: Sue 7” eas he kke ft New Bill to 0 alled Lake x * WO Detroit Children | Victims of Boat Mishap; 5 Saved Heavily Loaded Croft Overturns in 20 Feet of Water; Seek Bodies Two Detroit children drowned in Walled Lake yesterday afternoon when their heavily loaded row- boat capsized. Five other persons were thrown in the water. They * were rescued by occupants p of nearby boats. The drowning victims were: Virginia R. Couch, 13, of 8025 Melville, Detroit. » Robert W. Munnery, 6, of the same address. Oakland County sheriff's depu- ties said the 14-foot boat overturned | about 1,000 feet from the east bath- ing-beath when .it stopped to take aboard two girl swimmers. As the swimmers tried to pull themselves over the gunwale, deputies continued, the beat cap- Sized, tossing afl seven into about 20 feet of water, ° Other occupants of the boat in- cluded William Couch, 22, and his 20-year-old wife, Lalar, both of the Melville address.. The -other three members of the party were not identified. Couch and his wife were taken to Pontiac Gerneal Hospital for treatment for exhaustion. Civilian “frogmen” of the Mich- igan Mari Maruaders and depu- ties are searching for the bodies. Witness’ said the two children boat capsized and there was no way to rescue them, deputies re- ported. The boat was powered by a small outboard motor. Truce Officer for U. N. Dies in Palestine Crash JERUSALEM, Jordan Sector # — Hamilton Fisher, 56 - year - old American press officer of the Unit- ed Nations truce supervision or- / ganization in Palestine, died early today from injuries received when | his car plunged into qa-100-foot ra- vine yesterday. His body will be flown to New York. Hoover Group to Study | U. S. Real Estate Costs WASHINGTON (®# — The Hoover Commission is going to find out whether, in its view, the govern- ment owns too much real estate. A task force, named last night, also will try to determine whether the government is paying too much for property, Drown in Big Hug for World Champ in Pro Golf | (Continued on Page 2, Col. 5) * * * * Wi PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, MONDAY, AUGUST 16, 1954-28 PAGES | i i i i ’ i ; | } % : >> | ) TAKES $100,000 PRIZE—Bob Toski winner of | Mrs. George May, $100,000, first prize in the world golf tournament | motor. Toski won by a single stroke over two who effect. ~ ._ « AP Wirephote wife of the tournament pro- at Tam O'Shanter, Chicago, gets a big hug from tied for runner-up in final round yesterday. Hare Should Quit Fair Job’ fo Run in Fall, Says. GOP. | | | LANSING (UP) — Michigan Republicans demanded | today that James M. Hare, Democratic nominee for sec- retary of state, resign as state fair manager to keep the ‘annual exposition from becoming a “political football.” | Hare, a 44-year-old former Wayne University professor | who has headed the fair since 1952; was among the four ‘candidates nominated Saturday at the Democratic State Convention in Grand Rapids. The affair completed the | Democratic ticket for the November elections. | Others nominated in the*— furniture city were Thomas | * | M. Kavanaugh, 45, a Carson 5 N | ed City attorney, for attorney UNS n Ul a Bay Port farmer and) member of the state fair and Victor Targonski, 40, a ss . Wyandotte attorney, for Dominican Sisters Hurt | When Station Wagon Hare's nomination drew imme- | diate fire from Republican State | Chairman John Feikens, He said | Five aus from the Dominican | Detroit that Democrats had | Sisters Convent near Oxford were | station wagon overturned. on the | | Clarkston-Orion road five miles | } at general; Sanford Brown, 45, | | A c h board, for state treasurer, In ulo ras auditor general. | Overturns | | injured Sunday morning when their | Gov. Williams, General ““,' Listed in fair condition at Pon- | Review State Guar dsmen tia. Genera] Hospital are Sister By WILLIAM Pontiac Press Staff Writer |Mary Theopane with scalp cuts H. THOMAS | and Sister Mary Delores with | GRAYLING — Between 12,000 and 15,000 visitors to >roken ribes. the Michigan National Gua rd Encampment at Camp| Reported in good condition are | Grayling turned out Saturday to see Michigan's Gov. G. | Sister Imelda, with leg cuts, Sis- — Mennen Williams review troops of the State’s 46th Infan-| ‘* Alaysius with arm and knee |. member of the Avondale Horse try Division. - Williams and the “Iron Fist’s” commanding officer, | Maj. Gen. Gordon A. MacDonald, landed on the field at | ’ 3p. m. in helicopters as the | bruises, and Sister Mary Grace | with a broken right leg. | Oakland County Deputy Sheriff artillery pounded out a 19-| James Stone said the car, driven gun salute to the governor.*- Pontiac units, Com y| “M,” 125th Infantry Regi-| ment, and 107th Ordnance | Co., were among the troops | which stood at attention as| Williams and Gen. Mac-| Donald greeted those on the reviewing stand, and later motored past the troops in jeeps. The guardsmen then wheeled to the music of the 46th -Division Band and passed the reviewing stand. with streamers and: flags | flying. by Sister Imelda, overturned about | ordnance unit's mess also, and 10:30 a.m. after it went out. of that is the use of half a dozen control at Clintonville road, knock- mascots—boys between 12 and 16 | eq down several guard posts and who help with the cooking and ‘plunged down a 12-foot embank- preparation of food. The youngsters ment He said the car skidded | are relatives of guardsmen and ghout 60 feet on its top after, are getting their 4irst taste of hurtling down the bank. kitchen police duty. Two of the nuns, apparently Capt. A. J. Largent’s Company | thrown out, were found 50 feet | ““M”’ has the highest paid cooks in from the demolished station wag- | camp, Master sergeants are taking | on, Stone said. | The five were on their way to) the Mensecola Convalescent Home In Today’s Press out, . Pontiac guardsmen, who put in | a hatd first week, will have | iin Lreuny 0008" 3 more time this week for unit Comes vb babu ee cesageedynsccoun bs | and training. Last | Sr Geerse Grane... le week companies were powee pstemes neeeeedbakns sss eee $ plagued with work details and | fade Caster... ts recruits were absent taking their | Sel bey 00 Raat ealiing be ee ee ee Mereete Stoperapesssr wr ecyeyeruse Saturday the guard will break | Sper msc camp and return to home stations | TV-Raéie Pregrams.....-. 7 by military convoys and buses, | FitAM ee URE d ee Se ee) a ‘79 by 1 p. m. Fair Attended by Over 50,000 | . | “Boy,” he exclaimed, “there's 4-H Event Concludes a lot of work in there for lawyers." With Northville Entrant, Winning Horse Show - By HAZEL A, TRUMBLE Over 50,000 people attended this year's five-day Oakland County 4-H Fair, with Saturday’s rain failing to ;campen the enthusiasm of either | (Picture on Page 2.) young horsemen or spectators at the all-day horse show. “This was the most successful 4-H Fair year in history,"’ said John Bray, manager of the fair. Concluding the annual fair, the | horse show had over 100 young 4-H- horsemen riding in both English and western saddles. They slowed their paces con- siderably to cope with the mud- | q wom Ge . a |ment for individuals, Eisenhower —— the fairgrounds, with the judges taking cover on the center stage beneath huge canvas umbrellas. Seventeen-year-old Cynthia Gates from the Lucky Horse Shoe Club at Northville, took the top honor at the end of the afternoon when she was presented the award for | the championship horse. j Ironically, Cynthia's Lady Prim was borrowed from one of her friends a few weeks ago when her own horse died of poisoning. A senior in Northville High School, Cynthia wil} take Lady Prim to Lansing soon for the state show, Frances Spencer of Farmington, Club, received a ribbon for her reserve champion horse. In the showmanship class, re- presenting both western and Eng- lish entrants, Virginia Dudley, an Avondale club member, took the first spot, with Barbara Groom of Livonia, second; Zander Duffield, Rochester, third; Tom Leach, Avondale, fourth, Spencer, fifth, Cloudy, Cooler Weather on Tap for City Tonight Pontiac area residents will have A low tonight of 60-64 and high Tuesday of 76-80 are forecast. Saturday's temperatures re- all day with a range 61 to 72. Rainfall reached an inch. mercury ranged degrees in downtown morning at $:00 the tem- at 73 and reached and Frances | lke Sians Big Tax Overhaul Bill Into Law President Cloims Cut of Over $1 Billion Will WASHINGTON (A P )— President Eisenhower today signed into law the biggest “monumental” overhaul that will “benefit all Ameri- cans.” The new law, Eisenhower Said in a statement, will “help millions of Americans by giving them a fairer tax treatment.” At the same time, he added, it “will help our economy expand and ; thus add materially to the strength of our nation.” The new law brings about tax reductions of $1,363,000,000 in the | first year, and more later on, for millions of individuals and nearly all corporations. In all, the imitial year’s tax | | cuts will total about $1,363,000 | 000, This will be increased later | as the new program takes full | Ten members of Congress looked ~~ | on as the President signed the bill. Eisenhower kept switching pens, ’ using enough so that each of the) Congress members could have one ,as a souvenir. 4 Holding up the 929-page bill, the| 't President grinned and remarked: | ‘I must say that represents a long | }long bunch of work.” Eisenhower said the bill is | part of a comprehensive pro- gram which since last Jan, 1, | “will have provided for tax cuts | totaling $7,400,000,000—the largest dollar tax cut in any year in | the nation’s history.” its leaders,’ Eisenhower said in his statement, ‘for having enacted this monumental] tax revision." In a brief analysis, the President utlaw Red P ‘Benefit All Americans’ | tax revision program in his-| Bigs tory—what he called a & 4 “I congratulate the Congress and . le >. 1 | | ] ' j ' j &: | ‘and their wives. The scene: The | David, Thurmont;* Md. Attend Cabinet Luncheon 4 Z : } be < 7 * Fae 4 ; | i 8 3 ; Py 4 3 Fi 4 + . i ded. f : ted A an Phan § DESERT ON A STICK—President and Mrs. Eisenhower bit into | ‘Solons to Push Measure OK'd ~ by White House | Would Declare Commie Organization Unlawful, Without Rights _ WASHINGTON ( A P )— Congressional leaders agreed at a White House conference today to try ‘to push through Congress a new bill to outlaw the Com- munist party as such. In a session with Presi- dent Eisenhower, the deci- sion was to get the House President's vacation retreat, Camp } | ‘54 Dem Convention Ends, wines cet rete antisubversive bills risks who Clark J. Adams Stays Out || pa,:2ts2 peat ior pence. GRAND RAPIDS— Weary Oakland County Democratic testify on such issues. “under loyalty actions or refuse to broke the bill down into benefits delegates trickled from Grand Rapids’ Civic Auditorium | The administration had been dis- for individuals, those he said will |help the economy, provisions for /“*much needed clarification’ of the tax laws, and devices for closing more than 50 loopholes through which he said some taxpayers may have tried to avoid “their fair _share of the tax burden.” | singled out these: | Parents of dependent chil- dren can keep them as depend. ents regardiess of how much the children earn. Retired persons will get extra tax credits. Taxpayers now will be able to claim some non-relatives as de- pendents. Farmers will be allowed to deduct. part of the cost of soi] and water conservation. Deductions for medical expenses. will be more liberal. Deductions are provided for (Continued on Page 2, Col. 1) Forty Six Die in Plane Crash Twin Engine Airliner Evacuating Refugees Plunges Into River SAIGON, Indochina #—A _ twin- engine cargo plane evacuating | they helped nominate four running mates for Gov. | Williams in November. |Saturday after a tiring six-hour convention in Which| ‘ComMmued on Page 2, Col. 8) © Says Iran Parliament | Harmony was the keyword throughout the convention . delegates became rankled | {0 OK Oil Agreement 'though Oakland County’s | when Thomas M. Kavanaugh of Carson City was unani- As examples of fairer tax treat. Mously nominated attorney general while they were in| Gen Fazollah Zahedi said today TEHRAN, Iran, ® — Premier Postpone Trial of STeamsters Officials of AFL Locals Scheduled to Appear in Court Next Monday DETROIT (#—Trial of five offi- cers and business agents of De- ‘troit and Pontiac AFL Teamsters wiuons was postponed today until } next Monday. They are charged with conspiracy to extort, Today's postponement was at fe- quest of Assistant | John W. Gilmore. The defense won a week's delay last Monday from Recorder's Judge Joseph A. Gillis. Indicted on four counts and be- ing brought to trial were: | Mike E. Nicholetti, 43, president and business agent of Teamsters Local 247 Samuel J. Marrosso, 39, business agent for Local 247. Daniel J. Keating, 31, prest- | dent and business agent of Lecal Vietnamese refugees from Hanoi | 614, Pontiac. crashed in the Se Done River near .Pakse in southern Laos. yes- terday, killing 46 persons, Most of he dead were women and_chil- dren, }and child were the only survivors. The plane had taken off from | Hanoi for Saigon with the refugees, | fleeing occupation of that area by the Communist-led Vietminh. Airport authorities at Pakse said ithe pilot had radioed an hour be- fore the crash that one of the en- gines of his Bristol plane had conked out and he was heading for the Pakse landing strip, Com- ing in for the landing, the plane suddenly nosed into the river a |mile short of its goal. Three of the four French crew- | " | Bureau predicts, with showers this men and a Vietnamese woman | said by police to have involved | afternoon. Frank E. Fitzsimmons, 6, vice | president of Local 299. | Louis Linteau, business agent of | Local 614, Pontiac. The reported shakedown was | work on Detroit expressways, oth- ler civic projects, and various De- troit-area defense jobs. Charges against Anthony J. Liuzzo, 39, another business agent for Local 247, were dismissed on a prosecutor's office motion after his examination. + caucus. Prosecutor | he Majlis, the powerful lower | The delegates admitted, | House of Parliament, is certain to ‘however, that they had ratify the new agreement settling /planned to back the 45- | the any tocar eae yy ar year-old Kavanaugh for the, ‘" an flew on anni- post and hesitated to PrO- | rayalist of his premiership, the test the oversight for fear rang ‘of causing dissension. | and will segeeen the’ notin thee | The majority of delevates was by the government which serves in favor of backing Keven | Tacs we Se after Clark J. Adams of Pontiac, | Will be minor. ‘former Supreme Court justice, re-| Representatives of the Anglo- , |Tranian Oil Co., which developed fused to let himself be considered | the Iranian ind five A , it } for the post. can companies and Dutch and A solid draft movement had French firms reached a 2-year been underway to inveigle agreement with Iran early this | Adams into accepting the nom- | (Continued on Page 2, Col.-2) World Council Convenes Hope of Unity Explored | ' i at Meeting of Churches | EVANSTON, Ill. (AP) — A leader of the World Coun- ‘cil of Churches said today the organization cannot “ne- | gotiate unions between churches” but it is “committed | to the cause” of church unity. | “The Council can and must work to create a situation | in which there is sc much in common between the 'churches that there is no adequate reason for them to ‘remain separate,” said Dr. W. A. Visser’t Hooft, of the Netherlands. ’ Dr. Visser’t Hooft, the 161 churches in 48 Council's p, ma secretary,| most widely representative told the cil’s Interna-| "stews gathering ever held tional Assembly that) churches throughout the’ ven “a clear | miles south of here, erupted to-| F a ? ; -,% ‘am 1 the Birmingham Police Dept, will boast a new detective and two new | .Sters will congregate at the Y at sergeants. Police Chief Ralph W. Moxley announced over the weekend the results of examinations taken last - me ‘d that the Roman| month, naming Robert Schaule, de- | '4n at Baldwin Public Library has) _ be me nue ned that ; * — fective; Milton C. Jones, patrol announced that selections for to- Catholic Church, by choice, was sergeant, and Robert Pepperell.) morrow’s Story Hour will be, “The | Mot represented, and that Samuel © desk sergeant, Little Reester and the Turkish Sul-; Cardinal Stri’h, archbishop of Chi- Seven men took the promotion exams fer both the sergeants’ posts, with three taking tests for detective. Of the three men writing exam- inations for detective, Schaule placed first. In addition, he was top man for the jobs of patrol and desk sergeant. With the force for the past 10 years, Schaule has done consider- able extra study, Moxley said, which included attending the In- stitute of Applied Science in Chi- cago. Jones came here from the Highiand Park Police Dept, in 167. His is a post created be- cause of the 40-hour week, Mox- ley explained. Jones is a grad- uate of the Delehanty Police In- stitute, New York, and took the Northwestern University traffic institute course. An 19-year-veteran bef ,the force. Pepperell also will find-new duties in the job of desk sergeant. Both the violations and drivers license bureaus will now come under his supervision. “IT am very pleased with the work all the men did.’ Moxely said. ‘‘I feel that all of us profited, even the men who didn't finish at the top of the examinations. They gained knowledge which will be_of value on future exams.” ; * * *« After 36 years of service with the Birmingham Post Office, Mrs Gladys Heinze will retire Aug. 3) Acting Postmaster Roland W. Reese has announced. | Tuesday Her fellow employes surprised | Trinity Church. Detroit Burial Mrs. Heinze with a party at her | home at Williams Lake Saturday night. They presented the woman terday. whe has worked in almost every | capacity in the post office, includ- ing assistant postmaster, with a! sons, Frank, George Jr. and Sam: |his mother, Mrs. Nastasia Tato-| tion with each other Presently she is stenographer for the supervisory staff. Rotler skauing in tne morning Harmony Prevails and swimming at Case Lake in Tax-Overhaul law Signed by President — (Continued From Page One? working widows and many other mothers for child care expenses. People getting sick benefits paid a ps e a ig . Named in Birmin | After Competitive Exams From Our Birmingham Bureau | the afternoon—these are the ac- BIRMINGHAM — Effective Sept.| tivities planned for tomorrow's steak roast, swimming and boat-{ andum on the main theme of our Basil M_ Terry gham the Cause of Unity (Continued From ‘Page One) Czechoslovakia and Hungary, it was noted delegates from churches | in Rumania, China and Poland did not get here. Visser't Hooft said “we de- YMCA Da-Y program. Young. 9:20 a.m. and retura home about | Pore that-certain churches” de 4 p.m, 4 | met enjoy the freedom to send * * * | delegates. . Kathleen Piket, ¢hildren’s librar- | tan,"’ an Hungarian folktale. and “Cats of Kansas,’ by Le Grand Henderson, The story hours are held every morning from 10:30 to 1}. All children of kindergarten age and older are welcome, Miss Pike said. had issued a letter Catholic could not participate j “It had been expected that some | observers would be allowed to at- tend this assembly,"’ Vissert Hooft | said, referring to a Vatican in-! struction allowing Roman Catholic observers to attend a previous Council conference. - cago stating reasons why observers Ca * * A two hour outing is scheduled for Kiwanis Club members tomor- ao * * row night. Fellow K an James - Stevlion a : _ Nwanian James, “It is significant he added, Pine Leak h i" se club at his) iat well-known Roman Catholic «ake home and the evening. | theologians in Western Europe starting at 6:30, will include @ have issued a substantial memor- ing. | assembly which js a valuable con- | tribution to our diScussion . Also not officially represented Private service for Basil M.| are the Southern Baptist Church Terry, 46, of 528 W. Frank St. will | and the Missouri Synod Lutheran . * * | oveneas ibe held tomorrow at the Manley! Church, but Visser't Hooft noted | Bailey Funeral Home, with burial these churches have observers |Mrs, Hubert Thaler of Detroit. | in the backg¥ound. by employers need not pay any) tax on this income, up to $100 a week, Provisions effecting business, the President—said, wilt “help our people produce better goods at cheaper prices.’ The tax law, he said, also will help create more jobs, ° * * * “This economic growth,’ he said “will be fostered by. such provi- sions as more flexible depreciation and better tax treatment of re- search and development costs, thus encouraging all business, large and small, to modernize and expand, . “And, partial reduction of the double taxation of income from ~ dividends will stimulate the invest- ment of savings by our private citizens and so make available the thousands of dollars that provide the plant, tools and power needed for each new job in America.” * . s Seated on the President's right | Fair; delegates to reach a decision on a in White Chapel Memorial Ceme-| present, showing their concern fot tery. | the movement The city's first poho fatality; He voiced hope that all churches since 1952 Mr. Terry died yester-| sharing our faith in Christ as God day at St. Joseph Mercy Hospital, | and Savior’ will “come to see ou He is survived by his widow, one and only purpose is to be ser Margaret; a daughter, Sharon vants of the Kingdom of God and Kay; his mother Mrs. George Kra- of Christ's church on earth, jenke of Pontiac, and two sisters, » * »* Mrs. Leona Harris of Pontiac and, je emphasized that the Council is not. and has no ambition to ‘‘be- |}come qa superchurch that.is a cen- ter of administrative power.” “There is not a single church in the membership ‘which desires this.” he said. ‘There is not one’ which would tolerate this.” He said that while the Council In lieu of flowers, the family asks that memorial contributions be given to the March of Domes campaign. - * *@ George Tatomir Services for George Tatomir. 41 of 1916 Hazel will be held at 9 30) c.nKs< . , : “eks to Manifest and develop uni- om. Wednesday in the William ty among churches, it does not Vasu Funeral Home, Highland | | have a specific formula of unity Park, and at 10 am. in geet since its member churches have wi varied ideas on the subject. | be in Evergreen Cemetery Mr. Tatomir died suddenly yes- | _ 7. * The Council's task, he said, is “to create the conditions in which, Survivors include his widow, Kathryn: a daughter, Joyce; three other, enter in searching conversa- and learn mir; four brothers and two sisters. | from each other so that the w alls of. partition become transparent !and finally disappear altogether The Council's 17-day assembly which opened yesterday, faced a : . broad array of questions and in Dem Convention problems relating both to theolog jical matters and the churches (Continued From Page One) ination as Oakland County's favorite son, but he remained steadfast in his decision to stay stand on explosive social Questions Youth Breaks Car "ine backsFownd: caw Window With Fist backing of Oakland's 83 votes) While four adult occupants ‘sat were: secretary of ‘state, James jpn an auto at Roselawn Ave. and- M. Hare, 44, of Detroit, secretary- — Pike St. Sunday night waiting manager of the Michigan State «4 make a left turn. one of three State treasurer, Sanford | teenage boys standing nearby ap Brown, 45, Bay Port farmer and | proached the car and smashed the member of the State Fair. Board, | rear right window with his fist and. auditor general, Victor. C ' Pontiac Police reported today Targonski of Wyandotte, a 40-year-| Driver Mrs. Wellington Aikens old attorney and unsuccessful can-| 50, of 2242 E. Huron St., told police didare for lieutenant governor injthat one of the occupants asked 1948 the youth, about 16 Most of the work in narrowing, wanted.” as he neared the car. a teld of almost 30 candidates for | This le whej 1 wast.” she our posts took place Friday | . i . night in pre-convention caucuses quetne the vente Sa says |throughout the Hotel Pantlind be punched In te gloss. Democratic headquarters. Mrs. Aikens said the three were standing on the corner of the Series of discussions lasting intersection when the unprovoked until the eastern skyline turned \incident occurred. The juveniles to gray kept the county's party fled when Mrs. Aikens warned she leaders from the inviting com- was calling police fort of their beds. : . Total Office Workers Since no county men were being touted for any of the vacancies ii . Up 64 Pct. in 14 Years WASHINGTON «—The Degart- became the task of leaders and ment of Labor says office workers what he = boys limited number of available possi- bilities. as he signed the tax bill was When the delegates arrived in are more than holding their own “hai a iY against ‘evervthing from automa Chairman Dan Reed (R-NY! of the force at the auditorium for their en 7 ' -tomati nl . ; 2 , . . . . es eo auto t i IMREES House Ways and Means Commit- first county causus at 10-30 a.m . : 1940 pe number of offic . ‘ a Pa? | » we ul wer ’ e tee. On his left was Chairman saturday it was apparent that the ; i ‘ ed 6 , . “ t . vor é ncereased 6 rer cen Mibikin (R-Colo! of the Senate night's activities had been well emete ness pe , Finance Committee directed the department says. As of last j Apri arl y li ne Clustered around in a semi Lack of proper rest took its tol: APE |. nearly cight pane oe circle were House Speaker Martin in jangied nerves at subsequent and women were engaged in cleri (R-Mass) and leading GOP mem- cal work bers of the two committers Eisenhower has Xx 3rd graf ta39 eliminating 2nd graf. PONTIAC AND VICINITY — Partly eleudy and cooler tonight and Tuesday Lew tenight 6@ te 64, high Tuesday 76 te 8. Nerthwest winds 16-15 mph becoming nertheriy late tonight and Twesday. Teday in Pontiac Lowest temperature preceding 8 am At & am Direction’ Wes! Sun sets Monday at 732 pr @un rises Tuesday at § 41 am Moon rises Monday at 825 pr Moon sete Tuesday at 8 27 an Wind velocity T mph Sunday in Pontiac {As recorded downtown Highest temperature an temperature... ee scares «8 Lowest One Year Age in Pontiac Highest temperature cece . Lowest temperature. .......... Li M temperature -ighest and Lowest Te Date in #2 Years 95 in 1922 ia Is Fishing in Labrador aa {the wilds of Labrador today, fish- - 875 of here for salmon, brook and lake mprratures This Canada. 48 im 1880 | caususes, but party solidarity kept tempers from flaring. Many delegates began drifting from the auditorium floor about 2 | pm. to arrange departure schedules so that less than two- thirds the original 106 members remained at 5 p.m. when the convention ended. Passage of a resolution at the | county convention binding the dele- | gates to unit rule preventing the loss of any effectiveness of the county's vote due to absence of delegates In all, the convention the expected pattern and top party leaders departed the furniture city with high hopes of a Democratic sweep in November. followed Duke Sleeps in Bag, GOOSE BAY, Labrador (»—The | Duke of Edinburgh roughed it in | ing on Eagler River 115 miles cast trout as he continued his tour "| J The husband of Queen Elizabeth rm Churches Explore ™ the churches come to know each A 5 <= oe Pontiae Press Phote CYNTHIA AND LADY PRIM—Cynthia Gates, 11-year-old North- ville High School senior, and Lady Prim took the award for championship horse at this year’s +H Fair all-day show. Cynthia, who lives at 9643 Napier Rd., Northville, Lady Prim from a frend a few weeks will show Lady poisoning. She month "4 Man Held as Suspect in Parking Lot Beating Police arrested William of 99 Parkhurst St assault arid when he Pontiac M. Shubert, 21 for investigation” of battery Saturday night allegedly attached a man in a parking lot at 76 W. Huron St Police quoted Claudie Stratton of 1 Hillside St. as saving he was about to enter his auto when Shu- bert struck him several times and knocked out one of his teeth, Strat- ton told. police, who arrested Shu- bert in the lot, that he couldn't offer any reason for the attack An anonymous telephone call brought patrolmen to the = scene within minutes. said Capt. Clark Wheaton, chief) of detectives. Two Hospitalized for Crash Injuries Two motorists whose autos hit head-on on Clarkston-Orion road about a mile west of Sashabaw road in Independence Township ire in satisfactory condition today t Pontiac General Hospital Michigan State Police of the Pon- the accident oe- eurred when Gerald L. Bullock, 20, of 7615 Easton Rd., Clarkston, lest control of his car on a curve tiac Post said while racing. another auto and swerved into the path of an auto Mrs. Opal E. Hartman 27, of 37 Cayuga, Lake Orion 3ullock, reported in good condi- has a compound skull frac- ture and a dislocated left hip. Mrs Hartman ts listed in fair condition with a severe head injury driven by tion Flanders in London, Suggests Big 4 Meet LONDON «®—U S. Sen. Flanders (R-Vt) today suggested a high level Big Four meeting to approve an independence treaty for Austria as “the first test of Soviet good faith” Flanders said he thought Presi- ‘dent Eisenhower would be willing to attend such a conference “as. long as the agenda was confined to Austria “The Austrian situation is simple * the sena- tor said in an interview. “if we cant agree on that, we can't agree on anything.” and capable of solution Flanders. here on a Vacation, blamed ‘pure nastiness’ on. the part of the Soviet rulers for failure to reach an agreement before now. 27-year-old” ago when her own horse died of Prim at the state show later this GOP Asking Hare fo Quit Fair Job (Continued From Page One) ‘quite a record” of injecting poli- tics into state fair management. “We feel therefore,” Feikens said, “that Hare should imme- diately resign his position as manager of the Michigan State Fair so that it wilt not be turned into a political football for the Democrats.”’ ' Feikens’ demand brought a quick reply from State Democratic Chairman Neil Staebler, who said there was ‘“‘no reason’’ why’ Hare should quit the post. “The fair is his pride and joy and he'd let nothing interfere with] it,’ Staebler said. There was no immediate reply from Hare but a fair publicist said he understood that Hare would not begin his campiagn until the 93% ( Xposition ends Sept. 12, The pub¥icist said he understood Hare then would seek a leave of -ab- sence Bow- 61, of 363 Auburn Ave. died Walter Sobak Jr. Was| Suddenly at her home at 2 am. Pontiac Area 1893, the daughter of Frank and lac Miczinski Potrzuski. On Walter Sobak Jr., 43, of 8 N. Nov, 24, 1914, she married Mr. Johnson Ave. died Saturday at St. . League of Catholic Women and the and Leon of California. Rosary will be recited at the Brace-Smith Funeral Home at 8:45 p.m. Tuesday. Service will be Wednesday at 10 a.m. in St. Vin- cent de Paul Catholic Church, with burial in Mount Olivet Cemetery, Detroit. Mrs. Robert Cox Mrs. Robert (Minnie FE.) Cox, 73, of 169 Mill St. died yesterday the BPOE 810, Royal at Midland Hospital of injuries Club and Roya} Oak Chamber of | sustained in an Aug. 3 auto acci- Commerce, and he was a well- | dint. known golfer ‘in the Pontiac She was born in Centralia, Ill., area. He attended Pontiac Junior on Aug. 2, 1881, the daughter of Ostiage. bes sng | Ae” and Hannah Metcalf Cripps parents are two children, Sandra woe oa 33 yous 000. Surviving are three sons and two daughters, Eerl C. Carpenter and Mrs. Minta E. Gardner, both of Pontiac; Mrs. Bertha E. Forbts of Birmingham, Ira S. Carpenter of Hazel Park and Johnny R. Carp- enter of Mesa, Ariz. Four stepsons and one step- daughter also survive, Walter Cox, Jessie Cox and Barney Cox of De- Pontiac. Rosary will be recited tonight at 8 o'clock in Sparks-Griffin Fu- neral Home, with Elks Lodge of ‘Bloe Over Weekend a.m. from St, Joseph Catholic Church, with burial following in will be George Burt Jr., James Nichols, Arthur Lee, Charles Pick- ford, Lee Currey and Birum Camp- bell. Napoleon W. Barcome Napoleon W. Barcome, 74, of 435 Orchard Lake Ave., died Sunday at St. Joseph Mercy Hospital after an illness of 12 years, Born in Hull, Que., Dec. 19, 1879, he was the son of Oliver and Matilda Manque Barcome. He came to Pontiac 30 years ago from Cartillac, where he married Delia Burton in 1900. A member of St. Vincent de Paul Church and St. John the Baptist Society, he was last em- ployed by GMC Truck and Coach Division. - Surviving besides his widow are two sons, Leo Napoleon and Alvin Richard, and a daughter, Mrs. James Pardee, all of Pontiac. A Democratic party spokes- Also surviving are two brothers, troit, Elmtr Cox of Texas and Mrs. H. A. McGown of Poplar Bluff, Mo. —_——- Mrs. Willet Hazard Mrs, Willet V. (Cloreta Gra- ham) Hazard, 75, of 403 Elizabeth Lake Ave. died Sunday at 11:30 p.m. in Pontiac General Hospital. She had been ill 11 months. Mrs. Hazard was born in Me- costa County on Aug. 15, 1879, the daughter of Alva and Rebecca Bindo Smith. On Dec. 11, 1940, she married Mr. Hazard in Pontiac. She was a member of the First Christian Church. Surviving besides her husband | are two daughters, Mrs. Anna Mor- ris and Mrs. Muriel Smith of Pon- tiac. Also surviving is one brother, Bert Smith of East Tawas. Service will be Wednesday at 1:30 p.m. in Huntoon Funeral Home, with burial following at the | Andersonville Cemetery. | man said he expected an offi- cial statement from Gov, G. Mennen Williams’ office on the controversy some time today, He sald it prebably would be issued in conjunction with a meeting of David of Cadillac and Harvey of | Houghton Lake; a sister, Mrs. Al- | No Sale om Wrong Slot bert DeVonville of Mount Clemens; . 12 grandchildren and six great-| HARTFORD, €onn. (UP)—Work- grandchildren. men repairing a thermostat next Rosary will be recited Tuesday | to a cpin machine slot found five nominees who will carry the | at 8:15 p.m. in the Kirkby Funeral party’s colors inte the Nov, 2 election. Hare, Kavanaugh, Brown and Targonski were scheduled to meet here unopposed in-tht Aug.3 primary in his bid for an unprecedented fourth term as Michigan's chief execu- tive | PRINCE RUPERT, British Co- Also expected to be on hand | lumbia — At this last British port were Philip A. Hart, Democratic | o¢ ¢aji before the cruise ship en- nominee for lieutenant governor, | ters Alaskan waters, a reflection and Patrick V. McNamara, who is | on the spirit of Canada is in order seeking to unseat Sen. Homer Fer-| with an area far in excess guson (R-Mich) in November. | that of the United States, and a population of only about one-fif- Willys Workers on Job After Vacation Shutdown TOLEDO uw — Willys Motors Inc, called back 5,500 workers and 1,000 administrative employes to- day after a two weeks’ vacation shutdown. . size of Texas, but has a popula- had the | tien less than twice that of Oak- The company said it heaviest backlog of orders for jeeps | land County, with half of them living in one city,, Vancouver, and other utility vehicles it has had in many months, S. A. Gi- That city, by the way, chal- lenges the world for progressive- ness. It can show most any of our cities how to do things beter. It claims to have more automobiles —nearly all of them Michigan made—than any other Canadian city in proportion to its population. The Pontiac car agency in Van- couver tells me it is ahead of its quota, The English made cars are no more numerous here than in Pontiac. By JOE HAAS Pontiac Press Staff Writer | bor, the Dominion of Canada is a land of extremes and expanses. Its total population is about rard, general manager of Kaiser- Willys, said production of jeeps, trucks and station wagons will be raised 25 per cent over July to meet increasing demand. That spirit found vent in the jrecent British Empire games in ; Vancouver, No opportunity was ’ overlooked to give the rest of the breviated title of “BEG,” being |nickles jatnmed in the mechan. | Traffic Accidents Kill 12, and 4 Drown; 1 Dies There were four deaths from drowning, a woman died in a farm house and aq jet fighter pilot was killed while attempting to land at Selfridge Field in bad weather Saturday. The pilot was identified as ist Lt. Rudy G. Koch of George Air Force Base, Calif. He was flying to fhe field near Mt. Clemens from Wright Air Force Base near Day- ton, Ohio. Traffic fatalities included: William H, Legue, 50, Fenton, fatally injured Sunday in a three- car crash near Fenton ip Gene- see County, , Joseph A. Bartley, 23, River Rouge, fatally injured Sunday when his car went out of control in Romulus Twp., Wayne County, Saucedo S. Atilano, 42, a Mexi- can citizen, killed Saturday in a two-car wreck, seven miles south of Grand Haven in Ottawa County. Leroy Williams, 20, and his half- brother, Lyle V. McCarney, 17, Howell, killed Saturday when their car struck a tree near Howell in Livingston County. Dickie Nelmark, 15, Ewen, and Mrs. Jack Connors, 42, Topaz, killed Saturday in a car collision near Ewen, 40 miles east of Lron- wood in the Upper Peninsula. Charlies E, Clark, 36, Jackson, killed Saturday when his car plunged into q ditch near Spring- port in Jackson County. dames Goodell, 76, Carleton, fatally injured Saturday when struck by a car while he was crossing U.S, 4-25 near Flat Reck, : Soren Andreasen, 90, Flint, fa- | tally injured Friday night when he was struck by a car in Flint, Mrs. Emma Harrison, 76, De- troit, killed Sunday night in a two- car crash at Eight Mile and Bul- falo in Detroit. Other weekend fatalities inciud- Mrs. Winifred A. Runnells, 29, Route 2, Hillsdale, fatally burned Sunday in a fire that swept the third floor of a farmhouse. | Sherman D. Howard, 45, South Bend, Ind., drowned Saturday in Lake Manuka near Gaylord. | Two of the drowning victims | were children who perished in | Walled Lake Sunday when !2- | foot aluminum outboard-powered | beat overturned with 11 persons. They were Ruth Couch, 13, and Wayne Nunnery, 6, both of De- troit. Richard Laboda, 20. of Chicago, | was killed and five others injured ‘in a two-car collision about 12 | miles east of Hart Sunday after- | noon. A 5>-year-old Escanaba boy, Rob- ‘Home. The funeral will be Wed-! wise nice c= Progressive, Cocky Spirit = strategy with Williams, who was | ; Is Reflected in Vancouver New Bill Drafted teenth that of its southern neigh- | | ism. ert Beaudry, drowned late Sunday : : in the Escanaba Yacht basin, just a block from the home of his par- ents, Mr. and Mrs. Robert Beaudry Sr Here at Prince Rupert, with Alaska only a cold breath away, is | industrial progress at its best. A $500 million aluminum plant is junder_ construction, with an) |inexhaustible supply of the raw | material available. A $40 million | the Senate. | Cellulose plant recently went into’ Without a dissenting vote, the | production. | Senate passed a bill providing stiff |fines and jail terms for anyone It is the western terminus ef | holding membership in the Com- the furthes, north railroad to | munist party and actively carrying cross the continent. It has the ‘out its purposes. largest cold storage plant in the | On Saturday officials close to the President described him as opposing the Senate measure on grounds it would make prope ganda martyrs" of the Reds, an ibut fishing port in the world. ‘reporters were told he planned to On Canada’s Pacific coast the | ask the House to kill it. newsprint industry again springs} To meet the administration's ob- forth, the largest mills being at | jections, House leaders and Justice Powell River, B. C, Here over | Department officials hurriedly 1,000 tons of paper are turned out | drafted a new bill which would every day. Nearly all of this goes to| strip the Communist party of its United States newspapers in the | legal status, but which omitted the western part of that nation. | Senate provisions aimed at pun- Thus far, the pulp wood for these | ishing individual party members. mills has been secured largely only| Although Atty, Gen. Brownell from the forests on the mountains | and FBI director J. Edgar Hoover ‘that slant down toward the coast. | have opposed any ban on the Com- However, drag machines and sluice | munist party, saying it would only boxes now are being installed to drive the party underground, the tap the great expanse of primeval | House draft was reported to have forest on the other side of the | been accepted reluctantly in pref- rgountains., erence to the Senate bill. to Outlaw Red Party (Continued From Page One) satisfied with the bill passed by Now! You Can Protect Your Home AGAINST 17 HAZARDS Fire, lightning, windstorm, hail, explosion, riot, smoke, vehicle, aircraft, water damage, steam or hot water system explosion, vandalism and | malicious mischief, damage by your own vehicle, glass break- age, ice, snow, freezing, fall of trees, and collapse of walls, floors or roofs. IN ONE LOW COST POLICY May we help you make sure you are completely covered in view of high values? Don't Delay—See Us—Today! Gendey's Temperatere Chart’ | arrived at the camp in a down-| But Canada is a good neighbor f ca go pour. The only building there is —our best, It wants and is able . e ° vg 8 log cook shack and he and his! to stand alone. It has the natural H R Nicholie : ye party slept last night in tents, bed- mentee 8 ae ° bd iding down in sleeping bags on to & | cote. F | BANDITS OVERLOOK HIS MONEY—When three | United Prese Phete | therwise to be a stiff and friend- Cell “BUD” AGENCY ) > 4 bandits held up the bank at Andrews Air Force | retained the $1,200 in re-enlistment pay he had in | jy competitor of its neighbor to the H. BR. Nicholie — H, Delos “Bud” Nicholie |. Gail Borden discovered how to Base,-Md.. they forgot to search the . customers, | his: pocket. Baldwin displays the money as Sgt. | south. Its cockiness is an admirable ' Opposite Post Office - Ph. FE 2-2326 $$, condense milk, - | Therefore Sgt.‘ Liywellyn Baldwin, Pittstown, Pa., | Charles Pyles looks on. ~ spirit, ; | ‘ r | | I ; - ra ' A sh | ft f ) ' | 4 j | \ ti i, j : ' : { } f yf LP coy i Bees fe ae Ia ee a eee , as aa Bus & ao PAL sis Ee en Ty ee fof pi Pant I Pee pe eae 8 ge Sy AE eres “3 : Vet ; S ; i F _THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, ‘AUGUS ~ ‘ : (Advertisement) r} ‘ Peat ay ‘ 7 tee had obtained secret documents Announce New Way | 0W-It s-Going-With-Me which show former, Guatemalan iF fa ee | . the complete-controi of the To Shrink ~ (Js Key to U.S. Prosperity cnet appari” eer — Painful Piles By LAURA HOBSON sales, but at the Hotel Uish’s jo nag bee rare ty ) : TeMnie ) pe ag eee Tr”, BRIGHAM CTY, Un) —| “Seay en” ony, re ee set er Te eres $8 at| cee con ner — DISCOUNT PRICES Aren't New at SIM ee Te ees tne fumnd 8 pow | Summties to folke 1 gut talking to ee Bo yarwsngy ren so : . « » We've Been Giving ‘em for Over 20 Years — "— ocak saa ee csuncatten tater, And here in Brigham City, popu- in areas where the depth is That's right, at Simms you don’t need ‘special cards", “special mn rhoids and to stop bleeding—with, | it’s a $64 gem. Ges _ | lation 6,777, a gas station manager "| greater than 200 fanthoms. mendations! . . . we've been selling nationally advertised ¢ i out surgery. I've asked it now in about a|was in a real fiat-tire mood. ’ dise at discount prices for 20 years. Pacer = 4 In case after case, pain was re- | dozen states of the Union— and | “They're buying two gallons at a 3 aT : ' — : et lieved promptly. And, while gently | jm still trying to add up the re-| time again,” he said. “It's only 2 ‘ Cr OO C olla ¥ Tet a eg ae i ta tee wee WY cs Se : Eleciric Shaver Parts §} Fist Geeses renee river ae Back we a up to @ one- P wait Sang of sitet |e Pg ed wie Er woman pl at Sve ow ; ones made astonishing statements |owners of -the Starlite Motel in| a thing — except the old human 4 fo All Fo Makes Neti A ~ Fi like “Piles have ceased te be a | Maple Shade, N. J., said, “Fine, truth that people everywhere meas > r our ationally dvertised Filters problem!” fine. It’s a bit early in the season ure life by the personal yardstick 3 Schick @ Sunbeam @ Norelco - ap arated ore Ea aoe AIR FILTERS a world-famous research institute. | °Y*"-” “| Each one of us ts the center 2 stall times with. genine factory made, replace- . Now this new healing substance In Culloden, W. Va., another | of our own universe. We call the $ ment parts... your needs from this list: oF. M. Dag. U. 6. Pet. OF) Owens Coming Mbenstes Companion : is offered in ointment form under motel owner, Warren Sovine, | day sunny or dark, the night $ Reateaion Sewvion WIR « . «ono +s, 0s Look at Simms Discount Price on ' “ Tar teak Gib dee cteans—tunany | Suit. Mewar Detter, Fm, bet Oy at ee ee on 3 Readantem Shomer’ Gard... 12 1$1.00 One-Inch Thick Filte r iF beck guarantee, "tousin.| "a couple, of supermarkets | when we look up above our own $ Reminges Wott Molders 2. -..-. ss 31-95 ay LAN front yard or front windows. > Schick (3-M) Single Head......... $3.00 , boy Ad : In the same way, I guess, eco- 4 Schick (VIG) Double Head........ $5.00 hoy Se LA nomic horizons. may seem starlit > Schick Shaver Cord ..........005: — CE PAY S: to some and thunderstruck to oth- z Senaien haven Wad «oat pad PyS ALA Bring This Coupon! y an ore. = and { for que wil never 2 Sunbeam Cutter (Model $) .........45¢ LAY Ly again take seriously any amateur $ Sunbeam Cutter (Model W) ........ 65¢ ane. , 4 5 00 , id. * polister’s “report on the state of > Sunbeam Comb and Cutter De Lok \ Worth : the Union.” 4 (Medel RGM) ....... 2. eee. $1.50 15u20 16u20 . _| When it comes to over-all weath- 2 teshoom Cont and Cutter $2.00 bd cans > 7 | y i er maps about business or reac- : Model $) .... 0 se ceeeenes 0x20 Fi ON SAVINGS PLAN to : tions or opinions, I'm going to $ Suubcens Cond and Cation $2.25 @ 20x25 : a leave the surveys and charts to > Model Ap Ac tial ahd “™ S-Bach the experts. Provided there are $ AC-DC Inverters by Shavex....... git 83 All Sizes .... ........ ? , | any wt go in for star-gaz- 2 Kar-Shave Auto Converters ...... . Self-seal edge fits tightly to frame, prevents by-pass. Scientific de- | ing! scopmripnt 1980 3 Schick Wall Holders, All Styles...... um dan fer top efficiency in all make hamates, No lenit-—-tbenp ail you 5 70s, aad a directer of the Paris, has 200 streets = Sunbeam Shaver Cord .........- 1.95 SSSOSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSHSSSSCSSSOSCSCECECSSEEE : Handmacher-Vogel Clothing C..| named for saints. 3 { {g Brand New—Latest Model—Famous | s said yolipine nay ante in the $ S : MA A : | state had totaled $17 million worth ee > BROTHERS a: sat ad te ar and te | oe neeaee mreereses T $ we te am GENERAL @ ELECTRIC | 7 oa will be nearly as big—not © S Registered Pharmacists [ 3, ; ; much under. } © Savings 10% to 40% , —4 or ft Sid || iH Steam ;., lrons ! > Cab driver No. 527 mourned, , ' Dry ?e “it’s just terrible — way off.” PRINTING TONITE and TUESDAY ONLY! . 4 Was he judging by his tips? Nationally ft “That's one way,” he said, “but Bigger—Better—Brighter SPECIAL PURCHASE—Below Former Wholesale Advertised = 95 7 | 4 Must be aoe tant 12%" city right now.” When I — When Your P iption SU PER-SIZE Decorated—All Steel Gude eae «FREE HOME TRIAL where he got his figures, he Is Filled by Simms ... . | ; Terms Available flatly, “Why, I know 500 people Prints c GUARANTEED $6.00 SAVING a: HAMPT wi cmgt fad 2 fb ao amen All Standard Rolls Full factory guarantee, Dial temperature : ‘ where they apply.” One Low Price Gh ee en: Sas > ELECTRIC co. a a ny — 3 southern Sing your fire ee Floor > ‘til 9—Sap. ‘til 6:00 Indiana, a ‘ace informed me, - 8 ee as ad PF. 5 825° W. Huron PE 4-2525 | “Tourists just ain't travellin’ the he ond Tihaed MAIN FLOOR SPEC © Anta tatntatn45 | way they been doin’—ain't spendin’ DIFFERENCE prints =. - ” greater savings. ° cry OT” At your service for: “bat in Bays, Kan. 0 cheorfal S MA S ad _— aye roned a {2rimert, aurgows fl" paARMACY BOT MMS {8 Walker-Stroller RENTAL ers and bankers were satisfied |} oer and SALES |) with the present and optimistic ; # 14x17 Inch Troy Top Reg. $1095 S=88 J @ Hospital At the old Navarre restaurant * Many Designs & Colors Value Beds in Denver, Colo., a funny waiter * 25-inch Tubular Legs a os Tom Marino, wowed my 12-year- * Folds for Storage Self - lubricating bearings, @ Bed Sides old sén by suddenly flicking a % Ne-Mar Rubber Tip Shock absorber springs. De- napkin over him and saying legs tachable push handle with ‘ “Pardon me, you're crumby, sir” HAS MANY, MANY USES roomy package corrier. It’s @ Wheel Chairs St ee tem ee “Tm Liat ‘ter TV. waa, wand the latest mode! Taylor-Tot, @ Walkers high man in checks here,” he said. chair side, over-the-lap, etc. PPITTTTTT rit “I’ve been here 6 years, and this OIIOMAL CLEANERS, we, a so —— you — @ Crutches is my smallest year ever.” sci a i SR i gitts, ~ just Yee * tus ¥ ly Ad teed “In Salt Lake City, stores and , ” price. ationa vertise MICHIGAN FIRST AID | ois sane hed . . « It’s at SIMMS!! y . Invalid Neodo—Sichreem Supplies | Cleans Rugs, Upholstery, Walls etc. rT RONSON Li ters 1621 S. Woodward, Royal Oak A 07 BROTHERS —— Rhee Has Plan ‘Chom-0-Gol Cleaner Sponge en wathine tk | The Sponge “with the Cleaner in $3.95 WINDLITE Model ......... $2.63 Oxbow & Watkins Lk. | cae oe «a C HOUSEWARES DEPT. tnd Floor |B $4.95 WINDSOR Model ......... $3.30 eee . f U if K | ES = a $6.98 PRINCENS MODEL nee Ss EFFECTIVE AUG. 9 0 UNITé NOTed | | Ease » st ceaooenl IMIIIIPMIIIIIIIIIE $185 Gat aoc ss Le Oxbow. 8:05 a.m.; 10:46 a. m.; . . s "1 7 r . Model ....... . be Wan eet Ss mansat am; || But Day of Liberation 98 North S | AA MS A a Second Specials for Tonite & Tuesday! $9.60 STANDARD Medel ........ $6.40 a. Hasn’t Arrived, ROK Saginew | one Will Not Chafe or Irritate $8.50 STANDARD Model ........ $5.67 “ mene ae eso ems | Chief Tells Celebrators | —$<$_—$ —__— s Fomen Benen Lapeer ut oft strertnd een All are brand lv ses = ‘ome So fat ~~ SEOUL # — President) Special for Tonight and Tuesday lastic Pants eeeeeeeeeoeooeseesesoeeeeoeseeseeeseseeeeeeee ee Airport en M-80) |\Syngman Rhee chose Korea's in- _ FAMOUS TELECHRON “DORM” Self-Starting : I “ P| * 4 Reguler $3.95 Value AS pictured, smart mod- ern design for use in living room, bdedroom, dining room, any room Boys’ 8-Oz..Sanforized Western Jeans ate § “4 Sizes § to 16 Western jeans have tight narrow style, Full 8-oz. Sanfroized denim. Full ZIPPER LI E dependence day to announce a “certain plan” for driving the Communists from North Korea, Contact toot tae" ~—sTland Red chieftain Kim Il Sung warned his troops to guard against attack from the South. “This is not as yet a day of liberation,” Rhee told a crewd of 30,000 yesterday én ceremonies ob- serving the ninth anniversary of Korea’s liberation from Japan. “It is our hope that the United Nations will cooperate with us in pushing up to the Yalu River and in driving the Communists out of Korea,”’ the 79-year-old President Matching Wedding Bands, added, He did not elaborate on his 98 N. SAGINAW fly, durable construction, gold ‘certain plan. Bargain B'sment ~ in 14K . Kim, in an order of the day from - OTHE RS NEW PORT'S fi eget ‘come mare SS SAVER __— ———— o @ Keeps razor ond blades LOOK!. || uma = A Timken Silent Automatic @ Holds blodes Gas Furnace installed in Regular C 49c Value p-On Plastic Pents....... 29e Soft, but durable plastic pants. Will not chafe Choice of _ in the house. Seif-start, mt, accurate, guaran- $9.95 TELECHRON'= Kirkwood Model Exactly as $ 99 Pictured : Save $5 on this luminous dial, loud alarm, ideal for home or office use. $12.95 TELECHRON Miroalarm Model Exactly as 6” Pictured Standard Size—Sanforized Fitted Crib Sheet é | alc your home for at m0 ont e pean Pay Senor a a > — Ty Acting mirror tase. Butz’ elec, . . = any medicine war, regular pactly |, at this low price. a cabinet shelf RES MMS, cocccedebenneenscocecoooococe BARGAIN BASEME N | ‘ @ Keeps bathroom J lug in Auto Cigarette Lighter . Buy Now at-€ost Prices! ‘Cannon’ Percale Sheet @iue $ 14 reve = 8D $3.29 Value Double Bed Size... .$2.29 Combspun Percale for extra wear. Famous "CANNON’ mills sheets at cost price. ust —— | ELECTRIC Baby | TIVREN Bottle Warmer Only $1527 aa d- 419 Ti WE Cn dd dedhe ddd dead ddaddatadhedadtah ad nthatatrathathathathathathaciateente Avoid’S O'Clock Shadow’ with GEM V -Edge Blades! (iL. S {{@ SIMA IIVIZ IZ 22 LLL A LA AA AAA AAA Ad ee t BROTHERS w alee Re ae sae — ‘i $e f t os THE PONTIAC. PRESS MAKE OVER PAGE MONDAY, » AUGUST 16, 1954 ~ PONTIAC, MICHIGAN FIFTEEN Threatened ‘Liberation March ar nn tn Goa Peters Ou os ily — BSLoc > 2 fee: hacigieatios REGISTER DONOKS—Mrs. Robert Sutton of 143 Lincoin Ave. (seated) and Mrs. Lucile Dennison of the United Fund register | United Fund hopes its efforts will stimulate interest in future blood- coneee who made a © tor today’s bloodmobile visit. Talks Follow Party Lines Chairmen of Dem, GOP Groups Offer Differing Views on U. S. Policies The chairmen CHICAGO @# — of the two major political parties | drew widely different appraisals of the Eisenhower administration today | Stephen A. Mitchell, chairman of the Democratic Nationa] Commit- tee, discussed GOP farm policies, foreign policy and: the S3rd Con- gress at a meeting of the insurance section of the American Bar Assn., | now holding its Tith annual meet- | ing Chicago Mitchell, in his prepared ad- dress, said America’s farmers ‘are making four billion dollars a year less than they were in 1952." and added | a ‘They have lost one dollar of in- come out of every four..All the new . Republican farm program offers is still lower prices and lower income.” Hall, in a similar prepared ad- dress, said of the administration's farm program The Eisenhower administra- tion, with commendable courage and farsightedness, has obtained an improved farm bill Its aim is a better balance in | agricultural production, And, any support level adjustments will be gradual—in line with the President's recommendations.” = * Hall said the House GOP mem.- | bers stood firm for the adminis-" tration’s ‘sound program, but the | Democrats fought us.” Of the administration's foreign | policy, Mitchell said The raw isolationism of 1920s was no more deadly than is the sugar-coated isolationism of today — whether it is served with a slogan by a smiling Eisenhower or bullied down our throats by a sneering McCarthy over the pros- | irate body of Dulles.” * * * Hall said the burdened with a rather grim lega- cy when it took office, mediately presented with six high- ? ly critical situations,” . which he listed as Korea, Guatemala, Iran, Suez, the European Defense Com- munity and Indochina “The outcome of five of these Six tests can be termed a plus,” Hal! said. ‘‘To be candid, the sixth (Indochina) must be accounted something of a minus for reasons quite beyond control of this ad- ministration, ™ Students Investigate Yucatan Channel, Sill COLLEGE STATION, Tex. (UP) —Members of the department of oceanagraphy of Texas A. & M College embarked in July on a month-long cruise to study the Yucatan Channel and the sill be- low it that links Cuba and the Yucatan Peninsula, George Austin of the department said that “‘as far as we know, the floor of this shallow region. -be- tween the Gulf of Mexico and the | i t the | administration, ' “was im- | |agencies are rallying today to help| i ee ere ee eS 4 we a DWINDLING oo John Marra, SUPPLY—Dr. pathologist in charge of the blood bank at Pontiac | of needed blood is on hand. shows a near-empty blood stor- J. General Hospital, TELEPHONE REQUESTS—Miss Barbara Bebout of the Pontiac Child Guidance Clinic was one of | the volunteer workers who contacted possible don ors by phone agencies an effort that to boost Neca i } Pentiac Press Phetes The | mobile visits plus upping today’s total donations. 7 | age locker. Dr. Marra said only 35 to 40 per cent A aT + The clinic staff joined with other | affiliated with the United Fund here in the blood-donors total. United Fund Agencies in Area Rallying to Help Recruit Donors for Blood Bank The Pontiac Area United Fund) of needed bleed on hand right now. Blood is being issued only the American Red Cross overcome | when there is no alternative.” a local blood-reserve shortage, ac- cording to Mrs. N. E. Durocher chairman of the Pontiac vicinity blood program. } A bloodmobile wil] be at Elks Temple, 114 Orchard ban League Ave., today from 2 to 8 p.m. Affiliates of the UF sending This area fell short of its 720-' gonors from their staff include the pint quota by 523 pints last month Campfire Girls, Michigan Chil- said Mrs. Durocher. dren's Aid, Boys Club, United Fund Dr, John J. Marra, pathologist | and Family Service of Oakland in charge of the blood bank at | County. Pontiac General Hospital, said, Posters have been distributed “We have only 35 to 4 per cent by the Boys’ Club, Several UF agencies have been recruiting donors by telephone in- cluding the YMCA staff and Teen” group, the Pontiac Child the | Guidance Clinic and Pontiac Ur Lake oF Donors can make appoint- ments today by calling the Red Cross at FE 4.3585. Refresh- ments will be served te donors by Girl Scouts, Three other area bloodmobile visits will follow this month at the West Bloomfield Township Hall Aug 19, Pontiac State Hospital Aug. 20 and St. Royal Oak on Aug. 23, Appointments _ for ‘the West Bloomfield visit can be made by calling Mrs. 0. A. Koskinen at | MAytfair 6-2601, ‘| Some day John's Church in| DISTRIBUTE Pontiac Boys Club took on the job of distributing | Sanderson of 181 W posters appealing for blood donors today future bloodmobile visits to this vicinity, Bob Mc- | physical director. BLOOD-APPEAL POSTERS—The | Iirath (at left) of .11 N. Shirley Ave. and Jerry | | and at | for distribution Beginning: The Audrey Hepburn Story Shes Hailed as Most Promising Actress: By DICK KLEINER (First of F.ve Articles) NEW YORK (NEA) — This is Audrey Hepburn: She came out of the theater and there was the | usual crowd of autograph seekers pushing around her. She noticed one crippled lady, holding a cam- era. The woman obviously wanted to take her picture, and just as obviously didn’t stand a chance in the crush. Audrey Hepburn turned to a | tall man in the crowd and com- manded, ‘‘Take a picture of me with that woman's camera, please."" And she posed carefully and smiled. There was a tear in her eye as she smiled And this is Audrey Hepburn, too The night “Ondine” closed, she and her co-star, Mel Ferrer, an- nounced they were having «a party for the cast and crew at Dinty Moore's. Before the party began, they told the Dinty Moore management to be sure to close the bar and announce curfew by 12:30. | And they arranged that the show would end 10 minutes later than so the party actually ran The guests | usual, only about an hour ‘were somewhat miffed | These two stories illustrate one | basic part of Audrey Hepburn's makeup that many people nowa- | days overlook—she's a human be- ing, with good features and bad | just like anybody else Since her smashing triumphs on stage and screen, many of her fans have somehow reached the conclusion that she is something super-human, half sprite, half woman. She isn't. She's very real. She has her likes and dislikes, her love affairs her weak points, her strong points. Those who know her best say she's about the most normal person taround. That is probably just prejudiced talk; if Audrey Hepburn | | is normal, nobody else it. | For Audrey Hepburn is being | hailed by critics as the most promising actress of this era. she may be classed with Sarah Bernhardt and Elea- || nore Duse. Actually, she's at the | HALF SPRITE—Just beginning, ‘she already holds an Oscar. eae Pape eee Ee 28 aes ee beginning of her career, yet she is the most sought after in the business today. She has had only two decent-sized roles in movies, yet her studio, Paramount, considers her their prize, She has had only two decent- performer HALF she’s almost super-human—half sprite, WOMAN—Audrey sized roles on the stage way is at her feet * °* She's won awards—top awards— in both. She's packed them in at the box-office. She's had fabulous offers in dozens of different fields. She could have her pick of suitors She is just now reaching the large money and ahead of her loom years of fat checks, She's a lucky girl When you talk -to Audrey Hep- burn's friends and associates, it isn't easy to form a good picture of her. There are contradictions. But, basically, they all say the same thing: she is a nice, normal, ambitious, hard-working young ac- tress That's the skeleton of Audrey Hepburn, The backbone is that word ‘“ambitious."" She pours everything she has into her work —se much so, in fact, that she is constantly under doctor's care. She is anemic and she aggra- vates it by her unrelenting drive. Here's an example of the way Shie “Works, She was making a 10-mifiute recording for the They were to send it for rebroad- cast in her native Belgium. Lots of yet Broad people have made them, just read- | ing the script and listening to it played back ard-then leaving, Av- erage time: 15 minutes. * - - Not Audrey Hepburn, She mem- orized the script, She wasn't satis- fied with the first recording. Or the second, Or the third. It took her an hour Mind a half to get it so that she was satisfied. She is the same way with ,her acting. She works days on a single scene, and keeps working at home | after rehearsal, She is a perfec- tionist, rasely, pleased with her own performances. “I should have done tha; scene better,” she'll, say as she watches rushes from her films, Or she'll study a scene that had Hepburn's - ULN. Police Stymie Indian Invasion Ouster of Portuguese Fizzles After Order to Halt Demonstration NEW DELHI, India # — The Goan nationalist drive to oust the Portuguese from Iridia appeared temporarily stymied today. Indian and Portuguese police combined to keep yesterday's much-heralded “liberation’’ invasion down to a mere trickle. There were No re- ports of any injured. But one Goan nationalist leader vowed his group would march again—without warning. Reports reaching New Delhi on yesterday's demonstration for the | merger with India of Goa and | Portugal's other 400-year-old hold- | ings on the subcontinent gave this | picture: Indian police, apparently acting on government orders, banned In- dian nationalists from taking part in the demonstration timed to co- | incide with this country's independ- lence day celebration. As a result, only smali groups— mostly teen-agers—out of Goa's total population of 600,000 actually demonstrated. * At the main Portuguese settle- ment of Goa, south of Bombay, only about 50 demonstrators cross- ed the border at three points. The Portuguese police arrested all of them. At the Portuguese settlement of Damao, north of Bombay, Indian police detained 1,200 Indians who | tried to march into the enclave. | The demonstrators — members of |e Praja Socialist party—were herded into trucks after they re- | fused to disband and carted off to Vapi, where they were turned loose several hours later. Indian police at collection points x the Goan demonstrators also () Hopkins Ave. receive posters Michael Fiorillo, Boys Club . from given her trouble and she'll say. searched them to insure that they Now I know what Willie meant carried no weapons. In a previous about doing such-and-such Wil- attack on a Portuguese settlement, lie is her . 8 * | ship between the two couples, Then_he could present his case; Also questioned by police was to the grafd jury secretly. If no| Bay Village Mayor J, Spencer continuance is granted, the prose-| Houk, who was given two lie de- cutor will make his presentation | tector tests. after the hearing, and expects *) * * @ do s0 by tomorrow at the latest. Police said the tests backed up | A preliminary hearing deter-| Houk’s denial of a suggestion by | mines whether sufficient evidence Dr. Stephen Sheppard, the ac- | exists to hold a prisoner for grand | cused man’s brother, that the jury action. However, in Ohio, a| mayor might hav had a romantic prosecutor may submit evidence | interest in the murdered woman. ¢ for 2 i He At! : i CEREAGO APCs grain: Sept - March is 7 2.13 reh . 23% Dec. . 2.16% y. 1.20% March 2.16% Boybeans— May 2.11% eee 3.06% Nov. . 2 Sept. . . 1.63% Jan. 2.7 Dec. . ..... 1.53% March . 2.80% March . 157% May . . 2.76% May 1.57% Lard— Oats— Sept. . 15.90 Sept. . 72% Oct 14.26 Dee. . uses 14% Nov 13.28 March eee Th ' 13.06 7 «Me Soybeans Oil- Rye— Sept. . ‘. 13.32 Sept... 117% March . 11.38 Can't Get Hurt Stair}, Cupboard Doors Eliminated; Wires Melt tauity wiring, The CLEVELAND (UP) — There's | broke out—or was set—in where you can't fall downstairs, slip on an icy driveway, crack your | head against an open cabinet door | or fall out the window. “Home of Safety’’ is what its They've done everything ble to eliminate hazards, the National Safety Council mates take 33,000 lives each year. possi- which esti- j builders cail it. j | The firm planned the house, | everything that would trip, stab, shock or burn the housewife and her family. They started with the stairs. Or rather, they started without them. | The home doesn’t have a step in it. There's no basement and the front door is at the end of a ramp. | The ramp would have created a fine slide for the children in the J°S¥" avenue to winter and also a skid row for un- | witting guests. skid-proofed the walk by roughing up the surface and ice-proofed it | by burying electric heating cables | in if and in the driveway. | One of the designers gashed | his head on an open kitchen cabinet door in his home one eve- be installed. And so they were. | Shock-proof heated glass in the) ceiling keeps room and occupants warm by radiation. The natural principle that heated air rises is likely to be confusing — but the builders say their system has noth- ing to do with air movement. The children, of course, are more adept at getting into trouble than their elders. But the builders say it would take a mighty effort for the youngsters to fall out a window, Windows are set high enough to be practically out of reach of children and they swing out instead of sliding up. An agile child can take a tum- ble, but he'll have to work hard at it. You can still have accidents in the home of safety. The bottom of the bathtub is made so you can | stand up without slipping, but if| you step on a cake of soap you still | tan do down with a crash. The| builders say the floor is still hard. Quake Jolts Formosa TAIPEH, Formosa #—A sharp | earthquake jolted this Chinese Na- | tionalist island early today, but ap- parently there were no casualties or major damage. One Full Year Guarantee estaurants. Re- main out only three hours. No signs used. Rox Ex Company 20146 Pont. St. Hk. Hidg, FE 4-9468 So the builders | “eg SA ee Biers poak we i in East Lawn Cemetery, Lake Orion. Mrs. Casey died Sunday after a lengthy iliness. Survivors are one sister, Mrs. Minnie Lotimer of Lake Orion; two brothers, Robert Stanaback of Lake Orion and William Stanaback | of Detroit. for Clarence Milton Novess, 56, of 4507 Sashabaw Rd. will be Wednes- | day at 2 p.m. from the Farmer- Snover Funeral Home, Pontiac. | | Burial will be in Oak Hill Ceme- tery. Mr. Novess died today at Pontiac Genera) Hospital after a three-week illness. | Surviving are his widow, Violet; | two sons, Clarence Jr. of Roches- | ter and John at home, and a daughter, Judy, at home. A sis- ter, Mrs, Blanche Hurd of Gage- town, also survives. Undersea Seeing BLOOMFIELD, N. J. (INS)—Be- cause salt water absorbs light, an undersea target is only six per cent as visible as one in clean air, en- | gineers report. Ultra-violet rays in light pass through sea water fairly well, but the heat rays are. that visibility materially improves | when the beam is moved from the) Peat in its natural state is 90 to 95 per cent water. uh : ‘y ii i | i 5 Red tes ent, fatey, 480-418 bu: |ket climbed today with oils in the bee bu: No. 1. yg OS forefront. Volume was moderattly red, No. 1, 5.00-5.50 case. Muckteberries. No. * ea 2 pe heavy. Pears, oper, No. 1, a90-4ie ba. water: Railroads, utilities, steels, and _ melons, 1, 3.00 bu. copper mining issues followed the and a cab- Lettgen one cated qoute ong Mey oils higher ground. Motors, air- 1.25 bu; endive, bleached, No 1, 2.00- | Crafts and chemicals were irregu- 280 bu. Hecarcie, He 1. 90-138 bu: /lar while airlines and some dis- Re Pht ea | eet lettuce, head, No 1, 1.00-1.50 bu; lettuce,| Trading started extremely fast | reas. e i, Sie bu Romaine, No 1. and for several minutes the high | mra.'wo,i temtse be. Kate Re't: ASS | heey’ up with the heavy eetame LS be eeeae Doe PELE | a ae taot coon chenced toe . , 1.0061. . ‘apt soon c a te ferns, Be oie ppl ac selective tone prevailed into Troops, Police |... Yor see ’ Admiral M34 Air Reduc .... 267 Kelsey “Hay 333 | Alleg L &1.... 4.2 Kennecott 05.4 Allied Ch ..... 95.4 Kresge se 27 Allied Strs 48.2 Korger. $1.3 UDGUE FEIONS cer ss ere Alum Am .... 86.7 & My | 611 . . Am Airlin *:.! 13.6 Lockh~aire~ Kingston, Ont., Prison Am Can ...... 45.4 Loew's = 13 | sm Ges agi 3” Lorene” 334 ls Under Extra Guard |e ie vay Ht en tha 8 After Fire-Riot * | Aw Motors... us Martin Gr. 302 Am . 2 May Str 35.4 KINGSTON. Ont w — Extra Am Seating? S27 Midveu re. 313 crane paleatet big oy ee Am Tel & Tel 1123 Mont Ward | crt ederal Penitentiary today *| Am Tob .. 89 Motor Pd ... 221 ing a two-hour riot during which sm Sots ... Be Motor Wheel 304 some 450 convicts set a dozen | anac “"". 39.5 Mueller Br .. 29.7 fires in the big gray structure Anne We © Os Murray op ia Only one person, a guard, was Armour & Co er Nat Cash R 913 ces a ; . meured in the attempted break phy A ; Rr Nat Gype .. 384 yesterday. Atl Refin 3 mes Lead 34 Police reinforcements and 160 | Aveo Mig |||. 63 Nat Theater 5.’ 8. NY Air Brk .. Canadian Army troops were | Bald Lime «06 NY Gene Bal called to help guards subdue the Booch Nut 33.4 we M Pe a prisoners and to protect two Denon Av te No Am a 411 Kingston fire trucks which final- Seth Gteet 78 eee fe ly brought the blazes under con- | gohn “alum r+ Nwest Airlin | 111 mid-afternoon. : » O 62 ms the second fire in three ae was s ea if t was n eM... 39.3 a ° . | a Brist Pp w | days at the peiaon, one of Canada's Brun Belue’.. tha Param Pict a8 largest housing 1, convicts. A id Co ..... 14.2 Sarde | blaze Friday night, blamed on | bemeey 3s Pe mh tes ing, burned out sections Dry 334 Oils Dw. ans of the roof | Capital Airl .. 113 raeee sor oi riot started when a fire mo MS pn Pet... 6h the | Cater Trac... 63.1 Pillsby Mills.. 45.4 prison exercise yard. Torch-carry-|¢en mi Ps.. oy Proct & G... 90 ing prisoners spread the blaze to|Cert-teed -... 213 Pee: BY the trade shop and various parts | Chia’ nw. | ig; Radio Cp... 336 of the cellbigcks before they wege | Chrysler *... 886 RES’ wutors 322 subdued. Gee sh oF Repub Stl... 58.1 Climax Mo. 53.2 Ra, te B-. 38 Police ‘Said once reinforce- Ciuete Feo ... 32.3 4 Sp... Ay ments arrived, they had fittle m ... 50.7 gafeway Bt... 45.6 trouble. With drawn guns, they | Con Edis at of oon ieee... Ba herded the rebels into a corher, |Comsum Pw .. 486 Scovill Mi. 28 grabed them in pairs, searched | Cont Can |. |. 7 oe s* them and returned them to their (COP! Mot ..-. 107 Bhell Oil... 48 one lee Re Soe Be . | Corn Pd ...... melair . 4 Crue Stl ..... Socon i; § e reports put the fire dam- Curtiss Wr . D2 Sou pac “a7 age as high as a million dollars. | De C'seag 32 Sparks Ww wt The trade shop was almost com- Doug ’Aire ... 86 Sperry |. 744 pletely destroyed. De Pont ie? Sta On cel... a _. Serio Be BS oh ae Finish Blacktop Recap Set Ket... 1 OS Bs 4 - on Part of Walton Blvd. Emer mad. 133 Stodenater.. 44 * 5 oe The blacktop recap is now com. | Erie RR.” ine Swift & Cb. 487 plete on Walton boulevard from |e eo cone SO Penasco: at North Perry | Preept Sul ... 61.2 -Tex o+ - OA street and the stretch on Walton | Pr Bak. 8d Cimk Re Bear... 466 from Joslyn to Baldwin may be Gem Flee. 43 Tatsamer 334 open Wednesday morning, Assist-|Gen Mills "a Tyent, © Pox 244 ant Enginer James N. Carlisle | ¢" werors S88 Un Carbide. 82.2 said today. . o- ame 317 Unit Air Lin art) A 2-foot widening of Kennett road | Gitte | a cuneate 8 has begun from Baldwin to the earch... 992 Unit Prut..... 496 : a : | Goodyear 73.6 Un Gas Im... 37.4 west city limits, Carlisle stated. Gran Paige 13 US Lines...., 17.2 | The section will also be recapped, | Se faowns ; 137 oe enn on Ae he added. |Guif on 58 Us Steel... sat |Holland P |. 171 US Tob 116 ge Rl Ley ee County Deaths any! ER at tees Cop | Beste A wes 383 | r Mrs, George Casey (Int Harv 32.3 White Moi) 38° LAKE ORION—Funeral service | It Nick 1) wana eee: 58? r or Mrs. George (Florence E.6 | int sliver @. Woolworth 7 “8 ‘asey, Z South Broadway St. n e ow... will be Wednesday at 2 p.m. from nig oe Yaget Sh & t oo Allen's Funeral Home, with burial | Johns Man 76.4 Zenith Rad... 716 STOCK AVERAGES NEW YORK — Compiled by the Asso- ciated Press Net change Noon Mon. ..,.. 1909 87 648 1340 Prev. day ...... 1800 995 647 133. Week ago ..... 1766 970 60 1311 Month ago .... 1752 9878 62.9 1303 Year ago 1406 86.2 641 1065 1954 high 182.0 1002 648 144 1954 low 143.9 T78 86.4 108.0 1963 hig 151.8 83.6 5868 1163 1953 low ....... 1302 735 S05 995 DETROIT STOCKS Pigures after decima) pe nts are eighths Figh Low Noon Baldwin Rubber* D & C Navigation* Gerity-Michigan® _........ Kingston Products* ......... Masco-Screw* .. ; . 1 Wayne Screw* . o tec *No sale; bid and asked It takes more than 100 men to! track the flight of a cally and by radar. | |in-waiting were | ABSTRACT DISTRACTION—In San Mateo, Calif., g Sandra Leister stands beside “Schizophrenic,”” an art. abstract painting that won second show. The artist, who signed himself ‘Al Bijou,” | would have won first prize if it had been prize in ‘an art | judges defended was actually Kerney Walton, president of Peninsula | framed. Art Association, who entered the picture as a gag ‘Country's Newest City Has' News in Brief Very Favorable Position _ ;xtina’ss gece > PRESS, MONDAY, AUGUST 16, 1954. a alias, My SN * amount of groceries was taken breakin sometime Satur- LAKEWOOD, Calif. (UP)—They | could see a long way. Lakewood day night at the Cebert C. Jeffries claim this is the nation’s newest city. here 10 years ago. In those days you could get an unobstructed view of about 10 miles. Maybe a couple of citrug groves and an occasional home got in the way, but you Modern Britons ‘Light’ Drinkers Per Capita Consumption Now at 18 Gallons from 32 in Victoria’s Day LONDON (INS) The “new Elizabethan age,” hailed so proud- ly in Britain today as being bigger and better than ever, can't hold a candle to the reign of the first | It's true that enough beer and | ale was consumed in Britain last and child from the Hebrides to the | | year to provide every man, woman a | Scillys with 18 gallons of the| | heady brew. That's 899,415,792 gal- | j}was the ‘‘standard drink’’ | rocket opti-| strength than beer. ! ons to be exact. Sounds like a monumental thirst. But it isn’t. At least not _ “Only 50 or 60 years ago,”’ he re- called nostagically, ‘‘consumption per head of population was 32 gal- lons.”” Asked to what he attributed the remarkable decline in elbow bend- ‘"* 954/ing, he sadly explained that ale | in an England. “That was before the advent of tea and coffee,”’ he added. “If we go back to the days of Henry VIII we see that Anne Boleyn’s ladies- | The spokesman admitted that ithe alcoholic content of beer and | ale has greatly diminished since those days. But he said that on the average last year's beers were “slightly stronger’ than the year before. This, he said, was due to a growing taste for bottled beer which has somewhat English ‘draught a Bess when it comes to downing | allotted an ale) |ration of a gallon at breakfast, a_ {eatin at dinner and a gallon at \setropolitan Authority Photo Con- 30 16 15 oo . Indust Rails Util Stocks 7) +2 +1 +4 greater | was nothing. > full-time paid employe — a city clerk. county-contract form of govern- employes. It contracts from Los Angeles County for police and fire county to collect and assess its work. Lakewood has a nice’ income. The tax on assessed valua i ali i “z nearby aircraft and petroleum in- | dustries. the Lakewood experiment. They like those low taxes and overhead. Photo Contest to Accept Entries Until Sept. 30 the Huron-Clinton Entries in test will be accepted until Sept. 30, according to Eason Chun, president of the Greater Detroit Camera Club Council. | Prizes are offered for black and white and color transparencies talten in any of the five parts of the authority. Entries should be |sent to the Huron-Clinton Metro- |politan Authority Photo Contest, 1750 Guardian Building, Detroit 26. U. N. Gets Complaint CAIRO, Egypt #» — Egypt's War Ministry protested to the U.N. } i : Lakewood operates on a nove} | Dall, Ph. FE 5-S00t see |OR 3-718. This also eliminates a lot of book- ii; threatened annexation by nearby Long Beach. After much heated was to average family numbers 4.2. Most of the men in this almost entirely residential city are employes of } Mixed Armistice Commission to-| day that armed Israeli soldiers|ycnean nt —(Ontland County crossed the Egyptian border east | station and killed an Egyptian | workman, SERENAD -_ > > Carney, Chief of Naval Operations, strums guitar during a horse-drawn barge outing on did C & O / € $ a *] % ; é a mou! No slums. No Skid Row. No local | eogts police force. Not even a street out | guilty to reckless driving before of repair in its seven square miles. | Orion Township In fact, the place has only one | Stanaback. ment which does away with city | Drayton maintenance — even hires the | day, Aug. 29, starting fine Saturday after he Te buy Reast Beef Dinner, Other communities are watching |; several tracts stituting the Special Assessment District o be open in : : a 2 i HELE 32 i hit s¥ee t3a8 FoF i : be! by any parties The following ts @ descriptiton of the Or parcels of land con- f said “Tipsico Lake hovel Control” : DESCRIPTIO: Supervisor's Plat No. 4, Sec. 18—Lots No. 1-43 (ime.) of Gaza, blew up a water pumping! supervisor's Piat in 1-96 (ihe.) e Shores, Sec. 30—Lots No. 1-18 (ine.) ant Sec. 36—Lots No. 1-32 Tipsico Beach Annex, Sec. 30—Lots No. 1-14 (ine) all thet pert 1 ow “%. Bee. 0 le except Super- "Bie RS‘. 38 excent Tp 30 ex Beach Annex “ The GW ‘«, Sec. 30 except Supervisor's Piat No. a ug i i ‘i a . sf it i 83. "i fi Hi i 5 ; : ee h i bs i ase S : SHREREEMR tes oy sf ; il i Es = i ia SR ia ia igh ‘, eee Mi iif 4 Pex lim i 2 ey H : ay tg i uf 36 : oe ir eg | ! i 2 od o . vA » : . j i HF fet Fil ; f if i ? ; : z fits wil | i | : at atl sé af 24 <6 ries arf Z 9 Hf “alk 2 F at Wate fe ‘h 1 | i 58 sbiil sigtcas pig te f fd ign . 3 ri i : : H ss J 5 : 3 Donelson-lohns FUNERAL Voorhees-Sinle FUNERAL HOME Ambulance Service Plane or Motor on H “ 2 4 > H | : sf 33 i care on terms. PE. 3459 | Trate sow fe oil ter end gift | parties by selling cur unusual | of housewares. novelties, end tors. ee BOX REPLIES or, yatta 2000 Loovenne Enntbenn, At 10 am. today bold - : there were replies at home located the Press office in vopre = Si=Je!|| Saris + Ay Own room > Sreecee| | emer G4, a, 51,5861, | | eeNake Sate ae 72, 75, 78, 98, 96, $9, 96, ae $104, tes, 1s. Pontiac General ¥. MERRES WORER WERE GH tf Help Wanted Male 6 CAB DRIVERS, PULL Tram, aP.- Fess Orchard ae CW Manage: Used te handling men. CR Apply Fi $1487 ” ; i . Ld 3 i L i q Swell Recipe for Folks in a If everyday problems keep you in @ stew, Classified Ads are & recipe sure te agree with you. Gay you're trying to find 6 buyer for something. Real es- tate, car, furniture, whatever. 4 you do te dial PE D-8101 for an ad-writer, and your buyer's practically om the wayt Stew...