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The Herald-Palladium from Benton Harbor, Michigan • 12

Location:
Benton Harbor, Michigan
Issue Date:
Page:
12
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fACS TWELVE THE NEWS-PALLADIUM, BENTON HARBOR, MICH. MONDAY, JUNE 28, 1943 C1H1 loch! nrio rjinc GSDOTCS PEIOTOO Ei opcinii COnnEQPOrJDBTJCES IGAN Sykes Demands Industry Be Coloma Soldier. Gets Local Flood ews In C. B. I.

Roundup, India Bloomingdale VFW' Sells Home, Buys Glendale Building Lucy E. Champion 01 Hartford, Dies Mrs. Helen Grant Of Coloma, Dies Ready For After War Task VFW Asks More Hospitals For Wounded Vets Medical Clinic For 14 Counties At Fort Custer Sykes said he had no fear but Family Leaders In Trade, In Society There COLOMA, June 8 DeathTcame Saturday afternoon at 5 o'clock at her home In Coloma village to Mrs. Helen T. Grant, 76, a prominent I early day Coloma woman, in busi- ness, socially and in lodge work.

She was brought to her Coloma home two months ago from Florida where, while spending the winter, she suffered a stroke. The Grant family at one time conducted a department store and Death Comes As Garden Party Is Manned HARTFORD, June 28 Last Tuesday Mrs. Lucy Elizabeth Champion, 78, planned to entertain the Hartford Woman's club at their annual Garden party at her home at Rush Lake, but serious illness which came the Saturday before caused cancellation of the invitation. -Funeral services were held for her Sunday at 2 o'clock at the Zu- ver Calvin funeral home, following her death Thursday, June 24, at the Watervliet hospital where she was taken for medical She had been in 111 health for the past two years, but had maintained a keen interest in life to the last. She was born in Bloomington, on July 2, 1865.

Her parents were Charles and Sarah Gibney Wbitcomb. She was married to Charles Hamilton Kemp in early woman hood. There were five children who survive her. They are: Harold Kemp, Ada Belle Kemp and Mrs. Ned Winslow, of the Rush Lake district, north of Hartford, and Miss Ethel Kemp of Ann Arbor, There are eight srandchlldren.

trie two eldest -being Corporal Le- land Winslow in service in the Hawaiian Islands and Charles Winslow a student at The State at Ann Arbor University. She Was a member of the Hawley Methodist church and directed during the past year, the re-habili-tation of that small She was an honorary member of the Hartford Woman's club. She married John Champion In later life. He preceeded her in death five years ago. She spent most of her life, except eight years in Chicago, in and around Hartford and at Norwood Farm, Rush Lake.

Funeral services were conducted by Rev. Lester Clough, pastor of the Hartford and Hawley Methodist churches. Burial at Maple Hill cemetery. The mountain beaver, a native of the northwest, Is not a beaver and does not live in the mountains. Bloomingdale, June 28 VFW Post No.

1214 of Bloomingdale, has sold Its home to Mr. and Mrs. Marvin Spayde, who expect to move there after they are able to remodel the building. The post has purchased the ce ment store building on the corner In Glendale, which is a building large enough to accomodate their needs. They have members in PlatowelL Gobies, Kendall, Bloomingdale, Berlamont, Grand Junction, BreedsvUie and Bangor.

Three Visiting Nurses Assigned To Van Buren Co. DECATUR, June 28 Three public health nurses who have been doing advanced work in public health nursing, have been assigned to the Van Buren County Health Department for additional rural health work during the summer. Miss Ovidia Evensen, from Wayne University in Detroit Is a graduate of Northern Michigan College of Education and the Yale University School of Nursing, University of Michigan, will be working with Miss Barbara Carpenter and Miss Mil- dred Allgireof the County Health Department staff and will be assigned special work in the village and township of Decatur. Mrs. Irene Garland will work with Miss Carpenter and Miss All-8 ire in the village and township of Lawrence, and Miss Lillian Huber and Miss Aune Salo; of the County Health Department staff, will be assisted by Mrs.

Elsie Friel, from the University of Pittsburgh, and will do special work in Paw Paw village and township. GO TO CAMP GROUND WATERVLIET, June 28 The Youth Fellowship group of the local Methodist church is being rep resented this week at Crystal Springs camp grounds by three Watervliet young people, Beverly Owens, Betty Wurn and Lois Mill-ham, who will spend one week at the camp. They left here Sunday evening. Lb Van Buren, Berrien And Cass Included In List Of -Eligible? PORT CUSTER, June 28 One hundred and fifty physicians and surgeons representing 14 county medical societies will gather at the station hospital here Wednesday to participate In the first annual hospital clinic day arranged by the army medical corps "to fill a need in the community for scientific Instruction." County medical groups which wQl be represented at the clinic include Allegan, Barry, Berrien, Van Buren, St. Joseph Ottawa, Kent, Kalamazoo, Jackson, Ingham, Hillsdale, Cass, Calhoun and Branch, according to Col.

John G. Slevin, former Detroit surgeon now In command of the hospital In Charge CoL Lnsk The medical clinic will be in charge of Frank B. Lusk, chief of the hospital's medical service and former professor of medicineiAt the Cook county Post-Graduate School of Medicine in Chicago. Joseph W. Gale, chief of surgical service, will conduct the surgical clinic.

He is a professor of surgery In absenta at the University of Wisconsin. The afternoon session will Include a clinical pathological conference In charge of Major M. Xiooney, former director of the laboratory section, Worcester, Mass, state hospital, chief of the hospital laboratory section. A barbecue served in typical army style on the shores of Eagle Lake will close the program. The idea of a military hospital presenting a clinic day for civilian physicians was developed as a 'result of the curtailment of medical society meetings during the war," CoL Slevin said.

Service Takes Them "Because so many of the teachers and leaders of the medical profession are now in the military service, it has made if difficult for medical societies to obtain out standing speakers for their meet tags. "Civilian physicians who desire to keept abreast of the latest de- velopments in medicine and surgery have had to rely almost exclusively upon articles in medical Journals, It was felt that there Is a wealth of material In the larger military hospitals which can be presented by highly qualified medical off i. cers. The clinic day is an effort on the part of medical officers to fill a need in a community for scien tific The Fort Custer station hospital, having a capacity of 1,500 beds, is one of the largest units of its kind in the nation. Col.

Slevin said. Alwood Relates Work Of Recent Methodist Meet WATER VLIET, June 28 W. L. Alwood, of Coloma, gave a few of his impressions of the recent Meth odist conference at the morning ser vice at the Methodist church Sun day. Mr.

Alwood, who is superintendent of the Coloma public schools and also of the Coloma Methodist Sunday school, was elected a lay member of the conference three years ago, but through unavoidable circumstances was unable to attend the sessions the first year and of only a portion of them a year ago. Mr. Alwood was impressed, he said, by the quality of learship in the Methodist church, and he stated he learned that the church does have a program. He mentioned In particular the splendid speakers at the conference and of the great work that is being carried on by the organization, which now numbers more than 9,000,000 persons in the United States. He said the report this year on World Service was exceptional, the offerings being ly 100 per cent.

Mr. Alwood was elected for a four-year term, not as a delegate, but as a member of the conference, which has ceased to be just a ministerial conference. Woman Is Killed In Auto, Train Collision (By Associated Press) DETROIT, June 28. A collision between a Wabash passenger train and an automobile shortly after 8 a. m.

today killed a woman passen-1 ger and critically injured tne anver. Theodore Smith. 28. of Detroit. The car was hurled 50 feet onto tracks, according to police.

Police said the driver identified the woman as his wife, but added his condition was too serious to make the identification certain. She wore a Fort Wayne Army post work badge. COLOMA, June 28 The May floods in Benton Harbor were headline news in India. The C. B.

I. Roundup of June 3, published in New Delhi, India, carried the story of the flood, stating that Main street was under four feet of thatr all rail-traffic was tied up but operation of war plants was uninterrupted. Corp. Allen Bachman, of Coloma, sent a copy of the paper to his wife here. Hehas been in India since a year ago last May with the Army Air Force.

Recently he had a two weeks' furlough and traveled throughout India. Peace Reigns In Riot Zones Conference Today To Tell Status Of Troops (By Associated Press) DETROIT, June 28 After a peaceful week-end, Detroiters looked today to a conference between Brig. Gen. William Guthner, of the sixth service command, Gov. Harry Kelly and Mayor Edward effrles for Indication when federal troops on riot duty In the city will be The conference, scheduled some some time this morning, also was believed likely to bring action on further relaxation of curfew restrictions Imposed after last week's race riots which took the lives of 34 persons and caused injury to hundreds.

The Sabbath passed' uneventfully in the city and at Belle Isle, where the battling between whites and Negroes began a week ago Sunday night. The heaviest patrol of troops and police was maintained- at the Isle and Its bridge approach. Meanwhile, some 100 Negroes attending a Chicago meeting spon-. sored by the National Negro Congress requested President Roosevelt to instruct the Department of Justice to Investigate the riots, which a spokesman called "an Insurrection directed by a Fascist fifth column. Hitler agents and the Ku Klux Klan to divide our country from within." Mrs.

D. F. Cochrane Home From Hospital HARTFORD, June 28 Mrs. Sadie M. Cochrane, wife of Don F.

Cochrane, former Hartford editor, who has been critically 111 since May 26, when she suffered a heart attack complicated by pneumonia, was moved by ambulance over the weekend from 'Borgess hospital, Kalamazoo, to her home home here. Her condition is improved. It is Cochrane 's first Illness in more than 40 years and the first critical illness in her lifetime. A convalescent period of complete rest, however has been ordered for the patient by the family physician, Dr. F.

M. Williams. Record Michigan Pig -Crop Is Predicted (By Associated Press) LANSING, June 28 The state- federal crop reporting service pre. diets a record 1943 crop of 2,532,. 000 pigs in Michigan.

The spring crop is expected to be a peak and that of the fall 1,438,000. However, state crop Statlscian C. J. Borum said the entire 1943 corn crop would be required to feed this huge pork crop and that com short. age might force a reduction in fall farrowlngs.

Michigan Bankers Hold Annual Meet Saturday (By Associated Press) MACKINAC ISLAND. June 28. The Michigan Bankers association concluded its 3-lay annual meeting here Saturday by electing Rudolph E. Reichert, president of the Ann Arbor Savings bank and former state banking commissioner, its Bloomingdale Bloomingdale, June 28 A recep tion jeas given at the Methodist Church last Friday evening, June 25, for Rev and Mrs. Glenn Parrott, who have been returned to the Bloomingdale, Glendale and Town line churches for another year.

Charles and John Reynolds have gone to Akron, Ohio, for the sum. mer vacation. Frank Shindler has joined the Navy. Mrs. Royal Remington of Bloom ingdale and sister, Mrs.

Willard French of Pullman, "have gone to Greenville, to visit their brother, Pvt. Elwin Brindley. Vinton Cooley, a former Bloom ingdale merchant who has been managing a Kroger store in Kalamazoo, has been transferred to Three Rivers by the -same company and will move his family there soon. TAKEN TO CHICAGO WATERVLIET, June 28 Mrs. Margaret Hayes, of Casnovia, who has been making her home the past several months with her daughter, Mrs.

Wm. L. Barn urn, Pleasant street, was removed in the Keasey-Hutchins ambulance Sun day afternoon to a hospital in Chicago for medical treatment. The War Department has reveal ed that in January-February, 1943, 28,000 Army trucks and 5000 tanks were completed, and In February alone 7800 weapon-bearing combat (By Associated Press) DETROIT, June 28 A demand for "a basic" clearing of the postwar future for free enterprise" was voiced today by Wilfred Sykes, president of the Inland Steel company, at a Michigan-region postwar conference of the National Association of Manufacturers. Sykes, in' a prepared address, called on Industry to use its initiative now in planning post-war production so that it may be problems after the war "lest free enterprise go by default." "We need," Sykes said, "a basis clearing of the post-war future for free enterprise perhaps by something like the Charter of the Atlantic.

If official government assurance cannot be had for free enterprise, then both major political parties should be asked to proclaim for It In next year's election." Recover Body Of Drowned Airman Negro Who Crashed Into Lake Found (By Associated Press) SELFRIDGE FIELD, June 28 Army air base authorities last night announced the recovery from Lake Huron of the body of Second Lieut. Wllmeth W. Sidat-Singh, army flyer and former Syracuse University athletic star, whose single-seater pursuit plane plunged into the lake May 9. A Coast Guard patrol sighted the body off-shore seven miles north of East Tawas at 3 p. m.

Sunday and it was brought to the army's Oscoda Field for Identification. Sidat-Singh, member of the 332nd fighter group, an all-negro unit, from Oscoda when his plane was on a routine training flight crashed Into the lake two miles out from East Tawas. He parachuted from the ship, officers said. Sidat-Singh, a clever forward passer on the gridiron and a star at basketball, was graduated from Syracuse In 1939 and from the Tuskegee, flying school' last March 27. He reported for duty at Self ridge May mother, Mrs.

Pauline E. Sidat-Singh of. New York city, was to make funeral ar rangements. South Haven Legion To Elect Thursday SOUTH HAVEN, June 28 The annual election of, officers of Ed ward W. Thompson Post No.

49 American Legion, will be held at the American Legion Home on Thurs evening, July 1. Nominees on the ballot are: Com mander, Hugh Flickinger and Lewis Shields; 1st Vice Commander, Christian Niffenegger, Herbert commander, Dr. R. E. Keithly and Suhr, William Elliott; 2nd Vice Frank Sorensen; Finance Officer, unaries ouiett.

Adjutant, Benjamin C. Suhr; His torian, Ernest und; Chaplain, Ar. thur Clarke; Welfare Board; Joseph uorman and Clarence Christian House Committee, Joseph Gorman Leo Hlnz, Arthur Fennell, and Taper Pollln. Christian Endeavor Convention Closes (By Associated Press) KALAMAZOO, June 28 The 55th annual convention of the Michigan Christian Endeavor union closed here yesterday with the installation of officers headed by Miss Thelma Schroeder of Monroe, who was re elected president. The convention heard week-end addresses by the Rev.

Horace White, pastor of the Plymouth Congrega- tlonal church of Detroit, and Dr. Charles Copeland Smith, a lecturer for the National Association of Manufacturers, Decatur DECATUR, June 28 Miss Marian Knoll, daughter of Mr. Max Knoll of Hamilton township, who has been attending the Perkins Institute for the Blind, near Boston, has return ed home for the summer. Miss Knoll was granted a scholarship to the Institute for the teeming year. Mrs.

Frank Lindsley of Decatur, accompanied by Mrs. Lucille Noble and Mrs. Genevieve Sampson of Lawton, have gone to Fort Warren, Wyoming, to join their husbands who are stationed there. Frank Dodge, superintendent of Decatur schools, Henry Houseman, principal, and Chapin McAllis ter, principal of the grade school, are working In Defense plants in Dowaglac for the summer. Robert Tredwell of Poland, Ohio, has come to the home of his grand parents, Mr.

and Mrs. H. R. Fertig, for the summer. Leonard Peiree Has Hospital Operation WATER VLIET, June 28 Leonard Peirce, of Hartford, was stricken suddenly and seriously ill last Friday and was rushed to Water-vliet hospjtal where an emergency operation was performed at 10 o'clock that night Mr.

Peirce is a son of, Mr. and Mrs. Byron L. Peirce) and is a former well known local resident. He is convalescing from the operation.

Underground telephone cables In western states are specially armored to protect them from praule dogs. Industry could do the job of plan ning for the post-war world and "executing the plans, if the government will permit." He said the government "recognized the value of using top-notch business men in getting the war effort rolling. course," he said, "for those who don't mind collectivism, the whole post-war problem can be solved simply by default. When some 15,000,000 come out of the army and the wartime Industries looking for peacetime jobs, in default of such jobs they will all be put on public works. "And that brings us to what is wrong with the public works panacea.

Government jobs do not create goods. They Just equip a large number of people with money which the government takes by taxation or borrowing from those who do create the goods." STATE BRIEFS (By Associated Press) HOWELL Stephen Miller, 60, of (991 Holcomb) Detroit, was killed Sunday when a derrick used in unloading hay on a farm near here collapsed and fell on him. KALAMAZOO Mrs. Robert Lev- say, 24, died Saturday night at her farm home west of here alter drink. lng an Insect poison which, authorities were told, she mistook for a limeade.

The husband and a 3-year-old daughter survive. KALAMAZOO Funeral services were held Monday for a 1 Schensul, 49, who died In Bronson hospital Saturday after a long illness. He was associated with his brothers, Joseph and Irving, in operating the Hollywood Night club and the Schensul cafeteria. SELFRIDGE FIELD William H. Hasse, 54, Grand Rapids civilian shot by a sentry while climbing a fence at the Army air base here May 7, was released from the field station hospital Sunday.

Col. William B.4Wright, field commandant, said Hasse had absolved the sentry and Army of any blame, saying he became confused in his directions. MUSKEGON John S. Klobucher, 73, bled to death Saturday after cutting his wrist while opening a bottle. GREENVILLE Roane Waring, national commander of the American Legion, will speak July 11 at the Eighth district Legion conven tion here.

Robert Wright of Iron- wood, state commander, and Carl Smith of Bay City, national commit teeman, also will attend. DETROIT Injuries suffered In a fall from a second -floor bedroom of her home caused the death Sunday night of Mrs. Ada Allen, 77. Local Help Is Solution For Farm Problems PAW PAW, June 28. Van Buren county fruit and vegetable farmers will have to rely chiefly on local help to produce crops this year, ac cording to John G.

Woodman, coun ty agricultural agent. While in other years outside labor has been available, transients are this year finding transportation practically Impossible. "If crops are harvested," says Mr. Woodman, help will have to come from our own people." As to raspberry picking, at hand in a few days, he suggests labor be procured at from 10 years of age up. It is light work and can be thus done.

These centers are named by Mr. Woodman as points for anyone interested in helping on farms to con tact: South Haven Fruit Exchange; Bangor Fruit Exchange; Hartford Co-op Elevator; Bob Marks, Law rence; News Stand, Decatur; George Standard, Lawton; Farm Labor office, Postofflce building, Paw Paw. Candy Maker Launches Business In Hartford WATER VLIET, June 28-Joseph Moran, owner and manager of the Watervliet Kandy Kitchen since 1921, has pulled up stakes and moved to Hartford where he win continue to sell root beer and make and sell candy at wholesale. Mr. Moran is not a stranger in Hartford as he maintained a booth at the Hartford fair every year.

He came to Watervliet from Chicago 30 years ago and' has been in this vicinity ever since. Retired Dean Of North Michigan College Dies (By Associated Press) MARQUETTE. June 28. Prof. John Edward Lautner, widely known Michigan educator who was dean of the faculty of Northern Michigan College of Education at his retirement four years ago, died yesterday in St.

Luke's hospital of pneumonia. He was 79. Born in Traverse City, Prof. Lautner was irraduated from the University of Michigan in 1895 and received his master of arts degree there 1898. He was an instructor at the University of Michigan and then served in schools of St.

Louis, before joining the Northern Michigan faculty In 1903 as profes sor of modern languages and soci ology. He later became head of Northern's department of political science and when he retired because of falling health in 1939 he was named prcfessor emeritus. Surviving are the wldo a son, John of Los Angeles, a daughter, Mrs. Donald Morris of and three grandchildren. Foley In Five-Way Test For State Junior Vice-Corn.

(By Associated Press) LANSING, June 28 The Michigan department of the Veterans of Foreign Wars, already mushrooming in membership as result of World War today called upon the government to revise upwards its building program for hospitalization of veterans wounded in the current conflict. At Its 24th annual encampment which closed here Sunday, the department asserted that the beginning of the war found hospital facilities of the veterans administration Inadequate to care fully for existing cases. Clifford D. Everett of Sault Ste. Marie was elected department commander, while Maurice F.

Cole, Ferndale, was named senior vice-commander, and William B. Tarr, Ludington, junior vice-commander. Foky In Contest Tarr, who presumably will assume the commander's post in 1946, emerged victor in a five -way contest with Dr. Oliver Pratz, Flint, Arthur Gregg, River Rouge, Bernard Foley, Benton Harbor, and Harry Applegate, Lansing. Gregg, on a second ballot, threw his support to Tarr, asserting "apparently this Isn't a Detroit year." Retiring Commander Joseph W.

Mann estimated state VFW membership at 17,000, with a gain of about 3,000 World War II veterans this year. The encampment went on record as opposing "infiltration into American communities of citizens and descendants of Japan." It also requested draft officials to Induct single men between 38 and 45 before taking married members of the organization with dependents prior to Pearl Harbor. Early Vacationists At Paw Paw Lake WATER VLIETJune 28 Among early summer arrivals at Campbell's Breezyslde resort, Paw Paw lake, are Mr. and Mrs. Fred McGrath, of Three Oaks, and Mr.

and Mrs. Ev-eret McGrath, of Michigan City, who have leased the "Victoria" cottage. Also Mr. and Mrs. Richard Huff, and Mr.

and Mrs. Paul Hannah and daughter, Nancy Jean, of Cincinnati, Ohio. Mr. Huff is spending a little time here before going into military training. Mr.

and Mrs. D. W. Chapman and son, William, of Chicago, spent last week at their summer home near Breezyslde. The son, an ensign In the U.

S. Navy, has just graduated from engineering at Columbia University, New York City. He had a nine-day leave and reported back for duty. June 24. Mr.

and Mrs. Chapman are among the early day summer residents at Paw Paw lake, having spent 45 summers here. Vera Enders, Benton Harbor, of the Enders Bus Line, and Mrs. Enders have leased a cottage at the Campbell resort and will be there for a two weeks' vacation. Mr.

and Mrs. Edwin Achterberg, and small son of St. Joseph, will also spend their vacation at the resort. Mr. Achteberg has been coming-to the lake for a number of years to fish.

Ruby. Elzy, 33, Famed Colored Singer, Dies (By Associated Press) DETROIT. June 28. Funeral services will be held Tuesday. In Corinth, home of her mother, for Ruby Elzy, 33-year-old Negro stage, screen and concert singer who died Saturday in Parkslde hos pital here.

Miss Elzy. who played in more than 800 performances of "Porgy and Bess," became a surgical patient in the hospital after completing coast-to -coast tour in that George Gershwin opera in the soprano role of the widow "Serena," for which Gershwin himself selected her. In private life she was Mrs. Jack Carr. Bloomingdale Club Installs Officers BLOOMINGDALE, June 28 The season final meeting of the Bloom.

ingdale Woman's club was held last Thursday afternoon at the home of Mrs. Eunice Murray. It was not only the annual spring luncheon but was also installation of officers. Party and entertainment committees had charge. Officers installed were: President, Mrs.

Olive Dickerson; vice president, Mrs. Millie Culver; secretary, Mrs. Louvlsa Melvin; treasurer, Mrs. Mable Meek. Appointive officers Installed were: Historian, Mrs.

William Ruth; reporter, Mrs. Charles Pease; parliamentarian. Miss Blanche Cooley. Mrs. Eunice Murray and Mrs.

Julia Murray were the Installing officers. BABY SON BORN WATERVLIET, June 28 Mr. and Mrs. Ferdie Walker are the parents of a son born Thursday, June 24, at the Watervliet hospital. The baby is a grandson of Mr.

and Mrs. George Spore and a great grandson of the Rev. and Mrs. wm. A.

HennosAv, Watervliet were well known in mercantile and social circles. She was an early day club leader. BornOctober 13. 1866, in Cass county, she was the daughter of Mr. and Mrs.

John Pitcher. Most or her life was spent in and about Colom. She was a charter member and past president of the Clover Leaf club, and was second worthy matron of the Coloma chapter of the Order of Eastern Star. Two sons. Homer Grant, of St.

Petersburg, and Harold Grant, of Detroit, six grandchildren ana two great grandchildren survive her. She also leaves one brother, Wallace Pitcher of St. Joseph. Funeral services will be held at the Davidson funeral home In Co loma Tuesday at 2 o'clock. Rev.

H. B. Loomis, pastor of the Congrega tional church, will officiate. Burial In Coloma cemetery. The Coloma O.

E. S. chapter will have charge or the services.at the grave. APPEALS TO O. E.

S. coloma. June 28 Mrs. Peter Clark, matron of the O. E.

S. of Co loma, has issued a request for all members that can do so, to attend t.h funeral of Mrs. Helen Grant Tuesday afternoon at 2 p. m. at the Davidson funeral home.

Bunai will be under O. E. S. auspices. Mrs.

Grant was a charter member and a past matron of Coloma chapter. ODT. emphasizes that truck and bus operators should have worn parts rebuilt before they reach th point where crystallization sets in, with resultant metal fatigue and breakage. Til Lb DIAL 3-1633 INSURE NOW AND BE SAFE The most effective and easiest way to protect your right to drive under this new law is to buy adequate and dependable Automobile Liability Insurance now before an accident occurs. If you value your right to drive a car, the time to protect it is NOW.

The new law (Michigan Motor Vehicle Financial Responsibility Law) goes into effect July 30thw How can this law affect you? BE WISE! TNA-IZE! A policy written by the dependable tna Casualty and Surety Company not only will meet the requirements of this new law but will also protect you against financial loss resulting from an automobile accident. NEW LOW RATES NOW IN EFFECT You can purchase an iCtna policy today at thelowest cost in history. Yet you still get the same dependable protection and "tfie same prompt efficient service of your friendly JEtna. Agent as always. Ask for Booklet "One Strike It requires the Secretary of State to suspend or revoke the operator's licenses and registration certificates of all owners and operators (1) who become involved in an accident involving bodily injury or death and who, within a period of 3 0 to 60 days (a) fail to settle all bodily injury or death claims resulting therefrom; or (b) fail to deposit with the Secretary of State acceptable security (up to $10,000) to cover such claims; or (c) fail to show that acceptable auto, mobile bodily injury liability insurance (with limits of at least was in force at the time of the accident; or (2) who fail to satisfy, within the prescribed limits, ahy judgment for bodily injury or death or for damage to property io excess of 5 and you're Our" It tells the full story of this new law, of Etna protection and agency service.

Call, write or telephone this office today. 4-H Clubs Open Annual Meet At East Lansing (By Associated Press) EAST LANSING, June 28. A war-shortened 4-H club convention opened today at Michigan Stata college for 650 youthful delegates from 44 southern Michigan counties. Normally extending a full week, the 25th annual meeting of boys and girls who have excelled In project work txiA other club activities in their counties will lat only through Thursday to permit an earlier return of the youngsters to labor-shy fnns. i I 41 STATE ST.

SAINT JOSEPH REPRESENTING vehicles came off the assembly Una,.

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