Skip to main content
The largest online newspaper archive

The Daily Standard from Sikeston, Missouri • Page 15

Location:
Sikeston, Missouri
Issue Date:
Page:
15
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

The Daily Standard, Sikeston, Mo. Friday, March 15,1974 16 Deaths one great- great- grandchild. Friends may call at 5 p.m. today in Watkins and Sons Funeral Home in Puxico, where services are scheduled at 2 p.m. Sunday.

The Revs. Harold Miller of Poplar Bluff and Thomas Scuell of Benton will officiate. Burial will be inFronabarger Cemetery at Lowndes. Council tentatively accepts bids LEAMON E. CAMPBELL LoCfll Stocks ZALMA-- Leamon Edward Campbell, one- day- old infant son of Leamon and Debra Wells Campbell died Tuesday at University of Missouri Medical Center in Columbia.

He was born Monday at the medical center. In addition to his parents, he is survived by one sister, Beverly Jan Campbell of the home; paternal grandparents, the Rev. and Mrs. Homer Campbell of Arab; maternal grandfather, William Wells of Puxico; maternal grandmother, Mary Redman of Oran; maternal great- grandmother, Mrs. Henry Holland of Benton; and maternal grandfather, Everett Wells of Orlando, Fla.

Services were conducted at 3:30 p.m. Thursday in Morgan Funeral Home at Advance with the Rev. L. A. Dobbs of Zalma officiating.

price is the approximate price Burial was in Union Hill if one were a seller and the Cemetery near Zalma. asked price is the approximate price if one were a buyer. ARTHUR G. TRIGG These are listings at the close of the previous market. BIDASK 1st Nat Bk of Sik 78 Anheuser Busch 35 36 Olson Bros VA Martha Manning Pabst Chase Nat 89 Wetterau LISTED STOCKS Allied Stocks American Tel Tel 52 American Motors 10 Calvert Exp 6 Chrysler Columbia Gas 26 Eaton Mfg.

30 Ford Motors General Motors Interstate Brands Malone Hyde 24 Mid South J. C. New England Elect Occidental Pet WalMart Stores 16 NOTE: The bid EAST PRAIRIE a sanitary refuse service and a new were tentatively Thursday night by Council. Only submitted the refuse Bids on collection police car accepted the City Arthur Gardner Trigg, 83, of 404 Fletcher St. died at 2:10 p.m.

Thursday at his home. Born April 27, 1890 in Mississippi County, he was the son of the late Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Trigg. He attended the First Church of Nazarene and was a retired former employe of Lair Furniture Co.

On Nov. 9, 1912 at Jackson, he married Mary Haithcoat, who survives. Also surviving are three sons, Thomas Trigg of Villa Park, 111 Homer Trigg Sr. of Sikeston and Lawton Trigg of Overland; two daughters, Mrs. June Norman of Bernie and Miss Shan Trigg of Berkeley; and 12 grandchildren and 21 great- grandchildren.

Four children preceded him in death. Friends may call after 6 p.m. today at Bill Funeral Home. Services are scheduled at 2 p.m. Saturday in First Church of the Nazarene with the Rev.

Coy Presson, pastor, officiating. Burial will be in Garden of Memories Cemetery. LENA C. TUCKER CHAFFEE Lena Caroline Tucker, 80, died at 3:10 this morning in Chaffee General Hospital. Born Oct.

20, 1893 at Kelso, she was the daughter of the late Mr. and Mrs. Louie Hoefler. She was a member of St. Ambrose Catholic Church and Daughters of St.

Ambrose. On Dec. 7, 1910, she married Leonard A. Tucker of Cape Girardeau, who preceded her in death on Dec. 6, 1950.

Surviving is five sons, Lee Tucker of St. Charles, Walter and Leonard Tucker of St. Louis Adolph Tucker of Ogden, Utah, and George Tucker of Vacaville, seven daughters, Mrs. W. P.

Lee, Mrs. William Horn, Mrs. Adolph Hahn and Mrs. Marvin LeGrand of Chaffee, Mrs. Fred Morgan of New Orleans, Mrs.

Charles Desemone of St. Louis and Mrs. August Lux of Berwyn, and 38 grandchildren and 17 grandchildren. Three children preceded her in death. Friends may call after 4:30 p.m.

Saturday at Amick- Burnett Funeral Chapel. A rosary will be recited at 8 p.m4 Sunday in the funeral chapel. uneral services are scheduled at 10 a.m. Monday in St. Ambrose Catholic Church with the Rev.

James J. Holmes officiating. Burial will be in Memorial Park Cemetery at Cape Girardeau. Quotations furnished by Hugh T. McCollum, Registered Representative for Rowland and Co.

1405 East Malone. Phone 471-5350. Weather elsewhere By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS HI Lo Prc Otlk Albany Amarillo Anchorage Asheville Atlanta Birmingham Bismarck Boise Boston Brownsville Buffalo Charleston Charlotte Chicago Cincinnati Cleveland Denver Des Moines Detroit Duluth Fairbanks Fort Worth Green Bay Helena Honolulu Houston Juneau Kansas City Las Vegas Little Rock Los Angeles Louisville Marquette 41 16 74 36 57 42 33 19 58 27 62 39 68 48 39 18 .03 43 41 .15 cdy 46 30 clr 82 67 rn 34 24 cdy clr clr cdy cdy clr cdy 55 44 57 31 46 43 48 32 38 29 61 32 45 39 39 30 30 26 .15 sn 22 0 72 53 cd 42 23 cdy 81 66 clr 62 57 .19 rn 48 39 .05 rn clr clr rn rn rn cdy cdy cdy 64 54 34 5 52 45 80 52 62 47 77 52 52 42 cdy cdy rn clr rn cdy rn River Stages JOHN LOGAN HADDOX LOWNDES John Logan Haddox, 86, died Thursday at Chaffee General Hospital. He was born April 10, 1887 at McGee to the late Thomas and Nancy Denning Haddox. He was a member of the Seventh- day Adventist Church.

On Sept. 20, 1908, he married Resa Roper, who preceded him in death June 28, 1963. On Dec. 15, 1963, he married Blanche Gleason, who survives. Other survivors include five sons, Arnold Haddox of Chaffee, Virgil Haddox of Yacolt, Samuel Haddox of Lowndes, John Haddox of Bingen, and Eugene Haddox of Granite City, five daughters, Grace Bowman and Ruth Maxwell of Boulder, Mary Gooding of Huntsville, Elizabeth Johnson of Miami, and Estalee Buchanan of Darien, two stepsons, Calvin Gleason of Bingen, and Vern Gleason of Tangent, one brother, Henry C.

Haddox of Alhambra, one sister, Frances Jines of Stockton, and 26 grandchildren, 25 great- grandchildren and MISSISSIPPI RIVER Flood Now Ch. Chester 27 28.3 Cape Girardeau 32 33.0+1.7 New Madrid 34 31.3 Caruthersville 32 29.9 FORECAST At Chester the river will rise .2 Saturday and crest at 28.5; fall .5 Sunday; and fall .3 Monday. At Cape Girardeau the river will rise .7 Saturday; rise .3 Sunday and crest at 34.0; and fall .4 Monday. At New Madrid the river will rise .7 Saturday; rise .8 Sunday; and rise .8 Monday. The river will crest Thursday at 34.5.

At Caruthersville the river will rise .4 Saturday; rise .7 Sunday; and rise .5 Monday. OHIO RIVER Flood Now Ch. Golconda 40 33.0 Paducah 39 31.9 Grand Chain 42 41.7 Cairo 40 42.3 FORECAST At Golconda the river will rise .8 Saturday; rise .9 Sunday; and rise .9 Monday. The river will crest Wednesday at 36.5. At Paducah the river will rise .7 Saturday; rise .8 Sunday; and rise .5 Monday.

The river will crest Wednesday at 35.0. At Grand Chain no forecast was available. At Cairo the river will rise .8 Saturday; rise 1.0 Sunday; and rise .5 Monday. The river will crest Wednesday at 45.0. Livestock Market NATIONAL STOCKYARDS, 111.

(AP) Estimated receipts for Monday: 8,000 hogs, 2,000 cattle and 300 sheep. Hogs Butchers 25-50 lower. Sows lower. US No. 1 225 lb butchers 36.50; US 1-2 200-230 lbs 36.00-36.25; US 13 200-230 lbs 35.75-36.00.

US 1-3 300-400 lb sows 32.00-32.50 400600 lbs 31.25-31.50. Boars under 250 lbs 30.00; over 250 lbs 24.50. Cattle 75; Not enough cattle on hand to test prices. Sheep 25; Not enough on hand to test prices. Grain Market CHICAGO (AP) Farm commodity futures prices were mostly lower in early dealings on the Chicago Board of Trade today.

On the opening, wheat futures were 3 to 9 cents a bushel lower, March 5.30; com was 2 lower to lA higher, March 2.94 oats were VA lower to 1A higher, May 1.41% and soybeans were unchanged to 6 lower, March 6.30. two bids were for a contract for service, which went to Bill Jones of East Prairie, the low bidder, who submitted a bid of $2.50 per home per month. An agreement on the costs for commercial pickup, where the fee will remain flexible, remains to bo worked out between Jones and the city. The service will go into effect as soon as the commercial agreement is reached and a contract signed. The City Council adopted an ordinance setting the collection and transportation regulations for the service and penalties for failure to comply in a Feb.

27 special session. Collections will be made at homes once a week. Containers must be leakproof, water-proof and fitted with a fly-tight lid; have handles or bails and tapered sides for easy emptying. They are to be not less than 20 gallons nor more than 35 gallons in size and can be either metal, rubber or weatherproof plastic. The containers are not to exceed 75 pounds in weight when filled, and may be placed at the curb or alley at each home for collection.

The penalty for failure to comply can be a fine of not less than $5, nor more than $500. A bid of $3.25 per home per month was submitted by Gene Cade of East Prairie. A billing charge of 50 cents per month will be added to the $2.50 rate by the city. Presson Ford Co. of East Prairie submitted a low bid of $3,286.88 for a 197 1 model police car.

The bid will be accepted, provided the car meets the required specifications. Other bids submitted were Pope Motors of East Prairie, $3,575, and Winchester Chevrolet of East Prairie, $3,323. The council voted to reaffirm the crape myrtle as the official flower, as requested by the Improvement Club. The flowering shrub will be report of $17,756.24 and the police report, which showed a total of $225 in fines collected. Portageville shooting incident investigated No.

1 from page 1 promoted during the annual spring garden sale. In routine action the council approved expenditures of $7,176.25 for February; the from the jury. The defense also stated that it had an obligation to present the best possible witnesses in be halt and said if it had not been misled by the prosecutor, it would not have used Baker as a witness. feel his testimony was damaging to the defense motion stated. The defense said Baker told one story to a deputy sheriff on the morning of the slaying and retracted his story on the witness stand.

The defense also sought to support its position by calling Pros. Atty. Jim Moore and defense attorney James Crenshaw to the witness stand for questioning. On being asked why he did not supply the defense with a copy of the FBI statement Moore said he did not receive a statement from Kemp until the evening before the trial and only had the statement in his possession approximately 16 hours before he did provide the defense with a copy. Concerning the tatements from Baker, Moore said he was not aware that he had the statements from Baker in his file.

Crenshaw testified that he asked Moore on several occasions for a copy of the FBI statements and Moore told him he had not received any copies I he state called to the witness stand, Jim Robison, the second defense attorney, When asked why he did not take a statement from the FBI agent himself, Robison said he was representing an indigent person who could not finance a trip to Chicago for his counsel to talk to the agent, Robison also said he was aware of the law that the prosecutor must supply the defense a copy of all statements. PORTAGE VILLE New Madrid County Sheri Department is continuing its investigation of a shooting Wednesday night into the home of Eugene J. Cross on Route Three, two and a half miles north of Portageville. Cross is employed in the industrial relations department on Noranda Aluminum Inc. in St.

Jude Industrial Park where United Steel Workers of America Local 7686 have been on strike since Jan. 31. A deputy today said that nine .22 caliber rifle shots were fired through the windows of the house sometime between 10 p.m. Wednesday and 6 a.m. Thursday.

The failed to awaken the family and no one was injured. Cross discovered the shooting early Thursday morning when noticed holes in a piclure window. Three bullets which were embedded in one of the floors were recovered by the deparl ment. ALL COLOR ARE NOT CREATED EQUAL SOME HAVE DISTINCT ADVANTAGES FROM THE START, SUCH AS: Chroma Color Picture Tube Power Sentry Hand Crafted Chassic Tuner And Palmer Color TV To Service Locally 206 E. Malone Phone 471-2634 the Bank of Sikeston offers residential mortgage loans up to 30 years I A new approach to residential real LLdis estate and pjil construction Mil financing on new KjBSPlSlI homes that makes sense and saves time! In keeping with the demand for interim and long term financing of residential property and home construction, the Bank of Sikeston announces the creation of its newest the Real Estate Division.

0This now offers a single source for construction financing on new homes, and for residential mortgage loans to 30 years. Interest rates are competitive, and as an added convenience payments can be automatically deducted from your Bank of Sikeston checking account. We invite residential property owners, developers, builders, and contractors to talk over your financing needs with us. Bank of Sikeston REAL ESTATE DIVISION Helping you change things for the better Ml MBtK I I) I.

Get access to Newspapers.com

  • The largest online newspaper archive
  • 300+ newspapers from the 1700's - 2000's
  • Millions of additional pages added every month

About The Daily Standard Archive

Pages Available:
121,868
Years Available:
1919-1977