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The Ludington Daily News from Ludington, Michigan • Page 3

Location:
Ludington, Michigan
Issue Date:
Page:
3
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

FRIDAY, NOV. 14,1941. THE DAILY, MICHIGAN. PAGE THREE News Mr. and Mrs.

B. B. Patterson and family have moved from 403 East Court street to 319 North Ratji avenue. Judge and Mrs. Hal L.

Cutler of East Ludington avenue left Tuesday to spend the winter at West Palm Beach, Fla. Mrs. William Tolles will leave this afternoon for Lansing to spend the week-end with Mrs. Mae Hensel. Mrs.

Nettie Cpleman of 322 North William street reported that a rose bush on the south side of her home is in bloom. Miss Mae Hatnel of Lansing is spending a week with her sister, Mrs. C. J. Hansen of 705 East Loomis street.

Ludington friends of Peter Eastman of Scottville will be glad to learn that he is improving after an illness of two weeks. Pere Marquette lodge No. 299, Free and Accepted Masons, will meet at 7:30 this evening at Masonic temple. All members are urged to Dr. w.

H. Force leaves today for the Earl Fairbanks camp north of irons where he will hunt deer. He expects to be back Tuesday. The second of a winter pcries of dances will 'be given at Odd Fellows' hall Saturday evening, beginning at All Odd Fellows, Rebekahs and their friends are invited. Mr.

and Mrs. C. W. Perry of 316 North Harrison street will leave Saturday to spend Thanksgiving with their son and his wife, Capt. and Mrs.

Claude Perry, at Wilbur Wright field, Dayton, O. An evening ol entertainment will be held at V.F.W. hall Saturday evening. Because of remodeling the entertainment will be upstairs and no refreshments will be served. Mr.

and Mrs. p.on Quinn left Thursday night to r.eturn to Clare where Mr. Quinn is employed. They had spent a week with Ludington relatives and friends. Mr.

and Mrs. Frederic A. Heller and baby son, Billy, will arrive this evening to spend the weekend with Mrs. Heller's mother, Mrs. Daisy M.

Reek of 109 South Washington avenue. Mr Mrs. Arthur LaphanV of 715 Brother street will leave Saturday morning to spend the week-end in East Lansing with their son, Robert Lapham, a student at Michigan State college. All members of the cast of "The Old-Fashioned Album," to be given for Penlwater Townsend club this evening, are asked to meet at Ludington Townsend club headquarters in Masonic temple building promptly at 6 o'clock tonight. Kusscll Hawlcy, George Haller and Charles Mills left Wednesday evening on a 10-day deer hunting trip to sula.

Curtis Masteh 'and Em- mctt Taylor left Thursday night and will join the others at their camp at Eckerman, Michigan. Miss Beatrice Manie R. Mrs. Arnold Sundholm R. Mrs.

Harold Kennedy R. N. and Mrs. Leslie Modeweg R. attended a meeting of Michigan State Nurses' association in Grand Rapids Tuesday.

This meeting was on program planning. Mrs. Freeman R. Stearns will review Rose popular Broadway play, for Woman's Literary club at its meeting at Masonic temple parlors at 3 o'clock Tuesday afternoon. A meeting of the executive board at 2:45 will precede the club meeting.

American Legion Auxiliary unit of Edwin H. Ewing post No. 76, will meet at 8 o'clock Monday evening at the home of the newly elected president, Mrs. Mogens Larsen, 806 East East Melendy street. Members are asked to bring Christmas gifts to be sent to the Children's billet at Otter lake.

Wesleyan Service guild of First Methodist church will meet at 7:30 Tuesday evening with Mrs. George Usiak of 406 Fifth street. Mrs. Clifford Johnson will be co-hostess. Mrs.

Leonard Laird will be in charge of devotionals. An interesting program on "Mountain Missions" be presented by Mrs. Allen Robinson. Members are asked to bring their thank offering. Mrs.

Walter Larsen, general health chairman of Luqington City Mrs. Richard Nettnin, health chairman of Pere Marquette Parent-Teacher association, and Mrs. L. J. Betka, health chairman of St.

Simon's Parent-Teacher association, attended Wednesday's session of Michigan Public Health conference in Grand Rapids. Wednesday's meeting was devoted to nutrition. Miss Margaret Koopman of Mt. Pleasartt, assistant professor of social sciences at Central Michigan College of Education, was a guest in 'Mason' county Wednesday. She met with the staff of a Mason county rural curriculum study project in tfte office of County School Commissioner Gertrude Eastman for part of the day, visiting a teachers' study group Townhall school in Victory township later in the afternoon.

Mr. and Mrs. R. L. Johnson arrived Thursday morning from A new Ludington commercial printing establishment, Danielson's Printing made its debut in Ludington today at 308 South James street, directly south of Holt's Motor sales.

Wilman Danielson, the proprietor, announces that job printing of all kinds will be a specialty. Equipment installed is from Mendell's Printing Co. of Grand Rapids. Mr. Danielson has had several years experience locally as well as in Chicago.

Nielsen Baby Dies; to Be Buried Today A daughter, Donna Jean, born to Mr. and Mrs. Charles Nielsen of 707 North Delia street, died at birth at Paulina Stearns hospital Thursday morning. Funeral services are to be held at 3 o'clock this afternoon from Dorrell chapel with the Rev. Mr.

William Opitz officiating. Burial will be in Lakeview cemetery. Other than the parents, the baby 'is survived by her maternal grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Anthony Abair of Ludington, and her paternal grandmother, 'Mrs.

Katherine Nielsen of Victory. Ironwood. Mr. Johnson will leave Saturday for Detroit where he has accepted a position as engineer at radio station W45D, a frequency modulated station owned and operated by the Detroit News. Mr.

Johnson is a son of Mrs. Anna Johnson of 209 East I Melendy street. Mrs. R. L.

Johnson will spend a few weeks at the home of her father, Andrew Anderson, 109 North Franklin street. Former Ludington Resident Expires Ludington relatives have received word of the death Thursday of William Haney in Muskegon. Death followed a several years' illness. A former resident of, Ludington, Mr. Haney was born in Southern Michigan June 29, 1871.

He came to Mason county with his parents as a young boy, locating in what was then the village of Lincoln. After Lincoln began to wane as a lumbering village, he went to Buttersville with his parents in 1885. There he was employed in the Butters shingle mill until it burned in 1909. In 1916 he moved to Muskegon where he had since resided. He was married to Nellie Shearer May 18, 1904.

Mr. Haney is survived by his widow, two daughters, Mrs. Kenneth Hock of Grand Haven and Mrs. Margaret Nystrom of Ohio; two sons, Marshall of Grand Rapids and Holland of Lansing; a brother, Albert Haney of Ludington, and three sisters, Mrs. Margaret Gould of Ludington, Mrs.

Emma Chesebrough of Cortland, N. and Mrs. Minnie saght of Washington, D. C. Funeral services will be held at 3:30 Saturday afternoon in Muskegon.

John Sweeney, 66, Is Taken by Death John Sweeney, 66, former Ludington resident, died at Masonic hospital, Chicago, Thursday, according to word received by his daughter, Mrs. Gertrude Pomeroy. He had been ill but two and a half weeks. Except for the last 10 years during which he had lived in Chicago, Mr. Sweeney was a life- long resident of Ludington.

He was born here April 22, 1875. He leaves his widow, two daughters, Mrs. Michael Ulburt of Chicago and Mrs. Pomeroy; two sisters, Mrs. James Herr of Ludington and Mrs.

Nora Thompson of Saginaw; a brother, Dennis Sweeney of Spokane, and seven grandchildren. The body will be brought to Ludington for funeral services, which will be announced later. SAGINAW Robert J. Brown, 60-year-old Saginaw real estate dealer, died Thursday at Harrisville, where he was stricken several weeks ago with a heart attack while returning to Saginaw with his bride, Miss Rose C. Engler.

The couple were married Sept. 15. Commercial planes between San Francisco and Honolulu have established a new record of thirteen hours fifty-five minutes for the approximate mile over-water flight. ONE-O-SIX Glass manufacturers are pro- i ducing cables which they tend have greater tensile strength than steel. Tiny whistling frogs pipe throughout Bermuda each night producing a clear, keen note worthy of a fine flute.

ENTERTAINMENT SATURDAY EVENING Al P. M. V.F.W. HOME. North Rowe Street.

Public Invited! Sponsored by Ladies' Auxiliary of V. F. W. Holiday Fashions For Every Woman ANN FOSTER DRESSES BLOUSES AND SWEATERS SHEER MOJUD HOSIERY DAINTY EXQUISITE LINGERIE SCARFS AND PURSES Complete Size and Price Ranges Within Your Means The Purchaser is the deciding Factor in ascertaining the Cost of a Funeral as our distinctive service is available to ail. Visitors and those seeking information are always welcome.

MILLER-RYE FUNERAL HOME Washington Avenue South at Foster See this Thrilling New 1942 PHI LCD MODEL 380X America's Most Popular Console Radio! 1 YOURS ONLY Miserable With A HEAD £010? JilSt UP each nostril. -It (1) shrinks ijwpueh membranes, (2) soothes irritation, and (3) helps cjear iiasal passages. Fol- low the complete di- -fcV JU 1 COME EARW iQwnt'W Umite 1 XQUISITE New Beauty! Glorious New Tone! Thrilling New Power! Sensational Philco features! New Double I. F. Circuit gives you 4 times the sensitivity, amazing selectivity and power.

Built-in Super Aerial System. Complete Electric Push- Button Operation. Separate Bass and Treble Controls. Handsome Walnut cabinet. Many other features.

Come in, see it now! Take Advantage of Our Extra-Liberal Trade-in Allowances and EASY TERMS GROTEMAT'S Wife Saving Station "The Business Service Built" 420 South James St. jOpen iEvemngs Phone 371 Do Your Christmas Gift Shopping Early Have Many Lovely Gift Items. The Ethel Shoppe 106 North James Street COLD WEATHER IS Ladies! AT Caplon's IT'S ALWAYS "Quality ai a minimum cost" For the past 22 years we at Caplon's have been pleased to serve you and proud to say that our store has.been stocked with "up-to-the-minute" drygoods and ladies' furnishings. Again this year we invite you to visit our store and to inspect our fine stock of Thanksgiving linens. LADIES' AND CHILDREN'S SNOW SUITS LADIES' HOUSECOATS AND ROBES CORTICILLI, GOLDETTE GORDON'S SILK UNDIES GOSSARD WARNER'S FOUNDATION GARMENTS KAYSER'S SILK HOSIERY AND GLOVES HANSEN'S KID GLOVES SCRANTON LACE TABLECLOTHS ORR HEALTH, KENWOOD CHATHAM BLANKETS BELDSNG SILK FABRICS MINNEAPOLIS KNIT CHILDREN'S UNDIES ALL TYPES OF INFANT WEAR G.

D. CAPLON 115 S. James St. DRYGOODS But This Young Couple Really Do Not Mind, Because Their Home Has Just Been Refurnished Throughout with Furniture fr.om Palm's. Most persons dread the thought of winter.

They think of it as a period of weeks of tedious confinement indoors. Tis true you are inside a great deal, but you'd be surprized what new furniture would do to the atmosphere of your home. The correct Furniture, Rugs, Lamps, will add unexcelled cheerfulness to your home during the long winter. Stop in at our store today and inspect our large selection of Home Furnishings. It won't be long until Christmas, better lay aside Your gifts today.

Bedroom Furniture Living Room Furniture Dinette Furniture Dining Room Furniture Kitchen Sets Occasional Chairs Table and Floor Lamps Floor Coverings End Tables Window Shades "We Guarantee Our Laying Service" TO OUR MANY CUSTOMERS AND FRIENDS: Pon't Forget, You Can Still Buy on the Time Payment Plan at Our Store. flannelette for Sleep Comfort I Men's Pajamas Snugly Warml tMI For a good night's rest, keep warm in soft cotton flannel! Elastic in waistband. Cut fuli. Why Shiver Winter Wool Pairs 1. At Wards for Only Soft blends of new wool, cotton.

Doubly warm because they're pairs! Deduced from $1.55 Hoaster 1 large! Holds a 17-lb. fowl or 22-lb. roast! 'Self- pasting cover insures tenderness! Raised traps prevents scorching! 7-lb. tnamel Boaster 68c THE PALM FURNITURE CO. "Furnishing Mason County Since 1892." 309 South James Street.

Phone 5. Big Qouble-Drainboard Recessed base and proper height for no back-beading! Heavily porcelain-enameled! 2 drawers and 3 sliding doors! Sink is 54" wide! 1 Drainboard "Space-saver" For smaller kitchens! Loads of storage and working space; yet takes little room! 1 drawer, 2 doors 1 42-in. 57- 50 You may buy qnything at Wards on our convenient Monthly Payment Plan I Shop for (he of Additional Gifts in our CHRISTMAS CATALOG I PNTGOJPRY 103-109 E. Ludington Ave. WVKI) Phone 158.

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About The Ludington Daily News Archive

Pages Available:
95,345
Years Available:
1930-1977