ie om ie * rr <<< 112th YEAR —gre expected fo visit GM plants | ~ Komsomol Pravda, newspaper of The Weather Tuesday: Cloudy Detalis page two kk kk THE PONTIAC PR PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, MONDAY, > NOVEMBER 195444 PAGESC® GM's 50 Millionth Auto Rolls Off Line Tomorrow More than 100 press and radio-television representa tives are expected to be in the Flint assembly plant o! General Motors’ Chevrolet Motor Division tomorrow morning when the 50 millionth GM auto rolls off the line, the corporation said today. Completion of the 50 millionth auto, a gold-painted and gold-plated Chevrolet Bel Air sport coupe, will cap what GM hails as “an unprecedented industrial achieve- ment.” ** : No other company has approached the- 50 million lowa Governor “. ay mark in automotive pro- NX duction, the corporation de- [/* . clare maton“ Killed in Crash Net The newsmen will join 300 De-| MRS. MAUREEN THOMPSON Traffic Safety Advocate Dies as Cor Hits Rear of Truck; Wife Injured at Flint's IMA Auditorium. } A “Ballad of Progress” skit | and a talk by GM President Har- | low HM. Curtice, presented at the | DES MOINES, la. ‘| P)—Gov. luncheon, will be carried by William S. Beardsley, an ardent closed television network to 51 of aa leader in the drive for traffic safe- 6 similar luncheons across the | nation, including one here ty, was killed last night in a high- Pentiec civic and business lead- way collision. He was 53 years old ers will gather for the luncheon in Beardsley fatally | the Pontiac Motor Division en- when his car’ rammed into the gineering auditorium. rear of a pane! truck on Iowa High- See. te a eee ee, |e 60 two miles north of Des president of the Pontiac State Moines. Bank and the Chamber of Com-| His wife, Charlotte, was injured merce, will speak. | but authorities at Iowa Lutheran Day-long open houses will be held | Hospital said she was in “pretty | ar csoitae. tases chiiacs | good condition”’ and ‘‘resting well.” | was injured Three persons riding in the and training centers in 70 com-| truck were treated for minor in- | | juries and released. ‘ Lecally, GMC Truck and Coach Ironically, the governor had al- | will be the first to be- (ways shown great concern over house obsery open its ga’ MISS SUZANNE KARNER | First prize in the 1954 Man About ames. | highway accidents in Iowa. Only a it ne Mince ‘Toeueu par few months ago, he established @ Miss Suzanne Karner. The first state Traffic Safety Committee to | prize of $300 in U. S. Savings Bonds | work on the problem. | was divided between the two who Beardsley, who did not seek re- | finished in a tie. Details appear lection in-the Nov. 2 election, was | /" the Man About Town column just ending his third two-year term. | 0" the editorial page. Russia Training Sights on Town | Lt. Gov, Texan Admits One® | So =~ (Staying Niece Russia, 37 years after the Bolshe- | Leads Police to Body of | The Beardsleys had gone to vik Revolution, a little village is Ames. 30 miles north of here to Girl, 11, Missing Since Last Tuesday still called “Christmas.” “Somehow they never got around LEBANON, Mo. ®—A mild-man- néred bookkeeper who developed to changing the name,” complains an infatuation for his pretty 11- year-old niece admitted last night that he killed her. Then he led officers on a 226-mile hunt for the body. Police’ found the fully clothed body of Jeannette Earnest about four miles east of here in a pile of leaves just off U.S. Highway 66. The schoolgirl, missing from her Fort Worth, Tex., home since last Tuesday, had been shot in the right temple Her uncle, Thurman Priest, also a Republican, was elected to succeed him. Leo Elthon, Fertile, visit their son, Dan, an lowa State College student. They were re- turning here when the accident happened. However, their son said he “didn't get to see my folks this ing their churchgoing habits afternoon because I was at a movie Autumn, after the harvest, is the, When they arrived.” He heard traditional time for weddings in about his father's death over the rural Russia and without fail, the | radio and drove immediately to the paper complains, “there are mar- | hospital! —— in churches _ = of those _—_---—_— ng in chw are cven bd oe Baltimore Jet Crash Kills Two Crewmen Komsomol members." The paper quoted Maria Kudriat- sova, district Komsomo! secretary, as saying it was “only a habit" BALTIMORE (®—The two crew members of a Martin B57 jet bomber were killed today when the | plane apparentiy exploded in air the Young Communist League. | Furthermore, the paper says, the | people never got around to chang and asked: “Is it a good habit?, No, it is bad. Must we fight against it? Yes, we must.” They Could Use Turtles 4 " H and crashed into the hack yard re ae ith a 1 ere |of a private home near suburban nireatd bed . to Speed Up Ma =i oy eee Sheriff Bill Decker quoted SALISBURY, N, H, it P) = The burning plane set fire to Priest ac saying: Mrs. Harry F. Twombly = Salis-' the home of Edward H. Adams I was afraid the family was bury wondered why she was re- but his 3! vear-old wife and three going to take the girl away from ceiving a Christmas gift thank-you smal) children escaped without in- note with the holiday still a month | jury away. A spokesman at the Gienn Ls A glance at the postmark Martin Co. plant said the twin-jet showed the note had been mailed bomber, the American version of from Franklin—a town nine miles the English Canberra jet, was on away—on Jan. 1, 1915. a routine flight when it crashed. EEE me. If I couldn't have her, no one else could.” The ‘child's mother recently re- stricted Priest's visits with the girl. Mrs. Priest is a sister of Jean- nette's mother. She and Priest ‘were married about a year ago. Attorney General Leo A. Hoegh, | { 7 Youths Killed ~ as Car Hits Rail | ’ Near Highland | | Three Others Injured; State Police Find Beer Bottles in Car Two Royal Oak youths ‘died of injuries and three other youths were injured when their car hit a guard rail at M59 near Harvey |Lake road in |Township last night and overturned several times. The dead are: Dexter Field, 19, of 27817 Grove- land. | Roger Kendall, 18, of 28827 Wau- | keta Kendall, a passenger in the taic General Hospital. Field, the driver | hospital three hours after the ac- | cident with head injuries is John Neis, 2. of 4363 Miller Rd., Capac. Patricia Zeller, 15, of 350 Wood- ruff, Milford, is reported in fair condition with head injuries, and her brother, David, is listed in good condition with head injuries and face cuts, All were passengers in the Field car, according to Michigan State Troopers Bernard Schrader and Howard Hoag, who safé that the car |was evidently traveling at a high rate of speed Police, who found beer bottles in the car, are investigating the pos-| sibility that the youths might have | been drinking. C. of C. Supports Goal of Pontiac | Foundation | Support was given the Pontiac Foundation’s goal of a civic audi- torilum today by the Chamber of Commerce. In a prepared statement, Robert J. St. Clair. C. of C. manager, de- | clared: “We feel that the foundation's | initial project—that of helping to| acquire a civic auditorium for the | City of Pontiac which can be util-| ized by all its citizens—is extreme- ly worth while. “We feel such a structure will | add tremendously to the cultural \and social progress of the city. | “We can visualize where it could put the city in a position to acquire | | conventions and supply needed facilities for many activities which | leannot be adequately handled | This week has been officially pro- | claimed ‘Pontiac Foundation Week” by Mayor William W. Don- aldson. The foundation is a fund gather- civic improvement in Pontiac. first aim is construction of a mu- nicipal auditorium. ‘Lost & Found: One Wife | | LAFAYETTE, Ind. \e—Robert ' Cantrell, 28, Milwaukee, discovered ‘fvhen he reached Lafayette that es wife, Betty, wasn't with him. Driving back 130 miles to Deer- ‘field, T., to pick her up, he ex- plained, ‘I thought you were lin the back seat.” Play for Detroit Lions at = A Winning we P begpt t «. . \ . a * — os » 4 = ; & ai ty q mn res ) he . ; > . 7 et % ~ -as ~~” 7) s* . ¥ AS : b) Green Bay Highland | car, was dead on arrival at Pon- | died at the | | Listed in critical condition today | Local Fam | | | AVERY ‘Mendes-France Giving First U.N. Talk ily of F our Wins New Pontiac CELEBRATION: “QUITE A SURPRISE” — Winner of the 1955 | county courthouse is H. Wayne Gabert, at right, Pontiac Star Chief sedan given away by local | President of the Retail Merchants Assn. “It was merchants to climax y J Carol Jean, 5, and Ronald, selected from among 300,000 tic Making the presentation Saturday lives | 12 Lose Lives in State Traffic Weekend Mishaps Also include Fire Death and Fall Fatality BY THE ASSOCIATED: PRESS One smashup, in which four died. took a third of the 12 lives lost in Michigan traffic accidents over the weekend, A Tl-year-old man died in a fall down steps at his Detroit home and a Lake County man died in a fire which destroyed his home. Roger A. Kendall, 18, of | Warren was killed last night | when an automobile went out of | control on M59, three miles north | ef Milford, and overturned. accident on U. S. 10 Saturday near | the Oakland-Genesee County line) in Oakland County were: Lovell L. Beswetherick, 27, of the ‘Pontiac Celebration” was Claude L. Smith, 3%, of 271 S Edith St. shown with his wife, Helen, and children Flint; his son, 4-yearold Michael; | i orview, “that this delay is cer- Leadership | kets submitted. in front of the | John Dugan and quite a surprise,” said Mrs. Smith, “we never thought something like this could happen to us.” Smith, a World War II veteran, is employed as a metal finisher at GMC Truck and Coach Division. Smith's name was | The winning ticket was drawn by two members of the Pontiac City Commission, Mayor Pro Tem Commissioner John Carry. ar x-Convict Believes Pal. Clubbed Mrs. Sheppard CLEVELAND (#—While the murder trial of Dr. Samuel H. Sheppard efitered its sixth week today, police investi- gated a former convict's story that his burglar pal may have slain the osteopath’s wife. Frail, mild-mannered Henry Fuehrer, 51, walked into a police station in a Cincinnati suburb yesterday and announced, “I've got something on my chest.” Hints McCarthy Elbow Is Hoax Sen. Fulbright Doubts Seriousness of Ailment; Suggests Delay Intended WASHINGTON @® — Sen. Ful- George R. Yates, 71, a retired bet bright (D-Ark) says he doubts and to see whether he Great Lakes ship captain, wart ge scCarthy’s elbow trouble is|the Sheppard house | fatally injured Saturday in a fall «quite as serious as we were led) land bar down steps at his Detroit home. | The four killed in a head-on week suspended debate on censure | the other man to believe’’ when the Senate last charges against the Wisconsin Republican while he underwent hospital treatment. “It seems to me,” yesterday during 4 tainly consistent with an effort to prevent any vote at all.” Debate on the censure charges— eeeee tees terete “* pee eObodecesl - - a4 Then, officers said, he told of going to Bay Village on a burglary mission the night of July 3 and fleeing in panic after he heard yells, cursing and scuffling come from behind a house his companion had entered. was found in her bed Marilyn | bludgeoned to death |early in the morning of July 4. | Fuehrer was brought to Cleve- |land today for further ree ial in | his companion. E 35 i } | However, police of St. 4 gz sls Address Delays {A-Plan Action by Assembly Russians Renew Effort to Make Red Chino Part of Participating Group UNITED NATIONS, N. Y. (#—President Eisenhower's atoms-for-peace pjan played second fiddle in the U. N. Assembly today to the first appearance of French Pre- mier Pierre Mendes-France before the international or- ly shelved consideration of the Western proposa) for peaceful application of Chairman of the Oakland County Residents Urged to Back Safe Driving Day County Board of Supervisors Floyd Andrews today appealed to county residents to prevent traffic accidents on Safe Driving Day, Dec. 15, and stated that highway safety must be observed on Kramer, Walker on All-Big Ten : itel a rat te Tee i) F Besides the deadly-armed Dawson, the all-conference back- field had Obie State's Howie (Hopalong) Cassady and Minne- sota’s Bob McNamara at half- backs and Wisconsin’s Alan (the Horse) Ameche at fullback. Ameche was one of three repeat- ers from the AP’s 1953 team. Two other holdovers were the guards in_a 212-pound average all-star line, Tom Bettis, Purdue senior, and Cal Jones, lowa junior. Paired with Kramer at end was Ohio State’s 213-pound senior -]| wing-man, Dean Dugger. The oth- er Michigan player was Z ath Deadly Event Two Spectators Killed, 5 Drivers Hurt in 3rd Day of Pan-American Road Race MEXICO CITY — One of the | more than a score injured in the deadliest of all Pan American Road | first three days of the $117,200, Races entered its fourth and next 1,908-mile race from Mexico's trop- to last day today with no driver in any of the five classes holding a safe lead. ical southern border to Ciudad Juarez opposite El Paso, Tex. Six persons have been killed and Two spectators were killed Sun- PACE-SETTER—New leader in the weight division of the Pontiac | dale of El Paso grabbed the lead Harlow, of while opening day. a0 Pontiac Press Pheote buck shown above with hunter Harlow brought the 8-pointer hunting near , Stonington in the UP’s Delta County on was only 6 minutes, 32 seconds. Holly Hunter Enters Fine Buck in ‘Rack’ Contest A 170-pound 10-point buck with an exceptionally well-balanced rack is the latest entry in the) best rack division of the Pontiac | Press’ big deer contest. Deer was shot by Richard Pacer The 3-way contest includes com- / nearly 200 collegiate distance run- | cago Stadium. petition for the biggest deer (weight only considered), best rack and best over-all head. Entries are restricted to full- of 10380 Gibbs Road, Holly, while | time Oakland County residents hunting in Schoolcraft County on opening day. Other bucks, none of which is a contest entry, were reported by Gerald Buri of Walled Lake (10- pointer), W. L. Barton of 814 Sterling street, Pontiac (8-point- er) Omer McAnnally of 3423 Drayton Plains (10- pointer). Bucks should be brought to the Pontiac Press for measuring and photographing between 8 a.m. and 3 p.m. daily and 8 a.m. and 12 noon on Saturdays. Weight entries must be accom- panied by a certified weight slip, bearing signatures of the weigher, the hunter and a disinterested wit- ness. Corned Beef and Cabbage Dinne TUESDAY Every All ¥ JACK DECKERS ino: u Con Eat 5] AYTON PLAINS HAS HAPPENED AT Prefers / WONDERFUL State Barber Association Local No. 30 Pontiac area Barber Shops will be Open all Day Wednesday, Nov. 24 Due to Closing Thanksgiving Day ~ Signed, Secretary Local No. 50 4 day, three injured, and five drivers were hurt, two seriously. It was still anybody’s race as less than 100 cars left Durango at dawn on a 437-mile downhill dash to Chihuahua. About 150 from l4 countries started last Friday. a 7 . Two legs are on tap today: 251 miles from Durango to Parral, then 186 miles from Parral to Chi- huahua. There drivers will rest overnight for the payoff sprint Tuesday Only minutes separated the lead- class, lead by a Ferrari; Small THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, NOVEMBER 22, 1954 exception of Dawson, the unit Sports, Porsche: Big Stock Cars; Lincoln; Small U. S. Stock Cars, Dodge; and European Small Stock | Cars, Alfa Romeo. Leading the big sports car field , at the takeoff Monday, was Um-| berto Maglioli of Italy in a Ferrari But he was just six minutes ahead of Phil Hill of Santa Monica, Calif., in another Ferrari. Hill lead the first two days. * Ld . Less than five minutes separated | Ray Crawford of Long Beach, | Calif., and Walter Faulkner. also | of Long Beach, both driving Lin- | colns in the Big Stock class. A) close third was a Cadillac driven | lby Keith Andrews of Colorado | | Springs. Colo. |_ For the first time in the race, a Dodge took the lead in the Small | U.S. Stock Car class. Tommy Dris- from Dan Morgan of Pueblo, Colo.., | driving a Ford. Drisdale's lead Cross Country Men An ‘o Compete at MSC EAST LANSING @—A field of ners, including numerous sectional |}champions, gathered at Michigan | State College today for the 16th annual NCAA cross country run. | Fourteen schools have full | squads entered for the team crown |with Kansas State, Pittsburgh, - Penn State, and Oklahoma A. & M. | among the favorites. | Kikuo Moriya of Wheaton col- | lege. one of those favored for in- | dividual honors, had failed to ar- rive by late last night, but the | lists were kept open until the last | minute before the 11:30 a.m. start of the four-mile run. | Central States Pin Tournament Gets Under Way BATTLE CREEK —A total of 252 teams this weekend opened the Central States men’s bowling tournament, one of the top pin events in the Midwest. Moving into an early lead was Houghton Insurance of Battle Creek. The team has.an actual score of 2664 plus a 390 handicap for 304. Detroit's Maple Lanes, with no handicap, was 2nd with 2974 which stood tops among actual leaders. In singles competition Frank Decker of Albion, led with an ac- tual score of 643 plus a 38 handicap for 681. Eddie Jones and Bill Jerris of Battle Creek teamed together for the doubles lead with 1114 and a 138 handicap for 1952. The all-events lead was taken by Bud Taylor of Battle Creek with 1765 plus a 150 handicap for 1915. . ‘*” | Corvallis, Oregon; and Manhattan, | 4. Kansas, it has been decided and the dates have been set as March 11-12. Tourney Sites Set Regional tournaments in the NCAA basketball playdown will be in Philadelphia; Evanston, Illinois; Orleans in 1918, and disposed of| records. Watkins was as hard a runner as either Ameche or McNamara. Fine backs who had to settle for mention were lowa’'s a Smith, Michigan's versatile Based on reports received from 1,042 Automotive Engineers } ae compiled by nationally known firm of certified public accountants “ ¢ Illinois and Le Roy Bolden of New Blue Sunoco . a Michigan State dropped to only a = honorable mention, Injuries slowed z both these stars of the 1955 co . y ‘bee ve . ee oi ov 42% already Blue Sunoco users 1953 recognition, due to The 1954 all-Big 10 backfield has power in Ameche and Me- Namara, speed and finesse in Cassady, and a tremendous pass. | er in Dawson. With the possibic alse has great defensive skill. At least two of the all-star line- | men—have—been—compared \ ith+ immortals of their schools—kKram- | er with Bennie Oosterbaan at Michigan, and Jones with Duke Slater at Iowa. ENDS —Dean Dugger (OSU), Ron | Kramer (Mich). | TACKLES—Art Walker (Mich), Dick | HMilinski (OSU). } GUAR. — Cal Jones (Iowa), Tom | Bettis (Purdue). (Wisc). | CENTER — BACKS—Len Lawson (Purdue). Howie Cassady (OSU), Bob McNamara (Minn) and Alan Ameche (Wise). Honorable mention list includes tack'e Pred Baer and Dan Cline John Matsock and LeRoy 92% say it equals or excels all other gasolines | 3 : in Ring Features Light Heavyweights to’ Meet McBride, Maxim. in TV Bouts | By THE ASSOCIATED PRES Boardwalk Billy Smith and Punching Paul Andrews, the two, leading light heavyweight contend- | ers, share the boxing limelight this | week. Follow the lead of Automotive Engineers, the men who know most about . cars. If you're presently using a premium-priced gasoline, switch to New High-Test Blue Sunoco and save money. If you're now using a regular grade gas, New Blue Sunoco will give you Premium Quality at no increase in cost. Butane-Primed For Quick Cold _ Weather Starts * 7 * Smith, a dynamic clouter from Atlantic City, N. J., takes on heavyweight Archie McBride at New York’s St. Nichdlas Arena to- night. The 33-year-old Smith kay- oed Gene (Tiger) Jones, Willie Bean and Harold Johnson in quick order in his three fights this year. Du Mont wil] telecast at 10 p.m., | EST. | 7 . . Andrews, a tall, 24-year-old ex- paratrooper from Buffalo, N. Y., gets his big test Wednesday night against Joey Maxim, the ex-light heavyweight champion, at the Chi- ONLY ONE GRADE High-Test ... Premium Quality at Regular Gas Price New-fashioned for the world to follow CHRYSLER'S NEW 100-MILLION-DOLLAR LOOK YOU ARE LOOKING aT the most talked-about new ear in many years! Everything about this dazzling Chrysler is com- pletely new and dramatically different. It brings you a totally new fashion in motorcars. The new Chrysler is inches lower in its sweeping silhouette . . . washed free of clutter. Its sleek new 100-Million-Dollar Look will make you feel like a hundred million dollars the instant you step inside! And in performance, too, this magnificent new Chrysler demonstrates its great superiority. 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Main St., Clarkston, Mich. _ 1001 North Main'St., Rochester, Mich. © 99 FOR THE BEST IN TV, SEE"IT'S A GREAT LIFE,” “CLIMAX” AND “SHOWER OF STARS.” SEE TV PAGE FOR TIMES AND STATIONS a » ’ « 4 & ; * “SV Ui THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, NOVEMBER 22, 1954 Seth Mivack and Betty Clerk in| Juvenile Race Winners ear r thoegl ara drome Are Named at Rolladium |piana Rigotti in B, and David| light at the Pontiac Rolladium over tary Sadak aad Hamas tee the weekend. Winners included |ner won the dance contest. | OLIVER MOTOR COLLISION SHOP 36 W. Pike St. FE 2-9101 and Mounted on Your Car! 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They were Ar- kansas fot the Cotton Bowl host | and Nebraska as the visitor for | the Orange Bowl. Both sneaked in| the back door. Arkansas was beaten by Louisi- | ana State 7-6, and Nebraska suf- fered a 55-7 pasting at the hands | of Oklahoma. But . , . Baylor beat Southern Methodist 33-21 in a South- | west Conference game. Since SMU | was Arkansas’ only competitor for | | the Cotton Bowl assignment, the de- | feat spelled finis for the Mustangs. | Baylor still can tie Arkansas for | a on If Duke cafr get past North Car- olina Saturday, the Blue Devils no doubt will get the Atlantic Coast Conference spot in the Orange s s s Should Mississippi win the South- eastern Conference championship ose Bowl Only Major Classic Filled Saturday, Ol’ Miss will act as host team in the Sugar Bowl. Baylor has a good chance of being named the visitor, The settling of the Southeastern race also will enable the Cotton Bowl selectors some width in de- ciding the team to oppose Arkan- by getting past Mississippi State By ED CORRIGAN the league title. but the Razor-; victory over Nebraska gave the | The Associated Press | backs had the forethought to whip Sooners their seventh straight Big The scramble of lucrative bowl Baylor earlier in the season to Seven title, SOMETHING WONDERFUL | berths was not over by any means clinch it. ce ' |today, but no matter how the final | - aed | Kangas State was the only team | Bowl ; pairings line up the ‘“‘natural’”’ of Oklahoma. like UCLA is barred that had a chance of overtaking AT ey two years in a row, the runner-| place, Colorado beat State 38-14 The Rose Bowl is the only one | UP gets it this year. Oklahoma's and that settled things. of the four big postseason extrav- | — ~~ ~ aganzas filled. It will pit twice-| “y ~ ae Fo —_ tee ad peg s”™ aa DUCKETT STOPS SHOCKEY—Michigan State end Ellis | throws a beautiful block into Marquette back Dick Shockey, 2nd quarter end run and causing Shockey to lose 3 yards. Number 4 at East Lansing, 40-10. AP Wirepbhote | Vincent, 79 is Marquette tackle Jim Pasterski. MSC won the Saturday game Reichow. lows Ne Obligation. Prrrrr reer eee MEN WANTED To Trein for High Selery Positions in Electronics, Redio & Television. Day end pore J Clesses Allow You to Remain Fully Employed Whi Mail rales vd Call for Complete Training. WO 2-5661 2457 Weedward (Denevan Bldg) ELECTRONICS INSTITUTE: Sache Neri of Wes bests Seeccececs ROMS, .cccerceeeeceeseeee eee eee tereeeeeeseee —the Green Bay Packers give the | 'National Football League cham-| pion Detroit Lions the scare of the season. | They did it last year in the 1st of | two games at Green Bay when the | |Lions sneaked through with a 14-7 | vietory. 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Last Thanksgiv- - Five Blocks North of 14-Mile Rood | | ing it was 36-15, ee ae tie ae ee BIRMINGHAM, MI 4-0444 | AL THOMAS | But yesterday, it was Bobby|quarter with a two-touchdown bere geet glimerag A seared fear ey lrg Green Bay took an| one-y: sneak through the early Packers closed the DAILY & te 6:00 — FRI. § te 8:00 Health Club | middie of Green Bay's line that |to 1239 at bathtime and beth cite Hotel Pontiac. Open 12 to 8. FE 5-9661 saved the day. traded touchdowns in the 3rd pe- This, plus mistakes on the part) riod. * Detroit drove 72 yards for the winning touchdown midway in the period. Jug Girard made a falling} | catch of Layne’s 15-yard pass for Lorne Worsley Injures Ankle in 2-2 Deadlock With Maple Leafs By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS As if the New York Rangers don't have enough trouble, they learned Monday that goalie Lorne Worsley would be lost for a week opponent to be selected. Gopher, lowan Share Big Ten Scoring Lead McNamara and Smith Each Tally 66 Points to Top Watkins, Ameche CHICAGO #—Bob McNamara of Minnesota and Earl Smith of Iowa finished in a tie for Ist place in the Big Ten scoring parade. Smith vaulted into a tie with the Minnesota fullback by scoring one touchdown against Notre Dame Saturday. McNamara was shut out by Wisconsin. Ohie State’s Bobby Watkins, , injured on the first play in the Michigan game, finished third not having scored a TD PAT T e «6 e 6 36M eM , nd ° a6 “u 8 i 3 3 6 3 3 e 3 6 3 e 3» e 2 ¢ » | oe 33°36 2 3 1 23 Army Places 4 on Eastern 11 NEW YORK (INS)—Eastern foot. end, Pete Vann at Tommy Bell at halfback and Pat Uebel at fullback on the first tearm to their Vancouver farm of the Bol" ang ‘Fat wet army and Lenn Western League for Johnny Bow- | Moore. n er, last year’s netminder, who lost pordhess esa J a, -F- Lay ter the job to Worsley this season. | Sc." iutathen” ayes Bower is expected to arrive in Be Seige, Harv opt gm Sun Tee time to against Bost Wed- y - wo a lhe |g — hg ty Fg Pease ankle custiar noon ze against the Toronto Maple Leats| Short Hunting Trip with a little over four minutes to wats a ile coer Seay miustes @ | Proves Succeeytel game out, but the Leafs salvaged| COLDWATER # — Edward a 2-2 tie, after being shut out for| Blackman was at home packing 52 minutes. deer hunting equipment for an ex- pedition when he looked out the window. ° Bow! Outlook There stood a big buck. Black- man raised his shotgun and killed at a Glance the 1-poot, 20-pound prize. NEW YORK, (®—Major foot- png Ball bow! situation at # giai Branch county in several years. ROSE BOWL — Ohio State, . unbeaten Big Ten champion, | Strenuous Training vs. Southern California, second Emil Zatopek, famed Czech dis- ee a » san Conference tance runner, is said to have been COTTON ; ne a 2 ee oe } 11 years, and estimates that leader in Southwest Conference averages more than 9,000 miles bap tte vs, opponent to | 5 year, runner-up to Oklahoma in Big FINAL BG eT Pa. TP OOP Seven, vs. Atlantic Const Con- | Queens 2 3S me ig gt ference champion, probably | Wisconsin 2.....5 2 0 -T14 138 Hi} Duke or Maryland. Minnesota ..... 233 eT R. 107 SUGAR BOWL — South- 3 0 (Mississippi leads with 4-1) vs. sg. , ie 4 seh a : i i : i % fr rs? g Ed ef FE ‘ £ r x a ehh cette eet ; $ : s Ey RE : "if HH ie : fi ~ ad ji ah a Ee E i | F i 5 | 4 iri H H ¢ e fe if ve 2 ge oeRe 588 fl | i Z E fie t a ‘ Sees Higher 3 if f f ; L i mz £ Hi if iF I Ha r re és veut i ! 288 H : 3 ail +8 | § z 2 7 § te it i He [ i zg BoE ip $35 iy ; sf i i E ae : g i ; gf if 2 i i ; : i He Ht | ; eee “ack gee i ar F Fe 3 if fu sat | former wife, Kay Williams, at his | Balboa home last year and started | CHICAGO GRAIN CHICAGO, — Opening | divorced wife, after she underwent | srain Nov 3 car) in _— minor surgery in Los Angeles ear-| pe" MRE cee: BEY] lier this month Mar... 230% ee be | May |...) 237% D. C. Assessor Has Eye neorn vase, Mag rl ee on Untaxed Embassies [mar (000° rus sep ooo ie | WASHINGTON (INS)—The Dis-| 830000: 14% Dee... ema | trict of Columbia tax assessor Dee oe Mar UT) ee wishes there were some way to| MS .----.. yi: ‘ane collect nearly $350,000 which nor- | July ©*...)). tere war" — nas mally would be due on property|. "7* a July . 11.08 bassies. James L. Martin, whose job it) NEW YORK. Nov 23 — Compiled by is to find much-needed city rev-| ~~ «se & enue for the nation’s capital, thinks Indust Rails Util Stocks the U. S. government should PAY | Week ‘age sleee 1909 en? a3 133 the tax equivalent—as is done by| Month ‘eo "it ists 4 Hey | Marin said: “It strikes me that | isse en by 74 3; tens | this is too much property for the | ifs; jos """"] ied Bs tes eee district to be receiving — — trem : ‘Cops Riddle Car to Halt Fleeing Teenage Thieves DETROIT (UP)—Two Dearborn teenagers captured when police Daily Mirror reported today that /fired 14 bullets into their stolen “fabulous honeymoon undies and | car were held for juvenile author- gowns” which ex-king Farouk of | itites today. ° bot woes ae penis The boys, 15 and 16 years old, hep ted by the Egyp- | S#trendered early yesterday after tian government. ;one of them was wounded by a The newspaper quoted a govern- | police bullet during the high-speed ment spokesman as saying the chase on the Edsel Ford Express. | way Dearborn Patrolman Richard } | said the two boys admitted steal- | ing the car from the Warren Val- "| ley Golf Club. $ w $1.5 Million Offices i g i Lit : i F i 3 3 | ef & concession £4, ‘toe building, Ease), espe fenveer, tnehtons win ce ; Gea “—= int it | I the sentence in Orange County Jail | Nov. 1 after appeals failed. } Phone Directory Distribution Set for November 30 ager for the Michigan Bell Tele- | bion, Farmington, was sentenced to | critical at times of Eisenhower ad- phone Co., said today. Distribution should be completed | by Dec. 1, Novak said. The books |by Farmington Township Justice | GOP fioor leader, has told friends will include listings for Birming- ham, Clarkston, Lake Orion, May- | Effective with the new books. | wick sentenced John Cox, 24, of 160/ aspects of international policies. the code for calling time service will be changed from 112 to 116. Four persons were injured early Sunday when two cars collided at the Elizabeth Lake and Telegraph Waterford Township Police. Treated at Pontiac General Hos- pital for cuts and bruises were: Marcus W. Feltner, 25, of 3691 Paradise, Milford, the other driv- | er; Miss Thelma J. Utley, 25, of | 764 Young St., with Barnette; and | Forest Easterling, 77, of 5684 Kal- kaska, Milford, with Feltner. : j and the light was in . his Feltner said he went south through the intersection with the caution light. Hip ui ; in Early Trade He was convicted of beating his| Max 0. Field, 35, of his wife by Oliver. _THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, DEALERSHIP WINS—Ralph Humphries (left), sales manager for Oliver Motor Sales Inc., 210 Orchard Lake Ave., receives a letter from Jack Dobbs, Buick district manager, congratulating the dealership for winning a three-state sales campaign contest. sales staff sold 157 per cent of its quota. A free trip to Nassau awarded to owner Robert Oliver was turned over to Humphries and a : H 5 i ini ial f | : fi fi : z5% : E E F Pontiac Press Phete Reportedly in return for Rita's signature on the settlement, the aging Aga Khan promised to make Princess Yasmin, the apple of his eye, one of four heirs and heiresses to his -estimated $500,000,000 for- tune. The dealership's | . . News in Brief , was fined $70 Saturday by Holly Town- ship Justice Maxine Howe after Field pleaded guilty to reckless | driving. He was arrested by Holly | Patrolman Robert Prose. | } Fifteen 100-pound bags of grass seed, valued at $300 to $400, were taken from a storehouse at the Holly Recreation Area, Michigan Conservation Dept., at 7398 Buck- | ell Lake Rd., Holly, according tp a| report made Saturday to Michigan | State Police of the Pontiac Post. | Wesley Wright, 45, of 22664 Al- | five days in Oakland County Jail | Saturday and assessed $25 costs | Allen C. Ingle, after Wright pleaded guilty to driving with a re-| , | voked operator’s license. j South Lyon Justice Florence Ren- | Whipple St., South Lyon, to two| days in Oakland County Jail, and | fined him $25 with $5 costs Satur- day after Cox pleaded guilty to driving with a revoked operator's license, Te buy or sell in Waterford, Pontiac Country | Club. PE 5-8939. Open 9 to 9 seven | days a week until Christmas. Adv After your rummage sale call PE 2-0387. We will pick up your | items free. For charitable distribution. —Adv. | If your friend's in and needs | aS —A } Central Market, 14 E. Pike. We have fresh fruits and vegetables. } op im fancy fruit baskets. 3-9214. —Adv. $469.95. $229.95 plus cartage. 12 qubte ft. Hampton Electric, &28 W. | iv. | | Brando on Way Back to States and Josanne LE HARVE (INS)—Movie actor the French fisherman's daughter. United States, Brando said no date "| enhower’s nominee for ambassa- "| vocates of stronger action against ‘Detectives Probing "| tives: While checking a breakin of | at The princess will be reared in the Moslem faith and will receive a reported $1400 to $1800 a month for her support. When she is 12 years old she will go to Switzerland to be educated, Bridges in Line for Policy Whip County Deaths New Hampshire Solon | Een May Inherit GOP Job | ROYAL, CAR TOWMEEIY ~Rae- Held by Ferguson |ary service 67, 8 E. H WASHINGTON uw—Sen. Bridges of New Hampshire today was re- ported in line for chairmanship of the Senate GOP Policy Committee. | a. Such a move would fill two top| leadership posts with Republicans | Olivet Cemetery. He died Surviving are his wife % three stepsons Robert and Jodd Ward of Detroit, Frank Ward of ministration foreign policies. Sen. Knowland of California, the he has no intention of giving up that job although he diverges from President Eisenhower and Secre- tary of State Dulles over some While Bridges has not publicly indicated his intentions, colleagues : 66, said there is little doubt he can | 630 Trombiey Farms, was held at 2 have the chairmanship of the rks-Desmund party’s policy committee if’ he wants it. The present chairman, Sen. Ferguson of Michigan, was defeated for re-election. Bridges, senior Republican in point of service in the Senate, was one of those who fought unsuccess- fully against confirmation of Eis- >. (Chip) Bohlen. side Rd., Knowland and Bridges are ad- communism in Asia than the Eis- enhower administration thus far has been willing to undertake. Both are bitter opponents of admission of Communist China to the United Nations, a possibility Eisenhower | has said this nation opposes now but on which he has not foreclosed & possible future change in policy. As chairman of the powerful Sen- ate Appropriations Committee’ |’ past of some of the policies of | Reynard, 72, of 15 N. Washington Foreign Operations Administrator | 5t-. Will be held at 2 p.m. Wednes- Harold E. Stassen. day from the Flumerfelt Funeral Home, with burial in Oxford Ceme- tery. He died Sunday. Surviving is his widow, Eleanor. 4 Cottage Breakins Oakland County sheriff's detec- a summer cottage at 2273 Dun- woodie, Bald Eagle Lake, found that burglars had broken into three Others since Friday. Robert Hanna of 3137 Cumber- land, Berkley, who owns the cot- tage on Dunwoodie, reported that thieves took an outboard motor from his cottage. Detectives David Brann and Mahion France, while checking neighboring cottages, discovered that three others on Dunwoodie had also been entered. Owners are being notified to determine the ex- tent of property taken, the detec- tives said, ments wil) be an- | Hi the i : iz fir | i be ae Fs Funeral Directors 4 Donelson-Johns Voorhees-Siple FUNERAL HOME Ambulance ee Motor. Fes Hea EE) MUtual 44134, charge. Modern es = hav = and HOSPITALIZATION PRODUCERS ATTENTION! Here is o real opportunity for the Producer who con qualify and has the ability and ambition to create his own Agency. 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