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Ironwood Daily Globe from Ironwood, Michigan • Page 8

Location:
Ironwood, Michigan
Issue Date:
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8
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Company Buys Ironwood TV Cable System Ironwood Community Systems (Cable was pur- rhasod hy Hie American Cable- vision Co. of Beverly Hills, a spokesman 'for the local firm lias reported. American Cablevision reportedly is the largest cable television company in the world, serving more than 85.000 homes across the nation. Jack Kent Cooke of Beverly Hills is the president of the company. American Cablevision is presently negotiating contracts with Cable Constructors Inc.

of Iron Mountain, to rebuild cable TV in this sytem and extend the service from a five chann 1 system as at present, to channels. Announcement of fur ther expansion will be made a the program is developed. i was reported. Cooke has been prominent i the negotiations for the sale an nounced here today. Besides hi many interests in the televisio field and other activities, he i owner of the Los Angeles Laker National Basketball Associatio team and a principal stockholc er in the National Foo a 1 League.

"Our company." said Cooke "is delighted to add the Iron wood Community Systems our organization. We know you area as a progressive, forward looking community, with sub stantial business interests and healthy outlook for the future. "The facilities of our organ ization. under the sale, will be completely at the disposal the local cable system and we hope and believe the arrangement will be mutually pleasan and profitable for the part i immediately concerned and the local community." Cooke stated he is enthusias tic about the CATV industry and its dramatic growth, anc feels that the future holds even greater possibilities for this comparatively new field. Ironwood Community Systems was formed in 1958 by three men, Richard Juntikka and William Link of Houghton, and Thomas Renn of Iron n- tain, under the managership oi Alfred Wright.

Obituaries John W. Maki BESSEMER John W. Maki, 55, former Bessemer resident, died Friday at Sutler General Hospital at Sacramento, Calif. He had been a patient there for six months. The deceased is a brother of Mrs.

Mae Ross and an uncle of Mrs. Louis Adams, both of Bessemer. Funeral arrangements are incomplete. The remains may be brought to Bessemer for interment. John Lind BESSEMER John Lind, 41, Amish Pupils Are Hauled to Public School HAZLETON, Iowa (AP) Tradition that has shielded an Amish sect from the outside world crumbled Friday as girls in bonnets and boys in flat hats were rounded up and hauled to a public school.

The parents were in tears, but the children sang all the way to school. Many were the same youngsters who earlier in the day, with the urging of bearded fa- son of Mr and Mrs John Lind, there and shawl-covered moth- In July, 1962, Juntikka purchased the interests of Renn and Link and he has been operating the system up to the resent time. Wright resign his post as manager in October, 1962, and Steven Buch ko has been manager ever since Since cable TV first made its way into the area back in 1958 it has made tremendous strides. The subscription in this area is now close to 1,500, and the firm has a cable line which also extends into Hurley. When the firm first started the only channels availa 1 were Channels 3, 6 and 7.

In the fall of 1962, however, the ALP Microwave Corp. extended its service, furnishing Ironwood Community Systems with WLUC-TV, Channel 6, a quette, and WLUK-TV, Channel 11, Green Bay. This increased the interest in cable TV considerably, company officials said. The company has a high tower located on Maple Hill Farm with the addition of a microwave receiving rack. From there the signals are picked up, put through precision electronic equipment, and then on coaxial cables mounted on utility poles and distributed throughout the city.

In addition to eliminating the need for home antennas, the cable system eliminates most oi the noise and interference anc transmits a clear picture. The signal is also able to carry color TV signals. 1723 Hadley died Nov. 13 at St. Joseph Hospital, Flint.

He was born in Ironw Nov. 25, 1923 and moved with his parents to Bessemer in 1928. He was graduated from A. D. Johnston High School with the class of 1942.

After graduation he joined the Air Force and served in the South Pacific until 1945. He was a graduate of General Motors Institute and served as an engineer with General Motors 20 years. He married the former Hes ter Rose Martuch Nov. 20, 1954 She survives, together with five children, Sandy, Michael Karen, Nancy and Patrick, al at home, his parents, Mr. and Mrs.

John Lind and one broth er. Norman, all of Bessemer. Funeral services were held Nov. 17 with burial at the new Calvary Cemetery, Flint. Funerals ADAM J.

NEITO MASS Funeral services for Adam J. Neito, 64, where held Nov. JO at Holy Family Catholic Church, Ontonagon, with the Rev. Fr. Shiroda officiating.

Interment was in the Catholic Cemetery. Pallbearers were Tony Podsiadlik, Frank Podsiadlik, Ernest Phillips, Joseph Andrejewski, Harry Jesky and Willard Spitz. Nuclear Seamen Go On Strike NEW YORK (AP)-A spokesman for the American Maritime Association, one of four employer bargaining units for U.S. ship owners, says a seafarers union has struck 100 shipping companies. At Baltimore, members of the International Organization of Masters, Mates and Pilots refused Friday to sail association ships.

The New York employer spokesman said no passenger ships were involved and no vessels were tied up in the port of Continued from Page logical targets for nuclear detonation. Even more important, enemy and friend are intermingled. The war is a series of small engagements, usually covering areas of only a few square miles. To strike atomically al one might also mean striking at the other. Nuclear scientists have drastically scaled down the size of warheads and bombs.

Two decades ago, when the atomic age began, there was a that the approximate 20 kiloton yield of then existing est devices and bombs was the ninimum possible. This no onger is true. Official publications mention weapons of "very low" yield, meaning less than one kiloton or ess than the equivalent of energy produced in the detonation of ,000 tons of conventional exploit ves. But because of a nuclear ex- special heat and pressure characteristics, even "lit- le" warheads with a yield of about 500 tons have a lethal range far beyond a similar conventional detonation. Post-detonation contamination is no longer the serious problem once facing weaponeers.

Refinement in design of the explosive equipment and tests have shown that if the fireball does not touch the earth radiological contamination is comparatively minor and of short duration. On the other hand, even these explosions produce instantaneous neutron radiation which is lethal within moderate ranges from the detonation point, but do not produce residual radiation. Strike New York. At issue tract. is a general con- The union spokesman in Baltimore emphasized that no military cargo would be affected.

Although the AMA is composed of East and Gulf Coast ship owners, its around the world. ships sail Severe Drought in Six-Prorvince Area HONG KONG (AP) Severe drought has hit a six-province area of northern mainland China and hundreds of thousands of acres of wheat may not survive the winter. Reports from Communist Chinese newspapers and magazines, as well as from travelers, indicate that in some areas winter wheat seed has failed to sprout or is few days. dying within a Continued from Page One session in Washington immediately, and the White House, Defense Department and other government agencies urged a quick settlement. Hours of negotiating failed to produce any agreement, and the sessions were recessed Friday night to meet again today after company and union representatives had an overnight chance to figure out new proposals.

Some possibility of discussion of an agreement to let machinists go ahead with work on the Gemini project at Cape Kennedy, despite the general strike, was reported. "We'll rearrange the Gemini work schedules so we can do those things now that don't require a great number of technicians, but I don't see how we can go through the whole weekend and still stay on schedule" for the Dec. 4 launch, a NASA spokesman said at Cape Kennedy. Issues in the strike revolve around modification of a no- strike clause in the machinists' contract, loosening of a wage freeze to permit advancement of qualified employes, better distribution of overtime, additional paid holidays, more accurate wage descriptions, and improved vacation and sick leave ers of the Old Amish faith, hid in cornfields and around barns to escape the school bus they knew was coming. "We told the parents last night we were coming so that they could prepare the children, so that it wouldn't be a traumatic experience for them," said Buchanan County Atty.

Harlan Lemon, who is enforcing the Iowa school laws. "Instead they apparently told them other things, some of which were not true," he said. The parents, whose religious faith tells them to shun worldly things, had held out against sending their children to public school, although hundreds of children are en- Abe Yoder met other Amish rolled. Amishman school officials when they appeared at a one-room school maintained by the sect. Inside, 14 children studied by the light of a korosene lantern at rustic wooden desks.

The Amish farmers have been maintaining two one-room schools taught by their own teachers with eighth-grade education, which they think is enough for the simple farm life. Their failure to have state-certified teachers is the basis of the dispute. At the Hazelton school the children found persons to show them around and to introduce them to schoolmates. The Amish youths took part in recess after class. Some of the boys played basketball.

They had never ridden in a school bus. Fathers and mothers took them to the Amish schools hi horse-driven buggies. Some of the fathers have gone to jail. Within the past month they have been assessed more than $10,000 in fines they would not pay and their corn and hogs have been attached. ARE former area men have received promotions in the Michigan state police and have been given new assignments.

Staff Sgt. Jack A. Ebli, left, was promoted to lieutenant and has been assigned to Detroit. Trooper Joseph M. Panosso was promoted to corporal and was assigned to East Lansing.

Ebli was born Jan. 4, 1918, in Ironwood. He graduated from the high school here and during World War II served in the Army for 36 16 of them overseas. He is married and has two children. Ebli joined the state police Nov.

4, 1940, and has served continuously since that time, except for the period where he was granted military leave. Panosso was born April 30, 1931, at Bessemer. He graduated from the high school there and served in the Army for 45 months. He is married and has four children. Panosso joined the state police Aug.

29, 1955. Reds Prepare Attack on Law Plan to Move Ike Monday FT. GORDON, Ga. (AP) Former President Dwight D. Eisenhower continues to mend, and doctors now plan, tentatively, to move him to Walter Reed Army Hospital in Washington Monday by train.

The general, 75, has been hos- ntalized here since Nov. 9 when te suffered the first of two chest-pain attacks which, the doctors say, resulted in damage to his inner heart muscles. The doctors relayed word again Friday afternoon through he Ft. Gordon press officer, Capt. Wallace Hitchcock, that five-star general would travel as a patient, that is, he would not be allowed to take any steps.

Metal Cards Suggested WASHINGTON (AP) At least one New Yorker thinks the government could cut down on draft card burning simply by making draft cards out of metal. Rep. Howard W. Robison, R- N.Y., acknowledged today receipt of the suggestion from Mrs. Joseph Barrett of Conklin, N.Y., and added a touch of his own in reply: "If this suggestion proves to be feasible," he said, "I might add an additional thought that in view of the problems of the administration with certain segments of the business community, the new draft cards should be made of Cherry Promotion Campaign Planned TRAVERSE CITY (AP) 50-state cooperative promotion of cherries next February hi conjunction with at least two major consumer product firms was announced Friday by the National Cherry Festival Co- mittee.

Sears Roebuck Co. and Pillsbury Baking Co. were identified by committee president David Pierce as two of the organizations taking part. He said full details would be made known at a later date. Jury Will Not Report Until Monday, Nov.

29 BESSEMER Judge Robert R. Wright, Gogebic County Circuit Court, informs that the jury will not report Monday, Nov. 22, as scheduled, but is called to report on Monday, Nov. 29, at 9:30 a.m. in the, Circuit Court room, Bessemer Courthouse.

By JOSEPH E. MOHBAT WASHINGTON (AP) The U.S. Communist party under a $230,000 fine for refusing to register as an agent of the Soviet Union prepared today for another all out constitutional attack on the law under which it was convicted. The three-week trial of the party ended late Friday night when a federal jury decided it had violated the McCarran Act the 1950 Internal Security Act. The law, passed over President Harry Truman's veto, requires the party to register with the attorney general and disclose all its internal workings.

It took the jury of eight women and four men 2Vz hours to decide the government had proved not only that the party failed to register, but did so despite the availability of a volunteer to sign the forms on its behalf. After an earlier trial in 1962, the party was convicted and fined $120,000, but this was reversed by the Court of Appeals on the grounds the government had failed to prove there was such a volunteer. The court said party officers could not be compelled to register because they would risk self-incrimination under other anti-Communist laws. This time, the government proved that two paid FBI plants within the party a California housewife and an elderly, retired Negro longshoreman were available as volunteers if the party chose to use them. Party General Secretary Gus Hall reacted to the verdict with a slight shrug of the shoulders.

He said later he wasn't surprised. "You can't win them all," said the heavy-set, granite- jawed Hall. "This is like asking us to find our own hangman, to pay him and build the scaffold and when we'refused to do it, the government said it would provide two hangmen." The party buoyed by last Monday's Supreme Court decision that individual members may not be forced to register because of self-incrimination planned to hinge its appeal on that guarantee of the Constitution's Fifth Amendment. The two indictments under which the party was convicted Friday night charged 22 separate failures to sign the registration form each specified day in the indictments standing for a separate offense punishable by a $10,000 fine. The 23rd count charged failure to file the accompanying statement of party membership, finances, and publishing and printing apparatus.

It carried a similar fine. U.S. Dist. Judge William B. Jones imposed the maximum penalty moments after the verdict was given.

Radioactivity Release Explanation Is Given WASHINGTON (AP) The State Department says a technical miscalculation led to the release of radioactivity in a Soviet underground nuclear explosion last January. Giving this explanation Friday of the release of some radioactive debris into the atmosphere, the department was noncommittal on whether the blast violated the limited test-ban treaty signed by the United States, the Soviet Union and other nations. 5 involved in Plot To Take Over Regime By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FORT LAMY, Chad (AP) President Francois Tombalbaye said today three ministers and two members of the National Assembly were involved in a plot to take over the government. Tombalbaye claimed that they sought to assassinate him. He said other arrests might be' 1 Mrs.

Appointed to District Post BESSEMER Mrs. Virginia Selin, Marquette, chairman of the llth Congressional District "Voter Education Prog a has announced the appointment of Mrs. Axel Tenlen, Bessemer, as Gogebic-Ontonagon Cou chairman of the "theater party" fund raising projects, sponsored throughout the district to raise funds for the voter educat i campaign. "Voter Education is a new term in the Upper Penins 1 said Mrs. Selin," but it is a term which we hope to make more meaningful and important in developing better local, state, and national government.

This new committee intends to get the biggest percentage of eligible persons in the district, on the registered voters rolls, in local history," she said. "We can only hope to do this by informing the people about government and making them interested in participating hi government. Too many peop 1 fail to take an active interest hi government because they don't understand what it is all about or that they are important in molding effective government," said Mrs. Selin. "We hope do our part in changing this and making every citizen realize his responsibility for active, individual participation," Mrs.

Selin said. The Voter Education mittee's first activity will be a series of theater parties in the llth Congressional Dis trict. Premiers of just released top- rate Hollywood movies will be held in several theaters in the district. Profits from these movies will be used to help pay for voter education information and voter registration work. According to Mrs.

Selin, more details will be released soon on what movie will be shown in this area and the date of the showing. Coup Lacking In Support SANTO DOMINGO, Dominican Republic "discontented politicians" are plotting a coup but they lack any support in the Dominican Republic, says provisional President Hector Garcia-Godpy. Garcia-Godoy did not identify the group but hinted that right- wing extremists might be involved. He said in an interview that the plotters "represent a mentality rather than a political sector." Observers noted he had used the phrase "typical of'a mentality" two days ago in dismissing a claim by ex-Brig. Gen.

Elias Wessin Wessin that there were Communists in Garcia-Godoy's government. Briefly Told The Ironwood Woman's Club is sponsoring a teen-age dance tonight from 8:30 to 11:30 at the Memorial Building. Music i 11 be by a local combo. Club members and their husbands will be chaperones. 3 Officers, 4 Men Get Decorations TRAVERSE CITY (AP) Three officers and four enlisted men of the U.S.

Coast Guard air station here received unit commendations Friday for meritorious service with the Coast Guard disaster control group. Air crew members, they took part in flood relief operations on the upper Mississippi River last April 8 through May 5. Cmdr. Harrison, air base commander, made the presentations. Firemen Called Due To Overheated Motor The Hurley Fire Departm was called out at 7 Friday evening to the Clyde Pecotte home at 303 Poplar Street because of an overheated furnace mot r.

The damage to the home was repoteu by Pecotte and the fire department to be negligible. Expansion of Shoe Plant to Be Discussed Means of providing space for the proposed expansion of the Weinbrenner Shoe Company plant at Kimball will be i s- cussed at a meeting to be held at 7 Monday night at the Kimball Community Center. Carl Prosek, chairman of the Town of Kimball, said the Town Board has called the public meeting to decide whether the town should take its highway equ i p- ment put of the town garage and keep it in a temporary building until a new garage can be built next spring. Prosek said a heated building is available for storage of the equipment which includes two big trucks used for snow plowing, a road grader, a small plow and a loader. Prosek stated that the Weinbrenner which established a new plant about two months ago in a new building which the town had built as an addition to the garage, wishes to expand immediately and would like to take over that portion of the garage now used by the town.

According to Prosek, the firm is employing 22 persons now and has indicated that it will hire about 25 additional workers within the near future if it can obtain the additional space. The plant specializes in hand- sewn moccasin shoes. At the present time the shoes are being sewn at the Kimball plant and then sent to the company's plant at Merrill for finish ing, but Prosek said the firm should like to expand so that it can make the complete shoes and prepare them for delivery at the Kimball plant. 3 Killed on State Roads By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS A 4 months-old Temperance girl and two other persons died in accidents on Michigan highways during the early hours of the weekend. The Associated Press reports the weekend fatalities for the period beginning at 6 p.m.

Friday and ending at midnight Sunday. Patricia Susan Deiners of Temperance was killed Friday night when her parents' car struck a vehicle stopped at the U.S. 23-1 75 intersection near Flint, State Police said. Larry Eberhard, 22, of Battle Creek, was found dead in his car near Augusta today. The car had hit a tree during the night.

Timothy P. Horgan, 38, of Detroit, was killed today when he was struck by a car while walking across Dixie Highway near Pontiac. Ski Issues Are Mailed The special ski supplement published by The Daily Globe last Tuesday has gone to nearly every state in the Union and to 17 foreign countries in'mail- ings made by The Daily Globe for readers. There were 2,036 individual copies mailed in addition to the regular circulation of the newspaper, plus more than 10,000 bulk sales to ski hills and others. The foreign countries to which the supplement was mailed included Canada, England, Scotland, Norway, Finland, Sweden, Belgium, West Germany, Italy, Algeria, Union of South Africa, Argentina, Okinawa, Japan, South Viet Nam, France, and Austria.

Navy Honors War Victim WASHINGTON (AP) The Navy will name a new destroyer for a 27-year-old pilot who was killed in April in an attack on North Viet Nam gun emplacements. The pilot, Lt. William M. Roark of Omaha, is the first American serviceman killed in the Viet Nam war to be honored in this way, the Navy said Friday in announcing a destroyer to be launched next year will bear his name. Roark, a native of Sioux City, Iowa, and a graduate of the U.S.

Naval Academy, won the Distinguished Flying Cross for the mission. Season Snow 77.9 Inches Three and one-tenth inches of new snow fell on the Gogebic Range Friday evening and early today, bringing the total for the season to 17.9 inches. Last year at this time, 21 inches of snow had fallen, according to the records at The Daily Globe. Temperatures during the 24- hour period that began at noon Friday and ended at 11 this morning were relatively moderate. The high at 11 a.m.

was 32 degrees and the snow was thawing. The low was 27 and was recorded at 4 this morning. FAGi 8 Ironwood Dally Globe, Saturday, Nov. 20, 1965 Hospital Notes GRAND VIEW. Admitted Friday: Clayton J.

Valle, 315 Ayer medical. Discharged Friday: Nick A. Mattson, Montreal; Mrs. Sigurd L. Johnson, Mrs.

William Sikonia, Ironwood; ard J. Hauta, Bessemer. DIVINE INFANT, Wakefield. Admitted Friday: Mrs. Charles East, Ramsay, Mrs.

Stein, Trout Creek, Jean Cappo, Wakefield, medical. Discharged Friday: Mrs. Goldie Vaughn, Mercer; Mrs. Helmer Lund, Bergland; Kevin Annonson, Bessemer; Ang 1 Filippi, Mrs. Leo Chantelois, Ramsay; Mrs.

Felix Obertone, Hurley; Anton Kasieta, Ironwood; Roy Brunelle, Wakefield. 4 Injured in 2-Car Crash Four persons are receiving treatment at Grand View Hospital for injuries sustained in a two-car collision at 2:15 a.m. today on highway US-51 near Oma Town Hall, south of Hurley. Hospitalized are William W. Ruona, 26, of Kenosna; Albert J.

Jubeck, 21, and his wife, 22, of Kenosha, and Richard R. Steffan, 24, of Slinger, Wis. Iron County officers said Mrs. Jubeck apparently susta i the most serious injuries when hci head went through the windshield of one of the vehicles. The officers said Mrs.

Jubeck suffered a severe laceration of her lower lip, a n- cussipn and possible internal injuries. According to the officers, Ruona sustained a cut over the right eye, a cut on his right arm and possible chest i juries; Jubeck head cuts and possible ankle and spine injuries, and Steffan a cut on lower lip and possible knee and chest injuries. The accident involved cars being driven by Ruona and Steffan, according to the ficers, who said Ruona was driving north on US-51, with Mr. and Mrs. Jubeck as passengers, and Steffan was going south when the vehicles collided almost head-on.

Both vehicles were badly damaged. Basketball Scores HIGH SCHOOL Eben 63 Cooks 58 Gladstone 82 Negaunee 65 Republic 54 National Mine 46 Munising 62 Marquette 53 Escanaba 65 Escanaba Holy Name 50 THE WEATHER TEMPERATURES IN IRONWOOD Saturday. November 20, IOCS. For 24 hr. period ending at 11 a.m.

2 p.m. .30 4 p.m. .30 6 p.m. .30 8 p.m. .29 Id p.m.

.29 Midnight 29 2 a.m. .28 4 a.m. .27 6 a.m. .28 8 a.m. .29 10 a.m.

.30 11 a.m. .32 Precipitation, year to date, 33,16 in. Relative humidity, 88 per cent. Barometer: 6 am 29.59; 11 am 29.68. THE WEATHER ELSEWHERE By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS High Low Free Albany, cloudy 41 30 Albuquerque, clear 66 34 Atlanta, clear 62 38 Btemarck, rain 42 30 1 Boise, cloudy 51 35 Boston, clear 47 30 Buffalo, cloudy 40 36 Chicago, cloudy 44 39 Cincinnati, clear 47 30 Cleveland, clear 43 29 Denver, clear 64 25 Des Moines, clear 51 34 Detroit, cloudy 51 35 Fairbanks, rain 14 12 .09 Fort Worth, cloudy 70 61 Helena, clear 50 25 Honolulu, cloudy 78 73 .03 Indianapolis, cloudy 48 31 Jacksonville, cloudy 71 51 Juneau, rain 36 27 .01 Kansas City, clear 60 40 Los Angeles, cloudy 69 38 Louisville, clear 52 29 Memphis, clear 64 37 Miami, cloudy 80 64 Milwaukee, clear 40 29 .01 cloudy 40 30 New Orleans, cloudy 74 62 Nsw York, cloudy 50 39 Okla.

City, rain 74 55 Omaha, clear 52 35 Philadelphia, clear 47 23 clear 76 44 Pittsburgh, clear 40 25 Ptlnd, clear 41 24 Ptlnd, rain 62 49 .18 Rapid City, cloudy 62 37 Richmond, clear 54 27 St. Louis, clear 57 39 Salt Lk. City, cloudy 54 38 .22 San Diego, clear 67 55 San cloudy 61 55 Seattle, rain 60 47 .72 Tampa, clear 75 60 Washington, clear 52 32,.. Winnipeg, cloudy 1C 9 RANGE SKIES Sunset today 4:23. Sunrise tomorrow 7:10.

Moonrise tomorrow 5:19 a.m. New Moon Nov. 22. At this New Moon there will be an annular eclipse of the Sun, visible over part of Asia. The last eclipse of this series, Nober 12,1947, was seen over parts of the Pacific Ocean and South America.

Sunday Sunset 4:22. Sunrise Monday 7:12. Moonrise Monday 6:33 a.m. Prominent in northeast 5:55 p.m. This is the fifth brightest star and its light takes about 45 years to reach the Earth.

Prominent Constellation Cassiopeia, high above Capella. Police Issue Hearings Set LANSING (AP) The House Judiciary Committee will conduct hearings in December on Detroit Mayor Jerome Cavanagh's proposal to permit police to stop and search citizens on reasonable suspicion. Rep. William Boos, D-Saginaw, chairman of the committee, said hearing dates have not been set but that one will be held in Detroit and a second in Flint or Grand Rapids. The proposal would allow a policeman to stop any person and demand that the person give his name, address and an explanation of his actions if the officer reasonably suspects the person has or is about to commit a felony or high misdemeanor.

At the same time, Sen. Raymond Dzendzel, D-Detroit, the majority leader, gave his support to Cavanagh's plan and listed it as one of 14 law enforcement proposals to be introduced at the 1966 legislative ession. The others include provision for broader search warrants, an increase in the maximum compulsory school attendance age from 16 to 17, a riot control law, stiffer penalties for assaulting a policeman and an increase in state police salaries. LEGALS Nov 8, 13, 20, 27 STATE OF MICHIGAN, Court for the County of Gogebic Estate of Mary Smollar Chaknich, Marin A. Smollar Chakanich, Deceased.

It Is Ordered that on January 11, 1866. at ten (101 A.M., In the Probate Courirooin, Bessemer, Michigan a hearing be held at which all creditors of said deceased are required to prove their claims. Creditors must file sworn claims with the Court and serve a copy on Charles C. Keoton executor, 713 E. Ayer Street, Ironwood, Michigan, prior to said hearing.

Publication and service shall made as provided by Statute and Court Rule. LEONARD J. McMANMAN, A Certified Copy: Judge of Probate. ANN S. Register of Probate.

Frank E. Hook Attorney for estate Cloon Cloon, of Counsel Ironwood, Michigan. Oct. 30, Nov 6, 13, 20 STATE OF MICHIGAN, The Probate Court for the County of Gogebic Estate ol Mary Exworthy, Mary Exworth, Deceased. It Is Ordered that on the 6th day of January, 1966, at 10:00 A.M., the Probate Courtroom, Bessemer, Michigan a hearing be held at which all creditors of said deceased ara required to prove their claims.

Creditors must file sworn with the court and serve a copy on Sam Exworthy, Administrator of said Estate, 315 W. Francis Street, Ironwood, Michigan, prior to said hearing. Publication and service shall made as provided by Statute and Court Rule. Dated: October 26, 1965. LEONARD J.

McMANMAN, A Certified Copy: Judge of ANN S. MASSIE, Register of. Probate. Clifford A. Trethewey, Attorney for Petitioner, 119 S.

Suffolk, Ironwood, Michigan. Nov. 13, 20, 27 Dec. 4 STATE OF MICHIGAN, The Court for the County of Gogebic Estate of MARY MAZUREK, Da- ceased. It is Ordered that on January 18th, 1966, at 10 A.M., in the Courtroom, City of Bessemer, Gogebic County, Michigan a hearing held at which all creditors of said deceased are required to prove their claims.

Creditors must file sworn statements with the Court and serve a copy on Bernice Barna, Adminis- tratrix with Will Annexed, 119 Poplar Street, Ironwood, Michigan, prior to said hearing. Publication and service shall be made as provided by Statute and Court Rule. Dated: November 9, 1968. LEONARD J. McMANMAN, A Certified Copy: Judge of Probate.

ANN S. MASSIE, Register of Probate. Jerome C. Nadolney Attorney for said estate 424 East Ayer Street Ironwood, Michigan. Oct.

30, 6, 13, 20 STATE OK MICHIGAN, The Probate Court tor the County of Gogebic Estate of AXEL MOBERG, Deceased. It is Ordered that on the 30th day of November, 1965, at ten A.M., in the Probate Courtroom in the Court House, Bessemer, Michigan a hearing be held on the petition of Violet Jiriki.wic, for probate of a purported Will, and for granting ol administration to the executor named, or Fome other suitable person, and (or a determination of heirs. Publication and service shall be made as provided by Statute and Court Rule. Dated: October 26, 1965. LEONARD J.

McMANMAN. A Certified Copy: Judge of ANN S. MASSIE, Register of Probate. William Fellow Attorney for Estate ol Axel E. Moberg, dec'd Bessemer.

Michigan. Nov. 20, 27; Dec. 4, 11 STATE OF MICHIGAN, The Probate Court for the County of Gogebic Estate of PETER J. NICKEL It is Ordered that on the 2Jst dav of December, 1965.

at ten A.M., in the Probate Courtroom, Court House Bessemer, Michigan a hearing be held on the petition of Frances M. Nickel, Executrix, for allowance of her final account. Publication and service shall be made as provided by Statute and ijOurt riule. A 01 0 McMANMAN, Register of Probate Wright Zlnn Attorney for Estate 114 S. Suffolk Street Ironwood, Michigan.

Nov. 20, 27, Dec. 4, 11 STATE OF MICHIGAN, Probate Court for the County of GoBeblc ESe AGNES HESTER. De- It is Ordered that on the 25th day of January, 1966, 10:30 A.M? In the the CowE Michigan a Which a11 "editors of deceased are required to prove Register of Probate Attorney for Estate Brogan Building Ironwood, Michigan..

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