Ars | mt \"E ’ THE PONTIAC PRESS: tn parts 3 | re - CAAKE \ Details page two :
\ Whee 112th\ YEAR kkkeke PONTIAC, MICHIGAN. WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 27, 1954—42 PAGE SDVTEAMATIONAL wows SER sERvice . . 7¢
Panay Ready for Public Showing
PRESENTING THE 1955 PONTIAC STAR CHIEF CUSTOM CATALINA
Parmenter j |
Awaits Court Appearanc Appearing worried and dejected, Eugene A. Par-| ‘of the House of Representatives |
menter, 54, waited in his Oakland County Jail cell | “il! oe eyes! mel ee Soe
today to be —— on a larceny by conversion | “
charge.
The former stockbroker
here is accused of misappropriating $175,000 in com-
pany funds over a year ago. He was arrested in Okla-
homa City Monday and returned here last night by
Pontiac Police Chief Herbert W. Straley. n Jail Here,
e
for the W. H. Protiva Co.
=
GOP Promises
~ More Work Aid Secretary Mitchell |
Pledges ‘Any Action
Necessary’ in Talk
WASHINGTON — Secretary |
of Labor Mitchell has pledged
“any government action neces-
sary” to boost employment and
living standards, carrying out
the “prosperity without war”
theme to which the Republicans |
have pitched their campaign to
win control of the next Congress.
Following President Eisenhow-
er’s lead, Mitchell told a nation-
wide television and radio
audience last night that 1954 has
been “the most prosperous
peacetime ‘year in our history.”
He lashed out at “politicians
trying to get your vote by dis-
torting facts and trying to
scare you.” He said that while
there was some ‘prosperity dur-
ing the 20 years of Democratic
administrations, “it was built
on the suffering and tragedy
of two wars.”
The Eisenhower administration |
has brought about peace and in-
creasingly prosperous times and
is working for further economic
improvement, he said.
“We are looking forward to
more jobs, more productien, and |
a higher standard of living for |
all Americans,” he said.
“We Republicans are commit-
ted and determined to keep the
people of the United States pros- |
perous and to take any govern-
ment action necessary to —
employment and have an ever-
higher standard of living for all
the people of the United States.
An Elsenhower economic
speech Monday night and
Mitchell's followup appeared |
designed as a one-two counter-
punch: against frequent Demo-
‘ eratic campaign claims that
the Republican administration
(Continued on Page 2, Col. 8)
Clearing, Cooler-
Weather Outlook Clearing an@ much cooler
weather tonight is the forecast for |
the Pontiac area. The U.|
Weather Bureau says there will |
be fair skies tomorrow with little |
change in temperature.
Low tonight is*expected to be; tests and no one under 17 years
34-38, high Thursday 52-56
Tuesday's low was 51, high 62.
Today in downtown Pontiac the
thermometer registered 55 at 6
a.m., fell to 41 degrees at 11
\ y o'clock and stood at 43 at 1 p.m. | Interviewed in his cell
this morning, the bespec-
tacled suspect whose gray-
ing hair was cropped short,
declined to make further
4
Control of Both “Houses at Stake
By LYLE C. WILSON |
WASHINGTON (UP)—Thirty-
seven senators and 432 members
eek (on Nov. 2) to complete
the membership of the 84th Con-
gress.
Sen. Margaret Chase Smith, |
Republican, and three Republi-|
can House members were elected
in Maine last September. Maine |
also elected a Democratic gov- |
/ernor, Edmund S. Muskie.
Republicans have acknowl- |
edged a Democratic trend in
some areas and various polls re- |
flect such a condition. The poll |
concensus seems to be that the |
Democrats may win control of
| Statements until he has
| obtained a legal counsel.
Asked about the suicide note |
he sent his wife, Clara, after he
left Pontiac, Parmenter said:
“IT really intended to drown
myself in the lake but I guess
I'm a coward.”
| Parmenter, object of a state- |
| Wide manhunt after he disap-
| Prered ¢ during an audit of his
| Pictures, Page 2 oo
books, said earlier that be ‘flew |
| his private plane from Pontiac
Municipal Airport to his cottage
on Crystal Lake near Frankfort.
The suicide note saying “my
body will be found in the lake”’
was sent from there, he said.
Denying reports that the sum
he took was $175,000, the suspect |
‘said ‘‘you don’t know the half of |
it’ when asked about alleged |
“high living’’ on the stolen funds. |
Straley and Capt. Clark M. |
Wheaton, chief of detectives, said |
Parmenter appeared more in- |
terested in the looks of the new
Pontjac car than anything else |
| during the motor trip from Wil-
| low Run last night.
‘The suspect, whose $30,000 |
Birmingham home and other as-
| (Continued on Page 2, Col. 8) |
both the House and Senate.
The expiring 83rd Congress was
elected with President Eisen-
hower who ran far ahead of his
Congressional ticket. At the)
opening of the 83rd Congress in
January, 1953, Republicans had
merely courtesy control in the
Senate and a small actual mar-
gin in the House. The division
was:
Senate: Republicans 4,
Democrats 47, Independent 1.
House: Republicans 221,
Democrats 212, Independent 1,
vacant 1.
The division in
Congress as it ends:
Senate: Republicans 4,
Democrats 46, Independent 1.
House: Republicans 218,
Democrats 212, Independent 1,
vacant 4.
Independent Senator Wayne
| Mores of Oregon did not vote
MSC Takes on Oxford
EAST LANSING (UP) — Stu-
dents from Michigan State Col-
lege and Oxford University,
England, will debate the United
States Far East policy Thursday
on the MSC campus, it was an-
| nounced today. the 83rd
'Examination Urged
Wants Tigh
for Hunting
Pontiac Police Capt. Clark M. Wheaton today de-
plored the state’s regulation of hunters who “engage
| sin the sport with a deadly weapon without first pass-
| ing a requiréd examination
Pointing to latest reports
| fatalities, Wheaton said, “Until hgnters are required
by state law to undergo a complete examination, we’te
going to continue having many asin each year.” ter Control
Licenses
as for driver’s license.”
df hupting accidents and
As it is, he‘ explained,+
hunters obtain licensés, by
merely paying a fee over
the counter and “that’s
the only requirement.”
He blamed the -state for the |
numerous deaths to hunter's each
year, “‘because it has failed to
draw up laws governing the sport.
“Hundreds of hunters die each
year because they don’t know the
proper. handling. of their guns.
They , should be, made to take
of age should be allowed to hunt.
There have beeri too many kids
killed and hurt with guns they
shouldn't be allowed ‘to handle,”’
he added. S
Wheaton also noted that the ‘dentally killing another banter, - a
sintife Dicyese cunpiniien ak
a .bunter’s license’ fer sort-
is “absolutely, ridiculous.”
“Can you imagine some say-
ing, ‘I shot him because I
thought he was a deer,’ when
you're told net to shoot until
you.can see the deer’s horns.”
Angeréd over recent reports of
fatalities, he ‘added: ‘‘It's noth-
‘ing but silly. The state should
revoke such person’s license def-
initely.””
The state conservation depart-
ment only should be empowered
to issue licenses, and then only
after a strict test has been given
an applicant, he concludes, 5
against Republican organization
of ‘the Senate in January, 1953,
but he has announced that he
will vote next January with the
Democrats on organization of the
Senate of the 84th Congress.
Democrats, therefore, need pick
up only two Senate seats to
obtain an organizational ma-
jority of 49. They need six more
House seats for an organizational
majority in the 84th Congress.
By organization is meant the
election of the speaker in the
| House and the president pro
‘tempore in the Senate and all
committee chairmen. The or-
ganizing party also determines
the number of majority and mi-
nority members of all commit-
tees. The party holding the speak-
ership and the committee chair-
manships of Congress possesses
tremendous powers.
Those officials can make or
break a legislative program
whether it be offered by a presi-
dent of their own ical faith
or an opposition
Regardicss of the outcome of
next week's election, Vice
Président Richard M. Nixon
will continue to be the pre-
siding officer of the Senate.
Of the 37 Senate seats up Nov.
five Democratic candidates in
the south have no Republican
opposition.
' 37 Senators, 432 Congressmen to Be Named Nov. 2 One of the five, Edgar A.
Brown, is opposed in South Car-
Senate seats, the Democrats
Early Reports Show Over $300,000
Collected So Far for United Fund Early figures announced today
at the Pontiac Area United Fund
report luncheon indicate over
$300,000 has been contributed to
ward the $525,823 goal with seven
days remaining in the drive.
Hazen Atkins, industrial di-
vision chairman, gave $295,080
as the total se far for 11 in-
dustries in the Penties ‘Mane-
GM Profits Up
as Taxes Drop 9-Months Earnings
$585 Million, With
Lower Volume
NEW YORK (AP)—Lower tax
rates enabled General Motors |
Corp. to boost its profits in the
| first nine. months this year —
despite a 9 per cent drop in the |
company's sales.
Net earnings for the period |
climbed to 585 million dollars, the
big auto maker reported yester-
day. ~
This was equal to $6.58 a
share. It compared With a net
of 453 million, oF $5.08 a share,
in the first nine months last
year. ;
For the nine months this year
the company sold $7,219,000,000
in goods. Last year sales were
$7,931,000,000. That was GM's
record year. ;
Taxes—both ‘and do-
mestic—fell from ~ year’s
$1,006,000,000 to $614,000,000,
The stockholders report, issued
by WaHOW H. Curtice, president,
and«Alfred P. Sloafi Jr., board
chairman. said sales were at an
“impressive level” in the third
quarter of this year despite cur- facturers’ Assn. including the
General Motors’ plants and the
General Motors Corp. gift of
$100,008.
Returns from the Commercial
and Geographical Divisions were
the over 200 campaign workers
gathered in the Elks Temple.
Robert 8. Nelson, chairman for
|GOP Speaker
Hit on Head
by Ike Portrait PITTSBURGH (AP)—Afty. H.
D. Hitsh told a Republican rally
here last night that the GOP
isn't dead — “but merely hiber-
nating.”
At that precise moment a big
picture of President Eisenhower
fell from a wall and hit him on
the head.
| As the crowd roared, Hirsh | paused a moment, touched his
head and declared:
“I don't know who I'd rather
be hit on the head by than Presi-
| dent Eisenhower.”
Living Cost Index
| ‘
Shows Slight Drop WASHINGTON (INS)—The fed-
eral bureau of labor statistits
says the Detroit area consumer
price index hit its lowest level
in 17 months in September. Na-
tailment of passenger car opera-
tions due to the model change-
over.
Introduction of 1955 models this
fall will boost passenger car sales
for. the year close to lest year's
total, the report said.
GM's. civilian’ products sales
psec Nal sage its military
slated for announcement later to. Industrial Caterers
have exceeded their quota with
donations of $1,287.
Company and employe gifts
from the Steel Deor Corp. and
Superior Steel Industries have
also gone ever the top, said
Nelson, Steel Door contributing
$500 and Superior, $292.
Expenses for the luncheon
yi atalla eia emma
Parties Dispute
Ike's Influence Last-Minute Campaign
Cheers GOP, but Dems
Point to Trend
WASHINGTON (AP) — Presi-
dent Eisenhower was credited to- |
day with making some headway
for Republican candidates but
there was disagreement as to
whether his late burst of cam-
paigning will succeed in electing
a GOP Congress next Tuesday.
Democratic and Republican ob-
servers agreed generally that the
President's appearances — which
may be expanded on a flying trip
late this week—have helped to
stimulate interest in the congres-
V-8 Engine, Racy Lines,
Lower Bodies Featured Many Engineering Firsts
Incorporated in Cars
Completely Redesigned
By ROBERT B. TARR
Pontiac Press Managing Editor
Pontiac Motor Division today reveals engineering
and styling details of the all-new, more powerful cars
with which it expects to dominate the medium price
market in the coming year—the 1955 Star Chief and
the Chieftains.
Powered by a new overhead valve V-8 engine, the
cars have more engineering changes than any model
since Pontiac was first produced in 1926. Stylewise
the new bodies with low, streamlined silhouettes incor-
porate features of Pontiac’s “dream cars,” the Bonne-
ville Special and the Parisienne.
Across the nation the public will see the new cars
on display in dealer showrooms Friday and Saturday.
Here, a prevue of the cars will be held af the Pontiac
Retail Store, Mill St. at Mt. Clemens, Thursday evening
from 7 to 9, preceding the official public introduction
Friday and Saturday.
Outstanding feature of the new line is the 180-
horsepower V-8 engine, which incorporates many de-
-~
sign innovations that engineers say have produced
a power plant of striking performance and economy.
Tests indicate, Pontiac engineers say, the Strato-
Streak V-8 will be the hase economical V-8 on the
market.
With announcement |
the new models Robert M. | ari | yn S
Critchfield, general man- |
ager of Pontiac Motor and
a GM vice president said: | to ourt ay
“Our designers have cre-
ated ari exciting combina-| Star Divorcing Joe,
pragma safety and. Hopes to Marry Again
| “Improved frames and suspen. | Someday
|sion provide unbelievable com-| HOLLYWOOD (UP) — Marilyn
‘fort and driving ease. The new | Eee, is in court to divorce Joe
JiMaggio today, but she revealed | Strato-Streak V-8 engine will set | he’s a sour on anethel wae
new = of performance | riage ‘because “I still want a
and economy.” baby.’
In the 1955 Pontiac line are: Hollywood’s Grade-A glamour
The Star Chief series, 210 | gird won't say whether she'll tell
inches long on a 124 inch j all in court as to why her cele-
wheelbase ;
And the Chieftain 870 and the
Cileftain 860; each 263 inches
long on a 122 inck wheelbase.
In all, 12 body styles are of-
fered this year by Pontiac.
The Custom Star Chief model |
is available in four-door sedan
and Catalina; the Deluxe Star
Chief in. four-door sedan and con-
vertible.
include the Catalina Coupe, two
and four-door sedans, and four-
door station wagons; the Chief-
(Continued on Page 2, Col. 3)
In Today’s Press
The Chieftain 870 body styles | | brated marriage with the sports
figure broke up, or if she'll just
go into the ~‘he didn't like my
spaghetti cooking’ routine.
But in her first interview
since she sent the baseball hero
| to the showers, Marilyn said whe
hopes some day to remarry.
“Of course, I'm not thinking
about anything like that now,”
she said with a weary laugh.
“But I hope to marry again.
I stil! want to have a baby.
“I'm not dating anybody and
have no plans to. I've kept away
from everybody. After this pic-
ture is finished I just..want to
take a rest. Maybe out of ‘town.”
Marilyn has a day off from the
“Seven Year Itch"’ set at 20th
Century-Fox Studio to go to
Santa Monica Court .with at-
torney Jerry Giesler to explain
to the judge why she wants a
divorce. Giesler said her testi-
mony would be “nothing excep-
tional.”
ee we Our 35 Yrs. Experience te
D Cleaners, 143 W.
Pes-siis. Pick up & deliver, —
ee ide’ Verdict
in School Bleacher Case-. A $45.000 damage \erdict against
the Birmingham School District
was s@t aside vesterday by Oak
lam County Circuit Court Judge
H. Russel Holland
A jury had awarded the sun
last June 19 to Dr. Maurice Rich
ards of Royal Oak for injuries
received when bleachers collapsed
at a Birmingham High = School
footbal] game in 1948
After suffering leg injures
accident, the doctor started a
$200,000 damage suit against the
Atlas Bleacher Co. of Detroyt ahd
the schoo! district The action
against the bleachér firm was, dis
missed during tral proceedings
Richard's only recourse: now is
an appeal to the Michigar Supreme
Court
dudge Holland yestersday ruled
that the school district did have
geverament immunity from suit
in the accident. His opinion was
ea a motion by the school dis-
trict asking a ruling of ‘‘no
cause for action notwith -tanding
the verdict of the jury.”
“This court is compelled’ said
Holland, ‘‘under the law and facts
here invelved, to conclude that this
accident occurred while: the de-
fendant school district was per- |
forming a basic, authorized and |
accepted governmental function, |
and hence is immune from , .
liability.”’
During the trial
told jurors that if the bleachers
on which Dr. Richards was sitting
collapsed from failure of adjoin
ing- bleachers the doctor had not
proved his case
The jurors said Judge Holland
the stand col
‘ lapsed from shifting of adjoining
bleachers, but still granted dam
ages to the doctor
In his ruling, the judge said
there was no proof of negligence
in the (Construction, erection or
maintenance of the adjoining
bleachers and a finding based on
their failure could not be based
on fact.
In this instance, he stated, in
his opinion the rule in Michigan
is that a “school district while
engaged in a governmental func-
tion is not liable in damages for
the negligence of its agents. em-
ployes and officers.”
Althouth profit might be made
from sale of tickets to an athletic
contest, governmental immunity is
hot removed, he ruled
“The acquisition of profit is
purely incidental,”” Judge Holland
said and compared admission fees
to license fees imposed to defray
other governmental expense
“An essential part of . . .inter-
school rivairy is the presence of
spectators, for these . . . pro-
vide the attractiveness of these
activities more than any other
individual factors.”
Physical education ‘is required}
wy law. Judge Holland said. ‘and
it can hardly be considered not
to be a governmental function in
its basic character
School athletic events must be
controlled, the judge asserted, and
“admission fees control, to a de-
gree, the extent of spectator par
ticipation.”
Ticket sales
means of defraying expenses nec
essary to carry out the program
set up by law
“Physical education would be in
effectual if not impossible without
the inclusion of ‘spectator sports."'
a * o
BIRMINGHAM Although the
accident toll increased in Septem-
ber over August of this vear, there
Was an improvement Over the rec }
ord of September, 1953 Police
Chief Ralph W. Moxley stated in
his monthly accident report
He listed, accidents as the
total, with 7 personal injury acci-
dents and &persons injured Prop-
erty damage estimated at
$7,505 Was
Moxley said right of way viela-
tions again led the list of viola-
tions causing traffic accidents,
with 9 shown,
* . .
At the Pirst Presbsterian
Church, the Sarah Hunter Guild
has planned a potluck supper for
tomorrow and will meet in the
Youth Room at 7 pm
That same night at & the Jenme
Keyes guild will,n
en's lounge to hear eet in the son
a talk by Mrs
R_ (Marjorie Dooley)
of 9&5 Rockaway-Rd.
at 3 pom
Chapel of the William R
Co
he said, provide a Cemetery the Women's of which she
is president Assn
° 7 *
Jacques .(dack) Van't Groene
wout, “whese last volunteer = as-
signment with the Boy Scouts
of America Was as Scoutmaster
of Troops 4 and 9 in Southfield
Township, has joined the Detroit
Area Council staff, it- an
pounced yesterday by Scout bv was Will Go on Display Rated by Citizens League ws. vernon Babb” A ‘Yontinued From Page One)
fain 860° Comes two and four
door sedans and two and four-door
slation wagons
The Cars are
most three inche
Other new
cars new
features of fhe 955
include - =
1.—Wide range of modern col
ors and Vogue two-toning:
2L—More exquisite
styling;
3.—Panoramic interior
windshield with
ecutive Amos Shields. nereased glass area; Fue fordier Holland Wicld Was —Functional jewel-like instru
1 eorrenn) Grane Nires ei Giool panel;
SW Lahser Rd Southheld Towr 5.—t2-volt electrical system;
ship with his wife and four chil 6.—Newly designed: frame; Hen, Harn in Calitoenia of Datel 7.—New vertical king-pin front parents Van‘t. Groenewout was suspension;
tuken to the Far East as a smatl 8.—Larger brakes.
boy Where he started his scouting In the new bodies the front end
activiies in Singapore and con- accentuated by the massive dual tinued it in Holland, advancing in impact bars and prille bar has the
ii] available ranks modern appearance of a wt plane
* * * air scoop. The headlamps display
Supper will be served to families a bold new treatment with futur
of the First Baptist Church at 7 istic air ereseents above them tonight, prior to the 7:@ Bible In- Twin silver streaks, swept back stitute study “Christian Certainty from the radiator yrille to. the
of Victory” will be the theme used cow! wide. air intake
iy both the adult and children’s | The sijver streak motif con classes by the Rev. Emil Kont tinuert wit) chrome treaks that
and the Rev. Robert Wilkie. run along the crown of each rear Tonight's meeting will conclude fender fin and terminate at the | he series. massive tail lamps. At the rear * * «
Golf League members within
the Newcomers Club will close
the season with a tuncheon at
Red Run Golf Club tomorrow,
Mrs. George Bender and Mrs.
Russell Zollar, co chairmen,
have announced,
Prizes will also be awarded to
tournament and special event
winners. Committee workers are
Mrs. Burke Bartlett, Mrs. Thomas
Murphy and Mrs. J. E. Prestien
- > 7
Rebekahs will meet at the Com
munity House at & tonight for
further discussion on the rummage
sale the group will hold on Nov. 5
* . *
Two Dec. MM public hearings
were scheduled by Planning Board
members last night. At that time
the board will discuss development
plans with the three owners of
property on the west side of Wood
ward avenue between Colonial
Court and Bloomfield Court
The first 300 feet of property
fronting on Woodward are zoned
for terraces Owners Raymond
H. Smith, John K. Ormond, and
Robert L
the zoning be extended to include
the rear -portion of their land.
which is new zoned single
Meanwhile, Robert Boatman,
planning director, Marry Denyes,
and William Burgum, beard
members, will survey’ the area
from an architectural and en-
| kineering view point, to see what
is needed to retain flood control
there
A branch of the Rouge River ex
tends through the property
. . >
Mrs. Paw) KR. Picken,
Memorial service for Mrs. Paul
Pickens, 51
will be held
tomorrow at the Bell
Hamulton
burial in Mt) = Morish
Kansas City, Mo
Daughter of the late C B. Don
ald Dooley, who was an executive
of the Colgate- Palmolive Peet Co
in Kansas City, Mrs. Pickens died with
at her residence yesterday
A former member of the Ste
phens College faculty Mrs
Pickens was also an outstanding
journalist and an = accomplished
musician
Besides her husband, she is su
Vived-by one son, Paul D. of De
troit, a daughter, Mrs Joan Hart
wick of Detroit, three sisters and
two grandsons
Robert F. Watt on “The Work of
PONTIAC AND VICINITY —4 learing
and mech ceoter tenight lew %4-%8
Thursday fair and little change in
temperature Migh 5°. Nerthwesterty
winds 17-15 miles tenight becoming
northwest te west Thursday
Teday in Pontiac
we temperature precedir 8
46
Sun ee inesda
Sun rise Thursca 0 a
Moon «+ € * .
Moon ris®* T ay at ® a
Downtown Temperature
fam a
7 6. 0
ha 4 .
Gar 43
10 &. m 42
Tuesday in Pontiar
A recorded down er
Highe tems ‘
Lowest ter
Mean tempera
Weather —Cioudy Rainfal
One Year Age tr Pontiac
Highest temperature
Lewest temperature rT)
Mean temperature
Weather —Rainy
Highest , and Senet iScasperateren This
Date in ® Vears
\77 im 1927 25 in 1936
Tecsday's Temperatere Char. 0
. Baltimore 63 54 Marquette 42 36
Rismarck 45 28 Memphis 79 65
Brownerilie 86 70 Minneapolis 4 31
bn al 67 65 New York 65 58
54 36 Omaha 58 37
Chicago #2 47 Otmahe ‘58 37
Cincinnat: 63 & Phoenix 7 6
Denver 40 22 Pittsburgh 62 7
6 6 is 60 $1
a 32 28 8. Francisco 69 44
3 35 Beattie 56. 34
85 Tampe as 61)
60 45 Washington 6) 51
family | | bined with the are dual bumper impact bars com-
;circle emblem on the trunk lid.
Perry are asking that bility Pontiac colors for 1955 show
the influence of the public's
taste for lighter and brighter
tones. ‘Vogue’ two-toning brings
the color of the top of the car
down to the middle of the car
body
Body interiors are color-keyed to
the new exterior paints. The in-
strument) panel mounts aircraft
type instruments at 90 degrees to
the driver's vision with control
knobs recessed “for added safety
Pontiac's exclusive safet yar
speedometer indicate: speed with
a continuous red curve
The glove compartment, cen
trally located within easy reach of
both driver and front seat pas
sengers has heen designed with
additional function
ompartment
with
new an
thee
tray When open
door acts as a
for cups
The Strato-Streak V-8 en
gine represents
fo the
of developing an
durability and
and with the power
re sponse reCEeSSES
Pontiac's
automotive answer
goal
with industry's
engine
low-cost) dependa
and quick
that modern drivers de
mand
The Strato-Streak has a dis
placement of 287 cubic inches. Its
displacement and high compres
sion ratio of & to give it high
power at traffic
instant res output
speeds where
needed
The 1955 Pontiac incorporates
more engineering improvements
than any new model since the
ear was first introduced in 19°6
accerding to G A. Delaney.
chief engineer. He reports 109
new features in the new cars.
The
and especially
ponse is
1%o Pontiacs are the new
est mostl, thoroughly en
gineered cars we have ever
but) they
untried) Before
they were put into production
Veterans of pro
duced Delaney said
are bV no means
they
+000, 000
and Jaboratory tests
Strato-Streak V-8
introduce
the
performance and economy
will delight drivers. This en
has been secretly test: driven
the country under all
tvpes of weather and road condi
several years were over
miles of road
“In the
engine we
first
perior
that
gine
throughout new
several “Pon
tia giving engine su
fhons for
buyers
ball
‘Pon
helps economy minded
Will be
pivot car
interested in the new
rocker arm. a
which prot only valve
tiac first’ finest and safest series of bodies |
graceful wing4ind- | *
4
THF. PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 27, 1954
1955 Pontiac Models Candidates’ Qualifications, Pontiac Deaths ims
The Citizens
League
on qualifications of 28 Candidates Oakland
reported ( ‘ounty
has ifs opifien
to be- voted on by county residents
in the Nov. 2 election
Candjdates are rated the
league's committee said regard,
less of whether they belong to
either the Republican or Demo-
cratic party, being judged solely
on their qualifications for office.”
The ratings with party afliliations
in parenthesis, follow
For U.S, Representative from
the 18th Distri¢t, Paul Sutton (D)
and Gieorge A. Dondero (R) are
termed equally qualified.
Fred Elias (D) and William §
Broomfield (R) are also rated
ecual for state senator from the
12th District
State representative pairings find |
Fred G. Beardsley (R) and Don. |
ald’ Ek. Adams (Dt equal in. the
First District: Ernest Huthwaite
(R») regeives the league's nod over
Leslie H. Hudson (D) in District
2 (Pontiac).
Richard CC. VanDusen (R) is
quiet valve operation but removes
the need for manual valve adjust-
ment
“The new body, prédeaged, for us
by the Fisher Body Division, is the
we have ever produced.”
“The 1955 Pontiacs were in |
effect designed by the American
public,”’ H. E. Crawford, general
sales manager, said today.
“In our careful efforts to give |
the public what it wants in a car
we studied their
famous reactions to our
which were
auto shows during the
The American
us determine what |
wanted dream cars’
shown at
several years
helped
they
made Past
public
features
We
of the
ins in
thy Strato most
practical adaptations
most widely accepted de-
the Bonneville Special
Streak and the Pari-
and put them into the com-
pletely new lenne
195 Pontiacs
In the accessory line, Pontiac
again offers power steering and
power brakes.
defroster and underseat
changed to take advantage
of Pontiac's cowl ventilation sys- A new
heater
tem and its new 12-volt electrical
system. add comfort and insure
vapor free windshields
Pontiac air conditioning is lo-
cated entwrely under the hood
This system admits outside air to
the cooling umt and when greater
cooling is desired, the system re-
already cool air in
blending with it a limited
amount of outside air circulates the
thec ar,
The electrically operated radio
antenna will be located on the
right rear fender. The manual
antenna is positioned on-the right
side of the cowl
Tubeless tires are
equipment on all models
With introduction of the V-8& en-
gine, the six-cylinder power plant
is discontinued
City-Country School
Plans Open House BLOOMFIELD: HILLS—City and
S« hools of standard
Country Bloomfield
Hills will-hold open house Sunday
at 3 for
(,eorge A pm the general public
Roeper. headmaster
school will give a talk on
The Place of School in the Com-
munitv’’ and Mrs. Evelyn Scheyer
will present a piano recital
a private institu.
kindergarten and | of the
This school is
tion for nursery,
elementary aged children and was |
founded in 1941
180 students The enrollment. is ‘lerno Awhere placed over William G. Lambros
(D) in District 3, with Theodore
F. Hughes (R) and Donald L.
Swanson (1D) even in District 4.
In District 5. the league rates
Vernald E. Horn (R) over Michael
F. €ox (Di. while in District 6
Walter T. McMahon ‘D) is placed
above Bruce P. Wheeler (R)
For Oakland County offices,
Frederick CC. Ziem (R) is sup-
ported dver™ Robert L. O'Connell
‘D) for prosecuting attorney
In the sheriff's race, Frank
Irons (R) is considered better
qualified than George D. Hicks
(D). Lynn D. Allen (R) is rated
over Nelli R. Crowe (D) tor
county clerk,
County treasurer candidates,
Donald E. Barrett (D) and Charles
A. Sparks (R), are Called even
Orrin McQuaid (R) wins place-
ment above Hazel A. Kuschinsky-
T™) for register of deeds, while
Ralph A. Main (R) is rated—over
Glen D. Harper (D) for drain com- “odist Church officiating, She tee} |
missioner.
Omar E. MacNutt (R) is running
unopposed for county surveyor
Fear 300 Dead
inltaly Floods | Help Rufhed* by Sea
to Isolated Region Near
Salerno; 170 Missing |
SALERNO, Italy (UP) — Help
was rushed *by sea today to the
isolated coastal region around Sa-
more than 300 per-
sons were feared dead in the worst
flash floods in the nation’s history
Police listed 275 dead, 170 mis-
sing and 150 injured, with reports
still due from areas isolated by
the rampaging waters which swept
out of the mountains drowning resi-
dents in a score of hamlets while
they slept early Tuesday
Premier Mario Scelba_ teft
Rome for the disaster area by
plane this morning, as offers of
aid poured in from all parts of
Italy.
Fishermen working of Saterse
fished the bodies of downed vic-
tims from the sea
Mud a foot thick in the streets
and a grim silence in the air told
| the story of the third major flood
disaster in the Salerno region in
30 years
Only the shriek of an occasion-
al siren and the sparse clanking
of rescuers’ tools interrupted the
+ quieq death ang destruction in
the area bounded roughly by Sa-
lerno, Amalfi and Nocera In.
teriore south of Naples,
Medicine fogd and = rescue
squads were brought to the scene
in a hastily-improvised seaborne
policemen
from ferry service. Firemen,
and soldiers were brought
distant cities to help :
Telephone lines were cut. Roads
were blocked by landslides. Only
one raway line was back in opera-
tion. Bridges were down. houses
swept away. Debris was every-
where
Hundreds were homeless and
the threat of new disaster hung
over the area as a dark overcast
promised new rains in the re-
gion.
The Itahan Red Cress landed
emergency supphes on a mission
of mefcy across the same beaches
where the American Fifth Army
under Gen Mark Clark
stormed ashore on a mission of
war on ar 9 1943
National language of India ts
Hindu, but a dozen other languages
are prevalent, j
BOOKED AT-COUNTY JAn—¢——
Eugene A. Parmenter, arrested ‘in
Oklahoma City
charge of embezzling $175,000 from
the W. H. Protiva Co.
shown above as he was brought
into the Oakland,County Jail ‘by
Pontiac Police Chief Herbert W
Straley. At the left, Parmenter is Monday on a
here, 1s
= being taken to his cell after being
% booked and fingerprinted. Parmen |
ter faces a federal warrant charg
ing viol&tion of the Securities ant
Exchange Commission Act in addi
tion to an Oakland County warrant
PoPressPhotes accusing him of embezzling. of film Mrs. Vernon (Ruth Lennie)
Babb, 39. died at the home of her
sister. Mrs. Everette Young of 97°
Lynn St., this morning
| The daughter of G. W. and Nora
Elien (Taylor) Holt, she Was born
Aug. 22, 1916 in McCory, Ark. Mrs.
Babb was a member of the Church
of the Nazarene in Montpelier,
Ohio. She had lived in Oakland
County five months,
from Pioneer, Ohio.
Besides her husband and father,
she is survived by three sons and
two daughters—Wayne, Ray, Al-
len, Nelhe and Alletrice, allj at
home. She is also survived by three
sisters and two brothers, Mrs. Ber
tha Holt of Roseburg, Ore.; Mrs
Dessie Gray of Chaffee, Mo.; Mrs.
Jewell Young of Pontiac: Arthur
Holt of Dallas, Tex.. and Richard,
of Dexter, Mo.
Mrs. Babb is at the Pursley Fu-
neral Home where prayer service
will be held this evening at
p.m. with the Rev. Claude D.
_Friess of the First Wesleyan Meth-
| be taken to the Thompson Funeral
Home, Montpelier, Ohio, for serv-
iceFriday with burial in Pioneer
Cemetery there.
Louis Bleise _
Louis Bleise, 77, of B-2 Union Ct
died yesterday at Pontiac General’
Hospital after an ifness of two
weeks.
Born May 2. 1877 in Houghton,
he was the son.of August and
| Amelia Bronstroff Bleise and was
married to Ada Miller in Hancock
Aug. 5, 1913.
Mr. Bleise was a retired copper
miner and came to Pontiac from
Dodgeville 35 years ago
Besides his widow, a son, .Ver- |
non L. of Pontiac tree grand-
children survive Foed Sesser |
are a sister, Mrs i Meyers |
and a brother, William, both of
Hurontown
The funeral! will be held Friday |
at 1 p m. from the Voorhees-Siple
Chapel. Dr. Milton H. Bank of the
Central Méthodist Church will of-
ficiate with burial in Perry Mount
Park Cemetery
Mrs. Norman Deckard
Mrs. Norman (Mable L.) Deck-
ard, 49, &% Parkhurst. died yester-
day at her home
Born in Daneville. Til. she was
the daughter of Ernest and Rickie
(Ehlenfeldt) Pashe She was mar-
ried in Danville 27 years ago
A member of St. Paul's Lutheran
Church in South Bend. Ind.. she
came to Pontiac from there nine
moriths ago
Surviving besides her ‘husband
are three daughters—Mrs. Norma
Jean Petri of LaPorte. Ind.; Mrs. |
Dorothy May .Wills of South Bend. |
and Mrs. Mary Phillips of Misha-
waka, Ind
Also surviving is a son, Donald
W. Deckard, of Quantico, Va j
Other survivors are a sister, Mrs
Lillian Rupert of South Bend. and
two brothers, Walter and Herman
Pashe, both of Danville
Mrs. Deckard was taken this
morning from the Pursley Funeral
Home to the Hickey Funeral Home
in South Bend for service and
burial there
Mrs. William Flanagan
Mrs. William (Rachel) Flan-
agan, 90. of 60 N. Sanford St. died
yesterday after an illness of four
weeks
Born in Canada Apml 7. 1864
she was the daughter of Samuel
and Mary Graham and was mar-
ried in Canada in 1887. Mrs. Flan- |
agan has been in Pontiac two
months. coming here from Hub-
bard. Minn., where she was a
. member of the Methodist Church
She was atse a member of Past
Noble Grand of Rebecca in Hub-
bard
Surviving are five children,
Guy Madison, Actress
Wed in Mexican Nuptials
DALLAS (INS) — The marriage |
Madison and
tclevision actress Sheila Connelly actor Guy
was discolosed yesterday in Dallas
by Mexican Judge Paul Orozco.
The judge said he married the
couple Monday shortly after Mad-
ison, 32. secured a Mexican divorce |
from actress Gail Russell |
Miss Connelly, 24, divérced pro-
ducer Harry Danziger in 1952, i ' Detroit,
Steve eof Huntersville,
Mrs. Vera Watt of Port Ange-
ae ee ee
Backus,
(pCesp of anus Eg
pod at whose home she died,
alarm and 34 great-
&
Mrs. Flanagan will be taken to
Brainerd, Minn., for service and
burial. Arrangements ere by the
Huntoon Funeral Home
W. Garfield Larkin
Born in Whitefield, N. H.,
4, 1881,
Ward in Groveton, N. H., June 26,
1901. He was the son of John C
and Emaline C. Brown Larkin
A machinist for Grand Trunk
Railroad for 35 years until he re-
tired in 1946, Larkin came to Pon-
tiac from Groveton 42 years ago.
He was a member of the Brother- |
hood of Railroad Machinists.
Surviving besides his widow are
a daughter, Mrs. Randall B. Spur- |
geon of Pontiac, one granddaugh-
ter, and four great-grandchildren.
Service from Donelson-Johns
Funeral Home will be Friday at 2
bach of the First Presbyterian |
Church officiating. Burial will fol-
low in Ottawa Park Cemetery.
Friends may call at the funeral |
| home after 7 o'clock tonight.
Dr. Harry Leighton
Word has been received of the
sudden death of Dr. Harry Leighton |
‘of N. Perry St.
from a heart attack last night in
Guntherville, Ala. Dr. and Mrs.
Leighton were on their way to
Zephyr Hills, Fla
Mrs. Dalton H. Mosure
Mrs. Dalton H
Mosure, 78, of 403 N. Saginaw St
died yesterday
Hospital after an illness of four
days
The daughter of Dr
Jane (Williams) Lewis
born in Ingersall, Ont
Married_in Otisville in 1911,
came to Pontiac
years ago and was a member of
the Central Methodist Church.
Surviving besides her husband
is a son, Rev. Dudley Mosure of
and two grandchildren
Funeral! service will be Saturday
at 1:30. p. m. from the Central |
Methodist Church, Dr. Milton Bank
officiating. Arrangements are by
E. D. and
she was
she
the Sparks-Griffin Funeral Home. |
Burial will follow in the Otisville
Cemetery
Shoplifters Awaiting
Court Proceedings BIRMINGHAM — Twelve girls
who have admitted
tween $200 and $390 in merchan-
;dise from five local stores because
it ‘‘was so easy’ today are await-
ing Oakland County Juvenile Court |
proceedings
Their month-long shoplifting ac-
tivities ended last Friday when
Detroit Police apprehended two of
the girls, aged 12 and 13, trying to
register in a hotel there
Their admission that watches
they were wearing were stolen,
coupled with previous informa.
tion supplied police, led to the
roundup of the other girls, be-
tween the ages of 12 and 16. Most
of them are Birmingham High
school students.
Police Lt. Henry Timm said
some of the parents were ‘‘sus-
picious’’ of new articles of wear-
ing apparel the girls were bringing
home. ,
“This is a serious offense.’
said, ‘“‘and if these girls were
| adults, they would be sent to jail."’
| All are in Police custody
www
Gideons Slate Meeting
WATERFORD TOWNSHIP
Oakland County Gideons and their
| Ladies Auxiliary will meet at the
Waterford Community Church for
a cooperative supper at-6:30 p. m.
Thursday.
India is the second largest pro-
ducer of manganese ore in the!
world. and the chief export source
is said to be the United a of
America he married. Winifred _R. |
Dr. Leighton died |
(Ellen Beatrice) |
at St. Joseph Mercy |
from Oscoda 36 |
theft of be- |
he |
= Sutton Scores.
Dondero Record Says Representative Has
‘Refused to Back Ike's
Bi-Partisan Policy
| Paul Sutton, Democratic candi-
'date for Congress, charged that
coming here. W. Garfield Larkin, 73, 16 Waldo | the incumbent from the 18th Dis-
' Ave., died yesterday at his home. trict, George- Dondero, refised to
back the bi-partisan foreign policy
supported by the Eisenhower Ad-
| ministration, in a talk Tuesday
night before a group of Democrats
in Southfield Township.
ee)
| that he belongs to
| diated at its 1952 convention,”
every foreign policy issue
“If America adopted the ‘Go-
| It-Alone’ policies Dondero backs,
| the rest of the world would take a
|p.m., with Dr. William H. Mar-|.1 + George Do it’ attitude. and
e —— have a friend in the
as where we need friends most
r “ ws Go-lt-Alone’ policies would set
|the stage for another war since
they would make America more
vulnerable,” Sutton declared
“Better to send over money for
foreign aid than be forced to send
| over troops.”
GOP Promises Aid
for Unemployed | (Continyed From Page One)
| has neglected the working men
and kept aloof from the jobless
| problem.
Eisenhower said unemployment
declined by 400,000 from Septem-
ber to October. The exact figures, |
as released by the Commerce
Department yesterday, shows a
358,000 drop, from 3,099,000 fo
2,741,000.
A September-Ociober decline in
the jobless total is normal, but
the Commerce Department said
this month's drop “appeared to
be larger than usual.” The de-
partment said the seasonally in.
| dicated decline normally would be
230,000.
The total of employed in October
| was put at 62,141.000—virtually un-
changed from September
Mitchell said the “‘latest informa-
| tion” indicates unemployment ‘‘is
lower today.’
“In fact."’ he added, “unemploy-
; ment has been dropping sharply.
“All over the country, employ-
ment is increasing, new jobs are
opening up.”
Mitchell said he had employer
'reports of hiring plans in Michi-
| gan, Indiana, California, New Jer-
|sey, New York, Rhode Island,
| Pennsylvania, Illinois, Massachu-
| setts, Ohio and Iowa.
Parmenter Returned
in Funds Shortage | (Coritinued From Page One)
sets were taken over to pay off
|customers whose securities and
collateral allegedly were taken.
said he believed police learned
this whereabouts through his wife.
according to reports from Okla-
|homa City. His wife divorced him
' shortly after the disappearance
and is living in Austin, Tex., her
home town.
Straley refused te confirm
Parmenter's belief, stating “help
from many sources" led to the
| capture.
Parmenter was employed as a
clerk in a hardware firm under
| the name of Edward A. Parker
‘and further stated he contacted
his wife several times by letter
during his stay there
He stated he had a little over
$200 on him when he left Pontiac.
As manager of the brokerage firm
he received a small salary and
profit-sharing bonuses
| Conviction on the charge calls
for a maximum five-year sen-
tence
(Politieal Advertisement)
7 Days to
[COMING
PONTIAC GENERAL
HOSPITAL
PATIENT CENSUS
000
— al
Capacity ........ 1%
— |OVER Capacity
Today
The ideal working condi-
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| WILLIS M. BREWER,
| Member Hespital Béard i uaat Beds .....
Ss #6 6 6 6 6 6 ©
Please VOTE YES on Bend lesve
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_ ROTI pga seme — ane —ae I pric eatin Minna ttl
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Birmingham
:|Group Plans
Bazaar, Tec Birmingham Alumnae Chapter
of Alpha Xi Delta sorority will en-
| tertain friends and fellow alumnae
‘at a bazaar and tea to be held
|Nov. 6 from 2 unti! 5 at the
Royal Oak home of Mrs Donald
McGinnis.
Mrs. Thomas Jensen of By ming-
ham will serve as general chair-
man. She will be assisted by Mrs.
Frederick Burge and Mrs. J. J.
Frank West of Royal
Oak; Mrs. Harry Fitch of Oak
Park and Mrs. George Reynolds
» |and Mrs. Jo Porritt of Pontiac
On display will be knit goods,
homemade pies and jams,
aprons, blouses, tea pets, can.
dies, Christmas stockings, ete.
These items have been made
chapter.
Proceeds from the bazaar will
go to help support the fraternity’s
national philanthropies and the lo-
cal philanthropy as well as provide
college chapter assistance
On the national level Alpha Xi
Delta supports rural schools in ten
underprivileged areas and provides
layettes for needy babies. On the
local level the group sends funds
to the Michigan League for Crip-
plied Children.
“Local alumnae also sends as-
sistance to four college chapters
in Michigan which are located at
Albion College, University of Mich-
igan, Michigan State College and
Michigan State Normal College.
Well-Known Artist
Will Speak Nov. 12
Robert A. Thom of Birmingham,
internationally known artist, will
be guest speaker for the Nov. 12
meeting of Pontiac Society of
Artists.
The Lorraine court home of Mrs.
L. L. Sterling will be the setting
for the meeting > | Hogan of Birmignham; Mrs. Rob- |
2\bert Chase, Mrs. Robert Mooney |
Mm. jand Mrs
and donated by members of the | VR. and MRS. ERNEST LAUCKNER |
Celebrating their 50th wedding anniversary this eve-
ning at a family dinner will be Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Lauck-
ner of South Telegraph road. The couple has resided in
| Pontiac for | the last five years.
Promenaders Gather at Whitfield
dance held in Whitfield School.
Planning the Halloween atmos- Mrs. Kenneth Wilcox.
Iriand, decorations chairmen.
Callers for the square and
novelty dances were Harry An-
derson, Howard Mciiftyre, Engel
Groenberg, Mr. Irland and War-
ren Allen. The George Swayses
Joined the club for the evening
as guests.
Mr. Groenberg, president, wel-
comed the guests and introduced
new members. Joining the club freshments to the group.
Alpha Sigma Nu
Holds Meeting Alpha Sigma Nu sorority. met
Monday evening at the home of |
Mrs. Albert Kohn on Warwick |
drive. Members voted to give a
contribution to the Sister Kenny
Foundation as a major project for
this year are Mr. and Mre. Hirare the year. Muriel Andrews, a guest,
Permanents
11 N. Perry 8t. Professionally Styled, Cut and Cared For is the Best Way
te Keep Your
CALLIE’S BEAUTY SHOP spoke on the needs of families who
treat polio patients at home.
The group also planned to at-
tend one of the Pontiac Symphony
| Orchestra concerts and will also
| make a donation to the symphony.
Assisting Mrs. Kohn were Mrs.
Larmar Peeple, Mrs. Lloyd Mos- Hair Levely
e « from $5.00 Phone FE 2-6361. Opposite Hote! Roosevelt
bey and Margaret Waters.
a Ruth
Custom Lamp Shades
Square Dance at ‘Y’
“Young Adults of the Pontiac
YMCA will hold a square dance Haigh
THE PONTIAC | PRESS, | WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 27, 1954
Mrs. C.E. Wilson to Be Honored Guest at Open House
Dancers Mark Halloween
Promenaders Square Dance Club , Smith, Mr. and Mrs. Robert Bruce,
members danced among cornstalks | Mr. and Mrs. Al Drake, Mr. and
and pumpkins at their Tuesday | Mrs. Ned Reynolds and Mr. and
Women of the Daniel Whitfield | phere were Mr. and Mrs. Ralph | PTA were on hand to serve re-
* =
[Republi ican ‘Mrs. Davy Gilpin, Worthy Matron
Group to Be |New Officers
Entertained
Donald S. Leonard,
Homer Ferguson
Planning to Attend
Mrs. Charlies Erwin Wilson, wife
of the United States secretary of
defense will be guest of honor at
an open house for Republican wom-
en on Friday.
Berkley’s Northwood Inn will be
the setting for this event which is
scheduled from 2 to 4 p.m.
Mrs, Wilson ig expected to ad-
Republican gubernatorial candi-
date, Donald S, Leonard and Mrs.
Leonard and Sen. Homer Ferguson
and Mrs. Ferguson are expected to
be on hand for the open house.
Candidates for many state and
county offices and their wives will
also attend the event which is
open to all interested persons with-
out charge or special invitation.
E. Williams, Wayne E. Scott, Mrs.
Samuel Smith, Mrs. S. V. Griffen,
| Beverly Marion and Mary Moore.
Mrs. Arthur Augustine and Otto
Arrangements for this event are+ Schott, retiring worthy matron and
being made by Mrs. Brooks
Marshall, of Birmingham, Mrs.
William Kennedy of Pontiac, Mrs.
Bert Norton of Rochester, Mrs.
Chad Ritchie of Bloomfield Town- a table centered with the flowers Are Installed
by OES Chapter 228
.|of the order, under the direction
of Mrs. V. T. Wagner, by groups
; |two and three.
Philoptohos Group
Holds Convention
Mrs. Helen Pratt of East Pike
street and Mrs. George Pratt of
North Edith street are attending
a convention of the Ladies Philop-
tohos Society being held this week
at Savannah, Ga.
Socrates Sekles of Ottawa drive
is a delegate to the 12th National
Conference of Clergy and Laity
of the Greek Orthodox Archiocese
of North and South America, also
being held this week in Savannah.
They are members of the local
St. George Greek Orthodox Church.
Picture Framing Old Prints Thursday from 9 to 12 p. m. in
165 Pierce St., Birmingham Mi 4-2202 "| the Green Room. Hal Brown will
| be caller for the dance
9 . The Season’s Favorite
cence
nee
Smartly tailored to give
town and country
CHINCHI ps soon 9 MADBHOISELLE LLA
simple
casualness.
Contrasting MILIUM lining, and
-with half-belt in back. FLAME
and SAILOR BOY BLUE. Long Length Style. . . 5)
$
Shorties. ........ A5
o
Downtown Store
51 North Saginaw
Open Fri. ‘til 9 P.M.
| ship and Mrs. Edward Wilson of
| Birmingham.
‘Pupils Celebrate
Jubilee of Light In celebration of the Thomas
| Edison Diamond Jubilee of Light,
the pupils of Mrs. Clifford Christen-
son's third and fourth grades at
Emerson School gave a demon-
stration on the use of candles, old
lamps and lanterns, for the benefit
of the principal, Mrs. Charlies
Wait, and Helen Kinney’s second
grade
Nancy Blanchard told why light
has had a birthday, followed by a
group discussion about early light.
Judy Fox and Anita Tucker showed
how kerosene lamps work and a
Coleman lantern was demonstrated = by Gerald Hurst.
Appreciation for the opportunity
to see the program was expressed
| by Tommy Tucker and Pat Cook.
Jo Palace Honored
at Recent Shower
Jo Hill Palace, bride-elect of
| Harold L. Hayden Jr., was honored
| recently at a bridal shower. Mrs.
t William Palace was hostess for the
event in her Monroe street home.
The couple will exchange their
vows Oct. 31 at Grace Lutheran
Church. Joseph D. Palace of Ros
shire court and Mr. and Mrs
Harold L. Hayden of Marion, Il
are their parents
Coming Events Huron Gardens Eagles Auxiliary will
| meet this evening a! 8 pm. in the Migh-
| eee roed hell. Officers will meet et
| Camp Nesbitt 11, Ledies Mationel
League il) meet in Grotto Mall on West
| Pike street Thursday at 130 p.m
Child Culture Club will meet Thureday
et & pm. with Mre Alien Denham, 83
Oriole Rd
| Ladtes Aid Society of Oakland Ave-
gue United Presbyterian Church will
meet Thursday at 10 am. at the ehurch
to sew
Women's Missionary Society of Pirst
Baptist Church wit!! meet Thursday at
1:30 pm A missionary from Africa
be guest speaker
dies Aid Society of 8t
Lutheran Church will meet Thursday at
1 im the church periors
bahiend County Association of ors |
will hold annue) meeting Thursday et 10 |
em. in Commerce Masonic Temple
Weleome Rebecca. Lodge 246 will meet
Thursday at 8 p.m. in Maita Temple, on
Perkins street
John |
|
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soft pastels, smart deep tones.
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Many more new Ship'n Shore's in stock!
Nellie 3507 Elizabeth Lake Road, Pontiac
1 Block West ef Huron
LS = ~
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SE -—™- ——-—- -_- —_ ee ———
—_e a 4
THIRTY-FIVE
Murder Suicide
Attempt Failure Lansing Man Wounds Produce
DETROIT PRODUCE
| farmers’ markets reperted by the
| oe ef Markets: '
Fruits: ¥ Deliicous, fancy, 8.25
Estranged Wife, Self; | xo 1° is-ss0 vu: apples ; apples, fancy, 408 bu; No 1, 3.00-3.50 bu: « | MARKETS | Steels Fall Off
_ in Early Dealing
sure today in a stock market that
A . was generally lower in early deal-
Both Listed Serious | fear Nguham soy, Fe Suton | ings. LANSING @® — Martin Goss, | ap, ba gare sooo be U. S. Steel was hardest hit and
37, and his estranged wife, Lurene, | cider, No. 1, 2.00-2.50 4-gal case. Grapes.
35, were in serious condition today 350-400 ba ince. No Aue bee be.
trom gunshot woulds which State| "¥-eviabiee’ Beans, Lime, (No i. 230.
Police say were inflicted by Goss | 2°, topped Ne 1, Lisi is bu Bree:
im an attempted murder and) me ae oot : 138 bu cabbage, sprouts: No 1, 100-135 State Troopers Donald Herman-| bu. Carrots, No 1, 75-90 dos behs: car-
sen and Bryce Gray said Mrs. Fags “et AE gmt ~ ag
Goss told them she met her hus-| §,,27* 27% wrt, ‘Ne 4 ‘ip so" don. ik
rH
335% s°
= -
~
col
s? g
TTT] ai 4 riding stable, where she summoned
police.
Despite her ability to drive for
help, physicians said Mrs. Goss
was in ‘extremely serious con-
dition,” her husband in ‘‘serious
The couple had been separated | “,,.Rom'nt. . No
several months.
Queen Mother
Arrives in U.S. ‘Private’
Royal Visitor Time for
Sightseeing
NEW YORK, wW—Queen Mother
Elizabeth of Great Britain has ar-
rived for a 2>day visit in the
United States and Canada. It is to
be a “private” trip and her sched-
ule leaves much time for sight-
seeing.
The Queen Mother. smiling,
graciously, received a welcoming
party of British and American of- |
ficials aboard the Cunard liner
Queen Elizabeth after it docked
yesteday.
* *
She told her greeters, “I am
looking forward to seeing as much
as Ican...1I only wish that time
would allow me to travel much
farther and to sé¢e more of the
wonders of your country.”
* * .s
The Queen Mother will be in
the United States until Nov. 12,
during which time she will visit
in New York, Washington and Vir-
ginia.
Her schedule for today includes
only one official engagement—a
Canadian Club luncheon at the
Waldorf-Astoria Hotel. The rest of
the day is free for sightseeing or
resting and possibly a visit to the
theater in the evening.
The visit was made partly in re-
sponse to an invitation from Co-
lumbia University asking her to
represent the royal family at bi-
centennial ceremonies this week-
end. The University was founded
200 years ago on a royal charter
issued by Engiand’s then reigning
King, George II.
U.S. Planes Take Lead
WASHINGTON (AP) — The In-
ternational Air Transport Assn.
estimates that 86 per cent of the
commercial air transports used
throughout the free world are
U. 8. built.
STOCK AVERAGES
Associa Compiled by The - ted Press
» 16 6 oo
Indust. Reitls Util. Stocks
Previous d@ay....186.1 100.2 628 135.4
w OGO... cc. 1873 1022 63.2 1367
Month ago......1883 874 G47 136.3
Year ago.......1405 84 S41 106.2
1054) high.....+.100.2 1022 65.2 1374
1954 OW. ..0000.143.8 7.8 55.4 108.0
1963 high.......151.8 83.6 55.8 116.3
1063 low........ 2 735 S05 00.5
Generalissimo Franco, the mauso-
leum will be known as ‘The Valley
Dead:" — It will be the rest-
for 150,000 Nationalists
the Spanish Civil War
when he dies. Trip Leaves
g tt 3a? EE id 1, .00-
.» 1.35 14-lb. .bskt; No.
50 bu. Tomatoes, hothouse No. 1,
2.60 10-Ib. bskt. Turnip, No. 1, 1.
dos. = ; turnip, topped, No. 1, 1.
j
market for Russets slightly stronger; for Midwest Reds dem: fair and market
stead Russets §3.70-75;
a Russets 63.90-6400; bakers
| 04.75; oe Dakota Pontiacs
DETROIT EGGS
DETROIT (‘AP)}—Eggs. f{0.b. Detroit,
cases included, federal-state —
Whites—Grade A, jumbo 4- weight-
ed average 40; large 43-44, wtd.
434¢; medium 28-20, wid. avg. 282;
22: grade B large 38; peewees 18.
Brownse—Cirade A, large 41-42, wtd.
: Ss ee i=:
ree : + peewees
19; checks 20. :
—
CHICAGO BUTTER AND EGGS
CHICAGO—AP — Butter unsettled; re-
ceipts 935,570; wholesale buying prices
unchen to 1 lower; 93 score AA 51.78;
$2 A 57.25: 90 B 56.25: 0 C 56.25; cers
90 B 56.75. 68 .C 56.25.
Eggs — Steady; receipts 12.267; whole-
| sale selling prices unchanged; U. S&S.
| large whites 40; mixed 38; U. BS. me-
} diums 25: U. S. standards 23; current
receipts 23.4; dirties 19; checks 18.5.
DETROIT POULTRY
DETROIT —AP—Prices paid per pound
f.o.b. Detroit for No. 1 quality live pouwl-
i Bo to Wa. m f
vy hens 16-18; light type 12-13; heavy roosters (over 4 Ibs.) 25-37; heavy
broilers or fryers (3-4 Ibs); whites 25;
rey crosses 27-28: caponettes (5-54:
jucklings bs.) 30-31; old roosters 31; @
30; heavy ducks 24.
Breeder turkeys, young heavy 7.
hens 30-32 mostly 30-31; toms 23-
mostly 23-23».
Comment: Market about steady. Offer-
ings ample to slightly more than ample.
Demand light to fair.
Turkeys: Offerings more than ample
for light demand with most desiers
+conmtinuing to process and store stocks
for future use.
CHICAGO POULTRY
CHICAGO (AP)—Live poultry about
steady; receipts. 900 par ae (Monday
1,207 coops; 188,197 Ibs); f. 0b. paying
| [Frere unchanged to 1 lower; heavy hens
| 15.5-18; light hens 12-14; fryers and
broilers 24-265; old roosters 12 - 12.5;
caponettes 28-30; young hen turkeys 34.
.
Livestock
DETROIT LIVESTOCA
DETROIT ‘(AP)—Hogs—Salable 400.
Market not established
Cattie—Salable 400. 15 per cent fresh
receipts cows, market fully steady: not
enough sisughter steers or yearlings to
test prices; most sales utility and com-
mercial cows 8.00-11.00; few high yield-
ing young commercial cows to 12.00 or
above; canners and cutters mostiy 7.50-
9.50; few sales utility and commercial
bulls 12.00-14.00.
Caives—Galabie 100 Market opening
fully steady; most good and choice veal-
ets 21.00-30.00; high choice and prime
31.00 or above; most utility and com-
mercial grades 11.00-19.00; cull and iow
utility 6 16.00.
bs—Galable 500. Market
opening around steady; smail lot choice
Prime siaughter lambs 21.00; good end
choice 83 ib slayghter lambs 20.00- most
cull +e good siaughter ewes 3.00-6.00;
choice handy-weights up to 7
CHICAGO LIVESTOCK
CHICAGO (‘AP)—Salable hogs 8.500;
market fairly active; 15 to 25 cents
higher on butchers; mostly 25 higher
| om choice | ang 28 180-220 Ib. weights;
| sows unevenly 25-50 higher: most 180-270
|b butchers 19.25-50; mainly 19.35-50
on choice 1 and 2 lightweights. a doubie
deck sorted 210-220 Ib. 19.60: a few head
270-300 lb. 19.00-25; a few lots. choice
150-170 Ib. 17.50-19.00; larger lots sows
400 Ib. and lighter 17.25-18.25: bulk 450-
| 600 ibs. 15.50-17.00; good clearance
| @alable cattle 5,500 calves 700
slaughter steers and yearlings moder-
ately uneven, averaging steady: heifers
steady; canner and cutter cows fairly
active; fully steady; utility and com-
mercial siow, weak; bulls strong; vealers
steady to 1.00 higher; » load of prime
around 1,350 ib. steers 29.75; other high
choice and prime steers 26.00-28.50; most
good and choice grades 21.00-25.75; a few
commercial to good steers 17.00-
20.50; some choice to prime heifers and
mixed year most good and
mercial grass heifers down to 1
utility and commercial cows 9.25-13.00,
canners and cutters 1.00-9.00; utility
and commercial bulls 12.50-15.00; good
and choice vealers 19.00-23.00; cull to
commercial grade 8.00-18.00.
Grain Prices
CHICAGO GRAIN
CHI ~
wheats” queens orem Dec 221! Soybeans — * a
March . 223% Yov 2 78,
May. 231% July . ..... 262
July .. 2.10% March . ~ 285
Corn— May .. 2.86",
Dec 156 July 287
| March 1.58% Lard—
|} May . ...... 1.60', Nov 14.85
tA dae Honan 161'. Dec. 13.75
Oate— Jan . 6
Dec. . 61% March 13.15
March 42's Soybean Otl—
MBG | ccsce 82% cas 00-00
March . ..... 11.27
Dee. 136% May .. ..... 11.27
Mareh . 1.39 daly , o..:s- 13.33
Foreign Exchange
NEW YORK~—-‘AP)
Great Pore: exchen
rates follow ( “2 caibeen.
others Britain in doijars,
im cents):
Canad dollar im New York open
market 3-32 per cent premium or
103.00% U. 8 cents unchanged.
Burope: Great Britain (pound) $2.
: ; t 30 Gay futures
day futures 2.78 13-16, . ¢ La] 7 2.7% 27-32, un-
| changed; m. (franc) 2.00%, up
00'e of @ cent: Prance (franc) 28% of
a cent, unchanged : Germany western
(deutsche mark) Be. unchanged; Hol-
} land (guilder! 26.72, up .02 of
Traly /
| Portugal | Sweden
| Switeeriang
changed; Denmark
changed. ® cent;
» .18%@ of a cent, unchanged;
354, unchanged;
19.™, unch: :
{free} 23.33, un-
(krone) 14.56, un- B =.
Fi
omali
grade
wv
79%. | Cole, 53, past grand master of the
Masonic higher.
Claims Senate
: Needs Douglas _Qreene” Cabbag won hee : Kefauver Says Illinois |
1 ae osetia estes | Dem Will Help in Fight ise Py gg yy 1, 1.00-i Pong Against ‘Dixon-Yates
PEORIA, Ill. (AP) — Sen. Ke-
fauver (D-Tenn) called today for
the re-election of Sen. Douglas good
for | (D-Ill), saying Douglas “will be
needed to help fight “the Dixon-
Yates deal, one of the most bare-
faced giveaways.”
In a speech prepared for deliv-
ery at a Citizens for Douglas Club
luncheon, Kefauver said “‘it goes
without saying” that Douglas’ Re-
publican opponent, Joseph T. Meek,
would “‘be another yes vote for the
power lobby.”
The Tennessee senator said he
agrees with Sen. Langer (R-ND),
chairman eof the Senate Anti-
Menepoly Committee, that the
Dixon-Yates contract will spark
| am big fight in the Senate.
“We need Paul Douglas for that
one,"’ Kefauver declared.
The proposed Dixon-Yates con-
tract would be between the Atomic
Energy Commission (AEC) anda Utilities, headed by Edgar H.
Dixon, and the Southern Co., head-
AEC to negotiate, the Dixon-Yates
group would build a power plant
| in Arkansas to supply energy to
the Tennessee Valley Authority
(TVA) at Memphis.
quirements, could continue
serve the AEC plants without de-
veloping a power shortage.
| Blind Carpenter
Saws, Hammers
by Touch Alone | SCARBOROUGH, Maine (AP) —
A year ago 70-year-old Allen T.
| McConnell decided to take up car-
pentry. Since then he has re-
modeled his rural four-room home
and currently, is—adding a 12x14
foot bedroom. The next project
will be a sunporch. He is nearly
totally blind. :
He can distinguish only between
light and shadow.
His wife, Mary, tells him when
boards or studding are level —
sometimes helps with the sawing.
She also helps find tools her hus-
band misplaces.
Guided by the carpenter’s
square, he cuts a groove along a
board — then discards the square
| and saws along the groove. For
nailing, however, he depends en-
tirely upon touch.
Adding to McConnell's physical
woes is the fact that he also is
very deaf. He used to depend: on
lip reading but can’t see to do
that any more. .
3rd Quarter Dividend
Declared by U.S. Steel
NEW YORK (AP) — United
States Steel Corp., maker of a
third of the nation's steel, reported
| today that for the third quarter of
| 1954 it earned $44,323,860, equal to
| $1.44 a share. This compared with
| $49,020,738, or $1.63 a share, in the /second quarter and with $61.706,-
| 264, or $2.12 a share, for the third
quarter of booming 1953. |
High Masonic Official, Stricken While Hunting
ITHACA @® — Dr. Hazen P.
field four miles northeast of Itha-
ca, apparently. having suffered a
fatal heart attack while hunting
| birds. | Cole, a dentist, was grand mas
iter in 1948-49, He was a 33rd de-
}gree Mason,
group made up of the Middle South TODAY'S ASSIGNMENT FOR:
j
| JUNIOR EDITORS
straight pin, a paper nut cup, a
leaves stand out over the
drop, and Tear ¥ : A 2
A JACK-O-LANTERN ORANGE mw
This pretty decoration for a Halloween party is good to eat. To
make it you'll need an orange, a gum drop, three candy mints, a
piece of green paper and a small
1. Fold the green paper into fours and draw on it the leaf
pattern ‘A. Cut around the pattern.
like \design “‘B.” Curl the ends of the leaves by drawing the paper | An Episcopalian, he is a mem- When. unfolded, it will look ‘Business Notes: !
T
New Executive > THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 27, 1954
Utility Names
Charles Palmer Is New
Consumers Personnel,
Safety Head Here
The promotion of Charles R.
Palmer of Battle Creek to the po-
sition of personnel and safety
supervisor for Consumers Power
Company's Southeast Division,
was..announced here today by Di-
vision Manager David H. Ger-
hard.
_ Palmer succeeds Wilfred L.
Whitfield. who recently was
named district manager of the
company’s West Wayne district
at Plymouth.
He will be succeeded at Battle
Creek by Olin N. Jones, who at
present is personnel and safety
assistant for the Battle Creek Di-
vision. The promotiong are af-
| battle here between a University PAP Eee uFricCanes
scsi mals of barge. He has
the weight on the barge and alter-
ing the angle, height and frequency
get ANN ARBOR # — There's ‘a
of Michigan -professor and the
hurricane sisters, Hazel and com
pany, of the family of Atlantic) of the waves.
hurricanes. ‘He says the special wave-making
But this is no social conflict. machine roughly simulates the
broad-side charges of the ill-tem-
pered hurricane sisters who rise
from the Carribean waters to lash .
the coast.
The real-life barges on the south-
sles S. coast represent invest-
In @ 110,000 gallon tank Prot. | otal oxy Se on re
year, they and the men who oper-
ate them dwell in the shadow of
Lodge Calendar | rirecches ther can smash thers to
Special communication of Roose- | PUP. |
velt Lodge, No. $10, FP. & AM, 22) In Prof. Brater’s tank there are
State St., Thursday, Oct. 28 at 7:30 s of drilling barges, com-
p. m. Raymond Kneisel, W. M. | plete to the approximate weight
Adv.| of the drilling equipment, 50 feet
_ News in Brief Prof. Ernest F. Brater of the
university's lake hydraulics lab-
oratory is studying the effects
of hurricanes on oil drilling barg-
es which are sucking oil from the
dgpths of the Gulf of Mexico.
Nickohias Lampropoules, 19, of
325 E. Court, Flint, pleaded guilty
to reckless driving yesterday be-
fore Pontiac Judge Cecil McCal
lum, who fined Lampropoulos $50. fective Nov. 8.
Palmer has 18 years service
Consumers, which he joined
in Battle Creek as a meterman. :
A veteran of World War Il,
when he served overseas in the
European Theater, he has been
active in the Battle Creek Cham-
ber of Commerce, in Red Cross
‘and Community Chest campaigns. ing machine, sewing machine. engineering research institute,
Tests have shown the hurricane-
driven 20-foot waves can overturn
the barges. :
Prof. Brater also has been con-
cerned with underwater waves be-
cause the drilling barges are an-
chored to the bottom-—en giant
stilts. Actually the tests have shown
the stilts do not have the re-
a dull silver knife blade, and then put this into the nut. cup | per of the Battle Creek Foremen’s
the orange into the dish..With transparent tape fix two
candy mints to the orange to look like eyes. Break the
attach half to the orange like a mouth. Push
green paper left from the leaves around the
gently into the’ top of the orange like a Club and on the Industrial Safety
Committee. edge.
Three. executive appointments in
the Marine and Industrial Engine
Divison of Chrysler Corp. have been announced by Robert T. Kel-
ler, president of the division. stick it on the orange like a nose. .
Press Staff Writer
HOLLY—An hour and 15 minute
meeting
property the village
time. ;
The stand of those outside the
that the village is prepared to give
now, and want to wait until such
time as Holly can make it worth
while ‘for them to come into the
corporate limits.
The Village Council prompted
Adenauer Visit
Begins Today Public, Private Talks
to Dominate 3-Day Stay
in Washington
WASHINGTON # — Chancellor
Konrad Adenauer of West Ger-
many arrives in Washington today
to talk publicly of how Germany
will use her almost-attained sover-
eignty and arms—and privately of
how she hopes to scale the last
obstacle to obtaining them.
Adenauer and his hosts, Presi-
dent Eisenhower and Secretary of
State Dulles, have plenty to talk
about in the less than three days
allotted for his Washington visit:
‘1. The need to have the agree-
ments reached in Paris only four
days ago approved by the Western
parliaments, notably the French
and German.
*
° *
2. What Russia may do as an
ultimate blow at the thing she has
fought hardest in Europe—re-cre-
ation of a strong, armed, pro-West
Germany. Withdrawal of Russian
troops frorfi East Germany is a
possibility—they would not have to
go far. Or the Soviets might offer,
for a price, some other big con-
cession on reuniting the two parts
of Germany. There could well be
talk here of what Adenauer'’s gov-
ernment and that of the United
States might do in such circum-
Adenauer’s schedule allows am-
ple time for diplomatic work be-
the formal entertainments. Residents of Holly Area
Debate Annexation Plan
to discuss annexation of | earlier this month. Those receiving appointments . Freeman, factory man-
the meeting, when a possible in-
corporation of a new village in the
north Holly subdivisions developed U. of M. Will Sponsor
Hospital Conference The first conference on hospital
management for this area is sched-
Several of those against the
move feel that the village wants
the outlying people inside the lim-
its to quin’ tox revenue, in order | uled to be held Friday at the Rack-
to build a sewage disposal plant, ham roagye University of Michi-
‘ence voted down by the villagers. | 8@". Arbor.
The present proposal would in. | Sponsors are the U. of M. School
corporate all land extending one- | of Business Administration sapere
quarter section of the Quick Road, ension Service, in ———
one quarter section south of the the aoa —
South Fenton Road in Rose Town- | of the arog
ship, one quarter section east of | ation of Hospital Accountan'
the Falk Read. And about one halt | t¢ Michigan Hospital Assn.
This is the first time the eastern section west of the Fish Lake Road, |
with a thumb about one half sec-| Michigan chapter has ever partic:
For the most part, the village | Mercy Hospital in Pontiac will be council silently listened to the | Sister Mary cn Mirage car mainly anti-annexation faction. Vil- |“ nson,; Electa Kinch; quired amount of “give” to cope
with the underwater onslaught.
) Prof. Brater’s staff has taken . t©| several thousand feet of movie film
—AdV. | of the actions in their special tank.
. gg. From that film will likely come
wri} until, $1) haita the answers to the problem of
Temple. | —Adv.
Rummage sale, St. Mary's unit
of St. Benedicts, League Bidg., 281
8S. Parke. Fri. Oct. 29, 9-5. Adv. Temple Beth Jacob, corner Orch-
ard Lake and Exchange; Thursday,
October 28th; Ja“ m. to 9 p. m-
Friday, October 29th, 9 a.
to Start at $2,695
lage President Worth Hitchcock Mrs, Flossie Coleman; Mrs. Elva
and trustee M. Bryce Dabler led
the council in answering questions |
and charges of the group.
“I think most people have the
opinion that we want annexation
for additional taxation, which is
not true,” said Dabler. ‘We're
here to see how the people feel,
not to push this thing through.” Return to Crime Scene
Cass Waters, Holly township sup-
crviune. whe attended» meeting Lands Airman in Jail
of a handful of residents north of| ALBANY, Ga. (UP) While He'ly who were discussing incor-| police were investigating a theft at
poration of a new community re-| a home here Lloyd Dobner, an air-
cently, said “People at that meet-' man at Turner Air Force Base,
ing from north of the village | walked up to find out what was go-
wanted to incorporate, because | ing on.
they wished to have a vote as to| The burglary victim, a house-
whether or not they would be tak-| wife, noticed the antenna of her
en into Holly.” | tiny radio sticking out of Dobner's
Waters added that he did not) pocket.
feel they would form a new vil-| Dobner was arrested
lage, because they need 350 per-. -—
sons for this. Sister Mary Columbine and Harold
Brady.
Representing Pontiac General
Hospital will be Miss Loretta Paul,
|Mrs. Fay Stewart, Miss Kay Ved-
| der and Ralph Hose.
NYC nnmoncie loss ‘First It’s Waitresses,
Now Pajamas for AF
NEW YORK (UP) — The Air | | Templeton; Sister Jane DeChantal; |
NEW YORK (#—The New York | This will effect an-important sav-
| Central Railroad announced yes-|ing in freight charges on 20 per
terday that for the first nine | cent of our automotive volume. It
months of 1954 its net loss was $5,- | likewise will result\in a relatively LADIES’! ——
NEW FALL .. ALL WOOL
COATS . . . $16.71
SAM BENSON'S ]
|1,200 miles from Michigan plants,
more than 1,200 miles from Mich-
igan plants,
“The result will be that such
areas will pay only this amount.
a a
Oakland Fuel & Paint Co.
Force, which recently hired wait-
resses to eliminate KP duty, today
was studying the possibility of is-
life.”’
Servicemen now sleep in their
shorts.
Court Blocks Stock Sale
WHEELING, W. Va. #—U. §.
District Judge Herbert Boreman
today issued an order blocking in-
definitely a meeting of Follansbee
Steel Corp, stockholders to vote
on a proposed sale of the firm's
(121,146 compared with a net in-| small increase on all cars and
suing pajamas to recruits to “speed | ¢) 979 442, or 17 cents a share. | up. . .the adjustment from civilian -
model changeover. come of $26,349,314, er $4.07 a | trucks.”
| share, for the like period last year. | “Specific prices." Cuttice said.
For September, net income was |‘ tll be announced by General
compared with $3,572,484, or 5
/cents a share, for September 1953.
Ainsworth Reports Loss
DETROIT «» — The Ainsworth
Mfg. Co. Monday reported a loss
of $198,963 for the nine months
ending Sept. 30 as compared to a
profit of $144,204 for the same
period last year. The company
laid the loss to reduced defense
work and the auto industry's early
motors passenger car and truck
Statler Hotel Chain Sale
to Hilton to Be Completed |
NEW YORK (INS)—The sale of.
| the Statler Hotel chain to hotelman |
Conrad Hilton for $111 million will |
| be completed in New York today.
More than 50 bankers, officials
and lawyers will be on hand to
negotiaje thousands of legal docu-
ments in connection with the
transfer of ownership. 436 Orchard Loke
FE 5-6159
Employers Attention SOLVE YOUR
PERSONNEL PROBLEMS
Reterences Checked
Applicants Pre-Tested
Confidential
BOND
EMPLOYMENT AGENCY
53% W. Huron Se.
FEderal 4-4469
» =
i '
f
FIRE
Insurance o
Crawford-Dawe-Grove
716 Pontiec State Bonk Idg. KNOWS NO
CALENDAR
All Kinds
Ph. FE 2-8357
anne —_——oo
‘41% South Saginaw S.
Phone FE
OR ENDORSERS ONE PLACE TO PAY
"Stet 8 yous of credit counselling experience assist you"
MICHIGAN CREDIT COUNSELLORS Pd
Above Oakland Theater 8-0456
Fe ee
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