Skip to main content
The largest online newspaper archiveArchive Home
Southern Illinoisan from Carbondale, Illinois • Page 2
A Publisher Extra® Newspaper

Southern Illinoisan from Carbondale, Illinois • Page 2

Location:
Carbondale, Illinois
Issue Date:
Page:
2
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

Qjymgw3 IUE APR 2.8 1959 fa2t Two In Carbondale Liquor Licenses Set In Chester Liquor licenses for 12 taverns 4V-i i Alcoholism Survey Set Daylight Time Set Sunday In Marion and four clubs have been approved by the Chester City Council. The license fee was dropped from $500 to $400 this vear. a The number of licenses remains Lists Give Choice in Record Case Johnson County residents were given a two-way "call for volunteers" Monday. Newest development in the case the county's missing records was the appearance in stores of posters enlisting residents as members of cit' a "find the missing records" regiment or a "keep the records missinqV regiment. The "find records" group was asked to sign in the left-hand column, and contribute A change to daylight saving the same.

time Sunday was approved by i Licenses were issued to: Landmark Inn, 111 Ferry the Marion City Council Mon II day. Noah Crowder Acting on request of Carbon- Eggemeyer Tavern, 1301 dale officials seeking to coordi Swanwick Harry Eggemeyer nate communities in Southern II Attitudes toward the alcoholic will be the subject of a survey to be conducted in Carbondale. Plans for the survey were made Monday night at a meeting of the Jackson County Committeee on Alcoholism in Carbondale. The survey, under sponsorship of the committee, will be conducted by Southern Illinois University Sociology students. The students, headed by Bill McBride and Ron Van-der Veil, will question 170 adults selected at random from all sections of Carbondale.

The questions will pertain to the individual's knowledge of alcoholics within the community, and will cover the indivi dual's attitude on what he thinks should be done for the alcoholic. In other business at the meeting, committee chairman Kathleen Bellamy reported an information center, to supply free literature on alcoholism, will be established at the Jackson County Health Department offices in Murphysboro. Mrs. John McDermott reported a planned seminar on alcoholism for ministers probably will be held in September or October, and will be open to all religious leaders. The Committee on Alcoholism was organized in January, as a subcommittee of the Jackson County Health Council, and meets every month.

9 linois, the Council unanimously Piosik's Famous Tavern, 1205 Swanwick Daniel Piosik Grandview Hotel Bar, 601 approved the changeover in ad vance of the July 1 date set by State John H. Jungwaeltcr the state legislature. to a fund for the purpose the right-hand column was provided for the "keep 'em blocks will be advanced an hour at 2 a. m. Sunday, May 3.

1 .1 missing croup. lwo members or tne new Council which will take over The posters were distribut- 11 y-l rit .11. ec bv oeoree FniJliDs and May 4, Bob Yearack and A. R. Douglas, also voiced approval of I Bon Spiller of the Goreville area.

Jr. Chester Liquor Store, 1205 Yi Swanwick Bob Duensing Midtown Trvern, 616 State Jack Durkee Wittenbrink Tavern 995 State L. Cushman Liz's Tavern, 612 State Elizabeth Easton Buena Vista Bowling Alleys, 1227 State Ruth Willbrand Buddy Buddy Lounge 630 the action. An official canvass of April 21 election results made 1 1 CHESTER WOMAN DIES Funeral Wednesday For Mrs. Dora Hogrefe INMATE DIES Funeral Services Pending For Walter Krauser Funeral services are pending only minor changes the unof fically reported returns.

Water Tank Repairs Seen The Herrin water storage tank xl Mrs. Dora Hogreie, 74, oi L. B. Long gained five votes at the Welge Funeral Home. Chester, died Sunday at the Ches to make his total 2,140 for po TRAKHU BKtAK Rt.

13 across from the Carter- morning. Water is bein Heavy truck traffic ap- ville Beach road. Workers be- pumped from the highway anc parently broke a water line on gan repairs on the line i into a drainage ditch. Chester, for Menard Penitenti needs repainting and possible re-! ter Hospital after an illness pairs, Water Supt. Lester Jordan State Nelda Sternberg New Moon Cafe, 1945 State St.

Ray Durkee told the City Council Monday eight days. She was born near Blair in 1884. She was married in 1903 nicht. Royal Cocktail Lounge, 1012 He said the tank, built in Hoffman Tells Herrin Rotary 'Watch Trends1 to Louis Hogrefe, who died in State undine Stephens 1949, has never been painted. ary inmate Walter Krauser, 56, who died today.

Krauser was received at Menard from Cook County Dec. 1, 1925, on a murder charge. He was serving two concurrent sentences, one for killing a policeman during a store robbery, the other for the fatal knifing of an accomplice, who he killed lice magistrate. J. Luke Johnson had 1,375.

Atlic Simmons lost one vote for commissioner making i total 1,720. Other commissioner totals were Yearack 2.648; Harold Far-ncr Oscar Harris Douglas George Dodds John Miller 1,560, and William Armstrong 1,419. Elks 1629, 123 Stacey Cost Sharing Outlined Easf Herrin Street Work Resolution Is Approved Normally tanks require repainting every four or five years, he Garrett Berry VFW Post 3443. 939 State said. The City Council instructed Clyde Martin A Southern Illinois University marketing expert Monday warned Herrin Rotary Club members American Legion Post 487, Jordan to learn the cost of an 1929.

She leaves sons Gilbert, Fred and Harold, all of Chester; daughter Mrs. T. E. Lasatcr of Chester; brothers William Bock-horn of Walsh, Louis Bockhorn of Ellisgrove, and Alvin Bockhorn of Willisiville; sisters Mrs. Emma Conder and Mrs.

Ed Sie-mers, both of Chester, four grand children and five 500 Opdyke Bob Klind they must follow marketing independent inspection of tank. Results will be used to plan Robert Cooksey defeated Raymond McCormick for mayor by a vote of 2,186 to 1,960. City Clerk Ira C. Nelson sub work, draw up specifications and worth Knights of Columbus Club, No. 487, 209 H.

W. Gualdoni. The City Council raised pin- while both were in prison. Billfold Lost Theodore Anderson, 511 S. Ash Carbondale, reported to police Monday that he had lost a billfold containing identifica tion and other papers.

award a repair contract by bid. Jordan is to report on cost at a special Council mitted his resignation effective May 4. A former official of the N. O. Nelson Supply Co.

and ball license fees from $3 to $15, The Council also purchased a tractor, loader and disc harrow to be used jointly by the street and water departments. The Council approved bid of $5,512 by the Morgan Tractor Co. of Murphysboro. The cost to the city was cut to by the trade-in allowance of $2,370 for a diescl pump no longer used by the water depart trends to be successful in business. Paul Hoffman, associate professor of marketing and acting chairman of the marketing department, spoke at the luncheon meeting of the club.

His topic concerned changes in the consumer market. The market is marked, he said, by changes in quantity, aoc dis meeting Monday. a director of the Bank of Mar A sister and three brothers pre-'and bowling alley games from $5 ceded her in death. i to $15. Jukebox licenses remain- Jordan said the tank probably ion.

he has served as clerk the could be scaled and painted on ed at $10, and pool table licenses remained at $5. last four years. the inside in three days. During The new administration report edly will name C. H.

Whitcomb A resolution calling for the City of Herrin to pay half the cost of an estimated $311,000 street improvement project was approved Monday night by the City Council. The resolution will be forwarded to the state highway department for approval. The state, according to the agreement, will pay the other half of total costs. Herrin officials met recently with District 9 Highway Engineer W.D. MacLeod to map out the agreement.

East Herrin street is to be -widened and repaved. A grade crossing will replace an old wooden bridge now carrying vehicle traffic over the Missouri-Pacific Railroad tracks. The state will receive bids on that time, he said, city water pre sure could be maintained pumping against the mains. SOUTHERN UUNOISAN Pnblitheo landav and dtih eicepi Saturday and holidays brt Southern lllinoir Pohlica tiona. 227 Main Street Cat bondale; 212 North 1Mb Street Hemn: 9 11 8otb 12th Street Morphf shore Entered a Second Cm Matter ai the Poi Office in Carbondale 111 ondet the Act of March 1879 With ddi dona! en me a Second Clas Matiei the Pott Office of Herrin til and Mar ohrihoro.

Q. The Southern niinottan the Sac-caof Nevrtpapei to the Carbondal' Pre Pieaa, Herrin Daih loarna) and Mir ohriboro Independent. as clerk. He was a candidate for mavor in the primary and was tribution, mobility, education, leisure time, purshasing novver Relief valves installed by the Funeral services will be Wednesday at 2 p. m.

at the St. John's Lutheran Church Bremen. The Rev. Paul W. Kap-pes will officiate.

Burial will be in the church cemetery. Friends may call at the Sch-roeder Funeral Chapel, Chester, until 11 a. m. Wednesday, when the body will be removed to the church. defeated.

1 and preferences of costomers. Whitcomb was mavor in WEATHER TROUBLE A scheduled track meet and baseball game between Southern Illinois University and Washington University in St. Louis today were cancelled due to bad weather. The two events fuve been rescheduled for tomorrow. Hoffman defined marketing as 1931-3? and served two terms activities engaged in to discover repair contractor would protect water mains, he said.

He recommended the work be done during the Norge plant vacation the last two weeks of July. The Aaandated Pre ta entitled exel as a Williamson County com missioner. The Council approved an au drelj to the aae for republication of alt ment. Identical equipment was offered by the Chamness Farm Equipment Co. of Marion at a net cost of $3,752.67.

The lowest bid on a diesel tractor and equipment came from the Ed Myer Tractor Co. of Mt. Vernon. The bid was a net on a Massey-Ferguson tractor. Aldermen decided the Ford equipment would be more the foe! rw prinrad fn tni newrpapw all AP aewt dicwtclM.

new well dit bv Gray, Hunter and Stcnn and satisfy consumers desires. One means of learning these desires, he said, is motivational research, the "depth probing" to dig out deep-seated wants which the consumer himself may not be aware of. Such research tools, he said, re. vealed that when instant coffeee first appeared on the market, the project, pay 50 per cent of Marion, of the records of the out-going administration. It also approved survey by city' engineers to determine what can be done to eliminate flooding conditions on North Russell street.

the construction costs, pay en gineering costs and half of the A net bid of $2,477 on a gaso line tractor from the Mt. Vernon firm was rejected. Aldermen said right-of-way, pay for moving city utilities and half of the bridge removal and grade construction. The city is to handle the survey and drawing of plans, obtain the right-of-way, pay pre McCormick said work will take three days "and be expensive but worth it." many housewives avoided it because they secretly felt using it made them appear lazy and poor a diesel tractor was specified in the bid advertisement. Mayor Fred Henderson said liminary engineering costs and CASKET FIRM SUES FOR UNPAID BILL half of the construction costs, pay the Murphysboro firm would move die traded diescl engine at its own expense.

halt the bridge and grade con An Arkansas casket corpora struction costs and maintain the planners. The situation has changed, he said. Hoffman cited statistically other aspects of the market. He said in the next year persons will move to other homes and 5,000,000 will move across state lines. Working women today number 22,0000,000 and 16,000,000 pavement.

Herrin must also require parallel parking, erect traffic signs, require state approval for all ac Area Delegates To State Meet tion has filed suit to collect an unpaid bill from a Carbondale funeral director in Jackson Circuit Court. The Pine Bluff Casket has filed suit for collection The seventh annual state convention of the Illinois Council for Mcntallv Retarded Children of an elleged $245.20 bill from or them are married, he said. Per, James Walker, doing business as will be Friday and Saturday in sons with a four-year college-edu- the Walker Funeral Home, Car bondale. Spnnghcld. cation total 7,000,000.

Delegates attending from the nT -X XJ LOOKING FOR A GIFT? tf 'i (: -4 4 ---x! -x rN ZZ- txVx Tl" 'III llillllll iml'll li "ur" 11 1 'i'i'i iTl II I ill urn wiTiniif i 1 in Wm ill i urmil 11 11 I 1i.mi Ti Ti' i I "i Vrt Cvtlittk ri tit i lynfrfW', a Jvf-j The suit alleges Walker owe the money for purchase of caskets Egyptian Assn. for Mentallv He cess driveways and forbid pollution of storm sewer systems. 5-Year Payment Mayor Fred Henderson said th city's share will be paid from motor fuel tax funds over a five-year period. It will leave about $2,250 a month for other street expenses, he said. He said the contract i 1 1 probably be let late this year and construction may start next spring.

A special meeting was called for next Mondav night to receive bids on oil and rock for street from the company. The company claims it has made several demands for payment of the bill. A discussion of municipal hospital planning is scheduled for next Monday's Rotary meeting Kenneth Powlcss, Marion attorney and member of the Marion Memorial Hospital board, will tell the Herrin members how the city's hospital was set up. Snyder Herrin, Herrin city at tarded Children are Jackson County Judge and Mrs. Peyton II.

Kunce, 2301 Division Murphvsboro, and Mr. and Mr. W. A Howe, 1314 S. Thompson Carbondale.

More than 250 persons arc expected to attend the two-day IPA MEET SET The Shawnee Division of thf Illinois Police Assn. will meet at 7:30 p. m. (CST) Wednesday at the Cairo Veterans of For-eigns Wars Hall. Refreshments and special entertainment are planned.

a I sessions. On the agenda are pa repairs. The project, under 1 torney, arranged the program. A bond issue to pay part of the cost of a Herrin municipal hospital was defeated a week ago tod a v. nel discussions and workshops on moror tuci tax rund appropna tion, was previously approved by the Council.

problems and proiects deal mi with the mentally handicapped. Cities Report Progress Industry Prospects Brighter, SI! Board Members Told in, 'cm all you'd all have to move construction is assured, a pros- Industry is on the move Southern Illinois, directors Southern Illinois, or to Chester to provide manpower pcctive tenant tirm said todav thev are mailing us a check to show their good faith." to operate the plants with. Logan Colp, Cartcrville area fruit grower, said area horticul piromilllles as ytui Dirra front, Dwight Burns of De Soto said the Southern Illinois Recreation Coordinating Council's $1,029,350 plan for Crab Orchard Lake recreational develon-ment'Svill not be opposed by the U. S. Fish Wildlife Burns was one of a oroun which presented details ol the "When we get this one nailed turists are making a new efioit down," Bauer said, "we won't Mondav niVht.

At a meeting in Johnston Citv, the directors reported "more activity and more prospects" on ai! fronts than at any previous time. Ted Search, Chester, said His to obtain a fruits processing plant for Southern Illinois and reel stop there we'll go after another building and tenant." Earl D. Jamison, Mt. Vernon especially sure or success if the A SPRAY, STEAM AND DRV LOOK AT THESE PLUS FEATURES! city seems best off in this res- proposed depressed areas bill br- subdividcr, said his citv a program a week ago to Assistant ixvt. I le cited these items: comes law.

"prcttv ccod prospects for a few Secretary Ross Lcftler ol the Ik- I lie bill now bctorc Longrcs-, more industries and Im of Interior and FWi would provide loan capital t'or ning to spend $10 million over Director D. H. 'Janzcn, during depressed area redevelopment, the next few xcarr building hous- a brief visit the two officials paid Earlier efforts for such a plant cs." the area. The FWS is in charge K.ncr Industries, has LnuJ)t over 50 square miles of coal lands near Sparta and addi tiondi riverfront land at Chester and, while Kaiser has not stated its intentions officially, former landowners have said the firm Visualizer Fabric Dial 2. rrtzrTp Control S.

Handy Cord Lift failed, Colp said, because of Tack! Included in the reports were of the lake. or capital. 1 comments on recentlv announc- Prof. W. J.

Tudor, Southern ed expansions of existing firms WONDERFUL GIFT IDEA FOR ANY OCCASION Here's the most practical gift you can give any homemaker. No other iron you've seen makes ironing so fast and easy. Just press the button! This amazing iron sprays exactly the right amount of warm water in front of the iron. Eliminates sprinkling and pre-dampening of all but the very largest pieces-cuts ironing time way down. It's a steam and dry iron too with General Electric's Even-Flow steam system.

Even-Flow steam is continuous penetrates deeper moistens your fabric evenly for perfect ironing. Use it as a dry iron Visualizer Fabric Dial selects the perfect ironing temperature for every fabric-synthetics to linens! burns said arrangement are being made for a committee from the area to present the program to Congress soon. is going to put in a plant near Illinois University, said the pro- Universal Match Corp. at Ur Chester. dill has leased 55 more acres of posed new $10 million federal 4.

Convanlant Button Nooks land. 40,000 more square fee: utner area groups, cooperat- 1 Evm Dow St tarn Syatarn of building space and expects to-ing with SII, are planning for lease another 40,000 square ieel, three new major recrcatiun.il oiher firms have taken additional 'events in the area this year warehouse space. ia "Family Outdoor Living" show The Missouri Pacific Railroad reportedly is planning a new Mississippi River bridge at Mo-it t. link the rcccntK discover cd Missouri iron ore with South ern Illinois coal Chester's Chamber of Com prison "will be built either in Southern Illinois or in Missouri, and we are all working lor it to come to Southim Illinois." Du Quoin Optimistic Du Quoin also is optimistir about present prospects, a 1 Buy It now at your General Electric Dealer's! Expansions also are under way sat SIU May 15, 16, 17, a sail 11. Mallorv Co.

and boat regatta at Crab Orchud Lake May 16-17, and a horse so Bauer of that citv said. The mcrce is negotiating with Citv Manufactures G. rest in Du Quoin, the Lo back tour of area spots bv 200 application tor an insurance com 'plants GENERAL ELECTRIC rCRTASU APPLIANCE PEPARTUINJ 4 RADIO CCh.XI3 tour rnntins o. in Murphvs 'to 400 members of the Illinois many prospects" for its empty factory building and for other possible industrial locations in and near the city that "if we got pany loan to build a new uc lory slrll is apparently going along well and, even before fx State Stock Horje Assn. Lauui On the tourist recreational! Day week..

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

Publisher Extra® Newspapers

  • Exclusive licensed content from premium publishers like the Southern Illinoisan
  • Archives through last month
  • Continually updated

About Southern Illinoisan Archive

Pages Available:
955,084
Years Available:
1949-2023