Skip to main content
The largest online newspaper archive

The Evening News from Sault Sainte Marie, Michigan • Page 4

Publication:
The Evening Newsi
Location:
Sault Sainte Marie, Michigan
Issue Date:
Page:
4
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

Four THE EVENING NEWS, SAULT $TE. MARIE, MICHIGAN MONDAY, DECEMBER 7, T953 The Evening News STEWS riritnitoa SanH Ste. Mariej. EXCEPT GEOBGE A. OSBOBN Editor and Tie td it eatlUti to puJstotiaa at tht local la dis newspaper as wtlJ all AP nesri dispatcher Bulxerlptlon rates by car- WASHINGTON LETTER BY JANE EADS WASHINGTON Mamie Eisenhower, graduate cum laude of the White House Spanish-Portuguese 35c wetfc- ty.

Annually HI.JO IB nnct. By per ytu. Is advance. In Chlppeica. Maclunac and Luce County, S9.

Elsewhere In U. 8. til. i poration papers of the study group in 1942 along with I those of its founder, Mrs. Clarence Goodwin, Study Group, greeted members with a flawless welcome in Spanish when she entertained the group at tea at the Executive Mansion.

The First Lady put her signature on the incor- Entered as second July 3, 1900, at the wife of a Washington attorney, and Mrs. Richard posi otfice in Sault Ste. Marie, Michigan, under the I McCullough, wife of Rear Adm. McCullough. The Act of Congress of March 3.

1879. group was organized originally to aid the good in this office Price SlJSO -var vear in S. A S2 00 Mrs Goodwins apartment but today the group rn this office. 1B A i 2 00 includes wives of the Cabinet and the Supreme Court I an(J dip 0ma tj and residential society. Modern Commercial Printing Department i Mrs.

Truman was an enthusiastic student. When Telephones: Managing Editor and News Department her husband became President and it was no longer Melrose 2-75il. Society Editor ME 2-3S01; Sports Edi-' possible for her to attend the regular classes, a spe- tor ME 2-3SOL Advertising and Circulation ME 2- cial class was which met at the White House 2235, ConsmercJal Printing Department ME 2-7151, until it was closed for repairs. Another class was set Business Manager MS 2-2191, Editor and Publisher up for.congressional wives and met in the Senate office building. Today there are four classes, totaling some 76 women.

Each class meets for one hour Mondays at the Pan American Union building. Included in this year's classes are such notables i as Mrs. John Foster Dulles, wife of the secretary of TIUOAttV mi Mrs. Arnold p. Hpc'ncy.

wife of the new Cana- LlaKAKl iyULUbfr AlWMrJiKSAKl dian amb assador; Mrs. Charles E. Wilson, wife of Sault Ste. Marie's Carnegie Public Library, which i secretary of defense; Mrs. Arthur Summerfield, is celebrating its golden anniversary this week today wife the postmaster and Mrs.

Harold Stag- stands as a monument to a group "of men whose scn vife of the foreigrn operations administrator w- A AfnrA nf i-i ME2-S1SL MONDAY, DECEMBER 7, 1953 tions at the turn of this century have made local history. In 1900 Sault Ste, Marie was emerging from a frontier village and boom town, and heading into a period which made this community one the most important, in an economic sense, in the nation. The cultural life of, the community still had its rough edges. There were churches and schools, but strongly lacking was an adequate public library. Spearheading a movement to obtain this facility Henry W.

Seymour, business executive and banker and Otto Fowle, banker and historian, who made-con tact Andrew Carnegie, the great steel- man, -who had established a foundation for library purposes. These men later assisted by Judge Joseph H. Steers, prominent in legal circles, the Rev Thomas Easterday, beloved as a Presbyterian minister and Horace M. Oren, who later became an attorney general of Michigan. The idea for the library originated some of these men as early as 1900, and three years later, in December, library -was opened to the public.

Since then the library has provided valued reading material, research and historical records for countless thousands of citizens, both youngsters and adults. It is a strong and continuously growing public institution in the Sault. Its wealth of books has provided countless blessings for many, and its storehouse of literary treasures has supplied happiness to innumerable persons. Librarian Alice B. Clapp and her stafff, and past and present library boards are to be commended upon an anniversary which represents years of censclen- tous effort.

The library board of today, including William J. A. J. Terry Brown, Paul L. Adams, Elmer Fleming and Mrs.

D. C. Howe have assisted in making elaborate iplans for the celebration of the Centennial. Sault Ste. Marie residents will profit indeed from the experience of renewing acquaintances again this week at the Carnegie Public library.

Others include Mrs. Arthur Radford, wife of the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff; Mrs. Robert Carney, wife of the chief of naval operations; Mrs. Matthew Ridgway. whose husband is Army chief of and Mrs Nathan F.

Twining, wife of the Air Force chief of staff. Diplomatic wives include Senora de Valie, wife of the Honduran ambassador, Mme. Thors. wife of the Icelandic. Mme Koo.

wife of the Chinese, and Mine. Yang wife of the Korean ambassadors. For a while the teaching of Spanish centered in embassy and private kitchens while south-of-the-border dishes were whipped up for flavor-some luncheons. "Now we've gone from cooking to real culture," Mrs. Goodwin said.

After Dinner Mints HOPING "I took my daughter to see her first football match last Saturday and she lost her voice." "I expect she'll want to go again, though." "Very likely but I'm taking my wife next time." modest. AH I want to do is give mankind a new miracle disease every few years enjoy. The trouble with a miracle drug seems to tie that as soon as it Wise Guy: "I want to buy a left handed monkey whips one disease it sometimes wrench." gives your two other diseases that "You can't trust anyone these days. My own grocer gave me a phony quarter this morning." "Let's see it." "Oh, I haven't got it anymore. I gave it to the milkman." SAME OLD GRIND The World Today ftj JAMES 5IAELOW WASHINGTON President; senhower, Churchill and the Eisenhower and Premier Laniel of French Premier.

France have granted the heart's stretch i ng optimism pret- lr old man olj ty far The mood the West, Sir Wmston Churchill: I now seems to be one of skepticism in Bermuda, about any great C0 ming out of the ministers' meeting. Why hold it at all, then? pretty good reasons can be offered. For one thing, the West doesn't want to the eyes of its due to start today. But there is no world excitement about it, because this is only a Big Three conference, and not a. Big Four conference with Russia's Premier Malenkov.

Without Malenkov the Big Three can't agree on peace. The they can do is talk about a way to find it. if the are ever agreeable, and meanwhile try to strengthen their defenses. own people and allies and rest most i he wor to be turning its back on even such a remote chance for i peace as might emerge at Berlin. i Berlin did pave-the road for progress toward peace with Rus- Bv the end of the Bermuda meet- But sta ed I ing Eisenhower.

Churchill and uld the Eisennow- mav announce their witting- administration Russians talk peace but lei announce ness to have a Big: Four foreign ministers conference in Berlin, perhaps in January. Russia has agreed to such a meeting. If that conference turned out all right, maybe later Malenkov would be invited to get together with Ei- Leaves from a Correspondent's Notebook By Hal Boyle NEW YORK labors successor to virus and the com- to bring forth a new miracle drug I mon cold False Devil's Grip. But every day, but my aims are more I decided "false" would keep it Supreme Court Gets Segregation In School Issue a disease everybody from widespread popularity. Then I sounded out such names as Hellburn Warp, Angel Fever, can 1 Purgatory Flutters and Wishbone Cramp.

Somehow they didn't quite ring true. Throwing modesty aside. WASHINGTON for Negro parents in Virginia and South Carolina today renew before the Supreme Court the long legal battle to open all public schools all children regardless of race. They hope to win a decision that segregation of Negro and white pupils is a harmful discrimination i violating the Constitution. No de- 'cision is likely for several months.

contention tne won't prove it by deeds. And there's a further consideration. This country and Britain have been anxious to have France join a single European army which would also include West Germany, Italy, Belgium. The Netherlands and Luxembourg. And any kind of rearmed Germany is what most of the French don't want.

The French hold national elections this month. Laniel can't promise the French ment will approve joining the sin- i gle European army. In the first place, he -may be out of office after the election. And in the second place, the French certainly won't vote on joining that army until after the election. And, finally, the French seem i to keep hoping that somehow, i someway, the cold war with sia can be relaxed or ended, thus eliminating any need for such a single European army.

But if there is a meeting with savs she has i Soviet Foreign Minister Molotov I and it demonstrates to the French in the foreseeable future there Woman Believed Of Cancer Refuses To Leave STALEY, N. C. An aged women believed dying of cancer still resisted efforts today to get her and her mentally retarded nephew out of their one-room shack. The 75-year-old widow, Mrs- Mary Mines, has locked herself in and refused ail offers of medical aid. W.

L. Lednum, police chief of this town about 25 miles southeast of Greensboro. threatened to shoot anyone who tries to enter. With her is her 36-vear-old neph- ew, Georze Fox, who Lednum savs no ot understanding with is feed or dress himself. then ma vbe lh The police chief says Mrs.

Mines mto the one army Wlth Germany. once told him she keeps Fox tied jwith a rope. Mayor John Staley says that i Mrs. Mines, promised Fox' mother on her deathbed that she would take care of. him all her life.

acle disease after its discoverer, which would give it a ring of Tired Clerk: "I'm sorry. We don't carry them, require the discovery of two more authenticity There are very few left-hanaed monkeys in these new miracle drugs to cure. How parts." Daffynishion: woman who that a small role is better than a long loaf. believes long can this go on? That's the nice thing about my new miracle disease for the current season. No modern How can you tell when you have Boyle's Epidemic Spasmodic Bess? Well, Bess has exactly the same symptoms as the common cold or virus except for mirac wo things.

Your nose doesn't run, you yawn oftener from an SANTA BARBARA, Calif I Virginia Maria Gosden, 23. daugh- jter of Freeman Gosden. who is the i Amos of the Amos 'n Andy radio ishow, was married Sunday to Richard Emery Jackson, 29. an oil company employe. No Bargain Here OKLAHOMA CITY small, gray-haired woman walked to a.

counter at the five-and-dime store and asked for a. 5-cent tie box. The clerk told her the cheapest one was a dime. She left indignantly, declaring: "I bought the tie because it was a bargain but it won't be a bargain if-1 pay a dime for the box!" Briggs: I just saw two policemen chase a holdup disease itself, if treated properly, overwhe ng sense ennuL SHORTER COLLEGE TERMS Attempts to shorten college terms are wrong, says President Benjamin P. Wright of Smith College.

He maintains that four years of preparatory school and four of college are the least time in which maturity and judgment can be developed. This runs counter to the proposal in some educational circles to allow students to enter law or medical schools after two years of undergraduate That idea, might have been possible in earlier, less complicated days. But now the judgment once uttered by President A. Lanerence Lowell of Harvard University probably holds true even more forcibly: "I cannot understand how anyone who ever saw a sophomore can think of letting a young man graduate in that condition." man through, "a drugstore. Higgs: Did they catch him? will prevent you from catching i Briggs: No, he stepped on a set of scales and got a In this respect it is like the com- 1 You go to bed when it hits you more serious, disabling ailments.

weigh. bhe Wife: I got this recipe for the cake out of cook book. Hubby: You did the right thing-, dear. It never should have been there in the first iplace. Judge: Have you ever been in trouble before? Gangster: Only once, when I robbed my brother's bank.

mon cold or virus two fine old miracle diseases that have lost their social usefulness because people now suspect you are lying if you claim you have them and stay home from work. Nothing! and you recover from Bess when you get tired of it. You treat it by eating an old vitamin-packed miracle drug known as beefsteak whenever you are hungry. Children in Holland and- Belgium are always careful to set out'some straw and carrots to accommodate St. -Nick's hungry white horse.

Jet Bomber Sets I New Speed Record I TAMPA, Fla. B47 Stratojet bomber flew nonstop from England to MacDill Air Force Base here i Sunday in 8 hours 53 minutes, i clipping 14 minutes off the old rec- i 'ord for the 4,480 miles. The "Helping Hands," a mis- i "Aside from strong head winds sionary youcii group, met at the we encountered no" difficulties." home of Mrs- "Wilbert Eling, William E. Creer of Spanish i da Nov 3fi Fork. Utah, commander of the I After a "'singspSration" and talk bomber, said.

i ven Janice Steward, HANDS a miracle disease like wears out suspicion. kid That is why I suggest you catch my new miracle America's traditional Christmas dish is turkey, but other lands have Bess is a protective disease. It different favorites. Germany. Ire- will protect you from pneumonia, land, France and Scandinavia favor i overwork, or boring cocktail par-j goose; Italians like eels; Spaniards and Mexicans want lamb, and Cu; bans savor roast pig.

club president, we worked on a Christ' mae box for the home mission. Chippewo Grongc, DONAIJJSON KOSEDALE Seymour Road. Policeman: I'd better explain, your honor that his Epidemic Spasmodic Seizure, or younger 'brother is president of the First National Bess for soon as possible. Get its benefits now. It can't last long in a world where every man Bank.

THE PILTDOWN MAN "If you could keep only one object of your many priceless treasures," the director of the British Museum was asked at one time, "which "would The answer was unhesitating. "The skull down Man." This was a portion of a skull found 112 at Piltdov.T. in with the upper part of the skull definitely human, whereag the jaw resembled that of an ape. This might make it the proof of the existence of the so-called "missing link." No scientist venture to give its age, but obviously it was thousands of years old and as one of the few specimens of budding humanity is possessed of inestimable value. Now the considered opinion of scientists is that Piltdowri Man is a hoax, a combination of a human top-skull with an ape's jaw.

and the British Museum have to take it off its list of invaluable rarities. The feelings of the Museum authorities can be appreciated if ive imagine what the curators of the Louvre Museum in Paris would say if their Mona A small boy leading a donkey, strolled by an Army- camp. A pair of soldiers stood grinning at him. "What are you holding onto your brother BO tight for, sonny?" one of them called out. Without a pause the youngster answered, "so he won't join the Army." "Mother:" cried little Mary as she rushed into the doubts the other fellow's symptons and suspects his motives.

To give credit where credit is due, I got the idea for Bess from ties. It will protect you from being hit by a taxicab. What other mir- i A regular meeting of the Donald- i Those present included: Janet Son-Rosedale Grange will be held Garbrecht, Mary Ann Kling, June at the Rosedale community hall Dr. Walter C. Alvarez, the int -j around- nationally known physician.

Dr. Alvarez in a recent article acle disease can make these claims? Be the first in your crowd to catch Bess. Win the social acclaim and respect that reward anyone who is the first to fall victim of a strange, fascinating, mysterious and comfortable ailment. It won't be long until some jealous termite in our society passes the word the Rosedale community i Tuesday night, Dec. 8.

Eling, Janice Steward, Nancy Kink and Mrs. Eling. described a new ailment which he i "Have you noticed how much i Boyle's Epidemic Spasmodic Sei- farmhouse. "Johnny needs some chlorophyl. He himselt had su ff ered from called just caught the cutest little and white animal, i zure resembles what we used to but he savs it has halitosis." He: You gave me a nasty look.

She: You have a nasty look, but I didn't give it to you. The Devil's Grip. It is character- ized by a terrible back pain, head- i ache, chill, shivering, nausea and dizzyness. The title, The Devil'a Grip, drew me at once. It was just the kind of attention-attracting name I need- call laziness?" Then well new miracle have to disease.

discover a BOY SCOUTS PACK 4. Chemist: Why. I have developed a process for making -wool out of milk. today periodically everyone a terrific pain in the ornaments i out of paper end cotton. 'es Mrs.

Beam, our den mother. ut Sam: It must make the cows feel sort of sheepish, neck however and who tjon Army. give them to the Salva- also shiver, feel dizzy and nauseat- i our new den chief, in ed in these This results in introduced to us. i boredom, and causes a tired, run- i We closed our meetinc with the i down feclin that can best living circle and sang" the "Star cured by a comfortable siege of Spangled Banner." iasa or Venus of Milo were (proved to be modern forgeries. Thirty Years Ago-1923 The Sault Ste.

Marie Gas Electric Company has purchased the vacant lot on Portage Ave. west, just cast of the Hewett Grain and Provision Company, ii was stated by James Trimbie, manager and x'ice- president of the company today. brooding in bed. So I thought of naming my new Verne Johnson. Keeper of the Buckskin.

NEIGHBORLY NEIGHBORS Insurance on freighters expires at midnight December 12. Each vessel must leave for her destination on the night of December 12 in order that her insurance may continue valid. Three or four captains have reported at the canal office that their boats FILLING BUT FOOD were sch duled to ave fort William the night of the Knowledge of nutrition needs to be more widely elfth whic bring them to the Sault early in the morning. Dec. 14.

the last day the locks here and spread. A study of .5 rural famihes in Louisiana, re- in Canada will remain open. printed in the Journal of Home Economics, showed -that meat was provided in sufficient quantities, but that there was a shortage of fruit and vegetables. More regrettable the housewives questioned were The George T. Partridge and Company has two quite satisfied with what they were giving their chii- of the new 1934 Studebakcr automobiles on display at and held out no prospect of doing better if thcv heir.

garage at corner of Maple and Binprham. i 1933 onlv had more moncv. Among the new features the Dictator arc ar. SS- horsc-power motor, an svstfni. form- This indifference to food values may be connected fitting: scats.

Marshall-type spring cushions sn with the fact that 41 ot the women had not finish- upholstered arm rest and many other innovations. ed elementary school. )ne sn 'P expected to make the downbound trip A common attitude revealed in this survey is stili If Vh 3 orrihe closinE widely held, that any filling food will meet all the u-hich passed upbound for Lake Linden at oneVclock necessary requirements. Many Americans are still in morning, -wes expected to return Saturday or the meat-and-potaroes stage, and have not been edu- Sunda cated as to the importance of other foods. Many may not cave heard of Tftamhw or cf the necessitv A rin 1 QA "5 I Unusually favorabie December weather is proving proper balance in diet When -people indulge in too long and steady a diet a boon to late season shipping on the Great Lakes.

Sault lock and Coast Guard officials said today. In of eating their own 'words are not in danger of i almost every'previoys storms and severe weather turning op with a sort of" logogriphic indigestion? 2n shipping a dangerous operation. Despite in' I crease insurance rates, about fifty vessels are still in Two things are certain for the office worker: 1U ke "Pf rior and or four more may still go IT'LL EITHER oo OR. LAND BOTH IN BABY PACA. latest arrival at Kalamazoo's Milhani Park zoo.

is pictured with its parents, who were brought here from South America in 1S52. The Faca resembles a cross between a rodent and a rabbit. Baby Is believed to be first ever born in Kalaraazoo. (AP Photo from Kaiamazoo Gazettt. This is what is left two toander.

La- homes after a tornado strnck, killing- seven persons. The other home aboul a half away: looked much the pile of rubble. Neighbors sightseers are standing amid the. wreckage, tcander between and Alexandria. Wirephoto).

Get access to Newspapers.com

  • The largest online newspaper archive
  • 300+ newspapers from the 1700's - 2000's
  • Millions of additional pages added every month

About The Evening News Archive

Pages Available:
33,810
Years Available:
1924-1974