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The Holland Evening Sentinel from Holland, Michigan • Page 4

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Holland, Michigan
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4
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PAGE FOUR THE HOLLAND, MICHIGAN, EVENING SENTINEL WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 11, W3 The Holland Evening Sentinel remember Miss Parkyn who served so humbly and so well." PONYTAIl every a ex- The Sent nol I i 5-3-5b 3 i i Stieet. Ho.iami. i i a Second postage paid at "hc.iaru i i a A. Edltur and Publisher TV ephone Items EX 2-2314 Acnerns.nj.. is EX 2-2311 I i Phone EX 2-2311 The PjbHsher shall not be lla- 'or a emu or in i i a i s' 1 liivd advertiser f- i 1 'o 'i 'in i.ms for -i i i cot- i SL Cu.se it any i i so i is -v co-recteri 'publishers nnt exrrpci such a i the i cost of i i as a t.d bears to the by FIRST SNOW Poets have a way of growing lyrical over the winter's first snowfall.

And we agree that awakening to a world newly turned pure white has a special kind of excitement in it. But there are also other, very practical, implications in this first snow. For drivers of automobiles it is a dangerous experience as can be seen from the rash of minor automobile accidents which occur as soon as the first snow comes. Drivers apparently don't remember, after seven or eight months of ideal driving conditions, that roads can be slippery and undependable. So this is a reminder that safe driving is doubly difficult in the winter.

it is possible to drive safely even in the snow. Just remember to keep your speed down below your summer average, to keep a greater distance between yourself and the car ahead of you, and to brake gradually to avoid skidding. And turn on those lights in the dark of the morning! Member of Home Dallies, v' Mijpei Publishers, of A i i -a Dai Astocia- 1 OF SUBSCRIPTION" i -id or any i 1'H' mrtin- e- i i cents a i ptr bO per i i a aid Allegan --ear 56.00 tor i' v. $3 for three -t Van arid i i UO for no fm three i one 50 i of 'I 1 'in per a 00 for 1 '-O i 'or one month ji i ar e. mo ins from ie i be at a of 40 cents for the amount due a a a i i rp; 'V ie'her ny or o.rr C.C.I befoie "i -1 Fnday, ') i njsdav.

December 11, 1963 HINE VANDER HEUVEL Through the life-long efforts of Hine Vander Heuvel, sportsmanship and enjoyment of the great outdoors took on new meaning in Holland. Vander Heuvel, who died unexpectedly of a heart attack last Saturday, was one of the prime movers of the Holland Fish and Game Club, founded many years ago to promote conservation and encourage wholesome practices in the broad outdoor field which encompassed hunting, fishing and sports of all kinds. His articles on sportsmanship and conservation demonstrated his convictions as a true sportsman and as such were eagerly read by his friends. At 73. he remained active, fished, trapped, hunted, played golf, bowled and served as consultant to the new management at Service Machine and Supply the business he founded and operated for almost 40 years.

Death, which occurred as he was tending his traps near the Legion Memorial Club, came while he was in pursuit of one of his sports in the outdoors. It probably was the way he would have chosen. "Thanks for the invitation, Dick, but I can't go anywhere with anybody. I'm under house arrest until my grades improve." Dear Abby by Abigail Van Buren DEAR ABBY: I have a problem that bothers me immensely. We have a new minister whose language is atrocious.

I can hardly sit through his sermons any more. He says, "He done," "had went" and "they is." Abby, don't you think that after four years in Bible college he should be able to do better than that? My ten-year-old son notices these mistakes and mentions them to me. Is there a remedy? SMALL TOWN DEAR SMALL: I don't know how "small" your town is, but if the people were bigger they could raise enough money to import a more literate minister. have children, or After you have had them, I'd say leave him now. Better yet, why don't you Both leave his mother? The room and board is far from free it's costing you your happiness.

is a good word. It i a lot of meaning It is a ".01 hat describes a past tried to say when it a a word was i-C-d as bond But we come a long way from that Tnc past few weeks have hoe 1 e.von the inside information on the financial status of Son Hart Rep Ford, and Rep. Gnffi? In cry instance we to'd that the elected office holder had a minimum of secur- Uip'- and certamh no v. hr.lmi.~ig interest in any one concern were we given iiiformaticn'' II seems that this information to guarantee to us that these men were be trusted lo in the pub- he interest because their private interests were of such a nature thai there would not be a con- All this is interest- inf If man's integrity to the pub- Mc m.crost is to he judged on I'-'Lbi'ity to exercise a self- interest that man's integrity is "ui ir. confidence or i And the ciluen who is to sacrifice leal mteg: for eyes of selfish ss than the best, i ma ell qet just that.

i in the seen men r'i charac'er parade their T- i a 1 lives and divest of all their interests thn that this vuLid keep them honest. All this rroted in a theological as- Miirrtion that we can control a Td-. integrity. Integrity and hjnc-ty are words v.ith deeper than some outward A credit man says the "truth in lending" bill's too complicat-1 ed. He prefers a simple system under which no one knows i quite how much interest he's pajmg.

i The Bobby Baker inquiry still haunts President Johnson. If the Republicans have their way, it'll haunt him right out of the White House. In a study, twice as many smokers as non-smokers died. This gives the tobacco people another chance to go through that "there's no proof yet" routine. DEAR ABBY: My mother-in- law is interfering with my marriage.

We have lived with her ever since we've been married and she is the type who likes to run everything herself because nobody can do anything as well, I have never made a meal, and I am not allowed to clean or iron. If I do anything, she does it over. My husband thinks I should consider myself lucky to have free room and board. When his mother criticizes me, my husband never says a word to defend me. Should I leave him now before we have any children? UNHAPPY DEAR UNHAPPY: If it's a question only of whether you should leave him Before you DEAR ABBY: I have recently moved to a city where I have no friends and know very few people.

I would like to meet a handicapped girl between 20 and 30. All the handicapped girls I have ever met have such a sweet quality about them. Perhaps it is because they have suffered and consequently have more feeling and depth. This may sound strange to you, but I have my reasons. Where can I meet such a girl? DEAR The local Society for Crippled Children and Adults (also known as the Easter Seal Society) is listed in your telephone directory.

Ask them if you may be included in their next social get-together when their local club meets. I am sure they will welcome you. CONFIDENTIAL TO KENTUCKIAN: It doesn't take anymore energy to PLAN than it does to wish. What's on your mind? For a personal reply, send a self-addressed, stamped envelope to Abby, Box 3365, Beverly Hills, Calif. Copyright McNaught Syndicate, 1963 The first snowfall makes the world look like a Christmas card.

From then snow is something you shovei and mutter about. an elected representative fi a large number of General slock doesn't a the to legislate in the pub- 1 r. Tte'Cst these stocks i- portfoMo he will not auto- integrity himself of his ic-U have allowed ourselves to hu deluded a point of view tK.t makes mocken of those it-5 i we expect in our 1 It is time we iike a good look at the man. If ne 1.1 a man of integrity, trust him with his own i a and with the puolic interest. I I A.

PARKYN' On Monday one a laid to rest who truly reflected the best of r-ood things in this commu- nt Hannah Parkyn served as a te.i'her of mathematics at Hol- kind High School for 39 years, hut her interests and influence far greater fields in human relationships For Miss n. associations never terminated at the end of a semester or a vcar. but continued for 1'ie and her circle widened as time went on Her inlet covered aca- rlornic sports, literary merit and carried over to the "offspring of her students. Although not strong physically, she unselfishly of her i hei eneigy and her gifts. OIK of her co-workers brought tlif-e sentiments into focus by i "When teachers or parent 1 arc 1 tempted to lose patience or to say one person's i is not important, let VJ with fondness and gratitude Press Comment THE WORLD AXD THE NEWS The editor of this newspaper, departing to make one of his few speaking appearances before a men's club, received a letter from a member expressing regrets that he would be unable to attend.

The gentleman offered the passing advice that The Tribune print no crime news, of which there had been some in that morning's edition, and that it would be edifying if we printed, in his words, "only good news." But, altho it was this gentleman's belief that "the world cries for happiness creative good excellence of achievement, and life in its fullest sense." he did concede that "we need the bad news to stir us into action." But he thought most of it should be buried, skipped, or reserved by the editor for private meditation. Let us first consider the nature of the world. Evil you always have with you. From the temptation and the fall and the act of Cain, man has alwavs been fallible. The record of history will show more of violence and wars and rapine than of constructive good.

For every St Francis there is a matching monster. Human society is always checked and flawed. The acts of governments, even those which profess to be the most enlightened, are always subject to challenge and suspicion, for many a liberty suffers contraction "when the assertion good is being done is most loudly proclaimed. Hardly a week or even a day passes without revolution, violence, military coups, and assassinations. All of these developments bear upon the shape and condition of the contemporary world.

Could any newspaper ignore the recent events in South Viet Nam, where the leaders of the constituted regime were butchered in cold blood, with the sufferance of the United States government? It is not only not the duty of the editor to manage the world, hut it is beyond his capacity should he seek to try. And, equally, it is beyond his province and beyond his duty to attempt to manage the news. If hic columns portrayed only events which reflected the rosy glow of human kindness, his readers would certainly be exposed to a distorted view of the world. It is governments, on every level, which most frequently are found to be trying to manage the news. They do so for their own political profit, glorification, and self-perpetuation.

In many countries there are total censorship and a controlled press. In the United States the national administration advances a concept of "managed news." It is a concept against which The Tribune and the whole press are in revolt. In national, state and local 1 governments it is the habit to employ press agents and to supply a ver- sion of facts most congenial to their sponsors. Every day state, ments are issued which have a I little of the color of the truth, but not the truth itself. But I never until now has it been so I blatantly proclaimed that news is "part of the arsenal of weaponry" at the disposal of a President, or that it is the right of government "if necessary, to lie to save itself.

1 These are the assertions of Mr. Arthur Sylvester, assistant secretary of defense for public information. Sometimes our editors find crime news neither very interesting nor socially very instructive, but it is part of the record of our time, as are developments in international relations, in government activity, in human relations, in culture, and all else that pertains to human existence. All are part of the warp and woof of society. Because the editor knows this, he would not be discharging his duty if he sought to present to his readers a world all sweetness and light, with no shadows or overtones or evidences of the fraility of man.

--The Chicago Tribune mony. according to Capt. William A. Sikkel. Col.

Mallory Kincaid will serve as inspector general and will head a delegation that will include officers from Lansing. Agitation for city garbage disposal and the resultant eradication of the rodent menace in Holland was voiced by 75 members of the Public Affairs committee of the Woman's Literary club at meeting at the club house. Rotarians Cornelius Vander Meulen, president of the Holland Centennial Commission, and Willard Wichers, Holland i Time and Centennial manager, will address members at Rotary's weekly noon luncheon on "Holland's Centennial." seeking work, not going to school, not keeping house, and of the total two million are under 65. Right now the non-worker represents a major and growing problem in our country, just because he has so much leisure time and he doesn't know how to use it for his own satisfaction and his community's enrichment. At the same time, he represents a largely untapped market for imaginative manufacturers and marketing men.

His buying power remains fairly stable through periods of prosperity and recession. He is usually an automatic and immediate spender of his entire income. He is a made-to-order market for small apartments and homes, for thousands of ordinary consumer and leisure-time products, for hundreds of services. The money paid in this country for non-work has been climbing dramatically in recent years and the pace of rise still quickening. Just consider what non-work "earned" in 1962 (and when the figures for 1963 are in, they'll show increases in every category): Dividend checks: $166 billion, up 84 per cent from 1952.

Interest: $30 billion, up 148 per cent from 10 years ago. Rent: $12 billion, up 18 per cent from 1952. Social security and veterans' benefits, state unemployment insurance, federal pensions, mustering-out allowances, military insurance payments, i i 1 ar non-work payments: S35 billion, up 164 per cent in just 10 years. In addition, a whopping $9 billion went out in life insurance payments last year and SI billion to SI.5 billion went out in private pension benefits, also high totals. It comes to S103 billion and even this isn't the whole story.

An impressive percentage of last year's S50 billion in business, professional and farm income was a return on capital investment--which means the money, not the individual, was working. Of course, the biggest proportion of personal incomes in our country represents wages and salaries and the next biggest represents payments to indivi- i dual businessmen, professionals, other self-employed. But the significant fact is that 1 the occupation of non-work is taking an increasing share. While wages and salaries have risen 61 per cent since 1952, social security payments alone have jumped 550 per cent. No percentage income increase even comes close to this and the trend remains strongh upward.

Record numbers are becoming eligible for social security benefits ear after year. Increasing numbers of men and women are leaving the work force at the first eligible social security retirement date and more and more are bowing out at 65. Businessmen are starting to grasp the promise of the non! work population and its huge, growing, automatic buying power. They are groping toward ways to handle this I market, learning from their own I mistakes. But few, even among the most sympathetic and informed, yet grasp the scope of a key problem of the middle class non- worker which bluntly is how to carry the burden of leisure time gracefully.

Tomorrow's column will explore one solution: cradle-to-grave education. (Distributed 1963, by The Hall Syndicate. Inc.) (All Rights Reserved) Inside News On Washington WASHINGTON It is becoming apparent in Washington that President Kennedy's death has wrought no miraculous change in the congressional attitude toward legislation before it. The same forces that opposed the civil rights bill, a tax cut, medical aid for the aged, and federal aid to education continue. It would have been naive to expect anything different.

In fact, no one in official Washington did. After all, opposition to any piece of legislation or to a legislative program stems from differing views on the part of political factions. And politics still is the vehicle by which democracy operates in the United States. It would have been just as unrealistic to expect that President Lyndon Baines Johnson would i a the legislative program he had inherited and would strike out on his own course. The legislative program is a distillation of the views of many people and many leaders of the Democratic Party hope to retain control of the national government machinery for the next presidential term.

True, it was Kennedy's program. But it also is Johnson's program, and the program of the Democratic National Committee. On the Republican side, the opposition is just as much a program and a vehicle by which they seek to unhorse the Democratic majority. At best, the Johnson program may develop a little more drive because of public sympathy for the late President Kennedy, its originator. It also may benefit from a reluctance on the part of some politicians to play their toughest game in these times.

Ann Answers by Ann Dear Ann Landers: Please reply to this letter In your column. (1) If, as you stated recently, "Hansen's disease," better known as leprosy, is not easily communicable why are the lepers isolated? (2) Why do we need, lepro- sariums, such as the institution in Carville, Louisiana? And why have people been terrified of this loathsome disease since 1000 B. (3) Wh.v' are only close rela- lives allowed to visit inmates i in leprosariums? of KENOSHA, WISCONSIN Dear R. E. I welcome the opportunity to answer your questions, which I'm sure are shared by millions of other readers who know nothing about this disease.

(1) The isolation of "Hansen- ites" is a hangover from the biblical laws as set forth in the Book Of Leviticus. Since little was known about the treatment i of any disease in those days, separation from society was the law of the land. This included i mentally ill as well as the physically ill. (2) Such places as the lepro- sarium in Carville exist today because ignorant fearful Congressmen refuse to pass legislation which will enable victims of Hansen's disease to be treated in public hospitals. 3 It is not true that only close relatives can visit patients (not inmates, at the le- prosarium.

Anyone who wishes to visit a leprosarium may do so as I have done. TAX CUT Johnson's intimates believe that, while giving priority to civil rights legislation, he will not do so at the expense of the tax cut bill. At present, these two pieces of legislation are awaiting action in different Houses of Congress. It will be possible for him, therefore, to place the same degree of urgency on both, initially. But it is anticipated that the civil rights bill will move over to the Senate prior to the time that body has completed its work on the tax cut bill.

It may be at this stage that Johnson's lieutenants will a to establish a priority At this point, it is expected that Johnson will make known his preference for action on civil rights If he should do otherwise, he would be threatened with the loss of important Democratic leadership strength. Further. he would be faced with the loss of millions of votes that he. as a southerner, vitally needs if he is to be elected to the presidency. For still another reason, the better course lies in delaying the tax cut bill.

The effective date of this -bill can be made retroactive backed up to Jan. 1, if it is passed any time during the first six months next year. Unfortunately, there is no way of extending the benefits of civil rights retroactively. Dear Ann Landers: Neither my husband or I drink alcoholic beVerages. Drinking is prohibited by our religion and we were both feared in the strict tradition of our church We moved to this city a few months ago.

Because of my husband's position we are invited to many parties and I will be doing a great deal of entertaining. Next month we will be giving a dinner part. My husband feels that if we" don't serve cocktails we may be considered peculiar. Furthermore, he sas the folks may not wish to come to our home again. I don't want to hurt my husband in his work, but we've' never had liquor in our home and I'm reluctant to start now.

If you sa I am wrong I will reconsider. FIRM BELIEVER Dear Believer: It's a sad state of affairs when people who TWENTY-FIVE YEARS AGO i Plans were being completed for the annual Football Night when football letter winners of the 1938 season from Holland high school and Hope college will be guests of the Holland Exchange club in the Warm Friend Tavern. Christmas comes early this year for children of the Holland orthopedic room when members of the Holland Rotary club are entertaining the children at their annual Christmas dinner and a in the Warm Friend Tavern. The Holland Council of Social Agencies was organized at a meeting in the city hall. The organization is composed of all public and private a agencies of Holland.

The Sentinel Files TEN YEARS AGO Holland State Park will get a $133,500 slice of a $7,750,000 capital improvement outlay approved by the Michigan Conservation Commission at its meeting in Lansing. Lena E. Brummel more than 42 years of service at Zeeland post office, spanning a period in which she i served 31 years as assistant postmaster. The Board of a i opened bids for the special elementary bond issue for $900,000 and sold the to Braun, Bosworth, Co. and Associates of Toledo an unusually low interest rate.

SEVENTEEN YEARS AGO Holland's own Co. Michigan National Guard, will be at pjblio core- Your Money's By Sylvia Porter (First in a series of 2 columns) Non-work is soaring as an "occupation" in the United States, and today ranks unchallenged at the top of the fastest growing sources of our personal income. Right now, pay for non-work accounts for more than $100 billion a year, or over one-fifth of our total personal income. This huge chunk is going to Americans who are not directly working for the money through jobs, businesses or professions. Right now, our non-work population is a towering 7.3 million, triple the number in 1949, up one-third just since 1958.

This is a much larger percentage increase than the rise in our overall population and these non- workers are not unwillingly unemployed, not students, not the old and disabled. Rather, they are healthy or comparatively healthy Americans over 14 years of age who ara not woi king, not Facts From The Almanac By United Press International Today is Wednesday, Dec. 11, the 345th day of 1963 with 20 to follow. The moon Is approaching its new phase. The evening stars are Jupiter Saturn and Venus.

On this day in history: In 1816, Indiana became the 19th state to be admitted into the Union. In 1907, President Theodore Ptoosevelt announced he would not be a candidate for another term in the White House. In 1936, King Edward VIII abdicated the throne so he could marry an American divorcee, Wallis Warfield Simpson. In 1941, Germany and Italy declared war on the United States and Congress announced a few hours later a state of war exists between the United States, Germany and Italy. A thought for the day--American historian Henry Brooks Adams said, "Knowledge of human nature is the beginning and end of political education." Write Your Congressmen THE HON.

PATRICK V. Mc- NAMARA. U.S. Senator, Senate i Building, Washington, D.C. THE HON.

PHILIP A. HART, U.S. Senator, Senate i Building, Washington, D.C. THE HON. A R.

FORD, member of Congress, House Office Building, Washington. D.C.(Cong. Ford represents Michigan's 5th district, and Ottawa counties). THE HON. EDWARD HUTCHINSON, Member of Congress, House Office Building, Washington, D.C.

(Cong. Hutchinson- represents Michigan's 4th district, Allegan, Barry, Berrien, Cass, St. Joseph and Van Buren Counties). THE HON. NEIL STAEBLER, Congressman-at-large, House Office Building, Washington, D.C.

SEN. CLYDE GEERLINGS, State Capitol, Lansing, Mch. (Sen. Geerlings represents the 23rd senatorial district, Ottawa and Muskegon counties). SEN.

FREDERIC HILBERT, State Capitol, Lansing, Mich. (Sen. Hilbert represents the 8th senatorial district, Allegan, Barry and Van Buren counties). REP. RIEMER VAN TIL, State Capitol, Lansing, Mich.

(Rep. Van Til represents Ottawa County. REP. JAMES F. FARNS- WORTK, State Capitol, Lansing, Mich.

(Rep. Farnsworth represents Allegan county). One of America's cherished traditions the right of every citizen to write his representatives in Congress and the state legislature expressing his opin- on on issues facing his nation and state. We invite you to send to The Holland Evening Sentinel a copy of any communication with these men, specifying whether you will permit publication. Please limit communications for publication to 300 words or less.

WINNEK, AAA TRAFFIC SAFETY FOSTER CONTEST Ore Season Closes ESCANABA (UPI) The ore season closes Friday. The last ship scheduled to clear the Chicago and North Western dock will be the freighter Cornelius, bound for Trenton, with 16,200 tons of org. Michigan In Washington By Esther Van Wagoner Tufty 'WASHINGTON--When Senator Philip Hart (D. Mich.) first introduced his packaging and labeling bill "to protect the housewife from being gapped at the supermarket by confusing, misleading and even fraddulent labeling" he said "exposure" would help correct some of abuses and a law might not be necessan. As the evidence piled up, the Michigan senator became more and more convinced that legislation was needed altho he is aware, as he said in his last news conference, that "packagers have taken the hint" and made some changes in the information on their packages.

But apparently not enough, for he is pushing for passage in this session of Congress. The full judiciary committee will consider the favorable report of Hart's Anti-Trust and Monoply subcommittee i i a few days. A business magazine reports that a close look at the packages on the a shelves shows that "a lot of changes are going on quietly and not all of them for competitive reasons." It is reported that statements of net weight are in bigger letters and more prominently displayed. Blocks of type assure the consumer that, even though the package appears to be only partially filled, it was full when it left the factory and its weight conforms to the statement on the front of the package. "Large enough" sizes are now referred to as simply "large." Much of this, the magazine contends, "is the result of the truth-in-packaging bill." Another result of the proposed bill is that the housewife has become a more careful shopper.

She looks for the information on the package and compares it with the label or another brand. The Michigan Democrat discovered many abuses: faulty labels; confusing weights a measures; the not-full package; deceptive colors so the information was lost when printed yellow on yellow; the "5 cents off regular price" when the regular price was unknown; misleading slogans the "high quart," "large economy size." The sentiment grows for standardizing information and "honest packaging in the label." don't serve liquor are afraid of being considered social freaks. Anyone who would refuse to visit your home because he can't get a belt there would represent no great loss if he stayed away. Dear Ann Landers: Several weeks ago you had a letter in your column from a woman who wanted to know if marrying a divorced man was like buying a used car as she phrased it, "buying somebody else's trouble." I'd like to add something from experience. I am 26 and I married a divorced man a year ago.

I was divorced myself so I couldn't criticize him on that score. When we were going together he treated my as if I were a Dresden doll and he was afraid I'd break. Now that we are married I find that the things he said about his first wife seem to be true of him. He has a violent no respect for the truth and he drinks too much. My mother warned me that a divorced man would be a poor marriage risk.

She said divorced women are different because women learn from a mistake but men don't. How about this? DIM VIEW Dear Dim: Statistics don't support your mother's theory. When bo'th parties have been once divorced the chances for a successful marriage are slightly better than two rookies. A two-time loser, however, has a lesser chance for a successful marriage. And the odds lengthen as the number of divorces go up.

Ann Landers will be glad to help you with your problems. Send "them to her in care of this newspaper enclosing a i stamped, self-addressed envelope. i Copyright, 1963, Publishers Newspaper Syndicate LENNOX FURNACES Klaasen Heating Cooling Ed Klaasen, Owner East 40th St. Phone EX 4-8639 Ottawa Placement Service i 33 West 9th St. Ph.

EX 4-4520 I Wne-e Employers; for Permanent c-rd Temporary PARKWAY AWNING CX 1174 So. Shore Or. Ph. ED 5-5724 Aluminum Awnings, Sidings, Doors Windows Free Estimates Don Drew Roofing Contractor New Roofj, Repairs, Ice Chopping EX 6-4070 EX 6-5456 Suits Made to Measure ALTERATIONS REPAIRING Dykema Tailors 19'i West 8fh St. BEN DIRKSE ROOFING CO.

Roofing Insulation Ph. EX 6-4425 593 136th Ave. Holland FOR LOANS OAK Financial PHONE 394-551 FOR PROMPT PRINTING SERVICE 74West8fhSt Grand Rapids Girl Killed GRAND RAPIDS (UPI) A 17-year-old Grand Rapids girl was killed Tuesday when the car in which she was ridnig ran a stop sign at an intersection outside the city and was struck by a lumber truck. The ficlirn was identified as Marcy Ann Markowski. OLD NEWS PRINTERY Herman Bos AL RIEMERSMA Roofing Contractor Siding Insulation 649 Butternut Dr.

Ph. EX 6-4364 King Merritt Co. Mutual Funds John 234 Central Div. Mgr. EX 6-8712 HOME FURNACES HEATING HOMES SINCE 1916 GEORGE DALMAN 74 E.

16th Ph. EX 4-8461 Pete's Body Shop Bumping Refinlshing Rust Spott Repaired with Sheet Metal 127 N. River Ph. EX 6-7124 Nieboer Decorating Pointing Poperhanging Phone ED 5-3653 ROOFING Holland Ready Roofing Co. ALUMINUM SIDING 125 Howard Ave.

Ph. IX 2-9051 Even. EX 6-6734 WORLD-WIDE MOVING Estimates or CALL 751-6096 Vicser's Appliance MAYTAG HOTPOJNT Sales and Service Old M-21 Between Holland- Zeeland Phone EX 4-865S MOOI ROOFING ROOFING EAVES TROUGH ALUMINUM SIDING 29 E. 6th St. EX 2-3826 tO Yeari lopteg Ho'Iand Drr NKWSPAPEliflRC!.

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About The Holland Evening Sentinel Archive

Pages Available:
100,038
Years Available:
1948-1976