THE PONTIAC PREWM#® OVER PAGES   The Weather 
Partly Cloudy 
Details page twe 
118th YEAR - xkKwxewekk PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 8, 1955—26 PAGES ASSOCIATED PRESS | UNITED PRESS 7e 
  
‘Bulganin Is New Russian Premier; 
Malenkov Quits in Surprise. Move   
Commies Fire 
on U.S. Planes 
in Tachen Area All Civilians Removed 
From Northern Island 
in Evacuation Project 
TAIPEI, Formosa (AP)— 
Tachen islanders carrying 
fishing nets and a few treas- 
ured belongings streamed 
aboard Nationalist landing 
craft and U. S. transports 
today from rocky beaches 
under protection of a mighty 
American naval and air 
armada. 
AP Correspondent Jim 
Becker reported from the 
amphibious flagship Fstes 
that two carrier - based 
American planes were fired 
on by Red antiaircraft bat- 
teries on Yikiangshan last 
night and another one this 
morning. None of the planes 
was hit. Yikiangshan is eight 
miles north of the Tachens. 
(The two planes last night were 
flying north of the Tachens at 2.000 
feet. Naval officers said the plane 
fired on today had strayed ‘‘out of 
bounds” over Yikiangshan. It was 
immediately ordered out of the 
area. (Further details were not 
disclosed. ) 
Warships of the U.S. ith Fleet 
were under orders not te drop 
anchor er steam at slew speeds 
in darkness te aveid possible tor- 
pede attack. 
Two U.S. attack transports, the 
Henrico and the Lenawee, began 
loading civilians. The first U.S 
evacuation ship probably will ar- 
rive in Keelung, a north Formosa 
port, tomorrow 
There was no sign of interfer 
ence from Comraunist artillery on 
nearby Yikiangshan or from the 
hundreds of Russian - built jets 
based within close range on the 
Red China mainland 
American jets swooshed over- 
‘head and U.S. 7th Fleet warships 
plowed through the choppy waters 
of the East China Sea off the Ta- 
chens as the Nationalist evacua- 
tion moved into high gear 
The Navy announced the 
evacuation of civilians {rom 
Nerth Tachen Island had been 
completed. 
A report from Vice Adm. Alfred 
M. Pride, commander of the 7th 
Fleet aboard the cruiser Helena. 
said that embarkation of civilians 
from South Tachen Island would 
(Continued on Page 2, Col. 2)   his leader dog were   
First Fatality in Institution History   
Blind Student, Leader Dog Are Killed 
on Road Near Rochester School Today 
A blind man and 
killed this 
morning when they were hit by D4-yvear-old 
~a-car-on Rochester road in front ; 
of the Leader Dog for the Blind 
School. 
Charies E. Sailler 
City, 
dead on arrival at Pontiac of Mackinaw 
a student at the school, was 
Gen- 
eral Hospital after he was struck 
_by—a—car—drivea—_by—_James_Far- 
HA, of 438 Mt. Elliott, Detroit. 
Officials said it was the first 
fatality in the school's history. rell 
Authorities at the school theor- 
ized that Sailler gave hix dog, 
Prince, the wrong command and 
ended up on Rochester road rather 
than the relief area he intended 
to reach 
Harold Pocklington, executive di 
rector at the school, said that each 
morning students are required to 
take their dogs to the relief area 
on awakening 
An instructor stands at the door 
of the dormitory to see that the 
students are properly sared. 
““Sailler mus have given the 
dog a ‘left’ rather than a ‘for. 
ward’ command,” Pocklington 
sald. 
Pocklington said the dog had 
been trained for traffic. But, he 
added. because there is no _ Speed 
Somber Skies Seen 
by Weather Bureau Partly cloudy skies were pre- 
pie for Pontiac tonight by the 
1S. Weather Bureau, with increas- 
ing cloudiness seen for tomorrow. 
Forecasters see no snow for this 
area 
Low temperature tonight will be 
20 to 24 and the high tomorrow, 4 
to 38. Low tomorrow is expected 
to be B to WD 
Yesterday's high was 30, low 18 
At 8 a.m today, the mercury 
stood at 22 degrees, rising to 32 
by 1 p.m. 
Julius La Rosa Drops 
With Virus Flu Attack 
NEW YORK (INS) Julius 
La Rosa collapsed early today in 
Des Moines, lowa, where he was 
starring at an auto show. He will 
be flown to New York for immed- 
iate hospitalization. 
The boy baritone fired more 
than a year ago by Arthur God- 
frey and jilted last month by Dor- 
othy McGuire, was suffering from 
virus influenza, Dr. J.~ Meredith 
of Des Moines said today. limit in the area, the road could| that he was on his way to work 
jhave been clear when the dog, at the Crucible Brass Foundry in 
started and the car could have | Rochester when the accident oc 
come along when the animal was curred. 
half-way across. He said he was traveling about The road must have been clear a 40 -h. and did mot see the | when the dog started across,"’ Pox | sited cae or hts dog because of 
lington said. the lights of oncoming traffic. 
He added that the dog, an 18- Farrell was released to the cus-' month-old German shepherd, had tady of his employer, Clarence Mc- 
been trained for six months and ° - = Millan, pending further investiga- 
the read unless it were clear. - tion by the proseeutor's office. 
Farrell told assistant Prosecutor Sailler had enrolled for the 
Edward H Shigiey this morning school’s four-week course Jan, 3 
State May Back Financing 
New School Building Pla 
Will Help Crowded. Areas By HAZEL A. TRUMBLE   
school building financing program for Michigan appears 
assured of bi-partisan support in capitol circles today. 
Governor G. Mennen Williams said Monday that the 
constitutional proposal drafted by Louis H. Schimmel of 
Pontiac is “ingenious... sound... . provides for schoo! | 
districts and affords aid for distressed and rapidly grow- | 
ing areas with low valuations.” 
“Eeurnsy sore New GM Stock dune Tagged at $75 1—Local levy for taxpay- 
One Share of the Issue   
ers annually shall not ex- 
ceed 13 mills for school 
buil urp oe ses. The 
state ott nad 
whatever amount is aoe. neces- | 
sary to pay princi - and 
interest due annually above | | across the nation. 
| 200 =million 
the 13 mill building limit. © 
In return the district agrees to 
continue to levy the ful) 13 mills 
until it has repaid the state the 
amount borrowed. Thereafter the 
district's levy will drop to what- 
ever figure is required to meet 
the annual payments on pricnipal 
and interest on outstanding 
building bonds. 
2—For the lifting of the maxi- 
mam time limitation on bend 
payments from the present 8 to 
12 years te 30 years. 
“School buildings,’ declares 
Schimmel, “are designed and built 
to be used for 3} years, yet ac- | 
cording tg our restrictive laws in 
Michigan we now have to pay {for 
them in from 8 to 12 years. Hence 
the people under this jong-term 
(Continued on Page 2, Cal. 5) 
United States Craft in Tachen Operation 
    May Be Purchased for 
Every 20 Held Now 
NEW YORK ()—Stockhoiders 
of General Motors Corp. may buy 
one share of new stock for $75 
for every 20 shares of their old 
stock. 
The price of the new stock was 
announced yesterday, when Gen- 
eral Motors common closed on 
the New York Stock Exchange at 
$102. It continued to trade there- 
after on the Los Angeles Ex- 
change and finally closed at $99. 
GM directors set the price of 
the new stock at a meeting at 
which they alse declared a $1 
This dividend is the same as that 
paid during each of the first three 
quarters of 1954. A $2 dividend 
was declared in the final quarter 
of last year. 
The new stock. through which 
General Motors expects to raise 
325 million qollars in new capital, 
will not participate in the March 
dividend. 
Certificates known as ‘‘rights,” 
entitling holders to buy the new 
stock at $75, will be mailed out 
to GM stockholders today follow- 
ing approval of the new issue by 
the Securities and Exchange Com- 
mission. Trade in the “rights” 
will be followed after the expected 
SEC approval is given. 
The new issue is the largest 
raise mew capital through sale 
of common stock was a sharp 
departure from the usual post- 
war practice of corporate ber- | drawal of sf Billion Loans | 
for Education 
Proposed by Ike Asks Congress to OK 
Federal Aid Program 
for Nation’s Schools | 
WASHINGTON (INS) — 
President Eisenhower pro-, 
_ posed a million dollar pro- 
‘gram of federal loans and” 
emergency grants today to. 
help relieve the acute short- | 
‘age of school classrooms | 
In a special education 
message to Congress, the| 
President outlined a _pro- 
gram of federal aid which,! 
he said, will enable local! 
communities to put seven) 
billion dollars into building 
of badly needed new schools | 
LANSING—The Schimmel plan for a “pay-as-you-use” |in the next three years. 
Eisenhower 
and effective action.” 
He emphasized that the primary 
responsibility for bwilding and 
maintaining schools must remain 
with the states and local commun 
ities, but said the emergency situ- 
ation requires federal action 
Of the 900 yillion dollars pro 
posed for loans’. Congress was 
asked to appropriate 750 millions 
for federal loans to local commun- 
ities which are unable {6 borrow 
money for new schools at a rea- 
sonable interest rate. The White 
House said the ‘‘reasonabie’’ in 
terest figure has been set at 3's 
per cent. 
The federal government would 
put up the additional 150 million 
doliars te help establish state 
‘Continue’ on Page 2, Col. 1) 
Would Abandon 
Quemoy, Matsu Commonwealth Chiefs 
Hold Last Session as 
Britain Maneuvers 
LONDON ® — British Common 
wealth prime ministers today 
shaped a new diplomatic trq for 
a Formosa cease-fire in the windup 
of their nine-day conference 
As they gathered for their last 
uecret session, the British govern 
vent awaited official U.S. reaction 
to its appeal for the evacuation of 
'Quemoy and the Matsuilslands by 
the Chinese nationalists 
British diplomacy reportedly 
was concentrating on convincing 
the United States that the with- 
Chiang Kai-shek's 
treops from all other coastal 
eutpests was an essential first 
step toward reaching a tacit 
standstill in the Formosa fight- rowing through tow interest 
bends. 
ing. 
The prime muonisters discussed 
the Formosa problem for almost 
ithree hours yesterday Tpey 
planned to issue aicommunique on 
their talks late todas 
Indian Prime Minister Nehru will 
remain here unti] next Monda 
giving him an opportunity to con- 
| tinue his efforts for a cease-fire 
(UP) — Gov. G. Men-| Suggestions fer a Geneva-type 
nen Williams is expected to submit | conference te arrange a perman- 
& supplemental budget request of ent settlement between the two 
nearly $10,000,000 to the Legisia-| Chinas have been shelved until Sale of the new shares will be 
handied by a nationwide syntlicate 
(Continued on Page 2, Col. 2) 
  
| 
Hint Williams | 
fo Up Budget 
fy 
: | asked Conress for 
dollars for outriht 
grants to communities which are 
unable to obtain school construc- 
tion funds in any other way 
| who is 59 years old. Khrush- 
ture this week. | after the fighting dies down 
Williams already has submitted | The ovposition Labor party put 
a $292,000,000 general fund budget Prime Minister Churchill's goverc- 
Se ere re eae Sotey hanry grenmere i Oe 
The supplemental request will in- | House of Commons yesterday to 
clude funds te pay off various | declare publicly that Quemoy and 
bond issues, administrative offi- | the Matsu chain should be evacu; 
cials said, | ated along with the Tachens 
The annual supplemental request But Foreign Secretary Anthony 
usually ig between one and two! Eden refused fo commit the Cab- 
| million dollars, but on linet. He insisted that secret diplo- , 
hinted 'macy must be given aichance to 
be (try for @ 25'tleme _ ——A 
  New Soviet Premier 
| 
} 
  
  NIKOLAT A. BULGANIN 
Hero ef World War Il. and Russian minister of defense since 
Stalin's death, Nikolai A Bulganin today was named Soviet Prime 
Minister upon the resignation of Georg) Malenkoy 
Quit Because of Failur 
to Aid Economy: Malenkov Frem Our Wire Services 
MOSCOW — Premier Georgi Malenkov resigned sud- 
denly as head of the Soviet government today with a 
dramatic confession of “guilt for shortcomings in agri- 
culture” and was succeeded by defense minister Marshal 
Nikolai A. Bulganin. 
Nikita A. Khrushchev, depuly premier and Communist 
Party first secretary, succeeded Bulganin as defense min- 
ister in the sensational shift of power which may have 
far-reaching consequences in Soviet internal and foreign 
policy. M 
Malenkov, who at 53 was 
the youngest of the top 
Soviet echelon, stepped 
down in favor of Bulganin, 
chev is 60 
The pudgy, 250-pound Malenkov 
in his letter or statement read for 
him offered his continued services 
to the Soviet Union. He said that 
if given a new post he would do 
his best to serve the state 
But no announcement eof ac 
ceptance of this offer was made 
A month ago minister of trade 
Anastas Mikoyan. who had been 
long identified with the compaign 
to produce more’ consumer goods 
for the Soviet peaople, resigned 
his post. He also was present at 
  GEORGI MALENKOV 
the momentous session today + —~ 
Malenkov's letter said the prem- 
iership required “‘great experience Offers MIG Bounty 
in state work,” and added 
I am conscious of my 
quate local experience and the fact 
Il never had any experience of 
management.”” 
Malenkev's pesition before he 
became Premier was that of first 
secretary of the Seviet Commu 
nist Party. It was the pest which 
Stalin held befere he succeeded MIAMI BEACH, Fla. uw—Texa: 
oilman T. EF. Robertson has written 
the State Department offering a 
$100 reward to any Amencan pilot 
down a MIG over 
Formosa. He said he's ‘‘tired of 
having our bovs shot at.” inad 
who shoots Minister 
has 
prime minister of the Sovjet Former Defense 
_ Head Is Picked 
ia Higher Post Veteran Communist, 59, 
Gets Unanimous Okay 
From Parliament 
MOSCOW (AP)—Defense 
Nikolai Bulganin 
been named the new 
Union succeeding Georgi 
| Malenkov. 
Malenkev resigned today, 
saying his “lack of exper- 
ience” had held back eco- 
nomic development of the 
country. 
Bulganin, white bearded 
and 59, was nominated for 
the post of premier by the 
Communist party’s boss, 
Nikita S. Krushchev, in a 
| meeting of the Russian Par- 
lliament this afternoon. 
5: ernoon session: 
The government leaders 
ente the stage led by 
whe was greeted by 
plawse. 
Malenkov was followed 
| Khrushthev and the rest of 
government. As soon as they 
their seats. Khrushchev arose and 
walked to the rostrum, where he 
nominated Bulganin 
Krushchev 
speech 
the unanimous 
stery and the nominating 
Bulganin was 
(See Kherschey 
picture of page t.) 
choice of the Central Committee of 
the Communist party and of the 
+Couneii of Mimsters. 
Immediately after he finished 
speaking delegates to the two 
houses meeting in joint session in 
the great Kremlin palace unani- 
mously approved Buiganin. 
Marshal Nickolai Bulgania is 
the man whom Stalin and Stalin's 
heirs trusted te administer for 
many years the gigantic Soviet 
| war machine. 
With his iron gray hair, his care- 
fully trimmed Vandyke beard, and 
close cropped mustaches, dressed 
in an immaculate and well-pressed 
uniform with great marshal's stars 
gleaming from his shoulder boards, 
Bulganin looks the personification 
of military dignity and precision 
In reality. though he had once 
been given a cram-school course 
of milttary education. Bulganin is 
no more a veteran military man 
than (Generalissimo Stalin was 
Bulganin was put in charge of 
the Soviet armed forces as the 
Communist party's political police- 
man. lt was a tribute to him that 
he held this difficult and exacting 
job so leong—from 1944. when Stalin 
made him first deputy minister of 
defense. without interruption for 
more than a decade. During this 
period he had various titles: Minis- 
ter of the armed forces. minister 
of defense. and for several years 
he held no_ official tithe but was 
‘Continued on Page 2. Col. 6) 
GOP Names Sutton to Head Lenin. 
Malenkov turned the secretary s 
yob over to Khrushchev after Stal- 
lin's death 
Unlike some the past who 
have simply disappeared when re- 
lheved of their posts Malenkov and 
Mikoyan were present at today's in 
session 
Milkoyan sat behind Khrushchev. 
After the death of Stalin just 
short of two years ago, Malenkov 
became Premier and immediately 
adopted a “soft’’ line 
The two nmiain features of this 
line were emphasized on con- 
—— en a 2, Col. 4) 
In Today's Ss Press 
Red 
County News ; 
Crane. Dr. George 
Rattertals 
eanetiu 
+ 
n. 2. ; o. : 
me nh i \ at the state convention. . 
_-could work with other groups with | 
oh Hine: Peiieesthsevey: County Delegation at Meet 
Oakland County Republicans last night elected Robert 
A. Sutton, of Pontiac, chairman of their 124-member 
delegation to the GOP state convention Feb. 18-19 in 
Detroit. 
The group held its county convention in the County 
Office Building, 1 Lafayette St. 
The only dispute of thee— 
otherwise smooth-running | County person's nomination to ful 
event arose over the -en- for a major state post in 1956. 
dorsement of Sarah Van 
/Hoosen Jones, of Rochester, to be qualified for the post_on the 
|in her bid to win nomina-| body which governs age 
tion at the Detroit meeting | State College. but feels she could 
for a third term on the have been more active in cam 
State Board of Agriculture. | Paigting for the 
Harry W, Horton, of Royal Oak, | | grass roots level" objected to a motion to support | We in office: . 
Miss Jones, saying the matter 
should be settied by the deigates   
The delegation “should have itn | every 
hands free,” anid Horton, so, iq meet state officers 
‘comin fo Page } eek a De Lote Horton said he knew Miss Jones . 
    Pe 
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a a Pe ri te f. mee” : 
| ere : 4 4 * ." * 
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7 . - 
a * gr * “x be 
‘ a -_ a . 
leave Days ie ii f : z g 
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department. 
Press today that 
ision on the con- bad 
department's have adopted a simi- 
  
72 
grams to meet the emergency 
school problem. 
The total cost of the President's miles southwest of the Tachens. In |! 
$1.-| all, about 40,000 troops acd civil | recommendations would be 
120,000,000, but 900 millions in 
Joan authority eventually would 
be returned to the federal treasury 
with interest 
The President stressed that. fun- 
damentally. the remedy in the; 
school ‘crisis lies with the states | 
and local communities. declaring: | 
“We believe that te take away 
citizeens . . . \ 
“Federal aid in a form that leads 
to federal control of our schools 
cripples education for freedom.” 
The special presidential message 
already drawn on the issue of how 
much thes federal purse strings 
should be relaxed to meet the 
problem of overcrowded schools in 
many parts of the nation. 
Eisenhower favors leaving the 
prime responsibility at the state 
and local level, with the federal 
government in the role of ‘‘cata- 
lyst” in bringing action on the 
A White House conference on 
education will convene later this 
year, after completion of state 
conferences, but Eisenhower de- 
cided the problem was so acute 
that immediate action was _ re- 
quired. 
The Weather PONTIAC AND   
temerrew 34-38. Light variable wi 
cleedy tomerres, lew 26-28. 
Today in Pontiac 
Lowest temperature preceding %am 
a. 8 am.: Wind velociay 10-15 mph. | 
rection: Southwest. 
sete Tuesday at 5.55 pm Sun Sen rises Wednesday at 7:37 2 m. 
sets Tuesdsy at 8.06 pm 
Tises Wednesday at 8.31 am. 
  
       
      
      > Will Not Ask Change | 
~ >in’ New Schedule of i whee s s¥ 
    Reverses Ruling 
jon Negro Pupils | DOVER, Del. w—The Delaware | 
State Supreme Court ruled today 
that the Milford Board of Educa- 
| touched off a boycott by a majority 
| of the white pupils and caused the 
Milford board to resign. Another 
board was subsequently appointed 
| and the Negro pupils were ousted 
| from the school in that south-cen- 
tral Delaware town and are now | 
  
  
ue 
| said “progress of the operation 
| has been satisfactory thus far.” 
  
  hours daily. 
In addition to the Tachens. two 
PrO- | other island groups were to be) 
cleared. They are the Yu Shans. 
33 miles northeast. and Pishan, 32 
ians will be moved 
GM Stockholders 
fo Pay $75 a Share (Continued From Page One) 
of 330 underwriters headed by 
Morgan Stanley & Co., 
Street investment house. 
The biggest prospective buyer 
of the new issue is E. du Pont de 
Nemours & Co., which owns 2 
million shares or 22.6 per cent cf 
the current GM common stock. 
Last week the big chemical 
| firm announced that it expected 
| to exercise its rights to buy one   
| was unlikely before some time 
| late this month. 
day, the same day the 
| will be on 
| dividend, ex-rights” basis. 
This means that buyers on ard 
after that day will not get with 
their stock the March dividend or 
the right to buy new stock at $75. 
Pontiac Deaths 
‘Michael Hancock _Joseph- Hancock 
The rosary will be recited 
Wednesday at 8 p. m. at the Brace- 
Smith Funeral Home for Joseph C. 
  southwest 16-Iimiles tonight. @nd Michael F. Hancock, of Holly. | decide battles without a shot be- 
The funeral will be held Thurs- 
| day at 10 a. m. from St. Michael 
Catholic Church. Burial will follow 
in Mount Hope Cemetery. 
Joseph. 11, and Michael, 7, were 
| the sons of Joseph Hancock and | 
| Ardale Scott. Both boys were born 
lin Holly, Joseph on May 1, 1943 
and Michael on May 6, 1947. 
Surviving besides their parent 
are 
and Mrs. 
  
  ———— — —- — — 
Delaware Court "|Khriishchev Wheels Reds 
Back to Stalin's Policies By WILLIAM L. RYAN 
AP Foreign News Analyst 
The resignation of Georgi Mal- 
enkov as premier of the Soviet 
Union signals the end of the post- 
Stalin ‘‘collective leadership."’ The 
  | man in the street. For the Chinese 
they seem to mean closer collabo- 
ration and dovetailing of policies 
| between Peiping and Moscow in a 
| joint political assault on the non- A _THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 8, 1955 
Former Defense Head 
| Picked for High Post (Continued From Page One) \e ° SO ar ate 
hte agin, ———2 i «Pt 2 ee 
Ress - 
      
Communist world. 
Marshal Nikolai Bulganin, the 
, looks like a figure- 
head, who has held the 
title defense minister, has a mili- 
tary title, but always has been a 
  schooled in Red discipline. 
  
! 
countries began 
from their much-touted post-Stalin | 
“new course,” it was obvious that | 
a place of 
and handed   
Wall 
, Annual Banquet April 21 | adopted throughout the satellites. ‘Malenkov Says 
‘He Failed in Job Communist. party politician, | 
ii 
Khrushchev. The same pattern was and government 
From the very start, Malenkov   
_| back to an emphasis 
to let their earlier to give | 
| the Russian ~ people of the | 
- | good things of life. 
matic, the change was months in| At the same time the propaganda 
coming about. Its first evidences for “peaceful co-existence” dimin- 
could be noted as long as last ished and the Soviets went back to 
June, When the European satellite the old Stalinist line of a harsh | veering away front in foreign affairs. 
From 1925 to 1930 Malenkov was | 
n “responsible work in the ap 
great , Reputedly he was in charge of 
it over to! Stalin's own secret file on party 
ae | 
with the real boss relinquishing all @PParently was a key man in| 
| phasis on the consumer goods to! party,” a key party organization | 
build up the country’s internal of the Soviet Union at a economy, even to the sacrifice of jod. At this time there key per-| 
matter of caution to bolster the head of the Moscow Communist | internal Soviet economy against 
| the peesibitity of bg — shock. 
The signs became more appar-| 
ent, however, with the sudden shift | 
of Soviet foreign policy from one 
alliance, armed to the teeth, to | Sonsible to party's personnel department. } 
. . . 
“From 1934 to 1939 Re headed | 
Stalin for 
counter Western defense prepara. | ing dismissals of men from leading | 
tions. It warned that Western poli- | Positions and promotion of other | 
cies were leading to war. men to fill their jobs. One author- | 
About that time Khrushchev ity on the Soviets has said that went to Peiping with a large dele-| Malenkov was one of a three-man 
gation of Soviet leaders. Red Chi-| committee under Stalin to purge 
na's foreign policy also underwent | the party. He played a leading 
a change, and the Red Chinese role in the 1937 purge of nearly the | 
_ began to talk in a warlike manne: entire top layer of Communist | 
about Formosa. They would not| party and government posts inf 
take the final irrevocable step that order to fill them with new men 
use the fear of war as potent! 
political weapon in Asia against. 
the West. 
+ 
shocking effect their announce- 
would lead to ‘‘slanderous” specu- 
lation in the West. That ifs, the| 
| West would suspect the truth. 
| The prospect seems to be this: 
| Khrushchev will revert to the old 
| Stalinist icy of everything for 
heavy i , of belt tightening for the Soviet people, and of plan- 
ning against the eventiality of war 
|in the not distant future—say in 
terms of a few years. He seems 
out to use overwhelming industrial 
|power as a political weapon in 
| the cold war—a weapon which can 
‘ing fired. But he has given every 
evidence that he believes implicitly served as a member of the key 
| state defense committee. 
throughout the war and also was a 
leader in supply work and in the 
reconstruction of areas occupied by 
the Germans. 
a full member ‘of the ruling polit- 
buro, By then he was secretary 
of the Central Committee and dep- 
uty premier. pl 
  | in the Lenin Stalin doctrine that an 
eventual bloody clash between the | 
Communist 
worlds is inevitable. | 
YMCA Planning 54th   
The S4th annual banquet of the 
21, at the “Y’. Committee arranging 
  
    _ would lead to war, but they would owing all to Stalin, 
In 1939, Malenkev, was elected credit rating with bond buyers. - 
to the party Central Committee | . _ and that March was elected 
Malenkov and Khrushchev evi- "secretary of the committee, a| which will aid districts now heav-| ™* 
dently were well aware of the member of the organization bu- ily taxed with recent : 
| Teau, and chief of the administra-| Administration of 
ment would have. Malenkov, in his | tion of committee personnel. These you-use” plan will 
four Gr five most powerful men 
Stalin 
During World War II Malenkov 
He was sent to various key fronts 
In March, 1946, he was elected 
e’*e > 
After the war he allied himself 
    I, OO CC, ee 
  
The Day in Birmingham 
Another Plan for Parking 
Getting Commission Study 
‘|}on the other foot last night as rep-| meeting of the Women's Society 
resentatives for property owners in | at 8 tonight, to hear Leota Greene, 
|the Hamilton avenue area brought | missi   
missionary recently returned from 
  
      Ferndale and Park streets. | y's Slip Reveals 
‘Theft of Automobile Bulganin's considerable adminis- 
| trative and diplomatic ability con- 
tributed to his success. Before he 
donned a uniform in World War II Next, he will negotiate with the 
y Department on the | 
landowners’ request that Hamilton | 
Bu As it is, the 15 and 16 year old 
youtts Will appear Friday in Oak- 
the Volga River. His official Aes 
biography does not discuss 
    
School Plan fo Aid 
Fast Growing Areas (Continued From Page One) Forum, will speak on the same | and sat around watching televi- 
i : | sion, came back for more 
| the next day. That was when they 
found the car keys and took off 
| with the limousine. 
They were all to have turns tak- 
| ing possession of the car, only 
| one mistake—they 
| parked it in front of the same 
| house every day until the house- 
ng its different occu- 
Membekb)and friends of Embury pants, grew suspicious and noti- 
~ —_— SS ~ | fied Detroit police. 
GOP Names Sutton 
fo Head Delegation (Continued From Page One)   Members of the Michigan Build- t 
ers’ Association, the Michigan Real | later evolved into such infamous 
Estate Association and the Michi- | institutions as the GPU ( 
  | * e@ 
expert in intelli- $   
  it i ,cluded a commendation of Presi- 
dent Eisenhower's handling of the EB | disaster’’ and maintain “the high 
honor’ of the country. 
A motion was approved honoring 
| the memory of David A. Green, of 
| Pontiac, who died recently after 
being active in the Republican 
Party for many years.   z   weight behind the 
the section of leading party organs Ww 
of the Central Committee of the | 
of caution and wheedling to one , Soviet ADDISON K, OAKLEY 
| offered 
Pontiac Foundation on behalf of | 
The contribution is ear- 
for a civic activities County Republican Chairman Ed- 
ward E. Wilson urged the gather- 
; The Pont jac Foundation is a non- 
profit corporation set up to receive clined to go off in little groups. 
“We must get together and tell 
| why we believe in Republicanism. 
  
  
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a    length of 1500 miles.   
  “Yak, yak, Merman. “ 
—_ yakking ~ that record- 
ng machine of Pete Martin's. 
yet little Eahal is te clsheoaly ” says Ethel 
or months I've 
fascinating — even more than 
I thought 
Here’s the year’s top news 
from the entertainment world. 
And it’s full of intimate 
limpses of show-biz head- 
iners. Get your Post today 
and read That's the Kind of 
Dame I Am, by Ethel Merman. 
ihe sate 
POST A CURTIS MAGAZINE 
DEAF? Free Book... Tells All 
Sells Nothing! 
If you hear 
but don't un- 
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need a hear- 
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“Your Hearing and Your 
Health.” 
Contains such facts as the 
care of your ears; the ef- 
fects of vitamins and drugs 
on hearing; whether deaf- 
ness is inherited ; the family 
problems of the deaf, and 
many other revealing facts. 
And there's not a word in it 
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Get the facts str sight 
Send fer your frge copy—teday! 
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by /hehieaernmareliraetans 
me, “Your Hearing & Your Health™.   
  
Attrem Ast   
    ly he leaned forward. 
  | 
  | the tooting of the Singapore water- | 
1 
  | country, it may be a rooster crow- 
"and children - playing and wind | 
| mornifg sounds are the tooting of | 
, lence’ when he's in Paris 
| sound—is utter, complete sile nce.” | whole new world would open up Moris Trying to Atune 
U.S. to Nature’s Noises By PHYLLIS BATTELLE “Turn your phonograph to 
NEW YORK (INS)—Andre Kos-| screaming pitch and then ab- 
telanetz, the maestro who is mar-| Tuptly shut it off, Even if it is a 
ried to music and Lily Pons, has | Kostelanetz record you were 
figured out why we Americans are Playing, Kostelanetz will tell you 
so disturbingly restless. | —“‘the ensuing silence ts bliss.” 
‘We listen too much to the tele- | So pick your sounds, he advises 
phone,” he says, “and we listen | and listen for them. If you pn wo little to nature.“ He wes iamemer te k-leuends hearing the jangling telephone and 
chair before the fireplace of his | @‘t hearing nature, you'll be a 
Manhattan apartment. He looked | richer person. 
placid, from his shiny round face! Right you are, maestro. Think 
to his shiny leather shoes. Sudden- | of the money we'll save in phone 
“You hear?” he said. j bills alone 
We listened. A stray wind was 
wheesing and sighing somewhere —_—- 
Tomorrow: Miss Battelle meets 
“70 oe aims =o “That's one of my sounds. A savy they're cute, funny little 
ee ee Fascals—and so is Mrs. Stevens. THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 8, 1955 
End Costa Rica Fight, 
Rebel Leader Urges MANAGUA, Nicaragua (®—The | 
leader of last month's unsuccessful 
‘revolt to oust Costa Rican Presi- 
dent Jose Figueres urged his fol- 
, lowers last night to 
armed resistance.” 
Former Costa Rican President 
Rafael A. Calderon Guardia, a 
political refugee in Nicaragua, re 
in a. statement continuation of the 
fighting ‘‘will only serve Figueres., 
to intensify his sadistic reprisals." 
Calderon Guardia issued his| 
statement after rebel remnants) 
‘captured the ‘north Costa” Rican | 
town of Los Chiles last week, then | 
were driven out by airborne gov- 
ernment troops. 
The majority of the estimated 
500 rebels had fled across Costa 
| Rica's northern border and been | 
*““cease- all | jinterned in Nicaragua, but in) 
| Washington yesterday the Organi-" ean Republic was financed,by the minicans own it and Amerteans ecac h have 42 
zation of American States..Cam- Dutch, built by | Belgians, has Brit- operate it 
mission investigating the revolt 
| said captives from Los Chiles had 
  told OAS observers that some of 
their comrades, after being re 
| leased from internment, had re 
jentered Costa Rica and resumed 
fighting. 
Pure silver is too soft for com- 
mercial use. 
Croupy| 
Coughs relieved with 
FIRST aay onal ew 
of DR. DRAKE’S | Vinited States “| 
A 42-mile railroad in the Domin!- ish bridges, U.S. rolling stock. Do-' ‘The Chippewss and Heian 
treaties with the , 
  
WEDNESDAY AT BOTH - 
THRIFTY DRUG STORES 148 N. SACINAW ST. 
NEAR SEARS 
  
personal spunds to listen for— 
sounds that will make him exhi' 
erated and alive, or quiet am 
calm. Much better than the tele- WEST HURON 
AT TELECRAPH 
    
  
phone... . | 
» “Telephones!"" Kostelanetz| 
growled melodically. | 
The maestro, along with his 
besom-batonist Leopold Stekowski, 
is a pioneer in the field of high 
fidelity recording, and has always 
had an ear for a nice noise. How- 
ever, he is particularly hipped on 
the subject, having just returned 
from a tour ef the Far East, ac- 
companied by a highly competent 
tape recorder: 
Together, they picked up all 
the strange, exotic noises te be 
heard, and a year or so from 
now these feasts for the ear will 
be converted inte a long-playing 
record to be calied “Sounds of 
the Warid.” 
Among them was the mystic 
ritual sound of a Buddhist fes- 
tival, the scream of mynah birds, 
the squawks of Bangkok lizards, 
front, the hooting of floating junks, 
the wild sounds of the Cambodian 
| jungle as it wakes up at dawn 
“IT may be a bit sound-wacky at 
the moment, you see,’’ Kostelanetz 
concedes, “‘but basically I think I 
have a solid philosophy here 
“People look and feel and smell 
—but if they would listen more, a 
to them and add another dimen- 
sion to living.” 
For example, maestro? 
“The most important time of 
day to lsten perhaps ts the 
morning because—if your mind is 
attuned to the idea—a familiar 
morning sound can be your har- 
binger of a good day. 
“For people who live in the 
ing.” (This would be a harbinger 
of wrath where I come from, but 
Mr. K. is an early riser), “and in 
the city there are a variety of bird 
sounds."" (Turn off the alarm 
clock, friend, and dig that wind.) 
Mr. Kostelanetz's own favorite 
boats on the East River when he's 
in New York, and the clanging of 
the cable cars in San Francisco, 
and “a certain kind of special si- 
  “As a matter of fact,’’ he main- 
tains, ‘one of the greatest sounds 
of them all—and to me it is a| 
  
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wh 
MKe “From our sample of Goebel Beer at our brewery in Brussels, 
it is evident that it is made with the same painstaking care 
we continually apply to our brewing of Wielemans Beer. 
Only the best of ingredients and utmost technical skill can 
give Goebel such a fine balance of flavor and body. It has 
clear, bright color and delicate dryness of taste. 
“In our opinion Goebel merits its place among the world’s 
foremost beers.” 
Eric Wielertans —— 
Directeur-Gerant 
Wielemans-Ceuppens Brewery 
a 
; Nothing speaks more eloquently for the fine flavor and superb quality 
of Goebel Beer than this highly unusual tribute from arj@ther brewery. 
And it is even more unusual when that praise comes from an old estab- 
lished brewery in Europe, the traditional home of fine beers. 
Ist't it, too, good\reason for you to try Goebel next time?   ce. 7 Goebel...first American bee 
to win acclaim in Belgium 
Director of Wielemans-Ceuppens Brewery, Brussels, 
puts Goebel “among the world’s foremost beers” 
  Director Wielemans, pictured in frontwf the hearth in 
his office, enjoys a glass of Goebel. Note antique por- 
celain beer pump and old brewer's clock in beckground. 
  -« WINNER | 
15 INTERNATIONAL AWARDS 
- 
GOEBEL BREWING COMPANY 
DETROIT AND MUSKEGON, MICH.; 
»~ 
caAurF,     
  
          
   
    
        
found 
  
  
  
    ee nS 
. F friend's apartment. The secrecy of | 
if uitor her hideout was given away, how- 
ever, when she asked Jackson to| 
come to the cheap, sixth-floor tene- | 
. ment last Tuesday to remove a 
oF Sain ty ent dead cat, police onid. Miss Yarrow, an honor student; 
. . and reportedly a sensitive, ideal- | 
Married Man Quizzed istic girl, was slain Sunday in the 
in Vicious Sex Murder et bee her friend eal 
| of NYU Coed |Payson, 22. who had left town for |a 10-day visit home in South Car- 
| NEW YORK # — A married olina. 
| student, identified as a former | *-_ ¢ * 
boy friend of slain Anne Yarrow | Miss Yarrow’s body, 
and one of the few persons who 
the 
t, has been recalled by police| but @ sweater She had been 
. stabbed 37 times, strangled and 
.A police official said, however, | sexually abused. 
that the student is not a suspect. | Miss Yarrow was described to 
os 28 ¢ | police as a devout and gentle 
Tall, 30-year-old Ernest Jackson! member of the Quaker faith. 
was sent home early today after 
being closeted for eight hours with 
investigators assigned to the vi- Beer Quells Blaze * 
cious murder of the 23-year-old| KALAMAZOO, Mich. —A leak- | 
| woman graduate student. ing oil furnace started a fire in| 
—_ | Twice married and the father | the basement of the E. & H. Bev-|       
    
(A@vertisement) of a child, Jackson was a class- erage Co., igniting 12 wooden beer | 
mate of the murdered girl at a cases. Some of the bottles explod- 
U US |New York University postgradu-| ed, and when firemen arrived the | one bet pees te thing, eee ye | ate workshop on human relations. fire was out—quenched by al 
= 2= & beer. 
iniwerechine end Cotes freer breathe. (4 Ld . Get MENDACO 
Gruggists.   
friend with whom Miss Yarrow! Largest grain elevator: in the 
broke recently and from whom she | United States is at Kansas City, 
sought to hide in borrowing a! Kan. 
  Police said Jackson was the boy | 
money beck guarantee at 
  
IT'S OVER! THE 20 YEAR SEARCH! 
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“ | te cheer ay rye 
in—no chance of staining clothes. __ THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 8, 1955 
; 
Find Ex-Marine 
in Frisco Job | } 
charged 
| airline reservation. 
a eae | “Thea Te my mind,” | Missing Michigan Man sharrar aie. tetreded to ‘Dial Service Introduced _— 
Sought by Parents for! prite.” Be added, “bat M ft | oe osKEY w—The Levering, kept slipping my mind. 
Three Months | going to wire mother tonight.” 
SAN FRANCISCO W—A Michi-| Authorities from Michigan have nounced plans soon to provide this 
| gan ex-Marine, missing since his|been trying to locate the Man, | service for Carp Lake, Douglas 
| discharge from the Marine Corps | Who received a hardship discharge || ake and the Alonson area. By 
on Treasure Island three months | from the Marines so he could help| March, the company will be serv- ago, was found working in San his ailing father on the family jing 300 subscribers, it said. 
Francisco at a gasoline station for | farm. 
$75 a week. | After Sharrar’s picture was pub- | 
lished in the San Francisco Exami- was developed in 1954. Last Oct. 27 Melvin D. Sharrar, 23, telephoned his parents, Mr. | ner, one of the paper's reporters | f 
pos Mrs. Max Sharrar of Brecken. | yesterday located his present home | ff 
ridge, Mich., that he would be dis —S01 Bay St.—through Marines 
Oct. 30 and would be)! who had served with him. 
‘home Nov. 5. He shipped his sea-| Sharrar told reporters he didn’t 
bag and gear ‘ahead and got an want to go back to Michigan and \f { 
| become a farmer. | 
  Crawferd-Dawe- B. W. Rettenlecher 
Greve Agency Ageney Frank Andersen 
| } Maynard Johnsen 
Leselle Agency, 
| Telephone Co. introduced dial tele- ‘sesita:thvevesl” ine. ——. | 
phone service Monday and an- | Agoney W. A. Pollock 
Wm. W. Denaldsen Anglemier -Strait, 
Ine. Denlels Agency 
z Wilkinsen Insereace 
Baker & Nansen ency Agency 
Gitbride-Mallaha 
Agency 4. L. VanWaegener 
Agency, Inc. | nen Lincicome, Inc. 
| Pontiac Association of Insurance Agents   
An anti-rabies vaccine for- cattle 
    
  
        
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a Li    _THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 8, 195.   
House to Pass 
Draft Extension Four-Year Continuation 
Expected to Meet No 
Organized Opposition 
WASHINGTON (®—A bill to ex- 
tend the military draft for another 
four years was called up for House 
action today with no concerted op- 
position in sight and passage as- 
sured. 
Secretary of Defense Wilson has |- 
described the draft as éssential to 
maintain the strength of the armed 
services. The measure was ap- 
proved 32-0 by the House Armed 
Services Committee last week. 
The present draft law expires 
next June 30. The Senate has yet 
to act on an extension. Draft quo- 
tas are currently running around 
11,000 men monthly. 
The measure would continue un- 
til mid-1959 the government's au- 
thority to draft young men of 184- 
26 years for two years active serv- 
ice, followed by six years obliga- 
tion in the reserves. 
* ¢ « 
Another of the Eisenhower ad- 
ministration’s military manpower 
measures was taken up, mean- 
while, by a House Armed Services 
subcommittee headed by Rep. 
Brooks (D-La). 
One provision ig designed to in- 
sure that draftees keep up with 
ture, a kind of test for universal 
military training, would provide said they saw forced-into a car at 
— by Winterbottem. 
is charged with murder in -|Spurned Suitor 
Police Supt. James W. Slusser 
Charged With Shooting 
Man Who Tried to Stop | {quarrel between Winterbottem and 
Quarrel With Girl... es Rodgers, Winterbottem's for- 
girl friend. 
PITTSBURGH @® — A spurned | Miss Rodgers told police and re- 
suitor surrendered himself meekly | Porters afterwards that Winterbot- 
to police last night to climax a/i0° .0a himself She said, how. 
tal shoting of one person and the ing their ride over back roads. & e shooting ot Walter W. Henry, : 
Held in Slaying =e: "=~ said Henry was shot yesterday | 
as he attempted to end a| 
tem once threatened to kill both 
daylong hunt that followed the fa-| ever that she was unharmed dur. 
Sewer Bonds OK’d 
  STRAW SCULPTURES—A Paris girl looks at a group of straw 
creations, flower basket, heron and peacock, made by Mme. Ariette 
Puget, wife of author Claude-Andre Puget. .   Ruusell Winterbottem, 33, sur-! 
rendered efter telephoning from a 
reltive’s home in nearby Turtle | 
Creek for authorities to “‘come and | 
raine Rodgers, 20, whom witnesses ing Henry’s death and she asked 
Winterbottem to surernder. She is 
held as a material witness. 
  
town called Aid.   Pathologist Hints Link 
Between Cars, Cancer 
DETROIT ® — A University of 
Michigan pathologist says there 
may be an association between 
lung cancer and the develop 
ment of automotive transportation 
Dr. ‘Cari V. Weller told the 
night there is the ‘same remark- | 
|able chronologic parallelism be- | 
tween the production and use of 
the automobile and the increase, of | 
lung cancer that there is between 
| cigarette smoking and that dis-| 
}   
MUSKEGON & — Muskegon | 
Heights voters Menday approved a 
$320,000 issue of general obligation 
bonds for storm sewers. The unof- | 
| ficial ballot count ran 913 for and 
pick me up.” With him was Lor-| Both Missouri and Ohio have a 358 against the proposal. A three- | 
_ fifths majority was required. 
  
  
proposed two changes in the draft 
law extension: 
1. Youths who join the National 
Guard before the age of 1842 and 
serve continuously in it until they 
are 26 would be exempt from sub- 
sequent draft. They are liable now 
until 35. 
2. Those serving six months or 
-| More in the uniformed services or 
24 months in the public health 
service since September 1940 
    Margaret Given Royal 
Sendoff by Grenadians 
ST.GEORGE, Grenada *—Gre- 
nadians gave Princess Margaret a 
raindrenehed but fiery farewell 
last night as the 24-year-old sister 
of Queen Elizabeth II boarded the 
royal yacht Britannia to continue 
her monthlong tour of the British 
West Indies. 
-« 
FIRE AUTO: THEFT 
     DWELLING ALL RISKS 
Specialists in 
Auto Insurance 
CALL FE 5-8172 
Today for Information 
Lazelle Agency   
  
      
    ‘Curiosity About Toys 
Costs Child Her Life 
ALINAVIT -LN3GID2V |) 
  ae SEVEN 
orm reached down into ‘the 
box. The lid fell on her neck. 
The neighbor, Mrs. John Allen, 
WEST SACRAMENTO, Calif. w rushed the child to a-fire station. 
—Curiosity about a large wooden A doctor pronounced her dead. 
box of toys cost 14-month-old Peg- | 
gy Ann Boylan her life.   
Shorthand wag used by the 
Peggy, staying with a neighbor Egyptians more than 1700 years 
while her mother went shopping‘ ago. 
Wayne County Medical Society last, ~   
  
      
  
qualted Fa ihite 
    To Welcome Newcomers 
—A Christian Duty... 
Now, more than ever before, our people are 
on the move. Most frequently a newcomer 
has not personally selected our community. 
Business usually dictates his arrival 
But our own people can make them glad they 
came. Welcome—and be helpiul to newcom- 
ers. This Christian duty will make us many 
fine inends 
Phone FEDERAL a     
    
  
  that an annual quota of 100,000| could not be inducted for a second! Two hundred men and boys stood 1! é 
volunteers be given six months’|tour of duty. lin pelting rain around the semi- 
training, instead of two years’ | circular harbor, each holding a tall ==FE 5-8172 service as draftees, on condition} Iceland has no illiteracy. This| bamboo stick topped with burning a 
they agree to another 9% years’| island republic publishes more new kerosene-soaked rags. Fireworks 504 Pontiac State Bank Bld 
reserve obligation. books per capita than any other | burst from old Ft.George, at the g- 
The Armed Services Committee! country in the world harbor entrance. 
e ° 
Only Car at its Price™. . 
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For example, take Pontiac’s distinc- 
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If it’s size and big-car sure-footedness 
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long wheelbase—124 inches in the Star 
  PONTIAC MOTOR DIVISION RETAIL STORE 
Genergl Motors 
OS We Clemens Ot, Pention 1, DetRignn 
EDW. D. WHIPPLE PONTIAC SALES North Main Street, Clarkston, Michigan i 
  Chief, shown here, and 122 inches in the 
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As for performance—once you get 
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this department, too. Pontiac’s spec- 
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} ’ — 
  
4 
     
    
Support of Beating Probe Disrupts Carver Meeting — ROYAL OAK TOWNSHIP — A Mrs. Baker and Rev. Carter have |   
_— 
    t - THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 8, 1955 
motion to support the investiga- 
tion into the beating of the echeol bers with Mrs. Baker have filed 
board secretary sparked a meet: , counter recall petition against ing of the George Washington Car- frarrison. = 
ver school board last night. | 
Until board member James Har- | . Baker said the petitions 
rison offered a motion to support seeking to oust Harrisgn were 
the probe of the Jan. 12 beating of te subject of the search of her 
Mrs. Loretta Baker the meeting ®*S#llants. 
was and orderly. After Rev. Carter's veto, resi- 
_ |dents Otis Eaton and Rév. CC. 
Bates demanded that Rev. Carter 
jtake a lie detector test in the 
controversy, which he refused to 
' do 
Board members then voted to 
Mrs. Baker has told police she increase the bond on the board 
was beaten by three hooded as- treasurer. Rev. Carter, from $30.- 
sailants who demanded petitions 000 to $150,000. Rev. Carter alone 
seeking the recall of board mem- voted against this increase. 
ber Harrison, | 
TKEEP YOUR NEW Lambert PTA 
ICAR, +) / Lh See Pictures 
; Gier * of Hawaiian Trip 
=| WATERFORD TOWNSHIP —     
  of the Lambert School PTA meet 
ing, to be held at 8 p.m. Thursday 
in the school auditorium. 
Colored pictures of the. Hawaiir 
Islands of _a—_*‘Caribbean 
Cruise’ will be shown by Normar 
Roth, following the regular busi 
ness session. 
Refreshments will be served ir 
the basement by the fourth grade x Oe of 
[ AVOID WINTER 
  been named in recall petitions filed) 
by Harrison, and other board mem- | 
“Founders Day’’ will be the theme |   j 
<1 
J 
} EXCHANGED—Chosen by students and faculty of 
| the Waterford Township High School to serve a 
one-week period as exchange students to Handy 
| High School, near Bay City, were (I-r) junior James 
| Faxon, sophomore Judith Koch, senior Gail Bennett, Sunday, 
|Five Waterford High School Students. 
Taking Part in Week-Long Exchange WATERFORD TOWNSHIP —_ been made before, this marks the 
Five Waterford Township High first time that a full week has 
  | room mothers after the program 
DRIVING HAZARDS   
  —sopy vents. | |Set Hearing for Boy 
skinneo FenoeRs, | |in INT Threat Case WEAR and TEAR OF | | ,.A"MADA — 4 Feb. 17 hearing | 
juvenile who was taken into cus- 
|tody here Friday by Macomb 
| County sheriff's deputies after he | 
| threatened to blow up his foster | 
| parents with a secret cache of 
| dynamite. 
| A ward of the Macomb County | 
Probate Court, the 16-year-old boy | 
had threatened to blow up the 
; Armada bparding home where he | 
| was staying, according to officers. | 
| Sheriff's deputies were called in, 
| after another boy reported to the 
| foster parents that the youth was 
" possession of dynamite SLIPPERY DRIVING 
ade he Bx!       
’ Pontiac City Lines”     
Are You A 
SINUS Victim ? 
  | 
| 
| run away from the boarding home. | 
Returning last Tuesday, he threat- 
ened to “blow up anyone whe) 
* the foster parents 
| boy is being held at’ the | 
Wayne County Juvenile Detention | 
| Home, pending the hearing. The 
case will come up before Macomb 
  | Trombly at 10 a.m. on Feb. 17. 
  
GET PALLIATIVE BELIEF Bite 
TRUMAC TABLETS 
= Mra, Eart Utley | 
ged LUM—Service for Mrs. Earl 
(Inez) Utley, 52, will be held at 
1:30 p.m, Friday at the Baird Fu- | Gearenteer4d we Alfalfa or ony 
neral Home, with burial in Imlay harmfel ing 
      
Completely Stops Surviving besides her husband 
pA are four step-daughters, Mrs. Cy- 
Bleedin Piles ril Sheppard, and Mrs. Max Dele- 
‘ g hanty, both of Gaines, Mrs. Harold Just Stone of Lapeer, Mrs. John Laur, 
in 3 Days of Attica, two step-sons, Eari Utley 
Oe Jr. of Lapeer and Luis Utley of woman wr 
bleeding sore nese tes; 
and irritation. Tried all kinds of pile oin Lum. day of each month at the Birming- | | secretary: ih R 
mente eippretones tnyections ete. with ham Community House. Starting in | ee es fo a bo Trey 5 paw Pee x out reliet. Wae advierd only an operation William Schoot | seach imection will be lied at } eon uk ces enaes Say, corresponding and 
would help me. Then | tried RECTORAL, . . } s ca | meet nesda . Roy 
that carve a8 internal medicine. In just | CLARKSTON — Service for Wil- 1 P.m., opening with dessert Mrs. Charlies Cowsert will be hostess Mrs McDonald, Treasurer. 
  three me a bleeding et u Tr amp liam Schoot. 70, of 5471 Center 
at opnec at wae eighteen w ta a ~ = | 
there has never been any trouble ence St., will be held at 2 p. m. Wednes- | " ’ ot i ell! a 
er derea astcmery Gee battle of | Gay at the Sharpe Funeral Home. RECTORAT. today at with burial in Clarenceville Ceme- , 
ane ware Thrifty J V.\ tery. He died Monday. allman rus Luttre Pharmacy . - . . Blanketer & Jones Dunseith Cole's Surviving are his widow, Alvina. 
Pertney's Rule. Quality, Keego Drugs. | and a sister, Mrs. Marian John- 
eege Harbor, Drayton Plains, Auburn 
Heights son of Jacksonville, Fla 
  
Can You Stop 
in Time? 
There are more driving hazards In 
Winter, Make extra allowances 
for ice and snow 
Also be sure you have 
adequate insurance coverage | 
+ 
  good, 
} 
Kenneth G 
HEMPSTEAD 
  ‘WEDNESDAY IS . | County Deaths | Chartes Runta, first vice president: 
| historian School students are participating ; in a week-long exchange of pupils been spent in classrooms of an- 
other school. with Handy High Sehool, near Bay 
City. Participating are Gail Bennett, 
a senior; Janet Hudson and 
Sg Holly PTASet 
for Panel Talk 
Students, Parents and 
Teachers to Give Views 
_ on Mutual Problem 
| HOLLY — Monthly meeting of | 
\the Holly Senior High PTA will 
ator of the panel 
  executive 
  MES. C. 
Southfield Area 
GOP Women | those viewing the tople im dif- | that this topic was one of wide- | 
| spread interest in the community, 
and therefore we decided to se- 
lect our panel members from SWAIN LUMLEY 
. ferent capacities,” Mrs. Kart 
Elect Officers | dubett, FTA president, pointed 
wrcuien —— a ee Panel members include: teach 
t of the local Republican ers William Froberg and Harriet 
Women's Cub, following election, Myer; parents, Mrs. Court Hall, 
Mrs. Robert Brummier, Theodore | | 
| County Probate Judge Joseph: V. = = eo meeting Owens, and Gearid Niles; students; | yesterday at the Birmingham Com- | William Roberts, Laurel Conklin, 
munity House. and Jane Joslin. 
Other officers Refreshments will be served by 
the sophomore mothers. include Mrs 
Fred Neidermiller, second 
Vice president; Mrs. Herbert L. ned 
Smith Jr., treasurer; Mrs. Colin Noon Potluck Plan 
Smith and Mrs. Jenny Chambers,| wHITE LAKE TOWNSHIP—The 
secretaries; Mrs. Stanley Warwick, | Oxnew Lakeside Cemetery Associ- 
lation will meet at the home of 
Mrs. Harry Henderson, retiring’) \4-5 Howard Cooley, 7000 E. High- 
president, announced that Mrs. /j..4 Rd. for a noon potluck din- 
speaker at the March meeting, sae Thursday. 
speaking on the Evergreen Inter- | 
ceptor Drain and its importance |   
    junior Janet Hudson, and sophomore Robert Hope. 
Pictured here when they assembied at the school 
the group are living in 
students of their own grade level 
feature a pane! discussion éntitled, | peer 
“What our community can do tc | 
keep our children in high school,"’| Handy school yesterday, and the | ing Wednesday evening at the 
tonight in the Holly High School 
auditorium 
J. N. McCall. will act as moder 
| “When the PTA 
| counci! met last month we felt 
  to the residents of the township. | C ty C | d 
Membership in the club is open. | oun a en ar 
Meetings are held the first Thurs- Trey Township 
The Maccabdees will meet et the “aa 
te the Mulberry Bunko Club at @ p.m. 
Wednesday 
Aebuern Heights | 
Women's Missionary Society of United | 
Presbyterian Church of Auburn Heights 
will meet Wednesday at 1:30 p.m. with 
Mrs. Ray Stephens. 3186 Margaret St 
Getlewsy Leake 
MOMB Unit 21 will meet Wednesday 
_ at the home of Mra Charlies Shelton, | 
219 Pontiac Rd | luncheon 
Concert fo Feature 
All-League Band   
Unter Lake | 
MILFORD—The first of a series A card party sponsored by the women’s 
~ t ines. 
of All League Band Concerts will ary sux Gonmeaie Center. Pro- | 
be held at 8 p. m. Wednesday when | ceeds will be used to benefit the Union 
students from Milford and five | *** Volunteer Fire Department. | nearby counties will perform at! O88 Chapter 286 will hold « white | ephan i t 8 pm. | Clarkston High School. eae Orienvills Mesente fail. this May, the award will be based 
Students were chosen for the | The Altar Society of St. Anne's Church m. Wednesday at the All League Band by the directors | oath wed here yA 4 Becker ea highway | 
of the six schools participating im | M-1% = t Tewnsh' 
the league, according to Phyl Had-| The iulnersy Bunko Che will meet 
drill, Milford band director. ine aes ene — 
On Saturday, 53 students from | tne Troy Dads wil! have their nent | 
{ meetin Thursday eat the Colerain 
he Waren Valley school syutem | semeoi. The movie, When 
tpok part in the annual “Solo = shines.” will be shown 
and Ensemble Festival’ held at White Lake Tewnship | 
Ypsilanti. | The Jackion Boulevard Home Exten- 
ston Club will meet at 1 pm. Thursday / 
at the home of Mrs. Mermen Bruder for | Of the 35 events open to the stu- | § iesson on hat remodeling |   
the homes of 
  dames Faxon, both juniors; and | 
sophomores, Judith Koch and 
Robert Hepe. 
The five were nominated in their | 
home rooms, and classified as to 
grades, personality, extra curricu- | 
lar activities, and availability. Aft- | 
-eF this screening, they were voted} 
on by student council members and | 
the 13 student council faculty ad- | 
visers 
The young people will stay in 
homes of students of their own 
grade level, and, at school, take 
the same subjects they are cur- 
rently studying at their own school. | 
In twe weeks, the students with | 
whom they are staying this week | 
will reverse the process, and 
| Visit the Waterford pupils. 
The project has been hailed by 
school officials as informational 
tional, and a means of pro- 
ing good relations. 
A reception was held in the 
visiting students from Waterford 
were introduced, and welcomed to 
their temporary school 
  
Hospital Wing 
Plan Discussed 
at Marlette 
MARLETTE The Mariette 
Community Hospital Auxiliary met 
recently to elect officers and dis 
cuss a proposal to add a new wing 
to the hospital. 
Hospital Administrator Oran 
Hudson outlined the plan for the | 
wing, to cost an estimated $100,- | 
000. He explained that if the wing 
is built this year the government 
would grant 49 per cent of the cost, 
but this aid would drop to only 
SD per cent if the addition were 
built in 1956. 
The proposed wing woul d in- 
crease the hospital capacity te a 
tegal of 45 beds, with a quar- 
antine reom and a special area 
fer children and maternity 
reoms. 
Mrs. Walter Wood was elected 
president of the auxiliary. Mrs. 
Charlies Boyne was named vice 
president; Mrs. Jo Diem, record.   
  
Trophy Is Donated 
for Auburn Students AUBURN HEIGHTS — An an- 
nual citizenship award in the 
Avondale High School has been 
inaugurated by resident Albert 
Spadafore, with his donation of a 
large trophy to the school. 
To be given for the first time 
  on qualities of citizenship, truth- 
fulness, loyalty, ty, co 
operation, courtesy, self control, | 
and the ability to assume respon | 
sibility. | 
The student council will select 
phy, which symbolizes the spirit of 
educatien. 
Any Auburn Heights high school 
is eligible for consideration.   
Scouts Honored | 
| Club Fetes 3 Troops; | 
Goodison. 
Highlight of the 
presentation 
the Eagle Scout APPLEGATE 
rank to Explorer Scout Harvey Ap- 
plegate Jr. of Troop 139. Harvey, 
who lives at 580 Utah St., was 
presented with the award by Ma- 
son A. Case, member of the Na- 
tional Council of Boy Scouts and of 
the executive board of Clinton Val- 
ley Council, who also acted as 
master of ceremonies. 
The Troop Colter Guard and 
Scoutmaster Harvey Beach also 
participated in the presentation. 
Parents of Harvey were present 
te witness the ceremony and 
| Mrs, Applegate was presented 
| with the Mether’s Pin by her son. 
Floyd Huffman, 120 E. Fifth St. 
assistant scoutmaster of Troop 
139, received the Scouters’ Award 
in the ceremony. 
Ervin Schilke, district commis- 
sioner of Manito District gave a 
resume of accomplishments and 
work of this area. 
The committee on boys and 
girls’ work had charge of arrange- 
ments for the program. 
Crary PTO Meeting 
to Hear Psychologist WATERFORD TOWN SHIP— 
‘How Can We Help Our Young- 
ster Solve His Problems?”’ will be 
the topic of discussion for the 
Parent-Teacher Organization meet- 
Isaac E. Crary Junior High School. 
Dr. Mildred Peters of Wayne 
University, will talk about the nor- 
| mal behavior of a junior high 
| youngster, after which there will | 
be small group discussions about 
definite problems and their solu- 
thons. 
Allen Menlo, of the University 
of Michigan's adult education de- 
partment, will be the group tech- 
discussion. Frieda Huggett, town- 
ship visiting teacher, will assist 
with the program. 
Dr. Peters was formerly the psy- 
chologist with the Rochester 
Schools’ clinic. 
Open House will be held at 7:30, 
and the meeting begins at eight 
p.m. 
West Bloomfield 
Slates Meeting 
on Civil Defense 
on the number of welfare shelters 
organized and the number of vol- 
unteers registered. Reports on re- 
gional and county meetings also 
will be presented. 
Under the direction of John F. 
Warren of Green Lake, the town- 
ship is moving forward rapidly 
with civil defense plans, officials 
said. All interested residents have 
been invited to attend the meeting. 
Chi Omega Alumnae 
to See Garden Film 
SOUTHFIELD TOWNSHIP—The   
the recipient who will have his| North Suburban Alumnae of Chi | 
the son | name engraved on the large tro | Omega will meet at 8 p.m. Friday 
with Mrs. F. W. Sevin of Fairfa> 
as hostess. 
A colored movie, ‘From Seeds te 
Flowers,’ will be shown. 
  
dents, the Milford group won 15 
first division ratings, 13 seconds a 
Fomtco! Adv. ESE     
and seven thirds. The. participants 
were only allowed to enter three 
events and David Stetler. Sue ta e 
Bourns and Arie! Haddrill won Vote CLIFFORD Cliff’ MANNING 
first place in each class. for 
Winners from the Saturday Fes- 
tival will enter the state competi- 
tion which will be held at Ann 
Arbor March 26. 
  WATERFORD TOWNSHIP VOTERS — FOR HONEST IMPARTIAL 
—for Supervisor—       
  ‘55 Officers 
  
Baby, Tot Saved 
in Lapeer Fire Firemen Rescue Infant, 
Mother Drops Boy, 3, 
From Upper Window 
LAPEER — A dramatic rescue 
by firemen saved the life of a 9 
month-old child in a Lapeer 2- 
family house fire here, after the 
child's mother had dropped an- 
other son, Gary, 3, frem a seeond 
story window into the arms of a 
neighbor and herself jumped from 
the upper apartment. 
Firemen who arrived at the 
burning 2-family home at 74 S. 
Saginaw St. Monday afternoon 
found Mrs. Gerald Zuhlke. 20, ly- 
ing on the ground under the win- 
dow with a broken foot, repeating 
the words, “Baby on bed," over 
and over. 
They found the baby, Larry 
Father of the children was at 
work when the fire occurred. 
Estimated damage of the blaze, 
which was confined to the Zuhlke 
apartment, was $2,000 and no other 
injuries were reported. Firemen 
were unable to determine the ori- 
gin. The home is owned by Wallace 
Fleming. 
  
  Four Towns PTA 
‘Will HearTalk 
on Segregation UNION LAKE — Mr. Everett | 
C. Spurlock of Pontiac will be the 
guest speaker at Four Towns PTA 
Spurlock, 
| secretary of the Urban League. 
| will speak on the subject of seg- 
| regation legislation. A period of 
| discussion will follow his talk. 
| Open house when parents may 
meet with their children’s teach- 
| ers, will be held from 7:30 to & |p.m., preceding the regular -meet- 
ing. The second grade room moth- | Are Elected 
by Oakland Farm Bureau Veorkels, Davisburg; George 
Sutton, Molly; and Walter Wel- 
berry, Milferd. 
Holding over from present terms 
or re-elected were: Paul Button, 
  
Lake Orion Cow Cited 
junior four-year-old class, accord- 
ing to the Ayrshire Breeders Assn. 
of Brandon, Vt. 
“Beth” produced. 1.795 pounds of 
/ 6.5 per cent milk. for a total of 
117 pounds of butterfat. 
  
  FUNERAL HOME 
110 WESSEN ST. PHONE FE 3-7374 
Ambulance Service 
at Any Hour   
    
  We Have These 
Dependable Coals: 
Lew Ash Pocahontas 
Olga Pocahontas 
Kentucky Coals 
Blue Hard Coal 
Pocahontas Briquettes 
Disco Furnace 
Selvay Coke 
4 Stoker Coals 
SIBLEY COAL & SUPPLY CO. 
140 N. Cess Ave.     ers will serve refreshments during 
| a social period following the meet- | 
ing.       
  
Steel Bed 
Frame Only 
It floats the headboard 
  and the frame legs on 
  Price does not include ‘MILLERS — 144 OAKLAND AVE. 
  These strong metal bed frames may be attached 
to any headboard, or used without one. 
floor. The weight of the bed is evenly distributed 
where they can’t be bumped into. 
You can change one headboard for another with 
ease — or convert your frame from twin size to 
full size in a matter of minutes. 
include bracket to fasten headboard to frame. Easy Terms 
Available 
legs slightly above the 
casters fit underneath 
headboard, but does 
  
  yg ‘$12.95 Headboards, SPECIAL THIS WEEK, 
$9.95. Choice of Colors. 
DOUBLE 
    
    Royal Neighbors of America will 
meet at 12:4 p.m. Wednesday at | 
of 1. anager ade — a serous — materity be] S. 4 
mn election resident 
terfera from Bigher tax 
|Scouts Plan Banquet cok cin, Oa: Vee, fee oman nom Seer UNION LAKE—Cub Scout Pack coe,’ segecdiess ot gollmamh or peoceamn Os’ Suse Wunentend 67 and Boy Scout Troop 67 will economic position, to seth office. Teoncbi to order to brenden the 
Bey 2 Week with a © ie comune af cant ot al 3, FLYFF 
and Gold Potluck Banquet, to be township officials. berden. oe 
held at 6:30 p.m. Friday at Four 3. I promise te institute an scceter- ep BA ny A seme to * ated program ef proper sewage % ef township of- Towns School. disposal and sewage control. fete Oe property | oxsese- 
OS ee ee ree Ge ete ments, theredy surrendering this 
Royal Neighbors to Meet’ ty rights ond further im ¢ ~ pany. Fog = Re 
CLARKSTON — The Clarkston | oer 
       
      Our 19th Year of Greater Value Giving 
MILLER FURNITURE Where You Honestly Save \ 
  144 Oakland Ave. Careful Free Delivery 
  
: ° : aa : : j 
4 o4 ‘ 
jr { raya * " ; ; 
~~_ THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 8, 1955   
YW Celebrates 100th Birthday Monday at PHS   
V.L. Conners 
Entertained 
at Parties 
Trips to Sunny 
Places” Plarined by 
Residents 
This was the first trip back to 
Wanesville for the Conners, who 
During their month's vacation 
they will visit Las Vegas, Los 
Angeles, 
  of the 
lenin Qub will eather ‘— 4 
day evening at 
Country Club for a dance emer 
tail party. Rt will be guest hoy 
Mr. and Mrs, Nei] Fermor Cop 
pens (nee Carol Jean Griswold) of 
Barkman road are announcing the 
Feb. 5 birth of a son, Neil Fred- 
. at William Beaumont Hos- 
  
parents are Mr. and Mrs. Neil F. | 
Coppens of Birmingham. 
| Session Scheduled | 
| past   
On Feb. 24 more than 1530 branch 
presidents and committee chair- 
men of the Michigan Division of | 
Women's National Farm and Gar- 
den Association will meet at Wo 
men’s City Club in Detroit for the 
mid-winter council session. 
Luncheon reservations are being 
taken by Mrs. Cash W. Talbert of 
Detroit. | | Ziehmer, Mrs. Milton Probert, Mrs. |   
  v ° “ - 
ERC Ag A a tt nape 
     
The tea table appointments inspired most of the con-|tea for (left to right) Mrs. Alan L. Gornick, Mrs. Donald 
William J. 
of Women’s National Farm and Garden-club held in the| Hills, is Mrs. William G. Ferguson, also of Bloomfield 
Pouring | Hills, who planned the design. - versation at the Monday meeting of Bloomfield Hills Branch |O’Toole and Mrs. 
Bloomfield Hills home of Mrs. Dean A. Draper. ‘Local ‘Y’ Observes Tenth 
Anniversary of New Home 
The 100th anniversary of the H. Monroe and Mrs. Myron L.| 
| YWCA is being observed interna- eee ‘th - 
w arrangemen 
tionally this year, but the local } were Mrs. William S, Dawe, Mrs | 
*Y’ has even more reason to cele- | ug W. Grove, Ora Hallenbeck, | 
brate. Mrs. Haushalfer, Mrs John Kinz | 
Monday evening members ob ler, Norma Strickland, Mrs. Evw-| 
served their 10th anniversary with | gene Wellman and Miss Muir. 
F, | a dinner and gnnual meeting heid | 
at Pontiac High School. . | ‘League Women 
Ten years ago they moved 
| into their mew heme on Franklin ‘Name. Chairmen 
League of Catholic Womer | 
| named committee chairmen for the | 
coming year Monday evening in 
the League building on South   
    
| for people from nursery age to 
| senior citizens whe participate in 
| the Geldew Age group. Parke street. 
| President Mrs. Fred L. Haus- Appointees included Mrs. W tk 
halter introduced the’ past presi-,liam B. Dean. membership; Mrs. | 
dents including Mrs, William Ran- | Dalmo Chapdelaine and Mrs. Jo. | 
som, Mrs. Allan H. «Monroe, | seph Spadafore, house: Mrs. Floyd 
Mrs. W. H. Vann, Mrs. — and Mrs. Charies Piller. 
j | Adame, Mrs, E. G. Clark and Mrs. 
| John Garrison. Mrs. Haushalter | 
|has served three years as presi- 
=| dent, A special skit entitled “Moving 
i Day 1960” written by Mrs, Arthur | 
WwW. ers are Mrs. Arthur Craw- 
Mrs. Thomas 
  z 
‘fib 
  happy incidences of the ‘Y” his- | Mrs. Wilson Palazini was chosen tory, giving credit to the many as delegate to the convention of 
volunteers who have devoted | the Detroit Archdiocesan Council of 
much of their time, and ex- Catholic Women to be held in De- 
1 pressed hopes for future growth. |troit on March 31. Mrs. Chapde- 
g ~ laine is alternate. 
- Big ry eng tag rhage Mrs. Palazini assumed chairman. 
Pontiac Pres Prete Vale Marie Meyer Carolyn Hawn, | SP of the February fund raising   
    
  
Scripps all of Bloomfield 
  
Bloomtield Garden Club Woyside Gleaners 
Gathers in Draper Home ave Meeting 
Wayside Gleaners Society of First 
Bloomfield Hills Branch of Wom. | was inspired by the Chinese decor | B&Ptst Church met Friday in Bar- 
en's National Farm and Garden, in the Draper dining room where ett Chapel. The Rev. William 
Association was entertained in the the affair was held. Miles led devotions. Mrs, Theron 
Bloomfield Hills home of Mrs. | Slosson sang, accompanied by Mrs. | 
Dean A. Draper Monday afternoon. | David Gee 
The tea table decoration, de- | Tice: Ceeaied Sie: ther leer i by Mrs. William Fe , esson for the afternoon was 
| presented by Mrs, John Veneman_ 
m “Ye Must Be Born Again.” The centerpiece and table ap- 
pointments followed an Oriental 
theme. A fan of maline was. the 
peint of interest. From there, 
Mrs. Ferguson developed an old- 
| fashioned Valentine with flowers 
in many shades of pink. 
The centerpiece was placed on 
|a mirror flanked by crystal can-   
  
‘Pythian Sisters 
cinesday | Celebrate Third ‘Return From Trip 
Mr. and Mrs. Francis H. Phelps 
tus | Anniversary ami bicianenye-ylacalpe ote | of Btoomfield Hills have returned | 
ce ~ | to their home after having spent Mizpah Temple Seven, Pythian | of subtle pink. three wecks at Kenyon Ranch near 
Sisters held its third anniversary | Assisting Mrs. Ferguson with Tucson, Ariz 
party recently in Fellowship Hall | s-rangements were Mrs. Howard   
on Voorheis road. Harrington, Mrs. Albert A. Clark, Seas | 
Honored at the affair were Mrs. Mrs. Donald. O'Toole, Mrs. Fred- PTA Activities Dean Peterson and Mrs. William | erick M. Oliver, Mrs. John C Smesece | 
Vance, past chiefs. Cowden, Mrs. Fred W. Lindbloom, | gmerson PTA will meet Wednesday at 
The Rev Merbert Ryan will 730 pm 
Past presidents will be intro- | speak 
duced Special guests from Oxford Tem-| Mrs G. J. Huebner Jr. and Mrs 
» | Ple 60 included Mrs. Milton Miller, | Harold W. Holmes 
past grand chief and Mildred Un. ; 4 MecCarrell 
| ger, captain of the degree staff. Mrs. Louise Carpenter of Mich: |p ecutive board of McCarroll PTA igan State College was speaker —§ will meet Wednesday at 1:15 pm. at the 
Guests from Fanny Tompkins | for the day. echoes ne 
Saortan, mest euveiieat chief; |a.2t™ ft Hawiey Otis, chub pres » Crotgot PTA will meat Thursday at 3 © © c 
Mrs. Hugh Endries, excellent ~ foie weetian wilt be hai a : “Mental wat = on! aie te At Childrea.” 
— ana Mrs. Randall Wilsew (9) in the Bloomfield Hills home of Lenghetiew Longfeliow School 
Thursday at 7.30 p.m PTA will meet Mrs. Earl Thompson 
On the program committee for Party Held 
| Dallas Nelson reported on a re- 
| beome were explained by : The Boys’ Ensemble of Water- Witt a 
Valentine comeel eceviean, Sie. ddim Virginia Farrell Thors Jr., program chairman, in- 
by Sorority Sixteen members of Zeta Lamb- | 
da Chapter of Beta Sigma Phi 
Sorority gathered Monday evening | 
at the West Iroquois road home of 
Marilyn Shearer.     BEAUTY SHOP 
(Over Neumedes) PERMANENT (<- 
ROWENA’S 
824 N. Seginew “FE 2-9382 o> 
     
Nair Cutting , 
end Styling     
Mrs.Kenneth White and Mrs.     
cent Beta Sigma Phi City Council 
meeting where plans for a March 
fashion show were discussed. 
“Place Beautiful’ was the eve- 
ning’s pregram tepic. Mrs. Reb- 
ert Bege spoke te the chapter 
on the history of furniture and 
decorating. Relating celer 
schemes and what interior dec- 
erating means to the modern 
Mrs. 
  Robert Knight. 
Refreshments were served from | 
a table decorated in a Valentine | 
motif. The next meeting will be| 
held at the Crescent drive home of 
Mrs. James Perquette.         
the event were Mrs. Edward Kerr, 
Mrs. Paul Etter, Mrs. William 
Craig and Mrs, George Janes. 
Social committee members were QUALITY FLOOR COVERINGS and DRAPERIES SINCE 1941   
Mrs, Lewis Ellis, Mrs, Theodore 
  Delos Nicholie and Mrs. Etter. 
  
  PONTIAC SYMPHONY 
ORCHESTRA 
CONCERT 
Tomorrow - Wednesday, Feb. 9 
Lincoln Junior High School | 
Concert Under Direction of 
Francisco 
             
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   { 
i 
- ~ TWELVE   wy ee ae 
Woman Says . 
Her Courage Pierced Age Barrier | Mrs.. P. H., in Goshen, Indiana. By ANNE HEYWOOD 
Some weeks ago we mentioned 
in this column) a woman who felt 
that her life was over - because 
she had just celebrated her for- 
tieth birthday. She was completely ; . 
convinced that she was t00 old for (at I woud lke to share my ex: “anything, too old to start a new a aid. others. 
venture, too old to enjoy life. 
" Well, ii fesponse to that woman ‘I was left a widow at the age 
“some wonderful letters have come of 30, with three single daughters, 
in, of which my favorite is fromithe youngest of whom was nine. Here is what Mrs. P. H. writes: 
| “Im regard to the lady ef 4, 
who felt that she was too old to 
venture into new activities, I felt 
  
  Bright Brae Sperkics 
in New Classic Furniture By ELIZABETH HILLYER ha and idea-full, and this 
informa , 4 brings new type of furniture 
ner iv = ats into favor—the kind that has a 
bd a = >> look of importance along with sim- now. The good life at home takes plicity and easy adaptability to 
fewer trappings and less work than | small uncluttered rooms. 
it used to. | Good example of this from the 
We live comfortably, but we do it Grand Rapids spring previews is 
in style—furnishings and decora-| the Classic Provincial furniture 
tion may be simpler, but they're | sketched, which sparks medium- 
— ————— | toned walnut with bright brass 
PD 
« It was designed by Herbert Ten 
— MARY KING— Have from Italian provincial in- 
spiration, but with an appealing 
contemporary flavor. Jaunty little 
MACHINELESS AND 
COLD WAVE brass knobs top off the chair 
Mary King Cold 
    | backs, brass medallions decorate 
'the aprons of tables, circlets of 
brass form drawer and door pulls, 
‘and there are brass ferrules on 
the legs of tables and chests. 
Marriage License 
Applications 
  4 Robert E. Minton. Waterford 
‘Wave, Complete “ Joanne B. Lasperance 
HH Biake Detroit Gordon 
Mair cuts. Mary A Mcintyre 285 Cottage finger waves, facials. 
        and Thompson D_ Preer, Shaker Heights 
to 
ORA OBRECHT Betty J. Beardsley. Birmingham 
Appointments | Clyde M Kirklin, Ortonville 158 N. Perry FE 2-3053 Esther L. Hutchinson. Drayton Plains 
Jerry Moore. 1862 Birchcrest 
a —_ Qreta J. Hedlund, 136 Clive 
“ali Robert A. Conant. 47 Dekota 
| Jean L. Busse. 15 Adelaide 
Ow wey Bernard A Dennis. 168 E Huror 
Bernice H yman C8 Union Ct 
Heeh Giee Oerter 
Iva M Kokoris. Cedar Lake ind 
| Robert R. Henk. Mt. Clemens 
Virginie L. Martin. Lake Orion 
Royal Oa 
Wertren 
Williem F Zack Jr. Re Oak 
Derothy J. Benjamin, 172 Lincoln 
Bdaward N Lasich, a 
Helen L. Tamm. Parming' 
Bob G Houstell 484 Brooks 
Janet 8. Woodward, Holly James HH Bover 
Barbera J. Emerson, 
Raymond E Frick. Clarkston 
Markiyn J. Lewthwaite, Fenton 
“Theodore Motriuk, Ferndale 
Helen Radu. Ortonville     + 
We owned our little home which | 
Was very much in need of repair. | 
| I received an insurance check for_| 
‘the sum of $1,000. Ph “After paying funeral expenses | 
| the rest went tqward obligations | 
that had piled up- during -my hus- | 
band’s illhess and Otter debts that 
| had been incurred. 
“The youngest daughter had 
emergency qperation seven | 
weeks after the death of her fa- 
| ther. You can imagine what we 
went through. But after a year 
of struggle I secured a job in a | 
dector’s office as a. cleaning wom- 
| an. 
' “Now, after nearly 11 years I am 
still in the same office as book- 
keeper, nurse, and general as- 
sistant. 
“I feel one is never too old to 
venture, into something new and 
| different.”’ | 
| Isn't that a wonderful letter? | 
Next time you find yourself ali- 
biing because you're ‘‘too old,” 
| pause a minute and consider Mrs. 
| P. H., who proves that life can 
| begin at 50. And if you or any of | 
| your relatives or friends, have. 
made a new start alter your for- | 
| tieth birhtday, do write and let , 
| me share it with other women { 
‘Use Lemon 
asFlavor 
inPudding | Mrs. Donald Yerkes 
Makes Light Dessert 
_ for Entire Family 
By JANET ODELL 
Pontiac Press Food Editor 
Here is a recipe’for a dessert 
that can be given to the children 
in the family as well as the adults 
Mrs. Donald Yerkes shares her By MARY MARGARET McBRIDE 
Lemon Pudding recipe with us to. Apparently it's not (as I thought 
day. and said in a recent column} get- 
|The ile of teacher in Walle, Comers, started ha’ the Lake High School, Mrs. Yerkes controlling the excess flood without 
is another active young mother. giving offense. 
(She has one small daughter for At least that’s what the mail in: 
whom she likes to sew and knit. | dicates A typical sample: “I can 
Cooking is an activity she enjoys. find subjects to talk about all right 
The Commerce Home . if only I can stop the other pergon s 
| Extension mouth long enuogh to get anything 
group counts her as an interested said."’ ! 
member Wishing to be helpful, I have LEMON PUDDING | consulted guthorities and evolved 
Mrs. Donald Yerkes a method. Suppose it's a story-   
  
(blue strawcloth over which 
| 
| 
! 
| 
| I's cups milk 
l'e cups sugar 
5 tablespoons flour 
| ; I tell yeu the story about Charies 
and the horse-meat?”’ she asks. 
If she has, say loudly, “Yes, you 
did.” If sbe persists anyway, in- 3 Gas. operated 
3 tablespoons butter 
‘e cup lemon juice 
ind of one lemon - 
Cream butter, add part of the 
|sugar. Mix flour with remaining | 
sugar and add to creamed mix.| 
iture. Add egg yolks, then milk. | 
Add salt, lemon juice and rind. | 
Fold in stiffly beaten egg whites 
|Pour into greased 8x8-inch pan 
Set pan in hot watep and bake 
labout one hour in a 350-degree 
foven. 
Air Ducts | 
Get Ridof | 
Cold Mass By HUBBARD COBB 
| We got talking the other day to| 
a man in the heating business 
| who told us that cold air flows) 
| Just about like water. |   
  
    % repeater you want to stop. ‘Did , ! 
____ -THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 8, 1955 
One Is Never Too Old to Venture Into Something Different |   
  “Dots and plaids” is the neme for this |plaided veil is drawn. 
(spring presentation, made of smooth pale which is repeated, in the drooping quil 
a dotted and which boasts of two blue dots. 
Communication Problem 
Concerns Babbling Bore terrupt and insist firmly, “you 
did tell me.” And if she still 
goes on, simply tell her about 
Charles and the horse-meat—in 
detail. 
Maybe it's the long-winded bore, 
the one whose specialty is recount- 
ing in gruesome minutiae motion 
picture plots, trips over the Mo- 
hark Trail or why Alice isn't on 
the school honor roll 
The most effective treatment 
here, I'm assured, is for the listen- 
er to keep his eyes painstaking!) 
darting about the room. concentrat 
ing attention now on a hangnail 
now on a crooked picture which 
straightens. Occasionally. too, he 
breaks in with irrelevant remarks 
(“Aren't those peanut butter sand- 
wiches good?’ “Did the bank fi 
nally get hold of you about. the 
| overdraft? 
If all these fail, then create a 
diversion. Say you. think you 
hear the telephone or the door- 
bell or inquire if the furnace isn't 
making a funny noise. Then be- 
| fere the long-winded one can re- 
sume, ask ai question far re- 
meved trom his or her sabject 
(Say, wasn't it tee bad about 
the pastor's wife and the burglar 
in Bermuda shorts?"’) 
I do believe the anecdote-addict 
is the most deadly of the non-stop 
talkers. “Of all bores whom man 
in his folly hesitates to hang 
Thorhas De Quincey the most 
insufferabte 1s the “tetier of good 
stories’'—a nuisance that should be 
| put down by cudgeling, by submer- 
sion in horse ponds or any other 
| mode of abatement " Especial- 
ily the one, usually a man, who 
tells stories with accents * said   
  
| Pin Corsage 
on Formal 
on Arrival 
Girl Can Drop Hint 
] 
oat 
| Many Occasions 
| By ELIZABETH WOODWARD 
‘tending. my first big dance and I'd 
| like to know if it is proper to pin 
}on my corsage after I get there 
| I don’t want to crush it under my 
, coat. Would it be proper to wear 
it on my shoulder right instead of 
| my left?” . 
You can carry your corsage 1 
its box ‘after you've opened it 
enthusiastically at home and tried 
it against your shoulder before his 
admiring eyes). 
That would protect the flowers 
| until you get to the dance. Or 
| You could pin your corsage to 
your-ceat. Your right shoulder 
is the safest place to wear it to 
+—aveid-crushing it white dancing. 
“Dear Miss Woodward: Is it cus- 
fomary for a man to give a girl 
he’s been going with for five years, 
and is supposed to love, gifts for 
Christmas, Valentine's Day and 
birthdays? He can afford it.” 
It's normal apd customary for a 
man to want to shower gifts upon 
his love if he can afford it. Bot 
whether he does or not is a differ- 
ent matter 
Some men are forgetful, others 
The dots are “u hite are thoughtless, others are stingy, 
/ and some just don't even think 
about such things. If your man 
doesn't crash through on occasions 
when you think he should, you can 
show your disappointment and 
raise quite a ruckus. Or you can 
give him gifts at important times 
and show him by your example 
how very sweet it is to be re- 
| membered 
“Dear Miss Woodward I'm 
thinking 9f having a surprise birth- 
day party for a boy I like and | 
need your help: His birthday 
comes on a Monday. and that night 
he cojlects for his papers, so should 
sume other time near the date” 
How could I get him over to my 
house”? What could I serve for 
refreshments and what are some 
games we could play?” 
A surprise party Can be a delight- 
ful surprise—o ra pain in the neck 
It's the later if the guest of honor 
fails to show up. You'd better be 
sure he'll come to the party before 
you invite anybody else. Plan it 
‘for the Saturday night before, in- 
stead of his birthday. which is a 
school night 
And use the game and refresh 
ment ideas in my Games booklet 
which I'm rushing off to you 19 
help with your planning. Anyone 
else who'd like to have a free copy 
can have one by writing me for it 
enclosing a stamped, self-addressed 
envelope 
  
    yanner® . MAKE FRIENDS 
- for s 
— J 4860 
Abana Holos 
     One yard 5+tinch fabric Gr 
bolero! Ditto for skirt! No nged yy ks ‘ 
to bankrupt your budget’ Choose * i ont 
a wool remnant, make this ensem- 
ble for Easter! Couldn't be easier 
— diagrams show you how few 
‘seams there are in each garment! | 
Pattern 4860: Misses’ sizes 10, 12. Z \ for, Beau's Gifts on 
“Dear Miss Woodward: I'm at. 
Mis “simple 
1 have the party that day or_at- 
   ' 
! 
Contains Been Sprouts, Celery, 
Mushrooms and Pimientos! ‘ 
         
  Sab   He said that in 2 = story 
veo H house that was hea by warm 
Re Is Asian Fund air it wasn't at all unusual to find 
BAN FRNCISCO u — Author great mass of cold air flowing James A. Michener bas announced down the stairs from the second 
incorporation of Fund for Asia, & | Noor and then across the floors 
nonprofit organization to promote of one or more rooms on the first 
good will and understanding be- floor until it finally found a cold 
tween the peoples of Asia an dthe air return register. It then dived 5, play wear, is made in Italy of leap in and do one in his accent. 
United States. The fund will sup-| down this register and eventually 
port American groups operatingiin | got back to the furnace or to the 
Asia. basement, . 
He also said that in a well de- Ah.   
  
NOW! SOFTER HANDS GUARANTEED! Pesiti oaemeemaaes 
Chapped 
Mands And Dry Skin 
.No matter how dry, rough or 
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be, Aloma Lotion will help 
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Special New Formula 
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   signed system, cold air return 
aveid allowing this cold mass of 
air to make downstairs rooms 
drafty and uncomfortable, 
If you have a home where this 
condition occurs there are several 
| things that can be done and some 
|of them you can do yourself. 
One easy trick is to install a 
floor register right at the bottom 
of the stairs. This will allow the 
| cold air coming from upstairs to 
| get back to the basement and not 
create drafts in downstairs rooms. 
Another trick is to instalt floor Sent al      
     
   
          
         
        CF Rowe: 
  
ly ‘over reotis below that have 
cold air return registers. This 
will allow the cold air from up- 
stairs to get back 
e 
Naturally, the best remedy of all 
is to install cold air ducts where 
    necessary to carry 
back to the furnace     
  
(SLL I 
LIE 
Pari t ini 
- tks 
CitRiwa , 
  registers were located just to | 
registers in upstair reoms direct- | 
  | Loosely fitted waistline is not good. 
Surplice is the pointed movement 
ot front for a slimmer effect. 
Miss B.—Wrap blouse, for dressy 
| Egyptian cotton and fits superbly 
to minimize the busty look. The 
| large bosom is better in a rather 
snug fit but never bulky, loose 
| hanging clothes 
  
Newest Colors 
for Spring Wear | 
Bright, Crsp | | 
| PARIS (INS) — This spring 
women will look appetizing, crisp 
and fresh. 
; To be in the Paris style and’ 
' mood choose sunny spring colors. 
The news from Paris style design- + 
ers for spring wear is that women | 
will be sporting red, orange, yel- 
|low, turquoise, sand, and “almost- | 
| white.” 
Red is the star color. But to be of 
1955 vintage it should be luminous 
and more orange than purple. Cor- | 
al, shrimp, orange, tangerine and | 
a devilish ‘‘mephisto red” will give 
the spring look a violent touch. 
Yellow — mimosa and lime —| jul   
  z 5f f   4 14. 16, 18. Bolerd, skirt, in all 
sizes, each garment requires 1! 
yard 54-inch fabric. 
This pattern easy to_use, simple 
to sew, isYtested for fit. Has com- 
plete illustrated instructions, 
Send Thirty-five cents in coins 
for this pattern—add 5 cents for 
each pattern for 1st-class rgailing 
If you do it badly enough he | Send to Anne Adams, care of 137 
may drop the whole thing. Or of | Pontiac Press Pattern Department, 
course he may settle down pa- | 243 West i7th St...New York 11, 
tiently to coach you. In this case, | New. York. Print plainly name, 
better remember an engagement | address with zone, size and style 
you'd forgotten and walk right | number. ? 
out of there. 
, , ’ | In travel time, New York is now 
Gdicuiae tence ue ihn closer to Tokyo than it was to 
like everybody else, hate to be Philadelphia in the days of the 13 
bored. So if you can bring your- | Colonies. One of the worst of these in my 
experiepce was a gentleman with a 
reputation for Texas stories. The 
very best way to combat this type 
is to wait until he's finished his 
first, and while he's breathing deep 
befofe launching his second, you When you go into a restaurant 
alone and see two friends having 
lunch together, don't assume you'll 
be wanted by saying, “Do you 
care if T join you?” They may be 
having lunch together in order to 
discuss private matters. So just 
say “‘Hello’’ cordially and if they 
ask you to join them you will know 
you are welcome. 
Some people are put out when 
others butt in. , 
Thieves Take ‘Gator 
MIAMI, Fla. u\—Maj. and [irs 
Frank Pease reported to police 
that someone stole a four-foot pet 
crocodile named Hathor from a 
walled pond in their back yard.   
  
    
  
  
  
        
    
  
  
    
        
  
        
      
  
      
  
  
  
    
          
          
      
    self to it, there's one unfailing rule: 
Just be more boring than he is! i“, TERR 
Uirector. From ‘its formation until March!  wiitem’ —— 
3, 1871, the United States govern-, * 3? late —— : N 
ment entered into 371 treaties with | nesses many 7 
American Indian tribes. Gee Wy yyy, D 
Fe Bil Lh = PETUNIA! 16 Reyptian. sun 
g Lf, 
Ive labored and scraped] |*” stanaard - 
For an eon or so — | Seu iy 
This is the awfullest | 19 Un of wire Y 
Job that I Know/ 7 Baaeerement the 
! 22 Seine e Yy, po record 
Claws Claws Ata Yi Yi 
33 Mae OT 3 Vi, Yo YYy 
; 3s Gadese My 36 Red cap | i Zi 39 Remove 42 Art (Latin) | 
% Ueno | : ; | reluctance 
& pert fe ~ ’ 1 Roman” 40 Epistie ra | | 49 Make lace aa Bl - 41 Lily, maid ot 
, nvr * eroaeat oe 4 > eT : . Cravat t roller into-a flat square | | §7 Puptic otticer ea 2 Small candies 48 Brernities 
pan full of hot water axetic 865 lS of FE Marvel ES) ona 
~roll paper till it's soaked— } Fn Immactinte 30 Disembark s2 Fives 
end it will come off easily. _ 0 ths 3 Talking bird 8 ‘rock 
; . 2\Be displeased_ Pe hed . 
———_ HE e-PRO * i Hig | Bd hae 
Es ‘ [ agg 4, t 4; wr se Poh . : y : “       
  t 
|   
    SIZES 2—10 
by Cauora What Sundress—looks so 
pretty on your httle miss' Sewing 
embroidery a_ cinch! 
Use -gay cotton remnants — frilly 
eyelet ruffling fpr trim 
Pattern 849: Children’s sizes 2, 
4,6, 8, 10. Tissue pattern, embroi- 
dery transfer. State size 
Send TWENTY-FIVE CENTS in 
coins for this pattérn—add 5°cents 
for each pattern for lst-class mail- 
ing. Send to 124 Pontiac Press 
Needlecraft Department, P.O. Box 
164, Old Chelsea Station, New York 
11, New York. Print plainly your 
name, address with zone, pattern 
number, size 
INSPIRED IDEAS — pages. and 
pages of novel designs in our NEW 
Laura Wheeler Needlecraft Cata- 
jog for 1955' Completely different 
and so thrilling, you'll want to 
order your favorite patterns. Send 
25 cents for your copy of this new 
new catalog NOW' 
Her Family 
Responsible 
for Wedding 
Criticism Won't Be 
Directed Toward 
His Parents 
By EMILY POST 
brid groom    
Pinafore or 
The 
asks mother of a 
“Does the man's family have 
any say at all about the wedding 
arrangements? Our son is going 
to marry a girl who has had very 
little advantages and {rom 
what I have heard of the wedding 
knows nothing what- social 
plans so far 
ever about how a wedding should 
be conducted. 
“T am that this 
wedding be perfect in every detail 
as there will be many important 
people present and I do not want 
them to think that we do not know 
ic better. very anxious 
“The bride is a perfectly nice 
person and I do not want to burt 
her feelings, but, on the other 
hand, neither do I want our 
| friémds to criticize. Will you 
tell me how I can tell her in a 
‘tactful way that certain details 
wrong?” 
You are not in any way respon- 
| Sible for the details of the wedding. 
| That is entirely the concern of the 
| bride's family and everyone knows 
it and therefore no one will criti- 
cize you for anything bout the 
wedding which may “ot be perfect, 
If something is being very badly 
done; perhaps you can say to the 
bride, “Don't you think it would 
, be nicer if it were done this way 
instead?" 
Dear Mrs. Post: Does one 
have to buy an item ‘Lat typifies 
a particular wedding anniver- 
sary? Don't you think it would ~ 
| more acceptable, regardless of 
| what year the couple are cele- 
brating? 
I certainly agree that it makes 
| far more sense to buy something 
you know the anniversary couple 
will like rather than something 
| they would not like just because it 
| typifies the particular anniversary. 
Dear Mrs. Post® Is one ever ex- 
pected to tip the doorman and 
elevator man in an apartment 
| house of a friend whom one goes 
to visit often? 
Doormen, yes—now and again— 
| if he goes out to call you a taxi, 
|or help you get into your car (or 
‘to get others te_move their cars 
and let you move out_of.a block), 
You might also tip the-elevator 
  
  ea ee ed  
Rep. Don Petrucelli introduced a 
new bill in the Legislature yester- 
with an old nursery rhyme 
juice than pickles in pickle jars.     ® ‘in to us,"’ Von Westerman 
if in ( stra | conceded in an interview. “If there 
| are, we hope we can win over the 
Plans l) Tou / nothing to do with politics.”’ 
owe | ‘The tour opens Feb. 27 in Wash- 
ington. Other cities to be visited 
Manager Say | ington, Ill.; Milwaukee; Ann Ar- 
| bor, Mich.; Columbus, Ohio; De- 
United States this month for a tour Baltimore; and Newark, N.J. 
of 19 cities. The trip may show | 
whether music lovers there are Wants Pickle Packers 
to Pack More Pickles “We consider it significant, both 
culturally and politically, that 10 
years alter the war we have a 
von Westerman. 
The orchestra's temporary con- 
ductor Herbert von Karajan was 
orchestra's 103 members. Roughly | stalled at siphons on the big Gate- 
half of them played in the orches- | way Canal in Utah by the Bureau 
tra during the war. In return, they) of Reclamation will skim men or 
military duty. be sucked into the tunnel-like si- 
“It is possible there will be no phons. 
BOARDING HOUSE | objectors through*eur music. 
Both Cultural, Political are New York; Chicago; Philadel- 
BERLIN ~The Berlin Philhar- | troit; Rochester, N.Y.; Syracuse, 
willing to forget about the tainted 
chance to go to America,”’ says 
a Nazi party member. So were 
received the supreme favor from/animals off the surface of the 
  
    
      
     ‘“‘We must prove that music has 
ja; Pittsburgh; Cleveland; Cin- 
monic Orchestra is going to the|N.Y.; Boston; Hartford, Conn.; 
past of some of its members. 
the orchestra manager, Gerhart 
Von Westerman and some of the| A new escape device being in- 
Adolf Hitler — exemption from! fast moving water before they can 
45,464 000 TIMES EGAD/ L'VE WIT ON }{ Must BE PRICED Z 
  
of \ 
Wav 
ie \w OG DESCRIPTION =       +ne one now has more than a! 
‘compiled from last year's field 
DES MOINES, Iowa (UP)—State | 
day which is likely to identify him | 
The bill would make it illegal | 
for pickle packers to put more’ THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 8, 1955 
Salk Vaccine Results SANC¥   
    
           
Not Due for While Yet |- ; HOW CAN ANN ARBOR # — Dr. Thomas 
Francis Jr., head’ of the Salk I MAKE 
polio vaccine evaluation center at NANCY 
the University of Michigan, says JEALOUS 
? “limited view’ of the data being 
tests 
Dr. Francis said yesterday’ that ™~ ae coy 
extreme precaution is being taken e: am = 
to safeguard against premature a —_ 
disclosure of the results of the 
field tests 
Some two million children took 
part in the nationwide tests to wereres 
try out a substance that polio   
  MAKE HER 
THINK YOU'VE 
HAD LOTS oF 
GIRL: FRIENDS ° 
BEFORE HER 
  
    GOOD 
IDEA NINETEEN _ 
by Ernie Bushmiller 
  
        Of al nghe rerer~ed 
  ss Pe 
  to c woo thes tg Guat Come Sateen ce = PONE Bis. ae b.-6- ———-—   
fighters hope will provide im. 
munity against infantile paraly- 
Sclesiad, Michigan counties Par’ Burglars Must Become 
Some of the children were given Actors to Spend Loot 
the vaccine. Others were -given a HOLLYWOOD (UP)—The burg- harmless control substance, as . . 
useless against polio as water lars who stole $500 from the Key 
Only the vaccine evaluation cen- West Motion Picture Studios will 
ter knows which children received have to become actors if they 
the Salk vaccine and which re- want to use the loot 
ceived the control substance. 
      
  
DO IT YOURSELF 
    
@) 1955 wy she F Bete Co 
      
We did it ourselves once too often . , . we're broke. 
  
         
        
AYS wWANTEO DBD PUT 4 ; 
THESE OWING FOUNTAIN | 
aceoem’rs / 
    
  
  
    
    
        
    
      
  
      
      
      
by McEvoy and Strieber 
  
  WE'RE THE “DE PESTERS* — WE WOULD LIke To — a 
MEET THE “YOO” /40O 5 WHAT | INVITE YOU TO 
—, fo) 
        
    
  
  
  
  
      
        The currency was stage money. | 
by Merrill Blosser ———# SPUR LINE   
  
        YES SIR. MR. CASEY .. WHEN 
[1 PuT My ATOMIC ENGINE IN 
t/ MOTIVE SHE'LL 
'\ BE THE FASTEST 
THING ON EARTH! GEE. WHAT A TREMENDOUS 
BRAIN... IT'S MEN LIKE HIM 
THAT RE GIVING US TOMORROW'S 
WORLD BEFORE WE'RE 
READY FOR         
        
           
                            
DONALD DUCK        
  
. * 
      
RAMPANT, BURGLAR 
DEFIES SAFES 
BROTHER’! 
  Pied 
      
         
                
  
  
        
  
          
  
  
      td. ‘ ra 
  
  
      by T. V. Hamlin 
by Jose Luis Salinas   
    
    
        
                 
      LED BY BLACK MACK, THE POSSE 
PAVBLES 
  BAR WTO THE BADLANDS   
(/ I DONT WONDER, THESE ROCKS 
CAN'T SHOW ANY PRINTS! 
     
  
  
  
    
    
      — 
bi. “She only makes you do th: 
, ngs evenings. Shé has me all daj:" 
¢ 
,     ‘ 
Fi bs WE MAY AS WELL GO BACK HOWE, BOYS 
LOOKING FOR THOSE VARVINTS IN THESE 
HILLS WOULD BE LIKE TRYING TO FINDA 
NEEDLE IN A HAYSTACK! 
     
I 60F 7 YOU SURE TOOK THE Law) apour MACK!     
   Uap Wr Wag Vcomgadien Te 
    AS THE POSSE OSPERSES:|/ VE. NOW ALL woreyv 
i$ MY 6O- 
CALLED SSTEe 
    
OUT OUR WAY 
  
  wm — 
| y 
\4 | i" FIRE DEPARTANE . 
Ee! ‘ I GOT A FNE THE =>AAIE 
WreTe A ° ON 
STREET 
BUSINE ss -- 
- +! WHEN WE WORK’     
    
  
SS Sas sa A) 
——~ rar,   
    me  
‘ 
  
  
    
  
  TWENTY ’ ‘ wat i A. ene — : = —_—- 
are : News in Brief ins Fe | iow they ear te intr |AFL Meeting ews inBrief Grains Feature | MARKETS | = . Waterford Police reported today | . 
Iron the breakin of a summer home at : . Produce 
Redie Europe brogdcasts OW - |38 Airport Rd., owned by John are U la Ing DETROIT PRODUCE | 
Totey Bae Oe Douglas. Nothing has been de- DUSROrE. Feb. 8 = Whiiesale prices 
behind the Curtain. and termined missing. | the bureau of markets: — | 
ight, Radio Free Europe broadcasts Make -or- Break Try ie Gace Pa isang A dr nee ieee Mag ge Oh ee td dive . Mazel Pa justice Robert C.. lower on t rd of Trade today ; tall Apencpces ’ 
Aang Hangarios, Baler Being Pressed Today | Baldwin Agee, vs Fg conrion Roy in a market distinguished by very ee be.” plas. oy te 
7 ans and Romanians. expose H '€llison, 25, of tnam, De- careful trading the of bu: No. 1, 3.25-3.75 bu; a , jorth- 
Commie lies, brutality sy or be for Union Merger | troit, to 15 days in the Oakland | professional pairs. pan | Steele PP ned. No.1. 398-378 bu: Sbples. | 
; taormee Tailed potriots aésner | MIAMI BEACH, Fla, ® — Top County Jail after Ellison pleaded| The resignation of Premier Mal- | “vegetables: Bests, topped. No. 1, 1.00-| 
pone Radio Free Europe is | C10 leaders today invaded the win. | Sullty to drunk driving and failed | enkov of Russia attracted a good 1.50 - Carvage, 5 ed bu: | 
weeade for Freedom Progra ee ede of AFL chiets /(° PAY & 3% fine and $10 costs. ‘deal of attention trom local traders ‘Spped. wa. 10 108-128 bu: erlery teat the millions of Americans who help | mere Bilis on, 36, of 112 Dut, in the absence of any idea of | Ne. 1, 100-150 dos. fennel. Be to | 
keep the truth aan — | sets sailing ved han ® | Palmer St., pleaded innocent to a| ei paige might be, had Li No. 1, L004 50 dn ‘eche Onions. 
Send your’ Dollars | their la union organizations. drunk driving charge yesterday No influence on market. | dry, No. 1, 1 Ib. ; parsley. | 
to Crusade for Freedom, | Leaders from both camps indi-| when he appeared before Pontiac! Prices were down around a cent root Non 1 aie don. Parsnip, Ro | 
c/o Your Local Postmaster. = cated privately that.if no merger | Judge “Cecil MeCatem and furn- at the start wes scored «Ii ie ce 138 “term. be: porstons, Wo. is | 
ad . ld be hammered out | a ing ‘trail | on 1% . bas. ._ No. | 
Published as a public service See i oe paps sai Feb. 16. Wheat near the end of the first Rea or a Brobart panes 
by The Pontiac Press in 
cooperation with The 
Advertising Council | come. 
ankier Sumane 9 Orchard Loke Ave. 
FE 2-4021 / and tomorrow with CIO President 
Walter Reuther as crucial and ad- 
over the outcome 
. + * 
However, the same issue that 
| weld the AFL's 10,000,000 and the 
CIO's 5,000,000 members into a 
the main roadblock. 
This was the CIO's fear that. 
as a smaller organization, its uni- 
ons would be swallowed and sub- 
jected to ‘raids’ on their mem- 
berships. The CIO stil looks for a 
specific assurance that its unions’ 
| integrity’ would be preserved un- 
der a merged setup, but it was a 
| question how far in that direction 
ithe AFL was willing to go. 
The AFL was ready to accept 
| CIO unions as a block in a new 
' AFL industrial union department. 
    no. | specialist 
in packing! 
gt ALAdED 
  ' now, after two years of continuous | 
effort, they might as well forget | 
|about the plan for some time to driving charge yesterday 
ded that he was not pessimistic 
‘has wrecked previous moves to| and defective tail lights, and paid 
single labor federation was still | he - 1% 
Pleading innocent to a drunk 92.774 corn Ee Rete uA 
before er March $1.53, oats unchanged Pontiac Judge Cecil McCallum, |1,' 1 jower, March 76%. rye un-, AFL President George Meany Thomas N. Jones, 24, of 116 State | ; 
said he regarded the talks today St., furnished a $100 bond, pending changed to 1 cent lower, March 
  
  No. 1, 130-150 bu. Tomatoes, hothouse, | 10-lb. basket. Turnip. 
DETROIT EGGS 
DETROIT. Feb. 7 \AP)—Eges. fob De- 
troit, cases included. federal-state grades 
  $1.21%, soybeans unchanged to 1. . Whites Grade A jumbo 46-51 weighted hi , | . 0 aver 48%. large 41's-44 wtd av 43, 
is trial Tuesday. cent lower, March $2.80, and lard medium 36-42 wid av. 41, grade B large ; 0-42 wtd av. 41' | 
Ralph ©. Johnson, 2%, of 57 Unchanged to 10 cents a hundred |“ prowas: Grade A Jumbo 45-49 wid. av. 
| Brush St., pleaded guilty to two pounds lower, March $12.60. | 48. large’ 00%-42, wid Sy. A, meee | . : | 39- wtd. av . grade rge : 
| traffic warrants, charging he was oun achmcaee GRAIN | woes © laces 32-35 wtd. av. 34%. 
| Sant 4 icer. ICAGO, Feb. 7 (AP) —Open: rain: cus j driving with no operators licer.se oe be _ ing 6) | Raarnak: condiy én tire: en iow quem | 
Moreh 220'. July . 1.28% | large _—, and — bee Bal- " ay. 2.26% Sept 1.29 ance erings firm supplies 
a $21 fine yesterday when he ap- | 5.) 213% 80 ‘| Short due partly to lighter volume of | 
peared before Municipal Judge Dee. ‘ 2.18% Merch . 2.81% | Feeeipts and improved demand. Checks 
‘orn— , 278% 8 y end clearing but not as aggres- 
Cecil McCallum. March . 283% July . ...... 2.76 * sive as the rest of the market. 
May 155% Sept 2.60% | - ~ 
, If your friend's in jail and needs July 1.57% Nov. . 2.53% CHICAGO BUTTER AND EGGS 
bail, Ph. PE 5-5201.C. A. Mitchell... O8" an Lare— go CHICAGO. Ped. 7 (AP). Butter irregu- Adv ware an “ May . 12 lar. receipts 1.206.371, Wholesale buying | 
+, May -. 73% Soy Ot prices uncha to ‘s cent lower. 93 luly ‘Tte March 12.10 7 | | . lhe as Score AA 97-5725: 92 A 57. 90 B 56, 
: . ea Y------ 188 reg Cc 56: cars 90 B 865: 88 C S65 | | vs nee 13 j Eggs firm; receipts 16.216: whole<ale | 
earing on | e a . | buying prices ', to 1 cent higher, U.8.{ 
| large whites 41; mixed 41; mediums | 40.5; U8. standards 39; dirties 36; | 
checks 36; current receipts 37 5. 
of Natural Gas Rates Auto Men Sef | LANSING #@—Hearings will be | 
held Feb. 16-18 on the Michigan 
  Consolidated Gas Co, request for a | Sales Record hea ; Mg 
rate increase, the State Public ‘55-165; fryers or broilers 28-305; old 
| Service Commission said today. 
  
General Motors 
Rights 
BUY OR SELL ORDERS EXECUTED 
C. J. Nephler Co. 
444 Community National Bank Bidg. -   The company has asked for a) January Buying Tops general rate boost to cover in-| : 
creased costs of wholesale gas and | 500,000 Mark for First 
rising costs of labor. No specific) Time in History 
DETROIT (UP)—The auto in-| } amount was requested in the ap- 
plication. 
| A decision on the rate increase | dustry set a new sales record for | 
is not expected for several weeks | January last month by topping the | 
after the completion of hearings, 500.000 mark for the first time in} 
cornmissioners said. |history, Wards Automotive Re- | 
Panhandle Eastern Pipeline Co.| ports said today. 
|and Michigan-Wisconsin Pipeline| The statistical agency estimated 
Co. have hiked the price of whole | new cars sales during January at sale gas to Michigan Consolidated, | 515,000, which combined with sales 
although final approval is still to! of 570,000 during December to 
be given by the Federal Power | push the two-month total well over | 
Commission. 1,000,000. j 1 
| 
; 
  
Forging, Socket Club           
  
The Happiest Homes 
Are Financed the Low-Cost 
“Capitol Way!” 
hoame.-ownership. 
Capitol Savings & Loan Co. 75 West Huron St. — FE 4-056! 
         
         
  
i a 
; 1 g 
z Hears NAF Director 
Vincent Lym, regional director! cars sold in January a year ago. | 
for the National Assn. of Foremen| tye strong January sales left | 
|for Michigan and surrounding | dealers throughout the industry | 
' states, was guest speaker at the with inventories well below the | 
| American Forging and Socket Co. | customary supply at this time of | 
| Management Club's monthly din-|the year, Ward's said. 
ner meeting Monday night. 
| Introduced by club president | cent less than December sales be- &   
Hawaii and South America. Roth 
var preted wy Dave Hits” Three Deny Holdup 
‘of Hazel Park Bar | A trial date will be set for three men with hooding them- Roth @ 
‘grup with 3-D pictures and told of iy. months, however. 
| 
  
Missionary From China 
‘to Tell Experiences 
| SOUTH LYON—Mrs, Irene For- sythe Hanson, evangelist in rural charged areas and translator of sdugs and selves with pillowcases and hold- 
j . 10 Mile choruses, will speak on her expe- ing up the Club Bar, 84 E 
|riences as a youth worker in Rd., Hazel Park, last Nov. 13, 
! China during the Japanese inva., making off with $5,000. 
sion, at a joint meeting of the) 
Women's Association and Men's) raigned yesterday in Oakland 
Council of the First Presbyterian County Circuit Court were Donald 
Parke, 22, of 2193 Oxford, Berxley; 
ed from the country. She is spend- 
  
     
    
        
        
   
    
     
  : 511 Community Nat'l 
Bank Building 
Phone FE 4-1568-9 
BAKER & HANSEN 
Donald EF. Hansen 
Res. FE 2-3513 
~ Accident Insurance 
Automobile Insurance 
Burglary Insurance 
Bonds—All Types Richard H. DeWitt 
Res. FE 5-3793 
Fire Insurance 
Liability Insurance 
Life Insurance 
Plate Glass Insurance 
  
“ONCE POLITICS ENTERS. THE ENTIRE EDIFICE 
OF AN ENTERPRISE BUILT UPON EXPERT SKILLS 
BECOMES UNSAFE.” —David Lilienthal 
        
{ George B. Hartrick 
Unit Meets Wednesday 
‘of the Sacred Heart Church Altar | while taking the money, mostly 
Society of Auburn Heights will hold | in checks, from a safe. 
their regular monthly meeting at OO 
8 p. m. Wednesday in the church . 
hall. Mrs. Dell and Mrs. Ferrand Woman Gets Ticket 
_will be co-hostesses. 
Meeting in Waterford for Traffic Mishap Watertord Township Police to- 
day reported that Myrtle S. Slo- 
cum, 52, of 147 S. Francis St., | 
day at the home of Mrs. Francis whose auto hit a school girl last | 
|Dunean, 4342 Edmore Dr. Mrs. | week, was issued a traffic ticket, 
'Fred Reffe, extension chairman, | charging she failed to stop for a   
WATERFORD TOWNSHIP—The 
Friendly ‘Neighbors Extension 
Group will meet all day Wednes- 
  | will direct a workshop on hat re- | school bus. | modeling. | Police said they later learned 
| dha witnesses that Mrs. Slocum 
ont: didn’t stop for the school bus | 
To Study Millinery ‘which had stopped at M-59 and 
LEONARD—The Two Towns Ex- | Airport Rd. last Friday. 
tension Club will meet at 8:30 p.m.| She was quoted at the time of | 
today at Lakeville Methodist the accident as saying she stopped | 
  Church for a lesson on millinery.   
    
       
            
        
        pleased to announce the association of 
be + or for assistance on any protection 
to him, no obligation. 
318 Riker Bldg. = 
/ ‘ +1661 ? a In order to provide the finest insurance service—we are 
Donald S. Knief 
With This Agency 
Don has had wide experience in the insurance business and will 
& 
Huttenlocher 
Howard Huttenlocher — Maz Kerns when her car struck Sheila Mae 
Miller, 13, of 6005 Highland Rd., | 
who was reported in good condition | 
|at Pontiac General Hospital. She tiie yeas -   
Pn TS 
Another Step Forward... || whaler }] | requires motorists to stop for. 
| school buses, but they may later | 
  
  | 
experiences on recent trips to 
John Beard, 24, of 1381 Muir, | stes¢y tee 1.60 lower: storkers and feed- 
Hazel Park, stood mute and Judge | prime 1.080-1.985 th steers 3225-3000: | © entered an | Modest sunolr bich choice to low erime + — 
| 21076 Garden Lane, Ferndale, was   
CHICAGO POULTRY 
CHICAGO, Feb. 7 (AP: — ‘USDA! — . 
  
  
  
ket firm to slightly stronger: Idaho Rus- 
sets $4.75-485;: Minnesote-North Dekote | 
Pentiacs washed and waxed $2 65-2 80: 
Wisconsin Lasodas $250, sew stock sup- 
piles light. demand moderate market 
steady; Florida round Reds $2 70 
Livestock   THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 8, 1955   
  
  (Late Merning Quotations) 
Admiral "4 on OF ee 
Air : 
see Rt Cont Bak. 388 » ‘on ... 32. 
Allied Strs & Cont Can ... 716 
Allis Chal 764 Cont Mot .. 144 
Ahm Ltd ... 7% Cont OW 7 
Alum Am 97 Copper Rng 63 
Am Ailrlin 23.4 Corn Pd . 7 
Am ae i Cruc ask : = 
Am Cyan Cuna 4 
Am Ges & El #4 Curtiss Wr .. 223 
Am Loco 225 Det Edis “3 
Am M & Pay 28 Dis C Seag ... 32.3 
Am Motors 115 Soug Aire 133 
Am Rad 24 =Dow Chem “a 
Am Seating .. 34 Du Pont 167.2 Am Smelt - 462 Eagle P su 
Am Stl Fd 31.4 Bast AirL ... 39.7 Am Te! & Tel 178.2 sagt Kod _ 5 
Tob ..... 062 Bi Auto L_... 383 Am Woolen 26% £l @ Mus In 45 
Am Zinc 215 Bmer 47 
Anac Cop 53.5 End John ... 30.6 Anac W & C 576 Brie RR ..... 221 
Armco St! . 16.4 Bx-Cell-O ..... 97.1 Armour & Co 183 pairp * 351 ’ Dry .. 8. ; 
Arak eg? S++ 555 Swectens -....-8.4 Atl Cst Line 37.4 proch Tra | 37 Atl Refin 3 Gen Bak . 11 
Atlas Pdr “oe Gen $13 
Avco Mig 67 Gen 163 
Bald Lima 43 Gen Mills. 702) 
Bait & Oh 37:4 qoe sectors. o0la| 
Beech Nut 29.4 Gen Ry 8ig a6 
Bendix Av 112 Gen Refrac . 281 Benguet tg 3 
Beth Btee!l 1142 Gen Tel . 383 | 
Boeing Air 16.7 a see! 
Bohn Alum 21.6 Gen tue. oe 
Bond 8trs 16.3 pe re . ae Borden «47 on “4 3 
sel Se eg Genarieh ow gt Brist M 29.7 Goodyear . 
Brun e 244 Gran Paige 25 Budd Co 18.4 Gt No Ry 38.7 Burroughs 26.3 Gt West 8 3.4 
Calum & H_ 124 pias — = 
w i 
cmon wy Ft mays at... tz) and Chief of Bureau of Medicine 
Cdn Pac ersh Choc .. and Surgery. 
Capital Air 3 Holland PF 18.7 | Pp 1 | 
qusrier Ge . o.8 Homestk . | 
Cater Trae . ; os8 Hook El pf . 103 Celanese \g3.1 Houd Her 14.1) 
Cert-teed . 263 MM Cent . 61 Ches & Qh .. 46.1 Indust Ray $3.6, e e 
rysier . 70.2 Inland St 72.4 
Cities Svc ...126.1 Inspir = 48.2 ins 1g Wal 
Climax Mo .. 642 Interisk Ir Le .. 44 Int (Harv 
Goce Cole, 147) Int Mick. @ | LAPEER—The God and Country és mt per i oe bth Int Silver @7 Award, a high honor in Scouting, 
Con Edis ... 465 was presented for the first time in 
  
STOCK AVERAGES 
NEW YORK. Ped 
  
exchange rates follow ‘Great Britain in 
dollars, other tm cents): 
Canadian doller in New York open 
market 3 116 per cent premium of 
103 06', U. & cents unchanged 
7 16. up 132 of a cent. Great Britain 
30 day futures 2.78 716, up 1,32 of & 
cent, Great Britain 60 day futures 2.78 
| 716 up 1/32 of a cent; Great Britain 
DETROMT LIVESTOCK 
DBTROIT. Fed 8 (AP)}—‘USDA! 
Hogs—Galadie 600 Market 
barrows end gilts 170-330 lbs 
1778: for sorted choice 1 and 2 around 
190-220 Ibs extreme top 1800 for 
choice 1's 200-220 Ibs most 230-260 Ibs. 
1600-1700: sows 400 Ibs and down 
14 50-15 00. 400-600 Ibs. 12 75-14 00 
Cattle—@alable 700 Market opening | 
rether slow about steady few early 
sales good and choice fed steers 19 00- j 
January sales were about 10 per | 3556 ‘Utitty and commercial steers and 
hetfers 13 60-1800 few high choice 
sroundg 1.000 tb fed heifers 22 50-23.60; 
other good to choice fed heifers 1656. 
| 21.80; few sales utility cows 11 00-12 08; 
| few higher yielding heavy offering 
| hieher: canners and cutters 8 60-11 60. 
| with heervy high vielding cutters up to, 
118@: wtility end ‘commercial bulls | 
13 90-1450. stockers and feeders neg- | 
ligibdle j 
Calves—Salable 200 Pew rarity sales 
about steady but market not fully es- 
tablished few good and choice vealers 
25 00-3300. odqg head hieher utility and 
commercial vealers 17 00-2400. cull and | 
uti'ty 13 08-17 60 
  Rheen—Galadie 1008 Very little done, 
| Indication sround steady 
rwrcesco ViveerocKn 
CHICAGO Pes 7- APY—/(UBDA) — 
Salebie heres 11690 fairly ective strong 
to 278 higher «n butchere ‘nstances up 
more on weights over 2°@ W« sows 75- | 
%@ hieher: meet chotce 1-990 I butch- 
ers 17.00-177S metniy 1758 and 17 7% 
on chernce 1 #n@ 2? eredee: one 
2786 "he 16 75-17 68° Bulk 940-790 Ths 15 86. 
1628 a few loads ur te 350 Ibs down 
to 18% most sows 484 Ihc and liehter 
14%S-78 25. Wk 488.4n@ Th« 12 00-14 90 
Ralable cattle 19900: salable calvet 
400° high choice and prime steers and | 
| Mrs. Hanson remained in China and George Brown, 24, of 71 High- hetfers ceares, firm: other gredes une | 
until all missionaries were exclud-| land, Highland Park. | hapdivy Galle aaay be 06 Sean: ueators 
* scarce about steady’ a few loads 
  } 
steers 9900-3290: bulk choice gredes 
innocent plea for him. nen omet gond to low chaice _ - a few neds bow uiility to 
They were accused of using shvt- | jou pnoq stecre 148A.10%8. mont enof 
AUBURN HEIGHTS — Members | guns to hold customers at bay end choice hetfere 1099.98.00: seme high | 
chotee hetfere 9# “A.27 96: enmmerrial to | 
low good 15 00-1890" mxat Uttlity to low |p 
commercial cows 11.00-199@: a few com- 
mercial cows un to 14060 bulk canners 
and cutters 9.00-1190° etility and com- 
meretal belle 14 90.16 Se; end 
chotee vealers 25 98-11 48: bull to com- 
merrial erades #90-2400: a few Ineds | 
good ta chotce feedine steers 91 66-22 50 
+ Balatic sheen 4000: slauchter lambs 
tenersliv steady: slaughter sheen steady 
to *@ hieher’ mort te artme | 
lamhe 19S Ibs Coen 71.90-9250° deck | 
moetiy chotce 117 Ya wecickine 2190: 3 
decks ereuné 199 -20 73: enll te low ! 
cord lamba 12 60-90.00: shorn lambs am- 
sold: cull to choice slauehter ewes 6 00- 
950: latter price new high since last 
spring. 
Ferndale Gun Offender 
On One-Year Probation 
In Oakland County Circuit Court 
yesterday Albert Wakefield, 29, of   
    
placed on one-year probation and 
assessed $100 court costs by Judge 
Wakefield pleaded guilty last Jan. 
26 to having an unlicensed revol- | 
ver in his possession Sept. 8, 1954. 
Put on Probation, Fined   
   
      
GENERAL problem. Feel free 
Bee eaaeny 
Agency |           Bonds — All Forms 
ANN ARBOR 
eee 222222 Sees 35S SSS SS55 545545555445 545 5455454554446 88656 
«RIGHTS 
Buy and Sell Orders Executed 
Watling, Lerchen & Co. Members New York Stock Exchenge end Other Principe! Exchenges 
716 Pontiac State Bonk Bldg. Pentiec, Michigen ° 
Seeapeesaceaasesansenanenssnecccccnncacess 
, 4 3 : 3 . “ , 13/32, unchanged; 
unchanged 
  
ueel 
(kroma) 19.%, 
(feane) (Pree) 23.32. 
Denmert (krone) 1456 unchanged 
Latin America: Argentina (Free) 7 34, Switser 
20% of a cent; 
H (Pree 137. ue-| 
  
New Officers 
fo Be Installed. Dinner Will 
Program for DeMolay | Club meets at 8 p.m. today at the 
Unit Here 
New officers for Pontiac Chap- 
| mre 1 ond 2 eretce one 4c | ter Order of DeMolay, elected tast- Dessert Luncheon Set . 
“Thursday will be installed in cere-. WATERFORD TOWNSHIP — 
monies at- 8 p.m. 
Roosevelt 
   
  strom, 
ior steward; 
James Wert, MITTLEDORF 
junior steward; Robert Joyner, 
       
  Ceeeeeccccucecsesesases 
\ . | motif of each mbath of the year, 
\ “ \. \ j 1—Compiled by the 
;| Phoenix, Ariz., claimed yesterday 
Precede | Wisley of Ann Arbor will give a 
Wednesday “at dessert luncheon at 1 p.m. Wednes- 
Tem- 
ple. A dinner will rence Giddings on Van Sycie drive. 
the in- 
  , Lapeer County to Wayne Smith, 
13-year-old son of Mr. and Mrs.   
. 
  
  Cari M. Smith, Sunday. Presenta- ; 
  Liv m teady to firm; recet Associated : 
| coous 1.006. Pridey 233 coops, $2,340 Tos : | 18 ots sts tion was made by the Rev. Canon Indust Rails Ut fob paying prices unc ed to 2 cents : 2174 1201 694 1572 Charles D. Braidwood 
py 2 a SS bt bens | Week ‘ase 2162 1213 685 1566 ° 
Month aso - 9 126 683 15483 Wayne, a Star Scout in Troop 
roosters 12-12.5; caponettes 30-32. | Year ago 1818 33 s13 148 | 136, started ui nts for the 
{DETROIT POULTRY ‘ ‘ooo 7 10.8 m8 a8 4 198.0 award in December of 1953. 
: ‘ \—Prices f 181 . 
pit peaa bee, Wubi ler ee, b week | eee o2 38 865 995 The youth, an eighth grade stu- 
go Bo neo, BAL = eis | | dent and vice president of his 
eav hens t ne - ° ' i‘ 
ecaponettes (4 Ibs.) 30. (5-7 Ibs) 35. (Hornblower & Weeks) class; is also den chief of Den 5, 
| geese 24. | Figures after decimal points are aus Pack 125. His scoutmaster is John 
Market steady on hens and caponettes High Low Noon Myers 
and berelv steady on {rvers. Receipts and | Balwin Rubber*....... 7 18 ~ 
demand light with — pp ge end ee ‘4 c: . 
Gergrades @ 4 eek end carry- | Kingston Proeductse* od 
fryers noted asco . 3 31 
mare icatitrene ta $1 $63,000 Lawsuit CHICAGO POTATOES Mig.*...-. +0008 ¢ ° wea Gerew.......... 33 13 13 CHICAGO. Fed. 7 (AP:—iuUsDa, — | 8 QEMICAGO. Fee 7 caPi—iUsDAy — WEED* Shia and ‘sate ir Filed Against 
stock 18. on track old stock 463: new ee 
stock 18: tots! U 8S shipments Pride ° | 
Goo Gataréay 006; Sunday fi; oid stock Foreign Exchange | ord Co. Official 
supplies moderate. demand good: mar-| wew YORK. Ped. § ‘AP; — Foreigen| DETROIT W—A $63,000 damage 
| suit has been filed in U. S. District 
| Court against John S. Bugas, Ford 
Motor Co. vice president, by a 
of the Capitol Foundry Co. of 
| The firm was sold in February 
| 1952 for $1,520,000. 
Brazil Talk Scheduled 
| SOUTH LYON — Mrs. Sidney 
| talk on Brazil when the Tuesday 
{home o fMrs. Howard Parr on 
East Liberty street.   
MOMS Unit 36 will meet for a 
day at the home of Mrs. Law- 
  
  
County Deaths Teddy R. Cummings ITI 
WATERFORD TOWN SHI P—   
tery. The body will lie in state 
at the William R. Potere Funeral 
noon Wednesday. The Ki TERE i! 
i ; { 
| | | i 
  Europe. Great Britain ‘pound’ $278 former president of a defunct Ari-| 
Edward A. Spring, one-time head | Notice Relative to Opening ’ 
ins of Law, Revision 
(3083) tion 1. Om the day of ean 
election polls shall be at 
e’clock in the foreneon, and be 
continued open until 8 o'clock in the 
afternoon and no longer. ae 
fied elector present and in line the 
polls at the hour — for 
closing thereof shall allowed to vote 
The polis of said election will be open 
oo ea end will remain open 
oe m. P. of — Gay 
."~ nship Cler . wi «. 
< Peb. 6, 15, ° 
Death Notices RRAARRRw Rann nr 
BA . FEBRUARY 7, 1955, 
Raymond O., 92 Murphy St. age 
65; beloved husband of Mrs. Ze)- 
E. Batchelor: dear father of ma E. ; 
Mrs. William Dyer, Mrs. Williem 
Mayne, Arthur and Norman L, 
: other of Mrs. 
bach officiating. Interment in . Perk Mr. 
phy St. from Tuesday morning 
until Wednesday noon, when he 
be brought back to the 
ment—in S ‘ 
orado os service here, the 
baby will be shipped to the How- 
Mortuary, nver, Colorado 
for interment. Puneral arrange- 
ments by the C. J. Godhardt 
_ Funere) Home _ 
DEERE. FEBRUARY 6. 1955. MRS. 
Clara May, 241 N. Andersson &t, 
& 86. beloved 
service will be held Wed. Ped. 8 
at Allen's Funers! 
Orion with Rev 
Walter C Ballagh officiating In- 
terment in Evergreen ae 
Lake Orion. Mrs. Deere will 
in state at the Allens Funeral 
Home = _ ENSW SR. FEBRUARY 1, ORTH. 2 
1965. George, 115 Palmer 8. sy 
16; beloved father of Ralph B&. 
Ensworth, Miss Pern L. Ensworth, 
Robert J. and George Ensworth: Gear brother of Mrs. Mamie Tits- 
H. Marbach _offict- 
Interment itm Osk Hill 
Ens 
teld Tep. age 33. beloved 
husband of Mrs Eutha M Giea- 
son. deer father of Judy K., 
Vieteria Lynn and Rickie Lee 
Gleason dear brother of Mrs 
Rose. Funeral service 
will be held Wednesday Feb 8 
m et the Richardson - 
Clayten Oliver 
offictating Interment im Com- 
merce Cemetery Service by the 
Royai Order of Moose this eve- 
ping st &© p m. at the Richard- 
sen-Bird Funeral Home 
HANCOCK, FEBRUARY 6, 1955. MI. 
chael, 967 Cameron &t.. & %; 
beloved son of Joseph ward 
and Ardale Hancock, Geer broth- 
er of Devid. Denn Henceock, 
Jimmy Gene and Scott 
Punerel service will be held 
Thursday. Ped. 
home. 
HANCOCK PREBRUARY 6 1968, 
Joseph, 967 Cameron St. age 11; 
belived som of Joseph Edward 
and Ardale Hancock, dear broth- 
er of David. Dann Hancock, 
t. Jimmy, Gene and 
service will be held 
Thursday, Ped 10 at 10 a m. 
Michael's Church. Inter- 
m M OF Cemetery. 
ry will be 
m Wednesday evening 
ce-Omith Puneral Home. 
the at the 
Joseph will Ke in state at 
Brece-Gmith Funeral Home 
LANE. FEBRUARY 6 1955. MRS. 
Plorence Ada, 871 nee St. age 
@. beloved wife of ph F. Lane; 
a. officiatin, Interment in 
Chapel Sars. Lane is at 
the Donelson-Johns Fupnereal 
_Mome as 
MARQUART. PEBROARY 5 1986, Lena Caroline, 19182 Blacks 
Detroit, Mich. e 75; be 
mother 
Ht ; g ax HF 
bars ne i 
tk 
    
  
  
  
  
Donelson-Johns 
   
  
      
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