x THE pe Ae PONTIAC PRE f a, WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 19, 1955—38 PAGES ; ~~ ‘ kee ke "Te A p Prison Where Felons Hold Guards Prison Warden Reappointed Highest Budget PONTIAC, MICHIGAN Tachens 11ath YEAR * Bs if, [220 Te pL Wate: Ae diene ie BY PE [ped Bao od EB Bee) ene al iii el 34 ite ced i Hit pas iW lalal Fit ay! 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ECT IB oy 1 ft fit” i AS Bagge eH i thay ia AST m8 AS Cperesbpa Siebiiay ies (plea ii a java att * Ri IS He Hee ce yi i ifltiedii 8 6 i Hi it il : . i is “4 Beira ‘ifs te See Of ii ys lh Ht! 4 : i , P : i & esege ssi ip ae $3 4 Bak 3 | at sgguh i “ Hs He gare ah if i at BG steel? fact iit ef cul hate silt jdt alti Oss ie te fe cate de ge dapil= Saasie ifetiiesaae tylatHt O'S ae fill Scan Raine Bla dtiaay wae al | 88 ip a. eee ee ae 4 iy Wil Stuy ~ Dogs on Loose Will Seek Means to CoFl eiver. last night were advanced | Man Who Fired Shot, Number at Large as Safety Measure The Pontiac City ing to discuss ways of cutting down on the number of dogs running | loose .in the city. The move was suggested Commissioner John E. Carry and supported by Commissioner Har- court S, Patterson. by Carry cited a recent incident | where three children were bit- ten by a dog at Webster School. An informal meeting will i. held | Colorado, Wyoming and New Mex- | P: at an early date, commissioners indicated, to review the problem |°! Pontiac Post 13, which was rep- | and discuss what can be done about it, The city now requires that dogs be kept tied from May to October, said City Manager Walter K. Will- man. Carry suggested that school grounds might be fenced in or that a year-round leashing of dogs be made mandatory. Michigan GOP Lawmakers Get Committee Jobs WASHINGTON «® — House Re- publican leaders ‘today announced the following committee assign- ments for Michigan congressmen: Appropriations: Ford. Banking and Currency: Wolcott. Education and Labor: Hoffman. Interstate and Foreign Com- merce: Bennett. woe Cederberg Public Works: Dondero. Democrats, who are in the ma- jority; previously had made their The assignments are subject to formal House tomorrow. @ Highest City Budget Unofficially OK'd egraph Rd. and Orchard Lake Ave. i 3. Initial allocation of one-half mill for an addition to Pontiac cluding. paving, park development, sidewalks and a new sanitary {ill on West Kennett road (already in operation. ) Willman anticipates income from taxes will total $2,773,264 and in- come from other sources pf mu- nicipal revenue will total $1,500.- 338. The budget also recommends that $120,357 from surplus be ap- plied to budget income. Besides these sources of in- come, approximately $375,000 will be returned to the city by the State Highway Dept. in gasoline and weight taxes, during the year, Willman said. The funds will be used for street construction within the city. Willman estimated that approxi- mately $500,000 in special assess- ment income will also be avail- able during the year for a like purpose. Major items expenditure - wise are $3,318,196 for operations; $717,- 300 for: the city’s share of capital improvements; $257,264 for waste collection and disposal and $101.- 000 representing one-half mill lev- ied for payment of a $3,000,000 hospital bond issue, assuming the bonds will be sold this year. Fined for Recklessness Luther Olson, 4, bourne, Waterford Township, plead- ed guilty to reckless driving yes- terday before Waterford Justice Willis D. Lefurgy and paid a $50 fine and $15 costs. The Weather PONTIAC AND VICINITY — Partly cloudy tonight and tomerrew. Tomerrew night partly cleudy and continued cold. Lew tonight 16-20. high temerrow 29-33. Lew tomerrow night 11-18 Nerth te northeast winds 8-15 miles tenight. Teday in Pentiae Lowest temperature preceding 8 am 1 At 8 am Wind velocity Direction. North. Sun sets Wednesday a: 5:29 pm Sun rises Thursday at 7:56 am Moon sets Wednesday at 1:36 pm Moon fises Thursday at 5-24 am 12 mph Dewntewn Tempera tures s (As downtown) Highest. temperature. ....... . 3 Lowest temperature. ................ 16 Mean temperature................- 19.5 . Weat iy t Ome Year Age in Pontis ore... : _™ Minte 069 ec euscens a4 of 4990 Sher- | ‘Advanced Rank ‘Conferred on 7 Explorer Scouts Seven members of Explore: 'Scout Post 66, including the unit ;to the rank of apprentice explorer r a Court of Awards in Joslyn Avenue Presbyterian Church. | Those receiving advancement in- Commission | cluded Dave and Bob Birchmeier, | last night decided to set a meet-| Ray Kirby, Norman Mallory, Bob tion at Pontiac General Hospital ‘,}today was Mrs Franks, Charles Bradshaw and King Stetler, post advise Over 100 guests saw colored | slides and movies taken of Pon- tiac Explorer Scouts this summer on a Recky Mountain tour. Commentary on the trip was giv- jen by Dave Birchmeier, Archie ‘Haynes, Bob Franks and Stetier. A film. summary of the entire tour, which took in national parks and other points of interest in ‘ico, was shown by Bill De Grace resented on the trip along with All Tickets Sold for C. of C. Dinner All tickets for the Pontiac Cham- ber of Commerce's annual dinner meeting have been sold, John P. Niggeman, general chairman, an- nounced today. | The meeting will be held Tues- day night at the Elks Temple and , will feature Dr, William Alexan- ‘der of Oaklahoma City as guest ‘speaker. Local realtor Bruce J. | Annett will be toastmaster. Selfridge Officer , Explains Air Defense Col. William Tope, commander of Selfridge Air Force base ad- dressed the Oakland County Torch Club at Birmingham Community House™last night. Col. Tope dis- cussed air defense, and especially Selfridge. within a 200-mile radius from the field. Other bases to the north take over ‘beyond that limit, although all are directed from a central command. He described the intricate radar systems which keep a constant alert and by which all-weather targets. Rockets from fighting planes are fired without the pilots ever | seeing their targets, he said. Pilots and planes at Selfridge are on constant alert 24 hours a | day, Col. Tope said, and can be | airborne within minutes after tan alarm. Every plane which flies in the area must be satisfactorily identified, ‘he added. Council Finishes Sanitation Code in Walled Lake WALLED LAKE—The city coun- pos has completed its work on. its | Sanitation code, and has turned it | over to an attorney for study. | Charles Fisher has been appoint. |ed to head the traffic code com- mittee, Dan McVety will sv- pervise the taxation committee; | Charles. Riffenburg, the public safe. | ty committee; Gerald Hazen, the | Dog ordinance committee. | Building permit fees were set- tled upon, and sewage require- ments for homes decided. Robert J. Clark, CPA from Far- |mington, is helping the city set {up an auditing and accounting | system Perennial Jail Tenant _Herald’s Cold Weather | ST. BONIFACE; Man. (UP) — Police were certain today the worst of the winter is upon them. Pete Nikoluk has started his annual | jail term for vagrancy. Nikoluk has spent the past 21 | winters in jail on vagrancy charg- es. Police said he always manages to get arrested just before the coldest part of the winter sets in. the operations centered at | He said Selfridge is charged | with defense. of an area roughly |i jet fighters are guided to their | Fleet Girl's Condition -|s Satisfactory | | i _ 4 Teenagers Released After Questioning Reported in satisfactory condi- Jo Ellen Hall, 17, of Auburn Heights. who was | wounded in the back by a shotgun slug yesterday. ! The slug was fired by Seward | Rossman, 45, of 3151 Lake George |Rd., Oxtord Township, who told \the prosecutor's office he fired at \the gas tank of the car in which she was riding, thinking its occu- ants had stolen gas from a tank jin his yard. Ressman and the four teen agers in the car were released after questioning yesterday by Oakland County Assistant Prose- cutor Robert D. Leng, whe said no charges would be lodged un- less future developments changed | the picture. | Driver of the car, James May- | bee, 18, of 2627 Frankson, Roches- ter, said -he had gone to Ross- man’s door to ask directions after | becoming lost following an early morning skating party on Silver Lake. The shot, which passed through the car's trunk and back seat, was fired as he drove away, said Maybee. Released besides Rossman and Maybee were Clement C. Berger, 18, of 3035 John R., Birmingham; Edward Drogosh, 17, 2321 Long- view, Rochester, and Sylvia May- bee, 16, James’ sister, 200 Red Warplanes Soften Up Tachens (Continyed From Page One) telling the Communists they needn't worry about the U.S. 7th island 32 miles southwest of the were in the Vicinity. Air. Force headquarters reported Nationalist planes carried out night- long attacks against Communist | ships in the Tachens and many |Communist craft were destroyed or damaged. The Nationalists alse said anti- Real Estate Scheme Exposed by C. of C. | tional publication of theirs,” Hir- linger explained. “But they ask a $250 to $600 advance commission. I've never |heard of any property being sold | through this method, but we have had several complaints from peo- ple who paid the commission and ' got no results.” Officials OK Standards tor Civic B In order to remind Pontiac resi- 'dents of the need for civic better- | City Commission last night adopted ia set of standards designed to measure improvements. 1 Fe é “i { i i | | +f 5 & etterment Stern of the midget ship is The ship is designed prilertty fey Alimony Funds Hit Peak in 1954 County Friend of Court Collect $2 Million for Child Support Alimony payments in divorce cases involving minor children hit an all-time high last year in Oak- land County. Receipts for 1954 in the office of the Friend of the Court totaled $2,076,696.95, an increase of 8.8 per these cases. The office has a staff of 22 $84,184 in. ‘*|Warden Won't Deal 5 ze ; PLA tt fe ffir P E EE 37, F g37 3 mt i ; i x is THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 19, 1955 EXPLORER SUB—George Moore Jr., is shown in a two-man submarine after it was launched on Lake Texoma, near Durant, Okla. submerged, and the bow is awash. for underwater photography and exploration. Pincers on the bow are for picking up buried treasure— Assembly to Try Former Panama Head as Assassin PANAMA @® — Given a green light by the Supreme Court, a three- man National Assembly commis- sion pressed ahead today with its investigation of charges that ex- | President Jose Ramon Guizado | was involved in the assassination Jose Antonio Remon, The court ruled yesterday that only the Assembly could try the former chief executive. Supporters of Guizado had argued that his alleged complicity in the murder plot occurred while he was for- eign minister, before he became , and he therefore was entitled to trial by the Supreme Court. . * * $ The constitution provides that the National Assembly tries pres- idents, while the Supreme Court tries Cabinet members. The court ruled that the Assembly tries pres- idents for offenses committed be- fore they take office as well as /OCSC Will Entertain National Skeet Shoot g ce E ga & 2 Ss & ¥ : pall Eitil ri: Elder Sheppard Dies in Family Hospital i sil feet i E tH i gf = : = if : é zi HE flrs , i Education Talk : Slated Tonight Council for Exceptional Children Is Sponsoring Wayne Professor Dr. John J. Lee of Wayne Uni- versity will, deliver a talk tonight on “Recent Trends and Develop- ments in Special Education’ in Lincoln Junior High School at 8 40'clock, ‘Dr. Lee is professor and general adviser of special education at Wayne and is on the advisory com- mittee for elementary and secon- dary education in the United States Office of Education. Sponsored by the Pontiac Area Chapter of the International Coun- cll fer Exceptional Children, Dr. Lee’s talk is open to the public. The local chapter of: the ICEC said that Dr. Lee’s appearance will aid many people in becoming better acquainted with the aims and functions of the program. Oakland County is the only county in the nation which locally upports and controls its own pro- gram. Prior to the opening of the meet- ing, the ICEC will conduct a coffee hour fromf*7:30 to 8 p.m. Knowland, Ike Exchange Ideas Senate GOP Leader Declines to Say What Was Discussed - WASHINGTON w — Eisenhower and Sen. (R-Calif) exchanged views over the breakfast table today on “‘various problems” but the Senate Repub- lican leader declined to say wheth- er the matter of the eleven fliers imprisoned in Red China came up. Knowland has called the United Nations mission to Peiping to seek release of the fliers a failure, and has declared he sees no conflict be- tween that assertion and Eisen- hower’s counsel against ‘‘impetu- ous words’ regarding the situation. > ca 7 On leaving the White House Knowland told newsmen that he and the President ‘“‘had an ex- change of views on various prob- lems, both domestic and fureign affairs.” . He replied he would “‘have to let it stand at that’ when a reporter asked whether efforts to win re- | lease of airmen had been dis Repub- lican leader he has met with Ei- ‘Influencers’ Fakes, Postmaster States . &° : ap alt ree | rz 2 | z a # The’ Day in Birmingham . Ground-Breaking in Predicted for From Our Birmingham Correspondent BIRMINGHAM—Routine matters cut last night's Board of Educa- tion meeting to an hour-long ses- sion with brief discussion on the new junior high school to be built | on Adams south of Derby read. Architects announced that plans in February and ground broken in March Problems of previding storm and sanitary facilities to the area are now being hashed out by Board of Education and City Commission members and a bers, was appointed to study the advisability and effectiveness of tinted glass for the new Birmingham School addition. Plan Food, Medicin Airlift for Scotland LONDON @#— Britain mobilized | Red Cross Meeting Set A meeting tonight of the execu- tive committee of Oakland County chapter American Red Cross has been called by the chairman, Harold B. Euler, The meeting will be held at the chapter house on Franklin boulevard. Denies Gun Charge Juston J. Threets, 23, of 519 Mon- tana Ave., pleaded innocent to pos- session of an unregistered gun and furnished a $200 bond when he appeared before Municipal Judge Cecil McCallum yesterday.” Junior mingham desk at the Pontiac’ Press, FE 2-8181. | initial talk in a series of three at |8 tonight. Dr. Harold F. Powell, |for the building should be ready | Birmingham resident and associate professor of educational psychology. at Wayne University, will speak on ‘Goals and Ideals We Have for Our Children, and Successful Way? to Achieve Them.” Registration closes Friday at Torry School for the series of adult evening courses sponsored by the | Board of Education, Classes cover- | ing 21 subjects will start next week at Birmingham High School. s » + Clarkston Superintendent of Schools Leslie Green will be the speaker at the Hickory Grove school board meeting at ‘7:30 p.m. *| today at the school. A new building program will be discussed. The | meeting is open to the public. recess "est fF mee | DHE” Deaths Mrs. George H. Rupert Mrs. George H. (Ursula) Rupert, 1} 41, of 242 Auburn Ave., died at her home early this morning. She had been ill since last February. Born in Foley, Minn., Feb. 26, 1913, she was the daughter of Holly and Anna Wisneiwski White and was married in Foley in 1939. Mrs. Rupert came to Oakland County in 1933 and was a member of St. Michael’s Catholic Church. Surviving, besides her husband and mother, are two daughters, | Ann Florence and Nancy Louise. | both at home. A sister. Mrs. H. W. Lind, Princeton, Minn., survives. . Arrangements will be announced later by the Melvin A. Schutt Fu- neral Home. "Take Et From Me, there's nothing like tt in Detroit” ANNOUNCING NEW SERVICE _- at MOTOR BAR and GRILL— YOU CAN EAT * . “y at . = ; YOUR FAVORITE DRINK FROM THE MOTOR BAR HOURS— » ~ ” Ono 115 1 FOR SANDWICHES 114. M.to9P. M._ 7 BUFFET = —«s11A. M.to2 P.M 2 | BUFFET *~ “SP.M.to9 P.M. ai ree Bs Oe s 1.25 | 2.50 : _——* Lake * . piss a cE Hy i é Hil oF z Ht rT 8 E ag fy f icfie its SOOTHING RELIEF FROM COUGHS DUE TO COLDS Father John’s Medicine Acts Promptly irritated throat. How good that feels! Prove it Your Watch See $ 50 Some $45 Expansion Watch Bands - Ladies'—Men's Special | 95 Georges-Newports Jewelry Dept. | versive literature and holding a ~~». THE PONTIAC PRESS, _ WEDNESDAY, JANU Hero of WWI Lawrence of Arabia, No Hoax, Associates Tell British Author : LONDON (#—A British author's charges that the World War I ex- ploits of Lawrence of Arabia were largely a hoax brought friends to Lawrence's defense yesterday. The charges were made by Rich- ard Aldington, 63-year-old author and critic, in his book “Lawrence, the Impostor,” published last week in Paris. Thomas Edward Lawrence, who was killed in a motorcycle acci- dent in Britain in 1935, has been pictured as a young archeologist who during World War I sparked the Arab revolt against Turkey and led the Arab raiders to out- standing victories. He also, won literary acclaim as the author of “Seven Pillars of Wisdom." Aldington claims most of Law- rence’s exploits were the product ef his own imagination. In any case, the author contends, most ef the Middle East fighting was done by the British and the Arab contribution was negligible. Several of Lawdence’s former associates cited the words of Sir Winston Churchill in support of Lawrence. Churchill once wrote that, while Lawrence should not have the “whole credit for the great suc- cess" of Britain's World War I policy in the Arab lands, “the wonder was that he was able to sink his personality, to bend his tmperious will and pool his knowl- edge in the common pool.” “Here is one of the proofs of the greatness of his character and the versatility of his gqnius,”’ Churchill declared. Another support came from Prof. Lionel Curtis, a féllow of All Souls College at Oxford. “I knew Lawrence intimately, and whatever he was he was no charlatan,”’ said the professor. Curtis scouted Aldington’s impli- cation that the late George Bernard Shaw, a_friend of Lawrence, did much of the writing of ‘Seven Pillars of Wisdom.” “Tt is unfortunate for Aldington that recently the Lawrence letters | were published,” Curtis said. ]“They are among the most brik | | liant in the English language.” British Release Wife of Guiana’s Ex-Premier GEORGETOWN, @—Mrs. Janet Jagan, U. S.-born wife of the British Guiana Premier ousted in 1953 on charges of Com- munist plotting, is free again after serving five months in jail. Mrs. Jagan, general secretary of the Peoples’ Progressive party led by her husband Cheddi Jagan, had been convicted of possessing sub- prohibited political meeting —_ _ RESOLVED: Ss to take it on WASHDAY l'm Getting a new SS FRIGIDAIRE Automatic Washer Yes, this wonderful new automatic FRIGIDAIRE washer ‘will give me glorious new hours of freedom from wash day drudgery. tt won't be ony problem keeping my New Year's resolution with this amazing, time-seving, work- saving FRIGIDAIRE washer on the job. PACKED WITH HIGH | © bive-Water Washing is safe, thorough, gentle Fleat- Over Rinsing gets clothes really clean, bright « Repidry Spin leaves clothes drier, easier to handle « Select-O-Dic! for fully avtematic or fully flexible operation ¢ Uses 2 te 8 gallons LESS hot water « Saves suds for re-use if you like © Lifetime Porcelain where it counts most! Yo Priced withthe Lowest '299%_| easy > AA 9 PRICED FEATURES ME-4369.20 British Guiana | ” Even Hat of Brings Happy Memories By MARGARET: LATROBE “It was the year for a new hat. :] was void of imagination when it came to chileren’s hats. Warmth and durability was about it. Mother fell in love with a wide- brimmed beaver horror i : Being a weekday, my hair was pulled so tightly back in braids that vocal or visual manifestations of any kind were nearly impos- sible. This hair-do gave rise to the eyebrows (mine) and the expres. sion, peeled onion. The horrendous hat sat square- ly on my head, and from its brim dangled two crocheted streamers ending in large fur balls. Mother assured me that on Sundays, when the hair fell in perfect rag-rolled curls, things would look up with the hat. She said, while the milli- ner’s canaries chirped merrily, that nobody on earth would have a hat like this one. What other lucky child could Beaver Skin have a parent willing to spend two whole dollars for such a haf? Be- sides, it was warm. It would last for years. And she was right, It was the only hat of its kind anywhere. People stopped to gaze in disbe- belief that a fur umbrella had somehow been attached, upside down, to my braided cranium. No one could sit beside me at church because of the scope of its brim. I dare not take it off fer there was no place to put it. Although seen by many, I saw no one that winter. Entire weeks were spent looking straight down at my toes. How we laughed—Mother and I —in jater years about that beaver hat. Now that she is gone, the remembrance ot every trolley ¢ car trip, every curl she wrapped 80 éarefully for a child’s head, every good and wonderful thing she did— even the dreadful beaver hat—is sweet. She bought it because she thought it was divine. I wore it because I thought she was. pe Sometimes I wonder what memo- ries our children will have of us, don’t you? | (Copyright 1955, King Features) Tire Case Baffles Sheriff LAWRENCE; Kan. # — A rob- bery victim walked into Sheriff) = Billy Hodson's office, pointed to | a car outside and said, “One of | my tires that was stolen is on that | old Ford out front.’’ Hodson is | working hard on the case because the Ford was a used car he him- self had bought not, long before. Iran Chief Recovering TEHRAN, Iran ®—Premier Gen. Fazollah Zahedi is recovering from an n attack of gout. Junedale Brand Redi-Eat Bazley’s Thursday SUPER SPECIALS!! 78 North Saginaw Street — PICNICS... | This Valuable Coupon Entitles the 1 Bearer to o 1-ib. Limit, Fresh ‘BUTTER oo 6 Only With saat Purchase 29: = 4 * . UARY 19, 1955 Viet Nam Launches . New Land Reform SAIGON, Indochina #—The South Viet Nam government has launched its new land reform pro- gram, the weapon it is counting on most to save the coyntry from the Communist-led Vietminh. Premier Ngo Dinh Diem fixed ' <* per’ cent. tween tenants and farm owners are also required in place of verbal agreements. -The contracts will be for a mini- mum of five years, renewable for another five. If the tenant keeps up | payments for 10 years, he acquires ownership of the land. TT Beautiful Formica Dinettes Avaiame in Chrome or Wrought Iron Tables made to order, any size or shape, Including 26 colors and patterns to select from. Tables are equipped with self-storing leaf. Chairs are upholstered colors and patterns — 16 different styles, chrome is triple- plated, including copper, nickel and Open Nites ’til 8:30 WHERE THOUSANDS SAVE MILLIONS CONSUMERS POWER COMPANY $e EVERY 2 WEEKS 92 you SAVE | oe on $ 1.00. Next Christmas Receive $ 25. $ 2.00 . Next Christmas Receive $ 50. 00 = § 4,00 . Next Christmas Receive $100.00 x" $10.00 . Next Christmas Receive $250.00 ¢ , $20.00 . Next Christmas Receive $500.00 : # f3 name OE eh sian ; onene cy date a eae PF ee non aon ne are round, square and oval. in Comark material—64 All Made to Order ANY share STYLE $49.95 AND UP Lifetime Guarantee on All Chrome BUY DIRECT and SAVE %;! METALMASTERS MFG. CO. 4436 North Woodward Near 14 Mile Road Daily 10 A. M. to 8:30 P. M. : Llberty 9-301 a ee | Open Your Club Today! he Community National Bank of PONTIAC, MICHIGAN Member Federat Deposit Insurance Corporation oF RR Be he ce doll At’ Not Too Late’ We Are Still Opening 1955 CHRISTMAS CLUBS It’s so easy to save up painlessly far next year’s Christmas gifts by joining our Christmas Savings Club for ‘55! Save just a moderate amount every two weeks and have a lot to spend a year from now. er - DIRECTORS Irving B. Babcock President Dearborn Motor Credit Corporation Leuis H. Cole L. H. Cole Oil Company W. Russell Eames Eames & Brown Robert BR. Eldred Senior Vice President Community National Bank of Pontiac Harold A. Fitzgerald Publisher The Pontiac Press Alfred C. Girard President and Chairman of the Board Communiy National Bank of Pontiac Alfred B, Glancy, Jr. President A. R. Glancy Inc. Harold A. Howlett Attorney Howlett, Hartman and Beier Baldwin Rubber Company BIO, BRS PO APO. 4 e. 4 an, Pies Ma aR Se j ; s —_— — - —_— > = ¥ ee : f ee , : , ‘ 4 : : ’ Lee PREF PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 19, 1955 7 . what it is by hearing their elders | rebelling and began barking, “Bow. | ? Ok mittee has been lining up senators Dies . ‘Save ae! | talk about jt " wow-wow-wow,wow |" Dems Withhold ay for Lincoln Day speeches. but Sen. Try 9 to Dog Vi Ch l rE. , 4 D | Tracy Ann, who isn't quite 19 Now each /morning she brings | ON Lincoln Day Recess McCarthy (R-Wis) said he is set-; CHICAGO ® — An apparent at- ew In very ays months old, got a real thrili when | the harness to me to put on her | WASHINGTON ® — Democrats —_—— his own schedule. He said| tempt to save his mongrel dog we poughed through some rough before our deck stroll. She thinks | ithheld a dec oda Re- he engagements to speak in from his burning basement flat ) P ib! Cruise Shi seas off Cape Hatteras, To keep | She is a dog, and since she loves | ee © SaCeNen ey eS Bridgeport, Conn., Appleton, Wis., | } nt 4 lest wise te Pe: ! We'tt Your T Free! OSSI e. on p her from plunging overboard te | dogs, she has no objection to walk- | publican request for a 10-day Sen-| and Chicago and may schedule Gahagan, 80. The body of the man : Plan Your, Tour So —_ “ | pick foam flewers out of the (ing on a leash | ate recess during February to let] some other appearances. and his pet were found in the ruins Phone Mi 4-5711 SOMEWHERE IN THE a The kiks are all gone now. My | sea, f bad ta pal @ edness aad | ee |GOP members make Lincoln Day of the flat, Neighhors said Gaha- | : " BRAN or Laaves from a cruis-/ nerves are so relaxed | feel || 4 jeash on her while on deck. Sikorsk Gets Medal apecehes. There are three times more/ gan hed been seen outside during Tickets, Reservations ing notebook could skip rope with them. |” Fe ieehered ane enema of inal Y The Republican National Com-| widows than widowers in the U.S. ' the fire, but then he disappeared. to Anywhere The pleasantest feature of a win- _ leo fs oad . nse - 8 ‘|| LONDON u®—The British Insti-|— ie ee a <<“? ‘ter cruise is that. once you are} .No one has more fun on alt feat . Come i ae tution of Mechanical Engineers has | = Grace Plammer Reilly at sea all the worries of 1aMd) cruise than smal children. They! i, wear it | awarded the 1955 James Watt In- 379 in | become unimportant. | have more sense of Xdventure than| . ., | ternational Medal to Igor I. Sikor- : The word ‘‘diet.”’ by unspoken | older passengers, and enjoy storm) I know how you feel. honey.” | sky in recognition of his pioneer | es | agreement, drops from everyone's as well as mild weather They I told her It makes you feel like work in the development of vari- | MEH ata ' See ae | vocabulary. Time becomes mean-| rarely become seesick before’ the | 4 doggie. doesn't it? ous types Of aircraft particularly i T : 0 i A L gi Sq | ingiess. You don't need a calendar | age of two, when they first learn At the word doggie, Ahe quit | helicopters. ’ to chronicle the passing days. You - tell time by your chins This ‘morning, for example, | / when I got out my razor I found | p FO I ‘ gn I had.a brand new chin to shave e — a round, firm, fully packed chin slightly browned by the sun, When I remarked on this to | | THRIFT WEEK the steward, he explained: “Oh, that means we've been at | “4 | Sea four days. A three-dessert man © | your age and weight, who enjoys THRIFT :. HABIT his food. can grow a new chin surprisingly fast .. . at our high interest rate! | ain'’s newest and trimmest cruise vessels, When we boarded her— : SLOWER! DONT t i * | every four days without any troub- j ' tle at all.” : . wt ORDER NOW! 3 Since I started with two chins WOMEN’S MEN’S angi F d the best pabit you can acquire. 3 tt aoe land we will be at sea 13 days ® nce starte cee r i ‘that means 10 get back to Sew F FLORSHEIM DRESS SHOES Florsheim Dress Oxfords ance started «- : your bon’ neil work Oakland Fuel & Paint Co. Pha pda on = ear cali Discontinued Patterns Discontinued Potterns - y a better ruture tor you. : 436 Orchard Lake Pe oe somehow | don't minc P so ons P _ m ya 5.6159 | —_ | eg. $15.95 ta $19.95 Neg. $17.95 to $20.95 if you combine your thrifty habits with s the F ws ‘st : . — | Ocean” Monarch. ‘ou igney NOW $4. @8! Te $4 3° NOW $14% regular savings here, your money will grow : | Frances, - daughter, Tracy | WOMEN’S MEN’S Ann, and — I started to walk -s | right off again, There was le | TWEEDIE DRESS SHOES TAYLOR-PLYMOUTH SHOES phone stateroom, a | : P | | there Pegi im I detest no a 152 pair in this group Discontinued Styles (e) | vacation it is the sight of a Reg. $12.95 and $14.95 Reg. $15.95 ~~. ! Both For $1295 bone worrs ’ said Frances NOW $4.9 . NOW $50 | “ Anybody who phones you from Current Rate ~ marae Pp : gah i shore will have to pay $4.50 for | ° , in 14K yellow gold. a three-minute c'!l, and if I know | WOMEN’S AND TEENAGERS MEN’S your friends — ani after 17 years Jewelry Department I feel I know them unly too well FLATS and LOW HEELS DRESS SHOES | Lo you are as sufe as if you were 2 P; . . ' even ° 115 peir in this group ud Eo st G : $ 4 right she was! Every morte | Reg. $8.95 and $9.95 Reg. $8.95 to $12.95 SAVINGS INSURED to $10,000 a : ing I lie in bed for half an hour | NEWPORT'S Il [eae MT now $480 t $68! N the most beautiful telephone in the ’ PO NTI C F F D F R world, It never rings. Aboard ship you have to get ac- All Sales Final customed to strange noises — the creaking of wood in the night. the soft slap of waves against the y steel hull | oe to re The first day I stretched out on ; a deck chair in the hot sun [| was startled out of my doze time 20 W. Huron after time by a strange sound — sna-a-a-p, sna-a-a-p' ——_—— ————— “You bear anything snap ping?” I asked a veteran voyag- er next to me, He cocked his FAST RELIEF SORE THROAT COLO SAVINGS 16 E. Lawrence St. ears, “I don't hear anything,’’ he said = CETTE then after a moment inquired, ‘‘Do Se nnn - those snapping sounds sound like a they're inside you’”’ “Yeah, come to think of it. I guess they do.” “They re just the kiks coming | | out of your nerves,’’ he said toler antly | SAM BENSON SAYS: — OUT! Fore and Aft- and Curbside, too- When I Say Closing Out All My Women’s Winter Coats and Sportswear... | Mean It! All Wool! Blanket Fleeces Curls . . . Tweeds Select Your Coat and Deduct 10. ‘It's the style hit of the year! ou can take our word for it when we _—_ But bold new styling, of course, is just acceleration, but instantly, and with Their Already tell you this: | one reason for the sensational success of infinite smoothness. : ' Low Prices... 9 The first time we put eyes on the 1955 these great cars. So you can see that just looking isn’t Out They Go! Buicks, we really raised a cheer. New power is part of the picture—robust enough. . ° To top the looks of last year's Buick—the | new V8 power in record might—236hpin = You have to take that wheel in your hands, Figure-Flattering car that moved Buick into the top three the Century, Surer and ROADMASTER try that power, feel that Dynaflow take- | COTTON of the nation’s best sellers —that was — 188 hp in the low-priced SpeciAL. hold surge, sample that Million Dollar something. Ride—and check the hard-to-pass-up New performance, too—from the ‘ . “ That gave us two hits in a row, we figured dynamic action of Buick’s Variable Pitch prices were quoting. —and it seems we figured right. Dynaflow* that gives you far better gas We'll gladly help you do all that. Why not For with these stunning new 1955 Buicks, mileage in normal driving and cruising — a : ter ae ber er end namie aphid we're getting even more noses pressed and full-power getaway or safety-surge oo eaber Sori. cg —— against our showroom windows than last Senforized Shrunk! —— cna asenn 9c Thrill of the year is Buick : MILTON BERLE STARS FOR BUICK See the Buich-Bete how Attemate Teetoy Brestngn Wm BETO AUTOMOORES ARE QUT BUCK wal, RD Te , ‘ salasinhi sinamin CenSOn » 210 Orchard Lake Ave. Pontiac, ) Phone FE 2-9101 a | 5 , joc; Michigan | | H} CLOTHING OUTLET [ff OLIVER MOTOR SALES sl DRESSES tx hh Values to $4.95 All Sales Final! er eee oe —E EES 3 “THIRTY a Pegg} First By PHYLLIS BATTELLE NEW YORK (INS)—Most women cry for the moon when they’re young, and for mink when they're wise, but Peggy Keenan is dif- ferent. Peggy sort of hankers after the North Pole. “It's not that I want to own it, or anything like that,’ she says, because Peggy is not a greedy girl. “But I surely would like to be the first woman to set foot on it.” Judging from her past experi- ence at getting what she wanted, it’s safe to say that the sign of ™ rth Pole , the snow almost as much as he loves Peggy. He met up with of them forcibly, the snow and Miss Kee- nan, in 1947 during a blizzard in Alaska when Peggy, then a con- cert pianist, was entertaining, troops for the U.S. “The tem- perature was 73 below zero,” she remembers, “and I think he was impressed by the way I could weather the cold.” Two years later they were mar- ried, in South Dakota, with the temperature 110-above-zero. Ob- viously another weather test. * “So you see I'm not just going along as a pampered wife. The colonel knows, by this time, I can take it.” ~ Peggy, who still goes by the name of Keenan because jt’s her trademark in the musical and proven she can take it, does not look like the kind of girl who would | be content to sit around in caribou snuggies, sipping whale oil ‘n bit- « Z , ‘ V4 anted her-to--be-a dime [ frostbite, all Peggy gets is ‘the yi privilege of standing on the Pole She could have turned out to be | and saying *‘We-w-well, I m-m-m- a sharp-looking schizophrenic, un-| made it. der these circuinistances, but “as it was,"’ she says, “I found there’ Alumni Vote to Keep was plenty of time to do what } . . both nareihe wanted." Name of University So Peggy Keenan first oecame a1 PHILADELPHIA # — Benjamin concert P gg oon peng le ee Franklin may have been its foun- and radio. ‘hen e ti a, ee ree > made, she started looking into the der, but the a —— mining situation in the Black-Hills sylvania is still the University of af South Dakota, and now she Pennsylvania. That's what the owns aid manages her own com- | alumni decided in a poll, 1,101 to pany, Northwest Defense Minerals, 2H. ~ Inc., which will, starting next May, Changing the school's name was recover and process minerals and/ the idea of Alexander D. Chiquoine metals for defense. . Jr., of Scarsdale, N. Y., a member ’ of the class of 1934. He suggested “I guess you might say,” ven- : Jog = Fock ae mg like to the institution’s name be changed ~ , to honor its founder, Benjamin be doing things.” . Franklin On the North Pole trip, she'll pe _ doing plenty. She'll drive one Of |, +g. |the three dog sleds used by the | Lifetime Project scientific crew; officially record,| WICHITA, Kan. (UP) — The on micro-film, all tests made in| peach cobbler Mrs. Ruth Sullivan 65-below temperatures; act as|baked on her 90th birthday was business worlds where she has also | | chief radio announcer, giving daily | her production from start to fin- | accounts of the trek, and head up| ish: She had planted peach pits jthe film production crew which) years ago, tended the growing. tree, j will turn out a full-length color | picked the fruit, canned it and then movie of the $400,000 project. lused a jar of the peaches for the And for all this premeditated | birthday baking project. ters, the rest of her life. She is tall and delicate, with eyes jn honest green and hair the color of good tomato puree. She was brought up by a father who explored in mining and used to strap her te his back while he surveyed the Sierra Nevadas on mountain horses; and a mether —a scientific venture with the pri- mary aim of measuring the depth of the Arctic ice cap for the fu- ture safety of defense aircraft in that area. The expedition is headed by Lt. Col. John F. Stanwell-Flet- cher, a veteran explorer who loves SIDE GLANCES by Galbraith e—_—_ --—-—-- -- - __-_-—_- -+ S] ’ PS Pett Beterpriees, ee A. m—r—ed ORB “That's a good dog—give Mister Bailey back his pants!” 7. © Reg US Pat OFF Cape. 1955 by NEA Sermon inc “That's fishing apparatus the boss bought this noon—has he said | anything about taking a southern business trip?” BOOTS AND HER BUDDIES by Edgar Martin i \resve co Wo Bt YEFX .UEGERTED BN-|} THE WEXT STOP | = - WOM O® OUR V Ei Dory, | ws WER WES V'cour1d SANS VHAXS WHAT IT SRBMENAN Bt fo aa wre S24 in POS 3 : SAN ak (TT @ DONALD DUCK ‘ » THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 19, 1955 FRECKLES AND HIS FRIENDS | : $ ~ ~~~ POSSESSOR. OF FABULOUS BEAUTY--~ PRESIDENT OF THE GIRLS’ GLEE SECRETARY OF QUILL AND dL CLUS --- HONORARY SCROLLERS --. FLATTERER | NA oe GirRts’ VOLLE Micos S, i hiiy Bur wHarS Will THe ‘ao yy) MESSAGE wer’ ? “hg aC . Cap. 1966 by NEA Service, inc. Y. M. by McEvoy and Strieber HERE / dive 1T UP, SOLOIE A UP ! REESE LIVE IT SS THENAS \ / by Carl Grubert - RmOwr COM \ SO CREAP P/ D> — ——~"_’ ) oN NANCY WHAT WOULD AN EG AMOUNT TO, PRAY IF THE HENGOT h—7_ A ROOST TO LAY iT / by Walt Dianey THE MONSTER ON YOUR TV. LET'S WATCH GREEN NO, PEEWEE --- YOUR MOTHER SAID YOU GET NIGHTMARES FROM THAT PROGRAM — ry U a RN Ye WY YY . Yy MY YY 4 GRANDMA HOLY f cow! 1 » a 44 7 . 07 +f, OMe dt. / Jd ft < ~f. 2 iJ ea) . st > Cape, 1988 hy MEA Dorie, tne. 7. Ot tng U.S Pat by Leslie Turner WE MUSTWT SEE YOU POINT HM “Ni OUT 10 ME. DID yOu FIND OUT WOW LONG HE'S HAD THS OFFICE? YES..FOUR MONTHS. IL \ YES_ ME IS THE MAN NOW WHAT? DREAD TELLING AMY HOL DEN THAT SHES DEALING WiTh A BLACK MARKET BABY RING— LOOK! THATS Hm, IN THE DARK SUIT! WAM) LAST 6UMME CALLED HIMSELF JONES: 1 THEN! we JUMPED BAIL ms YY by Charles Kuhn No Matter What Your Problem Your “be May Be . » A Quick Action WANT AD Can help you solve it. DIAL FE 2-8181 Ask for the Want Ad Dept. 4 es ' JRwatams on t= wm, © hom Reid . ~ AW, SHUCKS, STILL .4/ BETCHA | DO KNOW HOw T' J YOu READY TO TURN Him IN 2 NOT YET. HBS W A VICIOUS RACKET, AND THS TIME WE MAY GET THE ENTIRE RING... TWANKS TO YOUR CONTACT WITH HIML THAT 16, IF . NEL? us CAPT SM ‘See by NEA Serview, ine. T. M Reg. U. & Pat Of) BOARDING HOUSE % 7 / tj fy 1 SAW Hee YW FIRST Hee ( ‘QUARANT INED HEALTHIER . HOWSE IS i f aoe ae : - — OO Le! LL ere os . ~ ee Se a meget . reported to police yesterday a bur | owen @ — ast Mares, al. “ | in Active Trade foreman at a products company, glar broke into the plant through CHICAGO \* Grains ruled a side door, ransacked desks and steady on the Board of Trade fo-, cabinets, broke the locks “off tool day but were not able to make any boxes, and khocked the dial Off 4) .ubstantjal gains. Dealings ayain safe in an unsuccessful attempt to were quite active, particular aN open the strong box Then he left the wheat i al d soy be ans following note There appeared to be in a company typewriter f vesterday’s early short) cover “This night has convinced Me jing iy wheat. possibly again in that tomorrow | am starting to g: spired by the intensified fightu straight. Your friend, the burglar.” 4.11, of Formosa. Januat x . - bean dropped a coup of cents [ As advertised in TIME } it the start but then rallied Feed grains advanced small fractions Wheat near the end of the first hour Was to 7# higher. Maret $2.28". corn 34 lower to 4. hig March $1 5 oats unchanged to '¢ higher, March 75's ve ', to lower March $1.19', soy bears : lower to 4 higher January $2.81'.: and lard unchanged to cents a hundred pounds lower January $12.80 Grain Prices CHICAGO GRAIN AF IT’S EASIER TO WORK BETTER ‘Jailed for Auto Offense Morris Cheatman, 32. of 546 Co- Lighters. General Printing nant, Monroe, was sentenced to five days in the Oakland County | & Office Supply Jail yesterday when he pleaded guilty before South Lyon Justice Charles T. Roby to driving his auto without an operator's license. He failed to pay $10 cost 17 W. Lewrence St. Pontiec, Mich. So you can keep the cards on the table.. Most offices need cad files, cabinets and boxes to be kept on table\or desk for handy reference. We have various kinds, made of steel, wood or fiber, for many uses. Cash boxes, too. STEEL BOXES WOOD BOXES FIBER BOXES Short “—_ trays Wide of narrow Good for temporary or files for larger wood boxes «for or permanent file standard-size cards standard card sizes. and storage use. from $3.95 up from $2.65 up from $1 75 up Ks BOX FILES Heavy binders board CARD CABINETS One and 2-drawer CASH AND SECURITY BOXES steel units, conven- or steel boxes for per . jent to stack on sonal or small-ofhce menyast ames desks or tables. fling of aH kinds. office from $3.60 up from $1.25 up from $1.20 up General Printing & Office Supply | 17 W. Lawrence St. Pontiac, Mich. (HICAGO a ) t rs . . . whee office fatigue caused by necdiess eae teaching, bending and moving around are a J) si +. SOYBEANS thing the past. See our Art Metal New 210 ; . Century Desks, each designed srounda job Fo. Ma ; and matching Art Merai Correct | 1), i 5 Seating Ofhce Chairs COR Ma 132 Se + . . Ma . 134 N eneral Printing or Yarn Se) a OATS > Ma & Office Supply |e os PP Ms ae Ma en th 8 SOYBEAN 1! 17 W. Lawrence Ju 10's Ma ‘ RYE Ma Ma 406 a Lad a Ma 1 23'e Foreign Exchange NEW YORK Jar le AP Pore exchange rate follow ‘Great Britatr dollar others in cent Canadian dollar ' New Y n market per cer pr tu i) US cents, up | 32 fa cen Europe Great Britain pound $278 @i 716 up 1 16 of a cer Geeat Britain © day futures 278 1 $2 up 3232 of a cent Great Britain 60 day future 278 15 32. up 3 32 of w cent Great Brttain \] 00 day futures 278 15 32. up 1,16 of a cent. Belgium ‘franc 190', off @% ol itin a cent: Prance ‘franc 28°, of a cen \ unchanged: Germany (West: (Deutsche / mark) 2385, unchanged Holland ‘gui! - der 26 36', ff O00O', of a cent Italy ‘lira 16's of a cen unchanged Portu gal escudo 350 unchanged Sweden ! Reliable Service by ‘krona! 1934 unchanged. Switeeriand ‘franc: ‘free 2333's. unchangec Dep mark krone’: 1450 unchanged | Factory Trained Men Latin America Argentina ‘free: 724, / 12 unchanged. Brazil :free; 143 up 03 of a . cent. Mexico 8602. unchanged, Venezuela i Complete stock of points-for most 9} :volivar) 3003, unchanged | Par East. Hong Kong dollear 1745. un pens, also repairs for electric | changed shavers Ronson and Parker - — . aoe \s THE PONWFIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 19, 1955+" Produce . . Low 14 Club at Pontiac Lodge Temple. 18', E. Lawrence 8t DETROIT PRODUCE in al y id e Wed, Jan 19.8 p. m L. W. Burnes DETROIT. Jan 19 /UP Wholesale Secretary Adv prices on public farmers’ markets re _os ported by the Bureau of Markets Fruits: Apple Delicious, fancy, 5 50 50 bu: No 1. 400-450 bu, @pples. Jona hon fane 400 bu: No 1,3 00-350 b apple MacIntosh ‘ 2 appl al $-3 78 kt app > egerta Bee pped No 1. 1 Of ot Cabbag N 1 100-150 bu abbage urly Nop | 100-1 50 bu ean age c No 1 150-200 b Carrots N ! on t Celery roc 1 60 5 Penne No 1. 100 25 4 H erac N 1 5 00-600 px leeks N 1 1600-125 doz beh Onions ' 1 1130-140 0 bag Pa if No 1 ‘85-100 doz bchs Parsie oot. No 1 85-1 00 ( Parsnips. No 00-150 ', bu Potatoes. No 1. 1 30-1 4¢ s0-Ib bag potatoes No 1. 250-2 80 100 b ba Rhuvarh ho ruse far 1 ‘s¢ x No 1.1006 1 $-lb box ro 0 « bet Rutabaga No 1.1 3 5 Te atoes hot he ' N 12 50 b baske Turnip, topped. No r 1 Bs 5 Le e and salad greens Celery cad base No 1. 1 50-200 | Greens Collard N 1 190-130 bu | Ka N 1 1 00 t Swiss chard N 100-12 bu CHICAGO BUTTER AND BOGUS CHIC AG a ’ AP B a ecely 65 29 * alr t 4 ’ AA 2 AS 90 F , ao < a B 5¢ ao Cc Sé [a 68 esa ng } ‘ Us are 4 ‘ i ar A } DETROIT BGGS DETROIT ar .) AP Eg I a ' e t a ae 4 {;;ade A 45-5 Welz a a a w a ‘ a rade H ‘ a ‘ Grady’ A 4 )w a ‘4 a e 44 * + + a ea r + wt a ] grade B iarge 34 (rane ( a 2 ¥ © a 28 ‘ a a 2 Poultry DETROIT POULTRY DETROIT ar - AP Prices pai t j f De y 1 sa , } a Heavy er 2 « r 12 hea roite t b Whites 25-26 Gray Cr 3 Barred I k 2-32 capone 6', Ibs 28°, hes a la Few hea pe ke aker na 6.30 r r i and r ns © eceig adequate e ligt emat CHICAGO POULTRY CHICAGO, Jan 18 (AP steady to firm on rt receipts in cooks 140 762 lb f b heavy hens 18-21 ligh hens 135-145 fryer and broilers 26-20 oid r raters 5. caponettes CHICAGO POTATOES CHICAGO Jan 18 ‘AP: - Potatoes arrivais old tock 87 ack stock 2. total suppties about shipments 706 oid demand fair stock noderate stead new Russets Minnesota NEW YORK \P—The stock mar- | a | | MARKETS | Stocks Advance | ‘odge Calendar GM to Pull No Punches in '55 | Special communication of Roose- | ket advanced moderately today in | a Lodge No. 510. F & A M 22 | State Street, Jan. 20 at 7:30 p. m North waxe $3 00 washed and Livestock DETROIT LIVESTOCK DETROIT Jar le AP Mogs- Sal able 400 Market active fully with top 25¢ higher sales 17-230 it berrows and gilts 18 00-18 75 mostiy choice 1 and around 190-220 ids 1900. top few sales 17 00-18 00 other weights scarce sOWs under 400 Ib 14 50-15 00 13 00-14 00 Cattle Saiabie 400 Calves 106 Mar ket uneven fresh receipts cr by several hundred cutte low good sterr and heifers carried earlier in the week merger suppiy high good te prime steers fully steady lower grade steers and yearlings weak in a peddling trade cows about steady bulls esround x lower. stockers and feeders fully steady scattered sales good and choice fed steers and yearlings 22 00-27 00 high choice and prime absent, few seles utilit? and: commercial steers and heifers 1200-17 00 jtter kinds 1100 down; most sales and commercial cows 8 00 ommercial grades very scarce rs and cutters fairly active. mostly nost jes utility and com- | 12 50-14 50 light weight i fown t 1000: few choice 750-900 Ib feeder steers 21.50 highly aggressive demand for supp vealer market uneveniy now 200-300 highe for the most saies good and choice veai prime absent early. most lity and commercial 18 00-25 00 r 1800 down enough sheep marke un from some ¢ low bulis BSalabie 100 Not and lambs eerly t make 8 CHICAGO LIVESTOCK CHICAGO an 1A :AP Baiable hogs or markets slow ea ate ade * a + ar even >- 50 ar a Monda genera ark weights unde 230 ibs 1 nd 25 lower} n weigt over 0 . even no | y steac to -25 lowe most choice No 1 and 2 grades with one load choice No 1 210 Ibs at 1875. most 230-250 | Ib 16 50-17 50 with 260-300 15 75 16.50 a few oads 00-340 Ibs 15 56 7% me sow 400 Ibs and lighter 14 75 15 50 larger lots 400-600 ibs 13 00 15 00 Salable cattle 8000 salable calves 400 steers and heifers generally siow. steady | to 50 lower than Mondays average mar ket other classes mostly steady twe oads prime 1.050-1100 Ibs steers 34 50 everal oads mixed choice and prime ade 0-90-32 50 r er 6 00-29 00 @ 4 te a . ~” 50 » co mercial gerade wr 700 a ew prime 1 090 e on hipment of prime 1 050 nixe esrlings 31 50 good 4 hei ers 19 50-26 50 commercia w @ grades 5 00-19 00 a ad nercial 1100 = Ibs “ iit te ow commercial a 9 11 00 canners and cutter Rg 90-9 50 2 few light canners down 4 700 r s tility and commercial bulis 13 00-15 0¢ good and choice vealers 23 00-28 00 a few head 29.00 Salable sheep 2 500 auahter ambs shevenly steady 25 wer f 5 or more lower for tw da heep argely stead gor wooled lambs around 105 r | 19 00-2125: loads and lots 1 2 | mostly choice woolskins 1900-20 50 ! to low good lambs 1000-1800. cull to! ‘ choice slaughter’ ewes 5 50-750 Pigures alter decimal! van ‘ o eighths this week announced plans to/spend Baldwin Rubber* 162 171/€ total of $20,000,000 on improve- Oecerity-Michigan* 37 1 > ‘ . Nees Pa é 3, ments in its downtown / stores Mas 0 &crew . vl 1 31; Plans for a $292.720,000 Shopping ldwest Abrasive* ) ‘Free Sul 04 ae Jn x >, . », ter made the tour, which was 4 : m7 G Be 19.6 . = : ps peti ts 494 Arranged by C. EF. King, vice chair- Ree N ee ( *-} man of the chapter. The visitors Bendix A 04 Lacy bl Reneur Ger cae were especially interested in auto- Beth Steril ms OF ae t ay ff oe j ansfe Rosing| A at cel 285/ mation in the new plant, transfer ’ tre oe Bot A i 64 machines and revolving test stands mnd Stirs 165 Ps mardes Pre a which contribute to building of the pase Gillette mot uy as Goebe! B se) new Pontiac V-8 engine acim malke Goodrich 62 = Fn eee Budd Ce Grah Paige 21] = st Ne 16 5 . Burroughs 442 . ze - Colum & M1 Oe | usiness Notes Campo Wy ) Greyr nd 4 Co D 1581 < { O 624 Cdn Pa 29 6 te s ane ni Max E. Kerns was elected presi Capital A . = Ce P 61 Holland FP s | dent of the Pontiac Association of Case I 18 Homest& 461 . — , role ore aclal jicek cri & yo, Insurance Agents at its annual Celanese 25 Cen $02, dinner mecting -at the Waldron Cen Til PS 74 Ine Ra $0 pear pee acl inisna 69 3 | Hotel last night. He succeeds Roy Ches & O 445 Imspir Cop 39 6} Wilton Chi & NW ‘ nterlak Ir 194 AP | Chrysler 673 Int Harv 373; Other 1955 officers are Robert Cities Bve 185 Int Nick 8 | RR. 6 Lazelle, vice : Sat wecids ae pecs wait president; and Climax Mo 654 Int Silver 6: | Noyce Strait. reelected secretary- eyuta Kvmeaeee treasurer. Merton Brummitt was NEW YORK. Jan 19 Compiled by elected a director succeeding Dan the Associated Press IR Lazell 10 18 18 60 ™ -azelle Indust Rails Util Stocks W. O. Hildebrand of Lansing Prev day 2049 #1163 675 1501 Week age 2101 1207 #81 1839) secretary-manager of the Michi- Month ago 2086 #1218 67@ 1329) gan Assoc’ y . Year ago 1490 821 565 1120/5 ssociation of — Insuranc¢ 1984-55 high 2145 1230 687 1864) Agents, spoke briefly on curregt 1984-55 low 1439 778 554 1080 business conditidns 1953 high 1518 936 SSa@ 1187 : : 1953 low 1302 735 SOS 995 ~ a Allied Stores Inc., owne o DETROIT STOCKS i ; marubiswes A Wesns Waites Department Store |ere Continental Motors Corp. and its | ket The news conference was an other of the series of prelimin- aries to the opening tomorrow of GM's annual Motorama at the Waldorf-Astoria Hotel, An invita- tional preview of the huge show- ing GM preducts was held today. Curtice- also told news writers GM dealers are selling 1955 mo de| cars as fast as they arrive from the factory He expects high demand for GM products to continue througn what s normally a slower period ea! in the yeat He would not Sant to express any Views regarding the proposed annual wage because guaranteed g GM conducts its labor negotiations in private The United for the 30-hour (eneral States is not ready MOTR Weer Motors’ engineering de partment currently HERE'S A TIP TO | PAPA GAS DRYERS. DRY CLOTHES FASTER and cost less to use! is doing some / DOES PAPA DO THE “MAMBO” AFTER MAMMA DOES THE WASH in yout home Poor Papa! Dancing, ducking and stumbling through a jungle of wet wash. He'll think twice before he goes down in the basement again on washday. Someone should tell him about the wonderful new Hamilton Gas Dryer, then he could throw away those troublesome clotheslines. A Hamilton is the perfect solution to all clothes drying problems. | research work on a revolutionary light railroad train, at the request |of ‘‘certain important railroad of- To Omit Birthday Rally WATERFORD TOWNSHIP—The bcials. - | Girl Scout Leaders Club have voted ee ~ to omit their scout birthday rally Reckless Driver Jailed this year, because’ many troops Pleading guilty to a reckless 4Fe participating in the Scouta- rama, March 12 in Pontiac. x night ar- driving charge yesterday before Waterford Township Justice Willis D. Lefurgy, Warren Green, 42, of | Pentiae Police last 10 E. Seventh St., Flint, was sen- | rested Sam Dunn, 24, of 26 Bagley tenced to 30 days in the Oakland st. ‘on five traffic warrants, charg- County Jail after he failed to pay | jng speeding. defective auto brakes a $50 fine and $25 costs iand cutting in and out of traffic. 1} Liil j | i @ Confidential Prefessienal selection @ Men and Wemen @ Office—Sales—Technical @ skilled & Unshilled @ Rapid & Efficient Service @ Ne Charge to the Lmplever MIDWEST EMPLOYMENT SERVICE | 406 Pontiac Stote Bank Bidg. When Do You Expect a Fire? Tomorrow? Next week? The chances are that you'll never expect a fire. .. but NEON KEEP YOUR PROPERTY ADEQUATELY INSURED! Crawford-Dawe-Grove of All Kinds 716 Pontiac State Bank Bldg. Ph. FE 2-8357 Insurance Get Mamma a New HAMILTON GAS Clothes Dryer *® EXCLUSIVE CARRIER-CURRENT z AIR CIRCULATION *® FABRI-DIAL TEMPERATURE _ CONTROL *& ULTRA-VIOLET LAMP FOR % Model Shown Only $289.95 OZONE FRESHNESS * ZINC DRUM CAN'T RUST OR % DOUBLE-PASS EXTRA EFFi- CIENT LINT SCREEN PRICES” START AT ONLY ‘199%