Skip to main content
The largest online newspaper archive
A Publisher Extra® Newspaper

Battle Creek Enquirer from Battle Creek, Michigan • Page 14

Location:
Battle Creek, Michigan
Issue Date:
Page:
14
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

THE BATTLE I AND NEWS Friday, January 4, 1963 BULLETINS Stock Rally Goes On With Ticker Behind Movie Industry Stirring Long III Film Giant Is Showing Some Signs of Recovery Side also takes an op has suffered from hardening of NEW YORK (ff) The stock market continued its new year rally in heavy early trading today. Gains of most key stocks were confined to fractions, but ticker tape ran as much as six Dean, a New York City lawyer, felt he should now return to private life. NEW YORK (A A former bar association leader appealed to President Kennedy today to invoke the Taft-Hartley act to halt this city's four -week newspaper strike. The lawyer, City Councilman Theodore K. Kupferman, a Republican, sent a telegram to Kennedy as negotiations in the deadlocked wage dispute bogged to a standstill.

MOSCOW IPD Soviet Premier Nikita Khrushchev will head the Soviet delegation to the East German Communist party congress Jan. 15, the official Tass news agency said today. timistic view: "The rest of the world, as well as the United States, is hungry for entertainment. Our business is going to flourish in the next six months and year." Plan 20 More Having made 16 films in the past five years, the Mirisch brothers have announced they will pro duce 20 in the next two years class attractions budgeted for a total of $65-70 millions. The most encouraging news for Hollywood came when MCA entered into a consent decree with the Department of Justice, which had sued to prevent merger of the show business giant with Dec-ca Records and its subsidiary, Universal Pictures.

With the announcement that the merger will be permitted, MCA disclosed a $lO-million program for modernizing the Universal lot. It already hums with television filming by MCA's Revnue, the networks' young supplier, and the features of Universal. The tough, young minded management of MCA is expected to bring new vigor to the film business, which SAGINAW (tPB Saginaw residents will vote Monday on whether or not they want a city income tax. Circuit Judge James E. O'Neill today lifted a restraining order which would have blocked the election.

O'Neill said he was disqualifying himself from ruling on the constitutionality of the case since he is a taxpayer in Saginaw. WASHINGTON (IPD The long mate Relay communication satellite today success-folly relayed television test patterns between Andover, Maine, and Pleumeur-Bodou, France. Relay, launched Dec 13, had been, silent because of a power drain until yesterday. CHICAGO IPt George Halas, owner-coach of the Chicago Bears, has asked the National Football League to make an investigation of rumors of a possible pro football scandal, it was revealed today. George Halas son of the Bear owner and secretary of the team, said NFL Commissioner Pete Rozelle was asked to look into reports that "fellows in the league were associating with some undesirable types." BERLIN (IPD The VS.

Army, once again proved its rights of Berlin access today by sending convoys in both directions over the winter-bound East German Autobahn without Soviet interference. But the Communists accused the West of "a gross misuse of the airways" over East Germany by allegedly flying in West Germans to blow up the Berlin walL WASHINGTON Arthur H. Dean has submitted his resignation as chief U.S. negotiator at the disarmament conference at Geneva, it was announced today. A spokesman for the arms control and disarmament agency said By BOB THOMAS HOLLYWOOD (AP) That long-ailing giant, the movie industry, is at last showing signs of stimng from its sickbed.

No industrial illness has been so widely diagnosed. But while the causes are well-known competition of television and other forms of amusement, flight of production abroad for cost and tax advantages, rising film industries in Europe the cure has been elu sive. The movie bosses have con cluded that there will be no dramatic solution to their prob lems, that they will survive only by better pictures, harder selling and sounder management Sees Rosy Future Eric Johnston, the constant op timist, sees a rosy future for the industry which be heads. To support his view, the president of the Motion Picture Producers Association declares that the number of theaters in the world rose from 79,000 in 1947 to 154,900 in 1960. Tough minded movie maker Harold J.

Miriscb Like It Hot, The Apartment," "West Rites Saturday For Jack Carson HOLLYWOOD (AP) Funeral services will be conducted in nearby Glen dale Saturday for actor Jack Carson, who died of can cer Wednesday at his San Fer nando Valley home. Dr. Raymond Lindquist, pastor of the Hollywood Presbyterian Church, will officiate. The serv ices will be held at the Wee Kirk The Heather in Forest Lawn Memorial-Park and will be fol lowed by cremation and private interment. Actor Dennis Morgan, a close friend of Carson, will be one of the pallbearers.

Carson, 52, is survived by his widow, Sandra Tucker Carson; two children, John Jr. and Katby, by a previous marriage; his mother, Elsa Carson, and a brother Bob. SAVE TIME! How Civil Service Works Is Explained in Handbook the executive arteries. Looks to Zanuck Hollywood also finds hope in the aggressive take-over of 20th Cen tury-Fox by its onetime founder, Darryl F. Zanuck.

Hollywood still faces a major problem in runaway production which has been a hardship for labor. During one week, 15 fea tures were being filmed in Haywood while 21 American spon sored movies were being shot overseas. The ratio would have been 10-1 in favor of Hollywood 10 years ago. Some of the films were being shot abroad to use foreign locales which can't be duplicated here. But many were being made to take advantage of cheaper labor costs, tariff breaks and tax concessions for the talent.

Now the tax situation is changed. New regulations that become effective Jan. 1 make movie stars and other Americans who live overseas subject to U.S. income tax on money earned abroad. The law also increases taxes for many firms doing business overseas.

in this handbook to be sent to each Romney appointee. Explains the booklet: "Some people have the misconception that state agencies cannot fire undesirable employes. The fact is that in the last 21 years 6,819 Civil Service employes have been fired with only 945 appeals and 177 reinstatements by the Civil Service Commission Then it goes along to suggest: "There is little question that many times this number have been allowed to resign when faced with removal proceedings." An administrator, said the memo, should understand that Civil Service is interested in removal of all undesirable em ployes in state service. "But this can only be done," it stated, "by orderly process not by sudden caprice, by in nuendoes or by vagary." The booklet then explained the civil service procedure of ratings and appeals allowed a worker who might be on the firing line. Included were some of the main principles of Civil Service such as: No discrimination because of politics, race or creed.

Veterans preference. Restrictions on gifts. No right to strike. The state, the booklet told each new Romney appointee, "hires, trains, fires and retires thousands of employes each year." The little handbook, to be received by every GOP appointee as soon as he settles down in his new office, is a well-written factual account of how Civil Service works. It also tells how to dispose- of the people he thinks should go.

SOOT is unbunradfoel Warm Blood Is Best For Transfusions CHICAGO (CPD The inci dence of heart arrest among pa tients receiving massive blood transfusions is "markedly re duced" when the blood is warmed to about body temperature, two New York City doctors reported today. Drs. C. Paul Boyan and Wil liam S. Howland said they com pared the incidence of heart arrest among two groups of pa tients undergoing the same type of operation (radical surgery for cancer) under similar conditions.

One group received transfusions of cold blood, the other warm. The doctors said there were 21 heart arrests among 36 pa tients receiving cold blood and only 1 arrest among 45 who received warm transfusions. These results, the doctors said, "lead us to believe that the bank blood should be warmed to body temperatures when given rapidly and in large amounts. ONE SERVICE 6 SONS INC AMOELL. STREET stopCW ML LOCAL TV millWli CALL WO 2-9585 Or Come In For a Demonstration Parson Holmberg Heating Air Conditioning Div.

LEATHERS AN OIL CO. 66 E. Jackson WO 2-9535 LANSING Listed on page 13 the unlucky number for somebody is some handy advice in a little booklet state Civil Service will be sending to all new appointees named by Gov. Romney. During his two years in office it is estimated Romney will name around 150 persons to administrative jobs.

They might have some problems with left-overs from the past 14 years of a Democratic administration. The new Re publican boss of a state agency might think he is stuck with people he doesn't like and doesn't want He might think he couldn't fire them. Why? Because they are protected by Civil Service. Not so, Civil Services advises SAVE MONEY! WO 4-3775 VINYL- EXCELON Per' Tile REGULARLY 10c ODD vLU lots rQi ROOF TRUSSES Meet FHA and VA Specifications LAKEVIEW BUILDER'S SUPPLY 1279 W. Columbia SEE activity was so fast that the minutes late.

Having exceeded its Dec. INVESTMENT CO. SHARES Bid Asked 2.07 2.26 7.41 8.02 3.87 4.19 8.26 8.98 Aberdeen Fund Affiliated Fund American Bus. Shares Axe-Houghton Canadian Fund Can. Int.

Fd Commonwealth Inv. 16.17 17.67 10.29 11.25 9.3S 10.22 Dlv. Groth Stock Div. Invest. Fund 7.98 8.72 3.16 8.75 9J6 3.46 Div.

Shares Eaton Bal Fund Eaton Stock Fund Elec Inv. Inst. Fdn. Inst. Grth Inst.

Inc. Fd Keystone Custodian Fund 11.91 12.87 12.76 13.78 5.35 5.85 11.27 12.33 9.57 10.49 6.56 7.18 us 15.37 16.77 B-4 K-l K-2 S-l S-2 S-3 S-4 9.46 10.33 8.83 9.64 5.28 4.84 20.48 22.35 11.83 12.91 13.10 14.30 3.91 4.27 Mass. Inv. Trust Mass. Inv.

Gr. Nafl Inv Phila. Fund Inc. Puritan Fd. Putnam, Geo.

Fund 13.42 14.67 7.42 8.11 10.50 1131 10.51 11.51 7.88 8.52 14.50 15.76 8.78 9.50 Select. Amer. Tel. Electronic Fd. Wellington Ek.

Fd. Wellington Fund 7.04 7.67 12.97 14.10 13.87 15.12 UNLISTED SECURITIES Bid Asked 32.00 34.00 16.75 18.00 9.75 11.00 13.00 14.50 90.00 100.00 45.00 O.W. B.W. 22.00 37.00 39.00 4.25 4.75 B.C. Gas Co.

Charming Corp. L. A. Darling uerrex tnem. Fed.

Life Cas. i. Federated Pub. Michigan Carton Michigan Nafl. Bank No.

Central Airlines Security National Bank Shakespeare Co. Sherriff-Goslln Co. S.E. Mich. Gas Union Pump Co.

Wolverine Ins. 40.00 O.W. 16.00 17.50 5.50 6.00 28.00 31.00 B.W. 10.00 48.00 O.W. GRAIN MARKET White wheat, red wheat.

J1.96: ear com, corn, oats, 70c. CHICAGO GRAIN Chlcaao Board of Trade Dalfv Ranae nf Price Prev. Todays 11:30 nnear osa urjfl A.M. March 211H 211 211W May 20A 209V 209 July 189 188' 189 Com March 113'A 113 1131 May 115 115'4 115 July 115ft 116 oars March 74 7W 74 May 7ivi 71 71 July 68V 68 68Vi Rye March 134 134 13414 May 131 130V 130 DETROIT POULTRY MARKET DETROIT (AP) Prices naid nor Ih at Detroit for No. 1 quality live poultry: roasters Over 5 lbs.

24-236; hrniler. xnet fryers 3-4 lbs. whites 19-20; barred rock Comment: Market steadv. Recelntt light but mostly amDle to the slow trade. Heavy type hens are scarce but roasters reaouy suDsiiturea to tin needs.

DETROIT EGO MARKET DETROIT (AP) Eaa prices oaid oer uuteii a i lciiuii uf Tirsi receivers un- cluding U.S.): Whites Grade A ex tra large 4V5-48; large 41-44; medium 3jv2; small 2641. Browns Grade A extra arae 42Vi; large 39Vi-41; medium 33-35; small 26-28; checks 26-29. Comment: Market unsettled mainlv on large sizes with suoolies amnle to cessive. Balance of offerings about steady and well clear with mediums short of neeas. uemana fair to oood a ret i promotion simulating consumer buying.

CHICAGO BUTTER MARKET CHICAGO (AP) Butter steadv: whnlp- sale buying prices unchanged; 93 score AA S7Vi; 92 A SPhi 90 SSA; 89 Xrvl cars Wl OW; 89 57'A. Business Notes Southeastern Michigan dan Co. has declared quarterly dividend No. 27 of .30 per share on the common srnr-V navahlo Jan. 15 to shareholders of record as of January 5, 1963.

He said the publishers had indicated they were ready to move beyond their total offer, "but at an appropriate time." Walther Thayer, president of the Herald Tribune, said this morning on a television program that the publishers at the moment can see no end to the strike. He said that anv renorts that the publishers favor a long strike are "sheer nonsense, propaganda or both." Reiterates Claim Thayer reiterated the publishers' claim that the strike goes on "because the printers union con tinues to make demands beyond considerably beyond the publish ers means to stay in business." "The publishers association has made concessions, concessions that some members could ill-af ford to make," he said. The New York publishers have offered the printers a package of $9.20 spread over two years. Local 6 has demanded a weekly wage increase of $18.45 spread over two years. The prestrike average basic wage was $141 a week on the day shift.

DISRUPT TRANSPORTATION ROME tft Buses and street cars stopped running today in Rome as workers staged a 24-hour wage strike. BATTLE CREEK FARM BUREAU Farm Home Supplies 295 Hamblin WO 2-4025 WO 3-5864 5 rally peak in yesterday's big I rise, the stock market had a green light for further gains, according to Wall Street theorists. Brokers ascribed the buying wave to the commitment of funds made available by tax-loss selling and profit taking. Some large blocks were trad ed in well known issues. Gains were made in most of the im portant segments of the stock list steels, chemicals, oils, motors, utilities, rails, aero space issues, nonferrous metals, electrical equipments, and drugs.

Advances of a point or so were scored by Kennecott and Union Carbide. IBM added a couple of points to its rise of 11 yesterday. Ahead close to a point were Amerada, Illinois Central, Chesapeake Ohio, Grumman, and Westinghouse Electric. After gains at the start, some blue chips started to back away. Du Pont erased a gain of nearly a point and showed a fractional net loss.

Eastman Kodak can celed a fractional rise. Big Three motors and the top steelmakers confined their gains to fractions. So did most of the leading oils and utilities. Rails were up on a broad front, but most gains were small. -NEW YORK STOCKS (11 A.M.

Quotations by AP) Admiral 12 Kroger iPA Air Reduc S6 LOF Glass 52 Allied Chem Lib McN 2Vi Allied Sirs 51'i Llgg My 68 Alcoa 5S Litton Ind 66h Am Alrlln 18' Lockh Aire 52? Am Can 45s LoeWs Inc 23' Am Cyan twk Lone Cem 227 Am El Pw 36i Lorillard 4 Am Hosp 22Vi Lou Nash tfh Am 22 Mack Trk 38'A Am Met CI 31H Manning 22'i Am Gas 42 Martin Co 22 Am 116 Mead Cp 39 Am Tob 307 Merck 79 Anaconda 43" Men- Ch 124 Armour Co 43s Mpls Hon 89Vk Atchison 25 Minn 56 Autom Cant 15 Monsan Ch 49Sfc Avco Corp 2S Mont Ward 331 Avnet El 22 Motorola 647 Bald Lima 14 Mueller Br Bait Oh 30V4 Murray Cp 30' Bell Howell 23H Nat Bisc 43H Beth Steel 30J4 Nat Cash 814 Boeing Air Nat Dairy 65 Borden 58V Nat Gyps 41 Borg Warn 42 Natl Lead 71 Briggs Mf 5H NY Central 16 Brist My 90s Norf West 110 Brunswick 19 Nor Am Av 64 Burroughs 291 Nor Pac 40 Cal Pack 247 Nor Sta Pw 351- Campb Soup 95 Owens Cng 59' Can Dry 217 Owens III Gl 734 Cdn Pac 23' Pac El 327 Carrier Cp 38' Pan A Air 22'4 Cater Trac Panh Epl 69V4 Celanese 39 Param Pict 36 Cert-Teed 17Vi Parke Da 26H Ches Oh 56 Penney, JC 44 Chock Fn 17'4 Pa RR 14? Chrysler 74 Pens! Cola 47" Clark Equip Pfizer 49 Coca Cola 87 Phelps 55 Colg Palm 447 Phill Pet 49v4 CBS 44 Polaroid 146'A Colum Gas 27 Proct 72V4 Con Gas 57 Pure Oil 38 Cont rn Ralston 357 Cont Oil Mb RCA S8' Corn t-d -a Republic Stl 37v4 Curtis Pub Revlon 43 Deere 53 Rex Drug 347 Dis Seag 43? Rey Met 25 Doug Aire 26V4 Rey Tob 43' Dow Chem 57'i Royal Dut 44' DuPont 238 Safeway St 46'i East Air 20'4 St Reg Pap 7Th East Kod 109' Sears Roeb 76V1 Eaton Mfg 35V Shell Oil 37' El Mus 6 Sinclair 361 Emer Rad 10 Socony 59 Ex-Cell-O 40' South Pac 30 Falrb Whitney 4 Sou Ry 577 Firestone 35 Sperry Rd 1" Std Brand 65V4 Ford Mot 46 Std Oil Cal 63 Freep Sul 23? Std Oil Ind 477 Frueh Tra 26 Std Oil NJ 59' Gardner Den 48 Std Oil Oh 53 Gen Bak 8' Stevens, JP 31 Gen Dynam 29 Stud Pack 6V4 Gen Elec 76' Sun Oil 43 Gen Fds 78 Swift Co 40 Gen Motors 59 Tenn Gas 18 Tel El 23' Texaco 61 Gen Tire 21V Tex Sul 14 Genesco 35" Tex Ins 66 Gillette 307 Textron 317 Goodrich 45 Thiokol 29 Goodyear 33 Thomp Rw 54 Gt A 405 Transamer 45' Gt No Ry 44' Twenty Cen 21 Greyhound 32' Underwood 18 Gulf Oil 39 Un Carbide 104V Hammer Pap 31 Un Pac 34' Hersh Choc 34 Unit Air Lin 32 Homestk 44' Unit Aire 52 Howe Snd 11' Unit Fruit 227 Ing Rand Un Gas Cp 36' i Inland S'i 39 Un 18V Int Bus Mch 398' US Lines 40 Int Harv 50 US Rub 41 Int Nick 63 US Steel 46'A Int Paper 571 Uplohn 35 Int Shoe 26? Van Raal 28' Int Silver 347 West Un Tel 277 Int Tel Tel 44 Westg El 33 Isl Crk Coal 21'4 White Mot 43V Johns Man 43 Wilson Ca 38'. Jones 50 Woolworth 65V Kellogg 55' Yale Tow 24 Kennecott 69V Yng Sh 8714 Kimb Clk 551 Zenith Rad 55V4 Kresge, SS 227 STOCK AVERAGES (By the Associated Press) 30 Ind. 15rls. 15util. Wstk.

1.5 .3 .4 .9 348.5 125.5 136.1 247.5 Net change Noon Fri. Prev. day Week ago 347.0 125.2 135.7 246.6 343.3 119.5 134.9 242.9 Month ago 343.3 119.5 133.0 242.1 rear ago 1962-63 nigh 1962-63 low 30.1 123.7 138.9 257.5 377.1 127:2 142.9 262.5 285.8 97.0 110.3 200.6 384.1 130.5 148.9 269.0 319.5 112.2 111.8 219.4 1961 high 1961 low Four More Jailed For Blasting Wall BERLIN (UPI) West Berlin police today announced the arrest of three men and a woman on charges they set off two explosions last month that blew holes in the anti-refugee wall and broke 161 windows in West Berlin. The four, all West Germans. were arrested Thursday by West Berlin detectives in the West German city of Haslach, police said.

Police said the band brought explosives to West Berlin by air in their hand luggage and were involved in wall blasts on the American sector border Dec. 2 and 16. Three others were arrested Dec. 16 when they were caught running from the wall after an explosion blew a nine-foot sauare hnlp in the wall at Zimmer Strasse and broke 41 windows. WE BOTH LOSE IF YOU! DON'T CET OUR PRICES BEFORE PURCHASING RUCS.

CARPET OR FURNITURE FREE ESTIMATESI Quality At Prices You Can Afford. JOHN E. WARREN INTERIORS 390 Upton WO 4-3624 SEE US FIRST FOR ALL YOUR REMODELING NEEDS! IS "I can't wait for oar cellar to get flooded!" Fifth U.S. Chess Crown to Fischer NEW YORK (UPD Bobby Fischer today reigns as U.S. chess champion for the fifth time in his career.

The young New Yorker nailed down his fifth title yesterday when he defeated Arthur Bis-guier in the final round of the national tournament to wind up with a tourney score of eight wins and three losses. Bisguier, also from New York. was tied with Fischer going into yesterday's all decisive game. He finished second in the tourney with a 7-4 score. CLASSIFIED HOURS 8 A.M.

5 P.M. Nights, Sundays and Holidays Phone WO 4-0265 II 3 1 SIT I in Lines I Day Days Days I Davs Davs 3 I .99 2.1 I 3.75 I 4.83 I i30 4 1.24 3.24 4.80 I 6.16 I 5 I 1.40 I 3.60 I 5.75 I 7J5 I 9.S0" I 1.68 4.32 6.90 8.82 11.40" 7 I 1.96 5.04 8.05 I 10.29 I 13.30" 8 2.24 5.76 I 9.20 I 11.76 15.20" I 2.52 6.48 10.35 13.23 I 17.10 10 I 2.80 7.20 11J0 14.70 19.00 11 I 3.08 7.92 I 12.65 I 16.17 I 20.90" 12 I 3.36 I 8.64 I 13.80 I 17.64 I 22.8 13 3.64 9.36 I 14.95 I 19.11 24.70' 1 I 3.78 9.66 14.70 I 19.60 I 25.20" Order Your Want-Ad on the Economical 10-Day Rate Advertising Is sold by the "line." Refer-ence to "words" for estimating purposes only. Count 5 averaaa 6-letter wnnk tn the line. NOTICES Funerals LOCAL FUNERALS GARRETT, MRS. OnaVee HAGER.

-ciiua mar ai me raney r-uneral Home where services will be held Saturday at 3:00 p.m. Pastor Robert D. Moon officiating. Interment Floral Lawn SMITH, MARION BUNDY. Friends may call at the Royal Funeral Home where services will be held 2:00 p.m.

Saturday, Rev. Don Price officiating. Inter- iticni nuaa i uwnsnip temeiery. BLANCHARD, MILFORD E. Friends may call at Hebbles where funeral services will be Monday at 1:00 p.m.

in the chapel. Rev. J. C. Pendergrass offirintlnn Informant Duea THOMAS, MRS.

BESSIE (SPILLER). Friends may call at the Patton Funeral Home Saturday afternoon where funeral services will be Tuesday at 2:30 p.m. Rev. Mrs. Minnie Stewart mil mm x.ciiicici y.

puns, puiioi uan nm BAKER, MISS MILDRED B. Friends may call at the Farley Funeral Home where funeral services will be Saturday at 1:00 p.m. Dr. Carleton Brooks Miller officiating. Interment Memorial MEAD, MR.

LLOYD J. Friends may call at the Farley Funeral Home where funeral services will be held Monday 1:30 p.m. Rev. David S. Evans officiating.

Interment Rice Creek Ceme- lery. RAUSCH, MRS. HENRY E. (BETTY l.j. t-unerai services Monday at the Penwell-Gable Funeral Home, Topeka, Kansas.

Interment Memorial Park Cemetery, Topeka. Arrangements by CROWELL, GEORGE C. Friends may -cn ai ncuum wnere Tunerai service will be held Saturday 1:30 p.m. in the Chapel. Pastor R.

A. Rleben officiating. Interment Riverside Cemetery, Bellevue, Michigan. STATE FUNERALS NYSSEN, MRS. WILLIAM H.

(FLOSSIE iw.i. i-rienas may call at the Court Funeral Home, Marshall, where services will be held Saturday 1:30 p.m. with Rev. Philip Howe of the Lyon Lake Methodist Church officiating. Inter- meni cyon Lake cemetery.

BEHL. FRANCIS L. Friends may call si me iseiser runerai Home, Marshall, where rosary will be prayed at 8:00 p.m. Sunday. Requeim mass will be at 10:00 a.m.

Monday at St. Mary's Catholic Church, Rev. Fr. Elmer H. Grogan officiating.

Interment St. Mary's Cemetery. Fnneral Directors FARLEY FUNERAL HOME Serving this area since 1882 105 Capital, N.E. Ph. WO 2-5527 Shaw Funeral Home BATTLE CREEK'S FTRST 121 Capital Ave- N.E.

WO 8-8103 ROYAL Funeral Home, Inc. 281 Upton Ave. Ph. WO 4-3706 HEBBLE FUNERAL SERVICE 'Over Half Century of Service" 123 W. Michigan WO 5-5145 Cemetery Lots Mausoleum 4 BURIAL SPACES Floral Lawn Memorial Gardens.

Owner leaving town, win sell at discount. Phone WO 3-4076. 4 LOTS IN FLORAL LAWN Memorial Gardens. Reasonable. Call WO 4-1701 Card of Thank WE wish to thank the Emmett Township rire uepanmenr, narnaoie union, Boyscout troop No.

30, Employees of the Kellogg our friends, neighbors and all others who helped, for the many kindness given us following the loss of our home by fire. The George E. Perry family Flowers The finest way to show your sympathy a I II wvyil a IKQUIIIUI rLUKAL I rv BUTE. CAPITAL FLORIST 630 Capital, N.E. WQ 4-3737 In Memoriam (N EVER loving memory of Billy, Linda and Johnny Lawson who left us 12 years ago today: Twelve years have passed since death has cast If shadow on your faces.

Our hearts feel pain. Things aren't the same. No one can take your places. We miss you so and we know From our love you'll never depart No space nor time can clearly define The loneliness left in our hearts Who can say the grief is lessened Though a smile may hide the tears? Memories keep the heart still wanting Despite the passing of the years. Still Longing for You Mom, Dad, Brother and Sisters Special Notices RUMMAGE SALE 141 W.

Mtchigan Jan-uary 7 and 8. Monday 7:00 to 9:00 Tuesday 6:00 to 4:00. Sponsored bv M.P.N.A. GALESBURG'S HOUSE OF FLOORS FOR ARMSTRONG TILE Newspaper Strike Talks Are Indefinitely Halted BATTLE CREEK fiiUJtaJi-- ASPHALT GROUP if Tile Anniversary PLASTIC WALL TILE 23sc ea. SPECIALS COMPLETE LINE OF INLAYS CERAMICS METALS "Do It Yourself or We'll Install for You" OPEN DAILY 8:30 TO 6 WED.

and FRI. NITES TIL 8:30 GALESBURG'S HOUSE OF FLOORS IN THE HEART OF GALESBURG, MICH. PHONE 665-7091 NEW YORK (AP)-A federal mediator har recessed indefinitely negotiations between the striking International Typographical Union's Local No. 6 and publishers of the city's nine major newspapers. William E.

Simkin, director of the Federal Mediation and Conciliation Service, said Thursday "there has been no tangible movement" by either party. He recessed the talks after two joint meetings, on the grounds that representatives of the printers' union and the publishers were "substantially at the same position they were at the time the strike began" 28 days ago. Time for Union Move "We suggested that it was time for the union to move a substantial move but, as is their right, the union said they were not prepared to do so at this time," Sim-kin said. NO MORE SHOVELING WHEN YOU OWN A SNOW BLOWER Three To Choose From Toro, Springfield, Atlas Aire Priced 1 ft95 From and up URBANDALE HARDWARE Hart Blakeslee, Owner 1418 W. Mich.

WO 2-5101 Celebrating Our First Full Year In Urbandale TOP QUALITY CONTINUOUS FILAMENT NYLON loo" CARPET From One of the Nation's Leading Mills! COMPLETELY INSTALLED OVER HEAVY WAFFLE PAD "7 AC SQ. Golden Beige Aztec Red Butternut ENTIRE STOCK OF i Vine Green (Example 12x15 Room $159.) Also Available In Room Size Rugs ONE GROUP OF ROOM SIZE ROLL ENDS DISCOUNTS AO, UP TO iWU TeT J. I Early American French Provincial FURNITURE! Everything Reduced For Quick Inventory Clearance -TERMS OPEN MON. FRI. TILL 9 P.M.

Norton Furniture Co. 724 W. Mich. WO 8-6240 FOR BETTER LIVING jric Check Our Other Anniversary Specials OPEN MON. FRI.

'TIL 9 L. G. McDaniel Co. Floor Covering Center 1416 W. Urbandale WO 3-1 544 NO MONEY DOWN! 5 YEARS TO PAY! FREE ESTIMATES CONST.

CO. 649 W. MICH..

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 Battle Creek Enquirer
  • Archives through last month
  • Continually updated

About Battle Creek Enquirer Archive

Pages Available:
1,044,589
Years Available:
1903-2024