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The Pantagraph from Bloomington, Illinois • Page 5
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The Pantagraph from Bloomington, Illinois • Page 5

Publication:
The Pantagraphi
Location:
Bloomington, Illinois
Issue Date:
Page:
5
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

nvE TIIE PANTACRAP1I. BLOOMINGTON. ILLINOIS. MONDAY. JULY If.

1951. Sent to Amarillo Dana Goes on Home-Building Spree Fisher Slates Two Day Fair, Two Accidents -Near Clifton Kill One, Injure Nine I 'I it Horse Show FISHER (PNS) The 19S4 Fisher Community Fair and Horse, Show will open Tuesday on the athletic field. The affair will run for two days. Entertainment lined up includes a 12 year old girl who is an aero-1 WATSEKA UP) One man was killed, and nine persons were Injured, two critically, in two highway mishaps which occurred within minutes of each other at the same spot Saturday night One of those hurt was a motorist who was attempting to flag dowr cars with a flare after a head-on crash. The initial crash on U.S.

Route 45 near Clifton, 15 miles northwest of Watseka, killed Don Louis Per-rin, 27, Wheaton. Children Hurt Injured seriously was the flare- batie contortionist and a hillbilly comedian who books himself as 1 'doing more things with a banjo and guitar than a monkey can with a peanut" Band To Play v. W9 msoa 3 -turn I (f reft J- ft A fA' BSt BSSSSSS fc The show will open at 10 a. m. Tuesday with the Judging of the woman's division and the livestock Judging.

At 7:45 p. m. the Fisher school band, under the direction of Eugene Loftis, will give a concert rX (rS) Knura D. Srott, airman tnlrd cUm, tm of Mr. and Mrs.

M. T. Scott of 1 raso, kas her tramf erred to AmarUIo AFB, Tex from Sampooa Field. N. Y.

A St Louis amusement service will provide the professional enter tainment for an 8:15 program Tuesday. Included on the bill are Shirley Ann Crouch, the young con tortionist; Shux Austin, the hillbilly comedian; the skating Lockwells; dancer Carol Ozman and one- De Land Unit Adds Two To DANA After 30 yean without new home conitruction, Dana Is now the scene of two house buildinr projects. At left. Herbert Lee and contractor Charlie Lnts place wiring In house beinr built for the Lee family. Other photo shows the nine room, two bath ranch house designed for the C.

B. Sauers takes shape. legged gymnast Arthur Dick. holder, Albert Cox, 20, of Clifton. He suffered several bone fractures and was given blood transfusions.

His condition is reported as critical. I Police said the first crash occurred when cars driven by Perrin and Calvin C. Burnett, 26, of Gary, collided. Burnett suffered serious injuries. Seven other passengers in the Burnett car, including his four children, were hospitalized also.

Cox, police said, was struck by a car driven by Mrs. Estell L. Litterst, 54, of Hazelcrest while he directed traffic with a flare. Woman Charged Police charged Mrs. Litterst with reckless driving and operating her vehicle with improper license plates.

Neither she nor her passenger, Clifford Ferrin, 6, of Chicago, were hurt. Hospitalized in Clifton, besides Calvin Burnett, are Mrs. Annie Burnett. 65, his mother; Kate, 26, SH Prt Show Wednesday will open with a live Teaching Staff stock Judging at 10:30 a. m.

and; Now Korea I Atlanta Crash Central Illinois Deaths races and contests for rirls and boys. At 1:30 p. m. there will be DE LAND (PNS) Two new teachers have been hired to teach Mrs. Daisy M.

Barrett a children parade and pet show Wesley Ratcliff I in Eureka, will be at 2:30 p. m. at th Otto and Areo Fu- Mrs. Clifford Albin will serve as in DeLand-Weldon unit schools EUREKA (PNS) Mrs. Daisy FARMER CITY -(PNS)-Wes- neral Home Eureka.

Rev. chairman. (ior ue lXH-io school year. Mrs. Sends One To Hospital M.

Barrett, 77, died suddenly at ley Ratcliff, 67, died Sunday at Beatrice Quinlan of Mor.ticello has Talent from Rantoul. Gibson a. m. at St. Joseph's Hospital, Lee Davis of the Sterling Christian Church will officiate.

Burial will be in the Olio Cemetery in Eu 11:30 p. m. Saturday at her home in Eureka. She had lived the past 54 years in Eureka. Qty and Fisher on instrumental.

Ite wS Bloomington, where he had been a patient for the past six days. LINCOLN -(PNS)- One person! ZZ7' TIT: school and Mrs. Grace MJler has He was taken to the Stensel was slightly injured early Sunday at reka. Mrs. Mary Schroeder She was taken to the Otto and Argo Funeral home in Eureka and was to be returned to her residence Funeral Home in Farmer City, where services will be at 2:30 been hired to teach the first grade at DeLand Grade School.

Mrs. Quinlan formerly taught commerce at Fisher and Monti- his wife; their four children, aged The horse show will begin at 7:30 p. m. Wednesday under the MINIER (PNS) Mrs. Mary from 1 to and Mrs.

Ethel Smith, p. m. Tuesday with the Rev. Sam when a car driven by Earl Green, 28, of Chicago and a truck driven by Frankie Kitchen. 43, of New Baden, were reported to have side-swiped on U.S.

Route 66 near guidance of Elmer Ciertz. Lyle his sister. The Burnett family was McKay of the Nazarene Church Schroeder, 83, of Minier died at! 6:20 p. m. Saturday at Mennonite Hospital, Bloomington, after a en route to Arkansas.

officiating. Burial will be in Maple 52-. iolSoSVZ. XX. Grove Cemetery in Farmer City.

Monday noon. Services will be at 4 p. m. Tuesday at the funeral home with the Rev. L.

T. Flynn officiating. Burial will be in the Olio Cemetery in Eureka. She was born May 16, 1877, in Washington, the daughter of Lewis 7, r-7Z' Western Illinois State College three day illness. i Mrs.

v. sv. jum uju He was born Dec. 1, 1886, at Mrs. Pearline Beasley.

22. of A. W. Sperling. She was taken to the McReyn- Louisiana Man Dies on Train Noble, the son of James and Jo-! and Colorado State College of Education.

Mrs. Miller is attending ITlinois State Normal University and will sephine Davis Ratcliff. He mar olds Funeral Home in Minier. Funeral services will be at 2 p. m.

Reunion Dates and Christina Helvern Myer. She ried Irene Farleigh on March 12, LINCOLN (PNS) A Shreve- Tuesday at the St Johns Lvan-twas married to George W. Bar- complete her work there next Wlrr Ilamer Sunday. July Chicago suffered lacerations on the head and she was brought to Abraham Lincoln Memorial Hospital for emergency care. She remained as a patient Five other occupants of the Green car escaped injury.

1907, at Wynoose. He lived on a farm until coming to Farmer City. Dort. retailer, Willis W. New at Summer.

23. at 11:30 a. m. (standard) comb, 76, died on a Gulf, Mobile and Ohio train at Lincoln Sunday He had lived in the Farmer City community for the past 29 years. gelical and Reformed Church with rett on gept 28, 1899, at Washing-the Rev.

William Mueller officiat- ton. He preceded her in death ing. Burial will be in Minier Feb. 20, 195L Cemetery. Surviving are one son, Eugene Mrs.

Schroeder was born Jan. cf Eureka; one daughter. Miss 17, 1871, at Minier, the daughter Clara Barrett of Eureka, and onej at 3 p. m. Death was attributed to Surviving are his wife; two sons, Miller Park, Bloomington.

Brer her Sunday. July 25. at Gibson Gty Park. Blrtrtt a y. July 25.

at Grant Memorial Park. Washburn. a heart attack. Fifteen minutes after the crash James of Indianapolis, and Mrs. Miller replaces Mrs.

Ethel Daiiion who resigned alter 33 years of teaching. An industrial arts teacher-coach is needed in the unit junior high school to complete the faculty staff. He was taken to the Holland and when Kitchen was attempting to Roy of Farmer City; two daughters, Mrs. Charles Tharp and Mrs. Barrv Funeral Home and will be release his locked airbrakes.

Mrs. oi bimon ana catnenne Appen-; granddaughter. One son, four returned to Shreveport. zeller Freithe. She was married brothers and three sisters also ere- Vera Jane Easley of Divernon ran angmille Claude Stenler, both of Farmer City; two sisters, Mrs.

Ira Diel of Mr. Newcomb was the president to Henry V. Schroeder on March ceded her in death. STANFORD (PNS) Prt Harold L. Foulk Is now stationed with the 2nd Military Folice Co, 2nd Infantry Division In Sonle, Korea, according to word received by his parents, Mr.

and Mrs. Robert Foulk Wednesday. truck. 1 of the Artis wholesale grocers of ShreveDort. He and his wife 13, 1888.

He preceded her in death on Dec. 1, 1930. She was a member, of the Eureka Methodist Church, the Re- Olney and Mrs. Mat Schnell of Noble, and 12 grandchildren. A daughter and a son preceded him in death.

wpre en route to Waukesha, Wis, Surviving are two sons. Simon of becca Lodge and the Senior Wom- an's Club. Oshkosh, and Orville of Chi State Policemen Robert McKay and Vincent Kuhl investigated the accident. Kitchen was charged with driving in the wrong lane on complaint of Green and he will be given a hearing in Atlanta city court. Hospital Notes St James How greedy your furnace? teaUf yawff fvel-wing frmota wMt reti WtLUAMSON FrMtt.

Omukm ere. yeeH im fwl mm4 rea lira 4leM pmy fat Mm wand erf wl aw caealaet George Kenney brothers, Senton, Seattle. PONTIAC (PNS) Patients WENONA (PNS) George Francis. Lawton, and Le- admitted: Mrs. Virginia Thorne Kenney.

62. died at 9 p. m. Satur Pov anA WilforH Strntnr I day at his farm home southeast of Wenona. He had returned Saturday Edward Bloompott PEKIN (PNS) Edward J.

Bloompott, 77, died in St. Francis Hospital, Peoria, at 5 a. m. Saturday. He had been in failing health for two months and seriously ill for five days.

He was taken to Kueck's Funeral Home in Pekin. Funeral serv ronuac, mis. iioiucs, uoiuiw, Kempton; Joseph Golmith, Che- Mr. Kenney had been town clerk rjectncuuiuy ronsumpuon oi rfearro Tnunckin mntimnidv coal in 1953 was 9 million tons cago; two daughters, Mrs. Ethel Bird and Mrs.

Fern Snider, both of Minier; one sister, Mrs. Emma Imig of Bloomington; five grandchildren and 11 great grandchildren. One daughter, one sister, and a brother also preceded her in death. She was a member of the St John's Evangelical and Reformed Church, the Ladies' Aid of that church and the Order of the East yawH aty- R4c nea "fei ke htrmmtm Ihrirry WitUaa. above from St Mary's Hospital, Streator, since he was 21 years old.

noa medical. Dismissed: Mrs. Eddie Rather, e3 where he had been for treatment He was to be at the Solon Funeral Sam Lambert, Mrs. Steve Symon Wurmnest Infant Home in Streator after 2 p. m.

Monday. Funeral services will be (AdvcruaaincnU More Comfort Wearing FALSE TEETH HVr iiV lUU j-A FURNACE SIBLEY Edward Arnold Wurm ices were to be held at 2 p. m. Mon i i in.rj ii i Mrs. Gene Francis, George Nolan, Mrs.

Teresa Lutson, Pontiac; Mrs. Julia Mortensen, Dwight; Percy Colclasure, Odell. II II I ira-MM day at the funeral home with the at 9 a. m. Tuesday at St.

Mary's Catholic Church 'in Wenona. Burial ern Star. I r-I I I lit Rev. Woodrow Sanders of the Ull- Irl Rrrt pleuant wy to overcome nest, five month old son of Mr. and Mrs.

George Wurmnest of Sib-, ley. died at 10:20 p. m. Sunday at Gibson Community Hospital, Gib-j son City. I Hp ur talrpn in th I Jimh Fu 1 Mi rML a wm ne in m.

Marys cemetery. ISS Maqqie VCMlDert He wax hnrn in Osaec TownshiD Advertisement) Free Book on Arthritis North Pekin Methodist Church officiating. Burial will be in Lake-view Cemetery in Pekin. He was lrn Feb. 16, 1877, the ARMINGTON (PNS) Mission Dec.

1, 1891, the son of George loo put aiarodirorv astlkth. an Improvrd powder, prtaklod oa upper and lower plaut bold thraa firmer ao that the feel more comfortable. No rumr. KOner. paaty taat or feeling.

It alkaline non-acid Does not aour. Cberka "plat Phoiy today foe FREE hmdioa J. KINGSTON I SON Phone 2-9610 SOS N. Prairie SL. BloomlncUo.

UL Maggie Gilbert, 85, died at 9 a. m. and Elizabeth Brennan Kenney. Sunday at a nursing home near I He married Maude Emm on Jan. Collinsville.

where she had resided! 3, 1915. at Wenona. son oi John and Adelaid Norden neral Home in Gibson City, pending completion of funeral And Rheumatism HOW TO AVOID CRIPPLING DEFORMITIES An amazing newly enlarged 44-page book entitled "Rheuma Bloompott. He married Elizabeth odor" (denture breath I. Oet FAS-TEETH today at any drug counter.

for the last year and a half. Surviving are his wife and four Marme in Peoria in 1902. Surviving are his wife; two sons, Arthur E. and Wilbur both of She was taken to the Quiram tism" will be sent free to any Funeral Chapel in Atlanta and will one who will write for it. Peoria; two sisters, Mrs.

Annie be brought to the residence of her fit pffrvHvmh Stye. brother, Roy W. Gilbert, Tuesday It reveals why drugs and medicines give only temporary relief and fail to remove the afternoon. Funeral services will be Rust and Mrs. Ida Mitzenfelt, and one brother, Walter, all of Pekin; four grandchildren and five greatgrandchildren.

Five brothers and at 2 p. m. Wednesday in the Arm- ington Christian Church with the causes of the trouble; explains a specialized non-surgical, nonmedical treatment which has two sisters preceded him in death. Rev. Charles Webb, pastor, offi He had been a painter all his dating.

Burial will be in Hittle life until retirement five years ago Grove Cemetery. Miss Gilbert was born Aug. 22, proven successful for the past 35 years. You incur no obligation in sending for this instructive book. It may be the means of saving you years of untold misery.

Write today to The Ball Clinic, 1867, in the old Gilbert homestead in Armington, the daughter of Rea E. Kreider EUREKA (PNS) Funeral services for Rea E. Kreider, 63, of Sterling, who died Friday night at the home of Mrs. Mabel Detweiler John and Martha Ann Taylor Gil Dept 1206, Excelsior Springs, bert. She resided on the homestead all her life until the last nine Missouri.

years when she and her brother, Roy, moved to the present home Surviving are the one brother. and several nieces and nephews Four sisters and four brothers pre Save with ceded her in death. She was a member of the Armington Christian Church, the Loyal of Daughters Sunday school class the Hittle Re- that church and bekah Lodge. Mrs. Josephine Keys LINCOLN (PNS) Mrs.

Jo sephine McKennan Keys, 78, died Churches Corporations States Partnerships Individuals Couples and others who appreciate better than average earnings with insured safety for their savings are numbered among our savers. Whether you have a large sum of money to invest, or save a few dollars at a time, you receive the same friend at her home here Sunday at 6 p. m. She was taken to the Holland and Barry Funeral Home where services will be at 9:30 a. m.

Wednesday. Burial will be in Harmony Cemetery. Mrs. Keys was born July 1, 1876, in Seafield, the daughter of Thomas and Anna Fleager. She married Samuel M.

Keys in 'i'I'-I II I 111. WIITl 111 Ill I .,4 iBeason on Dec. 29, 1897. He pre ceded her in death. She is survived by one son, Sam of Lincoln; lour daughters, Mrs.

the style, the power, end tke ralut that have made Buick such a best-telling success this year. Ft Bkk fJaj it r-ttllint all tkrr cars in A mrrica axrrpt hra aftkt M-callta "low-price thru." (Smart tip: With Buick such a barrhI buy tkis year, think what a winner k'a bound to be at trade-in timet Come us this week!) D. E. Doolen and Mrs. R.

S. Anderson, both of Lincoln; Mrs. John Hecko, East Lansing, Mich ly service. and Mrs. Hugh H.

Vassler, Battle Creek, and eight grand- I children. She was a member of the Meth wide rim wheels, a unique front-end geometry plus a host of other betterments too numerous to mention. You feel the result of this advanced engineering every mile you drive in what is literally and figuratively a Million Dollar Ride. You feel it in the superb and buoyant cradling. You feel it in the serene level-ness of your going over ruts and ridges.

You feel it in the precise snubbing of jars and jounces. You feel it in a new kind of steadiness, handling ease, curve control. Only thing for you to do, we believe, is to try this miracle of motion and we'll be glad to oblige. That way you'll also learn firsthand about YOU can see (or yourself the gty and gorgeous styling that's sure to be tha fresh note next year, too. And you can easily learn that here is power a-plenty the highest V8 power, Series for Scries, in the annals of Buick history.

But what you can never know, till yo try it yourself, is the feel of a Buick in motion. It's a ride 8S precision-soft and firm as only coiled steel can make it. Yes, coil springs on all four wheels. And a full-length torque -tube drive for true tracking. And a massive X-braced frame for solid steadiness.

And specially calibrated shock absorbers, V-braced struts, odist Church. Frank R. Sotzen Savings and Investments At Bloomington Federal DO PAY MORE! The Safety of Your Investment Is Insured Ur to $10,000.00 by an Act of Congress. LINCOLN (PNS) Frank R. Sotzen, 60, of Lincoln died Sunday at 2:15 p.

m. at St. Clara's Hos pital. He was taken to the Holland and i Barry Funeral Home where serv as ices will be at 11 a. m.

Wednesday with the Rev. L. H. Appel officiat-, ing. Burial will be in Union Ceme BLOOMINGTON FEDERAL tery.

Mr. Sotzen was born Jan. 1 1894, the son of Miles and Elmira Quigley Sotzen. He married Clara Loan Assoc. Savings McNelly in Lincoln on April 8 WK8N urrtt AVTdMOtnjs am wit tmcx wu urno tkim 1914.

Surviving are his wife; one son Conveniently Located At Richard of Lincoln; four daugh CORN BELT MOTOR CO. 105 N. Center St. Phone 3-8276 ters, Mrs. Hazel DeSort, Mrs Mabel Hertzfeld and Mrs.

Virginia 8AVE IN PERSON OR BY MAIL Culleton, all of Lincoln; and Mrs. 307 Grove St. Phone 4-3069 Grace Lumenshirie of Humas and 10 grandchildren..

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Pages Available:
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Years Available:
1857-2024