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The Escanaba Daily Press from Escanaba, Michigan • Page 2

Location:
Escanaba, Michigan
Issue Date:
Page:
2
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

DM' PRESS 2 Escanaba, November 10. 195ft UN Force For Peace: Drury The Umled Nations is the most effective instrument for peace and effect upon young people will encourage their conviction that "this country can live as a nation at peace among the nations of the Cliff Drury of Lansing, asfoci- ate secretary of the Michigan Young Christian told the Escanaba Rotary Club of the UN's role of keeping the peace and developing the economic and social of backward countries. He has been a student of the UN for several years and has visited its sessions with groups of young people TTie general assembly is the meeting of the where the conference table is replacing military force in assuring peace, Drury said There are now 82 nations represented in the UN and the number to be delegated will grow, he reported Drury described the operations of the several councils within the framework of the UN. Under the economic and social council progress is being made on technical and humanitarian projects, fabulous story of world The speaker introduced by L. Heirman of the Rotary Club.

James G. Ward Jr the Club president, conducted the meeting GOODMAN DIVISION of alumet A la. Inc. thin modem mu mill at Mohaw In the Copper Country's Keweenaw ountv where for most of a century A has meant copper min- and not woods industry. The Goodman Division, which large timberland area about Goodman, and operates a modern sawmill and wood finishing plant there, has recently acquired timherlands from Atlas Corp.

In the eastern I'pper Peninsula and that It plans to expand its I'. P. operations. The cars are being loaded with waste proceswcd into for pulping. (Daily Press Photo I Hi Phonics lake SPEBSQSA Title Ice Revue Future Studied By Board Briefly Told To Phone Your Items The Presa: ST 6-1021 Wells Willing Club The Willing Workers, Wells 4-H Club, met Monday at 3:30 p.

m. at the Wells School. Fred Bernhardt, county agent, attended the meeting. Plans were made for a candy sale to be held at the school Tuesday, Nov. 17, at 12:30 p.

and for a Christmas party Dec. 10 at St. Anthony Church. ENDS TO-MTEI AT 7 AND 9 P. M.

WILD RIDERS OF THE PLAINS! THE WAR FOR KANSAS! wivsar KSS NXXXf IM tart wed 7 2 COLOSSAL HITS! AND DELILAH KIRK DOUGLAS SILVANA MANGANO VDfSSES TECHNICOLOR The Hi Phonics, popular Milwaukee barbershop quartette, became the 1959-60 champions of the SPEBSQSA Land O' Lakes district at the annual district quartette contest held in Manitowoc last weekend. The bass singer in the quartette and one of the organizers of the group, Fritz Provencher, former Escanaba resident, son of Mr. and Mrs. Alfred Provencher, 501 S. Uth St.

Before moving to Milwaukee, Fritz was active in quartette and chorus work with the Escanaba SPEBSQSA. He appeared on an Escanabe show in 1957 with the Hi Phonics in one of their earliest as an organized quartette. Last July the Hi Phonics were one of the select 40 of 2.500 quartettes entered in the international contest in Chicago. The Land Lakes district, over which the Milwaukeeans now reign as champions, includes Up- Michigan, Western Ontario, Wisconsin. Minnesota, North Dakota and the province of Manitoba and Saskatchewan in Canada.

25 To Testify At Senate Hearings MARQUETTE Twenty-five persons are scheduled to testify Saturday at the hearing on unemployment in the Upper Peninsula. to be conducted by the United States Senate Special Cimmit- tee on Unemployment Problems, The hearing is one of two scheduled in Michigan this week. Senator Patrick V. McNamara (D-Mich), a member of the committee. will be in charge of the I hearing in Marquette.

Top officials of industry, labor and government have been invited to testify here. Included are may- ors of cities with unemployment problems. The special committee was created in the closing days of the re- cent session of congress, it was charged with investigating the unemployment situation in the U. and reporting its findings and recommendations to the Senate when Congress reconvenes in January. The future of Ice Revue was lengthy session creation Board Escanaba'fc annual the subject of a of the City Reat a meeting in City Hall Monday night.

Board members heard a report on a meeting of an Ice Revue committee which listed possible methods of creating more revenue and more interest in the home John McCallum Dies Suddenly H. Me- I Callum, 64, of Gould City, died suddenly Monday afternoon of a heart attack. Mr. McCallum was born Feb. 2 1 1895, in Gould City, and bad lived there entire life.

He married the former Ann Black Jan. 29, 1942 at Gould City. He had been employed by the Mackinaw County Road Commission, Gould City office, for 20 years. Among survivors are his wife; two brothers, Gerald of Muskegon and Amos oi Fruitport, five sisters, Mrs. Leo Gonyon of Curtis, Mrs.

Blake Dinger of Flint, and Mrs. Anna Yale, Mrs. George Judson and Mrs. John Cribley, all of Gould City. The body was taken to the Messier-Broullire Funeral Home where friends may begin calling at 2:30 p.

m. Wednesday. Funeral services will be held Thursday at 2 p. m. at the Gould City Community Building.

Burial will be in Scotts Point Cemetery. The body will lie in state at the Community Building from noon 1 Thursday until the time of the funeral service. town ice show which has been 1 staged here for many years. The board also heard a report from Art Petersen, city recreation director, on a recreation project hich would include an ice Pop Concert in a wide-scale Winter Carnival to replace the present Ice Revue. Petersen listed a vai iety of activities for and adults that could be included in the weekend Carnival.

No action was taken by the Recreation Board pending a de- tailed report from the recreation director on a tentative schedule of activities which would be sponsored at the Fairgrounds indoor i 1 rmk if the Ice Revue is discontin- ued. The Pop Concert, Petersen stated, could provide an outlet for figure skaters, young and old, in the area without the great expen.se which is necessary in staging the annual Ice Revue. The Ice Revue budget is underwritten annually by the City 1 Council with the understanding that it must be self supporting. I Ijast year the Revue finished $1,500 in the red and the City Council indicated it would not continue to underw rite the pro- ject on that basis, Dr. Norman Lindquist, chair- man of the Board, i stated that a decision on the 1960 Ice Revue would likely be made 1 at 8 p.

Monday, at the next meeting, following occurred at N. 15th study of both the Ice Revue and the alternative Winter Carnival plans. The monthly luncheon meeting of the Delta-Schoolcraft Life Underwriters will be held at the Delta Hotel Friday noon. Piesiaent Aivid Mustonen said a program is being arranged. Four local members of the Delta-Schoolcraft Life Underwriters are attending weekly classes at the Carney High School.

This an advanced underwriting class sponsored by the National Life Underwriters Council. Twenty underwriters from Menominee, Dickinson, Delta, and Schoolcraft Counties make up the class. Local men in attendance are Gordon Anderson, Don Koehler, Bud Nieu- wenkamp and Edward Marshall. Traffic violation tickets have been issued by Escanaba police to: Adela A. Olson, Escanaba Rte.

1, expired license and fail- i ure to stop in the assured clear distanct ahead; and Delia Peterson, Escanaba, speeding. Gary D. Bannister. Rapid River Rte. 1, was ticketed by Esca, naba police for failure to stop in the assured clear distince ahead after his car struck a parked auto I owned by Masako Sasa, 820 S.

16th St DdmaRc to the parked car was $95, Herman .1. Filiion. 37, of 1428 16th Ave. was ticketed by Escanaba police for driving too fast and leaving the scene of a property damage accident after his car hit and damaged a lamp post The accident and 3rd Ave. and damage to car was $50.

Deer Plentiful, Kiwanians Told Nov. 15 hunting prospects are favorable far the number of deer are Escanaba Kiwanis Club members were told Monday by Dave Arnold, regional game supervisor for the Conservation Department. Arnold based his prediction on the results of area counts which have shown an increase in the fleer population over last year, but pointed out that weather conditions as always are a big lactor in the deer kill. The number of hunters in the Upper Peninsula woods decreased last year, despite the predicted influence of the Mackinac Bridge on hunter traific. In the Upper Peninsula, there are only 6 to 7 hunters per square mile during the deer season, Arnold said, and the present deer kill could be doubled without threatening the perpetuation of the deer population.

In the state this year it is estimated that 116,000 deer will be killed, with about 25,000 in the Upper Peninsula. An additional 93,000 deer may be taken during the any-deer season. It is expected that the hunting army in the state will be about the same as last year. Arnold showed a collection of, colored slides which illustrated i figures gathered on deer hunting conditions throughout the state. Areas over-populated with deer were pointed out, and it was shown how the food supply I fects the size of deer and I number of fawns produced.

af- the Obituary EINAR HANNON Funeral services for Einar Hanson of Ogontz were held at 2 p. m. Monday at Calvary Lutheran Church in Rapid River with the Rev Herbert Carlmark officiating Burial was in Ogontz Cemetery. Pallbearers were Wallace Birk, Richard Johnson, Adolph Sundberg. Sigwald Kallerson.

Sandy Gustafson and Francis Rudenberg Rock Traffic Safety Sunday Stresses Golden Road Rule Annatto a yellowish-red dyestuff made from the pulp of the of a tropical tree and used to color various foods. In Service Lt. JR Robert W. St. Martin, of 409 S.

9th Escanaba, returned to Long Beach, Nov. 13. aboard the destroyer Black after a five-month tour of duty with the U. S. Seventh Fleet in the Western Pacific.

Despite the Far Easts worst typhoon season in history, the Black, a unit of Destroyer Division 92, managed to participate in various anti-submarine exercises and to visit Japan, Hong Kong. Hawaii and the Philippines. Traffic Safety for consideration sponsibility of driver, has been Sabbath, a time of the moral re- the individual called for by a MOVIE TREAT? Vital Facts Explained FREE DESCRIPTIVE BOOK As a public service to all readers of this paper, a new' 36-page highly illustrated book on Arthritis and Rheumatism will be mailed ABSOLUTELY FREE to all who i write for it. This FREE BOOK explains the causes, ill-effects and danger in neglect of these painful and crippling conditions. It also describes a successfully proven drugless method of treatment i which has been applied in many thousands of cases.

This book Is yours WITHOUT COST or obligation. It may be the means of saving years of untold misery. delay. Send for I vour FREE BOOK today. Address I The Ball Clinic Dept.

1607 Excelsior Springs. Mo. Cornell 4-1! Club Fitty members of the Tots and Teens 4-H Club met at the Cornell Town Hall to begin work on winter projects. Regular business meetings for all members will be held the second Monday in the month and work meetings the fourth Monday evening for older boys and girls. A work meeting for younger members is scheduled for Nov.

23 at 3 p. m. at the Town Hall. The condition of Mrs. South, a patient in St.

Hospital, is improving, Mrs. Archie Sanville patient at St. Francis ioi treatment for a leg El vera Francis Sr. is a Hospital fracture. state committee of clergymen representing Catholic, Jewish and Protestant denominations.

By official proclamation. Governor Williams has designated the weekend of Nov. 15 for the statewide observance This is the sixth such observance. The Inter faith Committee sponsoring the program includes: Rev. Fr John D.

Slowey, Catholic Social Service, Lansing; Dr. Stanley Buck. Methodist Peace Temple, Benton Harbor: Rabbi Philip Frankel, Congregation Sha- arev-Zedek, Lansing and Arthur H. Brandt, Lutheran Center, Detroit. The special committee, part of a larger group of clergymen, which started meetings in Lansing earlier this year, is concerned with the serious increase in the number of deaths and other human loss stemming from traffic injuries.

Included in the information mailed to religious leaders is the statement that four times as many people are killed by motorists as by The committee Ls concerned with the double standard of morality which many people seem to establish between their driving and the rest of their life. It is not the purpiKse of the program to try to cut accidents for I one weekend, according to the The 22nd Amendment to the U. Constitution limits future presidents to two in office. Chairman Rev. Fr.

John Slowey. The intent is to enlist the clergy of all faiths in a year-round program of counsel, teaching and preaching involving traffic on the same basis as other life situations. Dr Stanley Buck your religion show when driving The Golden Rule, basic to all religions is a desperate tor those who drive automobiles, if some of the needless slaughter on our highways is to be DID YOU KNOW ESCANABA DAIRY the FIRST Dairy in Escanaba to install a STAINLESS AIRTIGHT SEPARATOR for better quality control? Ask for Dairy Products At Your Favorite Store! HILARIOUS! WHAT GOES ON WHEN THE LIGHTS GO OFF il the PtHFtcr PAIR ron Pillow i TALK NICK ADAMS MARCEL DALIO JUUA MEADC A UNIVERSAL-INTERNATIONAL RELEASE astman COLOR CINEMASCOPE CARTOON-NEWS now! nuniMia HUNTERS' BALL EVERY NIGHT! THE TERRACE Starting Wednesday, Nov. 11 ALTERNATING BANDS CULTY JOHNSON AND HARLAND LIPPOLD 1 Wonderful Food Served Daily, 5 to 10 p. m.

SWALLOW INN Headquarters In Rapid River The Biggest Jamboree Of All Times! HUNTERS' BALL EVERY NIGHT STARTING NOV. 11TH MARRIER All Deerslayers Welcome! Buck or Doe! No Admitted Smorgasbord 5. Nov. II Cocktail Hour.6:00 P.M. Serving ........6:30 P.M.

Delta Hotel Toastmaster For The Evening ROBERT HANSLEY Speaker COL. JOHN W. KELLY Entertaniment And Singing By The HARMONY JILLS QUARTETTE Honored Guests Of The Evening: GOLD STAR MOTHERS SPANISH AMERICAN WAR VETERANS ALL VETERANS ARE CORDIALLY INVITED TO THIS VETERANS' DAY CELEBRATION PAI PENNO arrived here from Cadillac to take charge of the Escanaba and Manistique Seventh-Day Adventist Church and to serve as district leader, lie Bernard Furst. Mho transferred to Wellington. Ka.

The new pastor graduated from Union Lincoln. married and the family including Mrs. Penno and two sons, seven and 11. reside at 1712 9th Ave. S.

Explosion Wrecks Home; Mother And 6 Children Perish GLENS FALLS. N. Y. mother and her six children perished today in an explosion and fire that destroyed their home near here. The father was burned critically.

The Sheriff Department said one of tihe family apparently had thrown kerosene or gasoline into a wood stove in the living roomo the one-story frame dwelling Kiiled were Janet Harris. 24 and children ranging from 6 Veterans Day will be observed in Escanaba on Wednesday with traditional ceremonies in the morning and a dinner progiam in the evening at the Delta Hotel Veterans are to report at the City Hall at 10:30 a. for the sounding of taps in a ceremony to be held on Ludington at 11th. The smorgasbord at the Delta Hotel will begin at and Col. John W.

Kelly of Manistique will oe the speaker. Atty Robert Hans- iey of Escanaba will be the toastmaster and the entertainment program will include songs by the Harmony Jills quartet. Gold Star Mothers and veterans of the Spanish American War i will be guests. Only one-fifth of the land of Massachusetts is used foi farming and of this is used to grow hay. months to 8 years.

Charles Harris Sr about 36. a building contractor. was taken to Falls Hospital. E. A.

Special Meeting Of Delta Lodge No. 195 Wednesday Evening, Nov. 11,7:30 P. M. Work in E.

A. Degree. Lunch Will Be Served Mr. and Mr.v Walter Manntie have received news of their third grandchild, born Nov. 6 to Dr.

and Mrs. Richard Evinger of Ladysmith, Wis. The new granddaughter weighed 7 pounds, 8 ounces at birth. Mrs. Manntie will leave for Ladysmith Wednesday to spend several weeks with the Ev- ingers.

FRIDAT-THE I3IH LUCKY BUTS! Presents The Best Buys For Prices In The U. Quilted Insulated Underwear NEW SHIPMENT JUST UNPACKED! Genuine DuPont dacron interlined, nylon shell. Green, grey, yellow, red or blue. Famous Brand. Sim S-M-L-XL.

Inner or outer stvle jacket. $9.98 ir $13.98 Jacket and NOW! You can buy this quilted dacron insulated underwear in only, if you wish. Juat arrived All aiiea and Inner or outer $6.98 Sheepskin Lined Booties To Wear Inaide Thermo Insulated Underwear Waffle weave, cotton knit, warm and comfortable SHIRTS A DRAWERS ea. Wrifcht And Rodyjfard Underwear A Drawers 259c J.Q Wool 7 Wool $5.79 $3.25 $2.49 $2.69 WOOL HEAVY STAG JACKETS plaids, zipper front SPECIAL PURCHASE WOOL HUNTING COATS $9.98 Uned, sipper game pockets, 6 front pockets, button or front. Compare with $22.50 Value $15.95 $2.49 BIG YANK SUEDE FLANNEL SHIRTS Bright plaids, flap pockets, long shirt tail.

Comfortable to wear, but light weight HEAVY WOOL HUNTING PANTS plaids. Breeches $9.50 Knit Cuff $9.98 WOOL BUFFALO SHIRTS or multi-color All wool Low Priced $5.98 HOODED SWEAT SHIRTS Bright red, fleece lined, hood just slips back. SPECIAL $2.49 Insulated Rubber Roofs Full lace. 1st quality KST $12.50 1 Rubber Roots Converse crepe sole, cushion insole, first quality Special Purchase For Your Lucky The 13th! Factory Close-Outs And CAR COATS AND WINTER JACKETS VALUES TO SI0.98 $2-98 to SX.98 Terrific sNtvings in parka jackets, pile lined, convertible hooded some with de- tachshle hoods. Quilted linings some wash wear cords, poplins, corduroys, paisley prints A huge selection.

Sites 3 tn 6X and 7 for and girls. CHECK THESE NEEDED CLOTHES ITEMS! LMthir Top Rubber. Felt Shoes 86.50 Heavy 4 Bkle.Arctics 15.98 Felt Insoles, pr. 39 Red Jersey Gloves, pr. 39c Insulated Wool Sox.

pr. 98c Insulated Booties, pr. SI.98 Red Bandanna Hankies 15c Red Corduroy Caps Wool Hat Caps Poplin Hat Caps Wool Plaid Caps S1.49 Horsehide Choppers pr $1.00 Wool pr 89c 81.00 S1.00 82.49 81.98 FIHEMAH'S (10THIH6 (0..

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About The Escanaba Daily Press Archive

Pages Available:
167,328
Years Available:
1924-1977