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The Evening News from Sault Sainte Marie, Michigan • Page 8

Publication:
The Evening Newsi
Location:
Sault Sainte Marie, Michigan
Issue Date:
Page:
8
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

Page Eight THE EVENING NEWS, SAULT STE. MARIE, MICHIGAN THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 13, 1952 Expect Record Army Of Deer Hunters To Cross The Straits Several Hundred Attend USO Open House On Tuesday Hastings Indian Collection To Be Housed in Soo Museum Several hundred servicemen and The Walter Hatsings collection of Sault citizens attended the USO Indian artifacts was Open House Tuesday evening fol-1 brought to ST One of the largest: Accruing to state officials ell of the county. were pressed into service estimate the total number Wednesday afternoon and they i of doer huntera the county will predjct )lo traffic wi reach a eh mid out )at Thursday evening or of rvery four hunters will kill of deer hunters in Michigan history started crossing tne Straits of Mackinac on Sunday to bo buck, License fees are the fume on hand Saturday for the initial early Friday morning, opening of the IfWtey hunting eea- State conservation officers here J0n report prospects for a top deer sea- year- for fo: Today the Straits forries were son never better. They point) non-residents. $3.50 camp jammed with hunters and the boats 1 out that there were only scattered allow shooting of bucks only.

ivere operating off schedule in an reports of deer starvation in the effort to keep the traffic county and that the deer herd is No part of Mackinac comity will be open to "any-doer" shooting Hi- "any-dcer" kill if they purchase Another licence during the regular ss'-ison and did not score during the regular bow season. Conservation and state police here will again cooperate in offering tree registration service to hunters. Hunters who register oiioiiki call at the local poat here and pliin the officers where they to hunt. This service ie for! Assisting at the the USO-Pal Day dinner at the First Presbyterian Church. General chairman of the affair was Mrs.

R. C. Klinv. Jr. Mrs.

Roy Hollinssworth was in charge of the beautifully decorated buffet tables, and pouring were Mrs. James Robertson, Mrs. John Old, Mrg. Earl Thomas and Mrs. W.

George Larke. church dinner the Sault Wednesday afternoon and the Chippew: County Historical Society museun it was announced last night meeting of local Guest speaker at the dinner meeting was Paul Martin, local marine architect and designer from Sault, who is currently working with the Lock City Machine and Marine Inc. The firm building more than 100 small craft for northward. at its all-time high in several areas I though bow hunters may only, not regular com-j were Mrs Copt-land and Mrs. the United States Navy.

for munication, officials announced. They'll Do It Every Time By Jimmy Hatlo ONCE-FORGET TO TOStf HER ORDER AWAY-AMD TWE SB4RKS FLY." KNOW GOOD ANlD WELL TOLD YOU ID PUT ASIDE A PIE AMD A MLF-PIHT OF CREAM IT'S JUST LIKE M3UR DIRTY AND RETUR STUFF YOU C4MT THAT'S LIFE 60T SOUR THIS IS Trt'E Tn' DDME OBITUARY Ray Radeke The Hastings collection was Mrs. Bruce Wood and Mrs. James i purchased by the local society Pirn were in charge of decorations, cos $1.000 and was brought and senior hostesses at the club- to the Sault by the local secretary rooms were members of the New-, and curator of the museum, Fred I Rodiger. who made a special trip BRANDCR FUNERAL PICKFORD Funeral services for James' Brander of DeTour who Wednesday, Nov.

12, will be held in the DeTour Union Church at 2:00 p. m. Saturday, Nov. 15. Th" body will be taken from the Quinncll funeral home and beginning at noon Friday will rest in the Blunder home in DeTour.

Servici's will hp uder the direction of the Rev. Gerald Gaige with burial in Maple Grove ceme- ttrv. I comers Club. Eddie John and his orchestra provided music for the open house. New Canadian Ship Passes Through Locks Another now freighter, the Canadian ship Gordon C.

Leitch, is on its maiden voyage into Lake Superior today. Operated by the Upper Lakes and St. Lawrence Transportation Co. the 664-foot new freighter ie a sister ship to the Norriis which was commissioned early this yea r. The Leitch is headed for Fort William.

and passed upbound p. m. Wednesday, Nov. 12. to the Leelanau Peninsula Traverse City to pick up the ancient Indian artifacts at Glen Arbor where Hastings is an instructor in Natural History.

Hastings, a naturalist, spent many years out-of-doors, as a photographer for the Michigan Department of Conservation. Many 'of the items brought to the Sault A 20-day jail sentence was nand- are described extremely able in a historical sense, eaid Given 20 Days For Malicious ed Melborno Parks. 22, of Dafter. Wednesday in municipal court when he pleaded guilty to a chsirarc of; malicious destruction of property, i He was also ordered to pay a fine of $10 and S3.35 costs. Judge i Malon R.

Stewart, suspended 15 days of the jail sentence, provided fine, costs, and damages to Pie- ville's Tavern in Superior Township Hot at the dinner meeting James Robertson 6 who briefl reported on the 1955 Centennial lans outlined ftt a of the Soo Centennial Con f. mission durin recent meeti fa are paid. Sheriff's officers said Parks was refused service in the tavern on XT T- i vual Ui. Ullllivn WmtJJ he then got into nis vehicle wiu be so situated the water Mayor Robertson pointed out the Commission is going ahead with plans for a 'living memorial" at an estimated cost of million which and backed it into a porch and damaged it, they said. H'L ABNEK By Al Capp AT I OH.

wo boa HAMOFVOURS HAS GOTTEN OVER TH'HEAD LOOKS l-i KE WIFNO WHAR VO'GOIN; LI'LABNER? A WAITIM'FO' C'MOM, OAKY DOAKS TYPHOON, TYLOOM, TYCOOW--THIS IS NO TIME TO WELL IlL THERE'S SOMEBODY AT THE PROMT THE CHILDREN APE FIGHTING UPSTAIRS' BT Que Yonqg I OONT KNOW HOW 1 COULD EVER KEEP HOUSE WITHOUT XXJ STEVE CANYON Bv ftfiltoB Caattf HAVE i ROOM I HOUSE AT HAVE MRS. I OLSON'S EFFECTS AND HER SON MOVED FEaw HER CUAET5RS- TO A FURNISHED APARTMENT IN THAT HOTEL I WGNTVCNEAe NORTH rjSIDEj CUTTHt RENT- NEHAiF fdfC. JIN. KEES COMMISSION CHECK fOR THE P5AL.I OPEN AN ACCOUNT AT THE BEST SHOP IN TOWN AND CL'TRTyoiJESSLFsO'iOU WILL ALWAYS BESUSHTLY LtSS THAN I EVENINGS I Do SOME OF MY MOST IMPORTANT WORK AT NIOHT ASPI WANT YOU TO BE ON CALL! HERE A BONUS TO A FULL-TIME NUK5C fOf-THS AND CONT EVEE COWE CKVIN6 TO ME PERSONAL! NOW eer 4. DARE AK'D A SAILOR'S IS TO HELP A MAX' EVEK IP WORST EUEMY I'LL TO Minch, Crawford In Collision On Lake Erie LORAIN.

O. lake freighters collided in Lake Erie 26 miles northwest of Lorain early today, but there were no injuries. Both vessels proceeded under their own power. The bow of the Philip Minch. operated by the Kinsman Transit British and veseel design was stove in and the George 'as French eng-inecr- C.

Crawford of the Pittsburgh il Steamship division of U. S. Steel suffered damage to one side. The Crawford was due to dock in Lorain and the Minch in Toledo. front of the St.

Mary's that it will also afford the visitor an opportunity to view the Great Lakes freighters close up as they up and down the river Which divides the United and Canada- Martin, as gueat cpealcer, outlined the history of marine deaign- ing. explaining- the principal points that a designer attempts to incorporate in any new vessel. He emphasized the fact that the French are considered the best marine designers in world, pointing: out that much of the ln the He also out the significant fact which 'a responsible for the efficiency of the Chinese junk is because it a flat-bottomed vessel with a stern capable of running- before walit Martia "following -wind." Man Fined For Theft Of Tire, Tube And Wheel A fine of $25 and S3.35 costs were i assessed Walter Potter of Kinross Wednesday in municipal Court on a larceny charge. I He was charged with larceny of ed Scemc Highway between the a tire, tube and wheel from John i Sault and The two men Localising Eagle and Ed Doll to a committee to the Chippewa County He also said that the Navy Patrol boat which his farm now in. the process of constructing in the Sault, is a flat-bottomed boat and the designers have turned to the Chinese junk design for incorporating stability in the new small craft.

Martin said be deplored the de- aigns of today, since they are based on the tremendous power plants available, and are not actually as efficient as vessels designed by the Chinese, the Greeks, or the Egyptians. Versed in nautical terms and stories, Martin regaled his listeners with many anecdotes, spiced with caustic commente, as he pointed out the problems of marine design. He had with him a half model hull, based on the deaign of the small craft currently built here in the Sault. being were Mrs. Herbert grade teacher in Amng the guests present at the meeting held in the Hotel Oijbway FoJHs, fourth the Garfield School, Myrtle A.

Elliott, Washington School principal, John E. Comdr. T. A. Dahlburg Old and William Cum- India Works On Proposed Korean Truce BY SELIG HARRISON NEW DELHI, India Indian sources said today that the Indian government is working out a new Korean truce proposal providing for the screening of prisoners by neutral nations POWs.

The question of prisoner repatriation is the sole issue holding up the recessed Korean armistice talks at Panmunjom. Under the new Indian plan as here, the United Nations agree in principle that all prisoners should be sent home in keeping with the Communist interpretation of the spirit of the Geneva Convention, but Red China and North Korea in turn would agree would that no be sent prisoner actually home unless the LaHock, John p. mings. Big Harvest 1 Is -Lxpectedst WASHINGTON A screening showed he wanted to go. The Indian plan envisages Communist admission that prisoners should not be forced to return hoare against their will and agreement to abide by the screening verdict.

The prisoners -would be transferred to new camps, administered by the neutral screening nations agreed on by the designed to meet Communist contentions that prisoners unwill- go home have been influenced by Nationalist Chinese and put this year. are being- jlan, how- new camps. 11 Navy Men Die In Plane Crash SHELTON, Wash, A Navy fall sown as winter wheat, barley, and a precarious state over -widespread areas of the nation. The bountiful harvest expected this year, will be about 2.5 per cent below the record crop output achieved in 1948 previous record year. four-engine Privateer plane crashed The department gave the follow- on an Olympic Peninsula hillside ing Michigan crop estimates: night, probably killing- all II bushels per acre with men aboard, a total production of 85,731,000 bushels.

Dry pounds per acre, total production 3,812,000 100 pound bags. total prt- duction of 5,508,000 bushels. bushels per acre, total production 10,730,000 Sugar tons per acre, total production 639,000 IONIA Ionia Free Fair Association Wednesday reported a net profit of 14,406 on last summer's fair, compared with $16,922 Through the rainy night, flares were dropped and spotlights stabbed downward as planes attempted to locate the wreckage for ground searchers. A farmer he saw large plane flying low and a "big flash when she hit." Downey, local ager of the Michigan Employment Security Commission, a change in office hours commencing Nov. 17.

After that date the local office will be open Mondays through Fridays from 8:30 a. m. to Commission to discuss the proposed Scenic in 1951. Allan M. Williams blamed 5:00 and will remain steel strike which resulted in on Wednesday afternoons until 6:00 those individuals Road unemployment in the Ionia area p.

m. to service Pochavage, sheriffs officers said, about Sept. 20. The fine and costs were paid. were sheeted during condition of Gerald Synette of 600 Gros Cap injured early Sunday in a two-car collision, "seeme the War Memorial Hospital reported today.

Capt. Joseph Handy, injured in the same collision, spent a better night, the hoapital reported, and Edith M. Wright of 360 Orrie a passenger in the Synette car. was discharged Wednesday from the hospital. recent meeting at the Chippewa County court house where the scenic route was discussed.

A five-day Jail sentence handed Edward Ozomik of Drummond Island on a disorderly charge was suspended for one year by Judge Mahlon Court. and unfavorable -weather condi-1 who unable contact the tions for the drop in revenue. office during- the regular Cuban Television Star is Mystery Figure in Shooting R. Stewert in Municipal HAVANA, Cuba Qfi A beauti- cated that Mateo Carreno went to ful Spanish-born television star was i the apartment, forced the woman a mystery figure today in the fatal to telephone Gonzalez Rebull, and shooting of Julio Cesar Gonzalez shot the newspaper executive ce Rebull, president of Havana assessed Robert Atkinson of newspaper "El Crisbol." Peck St. in Municipal Court when She is Maria del Carmen Pereda, ing shots, rushed to the apartment, I he faced a charge of failure to atop 1 30, whom Cuban television writers overpowered Mateo Carreno and A fine of $5 and tS.15 coefe were his arrival.

The chauffeur. near- within the assured clear distance Application for marriage license' ahead. It followed an accident in- has been filed with County Clerk i voiving three cars about 8:40 p. m. Sam C.

Taylor by Russell Ailing i Wednesday on Portage Avenue near Ashmun Street, police said. According to the accident report, Henry Schoen of the 75Srd i Squadron had stopped to back jn- to a parking space. Gerald Cryder; man of 915 Cedar approaching and Vida Cadreau, 19, both of the Sault. COMPLAINTS ABOUT NON-DELIVERY OF THE EVENING NEWS SHOtJLD BE MADE TO PHONE 671 BETWKEN 5:00 and 6:30 PM THE SAME DAY recently voted the nation's top television announcer and mistress of ceremonies. Gonzalez Rebull, a handsome man of 45, was shot to death Tuesday night as he entered the woman's apartment.

She also was shot in the jaw. called the police. Police said that both Mateo Carreno and the woman gave what the officers described as obviously false accounts of the shooting. Mateo Carreno, according- to police, said he went to the apartment to collect a document but was told Police said tire man who did the iby the woman that a man was to shooting identified himself as Ma-; bring it there- When the man behind Schoen, stopped to allow; tias Mateo Carreno, 52, a Spanish Gonzalez Rebull arrived, Mateo him to park, police said, when At- banker and insurance expert who Carreno said, "he seemed angry kinson'e car collided with the rear came to Cuba in 1951. He set up I at my presence, attacked me, and of Cryderman's.

The front of the; a savings bank after his arrival i I shot him." Atkinson oar and the rear of the! but recently sold it and entered The officers said Miss Del Car- Cryderman car were damaged, but the construction business. men told them she believed Mateo none reported to the Schoen Police told the Court of Instruc- Carreno had shot the publisher be- car. I tion their investigation showed Ma-; cause he was annoyed that Goni I teo Carreno and the television star zalez Rebull had kept several docu- Court coste of $3-95 were i had lived together several months, ments pertaining to a business deal I Robert W. Keiper of the 753rd Recently, however, ane moved to the three had been discussing. Squadron, ticketed by Mich-: another apartment, where the i Polfce said Miss Del Carmen igan State Police for failure to stop shooting occurred.

made no attempt to explain why I for a through highway. Police said tire evidence indi- she was shot. IT SURE SUITS ME!" With Its World News, American News, State News and Best of All the News of My Own County." WRITE A LETTER TO THE EVENING NEWS completing the sentence: "I LIKE TO HAVE THE EVENING NEWS DELIVERED TO OUR HOUSE BECAUSE A BEAUTIFUL BOX OF STATIONERY WILL BE GIVEN FREE TO THE WRITERS OF THE SIX BEST LETTERS, TWO EACH FROM CHIPPEWA, MACKINAC AND LUCE CONTEST CLOSES NOV. 19 THE EVENING NEWS.

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About The Evening News Archive

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