7-5: 2-4: S-l: 3-9: 6-10 THI LEALI 7-8-6: 20-7 16-17: 15-18: 19-14. 9-1-13; 2-12. 3-11 4-10: 5-9 lit ll LF VG! 7 15-16; 14-17: 13-15: 19-1-2; 6-20 9-2-10; 3-9; 8-4; 7-5; ML MOR LEAGUE p. rn. DIXON HOME TELEPHONE CO.

Direct Distance Dialing DELBERT C. LONG SPORTSMAN in Sports REYNOLDS WIRE DIVISION of National standard a. ZEPHYR GAS OIL Cor Un LINCOLN LANES Lincoln Phone 4-tflAI 4 RI ll AFTERNOON EIG I Team Won I-ost Little 54 38 Spark vs 52 40 47 45 MAJ A's 43 49 41 51 Rork 39 53 FREEMAN SHOE CORPORATION and I rrrman I ut Ulna PAULSEN'S CHICKEN Strtetty Fresh Dressed DIXON RECREATION Automatic NG Ll MBER High Game- MHU ad lilt.II Edith Davis With Davis Neighbors Neighbors AND Bowler Chet Whttehr Burke Lavelle Rev nolda Brand Speed San rider a Handicap Tot. 470 430 150 170 150 136 160 134 151 152 451 172 240 153 565 177 189 569 162 162 162 446 215 I 522 934 2623 High bom iers in the Indies Friday Afternoon league were Little Foolers I Mary Ellen Wilson, 385. Rock Rollers.

Shirley Peterson, 482: MA- ACs. Clara Rowe, 387: Flor- Cole. 464 Neighbors Evelyn Reis 439. Pinschers Edith Davis 441 Shirley Peterson had the high se- I ries of the afternoon with and high games were Merlon Campbell Ruth Henry 177. Shirley Peterson 1 Totals 974 1061 9.36 2971 KLEIN A HECKMAN.

INC. Plumbing 4 Heating ll. A Bom Phil Bud Hanson George Werner Frank Draper (ill Contreras Handle.ap Ted a1 a RDI CO. I 2 I Tot. 146 146 144 436 123 174 148 445 154 129 152 445 09 115 131 346 19 167 129 494 2485 206 205 613 946 940 27 MI Mrs.

Bertha Golden COMPTON (Special) Mrs. Bertha Golden, sister of Mrs. Joseph Kaufman, Compton, died in Chicago March 8 and was buried March 12 in Waldheim Cemetery, Chicago. Rabbi Curt Reach, LaSalle, officiated at graveside services. MAJOR LE All I WASHINGTON (I) The U.S.

Capitol is but sting at the seams, but lots of people want to let out the waist line. For more than two decades there' have been proposals to extend the center section of the 185- year-oid Capitol's east front. Now, there is a concerted drive under way to advance the east front by 32.6 feet. A commission set up by Congress recently gave the loud and bitter opposition. Architect Frank Lloyd Wright said it would be to tamper with the Capitol.

Mrs. Frederick Groves, president-general of the Daughters of the American Revolution, called it Historical societies adopted test resolutions and Sent them to Washington. But thus far the stand-patters have been repulsed at every turn. The Senate last Tuesday beat back a move to hold up the remodeling plans temporarily. Foes of the project haven't given up.

still hopeful of winning passage for a bill by Sen. H. Alexander Smith (R-NJ) that would permit consideration of other plans to add working space to the Capitol. Backers of the extension say it is needed to (I) provide more room for Congress, (2) bring the center section in line with the House and Senate wings and (Si provide a full base for the great dome whose eastern curvature juts into space. In addition, chunks of the east front's sandstone walls have been dropping away.

Thus, say the advocates, would be the best time to undertake one big expansion project. The sandstone would be replaced with marble. All of this would cost about $10,100,000, or so, it figured. However, Sen. Robertson (D- argued it might cost much of 110 millions.

Capitol architects have long advocated extending the east front. In 1863, Thomas U. Walter reported to Congress: eastern portico of the Did building will certainly be taken down at no very distant day. and the front be extended Little did he know. Bock Island Man Fined $50 Here for Defrauding Motel Jack Fuller, Rock Island, this morning was fined $50 and costs by Police Magistrate Lawrence E.

Boos when he pleaded guilty to a charge of defrauding an innkeeper. Fuller was arrested in Rock Island after Lewis Blackburn, an employe of the Siesta Motel, Sixth Street and Galena Avenue, complained that Fuller had left the motel Friday morning without paying an overnight bill. Rock Island police arrested Fuller Friday night, and he was returned to Dixon today. Dees Will Attend 3rd Placement Day Dixon School Supt. Sherwood Dees be one of more than IOO administrators from 88 Illinois schools attending the third annual teacher placement day at the University of Illinois March 21.

Tile school officials will conduct with prospective teachers from 9 a.m. to noon in the II- lini Union building. Zcien Buicks ----Reigns Bread Dixon Recreation Oxon Oil Walter Knack Plum Hollow Sunnvbrook New Bridge Inn Won Lost 58 42 DIXON LOAN BUILDING ASSN. Invured and Home LING TRANSFER Phone BEIER Home of REMO Bread I HI RKH LEAGIE Team WonLost i Dixon Methodist 8131 Baptist I a. 69 43 Immanuel I 68 44 G.

Brethren 67 45 Baptist 2 65 47 Dixon Presbyterian 63 49 Nachusa Lutheran 6151 Oiristian I 1 2 2 56 St. Paul I 55 57 St. Patrick 2 53 59 St Paul 3 52 SO Church of God 52 60 St Patrick 3 51 tkPv Methodist 4963 St Paul 2 48 64 St Patrick I 45 67 Immanuel 2 44 'A 67 2 Immaruiel 3 43 69 Presbyterian 37 74 IIK.il SERIES Paul Timmons 255 Grebe Immanuel I 1103 Baptist I 3053 High bowlers in Pie bun league MELVIN FUNERAL HOME 29! E. I Phone I It TORY CAFE Hick 'Certes 4 hob Knudsen I 2 3 Tot, Behoof ....191 178 Mf Knudsen 213 189 570 Killen 179 133 191 503 Al Burgess 178 192 127 437 daub Knudsen 173 204 232 600 Handicap 104 KB 312 Totals 1038 1014 HOME LUMBER A COAL COMPANY Home Builders tnt the Hume RHODES LEEDS I Bowler Mel McConnell Roeer Miller Dale Rhodes Tom Titer Rob Dempsey Handicap Totals 3 Tot 136 140 406 121 130 165 416 116 146 106 326 200 1 39 477 151 1.54 ISO 4,54 162 162 162 625 668 862 2576 HOLLYWOOD STYLE SHOP Hixon'. eading fashion I enter HCH ROLLERS Game and Shirley 56 53 51 49 47 52 12 42 12 57 12 38 62 42 47 49 51 HK.II GAMES AND SERIES Nelson Taber 262 Bud Lair 666 Dixon Oil 1040 Dixon Recreation.

2803 High bowlers in the Major league were New Bridge Tnn Bud Lair. 597; Walter Knacks Bob Whitehead. 603: Briers Bread. Bob Bruce. 623: Sunnybrook.

Walt Klein, 594: Zeien Buicks. John Smith. 576 Dixon Recreation. Ken Detweiler. Jr 550: Dixon Oil, Freddie Spinden, 579: Plum Hollow.

Don Benne. 552. Bob Bruce had the high series of be night with 623 and Rob Whtehead had the only other high total with 6b3. High game? were Bud Lair 205. 211.

John Hvland 235. Rob Whitehead 219. 213. Boh Bruce 200. 211.

212 Eddie Detweiler 200 Rue? Hicks 210 Walt Klein 222, Joe Sweenev 237. John Smith 227. Ken Detweiler. Jr. 201 Orville Hoyle 216 Hank Hemmer? 208.

Freddie Spinden 201 201, Chet Dierdorf 220, Oscar Witzleb 203, Don Beane 202. were St. Patrick I Dorothy Gorham. 501: St Paul 3, Roy Ransom. 516; St Patrick I.

Al Berner St 3 Myron Olson. 582; Immanuel I Ray Dimmig, 496 Church of God. George Ifaberer, 576 Nachusa Lutheran. Harry Fish, 421; St Paul J. Herb White.

440: St. Paul 2 Bob Fisher. 524: Presbyterian. Bill Hussey. 412: Immanuel 3.

Max John 402: Christian Bill Dickson. 531 Immanuel 2. Rev. Lochner. 492; Christian 2.

Bob Caw lev, 498: Baptist I. L. Huesteden, 523 Dixon Presbyterian Click Alano. 545: I Baptist 2, Wally Sleva 544. Methodist.

Lawson Clark. 521; Dixon Methodist. Merle Smith 515: F. G. Brethren, Russ Group, Myron Olson bad the high series of tim night with 56? Dorothy Gorham led the with ROI.

High games were Linda Messer 172. George Patterer 214 203. Bel Loc liner 244 Florence Roemick 170 Lawson Claik I 211. Harold Wagner 203. Dorothy Gorham 191.

Rosemary Valle 171, Roy Ransom 200 Myron Olson 215. Rowler I Mon (Hock Shirley Peterson Marie Kraken buhl Handicap Totals I 2 3 Tot. 177 124 421 121 HK 147 .375 104 121 119 196 144 1 40 163 150 105 173 173 173 519 936 818 2562 PiiRLir sfpvicf co Live Better Kleetrlcally III RI ll OF GOD High Game and 12 3 Tot Linda Messer 123 150 172 445 tim Messer 120 129 136 385 Wally Rickman Glen George Haberer Handicap 144 124 146 414 14? 142 142 426 I VI e14 226 226 226 678 914 1025 THE NACHUSA HOUSE Have a ''nark After How ling LAWTON BROTHERS DAIRY Home Owned and Home Operated KEN MALL INSURANCE Dixon Nat l. Rank Bldg. 2 BOYD CASKET MANUFACTURING ILLINOIS IMM WI KL I Bowler 12 3 Tot Betty Dimmig 108 90 99 I Dorothy D'mmig in 13? 38? Don Dimmig 149 ma 140 407 I Ray Dlmmic 147 it? 496 Merton Peekham 133 tao jot; Handicap 230 230 230 690 Totals 896 870 PIJ 267? VAILE CLOTHING COMPANY far Values DIXON NATIONAL BANK The Friendly Bank With Revolving flock CITY LEAGUE Won Lost Victory Cafe 65 35 Zephyr Gas 58 Woosung Lumber 54 H.

A. Roe 49 Rich Motors Rhodes Feeds 46 Village Drive Inn 45 Tom Brodericks 34 42 46 50 54 55 66 high games and series Jim Brand 240 Chub Knudsen 609 Rich Motors 1119 Victory Cafe, 2980 High in the City league were Victory Cafe, Chub Knudsen, 609; Rhodes Feeds Tom Tzer, 477: II. A. Roe Gil Contreras, 494; Woosung Lumber. Speed Saunders, 569: Rich Motors, Ambrose 510: Village Drive Tun, Art.

Horton, 595: Broderick Trucks Corky Pitier, 469: Zephyr Lavelle Owen, 540. Chub Knudsen Had the high series of the night with 609 and high games were Jim Brand 240. Speed Saunders 203, Art Horton 219. 200, Barney Knudsen 213. Chub Knudsen 204, 232, Tom Izer 200.

Bowler WALTER KNACKS High (fume and 1 2 3 Tot. Charles Bruce 185 176 157 518 Ken Ct7, 161 161 ITO 512 Larry Hoyle IM 186 177 544 Bob Whitehead 181 219 213 603 Dorothy Gorham John Hvland 175 235 182 592; Bosemarv aile Totals '93 977 $99 2769 Pink Valle DIXON OIL COMPANY Choiler Alr-Temp Air Conditioning WALTER COMPANY Hixon, Illinois PATRICK Dorothy SERViSOFT SOFT WATER SERVICE We Soften the Water for You NEW BRIDGE INN I 2 3 Tot. Bud Lair 205 181 211 597 Leroy Hoyle Joe Morrissey Bob Hoyle Howard Hahn Totals 156 194 157 507 158 159 122 439 155 168 189 512 178 179 182 539 852 881 861 2694 CITY NATIONAL BANK IN DIXON B. A. SPORTS, INC.

Johnson Motors Benting Handicap Totals 1 2 3 Tot 191 156 154 501 1 to 13? "po ITI 109 ll? 330 155 144 151 17 ton 199 199 199 597 890 926 28020 GRACEY FUR SHOP Buy Furs From a Furrier Who Knows ST. PAUL 3 I 2 3 Tot Florence Pickwe.ll. 110 102 115 327 Garl Janssen 138 1 394 Roy Ransom 161 155 Al Pick Well 1 49 I I fir, 44,, Russ Globe ITI 457 Handicap 176 176 176 528 Totals 867 915 2664 AGUA MARINA Hixon Boating Headquarters ST PATRICK 3 BREAD Tot Bob tis 143 1:7 im 371 1 2 3 Tot. i 121 IU .355 Boh Bruce 200 211 212 6231 118 94 88 306 Bill McMullen 193 164 173 530: Muntean 135 1.35 135 405 Eddie Detweiler 159 189 548 Myron Qlson I sr, 215 Don Lebre 172 150 180 502 Larry McMillan 180 174 181 535 H. A.

ROE COMPANY Abstracts Insurance Koans SUNNVBROOK Jim Grombie Cy Winebrenner Hicks Walt Klein Joe Sweeney Handicap Totals 221 224 224 672 923 889 874 2686 MALONEY DRYCLEANING S-llnur (leaning Service ST. PATRICK I I 2 3 Tot. John Conroy loc 97 95 149 192 519! Bernice Murphy la? 94 192 176 167 5251 R. LaCoursiere 125 99 113 -m 175 210 146 531 Joe Murphy IRO 126 149 494 192 ISO 222 594 Berner 193 146 vie 237 166 185 224 224 224-672 Totals974 SSI 912 27671 Totals rn H2 2674.

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Years Available:
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