‘ ~. ‘The Navy used the christening ‘for Pontiac Area a a nn a a a pe i eg OG a BOs: een oe hae oop eae Ty ee 22a fh aes re «ae ee ae es he, a ier _ a ye a ss 8 gah NG + gow ae tet ee eek ip ag Mw wine whe, ae, Sarees entities thea as st ae ee sa ® “st. THE PONTIAC PRE! 112th YEAR * * * *x* PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, SATURDAY, DECEMBER 1, 1954 —28 PAGES UN. a ill Carry Appeal to Peipi Navy Launches World's Biggest Warship Today Wilson, Other Officials on Hand for Christening of Carrier Forrestal NEWPORT NEWS, Va. (®—The Navy, launching its giant aircraft carrier Forrestal, today hailed “the world’s biggest warship as “the most versatile and most dispersable weapon in our nuclear aysenal.” Secretary of the Navy Charles 8. Thomas said in a speech prepared for the christening ceremony that vessels like the Forrestal can be used for many pur- poses, including “massive retaliation”—a phrase often used by high administra- tion officials in connection with United States defense policy. ¥ One Week Lett to Enter Yule Light Contest ing will be held Dec, 21. ’ Entries must be filed at the Jaycee office, 34 E, Pike St., by Dec, 18. The four areas are: city limits, 2. Southeast: Saginaw to Pike, Pike to city limits. Saginaw to city limits. to city limits, Three Days Left of the Forrestal] to dramatize its bid for a major combat role in this jet-atomic age. gan flooding water around (Continued on Page 2, Col. 3)| Snow, Rain Forecast Snow mixed with “Yain is the outlook for Pontiac and vicinity tomorrow, the U.S. Weather Bu- reau says. Over 7,000 Signatures Collected on Petitions for S-D Day r Only three days are left for mo- torists and pedestrians to join Pon- tiac's ‘“‘Army of 10,000,” and lead the nation in traffic safety on SD Day next Wednesday. In only five days of petitioning here, the campaign committee has swelled the scroll with more than 7,000 names and many of the petitions are yet unreported, sald Ciyle R, Haskill teday. A person signing the petition » | pledges to make a conscious effort to keep S-D Day, Dec, 15, com- .|-pletely free of traffic accidents. Haskill urged all cooperating or- ganizations to return the petitions on .Tuesday, “We hope to have the scroll with all the signatures of Pontiac's motorists and pedestrians in the President's hands in Washington by Safe Driving Day,” he added, aged over 1,000 names a day. The drive also received support this week from the General Motors Corp. which urged their employes to sign petitions in the various After almost constant tempera- tures yesterday, the low being 30 | and high 32 in downtown Pontiac, | the mercury will drop tonight to | a low of 20-25. Sunday's high is | expected to be from 34 to 38 degrees. Both tonight and tomor- | row will be cloudy. This morning at 8 o'clock the | thermometer registered 26 de- | grees, rising to 34 by 1 p.m. plants. Police Chief Herbert W. Straley | has granted time of his officers to | collect the signatures at the main | enlistment station on the southeast corner of Saginaw: and Huron Sts. Haskill said that a total of 175 Pontiac merchants and firms have | declared their support by circulat- | ing the petition among their ‘ employes. best“display in each of the four sections into which the city has Been divided. A second bond will go to the creator of the display judged best in the entire city. Final judg- 1. Southwest: Pike to Franklin Bivd., Franklin Bivd, to Huron, to 3. Northeast: Saginaw to Oak- land, to city limits, and Pike from 4. Northwest: Saginaw to Pike to Sign Pledges State fo Attack Sam's Denials lof Slaying Wife Dr. Sheppard Stresses Marital Bliss, Avoids References to Susan - CLEVELAND # — Dr. Samuel Sheppard braced himself today for the state’s attack on his em- phatic assertion he did not kill his wife, and that “I couldn’t have done such a thing.” He says he was happily married to Marilyn Shep- pard. But one name—Susan Hayes—still confronts the dark, good-looking osteo- path. Miss Hayes, a labora- tory technician, has ad- mitted having intimate relations with him. The af- fair went on for more than a year, she said in court. | For a day and a half, Sheppard | testified in his own defense against a charge of first-degree murder. | He made only brief references to | Miss Hayes. He said his wife was not disturbed when he told her he had given Miss Hayes a watch. Marilyn Sheppard, a 31-year-old expectant mother, wag beaten to death in bed. The doctor, 30, tes- tified he ran to the bedroom when he heard her cries, and was slugged unconscious by the killer, He says Cleveland detectives ac- cused him of the murder in the first stages of the investigation. (Continued on Page 2, Col. 6) BUYING RUSH—Thousands of town Pontiac iast night to buy Christmas gifts for friends and families The buying rush started in earnest yesterday.as the Pontiac Retail Christmas area residents swarmed into down- Shoppers Jam. Downtown Pontiac Merchants from now Christmas Eve. . announced that their stores will be open every night . te Pentianc Press Phote Senate Group to Hold on Junk Mail WASHINGTON # — A Senate group is said to be planning to review an order. by Postmaster Getteral Summerfield permitting delivery of advertising mail bear- postal unions, and weekly news-| .-q Sykes promised he would a oS nas | Posed Solicitor Arch Ferrell ‘and Ph dena ne ang ome Chief Deputy Sheriff Albert Fuller and is Ices expensive to handle |" “i dearee unten changes. because it doesn’t require sorting A special “cleanup” grand jury Congress could void the order which conducted a sweeping in- by law. vestigation of crime and corrup- - tion In martial-ruled Phenix City Meets an Understanding Judge \Tired Postma SAN FRANCISCO (INS) — A year’s probation after he pleaded Court to & charge of ‘‘detaining”’ He could have received five tired of toting third class mail he called “ imprisonment because of a judge's sympathetic Fhe mail carrier, Charlies W. O’Brien, 62, was sentenced to one n Loses Bout Over Junk Mail Delivery rebellious postman who just got a lot of junk” was spared “understanding.” guilty in San Francisco's Federal mail matter. years in prison-and a $500 fine for the offense. He was caught by a passerby tearing up mail and stuffing it down a storm sewer in his home city, San Jose. It was third class advertising matter of the new “bulk handi- ing” classification addressed merely te “occupant” or “‘boxholder.” Judge Louis E. Goodman, who has a mailbox of his own, ob- served that ‘this stuff has been sort of cluttering up.the post office lately.” then philosophized: knows?"’ Remarking that the defendant ings with the one-year probation weight was just too much for him,” *‘Maybe he (O’Brien) was cariacuing a pebite service, whe was “old and lame and all that the judge closed the eee sentence. \January Trial Sought in Killing Alabama Pushing for Quick Action Against Pair in Patterson Death PHENIX CITY, Ala, (INS)—The | State planned today to press for - | an early trial of two men charged with the murder of Alabama At- ee person indicted hag not been ansnad pnt publicly as yet but officials |are —— to issue a warrant) a man who was thought | to = hewn fled the state. The grand jury which returned 749 indictments against 152 persons during 54 days of deliberation was highly commended by Special Ses- sions Judge Walter B. Jones for “driving entrenched crime and vice from this community and re- storing the reign of law and or- der."’ dudge Jones also credited the press for a major contribution te the cleanup campaign. He said the press “declined to be awed and refused to be intimi- dated”’ in its efforts to “throw the | revealing light of pitiless publicity” | President Eisenhower today projects. Dem Senators Back Up |Plan to Criticize President WASHINGTON (INS)—Democratic senators backed up+their new party chairman's continued criticism of more brickbats for “failures”—as well as support toe good Paul M. Butler, Democratic chairman-elect, reaffirmed hjs intention to criticize, Eisenhower when he thinks he has failed but declared: “I will never vilify the President, as Senator McCarthy has this week.” and predicted there will be Chairman Leonard W. Hall .|replied that the American people “won't think much of his judgment in these at- tacks on the President.” Hall said he was not aware of Butler's “qualifications Sen. shies Kefauver (D~- Tenn) said that criticism of the President for shortcomings is just demo- | eracy and good government in | ' action. He said: ia Republican National* Accidents Kill Eight in State Hammarskjold Plans Personal Plea for POWs. Decides on Trip After Assembly Backs Allied Stand on Release of 11 UNITED NATIONS, N. Y. (INS) —U.N. Secretary Gen- 3 Die in Auto-Train Crashes; 3 Teenagers Drown at Wolf Loke By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Three persons killed in separate automobile -train collisions and three teenagers’ who broke through the ice and drowned in Wolf Lake were among cight to die in Mich- igan accidents today and yester- day. Mrs, Josephine Dill, 23, of Red- ford Township, was fatally injured | yesterday when a car driven by her husband, Albert, and a Chesa-| peake & Ohio train collided at a crossing in Redford Township. Michael H, Walsh, 48, of Fra- on the “tragic and demoralizing | ty & Radic Programs .... " j conditions existing in Rusself eae ‘nt aa na 20 County."? Women's Pages ... 6.66: cesseee Only Child’ Is Reunited With Eight Brothers and Sisters After 7 Year Search By WILMA GREENWAY A young Pontiac Press carrier, 13-year-old Billy Rush of Coates road, Lake Orion Township, has just turned in a story that hits you in the heart. A story that carries within it the impact of strong human —toneliness, doubt, hope, faith, de- Per OF 2 mee” } a Pa get termination—of a long seeking, and a surprise answer. It’s the story of a family of 10 children, pa cotmppen te, Al ee another, always sea » and of how a letter to the editer of a proved the final link in a chain of circumstances that reunited them. It's the story of the Hartsells— Elma, Elia, Melvin, Marybelle, June, Clinton, Alton, Allen, Lillian and Velma—of the 27-year search that revealed one sister in Pontiac, a brother near Lake Orion, and others at North Branch, Elkton, Linden, Fostoria, Owosso and Kent, | Wash. And finally of how -the baby, Velma, believed to be dead, turned up this week in the person | Because all through her childhood,| the names of some of her broth- of Mrs, Thomas (Jane) Moore of | Milan, a 27-year-old girl with a husband and three fine children. Velma, or Jane as she is now | called, must have carried deep in Nae, Revenant Raprenny ot Het lively brood of brothers and sis- ters, lost to her at the age of one. although her foster parents as- sured her in all honesty that they knew of none, she held to the be lief «that, in| she had ‘ | After the death of her foster te eye somewhere in America, | ‘kinfotk."’ | parents, “Jane” began to inves- | tigate, and she finally learned | ers and sisters, Those names | she sent to the editor of a De- | troit newspaper, who printed | them in a “Voice of the People” | section, The answer came this month in the form of a surprise telephone call that proved to be more over- whelming than even Jane was pre- pared for. It’s quite a thing for a lonely “only child’ to learn suddenly that she not only has nine brothers | and sisters, but also 28 nieces and | nephews. | “It’s the most wonderful Christ- | mas present that could ever hap- | pen to ,” Jane said. *‘I) had prayed that I might find just | one.” * To add to her bewilderment, | there were other facts to assimi-| late—such interesting sidenotes as | not knowing her own name, cele- | brating the wrong birthday, and | probably being a year older or a/ year younger than she had thought. | Here’s the story behind the Hartsell reunion, as Alton C. Hart- sell and his wife, Dolores, of 390 Coates Rd., Lake Orion Township, (Continued on Page 2, Col. 5) Monday ts Bones Doubte samp “bay. Shop for Christmas gifte for men, wo- . is; shoes, linens, house- iry, .watehes, electrical Groror &- « NEWPORTS " 14M, Saginaw Bt. wee pen th © PM. Albeft Larsen, 63, of Wallace, | was killed yesterday when his car |and a Chicago & Northwestern pas- | senger train collided at a crossing near Menominee in the Upper Pen- insula. The three teenagers who broke through thin ice and drowned 150 feet off shore in Wolf Lake, seven miles east of Muskegon, last night were James Allison, 13; Terrance Johnson, 14, and David Baker, 15, all of the town of Wolf Lake. to sound an alarm, The four were walking across the lake when the ice tet go. Thomas Buheker of Niles drowned in the St. Joseph River | at Niles last night when his car went out of control and crashed through a guard rail. Philip A. Wilner, 46, of Detroit, was killed last night when his car collided with another and careened into a house on Detroit's Outer | Drive. Welcome Kids It didn't take long to find a tenant for this home. 4 ROOMS. CHILDREN WEL.~ come. Ol furnace. FE 4-4741. That's the way it works with Pontiac Press Want Ads. Whether you are buying, selling, renting or hiring, the easy way is the Want Ad way. Call PE 2-8181 and an experienced Ad Taker will be ¢ Pleased. to assist you. Santa Claus te Here: 3:99 te 5:99 p. Sunday, 12th Gen dee. isth. Mrs. Newman's Gortstnes, Quebere Labs vent ~ % J. Taylor replaced James J. Mitch- ell for the United Shoe Workers Union, The foreign policy resolution gave President Eisenhower « measure of praise from a con- vention that for the most part sharply criticized him, The resolution praised the Pres- |ident for opposing “‘a handful of | military adventurers who would |risk throwing the United States ‘into a preventive war.” 2 a . seine = tots ite - ie pe be ‘aig ~ * we i 2 ma yw airbag ee ee ee Ameren ‘ ; hy . : : ae Ee at, - “4 «5 THE PONTIAC PRESS. SATURDAY )DECEMDER in, 1094 a " fare ee se erg. I" ¢ Queen Soraya's as “good.” | against — ranging in age from 15 all the Both were admitted to the hospital way down to a few months old last Wednesday, but with no indi- baby. Allan, my twin brother, and | Cation why they went in. I were not yet 6. ~, “Faced with the pete — CIO Leaders to Visit of my mother (1 later learned | ° ° uttered three strokes) and a brood | Mexico for Goodwill of children that no one could be; LOS ANGELES #—CI0 leaders hired to care for, dad finally con-| headed today on a goodwill trip sented to let the Lapeer home | to Mexico after winding up a week- arrange for the adoption of his | long CIO convention sessions here. children. The included CIO Presi- “Adoption is a mighty secret | dent Walter Reuther and other top business, Some of us simply | CIO officers, all re-elected to new dropped from sight. terms at the’ ck ¢ convention “Others were takén in by distant | Session yesterday. relatives scattered throughout the state, and although we lost sight /|Gas-Fed Blaze Sweeps Detroit Water Building of ‘each other for some years, we did get word through my dad and were doing. fed tank explosions swept “As we got older, we followed = sella agora water pumping the clues and gradually found one | .: ation on the city’s northeast side last night causing an estimated $100,000 damage. another. When I went into the service in 1942 we had all been No one was reported injured in the blaze. Deaths Last Night Lillian, who was 3 when we were | LOS ANGELES (AP) — Peter P. Br- | : Hl Biggest Warship Family Is Reunited After 27-Year Hunt (Continued From Page One) reconstructed it for the Pontiac Press: Mrs. William A. Hempton Mrs. William A. (Alice) Hemp- ton, 58, of 3849 Motorway Dr., died He ie Af Hf (Continued From Page One) Ht H E iL down ways into the water after she is formally named To carry out the “launching” ritual, workers and tractors were to “walk” the carrier a few feet in her dock at the end of the cere- Hmeny. Tomorrow, t i i i inhi if fi + H i i! Besides her husband, she is sur- vived by a son, Doyle O. and three Also surviving are 7 23s Ht i al ilj i “fl uh i i z natives drive wild horses into ! iit i | rf E ? ‘Woman Being Held on Robbery Charge A 3%year-old woman is being held today by Pontiac Police for investigation of charges that she robbed a cab driver of $30 at night. | i i i : i Mt Ht ie th eel were known to the ancient 5 § f | i 8FE wSa lt lt Fee torpedo rays were used physicians as shock treatment for gout and headaches. Moslem doc- tors treated epileptics with them. At least 15 varities of electric z£ : if $ z g [ : ait ; | : James Sexton at Bagley and Wes- son sts., about threé hours after i i I i F These statistics give some idea of the Forrestal's size and speed: ? i : a z = Z a = ° of g 2 From keel to top of masts, it is| Bates as the woman who earlier as tall as a 2}-story skyscraper. | flagged down his cab, and who then The ship couldn't go under many | put a knife to his throat and took bridges, including New York's | the money from his shirt pocket. _—— Bridge, so its mast folds. | . ts horsepower — over 200,000. | ¢; ts weed @ mules on hour, (rire Causes $600 Damage Two anchor -chains, each 2,160) Fire caused $600 damage yester- end Neil D feet long, weigh 246 tons. Each | day to a housetrailer owned by George end rt anchor weighs 30 tons. | Leo Zenke of 1315 Hendricks Rd., Mary Holnagel. Her foster parents tl. — Alvaro Krots, a Robe Its air conditioning system could | Waterford Township. when one of | had called her Mary because, when | pioneer inventor 10 the aute industry. "| cool two Empire State buildings. | his children fell against an oil! she was adopted at the age of SS The Forrestal will carry no more | stove and fuel spilled from the three, she kept saying ‘‘Mary- “| planes than the lighter 45,000-ton | stove ignited. June?’'—the names of the two sis- Worst Tragedy because leaves and twigs from an Midway class carriers, but some; Zenke, who said he and his fam- | ters who had cared for her during old tree were clogging a catch will be much bigger and heavier.| ily are living in the trailer while! per mother's illness—they coanien | 3 4 P ° h d 20 Y A | basin. Before the board could get Trolle Bus to Run ; | he builds a new home, told Water-| eq Mary must be her name. er 1S e €alr Ss go | around to her complaint, up came y The ukulele started as a Portu- | ford Township firemen that he had|- Although 27 years had passed | , 'a windstorm and down came the gese musical instrument and is : : The missing hunt con- tinued while Alton served with the Army in Europe. Finally, seven years ago, a chain of co- incidences led to the discovery Bf moge ot Me of a number of books of Lillian. = H. Courtney, She turned up in the state of | ss“to ANGELES — William = Washington, and her name was visory Committee for the Hoover Re ROCKTON, separated, and Velma who was 1. the “All were living except Melvin, matinger, 66, meonee™ of the Biltmore Theater in Los Angeles and former man- robbery. Taxi driver William Neikirk, 30, ; ident of S74 Stisting Ave., Mentified ities | “"2,net been biked tm an acct at Flint. | ager of the St. James and Astor Theaters Garden in | i } i ; | shafts, just as electric eels, can charge a wet fisherman. Shoplifters Nab Coat BIRMINGHAM — A girl's coat valued at $20 was taken by shop- -| lifters last night from Eggleston's store, 136 N. Woodward Ave., po- lice said today. 2% ; J he is survived by two sisters, Carol Ann and Judith E. Pickett both of Pontiac Complaint Is Answered WATERBURY, Conn. @ — Mrs. John D. Verseckas complained to the City Works Board that water was overflowing onto her property é F i F York City. TUCSON, Ariz. — Dr. Ferdinand Sche- ville, 86, retired _ | the University of \*s Madison Square i i essor of ‘history et a . i ; rf Ht 4 Hh FS i 4 iG i : | | & ef i two grandchildren, : i 5 . no insurance to cover the dam-| since that first parting, and in- H ] Bl La: ; tree _. 11 fliers—all wearing U.S. on Moscow Canal now manufactured chiefly in Penn- | age. No one was injured, firemen | quiries had uncovered a rumor in ote , aze at ASING uniforms—were on an official U.N. sylvania. said. that Velma had died, still the| LANSING u—A bellboy ran| window, getting ready to jump,” The Atomic Energy Commission the Yalu Ri - North MOSCOW wh — They're working |" Y’S FORE: IGNMENT FOR _ family clung to the conviction that | through the smoke-filled corridors | an employe of the newspaper re- — = —_ three mil- south of lu River in on something -new at the Moscow TODA ae: ie their baby sister would be found. | of the rambling, brick hotel, shout-| called. “Then a tongue of flame i? ars ps uses to finders Korea on Jan. 12, 1953. Their trial | shipbuilding yards — a “trolley It was Alton’s sister-in-law, Lor-| ing a cry of “‘fire!” reached out and wrapped areund | % Uranium deposits, says the Na- . 2 cy tional Geoegraphi a ae by a Red Chinese boat’ to operate on the same etta Dingel, who was to bring the| [¢ was shortly after 5 a.m., just; him and he fell back into the | __ le Society. og. principle as the trolleybus. ar oll news that Velma was alive. She | 2 years ago today, that the first; room, dying before my eyes.” : announced by the Peiping regime| This is reported in the News saw the ‘‘letter to the editor,” and | siarm was sounded for the Hotel | The brick walls of the col ' ee oe paper Evening Moscow, which hurried to Dolores with it. Kerns fire. pr hretaniy aed . U. S. efforts, directly through says -the craft will be the first Deteres tock ene took, ang the It was to be the worst disaster apsed because intense ‘ ‘ the Peiping representative in Ge- | of its kind. It is planned t te ’ 3 hed es, Lansing firemen, aided by depart gf . I. is 0 opera’ lid blew off. There was a rush | in Lansing’s history. | ments from Jackson, Battle Creek : were met with rebuff ping. | on the Moscow canal and they are to the telephone, a long distance No one knows for sure just how and Owosso, succeeded in getting a, ik aan se going to erect an experimental call—and then the ringing at the | many persons died in the fire. i. blaze andar contrel by mid- i , dent to the U.N Assembly desp 8 oo ifications of other end of the line that was | There were 34 bodies recovered. morning - Soviet opposition _ we Rasy dye el wae abl "put to tell Jane Moore that her life- | Some were unidentified and were But it wa nearly a week before ' : = a wish had come true. buried in a common grave. s 4 (Coyright 1954) it is assumed it wuld be built the last of the bodies were re- | chiefly to transport freight. There were other phone. calls,| There were persistent reports | covered . letters, a flurry of arrangements.| that a group of guests trapped on The state Legislature, shocked The Weather * * Three days later, on Dec, 4,| the root of the hotel jumped into ee d : | Bank Cashier Kicks Out : : by the loss of seven of ‘its mem- ; | the Grand River, The PerTuac amp veuntry — reruy : . | Jane's three children, Sally 6, Su- | adjoining ° bers, drew up a rigid new fire 3 lesdy and colder tonigat. temerres Pair of Junior Robbers | san, 3, and Tommy, 1, shyly greet-| river was dragged but no bodies | 111 04) toe Michigan hotels = one with some rain, Seutheasterty ed an aunt and uncle and five of; ever were found. Thi the . Pe winds. Low tonight 20-25. High tomer.) CLIFTON FORGE, Va. wh —) their newfound cousins. Alton and —— a s was one good thing to | G woh © @ | Cashier Curtis M. Brown thwarted | Dolores’ With thie tates children Every room in oe come out of the fire—a disaster is Downtown Temperatures two daring daylight attempts to ceil Wile aad Sr Wacken. Loree taken when the disaster struck. | wel] - remembered as Lansing’s Hr iemern. Be A mn o222 3s | OW the First National Bank bere | wi thle ton, hed ‘code ta vik ee ed eee: | i. 42. 2.........28 Ip. m........34| but says he can't be certain that | “We ~iol Velma—I mean Jane liam A, Comstock, had called ms I F, pt a eeehene ~ 'the two would-be robbers were special session of the Legislature | —right away,” Dolores said, ‘the | aera | family resemblance was so strong. and 3 or @ law pe And our 9month-old Leonard and her little Tommy look enough alike to be twins.” j Although this will be her best Christmas, Jane’s hoping for one thing better yet—a birthday cele- bration next August, with 5 sis- ters, 3 brothers, 21 nieces and 10 nephews present. As te the detail of which birth- | commissioner, was day te celebrate, Aug. 19 or Aug. | guests who escaped. 28, the children have settled that. the exterter walls | They say, “ oo y say, “Celebrate both. | e in The little matter of ages has among those registered at the | popular hotel. . : Seven legislators died in the fire, six representatives and one state senator, John Leidlien of Saginaw. feéay in Pontiac | —— ed | first time Brown pull a i gg Wreet ‘emperature preceding 8 em | yall hand from a fishbowl filled | € at 8 oe velocity $ mph with pennies in the lobby and 7 \told the five-year-old owner to | “seram.” Shortly afterward he } gave another robber the heave-ho, | but this one was wearing a blue | handkerchief mask. s+ B Salesman Gets More _ ‘Than He Had Expected IONIA — When automatic! 27 washer salesman Harry Boyes df- | “Thoughtful Service” Sparks-Griffin Funeral Home 24-Hour Ambulance Service A FLOWER CART FOR COLETTE Here is the flower cart on which Colette, the little French girl you | met yesterday, moves her blossoms from her parents’ garden outside Paris to the big city. Color this picture with water colors or crayons. The cart is green | with red handles and wheels. The flower pots are orange, the baskets terete its finer points ’the Cranect |3eow, and the tub for the tree is a bright blue. Color all the tabs WORRIED OVER DEBTS? | already been disposed of. Confront- accepted. | Sreen. ; ed with three family documents af you aro wnstte dedts oF when éue, 1 m ise She confronted him with 10 loads | Paste entire picture down on strong wrapping paper. When dry, indicating that she was 27, 28 and| Some guests died trapped in their = peng | Co Bey = pe sand rrenge payments cut out all the pieces carefully. = ; Fold down sides and tailboard of cart so that it stands as shown cee ees in smal] diagram (A). The mile was established for; Fold back the bases of the tub and flower pots, one tab forward distance measuremerit in Roman | and one back as shown in diagram (B). Then you can paste on top times, says the National Geo-' fo cart just the way you like. graphic Society, and the term, Fold up the basket and paste one end of handle over the other as |comes from the Latin “‘mille shown in diagram (C). ; +passum” or 1,000 paces. Celette now has @ colorful cart from which to sell her flowers and explained her old machine had 29, Jane made the logical feminine been disabled for three weeks. choice. She's 27. Avalanches Kill Four MILAN, Italy @—Four persons were killed and nine injured today eet by avalanches thundering down the | from the hotel. | snow-blahketed Italian Alps. “§ i NO SECURITY OR ENDORSERS : ONE PLACE TO PAY -— BONDED AND guukainitasiatutbonniim 1 MICHIGAN CREDIT COUNSELLORS: F 41%) South Seginsw Se. Abeve Oskiand Theater Phone FE 8-0456 eesesysesss® __ THE PONTIAC P i . aged | RESS, SATURDAY, DECEMBER ‘11, 1954 . AS { Everyday Religion “I Never Seed It,” 4 By DON D. TULLIS — , , When James Russel] Lowell was a young“fhan he visited the INS On mia Notch he paved for bite bass The Cat Man ef the Schihs Cicteitinn Gives Franconia Notch he paused . Mountains—that majestic stony replica of a human face. On the way, back to is telge Be shoged fp tlk to 9 some ram of | , worker. “Can you tell me,” he asked, “where I can a Gthrent view at Go Creat Sem Few” He teu tor 2 on Polish Customs and then replied, “I dunno. I never hey The Schola Captorum . Cy- How like him are we who pass through his wonder. world with snd Maisdins Senieoe: Ge eyes blinded to the beauty of it all. Two friends of mine were , will appear in its Playing golf when a magnificent sunset caused one to exclaim, 7th annual Christmas Broadcast or aaharenderd tgs ah. plhng OS cna geralie rg ebay See 7 for shining in his eyes and making drive to 10: 11:00 ee ee ike be sheut ond tis Honk Gach doa’ da wie coals ehens . “THE UNPRETENTIOUS /ANT” need the touch of divine fingers on our eyelids. Milton sang— na 7 tae bale to ‘To nobler sights Michael from Adam's eyes the film removed; eects Se ae 330 P. M.—Ev. orship purged #the visual nerve, for he had much to see. So have we. priesthood represents eleven “TES PRICE OF : Many people fail to see the hand of God in History. In these states, Canade and Poland. They Sunday School 9:45 a. m. Youth Service 6:30 p. m. of babbling apes and screeching owls we need, with Thoreau, will present @ program of Polich . : to “hear beyond the range of sound see beyond range : L_._ Wednesday Evening Service 7:30 p.m. | and know that God is still the Master of the Show. ome soo, np il Tih ct mr oa eee -hpnerses peng hap ody aaa hg tury-eld Polish customs and tra- = PARKDALE Gt NAZARENE & GFem, oF any nation pledged to on. pthelatic shilesighy of first. CBS presentation MH as . stand for long before the freshet of His fountain that a: Setasae dee been ie wundey School ec 9:45 A.M, Youth Service. ....6:45 P.M. g the moors and marts of men? The History of the ages to South and Central e Bible Preaching 10:45 a. m. and 7:30 p. m. a). Mis-| answers “NO.” | America, and transcribed for the | Parkdale and Hollywood, One Block West of Bzidwin 4 are “ready, even eager” for re- | sionary Society, Elkhart, Ind, will| _He is present also in each individual life, whether we see Him — America” and “Radio - TAD OBE RE ERE ROTOR, Minteter PE 2-000 s ligious edncation. speak Sunday morning at the First} or no. We cannot'escape Him. In the darkest hour He is our Europe.” The choir also SERRE ReeeneeeD His plea was endorsed by W. L.| United Missionary Church, 135| guiding Star; in the saddest moment He is our “song of a lark two albums of recordings for CHURCH Straith, former minister of educa-|PTospect St. at 11 a.m. He bas} singing for us a rallying roundelay. Wher e’er we go we must ‘ OF CHRIST tion in’ British Columbia, who said | 58% Teturned trom India where he | confess “God is in this place and I knew it not ar, ees O Meets at 1196 Joslyn Ave. tor \LORD’S DAY MORN, 11 A. M. the church had been neglecting its spent five years as a missionary. Re ant aie Go ashe mivehe of pring through Ni Sind © creck & respensive es ciate be tatty bap Benner a uty tn pat yours by mat prening| ta ang as essen That |e Rreseae of “The Man Upsaire.” De sot come you tical expreaon Fee at or roe ante Sat Sand ae od at ae aman |b wort n'a youth evangeint| = ) = which the Poles centures ago have Paul Deems, 1175 Elizabeth Lake Road FE 1-e226 || Provincial educational authori-| Wi" the “America Back to . : ; : Getet tes were urged by to dengan | Movement” He ns eho putered | Tewish Winter Holiday drawn from the beth of Chit FIRST GENERAL HH | |teache. traning" curvienum for | 86 fulltime, Director of Eikbart| Sunset, Dec. 19 raped hoe weal BAPTIST CHURCH competent Instructors in the fel [Panty Youth for Christ ..|Begins at Sunset, . : Christmas, the Orchard Lake nvites You to Our Services of religions education. See anes, be ‘The celebration of Chanuko, the, Congregation B'nai Israel Soutnastion ao ad . served as principal.of the B'nai 13 chorus that emanates 249 Baldwin Ave PE 4.1172 7 .e Raghunathpur Bible Institute, and jeight-day Jewish winter holiday, | Ouereesiog es Toler ri oy Jemos Kennedy. Specking FIRST has been Director of Calcutta | pegins at sunset, Sunday, Dec Chanuko (Feast of Lights) Home- the world over. Sunday School .........00054+.10:00 2. m. Louth for Christ. Tt was under his | ‘sow, variously as the Fest! |Decoration Contest open to the Father Henry A. Waraksa, direc- Morning Service ..,...,........ 1180 =. PRESBYTERIAN Saleh. Gat Fenty fey Conteh oa create ef Dedice- | entire public, Gregorian Chant and Polish Sunday Evening ............. ‘ began a broadcast over wave i Septiomal, Communion sad Fost : CHURCH s__ | |ststion, Radio Ceylon, with a} ten, and of he Lights, Chanshe | | Traditionally. the Jow through eee s Os Eek ae Sse —— Buen 0 Se Africa ae Sweden aed rthwcenith | commemorates the straggio of | ow ie venene with the auth day |. Th® program will not be a “re-|Musical- Arts and the New York Sunday Morning Broadcast Africa to Sweden and northwestern the Syrian mon- ligious” one in the usual sense, Dr.| Pius X School of Liturgical Mu- 1460 on your dist, Sunday from 7:'30 to 8 2. m. wees United States. rch Antiecbes, whe cought to | of the. month of Kidder, on a | ice, Sf° i ‘will feature rousic| che, Besides directing the aecinis . Wednesday Evening Prayer....... 7:30 p.m. 9:45 A. M. Church School - aveh, them | week of feasting. and of Joy |1,"S Dined chorus of 14 voices of sa —_ IT K. M. Morning Worship peas ge rds the close of the first | celebrating the victory of the | 54 4g if-plece brass ensemble,|seventeen years of Christmas “HEARTBREAK AND Members Prefer century before the Common Era. preg een Lae rt ep and each program will be built| broadcasting, he is alsc responsi CHUR mR, Hee rat ty te acaba, | Sate ana" | seta rer than wh | theme HURCH OF CHRIST of "Korea Serenity Sermon Judeans fought the overwhelmingly | one day's use burned for eight | (a! Sl eee 1189 N — Phone FE 2-6269 = a superior forces of the world’s) days. . minton k. raves. wanes On Pant News Gervico | mightiost nation for five yeers, 004) po uo “THE BERALD oF one A. Bitte chest ARK, Ill.— Members of] wrimately were victorious. Their . Sum. 1:00 to 1:80 P.M. 7:90 P.M. Eve. Service Euclid: Avenue Methodist Church insured the survival ot | lowing: 7:00 P.M. Sanday oe A.M. Sanday would rather hear | Success 1. Either an entire home or a Rebinweed Ave re a sermon Of | Judaism and is also credited with) 34 oo in = home res . serenity than any other subject, | paving the way for the future emer- | WOE luni wadiatenes teen cee een lente (oo . pastor. With , the first act of the : The SALVATION ARMY 10 scrmons in October, hesed on | amphant Jews wae the rededt SUNDAY SCHOOL .............00..... 9:45 A. M. lar In’ the balloting, ‘The wivoing | which had been desecrated by the HOLINESS MEETING ................... 1AM. sermon tides: een YOUTH SERVICE ....................... 6 P. M. (1) Keeping Serene; (2) What | 1 observe the festival and bis- EVONGELISTIC MEETING .............. 7:30 P.M & Protestant Believes; (3) Meet- | story's first struggle for religious ing and Mastering Defeat; (4) freedom, lights are lit on a spe- Officer in Charge, : How to Bo « Christian in the cial candelabrum (menorah) each ‘ . -MIDWEEK PRAYER Business World; (5) How to | sient for cight nights, one the Captain Vernon Vie 700 P. bt Read the Bible; (€) Utilizing | first night, two the second night, 0 P. Your Widden Resources; (7) and se on, and prayers are 29 W. Lewrence Street How to Learn to Pray; (8) How | voiced, thanking Ged for instill- te Overcome Worry; (9) What ing the love of freedom into ha- Can We Believe About Heaven | jon hearts. and Well; (10) Religion and = = eaaitices — tions glorifying spiritual heroism The church members also were/are recited and sung. A typical r asked to vote on a sermon series | Chanuko sentiment is contained in LET'S STICK TO MOSES! eater e this phase, the most popular topics | read the festival were the Ten Commandments, the} “With the loyalty and zeal of the Parables of Jesus, and New Testa-| Maccabees, may we overcome the ment. Characters, Mr. Turk said. | dark forces of tyranny, prejudice - and hatred and spread the light When they were preparing thyself,” said the Sevior. NI th i alata aaa to produce the motion pic- Who should hold first place ae ae eee Rev. Eve Edeen, Minister — — = Sie | ti iat Youth Groups 6:30 P.M. Ch aad Od Ps aa” 11th cheurvennn of Cunche ath 6 ments,” the director and mot our parents...or out |] Radie CKLW, 7:30 — WCAR WJLB 7:45 A. M. Daily congregational brunch on Sunday the author of the story con- own children? 8 A.M. A. |. Beughey, Paster Unity Books and Literature mormon Me tc prim sulted a professor who had And it should be obvious and dramatic presentations at been recommended as an that if we love our neigh- |f} J 10:30 a.m. Moses. They expected a scholarly explanation, but when the pro- fessor had finished, there was little left of the Ten Commandments — and mo story. After the interview, when they were alone again, the disgusted di- rector remarked: “We'll stick to Moses.” Yes, let's stick to Moses! There may be those who would abolish the Ten Commandments, but let's stick to the Commandments as God gave them to us through Moses. And there is no better way of doing so, than by sticking to Jesus Christ, Who gave us the Com- mandments of love — the love of _ God and the love of our neighbor. All other Commandments are con- tained in these two. “Thou shalt love the Lord, thy God...” The observance of Christ's first Commandment will establish in us a strong, dignified personal relationship to God. If we love the true God, we will give Him the honor that is His due... we will respectfully use His Holy Name... we will not think it too much to spend one day of the week in His company. “Thou shalt love thy neighbor as life, or damage his health De- cent human love surelf excludes the burlesque of love called adult- ery and the fierce attack which this lust makes upon the innocent and unprotected. We would never steal from the ones we love; nor would we rob them of their good name. Certainly we would not lift a covetous hand to deprive them of the things in- tended to make their lives full and contented. : “Lets stick to Moses, whose Com- mandments forbade human beings to break the bonds and destroy the relationships that preserve human dignity, develop character and guarantee human safety. Let's stick to Christ, Who, in # more spiritual way, pointed out that if we love rightly and well, we will obey the law of God... protect all the relationships that guarantee our own happiness and make life safe and happy for the people who are our neighbors. The Ten Commandments are God's design for human living. Are you familiar with them? Do you understand how important they are in your daily life? Write today for our free pamphlet on this sub- ject. Ask for Pamphlet No. 12-KC. SUPREME COUNCIL KNIGHTS OF COLUMBUS Religious Information Bureau 4422 LINDELL BLVD. ST. LOUIS 8, MO. 87 Lafayette Street 12 Blocks West of Sears) Sunday School 10:00 A. M.—Clesses for All ata, ae Ge SusteBie Groen, Sat, tien will share in a meal feater- Worship 11:00 A.M. end 8:00 P.M. ing typical holiday delicacies, - HOWARD C. ARTZ. Paster — Preaching Morning and Evening in the city hall will be lit each of i the eight nights of the holiday FREE METHODIST i ; Es : iE SUNDA IN THE NEW TESTAMENT WHAT IS ITS SIGNIFICANCE? THE TENTH IN A SERIES ON WHAT THE BIBLE TEACHES ‘TOMORROW EVENING, DEC. 12, 7:30 Seventh-day Adventist Church—156 Mt. Clemens St. fn greeny Speaker, |. HABENICHT TO HEAR BRING YOUR BIBLE MUSIC AND SINGING YOU WILL SURELY ENJOY ee tes First Southern Missiona BAPTIST CHU BTA, cect ccnccee CHS AM, | Evening Worship ...... 7:30 P.M. Wed. Prayer Meeting... 7:30 P.M. | Young People’s Bible Study 8:00 P. M. REV. A. H. MULLING. Posies CH Morning Worship 11 «. m. “CHRISTIAN LOVE” - Allience Youth Fellowship .. 6.15 p.m. Evang. Service 7:30 p. m. “SEEK SPIRITUAL THINGS” iciediiesicuaatielae FIRST ASSEMBLY OF GOD 210 N. Perry St. Rev. W. Wibley. Pastor SUNDAY SCHOOL 945 A.M. Sunday Morning 11:00 WORSHIP Sunday Evening 7:45 EVANGELISTIC RALLY TUES. 7:45 P. M. WORKER'S CONFERENCE THURS. 7:45 P. M. YOUTH SERVICE 230 A. M. SUNDAY 1460 on Your Dial Visit the Church of the 00 ly TE III, TRE a. i Elita ke te a Yale Ae A Aint eine ee Beene = | aan en ome ee CC loved the child, and dreaded that ee eee _ —~~sene, early as 1876. fom NO MONEY DOWN-$1.25 A WEEK at Christmas with this new Speed Queen Deluxe Soh Rol Safer” Wing Aoi. Time, Ah Big, Bee Bote sf . Lemania Timer, Aluminum 51 W. Huron St. Buy now. . time you like. , Buy Her Gift at The GOOD HOUSEKEEPING SHOP of PONTIAC Where Famous Brands Are Priced Lower! SPEED a saving today! REGULAR 4139° . get this ¢ Exactly as Pictured goon HOUSEKEEPI of PONTIAC Open Every Evening ‘til Christmes Order by Phone_ QUEEN DELUXE AUTOMATIC TIMER MODEL SAVE ‘30” . delivered any Sh Phone FE 4-1555 SUEPEssESeesDESSTOSSETDEEEESES BUSS $5555555555555555555555555555555555555555555S55SSS55S5555008 9th Annual Christmas Musical Program Presented by THE PONTIAC STATE BANK Daily, 12 Noon to 1:00 P. M. — Starting Monday, Dec. 15 Mrs, S. M. Dudley at the Hammond Electric Organ MONDAY, DECEMBER 13th 12:00 NOON Roosevelt School Girls Glee Club Mrs. Charles Seavey TUESDAY, DECEMBER 14th 12:00 NOON Ww Jr. School a. High Mrs. Robert Veltman WEDNESDAY, DEC. 15th 11:00 A, M. St. Michael's School Glee Clubs Sister Eulalia THURSDAY, DECEMBER 16th 12:00 NOON FRIDAY, DECEMBER 17th 12:00 NOON Webster School Mixed Chorus Mrs. Ruth Laudeniager FRIDAY, DECEMBER 17th 7:00 P. M. Sate one Sieh Schost Miss Helen Davis SATURDAY, DECEMBER 18th 11:00 A. M. LeBaren School Mixed Chorus Miss Hildegard Odhner MONDAY, DECEMBER 20th 12:00 NOON Wash Jr. High School Bove’ Glee Club Mrs. Robert Voltman TUESDAY, DECEMBER 2ist 12:00 NOON Jefferson Jr. High Mixed Chorus Miss Eleaner Bryan WEDNESDAY, DEC. 22nd 11:00 A. M. THURSDAY, DECEMBER 23rd 12:00 NOON Pontiae Sr. High School Sr. Girls’ Ensemble Mr. George Putman FRIDAY, DECEMBER 24th 12:00 NOON St. Frederick's School Mixed Glee Club Sister Christine You Are Invited to Attend areeay Wai[ =] SRR STE RTT CAPO ULAR 699999995 .—In-commenting last night on pos- so today Bill and Carol Stanford | over all taxpayers. The total “re- are going to be married, they met. marry where we met,’ Murphy, 31-year-old machinist cn nad ‘theta ot « urenacr Before Red Trade has many complications but this | cupid. Items on Current Tax Bills This bit of tax trivia is for any , wasn't sure of the two perplexing puzzled Pontiac taxpayers and | items. : City Treasurer Murray M. Ash-| ‘The two items are titled “Special Education” and ‘‘Re-assessed at- Large.” City Assessor W‘ Raymond Ran- som, who makes up the hills, offers! this explanation for all and sundry: “The ‘Special Education’ item is a 50-cent per thousand assess- from taxpayers wanting to know about two unfamiliar items on the current bills. Ashbaugh just sends the bills out, doesn’t draw them up and so Remington's Death Not Due to Gangs . | seam oats‘ LEWISBURG, Pa. ® — Acting “The second item is mainly to Fred T. Wilkinson says gang war-| cover payment of séme old back fare was ‘‘positively"’ not involved taxes assessed against 32 acres of in the recent slaying of former | property across from Perry Mount government economist William W.| Park Cemetery on Perry street. Remington at Northeastern Feder: “It only amounts to two cents al Penitentiary here. per thousand equalized valuation. Remington, convicted of perjury | | “From 1931 through 1938 the in a government spy-ring CASC. | property was on the tax rolls. Then died at the prison last month after | owner, the Perry Mount Park he was beaten with a half-brick en- | Cemetery Asan., claimed a child aad Soe eg ead el eo buried on the land, and, thus conv ve. been indict lor t prope: murder in the case. — - 7 a «7| “The Oakland County Court) agreed it was non-assessable. “Now the State auditor general has decreed we must collect the taxes assessed prior te the court ruling. So we are assessing the city at large.” The assessment at large also covers a few other small parcels of land owned by the state which had been placed on the city tax rolls inadvertently. Since taxes cannot be cancelled once they are on the books, the old taxes are being spread thinly (Oakland is the only county in | the nation to finance and operate a program locally. It is slated to sible motives, Wilkinson said personally discount reports of im- morality, gang warfare or sirdiilar | defects as a basic cause for the | murder of'' Remington. Couple to Wed in George's Bar on 2 Motorcycles LOS ANGELES #®#—They met in George's Bar; Their romance flour- ished on Bil] Murphy's motorcycle, assessment at large’’ Where? Why, in the bar where | $3,687. amounts to “We thought it would be nice to “coed Japan Puts Allies | City Assessor Explains 2. Next Door te Sears YANKEE STORES OPEN SUNDAY . 382 N. Saginaw 10 A.M. to 6 P.M. 25 FREE HOLDENS RED STAMPS With. This Coupon Tonite and Sunday, Dec. 12th is the first time he has acted 'as| TOKYO uw — Japan's new gov- | |ernment promised today that con- Lang said he thought there would tinued collaboration with the be some trouble getting a minister | United States and other non-Com- to perform the ceremony in the | munist nations will get first prior- bar, “but the first one we asked | ity over expanding trade with Rus- said it was Okay with him. | forget | sia and Red China. his name, but he works out of a| Foreign Minister Mamoru Shi- wedding chapel.” |gemitsu formally enunciated the The couple will be married on/| policy following prime Minister | two motorcycles. Ichiro Hatoyama's first meeting They will spend their honeymoon | With his Cabinet. | motorcycling, natch. | Shigemitsu, back in place of pow- er again after being convicted as a World War II War criminal, said Britain Restores Last | Japan was willing to restore nor- | | mal relations with Russia and of China Tea Clippers China so long as such negotiations LONDON &—Workmen began 8) do not “prejudice our basic col- | | face-lifting job today on the Cutty | jaboration with the free nations.” Sark, last of the great China tea) | clippers. The vessel is to be re- | stored to something like her old Warm Rainfall Studied glory and preserved as gq monv- ment to the days of sail. | dozen top scientists from through- The Cutty Sark has rolled at an- out the world gathered in Hawaii chor in the Thames River the last | for a detailed study of warm rain- 20 years. Recent indications she | fall. The scientists used a special- was falling apart sparked demands | ly equipped Roya] Australian Air that she either be restored or | Force Dakota for the experiments scrapped. dubbed “project shower.” 30S OF ASH PER TON OAKLAND FUEL & PAINT C0. 3851408 Orchard Lake Ave” Ph. FE 6-6158) ; a HONOLULU wn — More than a | | | | Reg. $1.98 Chrome TID-BIT TRAY 6-Pc. TABLE SETS Butter dish with cover, sugar bow! and cover, _ Creamer and large tray. Reg. $2.68 Baltimore Pear Design ‘MAKE-IT-SNOW Plastic 12 Oz. Can Cd BOWL kev. 83.95 Crystal like glass bow! with 24K trim. Values to $1.98 YOUR CHOICE Dolls, tea sets, gun and holster sets, trucks, ao) autos, games, boys’ toys, and girls’ toys. (g' This beautiful crystal-like glass set includes: 188 Large Scalloped FRUIT 1° Sturdy Metal Illuminated TREE STANDS SANTA With == P LAQU E TREE 8-Bulb « With $8: and cord * N. SAGINAW. TREE LITE SETS Complete with bulbs end extra ontiet. YANKEE STORE off