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The Herald-Palladium from Benton Harbor, Michigan • 8

Location:
Benton Harbor, Michigan
Issue Date:
Page:
8
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MONDAY, JULY 22, 145, THE NEWS -PALLADIUM, BENTON HARBOR, MICH. TAGE EIGHT Traffic 1 OBITUARY AARKfcTS TODAY Winners Of Scout Awards At Camp Madron Listed (Continued From Page On) run out of gasoline, according to the report filed by Deputies Edward Sandrea and Oliver Slater. Andrew Patrick, Former Merchant, Competition Best Business Regulator, Honey Declares p. Sunday for Mrs. Jessie Kern Savage, 59, who died in Blocgett hospital in Grand Rapids last Friday at 7:25 p.

m. The rites were conducted by the Rev. LeRoy Cabbage. Afterward the body was taken to Chicago for cremation, Mrs. Savage, a teacher in the Decatur schools for 23 years, was visiting her daughter, Mrs.

Hollice Van Court, In Lowell when she was taken ill. Her death in the Grand Rapids hospital was due to a cerebral hemorrhage. The daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Frank Kern, she was bom in Voli-nia township on Oct.

28, 1886. Her marriage to Hollister H. Savage of Marcellus was solemnized on Oct. 23, 1907. At the time of her death Mrs.

Savage held the position of dean of girls and librarian in the Decatur high school. She was a member of the First Presbyterian church here. Volume Is Heavy On Fruit Market Honor camper emblems were received by the following boys during the second week of Camp Madron, summer camp of the Boy Scout of America: David Derm of Troop 12, Benton Harbor; Harold Hartmux and John Benning of Benton Hat's bor, Lone Scouts, Jay Auer of Troop 23, St. Joseph; Duane Horton and: Joe Nola of Troop 24, St. Joseph? Don Suits of Troop 61, Watervliet: Ray Morlock and Joe Williams of Two drivers suffered broken arms in a crash on Napier road a mile east of M-140 at 10:30 p.

m. Saturday. According to the report filed by Deputies William Mihalik and Joseph Heyward, Harold Daas, 31, 97 Thresher avenue, Benton Harbor, was going east on Napier and was struck by a ear driven west on Napier by Alvin Cope-land." 28, South Bend. Dass claims Copeland was over the center line on the highway. Both were taken to Mercy hospital, and later Copeland was removed to the Epworth hospital in South Bend.

TWO PEDESTRIANS, Gilbert Dies On Sunday Andrew Patrick, 75, head of the Andrew Patrick drygood store here from 1915 until 1922 and one of the charter members of the Benton Harbor Kiwanis club, died at the Miller Convalescent home. 800 Wayne street, St. Joseph, on Sunday at 9:50 a. m. He had been ill five weeks.

In recent years Mr. Patrick was connected with the Gilmore Bros, department store in Kalamazoo. Last May 1 he retired and came to Benton Harbor, his former home, to reside with a daughter. Mrs. J.

H. Soper, J.II, at 544 Broadway. Mr. Patrick was prominently known during his residence here perience. They are agreed to by all.

Briefly the Idea is that In times of rising prices and business expansion, individual business men are apt to make the well-known mistake of accumulating too big inventor BY LEWIS HANET Professor Of Economic New York University One of the facts of economic life thar many Americans need to learn is that it Economic life goes on undT "laws" that govern Troop 63. Coloma. David Denn of Troop 12 also paaao ed firebuilding and cooking. Lon Scout Harold Hartman passed sec- Her husband, a son. Frank K.

Savage, of Mattoon, daugh- c0nd cooking and pace and Lone it. In other words, businessmen cannot do just anything they like. They are in business to make money, and in order to do that they must obey well-defined rules. Probably nothing is doir.g more harm just now than the mistaken Scout John Benning passed fire- ter, Mrs. Hollice Van Court, of Owen P.

Daly, 65, Native Of Hagar, Dies In Ludington Funeral services will be -conducted Wednesday morning at Custer. for Owen P. Daly, 65, one of Michigan's leading fruit growers and fruit processors, who died in the Ludington hospital Sunday morning. Mr. Daly, who was bom In Hagar township, was ill only five weeks.

He was the son of the late Thomas and Mary Daly, pioneer Hagar township residents, and brother of William Daly, Riverside road, Benton Harbor, and Thomas Daly and Mrs. Michael Daly, both of Sister Lakes. His brother. John Daly, well known Hagar township fruit grower, was killed in a truck crah on US-31 near Greenland Inn two months ago. The deceased also leaves his widow, the former Minnie Lowry, who lived in Riverside before their jnarriage 1902, his son, Alfred, of Freesoil, and one daughter.

Mrs. Rose Wheaton. of Custer. Mich. Mr.

Daly was a member of the Knights of Columbus and the Spanish-American War Veterans. He enlisted in the Spanish-American war when he was only 16 years old. He was born in Hagar township where he resided until 1904 when he moved to his farm at Freesoil. There he won nation-wide fame as being one of the first fruit growers to freeze various kinds of apples, peaches; cherries and berries. He erected his own processing plant on" his farm and made exhaustive tests to perfect the freezing of the various fruits.

ies, which later cause great loss. Also, one of the first signs of approaching trouble is the excess of production over shipments, which results in stocks of goods piling up in producers' hands. Clearly, if all the business men In an Industry or trade could be advised of the true state of stocks of goods from week to week, and If the speculators among them could be Lowell, and six grandchildren survive. Mrs. Savage also leaves three brothers, Robert J.

and Harold C. Kern, of Los Angeles, and building. Walt Single, a member of the-staff, received canoeing and rowing merit badges, Duane Horton passed swimming, and Joe Nola passed sig- Hawk. 72. and Elsie Yerington, 50, of 411 Cribbs street, were severely injured Saturday afternoon when Donald C.

Kerri of Marshall town struck jDya JTwin City Motor Coach on Main stret at the four corner much restrained from "going long. Iaand two Andrews, in Los Angeles, and Miss SHuIfts 6'tT' Katherinp KPm in California arf.l passed tracking, pace, and re Early Apples Make Up Bulk Of Receipts Volume on the fruit market here today took a sharp drop during the light morning trading with sales on most commodities too few to quote op until noon. Noon prices were: Apples, Transparent, bushels, one and three-qurter Inch, mostly $13, two inch apples, $2.40. Raspberries, redsi Splnt crates, $7 with a few quality crates going up to $7.50. Blacks, mostly $6.

Michigan No. 1 tomatoes, Jumbos, S1.75, No. 2 tomatoes, mostly $1. Heavy volume greeted buyers on the fruit market here over the week-end with early apples making up the bulk of the receipts. There were 800 growers loads on the market Sweet cherries, black raspberries and tomatoes showed a slight increase over Friday's closing prices of the danger of booms could Both Hawk and Mrs.Yerington were dress unknown.

Jaken to the Mercy hospital where they were treated for knee and leg Injuries. Their condition was re notion that without the OPA there would be no price controls. This is associated with the general notion that the only planning in business Is so-called "social planning'' through government bureaus. In this, some business men are their own worst enemies a condition that is not at all unusual. They seem to think that only under OPA can prices be kept from "running away." This notion may be due to a dread of the headaches of competition; but it is fatal to business freedom i.nd private enterprise.

Pricing is the heart of business. As a matter of fact, there are two kinds of so-called "controls" which may operate to govern business, without any bureaucracy or dic Donovan Rites Held Saturday In Watervliet ported much improved this morning. According to police Mrs, Yering ceived the swimming and life-saving merit badges. Ray Morlock, of Troop 63, Coloma, passed firebuilding, knife and axe, pace, tracking and safety; Joe Williams, Troop 63, passed cooking, swimming, Judging and handicraft. Bill Bischoff of Troop 23, of St.

Joseph, passed cooking and received the rowing merit badge. Jay Auer of Troop 23 received the swimming merit badge and passed cooking; ton and Hawk were attempting to cross Main street at the four corner WATERVLIET, July 22 Funeral services for Edgar W. Donovan, 49, well known Elm street resident and storekeeper at the plant of the Watervliet Paner enmnnnv nlnnt. who eliminated. Stocks of goods should bear a' certain average relation to shipments, modified sufficiently by orders and production, to allow for different conditions.

A scientific formula can be worked out, and be applied by a democratic government without dictation. The other "control" is economic incentive, or the profits motive. Take lumber prices, for example. The OPA had so fixed" prices that production is backward and stocks of lumber very low. A demoralizing black market exists.

Such Is government control. But now, lumber producers are figuring that a 15 per cept rise in price will enable them to increase production and build up necessary stocks, all in an open way. Such a died an earlv hour Thursday iRonnie -Moore, also of 23, passed morning as the result of two heart' compass, firebuilding and pace. Dale tatorship. One is "regulation by attacks suffered a few hourst pre viously, were held at 2 p.

Sat Warsco and Charles Lindt of Troop 44, Berrien Springs, passed knife and axe; Bob Bramse, pace and while sours, dewberries, currants, i democratic government-, the other Is during which time he was active in civic affairs and in the First Congregational church, and he and his family participated in the social life of the community. A native of Canada. Mr. Patrick was born in that country on Feb. 9, 1871.

On Jan. 4. 1898, he was married there to Ida Brash. His wife died in March of 1934. In 1900 the Patricks moved to Three Rivers, where Mr.

Patrick operated a dry goods store for 15 years and was a member of the Knights of Pythias lodge. He came to Benton Harbor in 1915 and for seven years ran a mercantile establishment on Pipestone street. From Benton Harbor he went to California. After five years of residence there he and his family returned to Michigan and settled in Kalamazoo. Two daughters survive in the immediate family.

They are Mrs. Mark R. Baldwin, now of Albion, the former well known and socially prominent Miss Marjorie Patrick of Benton Harbor, and Mrs. J. H.

Soper, III. There are also four half-sisters surviving. These are: Mrs. J. B.

Armitage and Miss Mary Thomson, Los Angeles, Mrs. Andrew Blair, Toronto, David Isbester, Bright, Can. Funeral services -will be held' on Tuesday at 2 p. m. from the Dean chapel in Benton Harbor with the Rev.

Keith of the Congregational denomination in Kalamazoo, officiating. Burial will be in the Three Rivers, cemetery. The body is at the Dean chapel where friends may call. urday at the Methodist church of which he was a member. The Rev Henry M.

Swan officiated. intersection when struck by the motor bus. driven by Dwight Mende. vail, which was making a turn from Pipestone onto Main street. Four Other Accidents In four other traffic accidents over the week-end no one was reported Injured although two persons were arrested and charged with driving while drunk.

Leo E. Brown, Route 2, Britain avenue, was charged with driving while drunk when he ran into a Benton Harbor police car. parked on Fair avenue Saturday night, damaging the left -side. Hansel Harris, Route 1, Paw Paw, was also charged with driving while drunk after hitting and destroying a fence in the alley at the home of George Shears, 932 Superior. Arthur Schmidt, 1011 Pine street.

firebuilding; Ed Swanson, axe and first class axe. 'The third and last week of campj opened July 21. Mrs. H. S.

Faram, accompanied self regulation under competition. Let me illustrate: The OPA has just announced that it will impose tighter curbs on inventories. -At firsr this may seem like an alarming government "control." But it is really a highly desirable, scientific regulation of business. Above all, note that it does not tell business what it must at the organ by Mrs. C.

G. Milhani sang one selection. blueberries and apples went slightly lower. Apples, amounting to 5,661 bushels, sold from $.75 to $1.25 on one and three-quarter inA Transpar-ents, $2 to $2.25 xn two inch, and from $2 to $2.75. mostly $2.50 on two and one-quarter inch apples.

Two and one-quarter inch Duchess went at $2.75 to $3. Sweet cherries went at $5.50 to price advance would be much under Heart Ailment Fatal To Henry Pump, 69 Henry Pump. 69, died suddenly at 9:15 a. m. Sunday at his farm home on Crystal avenue, Benton Harbor, of a heart ailment.

Born April 22, 1877 in Germany, he came to Benton Harbor in 1903 from Des Plaines. 111. He was a 1 Sun YatSen Casket bearers were Elliott Spreen, William Rogers, Leo Rose, Alden Bridges, Chris Krieger, and Barney the black market level and would be open to all. Costs compel the raise. Competition limits It.

Such is free D. Dwiggms do how to run Its affairs. It merely enterprise. Burial was in the City cemetery. Mr.

Donovan was a veteran of Merely let the government (1) competition to make it fair, $5.75. depending on quality with tells business what not to do. It most of the 605 crates selling at i merely sets certain limits to the farmer by occupation. (Continued From Page One) Chinese Communists." "THE AMERICAN PEOPLE, who are allies and long friends of China, must be clearly told of this road to and 2) speculation to take out the World War and saw considerable service in France and Germany. He $5.50.

Sours totaling 324 crates, business game St. Joseph and Bernard Goldstein gamble. The best "planning" and And these limits are not arbitrary. was a member of the local Ameri "control" are regulated competition. They are based on science and ex can Legion post, and had been in the employe of the paper company of Chicago, both attempted to back into a parking space at Jean Klock Park at the same time and damaged the fenders of the two cars.

No since 1929 disaster," she said. "They must be told that Ameri- can reactionaries are teaming up i with Chinese reactionaries, each en'-J; couraging the other. They must bi told that the presense of unified1! Noon Stock Prices Bol ivia ranged from $5 to $6, mainly at $5.50. The 2,435 crates of red raspberries moved from $7.25 to $8 with most sales at $7.50. Blacks sold between $6 and $6.50, mostly $6.25 on 1.364 crates.

Dewberries went at $5.25 to $6 with most of the 2,498 crates going at $5.50. Blueberries in 16-pint crates sold mostly at $4.25 with a few going as low as $4 up to $4.50. In 16-quart crates, blueberries sold from $6.50 to $7.50, mainly at $7. There were 285 crates of blueberries on Surviving are his wife. Hannah, five daughters, Mrs.

Louise Schu-man of Maywood, 111., Mrs. Emma Shearer of Benton Miss Bertha Peterson of Lincoln, Mrs. Ann Wagner. Benton Harbor, and Miss Freida Ferries, of Lake-wood. Also surviving are three sons, Herman Pump, of Kalamazoo, Gus Peterson of Benton Harbor, and William Peterson of Willoughby, Ohio, 10 grandchildren, four great grandchildren, a brother, William and a sister, Mrs.

Anna Domin of Des Plaines. Funeral services will be conducted at 2 p. m. Wednesday in St. Matthew's Lutheran church of Benton Air Reduction 52'i Stand Brands 47 Alaska Juneau 754 Stand 1 Cal S4S (Continued From Page One) Allis Ch Mfg 49'i States armed forces on Chinese soil-is not strengthening peace and order! among the Chinese people.

"They must be warned that loanst should be given only to a reorgan-j ized and truly representative Chinese i Am Can 96 Am Car Fdy 67 1 i Am Locomotive 4,.. Am $5 Pf 1134 Am Rad St 19U Am Roll Mill 38 Stand Oil NJ 77 Studebaker Corp 33 Sutherland Paper 46n Swift Co 39' i Texas Co. 654 Texas Gulf Sulph 54 Tidewater A Oil 23'4 Timken Dat Axle 24 i Timken Bear 53sa Transamerica the market yesterday. Currants, amounting to 100 crates i Am Smelt 64l2 Harbor, of which the deceased was went at $4 to $4.50 with most sales! Am Tel Tel 198 at $4.25. 93 Am Tob Am Wat Wks a member.

Burial will be made in Crystal Springs cemetery. The body will rest at the Kerlikowske funeral home until 11 a. m. Wednesday when it will be taken to the church to lie in state. 'Union Carbide 109'4 Union Pacific 150 United Aircraft 29'i Michigan No.

1 tomatoes sold at $1.50 to $2. mostly $1.75 a jumbo while the No. 2's went mostly at $1 although a few sold from $.50 to $1.25 on a total of 1.871 jumbos. Anaconda 46 Arm Co 16' Atch Atl Refining 49 Aviation Corp 9'ij Bald Loco Ct 30 Bail fc Ohio 24 government. They must be told that if American makes it plain that won't supply munitions or military'" assistance there will be no spreading', of the Chinese civil war." As she issued her statement, I Chinese Communists were claiming; a big triumph on the coastal plaint between here and Nanking, includ-1 ing the capture of 12,000 govern-!" ment troops and the commander ol the government's 49th army.

Madame Sun's statement, which'i some observers thought might mark her active reentry into politics, emphasized: are threatened by Civil into which reactionaries hope tc draw America, thus Involving thj; whole world. Such a civil wr. though undeclared, has already be- J. C. West, 58, Dies Stock Market Is United Corp Unit Fruit 51'i United Gas Imp 25'4 US Rubber 73 '4 US Steel 897 Walworth Co 15 78 Warner Bros.

Pict 44'i West Union Tel 35 Westing Air Br 38 West El Mfg 32 Wool worth (F. Youngst Sh 78U Consum Pow Pf 113'4 Barnsdall Oil 20' Bendix Aviat 471- I Beth Steel 109 i Borden Co 52 Borg Warner 53 Briggs Mfg 45' si Brunswick-Balke 31 Burr Add Mach 19 i Friends Join Kin In Last Honor To Donald flotchkin Funeral services for Donald J. Hotchkin, well known Benton Harbor resident, employe of the New Products Co. for 12 years, and secretary of the UAW Council of Berrien county, were held Saturday at 2 p. m.

at the First Baptist church. Mr. Hotchkin died on July 18 at Mercy hosptial after a six weeks' illness. Attending his funeral in a body were members of the UAW local No. 931, and the Berrien County AUW Council, the Loyal Order of Moose, No.

1570, and the Women's Auxiliary of the Moose. Mr. Hotchkin held the office of prelate in the Moose lodge and his wife is secretary of the Women's auxiliary. The church was crowded with friends and relatives, many of the latter having" come from South Bend, Plymouth. Detroit, and Chicago, for the rites The casket rested before a lavish arrangements of floral tributes.

The Rev. Donald S. Bourne, assistant pastor of the First Congregational church here, officiated at the funeral. Mrs. W.

E. Brown presided at the organ, console, playing before and after the service. Officers and members of the Loyal Order of Moose formed an honor guard at the church also at Crystal Springs cemetery, where their graveside ritual was conducted by the governor of the order, R. L. DeMorrow.

with William Lyons serving as prelate. Casket bearers, all members of the Moose lodge, were C. R. Fitzcharles, William Fitzcharles, Frank Johnston, Bert Nichols, Jasper (Duke) Postello, and Frank Hanner. Calumst Hec 9 gun.

This calantity must be stopped; ft in its beginning." Canad Pacific Case U. Co. Jgo IVIJttU VAJip 0'2 48 arrests were made. Arnold Nickel, 543 East Main, ran into the rear of a car driven by R. H.

Manning, of Chicago, Sundaj evening on West Main street. Slight damage was caused to both cars. James Reynolds, 28, Sodus, was injured in a crash at the intersection of Pipestone end Napier roads south of Benton Harbor late Saturday afternoon. Deputy Sheriff Leo Kreciock reported that Reynolds was driving north on Pipestone and collided with a car driven by Carl W. Carlson, 28, Chicago, going east on Napier road.

Carlson, according to the report, did not stop for the through road. He was arrested. Reynolds, who suffered chest injuries, was taken to the Mercy hosspital. MRS. LOUISE MARY SENOUR, 28.

South Bend, was injured when the car driven by her husband, J. D. Senour, 29, South Bend, turned over on US-12 near the Grande Vista south of St. Joseph at 8:10 p. m.

Saturday. She was removed to the 1st. Joseph sanitarium in the Kerlikowske ambulance where she was treated for shock. Her husband was arrested on a drunk charge by Deputy Krescock, when he refused to answer questions regarding the accident. LaVone Baker, 23, Terre Haute, Ind was arrested a charge of leaving the scene of an accident at 7:50 p.

Saturday night after his car crashed into a parked car owned by Richard Lambert, 17, Benton Harbor. The accident happened on Highland avenue a short distance south of the intersection of Fair avtnue. Deputies Charles Andrews and Roscoe Conklin, who investigated accident, reported that Baker made a wide left turn from Fair onto Highland and struck Lambert's car, but d'd not slop. He was chased some distance by Lambert and later arrested. Jennie Macintosh, 64, 1122 Main street, St.

Joseph, appar- ently confused while crossing the street Saturday evening, was struck and knocked to the povement by an auto driven by Cornelius. Van of. 477. North State street. Taken to the St.

Joseph sanitarium In an ambulance she was treated for a. head cut. abrasion on -hct left arm and a possible fracture of the left leg. St Joseph police, who investigat capital. The new government is composed of university professors and students, labor union groups and several prominent figures including the deal of the La Paz superior court.

First official act of the revolutionary regime, which calls itself the "institutional government," was to issue a communique calling for national unity and restoration of "popular liberties," which were suspended under Villarroel's "strong man" rule. The communique also said that all political, prisoners would be freed and that all political exiles would be welcomed back in Bolivia to "collaborate in the restoration of democratic liberties and guarantees." Reports differed as to the manner in which Villarroel met his death. Once source said that when crowds surged into the presidential palace, slaying guards and soldiers who attempted to turn them they found Villarroel hiding in the attic. Another report said the president was wounded when he tried to escape through the palace THE CURRENT REVOLUTION began July 13, when a student was killed during a demonstration in support of teachers' demands for higher pay. The government then prohibited all demonstrations, and a general strike was called in protest of this action.

Fifty persons were killed and 250 last Thursday when police fired on a crowd of demonstrators. Realizing that his regime was wabbling, Villarroel reorganized his cabinet Saturday, forming an all-military body. When this failed to halt the revolution, he resigned yesterday morning and prepared to flee the country in his private airplane. However, student leaders, who had amassed a large number of arms during the night, threw up barricades around the presidentiai palace and moved in for the kill. 50 Killed Celanese Cor 68'4 Ches Ohio 62:14 Chrysler Cor .120 Colum El 11 Coml Solvents 26 Comwlth South 4i Cons Edison 33 At Mercy Hospital John C.

West, 58, of the Townline road, died Saturday at 10:30 p. at Mercy, hospital where he was rushed following a heart attack at his home. He was born June 4, 1888, in Memphis, the son of Mr. and Mrs. Roscoe West.

He had been a res9ent of this community for the past seven months. Survivors are his wife, Annie, of Benton Harbor, a son, Tarzola West, of Little Rock, four daughters, Mrs. Esther Rhodes, Mrs. Artie Releford. and Mrs.

Mildred Lrvin, Benton Harbor, and Miss Annie P. West, Elkhart, and the following three step-sons, Frank Cross, Little Rock, Pearl Johnson, Elkhart, and Charles Johnson, Tipton ville, Tenn. There are also six grandchildren and seven great grandchildren. Funeral services will be held on Wednesday at 2 p. m.

at the Pilgrim Rest Eaptist, church. The Rev. D. E. Cook, of the Progressive Baptist church at 60, Sixth street, and Corn Mart Hit By Price Break (Continued From Page One) vented an approach to the scene.

Container Cor 50' Con Can 43V Cont Motors 1638 Curtiss Wright 758i CHICAGO, July 22-(AP)-Corn Du Pont De 212 futures were under pressure, drop-Eastman Kodak 238'2iping around four cents at times to- (The New York Post said it hadj bsen informed that its correspondent, Richard Mowrer, had been in-j jured in the hotel.) i FIVE ASSASSINS WERE said bj, eyewitnesses to have planted the explosive after shooting at a Brit-; Eaton Mfg 59 El Auto Lite ish officer, storming the Ruled By Apathy Trends Are Irregular, Price Changes Small NEW-YORK. July 22-(AP) -Apathy was the rule today in mildly Irregular stock market. Most customers seemed somewhat confused over the compromise price control legislation and. pending final enactment of the measure, were Inclined to bid' sparingly, pr trim commitments. Earnings and were helpful to a certain extent.

Scattered Issues edged into the plus column at the opening but dealings were sluggish and the direction was indefinite near the fourth hour with fractional variations predominating. Public Service of N. J. common and preferreds pushed upward. Support was given United Aircraft, Glenn Martin.

Consolidated Edison, American Telephone, American Water Works, Standard Oil NJ), Eastman Kodak. Du Pont. General Electric and American Smelting. Laggards included National Dis. tillers (off 21; on an initial 1.000-share trade), Republic Steel, Youngstown Sheet, Chrysler, General Motors, Montgomery Ward, U.

S. Rubber, International Harvester, WestJnghouse, Union Carbide, Y. Central. Southern Pacific, Chesapeake Ohio and Texas Co. Bonds were uneven.

Commodities, led by cotton, broke at the start but eventually steadied. In the curb resistance was exhibited by Mesabi Iron, Consolidat 59 248 16 56 72'4 56' 46 53 El Power tt Erie RR Excello Firestone Freeport Sulph Gen Elec Gen Food grounds and herding its employee against the walls. After placing explosives outside the right wing of the building, thi) day, but oats managed to display a fairly steady undertone. There I was a good trade in oats with pre- vious short-sellers turning to the i buying side and giving the market support. Trading developed In barley fu-! tures for the first time in several days with prices a few cents low-.

er than last Saturday's buying prices. former pastor of the New Bethel Baptistj church, will officiate. Burial will be in Crystal Springs cemetery. Friends may call at the Robbins Bros, funeral home until noon Wednesday when the body will be' removed to the church to lie in state until the funeral hour, Gen Motors 68U Gillette Saf 34 Goodyear 65 Cash markets again weakened un- Gt. Northern Ry Pf heavy receipts Wheat was 2 Requiem Mass Is Said For Arthur C.

Taylor terrorists rushed away and apparJj ently escaped. Fire erupted after the tremencUf ous blast, which shook the centes of modern Jerusalem at 12:30 p. Clamp On Curfew A strict curfew was clamped or and traffic and pedestrians disap- peared from the center of Jerusa-j lam and other Jewish parts of thd capital. The King David hotel was ont neicmes rowaer 01 0 3 to 3 cents a bushel lower, corn 2 to 4 cents and oats 'a to 1 cent. All cash wheat fell below the 2 Momestake Mm r.

444! Hudson Motor 27' 4 I Rites Held Saturday For Watervliet Man j7'; level with No. 1 hard bringing $1.98. Corn finished cents low- Requiem high mass was celebrated by the Rev. Fr. H.

F. Conklin at St. John's Catholic church at 9:30 a. m. today for Arthur Clay Taylor, 77.

of 1427 Rose avenue. Mr. Taylor, who prospected for Illinois Central Inland Steel Inspirat Con Co Interlake Iron Int Harvester Int Nick Can Int Tel Tel WATERVLIET, July 22 Plymouth Congregational church was of the largest in the eastern MedH liveries sank to the former OPA ceilings of at one time. Oats 15Ts 93 37'2 terranean countries. Army head ed the accident, report that- Van i closed Vi-l'i higher, July and filled nearly to capacity Sunday afternoon when funeral services were quarters were on the upper flood 21'4! and it was from there that th.

Johns-Manville 143 barley was down November 1.35. antisn recently directed the ar rest of Jewish agency leaders ir Palestine, ordered the search oi CAPT. R. H. JESCHKE HERE Capt.

Richard Hall Jeschke, just back from Japan, where he served with the U. S. Marine Corps, arrived this afternoon tot -a brief visit with his grandparents, Dr. and Mrs. H.

Jewitt Jeschke? of the North Shore drive. Capt. Jeschke came here from Milwaukee, where he visited his uncle, Woodard and family, and is en route to South Carolina to join the rest of his outfit. He leaves for the south tomorrow. On the way home from Japan he stopped at Pearl Harbor to see his father.

Col. Richard Hall Jeschke, of the U. S. Marines there, i Kenneeott Cop Kresge 1 SS Lockheed Aire Loew's Inc 56 39 29' 33 80 many Jewish settlemsnts and thel seizure of large quantities of hidden ed Retail Stores (on a jump in net), Lone Star Cem Dam was traveling west -on in Alaska for 20 years, from street, at 7:42 p. at a reported' 1898 t0 1918, died last Friday at speed of 10-miles-per-hour.

Mrs.Mercy hospital where he had been Macintosh was crossing from thea Patient for seven weeks, north to the south side on Port Casket bearers at today's service street. Just as she neared the cen-lwere Jhn Hansen, Frank Vogel, ter of the street she apparently George Vogel, John Oehlhoffen, decided that she couldn't make it John H. Brennan. and Peter Flynn. and turned back.

As she attempted' Burial was in the cemetery of the to run back to the north side of the Resurrection. St. Joseph, street, she was struck by the Van Sunday evening relatives and Dam vehicle, police said. friends gathered at the Reiser Autos driven by Raymond Harner, chapel and recited the Rosary for Route 1, Berrien Springs, and Taylor. tin O.

Selfert, East Chicago. arms and ammunition. Army off! Fruit Belt Forecast cials said the arrests and searched American Republics and Elliott Co.iMack Trucks 67'2 Slipping were Sterling Ameri-'Marshall Field 45 can Cyanamid and Transwestern Miami Copper I5'i held for William Henry Callard, 71, who died Wednesday evening at his home on Pleasant street. The Rev. Clifford W.

Hilliker officiated. Miss Joyce Larsen sang the two selections, "Old Rugged Cross" and "What a Friend We Have In Jesus," Mrs. Willard Nelson presided at the organ. Casket bearers, all nephews, were William, Harold, Warren, and George Penny, and George and Ralph Island. Burial was in the City cemetery.

Mr. Callard was born at Grand Rapids, June 29, 1875, and lived at Chicago before coming to Waterv were aimed at Jewish terrorists. Maj. Gen. Sir Evelyn Barker, Brit Oil.

ish commander in Jerusalem, was! Mid-Cont Pet 41" Montgom Ward 74' Motor Products 28' reported to have hurried to the hO' tel soon after the attack. U. Fair S. Weather Bureau forecast: this afternoon and tonight; Bribery (Coniinued From Page Onei collided at Court and Elm streets at! Mineral held batUrdaV For Watervliet Infant Motor Wheel Mueller Bras Murray Corp Nash Kelvinator Nat Biscuit Nat Cash Ref Nat Dairy Prod Na; Pow Lt 31 1 59'4 464 21', 33 391, 39 ll'i and most of Tuesday with moderate temperatures. Increasing cloudiness late Tuesday with some chance of scattered showers Tuesday night Wednesday partly cloudy and cooler.

Thursday generally fair and continued rather cool, light northerly n-inC Viic ft kannminn mnn DieTATii BUTTER liet with his family, 26 years ago WATERVLIET, July 22 Funeral first locating on the north shore 7 3 CHICAGO. July 22-(AP) -Butter, services were conducted at 4:30 weak; receipts (two 836.914; m. Saturday at the Hutchins fu- of Paw Paw lake whefe they operated a resort. He was a member of the- Congregational church. UUlllJ EflUIFuftjT ZJZ it southerly and increasing to 15 to 18 93 score AA 67.5; 92 A 66.5: 90 Bjneral home for Edwin Bruce 64.5; 80 63.5; cars'.

90 64.5; 89 iMundt. 18-months-old son of Mr. 4 1 P- h- late aernoon. EAST LANSING, July the size of walnuts pelt- the Michigan National bank, Francis P. Slallery of Grand Rapids, assistant vice-president of the Michigan National bank; Byron L.

Ballard of Lansing, former legal adviser of ex-governor Murray D. Van Wagoner; Simon D. Den lyl of Dtetroit, secretary-treasurer of the Bohn Aluminum and Brass State Representative James B. Stanley, Kalamazoo republican; former State Senator Carl F. Delano, Kalamazoo republican; former Senator Ernest Nagel, Detroit democrat, and former Representative Edward J.

Walsh, Detroit democrat. until you investigate SounrJScriber land Mrs. Lester Mundt, of South Eggs weak; receipts (two days) Pleasant street, who met instant 27.294; U. S. extras 1 and 2 36.5-(death Wednesday afternoon when 38.5; U.

S. extras 3 and 4 the wheels of a Beverly Lumber U. S. standards 1 and 2 33-35; U. 'company truck driven by the baby's standards 3 and 4 32; current re- grandfather, Thomas Frazier ran Funeral Of Decatur Teacher Held Sunday DECATUR, July 22 Funeral services were held in the First ceipts 30-32; dirties 28-29, and lover the baby as the truck was Presbyterian church here at 4:30 checks Ohio Oil 26 Packard Motor 9U Param Pictures 35 Parke Davis 45 Penney J.

50 Penn RR Phelps Dodge 42', Phillips Pet Proctor Gam Pub Svo NJ 26'4 Pullman 60l Pure Oil 26's Radio Corp Of Am 14's Radio Keith Orph 20 Reo Motors 34 backed out of the driveway at the Frazier home, two doors south of ed Grayling yesterday in a sharp 20-minute hail, rain and thunder storm. The icy nuggets covered the ground to an approximate depth of 'an inch and a half, the U. S. Weather bureau said, and Grayling base- ments and sewers were flooded. At Harbor Beach, 1.63 inches of fell during the late afternoon and evening." i Moderate temperatures will con the Mundt home.

BECOMES PHARMACIST Ernest J. Badt, son of Mr. and The Rev. Carl Hiler, pastor of the SoundScriber is the most revolutionary business aid since the typewriter it's simpler, more versatile, lower in first cost, lower in operating cost. Saves you time and money in ways never before possible.

Steadily increasing demand for SoundScriber electronic dictating equipment and resultant manufacturing economies make possible the continuance of the present low price lower than O.P.A. ceilings. See what the SoundScriber system can do for you; Mrs. John Badt, 169 Britain avenue, Free Methodist church at St. Louis; MARRIAGE LICENSES SOUTH BEND, July 22-'.

Special) -Marriage licenses have tinue through Tuesday, the weather Reliable Moving We move everything with expert care and speed. PHONE 3-1101 LaFayette Transfer Stprage Co. "Movinf Engineers" been issued here to the following: iRepub Steel 36 bureau predicted, althoush tern is now a registered pnarmacist. hav- Mich, officiated. inr received announcement Satur-i Casket bearers, uncles of the day that he had passed his phar-i child, were James Rouse David macist's examinations.

He graduat-! Wilson and Victus Frazier' ed from the College of Pharmacy. Burial was in the Keeler ceme- University of Michigan, in Febru- tery. arxir a. i The baby Was born Jan. 18, 1945, Mr.

Badt is employed at the Rex-1 at Benton Harbor, ar was the all drugstore of his father in St. VnnntTPcf nf tha thro UjT.AM Andrew Ehrnardt and Betty Jane Houser, both of Benton Harbor, Mich. John E. Forbauer and Ivt N. Nor-dyke, both of Benton Harbor, Mich.

Sears Roebuck pera tures will rise over the week- Socony Vacuum 171 end levels. Thundershowers tomor- Southern Pacific 61 i row in the north and west portions Sparks Withlngton 9 of the lower peninsula and in the Sperry Corp 28 upper peninsula were forecast. Twin City Business College 198 Pipestone Ph. 8762 Benton Harbor I Joseph. Mr.

and Mrs. Mundt..

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Pages Available:
924,949
Years Available:
1886-2024