AIY, JAN. Jai; 11)44; T1lE MICIIIGAN DAILY PA Gh fi-VE' New Clue Found in Hunt for Murderer of Senator H , ' 4 1 4' loo er Witness Provides First 73reak'& In Michigan's Greatest Manhunt AMERICAN (AiRLS AND IMILK: Returning Heroes'Dreams Realized By Te Asocited res Feverish Investigations Caused by New Report By The Associated Press JACKSON, Mich., Jan. 13,-A wit- ness who believes he saw the killer and his accomplice at the scene of the roadside execution of State Sen- ator Warren G. Hooper provided the first "break" tonight in one of Michi- gan's greatest manhunts. He saw Hooper's body slumped in his automobile, a man standing be- side the car, and a mysterious ma- roon auto, with a second man at the wheel, parked nearby, the witness reported. Feverish Activity His study caused feverish activity by investigators seeking solution to the shooting of Hooper who was a koy witness in legislative graft cases developed by Judge Leland W. Carr's grand jury at Lansing. Tensely expectant officers set to work checking all angles. Identity of the witness was closely guarded, also undisclosed was whether he noted thea license number of the maroon car. Here is his story as announced by Kim Sigler, Special Prosecutor of the Grand Jury: Eye-Witness Story The witness was driving north on highway M-99 north of Springport at 5:30 p.m. (Eastern War Time) Thursday when he came on the ma- roon automobile parked across the road, blocking it. Partly off the pave- ment on the east side of the highway was Hooper's car, with the Senator slumped in the right front seat. A man stood at the left front door of the Hooper automobile. As he approached, the maroon car pulled to the west side of the road and parked, headed south. As the witness drove past, he looked closely at the driver of the maroon car; the driver looked at him; the mal stand- ing by Hooper's car looked over the top of it at him. Maroon Car In his rear-view mirror, after he had passed the scene, the witness saw the man by Hooper's car run around. the front of it and jump into the maroon auto. Sigler said he was "not in a posi- tion at this time" to make public descriptions of the two men given by the witness, whom he described as ."reliable." He said the maroon car appeared fairly new and shiny, prob- ably a 1941 or 1942 model. Navy Ships Beart MichiganTies WASHINGTON, Jan. 13-(P)- Fifteen transport and cargo vessels of the Navy now bear the names of Michigan counties. Known respectively as APAS and AKAS, the transport and cargo ves- sels are the Navy's prime movers of men andi material. In combat operation, the APA car- ries many hundreds of men compris- ing a complete combat team, with all of the attack equipment needed to gain and hold beachheads. APAS and AKAS bearing Michi- gan names are the Alcona, Allegan, Antrim, Arenac, Berrien, Charle- voix, Clinton, Lenawee, Livingston, Marquette, Midland, Ottawa, Wash- tenaw, Wayne and Wexford. BUY WAR BONDS NEW YORK, Jan. 13.-An Ameri- From New York harbor they were can girl and then a glass of milk ! taken to Camp Shanks, N.Y., for That's what 1,368 veterans, home pendency or .medie dislated forth- today from the European battlefront, ers will be shipped back to combat looked for first as they stepped of' duty. The majority will be assigned the gangplank. Wearing anywhere from one to 12 decorations each after six months to three years overseas, they crowded the decks of their troop transport in a raw waterfront wind. They waved captured Swastika flags. They whis-I tled at pretty girls, plain girls, any girls. They yelled at the band for iive 'music. But the miracle of America hit home when the Red Cross grayl ladies handed them their first bot- tle of milk.! "God, I can't believe it. Pinch me. j Please pinch me." "I kept my promise. Swore the first thing I'd drink when I hit the U.S.A.C would be milk. First in two years. "I sneaked up on a cow in Nor- mandy once. But this is American milk!" The men were hand-picked from the 1st, 3rd, and 9th Armies for 30- day merit furloughs. Chosen for length of service and number of dec- orations, evacuations, and wounds. they were the largest group of non- casualties yet to be sent back from combat. to temporary duty within the United States. How does a soldier feel to be back from the wars? Ile is happy. He is mad, delir- ious, hysterical with happiness. And if he is bitter, too, there is always a pal to clap him on the mback and say, "Forget it, you're home now." They brought back their souvenirs -everything from a German colon- el's sword to a highly-perfumed lav- ender chiffon handkerchief with a nude woman and "Souvenir de Paris" stamped in one corner. And they brought a series of G.I. gags: "He's nervous with the service. He's fed up with the set up." "The Jerries fight for the father- land and the Fuehrer. The Ton mies fight for the United Kingdom. The Yanks fight for souvenirs and the hell of it. Yeh, we got souven- irs. We also got the hell of it." They ate Camp Shanks' best T-! bone steaks. They phoned their wives and mothers and sweethearts. They argued bitterly about the respective merits of Parisian and American Wo- men. They wanted to know about cig- arettes, liquor, the Rose Bowl game. But most of all they plantied those 30-day furloughs. What would they do first? "Are you kidding?" "What ain't I goin' to do?" "Eat and eat and eat. Get drunk for a month." "Raise hell. Paint the town red, white, and blue." "Thirty days with my wife. Ain't seen her for three years. Thirty days. Nothin' but my wife." "Boy! This is America!" Missing 'Fags' ST. LOUIS, Jan. 13-)--Police today were asked to search for a missing truck driver. Thursday the driver was given 125 cartons of cigarettes and 10 boxes of cigars to deliver to the Missouri Ath- letic Club. He hasn't been seen since. Military Styles are blended and shaped to con- form with your facial features! THE DASCOLA BARBERS Liberty off State BULLET-RIDDLED HAT OF SLAIN SENATOR-The hat that was worn by State Senator Warren G. Hooper of Albion, Mich., when he was found shot to death near Springpart, Mich., is being examined by Kim Sigler (right), special prosecotor for a Giand Jury investigation of corruption in the Michigan State government. The hat is being examined at Lansing, Mich. POTENTIAL WORKERS: d CLASSES FORMING Business and Secretarial To employed people who want to serve more effectively now, and be secure when peace comes, we offer the following practical business subjects: Secretarial Shorthand Typewriting Office Machines Bookkeeping Accountancy Reviw Courses Stenotypy No age limit. No entrance re- quirements. Whether you are other- wise employed and desire arbusiness career, or are now employed in an off ice and want to prepare for the Job ahead, wecan help you. Free Employment Service. Sessions: Tuesday and Thursday evenings, 7 to 9. p.m. For further information on sub- jects offered and reasonable tuition cost, call, write or phone. No ob- ligation. HAMILTON BUSINESS COLLEGE William at State Phone 7831 Senator Ferguson Demands Up-to-Date Manpower Survey WASHINGTON, Jan. 13-(A)--~ ernment has cut back some of its Senator Ferguson (R.-Mich.) de- warplane orders, he said; Why not manded today that any new legis- I ask the management of those facto- lative controls over manpower be Eries how many man-hours they have e bsaved and what had happened to the justified by an up-to-date survey of extra pool of labor made available employment needs and a nose-count by the cut? of available potential worker's. The Michigan Senator said he was "I am not satisfied that the man- not satisfied that the Armed services power we have is being utilized to are utilizing all of their members the best advantage," he told report- to the fullest. ers who asked for his views on a Ferguson's call for a survey was pending House bill designed to chan- one of the first Senate moves on the nel deferred draft registrants into manpower front this session. war jobs. Meanwhile the House Military The Mead War Investigating Coin- Committee arranged to hear AFL mittee, of which Ferguson is a very Representatives Monday, CIO spokes- active member, is known to be con- men Tuesday, on the pending legis- tinuing its study of the manpower lation. situation begun last year. Ferguson said he was disturbed by the di s- crepancy between the needs estimat- Perins elivers ed in December and the War De- partment's new estimate that 900,000 Ane men will have to be taken into the Ara Armed forces and another 700,000 p into industry in the next six months. To Congress "In December we were told that there was a pool of 34,000,000 men out of which we had to get 90,000 WASHINGTON, Jan. 13-(f)- for essential jobs, and that in six Secretary of Labor Frances Perkins months we would need 300,000," Fer- made her annual report to Congress guson recalled.an itrensct He said he thought the Mead Com- today, and its reminiscent nature mittee or some other competent fact carried the broad hint of a "Swan finding unit ought to check specific Song." plants to determine their exact pres- The Secretary looked backward at ent employment needs. The Gov- her 12 years in office-longest term for any Labor Department head- ek .H kWants then turned to the future, envision ing an expanded Labor Department Permanent FEPC and cautioning organized labor to measure up to its responsibilities in Pthe postwar era. Accent on ~} Color.. In :Suits For Now and Spring! Whisper-soft pastels or strident tropical tones . color has its way with the newest, suits! Heart-cheer- ing. gloom-dispelling under a winter coat . . . ready, to blossom out in the open with the first warm breeze. Classic and softly detailed styles in wonderful wool l' i 1/2 Yearly Cki rance SP LS I: for Monday Only ( FROM 9 A.M. TILL 5:30 P.M. 1 t x e « DR ESSES A WONDERFUL OPPORTUNITY for you to choose smart, higher priced Dresses, originally up to $29.95. Not one originally less than 16.95. $1000 SMARTEST VERSIONS of Crepes, Wools, Gabardines, One- and two-piece versions in an array of dressy and W A6HINGTON,. Jan. 13-( )'-Rcep. Frank E. Hook (D.-Mich.) was the In other years her report has been seventh member of the 79th Con- confined to the events of the pre- gress to introduce a bill calling for ceding fiscal year. a permanent Fair Employment Prac- She dealt perfunctorily with these tices Committee. in the new report, and devoted the "Racial and religious prejudice is bulk of her accounting to a sweep- the greatest single obstacle that now ing review of her department's role impedes our war production," Hook in achieving Legislative gains for declared. "We owe it to the Ameri- workers. can boy overseas and to his brother A heavy percentage of the Legis- working overtime here to call upon lation with the new deal hallmark labor and management to remove originated with the Secretary. and that altogether unreasonable, un- her helpers since she became, in justifiable, and un-American obstacle 1933, the first woman cabinet mem- wherever it still exists. ber in history. 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