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The Herald-Palladium from Benton Harbor, Michigan • 24

Location:
Benton Harbor, Michigan
Issue Date:
Page:
24
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

SECTION -TWO PAGE TWELVE THE NEWS -PALLADIUM, BENTON HARBOR, MICH. WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 9, 1963 REPORTS FROM MSU Criminal Arrests In City Decrease Chickens Do Better In Crowds, Litter Can You Remember These Days? Bpyle Takes Walk Down Memory Lane Benton Harbor police ended 1962 142 traffic accidents. Traffic summonses totaled 159. The license bureau Issued 348 operator's permits and four bicycle licenses. Mileage logged on 10 department vehicles came to 14,453 during the snow-plagued month, more than 5.000 miles less than tha same month a year ago.

CHURCH MEETING By FRANK KNOX Associated Press Farm Writer EAST LANSING (AP) studies at Michigan State University seem to indicate that chickens prefer slum-type living conditions. with two more felony arrests in December than for a year ago, although total criminal arrests fell by seven. Chiefs Merle McCarroll reported 14 felonies charged or investigated in December among a total of 82 criminal arrests. Ninety charges were brought for traffic offenses. Ten felonies were -breaking and en te rings.

Two others were assaults. Forty-two persons were booked on drinking charges, including minors in possession. Officers handled 566 complaints Bv HAL BOYLE NEW YORK iAP Everybody is in love with his past, whether it was rich or poor. EveiTaclifld of lOeagertyasks a parent, "tell me how it was when I was. just a baby.

Crowded chicken houses and conditions didnt hurt egg production. All of the studies are aimed at DECATUR a meeting of the congregation and corporation of the First Presbyterian church Will be hied on Sunday, Jan. 13, following a co-operative dinner As we -grow old er, many us increasing egg production and among themat 12:30 pjn. during the month, lowering costs. spend more time recalling the past than we do planning for future.

But your memories date you just as surely as rinps of rnwth 7 fci I II 1 III I ifj- till VMI IT I. Ill I ill -t I date a tree. I And you've been around some time now if you can remember when Hal Boyle HIKERS REST: Fred Rydhohn (left), strapping six-foot guide for the Huron Mountain Club at Marquette, pauses momentarily with Brennan Biolo near the top of the Huron Mountain during a day-long hike into the area. Rydholm has J)een employed by the club for 22 summers. At other times he is a science teacher in the junior high school in Marquttte.

(AP Photo) 1963 NEW YEAR'S RESOLUTIONS 1 Listen to POINT OF LAW dally at 4:45 on WHFBK.ADIO 1060. 2 Listen to POINT OF LAW daily at 4:45 on WHFBRADIO 106(K Listen to POINT OF LAW dally" at 4:45 on WHFBRADIO 106ft. 4 Listen to POINT OF LAW daily at 4:45 on WHFBRADIO 106ft. 5 Listen to POINT OF LAW daily at 4:45 on WHFBRADIO 106ft, uette City Father Marq Husbands were more suspicious of the iceman than they now are of he television repair man. You couldnt buy a dictionary, a box of aspirins, or a packet of hairpins at the corner grocery store.

Eating in a Chinese restaurant was a big adventure, because you just knew that somewhere behind a secret panel was an opium den. It was considered normal for a dog to have fleas. The goal of every Iowa farmer was to grow enough corn so that he could retire to Southern California and listen: some really interesting evangelists. NUMBER litter on the floor helped, rather! than slowed, the production of! eggs. Howard Zindel, chairman of MSU's poultry science department, and H.

S. Johnson, who is now with the University of Illinois, tested 360 pullets for nearly a year under different housing conditions. Here's what they found: Birds on litter floors laid eggs 137 more than those in cages and 2,652 more than those housed completely on slated floors. The albumen quality of the eggs was significantly higher among hens living in the litter floor houses. Zindel and two other MSU poul-trymen, Lloy Champion and Merle Esay, teamed up on another type of housing study.

They studied the productivity of chickens alloted varying amounts of space, keeping nutritional and ventilation factors constant. ound that layers housed with just one and a fourth square foot per hen did just as well at producing eggs as those provided with two square feet of floor space. The study debunked previous recommendations against crowded conditions. The anti-crowding school had suggested that certain troubles would result from crowding, for example: reduced egg production, increased mortality, cannibalism, egg-eating by the hens, and ventilation problems. In another, more basic study, Robert Ringer and John Wolford tested laying hens subjected to different kinds of stress.

They used the hens' production of white blood cells and certain hormones as indicators of reactions to stress. They put the birds into solitary confinement, one bird per cage, Is An Avid Outdoorsman 6 Listen to POINT OF LAW daily at 4:45 on WHFBRADIO 1060. Swedish Descendant Fast Becoming North Legend By A. F. MAHAN MARQUETTE (AP) Fred Rydholm is the most uncityfied city commissioner you're likely to find any 7 Listen to POINT OF LAW daily at 4:45 on WHFBRADIO 1060.

8 Listen to POINT OF LAW daily at 4:45 on WHFBRADIO 106ft. 9 Listen to POINT OF LAW daily at 4:45 on WHFBRADIO 106ft. 10 Listen to POINT OF LAW daily at 4:45 on WHFBRADIO 1060. 11 Listen to POINT OF LAW daily at 4:45 on WHFBRADIO 1060. 12 Listen to POINT OF LAW daily at 4:45 on WHFBRADIO 1060.

13 Listen to POINT OF LAW daily at 4:45 on WHFBRADIO 1060. 14 Listen to POINT OF LAW daily at 4:45 on WHFBRADIO 1060. 15 Listen to POINT OF LAW daily at 4:45 on WHFBRADIO 1060. mines in the Hurons. A 1948 graduate of Albion College and a one-time Navy hospital Corpsman, Rydholm came to Marquette as a teacher in 1953.

Within four years a vacancy developed on the Marquette City Commission, and tre four remaining commissioners asked him to serve out the term. In 1958 he ran on his own, but didn't campaign, and led the ticket as he did in 1960 and 1962. In 1959 at the age of 35 his fellow commissioners elected him mayor. He also is a Marquette County supervisor. He's a scoutmaster, as you might imagine, and he's also an amateur magician of talent, which you wouldn't suspect.

He's also on the Marquette Multiple Sclerosis where. velop what they've got already before grabbing off any more You could -get the operator on the telephone merely by lifting the receiver. The ambition of every arriving Irishman was to get on a police force. You could tell how new a man's shoes were by how loud they squeaked. No candidate had much hope of being elected to the U.S.

Senate unless he could hold a crowd of 10,000 spellbound by his oratory for two hours, rain or shine. A hired hand wouldn't stay on a farm where he couldn't have a huge slab of apple pie for breakfast. Kids earned their spending mon-' ey by collecting scrap iron, tinfoil and bottles and selling them to the junk dealer. Yes, those were the days of innocence. Remember? When school's out in summer, Rydohom can be found at the Hur on Mountains Club, an exclusive 50-member organization that owns 16,000 acres of virgin forests some 30 miles northwest of Marquette SPONSORED BV OAST MFG.

CORP. AND FARMERS A MERCHANTS NAT't. BANK along Lake Superior. HEADS FOR WOODS Board "and mixed up in so manyJ And even when school is out for and then crowded two birds into the same cage. But they found no difference in reaction.

The conclusion: the chicken tends to be passive. And that trait helped explain why crowded NEW FOR 1963 ON WHFB "a honey cf a station" weekends, Rydholm usually can other things'r he doesn't have time for service clubs, such as Optimist and Kiwanis. be found in the woods even on winter's coldest day or the muddi est one of the springtime thaw. This strapping 6-foot-3, 210-pounoV er with a brush haircut, dressed ft ft in knee-patched overalls, a check At 38 this descendant of "Swedes who pronounce the name Reed-holm, already is becoming a legend in Michigan's north country, parts of which he likely knows better than its bears. Rydholm spends every minute he can in the woods and still earn a city living.

And the more primitive the woods are, the better, he likes them. But Fred Rydholm has some traits of a professor. He is an instructor at Graveraet Junior High.) Once re hiked seven and a half miles on snowshoes in the dead of winter to check his forest cabin and found when he got there he had forgotten the key. He chuckles about things like that, but he gets dead serious when anyone suggests development of a national park in the Huron Mountains or a broad-band, 37-mile long national lakeshore development between Munising and Grand Marais. CAN'T BE DEVELOPED "You don't develop a wilderness," he says.

"You leave it alone, if you want people to enjoy it just as nature created it." He wishes Isle Roy ale had been left alone, instead of being made into a national park. i'They tell you where you can go and can't go, where yoij can High Twelve To Install New Officers ed flannel shirt with, a T-shirt peeing above the open collar and rough, brown brogan shoes looks for all the world like a guide. He never carries a gun in the woods and has a theory that ani mm mm mals will not attack humans un 1400 Jennings 449 Pipestone less frightened or provoked into it, explaining: "At one time or another, I've seen about 500 bears in the woods, and I've always --questioned stories bears attacking people. ROUND Fruit Belt High Twelve club will hold its annual installation of officers Thursday evening at 6:30 in tile Banquet room of the Milner hotel. Among state dignitaries expected are John Willingham and Warren Hall.

An ensemble from Benton Harbor high school will provide music. All members and their wives are Invited. STRONGHEART Dog Of course, you can't be in their way, but they're not to be feared." At his own lodge he's building in the Michagimme State Forest area about 50 miles from Mar quette, Rydholm has built brush paddle a canoe and where you piles to give animals cover, put insist you use a developed jsout salt to attract deer.and made 4 Mb. Cans plot for your camping, and they've got ovens all over the place that won't work. Adventure has been taken out of a trip to Isle RoyaleJ! Center Cut PORK some lakes to attract geese.

STILL BUILDING Rydholm still is building, after 14 years, on his place in the woods. He cut and peeled his own cedar and in his gigantic fireplace are We arc A WSJM Larky Family Checkbook Merchant and welcome you to honor your gUt check. Kniebci Music Marl 41k State St. Joseph The state anl federal governments already own 40 per cent of the Upper Peninsula, and Rydholm thinks that's enough, "and they ought to de embedded rocks from every coun ty in the Upper Peninsula, even some from what used to be gold PORK STEAK FOULDS, 12oz.pkg. Noodles ENJOY FREE COFFEE WHILE SHOPPING BLOSSOM QUEEN FROZEN Strawberries 100 PURE Ground Beef EXTRA LEAN SHURFINEor -TABLE KING 46oz.

Tomato Juice 3 Pounds Packages 1 3 i Charmin 4 Polls Id: i nit 1l i il'lli I to: SHURFINE or TABLE KING' ij 303 Cream Style or Whole Kernel Cans CORN SHURBEST or MARLENE MARGARINE 3- 10 POUND BAG U.S. NO. 1 MICHIGAN Potatoes Start a savings account any time between now and the 10th of the month. Earn on any amount a full 3Co hank interest from the 1st of the month. Extra free days of interest for you! At the Bank your savings grow with the safety of a National Bank.

Result? You'll soon have a nice nest egg to lean on or live it up with whenever vou choose. Come in start saving today. Hurry! 1 day left I to save EVERYDAY LOW PRICE I HI 2 Lbs. GOLDEN Bananas Homoctnlzid ri'ii WfV First! 1 i For friendly financing. FARMF.RS nd Ml RCH AN T5 NATIONAL BANK mill mm.

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Pages Available:
924,889
Years Available:
1886-2024