The Weather Partly Cloudy and Warmer Details page two THE PONTIAC PRESS Home | Edition 114th YEAR xkkwrk ASSOCIATED PRESS oe NEWS. SERVICE PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 10, 1956—40 PAGES ED PRESS PHOTOS Cherry Pie Champion. d Dog Killer ‘Glad It’s All Over’ AP Wirephote NAMED TODAY—Linda Tompkins, 18-year-old Hart High School senior who believes in the saying that practice makes perfect, was | named the winner of the 1956 Cherry Pie Baking Contest. She is the winner over some 4,000 high school girls in the state. page 16.) (See story, Groundwork Being Laid for Joint Water Authority Oakland County Board of Supervisors at its Apri] was intended to influence Case's meeting will be asked to join with Macomb County in. an authority to establish a new water supply from) either Lake Huron or Lake St. Clair. A tentative agreement to form the authority was! Ce.. Austin, Tex. reached reached yesterday at a meeting of 25 representatives! — of Wayne, Kefauver Plans Busy Schedule Visit to Utica Saturday ter system would ease pressure in to bribe him. 1.0f Many Appearances. Slated in State A speech Saturday night at Utica’ will be one of many appearances | scheduled by Sen. Estes Kefauver (Tenn.) during a weekend quest for Michigan support in his bid for the Democratic presidential nomination. Kefauver will appear at the Knights of Columbus Hall in Utica at 7:30 p.m. for a Sevenih Con- gressional District Democratic Par- ty Dinner, following news confer- ences in Detroit and Mt. Clemens. After that busy Saturday fling. he has scheduled this for Sunday: A meeting with the Sixth Congres- sional District Democratic delega- tion; luncheon at 2 p.m. at Rose- ville with the Welch Supper Club to meet Democratic representa- tives in the State Legislature: an interview at 6 p.m. over CKLW- TV in Detroit on the United Auto Workers’ program, ‘Meet the UAW,” and a reception at 7 p.m. in St. Clair Shores to meet Ma- comb County delegates. Monday, after spending Sunday night in Detroit, Kefauver will vis- it his state headquarters at 8:30 a.m. He will leave by plane at 10:45 a.m. for Washington. Waterford Man Greets Airman After Rescue Southfield Township navy man John H. Floyd Jr. had lots of home-state company, including a Waterford Township man, after he- ing plucked off the south polar icecap by helicopter yesterday. Floyd and six others who went down in the snowy wastelands a week ago when their exploratory plane was forced flown to the icebreaker When he landed he was greet- ed by Willis J. Bugg dr., 20- year old son of Mr. and Mrs. down Glacier. WeETE Willis J. Bugg, of 380 Ascot. Bugg enlisted in the Nav) March 1. 1955 for two years after his graduation from Waterford Township High School in 1954. He was previously a member of the Naval Reserve -organization in Pontiac. Eleven other state residents are aboard the icebreaker as part of Operation Deep Freeze, the Navy's antarctic expedition. First Victim: Himself DETROIT w — spector Charles Searle, a Detroit policeman for 36 years, is in a hospital today with an injured foot. He shot himself when a cocker spaniel puppy grabbed his leg whWe he was cleaning his pistol a hom®, ‘First guy I shoot in years turns out to be me,” said. Detective In- Oakland, Ma- comb, Monroe, Washtenaw ee St. Clair Counties. ral Oak Mayor Howard K. | iid chairman of the Water Sub-' | Committee of the Supervisors In-| ‘ter-County Committee, said the ex- |panded Detroit-Wayne County wa- the south and western areas of! ithe siv-county region. However, no help can be ex- pected in the Oakland-Macomb- St. Clair area, he stated, Kelley said the authority would) comprise representatives of the ™ two counties and be empowered to build a pipeline from the source or to hire the work done. It would be able to condemn property, issue bonds and contract for work, he added. “If the Boards of Supervisors approve the authority we'll have, the pipeline finished in less than five years,”’ he stated. Other coun- ties are welcome to join. he said. House Group to Get Summerfields Plan ~ WASHINGTON \# — Postmaster General Summerfield will carry his request for higher postal rates before the House post office com- mittee next Thursday. The bill would: Raise the letter to 4 cents, airmail rate to 7 cents, raise sec- ond class mail—mainly newspapers and magazines—30 per cent in two yearly jumps, Raise third class mail—mainly advertising matter—30 per cent, Create a commission on postal rates with authority to set ‘'a fair and reasonable’ domestic postal rate structure. The commission would be com- posed of three members appointed by the President for 7-year terms at $15,000 a year salary. Congress could change the rates set by the SECO +-cent was unable to make a statement. P Me e S S A iE tj cl e S Grea ted Sherifi’s deputies Carl E. Ray- With Post O Postmaster General Arthur E. Summerfield in Wash- ington this week credited T pointing up inadequacies facilities as ‘directly leadi building here. The project had been shelved, said Summerfield. which. were sent to him. situation actually is and attention. “A needs and building-location survey was started immediately after we received the first article,” he said. The Press flew Acting Pontiac Postmaster Leslie H. Dean to Washington Wednesday in company with a istaff writer. “This was the done,” said Summerfield, “ a plan of action during a face-to-face conference with Mr. Dean.” Both Dean and The Pontiac Press voiced appreci- ation for the courtesy and complete cooperation dis- played by Summerfield and his staff. The top official took an » explain the postal situation at the national and local him. raise the 6-cent, _trouble? He'll get it.” Case Believes Snow Etches Scenic Beauty Throughou City Gift Reflected RRP (iss: BAAD SSS Interest in Vote | asc But He Insists $2,500 Wasn't Offered to Him as Bribe WASHINGTON (?i—Sen. Case (R-SD) told a Senate) investigating committee to- day that he rejected a $2,500 campaign fund con- tribution because it seemed to suggest an “abnormal iinterest” in his vote on the | | { i] | natural gas bill. Case was the first wit- ness at public hearings by, ~~ | the special committee set tia eae up to investigate whether) . ss. Dos sade the proffered antral) ae Nebraska lawyer John) M. Neff was intended to in-| fuence Case’s vote. Neff, of Lexington, Neb., has) enid he favored passage of the’ gas bill but has denied the $2,500! vote. Neff was registered with the Nebraska Legislature last = | | as a lobbyist for Superior Oli Death Toll Soars to 210 Asked by newsmen about the source of the $2,500, Neff has de-| ‘clined to say, He said he had been | able to raise the money “as al campaign contribution without any strings attached.” Case told the Senate committee | the offer of $2,500 from a man} Food to Freezing Europe LONDON (#—Giant U. 8S. Air Force Flying Boxcars joined in an emergency airlift today carrying food and fuel to villages snowbound in Europe's. worst winter of the century. , |Giant U.S. Planes Rushing'y -+ Extensive Hunt = Ends as Fugitive Submits Meekly San Francisco Officers Arrest Unarmed Slayer in Pawn Shop SAN FRANCISCO (INS) A self-achieved delay in his journey to the electric chair was at an end today for Leslie Irvin, Indiana’s “mad dog” killer of six holdup victims. The handsome 31-year- old slayer, sought for a cisco pawn shop. Neatly attired and sport- ing a crew hair cut, the identity for several hours. “In a way, I'm glad it’s all over,” he sighed at police head- i “| = 8 Ski fi ! he regarded as a stranger ‘‘sort of took my bréath away” but that he does not accuse Neff of trying The weather death toll soared to 210 in 11 days _NO ALLEGATION | Case said the investigation or- \dered by the Senate after he pub- licly denounced the offer, is “not /an investigation of a bribe, be- freeze. ; director _as a new Siberian cold wave turned a 2,500-mile front |homicidal from the far north to Turkey and Italy into a deep|tantastic,” escaped from the Icy east winds whipped up big seas in the English ‘He accomplished his amazing es- 9 ES | coaster lea abandoned* cause no such allegation has been made.” The question, he said, as he un- derstands it, is whether the prof- —s ‘exposure and a freighter) fered campaign contribution in-| ~~“ pre” 5 ts picked up the rest. volved an effort “to influence my'| 3 fg - | Three U.S. Air Force traseports| decision” in the voting on the nat- | —— reared over the frozen wastes of | y a ural gas bill. ;southern Greece, dropping anal Pentiac Press Phote WINTER FAIRYLAND—Heavy, clinging snow which fell yester- day in the city was a nuisance under foot, but to compensate for this | were unusual scenic rewards as depicted above. The top picture was | made on Lafayette Street, the lower on Pine Street Thursday after- noon, “There was nothing proposed plies to desperate villagers. to me tn this matter,” Case said. | “There was nothing -promised.” He said Neff himself has said there were “no strings attached” to the offer, and added that “all r have heard or read about it ould indicate there were no sha Leonard Man , The question of whether the offer was designed to influence his vote, | Murderer Invades Flat; Attacks Mother of Two \inlain Terror Spree The usually sunny south at | France shivered in its worst | freeze since 1887. Thunder and | | lightning rattlied-over the play- | ground resorts of Nice end | Cannes, then came a blizzard. Germany reported record temperatures. Weissenburg; near at 1524 Glynn Ct. in Detroit today, Nuernberg. hit 29 below zero, low-| stabbed to death 34-year-old Aziz High Fatalities, est there since 1855. Hermiz and attacked his wite, Vi nithern Italy expected warmer . 2 Mowe Road Mileage eoathee but blizzards still raged|‘oria, 22, EAST LANSING um — Michigan over Milan in the industrial North.! Hermiz, a grocer who came to he said, is for the committee to S s ee Hi€d In Uras Case’ voted against the gas bill, had 2.001 Thick clouds helped keep Britain this country from Iraq about a which was passed Monday, 53-38. —_—_ | Gerald Pincombe Dies, State ‘ slightly warmer than expected.|\year ago, was found in bed. His c : : London's temperature stood stead : Companion Injured Q$ The number was one more than a 6 de Hate The daw: brought wife was found bound to a dining Car Strikes Tree \room table, the 1955 toll predicted last May by Orrin M. Lucas, State Police aw —— The couple's t li child couple's two sma ren also were in bed and unharmed, traffic analyist. A Rockies Town Measures | Mrs. Hermiz told detectives through an interpreter that the Snowfall by Yardstick CLIMAX, Colo, w—Most places Killer crashed into the flat by measure snows: by inches, but this, breaking a front window. two-mile-high town in the Rockies) Then, Mrs. figures the depth of its white stuff rushed into the couple's bedroom by feet and yards. _ i Michigan Counts DETROIT (INS) — A maniacal traffic deaths in 1955 Police said today, Prophet's Grocer Gets Threats on Car Seizures DETROIT (INS) — The Detroit grocer who. seized Prophet Jones’ three autos as payment for an $856 overdue food bill told police and he received two threatening phone jured as their car spun into a tree calls last night. Fred Ayoub said the first call was made to his store. The caller said “The prophet has ordered your store bombed.” Ayoub said the second call came to his home and a male voice tole his wife, Renee “Is your husband Lucas said the 2,001 figure was subject to change as delayed reports are received, A Leonard man was killed today his companion seriously in- on Rochester Road east of Good-) Lucas said Michigan motorists ison, Oakland County Sheriff's de- also set a new record for, mileage 2 traveled. He said the latest figures show motorists traveled 26.5 bil- WaS lion miles in 1955, an eight per dead on artival at Avon Center cent increase over the previous year. puties said. Gerald Ray Pincombe, 74, yards of snow has fallen on this she was attacked. Hospital community near 11,318%-foot Fre-| Ellington also of Leonard, re- Driver of the car, M. mated the cost of Michigan traffic Winter. Godbee, 38. accidents at about $240,000,000, looking for five and one-half feet. portedly suffered multiple frac- tures. bruises and lacerations. He mond and Lyle W. Walmsley said ffi A ti the car was totally demolished Tee C 10n Witnesses stated it had been travel-, ing about 55 miles an hour on icy Congressman George A. Dondero of Royal Oak, rep- pavement . le 5 ran ee Lp Towing trucks were used to pry Tesentative from the 17th Michigan district, will intro- the wreckage open enough to re- duce the main speaker, Sen. Barry M. Goldwater (R- Annual Lincoln Banquet Climbing:Mercury Predicted Tonight he Pontiac Press’ Campaign : According to the U.S. Weather in Pontiac’ S present postal ng” to approval of a new Me Gorher and Pincombe's Ariz), at the Oakland County Lincoln Republican Club’s Sal warmers wale Gk a . Oakland County Assistant Prose- 66th annual banquet Feb. row eee ne ad put cutor Paul Mandel said today he 16, club President Robert | The low tonight will range from until ve Press’ articles, planned to take a statement from 26 to 30 degrees. Tomorrow's high “revealed how critical the Come as soon as his condition A. Sutton, said today. will be 36 to 40 that it needs immediate improved. yo The. five day Michigan weather . ie . Other honored guests will In- forecast savs that temperatures 5 will average from 3 above normal. There will be rather frequent but generally small fluctuations in the temperature. It will snow on Tues- intendent of Public Instruction, Dr. day or Tuesday evening. clude Congressman Alvin Bentley, to 6 degrees of Owosso, State GOP John Feikens, Highway Commis- sioner Charles M. Ziegler, Super- ‘Here’s a Marine Boot Who'll Know His Gun SALT LAKE CITY uf—A Marine recruit sent from here to San Di- Chairman : ego Calif. for basic training Clair L. Taylor and former Audi- The lowest temperature preced- ve ee you seus have should have no trouble. tor General John Martin. the s eet. was 29 —— ce in allowing us to agree on ; 5 : cheat livnceras ermometer registered 36 at 2 8 8 iccce tf plasty lien sign Some tickets are still available |p m, a Mon an on es for the event at 6:30 p.m. in the Pontiac Elks’ Temple. They are obtainable from Robert eee | Te In Today's Press Popular to Foreigners eoentoc toate geven-man crew of the 216-ton British Tat etttan ee! Detroit Husband low ‘Killer broke into a downstairs flat Hermiz said, he stabbed her husband and dragged So far this year more than five her into the dining room, where The slayer tied her to the table| The National Safety Council esti- mont Pass—more than fell all last and placed a gag in her mouth | Right now the depth 18 before fleeing. It was a half hour \before Mrs. Hermiz could remove! ithe gag and her screams. for help! Top Officials to Mioagline are LESLIE IRVIN cape from the modern jail on the ‘eve of his scheduled transfer to the | state prison for execution in the electric chair June 12. SIMPLE ESCAPE METHOD “Any man in his right mind ‘don't want to be kept locked up,” the so-called ‘'Chinése executioner” explained to San Francisco police, His method of escape was simple, All he did, he said, was to make “some keys to my cell and to the cellblock.” He added “ft made them out of the covers from some paper bound books glued together with tinfoil.” He said he used the keys while Sheriff Earl Hollen ‘‘was up front watching television.” When ‘Irvin's absence was no “ ticed nine hours later, all federal,. state and local law enforcement (Continued on Page 2, Col. 4) Seeks Road Group C. Miller, of Pontiac; Mrs. John) County News..............: 16 EAST LANSING vu — Business Schock, of Berkley and at Annett’s) Editorials ........... 6 LANSING @® — A bill to re “ administration and engineering) realty and Osmun’s store in down-| Sports........... ,-26, 27, 28, 29 |place the elected state highway hour out of a busy day to are the most popular subjects! town Pontiac. TWOOGCCS on ones 38 commissioner with a severn-man among the 3,287 foreign students, a oe | TV & Radio Programs -. +s 39 (highway commission was , i ie level and give thorough answers to all questions put to from 102 countries attending col-!| Income Tar Returns Prepared wilson, Karl. TH ae bes howse today Ah | Heges and universities in Michigan. , GrorGt A. DONDERO 905 Women rn Opear Eas: re. 3- Seu Women's Pages......17, 18, 19 George W. Sallade ee Arver). a 7 ne te = {, \ é 4 ' \ & \ | \ ‘ # — SS be \ , a atte, & MN ay =a 3 _ Without Comment TW ‘) t * fy. mt fe pee eA) Ey ‘ i] ‘ / : 2 ¢ f 5 Ry = ( a Youths Admit Entering Station Held in Juvenile Home for Questioning About Another Breakin Three Pontiac youths, spotted by an alert Bloomfield Township Police officer, admitted entering a gas station at 446 N. Perry St. last night. Ages 15 and 16, they are held in Oakland County Children’s Home, where they will be ques-) tioned today about another north end breakin, police said. Mother of one of the boys had notified Pontiac police at 11:20 p. m. yesterday that the trio was missing. She described their car. It was spotted at 2:45 a. m. on) Telegraph Rd. in Bloomfield Town-| ship by Officer’ Knute Tubbs. He turned the boys over to Pontiac, police, who discovered one of the! lads had $24 hidden in a glove. Under questioning by detectives James Laponsie and Robert Emery, they admitted breaking, into the station at 1:30 a. m. and taking about $50, which was hidden under a merchandise display. Accepts Resignation WASHINGTON «@® — President Ejsenhower has accepted Trevor’ Gardner’s resignation as assistant Air Force secretary in a letter which took no note of Gardner's plea to speed up work on guided missiles development. Gardner in effect carried to the President his dispute with other, top administration officials over, the size and urgency of the mis- siles program. ‘It is in this area,” he said in his letter of resignation, of a possible enemy.” | that in a brief letter which extend-, ed his best wishes and praised and will aside Saturday. His successor. has not ‘been American Given 25-Year Lease at Wayne-Major TWIN MARINE RECRUITS — (eft) and John Brower, 17, into The boys, sons of Mr. and Mrs. Norman Brower Marine T.Sgt. | Leroy H. Meisner welcomes new recruits James Marine ranks. ing. of 32 Clarence St., will be sworn in Monday and leave for San Diego and ten weeks of basic train- THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 10, 1956 The Day in Birmingham : ; Louies Upsets Grill Quintet Tavern Club Surprises National Loop Leaders in City Basketball. Loule’s Tavern, entrenched in last place in adult National League basketball, mupeised league-lead-_ ing Griff's Grill wit h a 55-4 upset last night at Pontiac High's gym. The downtrodden Tavern club jumped into a 32-23 halftime advan- tage, then staved off Griff's des- peration rally in the 2nd half to win a “equeaker.”” s Dale Davis poured in 20 points. and Ron Sandage followed with 18 for Louie’s while Marv Holler scored 18 points and Chuck Frank- lin a dozen to top Griff's. be st ‘Twice weconea ce x; Named by Pontiac UF poets oe peor _ 21 alee at ee newspaperman, Merchants, 63-36, in an adult Amer public relations rector of the \ ican division nightcap. Mike Haines! pontiac Area United Fund, accord- led the Merchants with 13 points. ing to Executive Director Karl SIMON O'SHEA - Pontiac Press Phete Candidates File Petitions for Forthcoming Election With the filing of two more nom- inating petitions yesterday plus one withdrawal, the number of candidates hopeful for seats on the 1956-57 City Commission today stood at 13. District 6 Commissioner John E. Carry, of 576 E. Pike St., and Earl J. Smith, of 138 W. Lawrence St., (District 3) subittted petitions to the city clerk, while Emil F. Jaworski (District 4) withdrew. Deadline for nominating peti. tions for the March 5 primary is Tuesday, Feb. 14. Jaworski, of 691 Stanley St., had not been a resident of Pontiac, as required by the City Charter, for five years thus disqualifying him from running for commissioner, Mrs. Ada R, Evans, city clerk, re- perted. A lifelong resident of Pontiac, Carry, 36, was elected to the City Commission in 1954. He works in and Coach Division. He formerty served as a sales- man for the Metal Plating Corp. of Oak Park and the Pteiffer- Oakland Distributors. Carry is a graduate of St. Fred- erick High School, a World War TI veteran and a member of the a @year lease at the Detroit | Wayne-Major airport, following the) first allocation for an eventual $14) * s October. Willow | if Thus a solid front of county, | state and federal agencies was, placed behind the President's air) use panel decision that Wayne Major, 10 miles closer to Detroit, Elks and Knights of Columbus. He is a member of St. Vincent de Paul Catholic Church and is mar- ried, with four children. A partner in the Brace-Smith Funeral Home for. the past five years, Earl J. Smith, 32, is trying again for a District 3 election after being defeated in 196 by Mayor William W. Donaldson. Smith ts a native of Pontiac and a veteran of World War Il. He is a graduate of Wayne Uni- ‘versity and is active in the Pon- - Commerce. He is married, with four children. By districts, the following pe- titions have been filed to date with the city clerk: District 1, Dr. Roy V. Cooley, John B. Woodward; District 2, Philip FE. Rowston. | Wi Public Relations Man World Prayer Day Plans Made by Church Women » BIRMINGHAM — World Day of plans of the United Church , who represent 12 churches in Birmingham; Bloomfield Hills, and the Southfield area, call for the worldwide-program to be led by seven ministers’ wives. Mrs, Norman G. Ellis and Mrs.' man of good principles of “Cash Charles Brietmeyer have led the, McCall was red by the critic. orranizing of the event, slated for Both authore try to make stories Feb, 17 at 10 a.m. in the First acceptable to millions, she says. Methodist Church. The area's * « @' church women are invited to at- tend the annual event, held at the same time around the world on that date. America’s Indians are taking the spotlight for the program in this and ether services, but here ministers. wives taking part will be Mrs, John Rese of Commun. ity Church Congregational, Lath. rup, Mrs, Harold DeWindt, of Kirk in the Hills, Bloomfield Township, Mrs. Reginald Becker, of Methodist Church, Mrs. Mae Taylor, of Northmin- ster Presbybterian Church, Troy Township and Mrs. Marry Mar- tin of First Methodist Church, Also, Mrs. Emil Kontz, of First) work of 25 years’ research on “An- dersonville” prison life as “‘recre- ated passion.” . Contrast between the “just like a Judges are Ralph Breding of Maxon Advertising Agency, and Reco de Marco, of the J. Walter Thompson Advertising Agency, both Detroit firms. Awards will be at the captain’s luncheon Feb. 15 at the community House. 2 License Plates for State Autos Sa F 4 p rf Getta sscorecseeeess 4, TB tengeiW. Bradley. = N Francisco Folce po wll aero eoecco fey fr) 1-43 O'Shea will begin work Monday, Baptist Chureh, and Mrs, Glen Harris, of First Presbyterian succeeding Mrs. Lucille Dennison will participate, |who resigned recently. He attended) Get House Okay LANSING — The House has given preliminary approval to a the Traffic Dept. of the GM Truck 7 ‘tot earrings he picked up in a Nab ‘Mad Dog’ Killer (Continued From Page One) agencies were notified and the na- tion's biggest manhunt in years was thrown into gear. While authorities across the nation were looking for him, he was hitchhiking to Los Angeles. * . « St. Louis and Michigan State Universities, In addition to duties as a Mt. Clemens Monitor-Leader reporter, O'Shea has engaged in free-lance {public relations activities and re- jcently edited the Mt. Clemens city report, New Hampshire March Primary to List Harriman CONCORD, N.H. #—The name of Averell Harriman today was tossed into New Hampshire’s Ho intends to reside in the Pon- March 13 presidential primary. (tiac area. ' William A. Joyce of Nashua, Inspectors ones and Ferro meg as a Democratic delegate giaro approached Irv pawn candidate “favorable” to the New shop while he was attempting to) Pontiac Deaths : {York governor frequently men-, pawn a diamond ring and & Pal iioned as a possible presidential candidate. Neal Bresnahan Under New Hampshire law, | Word has been recetved of the any person is free to rum as death of Neal Bresnahan, 68, of “favorable” to a_ presidential | Glouster, Ohio, formerly of 136 aspirant without the Jatter’s Waterly St., Huron Gardens. He knowledge er consent. | died yesterday in Glouster after an a disarming smile, he produced . illness of five years. musician's uni Harriman was the fourth Demo- ; Sy ee reenter rat wine name has ben entre arm Mah TIS In New seauad Ge Vitar Davia: by supporters in the nation’s first * raitsville, io, was the son ner presidential primary of 1956, jot Cornelius and Rose Kelly Bres- But O'Keefe was unconvinced. | Complete 12-member delegate "4han. In December 1909, he was slates have been filed by partisans ™4'Tied to the former Agnes pease Lr and — lof Sen. Kefauver (D-Tenn.), who|Tippie in Athens, Ohio. avis been robbed by & |won the 1952 primary; and Adlai] ygr. hitchhiker whom he transported istevenson, the party's standard-) Pontiac from 19%8 to 1953 and from Las Vegas, Nev., to Los (hearer four years ago. (eras ceplaped attde Wuskes ody Angeles, | One backer of Michigan Gov. G.| pjivision. Confronted with this information, Mennen Williams and three un-| ; Irvin shrugged and asked: “Don'tCommitted delegate candidates! He leaves his wife, and eight you know who I really am?” also are in the contest for the Children, Darrel of Illinois, Frank recent Los Angeles burglary, USED ALIAS At first he calmly identified him- self as Victor Davis, a pianist with Tex Williams’ orchestra, Flashing Bresnahan had lived in Piss saecetiaiie of Schools Dwight hi) returning Michigan to the use Ireland has proclaimed that) . ; la moment of prayer will be ob- |" = automobile license plates serves in pli tiares district's) The measure would require the schoo at Oa my that day: |secretary of state to issue two re- ~ | Other churches whose women are flectorized plates in 1957 working with the UCW committee! . Reflectorized tabs could be is- jand part of whose choirs will be; \joining in the all-church choir are) sued in succeeding years instead the Southfield Methodist Church,| of issuing new plates, Front the First Congregatiorial Church,| Plates were discontinued. during Christ Church Cranbrook, Bloom-| the war because of steel short- field Hills, Franklin Community | ages. Bae St. James Epis, The new-type plates and tabs 5 ;would cost motorists 25 cents more | than’ they currently pay for new Seven novels, analyzed in a licenses. Pleasant talk but books one | By a 27-0 vote, the Senate passed might assume she did not care |q bill to raise the maximum old for, were the subject of Virgilla [age assistance benefits from $70 to Peterson's talk yesterday and ($8) a month, and from $80 to $90 | today at the Town Hall program for recipients in hvspitals or con- | at Birmingham theater, \valescent homes. | Commercialism in novel-writing, Sen. Creighton R. Coleman (R- has led many young authors to Battle Creek), one of the spon- choose majority-possessed ideas, 80'S. .said the bill would raise the but has led them away from ma-| benefits of 21,500 of the 70,000 per- jor literary achievement, was the Sms receiving such aid. lauthor's thesis. | An amendment by Sen. Philip Love in new novels doesn’t offer Rahoi (D-Iron Mountain) to give a new set of values for those the 2! recipients a flat $10 increase novel tears down, Miss Peterson | 2s beaten down. jsaid, pointing out that Mary Mc- Carthy’s “The Charmed Life” re-' Mitchell Says Dems * * Then he volunteered his identity, adding: » ° 8s come, I've heen expecting to get picked up for quite a while.” Irvin was convicted and sen- 'tenced to death for the killing of a) |been formally charged with the ‘slaying of five other holdup vic- tims. * In each killing he adopted the| imethods used by Chinese execu- |kneel, tied their hands behind their’ jbacks, and shot them through the ihead, | EARL J. SMITH a “I wasn't surprised. It had to) tioners. He forced his victims to! state's eight votes at the Demo- of Denver, Colo., Roger of Cali- cratic National Convention. fornia, Bernard, Patrick, Mrs. The filing deadjine is 6 p.m. to- Russell Dosch, Mrs. Reymond De | morrow. |Armond and Mrs. Ralph Jeffery, Another last minute name was and 20 grandchildren all of Pon- injected into the presidential pri- tiac. A brother and two sisters mary last night. The publisher also survive. of the Old Farmer's Almanac, Service will be at 1 p.m. Sun- filling station attendant. He has|Obb Sagendorph of Dublin, filed day in the Johnspn Funeral Home, ‘as a GOP delegate candidate Glouster with burial in Sugar “favorable to Chief Justice War-| Creek Cemetery. ren, who has said he is not in-| - terested in the presidency. - Saavuderph cota be karw ef eo Mrs. Joseph L. Mcintosh ‘organized move to file a complete’ Mrs. Joseph L. (Edith) McIntosh, lslate favorable to Warren who, 66, a former Pontiac resident, died under New Hampshire law, cannot early Wednesday morning in Me- prevent anyone from running morial Hospital, Owosso. She had ‘favorable’ to him. been in ill health the past year. Tuscaloosa Seethes With Over Fate of Alabama's Negro Coed | TUSCALOOSA, Ala. (INS) — A) at the universty and in Tusca- |Negro coed, returning to Federal) leosa. She was born June 9, 1889 and jmarried in Detroit Nov. 7, 1929. Con troversy Her parents were Alvin and Letetia Jackson of Lorraine Ct. Mrs. McIntosh had attended school in Waterford and was em- ployed 12 years at the Pontiac Commercial & Savings Bank, located in the building now occu- pled by the Community National Bank. heated, hitter and resentful. The O77 Zid de dan dita TONIGHT and SATURDAY Only! \ flects today’s multi-marriage life ° aithialnerpent etianede Delaying Labor Moves Norman Mahler's novel of a re- sort where movie colonists ‘‘alter- nate between the bottle and the bed"’ knocks away values but of- fers no new value, she feels. Ot “Marjorie Morningstar,” she says the story's success lies in Marjorie’s Jewish back- ground, “one of the great minds of human history,”’ rather than | the novel's plot. | She termed McKinlay Kantor’s | | WASHINGTON (INS) — Labor Secretary James P. Mitchell has charged that Democratic leaders jare delaying ‘‘pro labor’’ legisla- \tion. | He said yesterday at a news con- ference that he believed workers would fare better with a Republi- can-controlled Congress. Most of his criticism was directed at the House Labor Committee headed by Rep. Graham A. Barden (D-NC). talk is of Miss Lucy minal while Willow’ Run be put to 4),|Court in a bid to g ; i z . We gain readmit-! - : military use. — i gies Mie sega oe ale |tance to the University of Ala-/,, The case of Miss Lucy vs. the Some folks believe the entire Ham aldson, var lbama, charged school officials University of Alabama has become! Issue of segregation in the deep Smith; District 4, Floyd P. Miles; | District 5, John A. Dugan Pat Could have halted campus rioting. Stoglin; District 6, J. H. Patrick’ The action was one of two filed Glynn, John E. Carry; District 7 yesterday in the Jong legal battle Stripper Is Freed ‘in Shooting of Mate eaten L. Smothers, Benjamin M DALLAS @®—Night club stripper! If three or mare file from a dis-| Candy. Barr was freed after her trict. jat the university. of Autherine Lucy to attend classes ne Hearings on both petitions are | a March 5 primary {s_re- scheduled Feb, 29 before U.S. miles from Birmingham, common breakfast talk in most parts of the country, In Tuscaloosa, | the case not only is discussed at breakfast, but also at lunch, din- r and far into the nigtt. ° * 8 This. university town, some 58 has had estranged husband declined to quired to select the two candidates, Dist. Judge Hobart Grooms in , few upsetting experiences since the prosecute her for shooting him in|that will be placed on the April 2) Birmingham, Ala, the midriff with a rifle Jan, 21. jones) election slate. Tuscaloosa’ teal teen) divided te ae day, torn asunder not by the ques- B. Phillips Jr., 35, testi- yan: a areaati : fied that when he beat on his wite's| Williams iS Speak licen 6 ora Ratherine | a apartment door “I was so tight) KALAMAZOO wW—Gov. Williams ; : I fell against the wall. I remember and Sen. Potter (R-Mich) will a’ gun cracking. I said ‘you have give the Democratic and Republi- shot me’ and she said ‘you can Party views respectively in shouldn't have come here.’ ”’ ‘separate appearances at a Kala- Alabama | Alabama campus came into exist-| ‘panty raids and the glory of its Students are trying to confuse the ence 125 years ago, Only a few sports teams have caused ripples of excitement. from attending the University of NOTED ALUMS The staid old Southern school John Hamner, managing editor Was known chiefly in the public) ashamed at the outburst of violence! of the Tuscaloosa News, the town’s, mind as having educated such per- | South is tled up in the case, She was a member of the Owosso Baptist Church. Surviving besides her husban | Leonard Wilson, 19-year-old Sel: mice ma, Ala., pre-law student and an) i PRIC d jadmitted leader of the demonstra. 2° & daughter, Mrs. Marillyn Compare Itions, who comes from the rich Eaton of Fort Wayne, Ind.; a ; ‘ QUALITY agricultural Black Belt of Dallas|>rother, Edd Jackson of Rogers First Quality Anywhere in Town County, Ala., so named because of City and a sister, Mrs. Eva Her-| \its soil and where Negroes out-|Tick of Plymouth. 54x72 Service will be at 2 p.m. Satur- day in the Knapp & Smith Funeral Home, Owosso, with burial in Oak Hill Cemetery, Owosso. eh ee, nr WNdian Blanket < “The faculty and some of the ne REGULAR $2.49 VALUE Famous ‘BEACON’ Indian blan- kets in gay. authentic designs. Choice of colorful patterns. Rayon and nylon blends. $2.98 Value 64x76 in. $2.27 issue by making it a question of jmob violence. This is not the issue. |It is integration or segregation.”’ Dennis Holt, 20, a student from industrial Birmingham, feels| Treat Drayton Man After Car Hits Tree Benny. Karpoige, 18, of Drayton |Plains, was treated for minor in- on the campus. ‘only newspaper, sums up the con-| sonalities as Sen. John Sparkman, He initiated the non-violence $3.98 Value 70x80 in. $3.17 juries and released from Pontiac » Justice of the peace freed Miss. Barr without bond and said he would refer the case to a grand jury, She had been under $10,000, bond on an assault to murder mazoo College program on presi- dential campaign issues. Potter, will speak next Monday and Wil- liams on Feb. 20. troversy in this fashion ‘all-American quarterback Harry “The town is not divided on the: Gilmer who became aq football star question of integration at the school,on the professional —almost everyone is for segrega- Redskins team and who now by aanine ton day nighf and said again yester- iS' day: | resolution of the student govern- General Hospital yesterday after ment which was presented Tues- his car spun out of control and hit a tree on Auburn Avenue at |Martel Street, Oakland County: Bargain Basement Oe ehh hed hh hide de ded hhidede Meadebidad Maine : tion. But they are divided on how With the Detroit Lions, and Johnny| . . ; _ charge. To Get New Post Office 1, keep the Negro girl out.” |Mack Brown, another all-Ameri-| “The government of this univer- DETROIT w — A new multi: CROSS. BURNING |can gridiron star who later be- sity is not going to be run by high The Weather La | — NG came a movie cowboy star. | School students, goons, Leonard case cs [million dollar post office will be) Last Friday night, a few hours * * 8 | Wilson, white Citizens’ Councils or rhitytabberg Blot Patti diag dani erected On Detroit's West side near after Miss Lucy attended her first, Quiet and calm prevailed until) the Ku Klux Klan.” . the downtown area to replace the class at the university, a cross- the Civil War when federal troops. What will happen if and when today. im Park annex postal build: purning incident took place on the burned every university building. | Miss Lucy returns to classes is ing. | campus | Little has disturbed the town still debatable. Then came demonstrations both since the days of reconstruction. Some persons predict violence in downtown Tuscaloosa and on the Now a violent change has ap-|Others say that the disturbance has campus on Saturday. |peared. Old-time citizens can feel|/run its course and nothing will They erupted with violence , the changed emotions. _ happen. Only time holds the an- Monday when Miss Lucy was ,_ SUidents and loca] residents are! swer. driven to classrooms. A mob, estimated at 3,000, pelted the car Today in Pontine etna) temperature preceding 8 am At @ am: Wind velocity 2 mph Direction: Bouthwest Sun rises Saturday at 7:35 a.m. Sun sets Friday at 8:57 Ie Moon sets Friday at 6°07 pm Moon rises Saturday at 7 33 am. Corky’s Home Again! Downtown Temperatures It took this Httle ad in the WII IIIT OI ILO III IIIOI ITI IO = Sheriff's deputies said today. | At td ed ede ded ee We take pleasure in announcing the appointment of MR. PAUL T. WILLIAMS as District Manager and the opening of our Birmingham District Office located at 4062 West Maple Road BIRMINGHAM, MICHIGAN Our new quarters will now handle all of your premium payments and claims, bringing our facilities closer to our increasing number of policyholders and friends. Mutual Benefit Health and Accident Association You are cordially invited to visit our new offices. CaM ........38 llem..........4 ws z * col st - = Sosonc = “ Me) oecces 3s ae TE teunn “Oneky- in which she was being driven Pam... 28) 62pm .......36] safely home again. with eggs and rocks. 10 a.m... 31 The Negro coed herself was hit Thursday in Pontiac LosT IN VICINITY oF arn. | With an egg. A rock broke a.win- Highest Gesomare raaeneies M port, young dog, white with dow in the car, owned by the dean! @ RADIATES MAXIMUM HEAT Lowest vemperetare ..0000000000 S| Often taco ‘ana “to mame ai | Of women, | © ELIMINATES ROOM HEAT LOSS, SAVES Weather—Mild. = 8 =" Corky. PE 4-6129 Monday night further violence; FUEL i Ro, ear or — climaxed the three-day emotionally | ! Lea Gato Oana SPARKS, tL ; : - | : ; i t tomperstere. ny ico ee 42 You, too, can get the same charged situation. Students and @ TWIN DOORS OPEN WIDE FOR EASY te ebay enomapsipgsoate eee aCe . 28 quick results when you use a townspeople alike joined in the) jim LOADING OF FUEL } ie any baad EI saeavae ween ta Gaye to recover a = demonstrations, in town and on the @ CONTROL DRAFT WITH TWO SLIDING DOORS FOR FAST OR SLOW FIRE * ), Super Kem-Tone | Deluxe Wall Paint 4 Deep Colors Qt.. .$1.98 Cal. $6.19 Colors for any decorating scheme— covers wallpaper, plaster, wallboard, etc. Dries in one hour. guaranteed 3 washable, fadeproof colors. Easy to use. Tubular steel frame, padded seat and back in choice of oy Exactly as pictured. BABY NEEDS —Nein Floor re 2 SIMMS—Pontiac’s Underselling Department Store .. OPEN NIGHTS Fridays—Saturdays—Mondays ‘til 10 P.M. 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Waite's Men's Jewelry—Sireet Floor 5 ay ; he . if? of NTIAC PRESS.~ Entered st Post OMice, Pontiac, as second class matter MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ted Press ts entitied exclusively to the use - printed in this news- The Associa’ * for republication of ali local news paper as well as all AP news dispatches. Tue Powrtac Paxes ts delivered by carrier for 40 cents a week; where carrier service is not avalls acomb, (Lapeer an’ ionmted. States Michigan and ell other places in th a! Mates year. mail subscriptions payable im advance. Phone Pontiac 39-8181. MEMBER OF AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATIONS FRIDAY, FEBRUARY. 10, 1956 Summerfield Promises Larger Post Office Pontiac soon will have a new post office. That's an official promise. It came from no less an authority than Postmaster Genera] SuMMER- FIELD. This good news had additional impact because it was released in the presence of Pontiac’s Acting Post- master Dean and our own staff writ- er, Burpetr C. Sropparp. Moreover, it was announced in a Washington ’ interview arranged by Oakland Coun- ty’s Representative, Gzonce A. Don- = DERO. - * * * The Postmaster General minced no words in making it clear that “Pontiac definitely will _get a new post office.” Briefly, the plan is to erect a warehouse type building on an outlying site to be chosen within 90 days in a location survey now in progress. It would be built by private capital and leased by the department when completed. * * * Mr. SUMMERFIELD agreed with Pontiac postal officials that the City’s need is for a mail handling building with plenty of room for postal vehicles to move in and out. | The present post office at Huron and Perry Streets willbe retained to serve mailing, stamp’ and money order needs. Space also will be made available for the return of other Federal agencies formerly housed there. * * * As the Postmaster General re- alizes, there is no question about Pontiac’s need. The present build- ing was designed to handle only about a fourth of the mail now - regularly processed there. The prompt action received in this matter shows how fortunate the City is in having the aid of men like Post- master General SUMMERFIELD. Mr. Baseball When death called Connie Macx, major league baseball lost one of its mest illustrious pioneers. The man who changed his name from CorngLius MCGILLI- Cuppy so it would fit a box score, was baseball's “grand old man” in the fullest sense of the term. * * * For 62 of his 93 years he lived and breathed baseball. For 50 years he was mahager of the Philadelphia Athletics and history records him as one of the founders of the American League. During his career at Philadel- phia his Athletics won nine Am- erican League pennants. and five world championships. Seven members of his last champion- ship team now are in the Hall of Fame. He, himself, was admitted at the start in 1937 as one of seven baseball pioneers. * * * This quiet spoken, kindly gentle- man long will be remembered by fans for his fine personal qualities as well as for his contributions to our na- tional game. America is a better place to live because of baseball and base- ball is a finer game because Connie Mack helped to develop it. Plight of Peron Warning to Rojas Inthe age-old fight for press free- ‘dom, history has a way of repeating itself. ‘Thus it seems to us significant that at the very time the great Argentine newspaper La Prensa is able to re- sume uncensored publication, Colom- . bia’s dictator is stepping up his war on the press. Already President Rosas Prvttta has silenced four important newspapers for criticizing his gov- ernment. * * * ‘There is a strong historic lesson for President Rovas in the editorials with which Dr..Gamnza Paz marked his return to free control of La Prensa, ; The Argentine dictator PERon who engineered the illegal seiz- ure of that newspaper is in forced exile. Argentina has a new gov- ernment and is striving to undo » the national harm resulting from Peron’s attempt to suppress not only press freedom but all civil liberties. Vv * * * Dictator Rosas may not have the vision to imagine himself an exile like Peron. But that doesn’t alter the fact that the people of Colom- bia, like those of Argentina, may decide suddenly that they have had enough of assaults on press freedom . and individual liberties. < PRESIDENT E1seNHOWER might dam- age his heart if he should run, but if he doesn’t run, he'll break the hearts of many leading Republicans. ances ees ea Anoruer technical problem man. hasn't been able to solve is how to make an unbreakable toy. The Man About Town Dispute the Claim Two Other Townships Say Waterford Has Less Lakes Histery: What is said to re- peat itself—often when it isn't worth it, =~ { The long standing claim of Waterford to having the most lakes of any of the 25 townships in Oakland County now is challenged by two other townships. Wa- terford has 36 lakes, but Holly Township numbers up 44 and Rose Township claims 42. Our county has 430 lakes. According to an authority on the subject, a body of water is counted as a lake when it does not dry up at any season, and has fish in it, West” Bloomfield holds the undisputed title of having the greatest water area of any township in Oakland County. Previous to the turn of the : century a good part of the area within the Pontiac City limits was taken up with four mill ponds. As it gets close to the anniversary of the birth of the Great Emancipator, I am reminded by “Hater of Long Winded Speakers,” that the time required by President Abraham Lincoln to deliver the Gettysburg address was a trifle over two minutes. A communication from George M. Worden, of the National Manufacturing Chemists Association, says that 400 million pounds of plastics went into building construc- tion in 1955, being about $225 million worth. Living at the same location in what now is downtown Pontiac for around three-quarters of a century is T. W. Jackson of 82 Mt. Clemens St., and Bill wonders if this isn't a record. ¢ Ample advance notice is being given that the annual Michigan Week is to be observed May 20-26. This ts wheri we are urged to plug harder than usual for our state and its many attrac- tions. Here in the Pontiac area in recent years we also have made this an Oakland County Week, to call attention to what Michigan's best county has to offer. Why not begin right now to urge your friends and relatives from other areas to visit you at that time? The first paving in Pontiac was taid 100 years ago, Early in 1855 the village council made a contract with French and Southmayd to lay two blocks on Saginaw St. of a cobblestone preparation that the Weekly Gazette sald was “rougher than the rocky road to Dublin.” It extended for a block each way from the Pike St. corner. Verbal Orchids to— Clinton E. Graham of 280 Osmun 8t.: elghty-sixth birthday. Mrs. R. E. Bailey of 18 Lexington Place; eighty-fourth birthday. Jack, Jim and Jerry Uhrick, | triplet sons of Mr. and Mrs. J: A. Uhrick of 3335 Pontiac Trail; ninth birthdays. Dayton E. Glass : of 32 Bagley St.; eighty-eighth birthday, But Where Is He in a nl cy i F « cs we ro | FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 10, 1956 bb prmas > re rr te te. on-Election Years? David Lawrence Says: Ike Has Been Trying to Soften Shock of His Negative Decision on Re-election WASHINGTON — The nation might as well prepare for the news that President Eisenhower will say he doesn’t feel equal to running again. It has been expected that such news weuld prove a ‘‘shock” to business, to the stock market and to the politicians in the Re- publican Party who have been hopeful that he would run again. But it’s the kind of “shock” that may .prove ephemeral and in a few days might readily be taken in stride by all concerned. + a * The President has plainly been trying to soften his own words on that subject as given to his latest press conference: “Well, of course, I don't know why the stock market fell when I got sick, As a matter of fact, I don't know—I think I brought it up (at a press conference) because of the fact I didn’t know it unti] several weeks later. “Now, I have never said any- thing that was more hopeful than any doctor said. I have, on the contrary, tried to be a little bit on the let’s say, cautionary side rath- er than on the optimistic, in the hope that if the time came when I had to say, in all justice, that I don't befieve I should try to do this, there would not be the kind of stiock—as 1 say, I don't know why, but there would not be that kind of a shock—if it were possible to avoid it.” * * LJ Naturally there is speculation as to what the impact of the news would be if Eisenhower says he cannot run again. The Democrats for the most part will be very happy. They are convinced That Eisenhower is the only Republican who could win. Many of the Re- publicans, too, who have been pin- ning their hopes on one man are fearful that nobody but Ike could win. So it will not be surprising fo see Republican hopes drop as Democratic party hopes rise. MUST RESTORE CONFIDENCE This may last a little while, perhaps until the Republicans get back their confidence and remind themselves that the American vot- er has never turned out of power a party under which there was prosperity — not even in 1948, when Truman was recorded in the public-opinion polls as one of the most unpopular presidents of re- cent decades. As for the Republican nominees, it is plain that Eisenhower isn't going to ask Chief Justice Warren to run and that he hasn't said a Portraits Ry JAMES J. METCALEE The only rainbow that could lead To any pot of gold. . Would be the one around your heart For me to love and hold... Be cause in fiction or in truth... In my sincerest view... No treasure on this earth could be... More wonderful than you . . . To me vou are more brilliant than ... The most outstanding star... And more important to my life... Than others near or far , . . But this is just a sample of . . . The words I want to say ... To tell your heart how much Iam... In love with you today ... And just my way of whispering ... That every rainbow bright ... . Is wish- ing you with all my soul .. . Good morning and. good night. (Copyright 1956) BiS CHIEF, IM Stuns LOW ON favorable word about anybody else except Vice President Nixon, Nix- on is unpopular with the Demo- crats and with a minority of the Republicans who have been listen- ing so long to the Democratic ti- rades against the vice president that they believe them. * * ® There are many more Republi- cans, however, who, while they would have preferred Ike, would accept Nixon. They would do so on the theory that, while he may have some of the defects that his critics ascribe to him, “‘he never could be as bad as Truman,” as one Republican smilingly remarked the other day. But why has there been a shift lately by many people here who all along have thought Ike would run? The answer is the way the President has been dis- cussing the subject at his press conferences. He has repeatedly given the impression that the country must be prepared for a negative decision, The doctors can tell him only Belly-Breathing Exercises two things. They can say he is physically able to run and that the President must make up his own mind. Or they can say he is not physically able to run. In that latter case, would the President trust his own feelings more than a doctor's report? Obviously he would not, o s * So what it amounts to is that the President is saying that, al- though the doctors may tell him he is able to run, he himself may then decide that he cannot take the risks for the country’s sake. It will be his own decision com- pletely, and, as one cabinet officer put it to this correspondent, even in the face of all the quotations citeg above: ‘I wouldn’t bet a nickel either way.” (Copyright, 1956, New York Herald Tribune Inc.) Smiles An Ohio girl married a drug- gist after a five-year courtship, Maybe because she found out he knew how to cook. Bring Musicians’ Praise By WILLIAM BRADY, M.D. Probably because I am an avowed quack, correspondents are about committing thent- selves, lest I give them unwel- come publicity. I'm not grumbling, that is, not more than you would expect. In fact Im willing to stipulate that year after year | get as many pats on the back as k.i.t.p’s from read- €rs 5 chary The troubie is that readers who do insert a pat somewhere near the bottom of the third page are so furtive about it that I can hardly understand what they mean. For instance: “T am a band instructor and also have a chorus and have used “belly breathing’ to good ad- vantage. Thank you.” Experience has taught me to take nothing for granted. The reader may have practiced belly breathing to his advantage, wheth- er he happened to be a band in- Structor or a drill serge&pt. Numerous players of wind In- struments have asked whether ene who plays such an instru- ment is more likely to get chronic lung or bronchial di- -sease. The answer is no. Many wind instrument plavers and vocalists have assured me that the practice of belly breathing has given them better wind NATURAL WAY Well, naturaltv. That's what bel- lows (belly) breathing is—natural breathing, breathing like a horse or a gazelle or a savage who has never been told to throw out his chest and pull in his ‘‘stomach.” Some vocal instructors impart notions about ‘breath control” and use of the diaphragm that must have been conceived by a Meistersinger a century or two before Velasquez spilled the beans. I havent as much faith in medicinal remedies as one might expect a horse-and-buggy doctor to have. I have so much faith in certain non-medicinal remedies, for pre- vention as well as for cure, that I take ‘em myself. Belly breathing is one of them. Somersaults is another. Send me a quarter and as stamped, self-addressed envelope, for Little Lesson 21, How to Breathe, Or if that seems too steep, send Me just a stamped, self-addressed envelope and ask for the free pam- phlet on Belly Breathing. Signed letters, not more than ove page or 100 words jong, pertaining to personal health and hrgtene. not to disease diag- nests. or treatment, will be answered by LD William Brady, if a stamped sel!- eddressed envelope is sent to the Pon- tiac Press, Pontiac, Michigan. (Copyright 1966) — Voice of the People a T. W. Dimon Disagrees With Parking Opponents I have read the articles dealing with the parking problem. Sam Stolorow and L.B. Doggette are against it because it tends toward socialism and communism. A parking lot is a wonderful thing, considering the little invest- ment. I wonder if they have ever stopped and looked good at the price. If a parking meter at five cents per hour is communism, then I am personally going to support it. The poor parking facilities are the reason for the suburban shop- ping centers. Ne one wants to pay a high price fer qa parking lot and then have an attendant use it as a battering ram. I feel that the public should sup- port the municipal parking lot. T. W. Dimen 1981 Auburndale Suggests Israel Support Is for Dumping Ground Rev. Tiffany states, ‘‘We ask our government to stand firm and sup- port with vigor our sister de- mocracy of Israel and to make available at once the legitimate means for self defense... ” Could it be that we’re being faced with economic strangulation? It's even predicted today that a machine in the future will be able to do anything in an office except sit on the boss’ lap. No less an authority than Gen- eral MacArthur said, “War has become a Frankenstein to de- stroy both sides. If you lose, you're annihilated, If you win, you stand only te lose, It con- tains the germs ef double sul- eide.” So all that's left to do is flea the cat’s tail, Reverend. ; Rath Hagon 3110 Garden Ct, THOUGHTS FOR TODAY Cast thy bread upon the wa- ters: for thou shalt find it after . many days.—Eccl. 11:1, * * 6 What we frankly give, forever is our own.—George Granville. Balloons Can Be Utilized in War, as Soviet Knows By JOHN H. MARTIN INS Foreign Director The balloon, invented nearly 173 years ago, now is the latest instru- ment in the East-West controversy. * * s Moscow says that the United States is sending balloons, equipped with radio and camera, to violate “Soviet air space."" Red China likewise charges that the United States is doing some fancy military reconnaissance with balloons. Washington acknowledges launching balloons that probably floated over Russia and other distant areas. It says they are weather instruments—an expla- nation that Moscow doubtlessly will not accept. Propaganda balloons from the West are an old story. These are launched by divisions of the pri- vately financed Free Europe Com- mittee, an anti-Communist organi- zation with quarters in West Ger- many. * « «@ East European Communist satel- lites—the target of the organiza- tion—long have complained against the balloons carrying propaganda leaflets intended to keep hope alive in the conquered East. The com- mittee naturally thinks these leaf- lets are very effective, judging by the accumulating Red complaints. e * * Even Soviet party boss Nikita Khrushchev complained that Presi- dent Eisenhower's Christmas state- ment for the East was what he called “crude interference.” The Free Europe Committee balloons carried leaflets bearing the presi- dential statement. MILITARY USE Balloons undeniably have a mili- tary importance, too. The US. weather balloons are capable of circling the globe. They open vistas, not lost on the Russians, of immense military potentialities. * we Japanese used balloons in World War II. These were equipped with incendiary loads with timing de- Case Records of a Psychologist: Crane Explains Reason for Between Male, Female Sex Makeup Margaret is asking one of the most perplexing questions which physicians and psycholo- gists ever meet. Be sure to study my answer to her. And you young wives can insure your happy marriage by using the booklet mentioned below. God ernects you to work dili- gently to make your marriage successful. You dare not drift along if you want to avoid di- vorce. By DR. GEORGE W. CRANE Case Q-371: Margaret M.. aged 29, is a very attractive housewife. “Dr. Crane, I notice you say women are frigid as measured hv the average male's standard,” she began thoughtfully. * * * “Well, I agree with vou. I have a wonderful husband and love him with all my heart. “But I simply do not have as much desire for physical relations as he does, even though I prod myself at times to avoid offending his ego “So why did God make women to be relatively frigid in contrast to man’s sex appetitite’”’ GOD'S STRATEGY For many years I had wondered about that very question. And I now believe God planned that one adult parent should be created to have more parental hunger than sex desire. If it were not so, notice what would have happened in early days, If a woman had been cre- ated to have as much passion as & man and to be as easily stimulated by the sight of every good looking male, she would have placed romance ahead of maternal duty. Suppose 25,000 years ago a young ¢ woman had thus borne a baby and was then traveling through the jungle in quest of food, Assume that she sees an attractive male at a distance. So she lays her baby at the foot of a tree to chase after the strange male and have an ‘‘affair.”' When she returns, however, her baby may be gone. Perhaps a python or tiger or lion may have devoured it. Thus, the procreation of ‘the species would have been frustrated. * * So God decided to make women to be perhaps 25 per cent sweet- heart but 75 per cent maternal, thereby guaranteeing babies a break. For then the human infant, which is the most defenseless of all new offspring, would have one adult to feed and protect it, UNPREDICTABLE WOMAN “Women are so unpredictable,”’ poets and authors have told us, but that -is not true. Women are very predictable if : you understand their bi-valence regarding romance vs. maternal hunger, “Then why was woman made to have any passion at all?” some folks have asked me dur- ing the marriage clinics which I 4 vices aimed to start forest fires in the American Northwest. Research in balloons has pro- duced quite a vehicle compared to the first invention, which is credited to Joseph and Jacques Montgoifier, sons of a wealthy French paper bag manufacturer. The Frenchmen inflated a bag with smoke fed by a fire from wool and* chopped straw, and to the great excitement of spectators floated the balloon a mile and a half. * 8« « . The following September they put a sheep, a cock and a duck in a balloon. These were uninjured in the flight except that the cock got kicked by the sheep. The next month a Frenchman had the honor of being the first human to ascend. He was Jean Francois Piatre de Rozier. ‘OPEN SKIES’ PLAN President Eisenhower proposed last year to Soviet Premier Mar- shal Nikolai Bulganin an “open skies’ plan of mutual aerial in- spection. The idea was to allay world fears of any war between the two most powerful nations on earth—in a jet age of planes flying more swiftly than sound. * * Ld Rus$ia virtually has rejected the plan. And yet high-flying balloons —which also can be controlled by radio—now haunt the Kremlin men who claim they want controlled dis- armament The weather balloons are caus- ing high temperatures in Moscow. Looking Back 15 Years Ago BRITISH BREAK _ relations with Rumania. ROME ADMITS enormous loss in Genoa road. 20 Years Ago PONTIAC HAS coldest day of year, 12 below. PITTMAN CHARGES Japan will close China to U. S. Difference have conducted for churches, various Well, a woman has to have some romantic desire or she would nev- er be attracted to men in the first place. And her romantic hunger was made diffuse and slow to satisfy so she'd be continally receptive to masculine advances and thus be more likely to conceive. * * Once her baby arrives, however, the normal human female shifts her interest to it. In fact, many caustic husbands even today freely admit their jealousy of their own children. 6 “My wife got so wrapped up in them that she felt I should be happy as a platonic husband,” they testify. “All she cared for after the baby came was that I bring home my pay check.” That isn't true, but many thoughtless, wives have allowed another woman to divert their husband's interest by failing to realize that husbands still retain 100 per cent romantic ardor, even after they become fathers, So insure your marriage by ca- tering to your hushand’s different makeup. A successful wife must learn to remain a_ satisfactory sweetheart while serving as a tal- ented mother, too. Send for my booklet “Sex Prob- lems in Marriage.’ enclosing a stamped return envelope, plus 20 cents (non-profit). It can: prevent a divorce and keep your husband devoted to you through your Golden Wedding Day. Always write to Dr. George W. Crane in care of The Pontiac Press, Pontiae, Michigan, enclosing a long 3¢ stamped, self-addressed envelope and 20¢ te cover typing and printing costs when you send for his psychologigal charts and pam- phiets. - (Copyright 1956) akoe neti THE PONTIAC PRESS. FRIDAY, FE BRU ARY. 10, 1956 & main neutral in the East-West cold sovernmeni's determination o Especially When Records Made Public war, * * * Allies to Build — Dam in Egypt seis SoS Western Sources Hail) >uild the high dam.” Ag t Victo oe * Over Sve lence Astor, Second Wife CAIRO, Eaypt nthe west na REACH Settlement not the Soviet Union is going to * help Egypt build its vast high dam — * * «& settlement, LONDON #®—The scandalous alf-| fair of King George IV and Queen Caroline took place 135 years ago but apparently someone in the royal family still was smarting over it in this century. It has es disclosed that two, red-taped bundles of state Papers NEW YORK @® — John Jacob"! on the Upper Nile River, the big-|Astor and his second wife have heen a Ft the" ublc the ruling oat Seereeton pentect SEPP reached a permanent financialirecords office, For over a century Soe lRovaliy Eno tassed by Ancestoralfl wishing to brush up on the doings/fragments of British history. of Britain's Hanoverian rulers. There is speculation that King George V, grandfather of Queen’ ‘Elizabeth II, had the papers re- ‘moved to his private archives. An intriguing point is that they fore the ‘wedding. * Charlotta Augusta. It took the throne, Caroline spurned was a state marriage of converian offer to stay abroad and re- jence and he met his bride, Prin-/nounce her claim to the queen's cess Caroline Emilia of Brunswick-' crown, Woffenbuttel, only a few hours be-{ When she came back to London, They parted in 1796, just one yorce, on the grounds of her adul- year after the marriage and after tery with an Italian nobleman. The the birth of a daughter, Princess suit was hastily dropped when George slipped easily back into business of the King’s girl friends Britain as prince re-jhis gay bachelor ways. Caroline during his regency days. toured Europe in a flare of gossip and intrigue. In 1820, when George minster Abbey for the coronation Egypt agreed yesterday to ac- Gertrude Gretsch Astor and their cept a 200-million-dollar loan from|8-year-old daughter with a total of the World Bank to help finance the|$36,000 a year. huge construction three miles wide| ‘The agreement, announced yes- ‘and 300 feet high. With that, the | terday by lawyers for both sides, way was eased for the United) continues $500 a month for support States and Britain to supply an-jof the child, Jacqueline, and $2,500 other 200 million dollars in direct imonthly alimony to Mrs. Astor grants for the project, expected to’ which was begun in December, cost $1,300,000,000. 11954. Egypt will put up the rest. -The attorneys said Mrs. Astor ~ 7 ,will institute separation action HAILED AS VICTORY next week in State Supreme Court. Western diplomats hailed the/r4. Astors were married nearly agreement as an important Victory !i9 years ago over the Soviets in the battle for The separation suit will contest influence in the strategic Middle|,,. validity of Astor’s Mexican di- East. The Russians also had of-| vorce of July 1954. Astor remar fered to help build the big dam at| ved after the divorce but now jis Aswan, 600 miles up the Nile from) . porated trom his third wife, the Spates 5 Raypten elficials cou the former Dolores Fullman, He is agreement as evidence of te fenance Cre ae (Politica! Advertisement) _—_—— Musical Tone May Sub for Bells on n Telephones TAXPAYERS areca | tone ‘similar to a clarinet soon may A Bond Iss we | replace the telephone bell if field trials of the new device are suc- IS A cessful. Bell Telephone laboratories re-|, B 0 & D SY | F ported yesterday that the new sound stands out better above gen- eral room noises and is more av jeasily distinguished from door- NO MATTER WHAT | bells, alarm clocks and fire alarms. Heart Attack to Keep Oakman. Hospitalized DETROIT#—Charles G. Oak- man, general manager pt Detroit's City-County Building and former congressman,» will’ be ‘hospitalized for the next two weeks as the jresult of a ‘‘mild heart attack,” make the 7a AXPAYE RS |his physician’ said today. Geoctved. acto in by the | Dr. Hazen Price said, after his — Apt release from Harper Hospital, Oakman will have to rest for a |time at his home. The physician |desc ribed Oakman’'s condition as | good. The former congressman was stricken emnentny: |Woman Moretint Has ‘Bad Luck All the Way . HENDERSON, Ky. W—An_ un-| Of Said Bonds identified woman driver ran out of gasoline in front of a’ filling station, MARCH +] But she wasn't as lucky as she jthought. The filling station was out| heal ‘FIGHT FOR FREE ENTERPRISE of gasoline, too, CALL IT ee le & DEBT. And, » bond iste its good a higher = meter if Parking Don't be nique and the tax DENYING pain OUT OF t be issues mus in one form TAXES and fees er another. 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Tailored ‘royal pair were deposited in the ‘Hold, Pontiac Press Phete/5@ssion in the afternoon will hear Sula" 'George immediately filed for di- ‘Caroline's counsel brought up the Caroline was locked out of West- and ‘died a fortnight later — as queen of ‘England. * * * According to custom, two bun- dies of state papers concerning the ipublic records, “Sorry, sir, they were taken to Windsor (the royal state residence outside London) in 1935," he was Science Teachers to Meet af Lansing Science teachers from all over the state will travel to Lansing Feb. 18 to attend the third annual convention of the Michigan Science Teachers Association, é Keynote speaker will be Dr, George G. Mallinson, director x graduate studies at Weste Michigan College, who wil discuss the training of future science teach- ers for Michigan schools, Following the talk, section meet- ings during the remainder of the morning will deal with Dr, Mallinson’s proposals. A general summaries of the sectional meet- ings, and a business meeting will foliow. John Youngpeter of Pontiac is one of the members of the MTSA ‘section committee for this year. from Your EXACT PRESCRIPTION Pretties in easy-care fabrics! USES ith a Val entine gift blouse. In Dacron® batiste $ and pique, silk, sheer nylon, rayon- f . Tai or dressy or styles. Solids, prints, stripes. 32-38. *DuPont’s polyester fiber 5.00 SPRING JEWELRY Necklaces, earrings, ‘$4 bracelets, pins. Assort- ed styles, bright pas- tels. See them today! Plus U.S. tax JEWELRY BOXES Pink, blue or ivory $2 CIRO New render, etc. The perfect gift. plastic ‘leatherette on Reflections, wood frame. Cantilever tray. Valentine gift! Ciro Originals Five 14 oz. bottles. Sur- . V2 oz. perfume Plus U.S. tex Danger, $3 Exect p15 0, $. tas New Horizons. replica. Gift-right! SAGINAW AT-WARREN, PONTIAC [ame stor@S OPEN MON., FRI., SAT. NIGHTS TO 9 PERFUMES $5 Horizons, Every woman’s weakness...lovely LINGERIE Frothy and filled with lace, or neatly tailored. Gowns, pajamas, slips and WF $ petticoats in flower-tone nylons, ; plisses, broadcloth, \nylonized fab- for rics, Sizes 32-40, ats in group. ‘From a famous 5th Ave. maker! Sale! Men’s jewelry sets 1.69. You'll know the famous name instantly! Cuff links with matching tie bars, hun- dreds of styles and patterns, if boxes, All in handsome gift ‘RIGHT THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, FEBRUARY | 10, 1956 ROK Rocking With Rhythm Korean Bistros Say “To My Valentine” with Jump at 10:30 p.m. in accordance with strict curfews in the city. After centuries of living as a! “hermit nation” the people finally have recognized the fact that some changes should be made in their way of living. They agree, though, it tse her process and should be made with caution. UF Was Amazed DENVER (INS) — Denver Com- munity Chest-United Funds cam- lighted and puzzled over the receipt of a fat envelope, contain- ing a contribution of $5,700, The nor insured, contained a large stack of $100 and $50 bille The contribution was strictly anony mous—it didn’t even have a re- turn address on the envelope. Caustic soda production in Ar gentina is showing a 25 per cent Th Fest Cady Mey Che Bay Meadow Milk Chocolates In Ribboned Heart Box he 1 POUND BOX large envelope, neither registered gain in recent months. as Ancient Ban Bows : to Modern Pop Tunes For the BEST BUY on any appliance Compare Federal’s everyday Low PRICES before you Gi KELVINATOR Reduced for added savings now ...at Federal’s SEOUL (INS) — lights are slowly coming on ag ‘in in war- ravaged Korea, together with mambos, rhumbag and fox trots, It's truly a “birth of the blues” for this little peninsula once known as the “hermit na- tion" of the Orient. Koreans always have adhered to strict regregation of sexes in ac- cordance with rigid interpretation \of Confucianism, which held that boy and girl should be kept apart after the age of seven. After sunset, not too many | years ago, Women were not al- |. lowed in the street alone. Their gowns and head coverings shield- ed every part of their bodies and revealed only the eyes. If the streets, they were consid- p, they were seen unescorted on ered prostitutes. When the United Nations soldier became a common-place addition to the country during the recent war years, an enterprising Kor-| ean opened the first public nightelub-dancehall in Seoul. It shattered the way of thinking of the people. But soon afterwards, even President Syngman Rhee joined the tremendous change in social life FIVE BISTROS The elderly statesman suggested there be a place to go dancing for members of the foreign press corps covering the war. The ‘‘New man's Club” was born for U. N correspendents only. Today there are five nightclubs operating in Seoul. The majority of the customers, however, are not U. N. soldiers and newsmen but Koreans. The clubs, fancily named — Mogambo, Moulin Rouge, News man’s Club, Union Hall and Car- negle Hall — are extremely an- like their western-world counter- r 5 Big 11.6 cu. ft. with automatic defrosting; roomy twin crispers 299% Wonder-working Magie Cycle defrosting re- moves frost before it forms. Separate freezer chest holds week’s supply of foods. Huge twin crispers keep vegetables fresh. Butter and cheese chests plus handy shelves in door. Price Includes Delivery, Hook-up end Service 3.00 2 POUND BOX 80 Ib. frozen food capacity And what could be finer than a gay red ribboned box of Sanders delicious Meadow Milk Chocolates! This superb selection, richly coated in Sanders dis- tinctively fine milk chocolate, includes luscious buttercreams, nut clusters, almond butter squares, cherry cordials, nut fudge, caramels, and many others. ‘ . Space-saving 30” electric range with giant 23” oven parts. ’ THIRTY-SEVEN ALL OF SANDERS | There are no plush surround- Automatic jings for the dancers. At every loud SANDERS STORES REGULAR jroll on the drums, another bit of| oven timer 95 AND ASSORTMENTS [plaster drops, unnoticed, off the’ erms 30 NATIONAL ARE ALSO | walls. | x : SINCE 1 Bote omen . , ; SUPER MARKETS Asis AVAILABLE Pose ad ee. peng aire Uses just a few inches of today’s small kitch- around pot-bellied stoves through- out the short evening until they aré-asked to dance by the shy male. Some places frequently have bands, others entertain customers with records. The musicians in- termix their polka-style native) tunes with popular ballads of; America. The end result often is) very amusing. The dancehalls close ee uP tightly ens. Automatic timer cooks complete oven meal automatically. 7-speed surface units. Electric minute timer. Range lamp. Appliance outlet. Big range conveniences. Big savings! Price Includes Delivery and Service Where Quality Costs You Less Valentine’s Day is Tuesday, February 14th Visit your nearest Sanders Store in the Tel-Huron Shopping Center Telegraph Road and West Huron Street, in Pontiac cemeeene” Enjoy this new idea in Floor Covering For the playroom, nursery, attic, closet— wonderful cotton Karpet-Squares thot anyone can put down. And you'll find them wonderfully easy to maintain, ” SAVE on installation costs—KARPET- SQUARES adhere to the floor with just o pat. SAVE on carpet-cushion costs— : KARPET-SQUARES ore self-cushioned. SAVE on burns and occidents—replace ; | one square instead of the entire carpet. : EASY TERMS CHOOSE from 12 fashion-right colors — create your own solid or contrasting design. See KARPET-SQUARES today! Enjoy their comfort in your “FORGOTTEN ROOMS” fonight! \ 4 12 Colors in Stock! ; $ 69 Regular 14.95 mailing base ‘ Self-Cushioned PAT Monor ea. Self- Adhering 18-Inch Square with this big Admiral be] | ; | , : . 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NIGHTS TO 9 eee * ‘S511 Elizabeth Lake Road dept. stores COVERINGS FE 4958) 2 PE Rae a ay fal oy . t \ ' i ‘ hi is ' y j ij . x dd ; ie ; aay . \ P ; THE ris OWETAG PRESS, FRIDAY. FEBRUARY 10, 1956 Jeckion Resident Dies. iC winla Suspect | JACKSON @—Dean McLaughlin, 66, who retired three years ago ; died yesterday. He was injured Jan. 22 in an automobile accident near Adrian. Only a short time before Mc- Laughlin died, his sister, Mrs, Neil Viergever, injured in the same ac- cident, was dismissed from the hospital. ‘ SEN VE Former Detroit Broker | Cited in Embezzling, Larceny of $150,000 DETROIT W—-A former Detroit ae an , }stockbroker, accused of swindling Weather Vane for Ike —[ctients out of from $150,000 to, MUSKEGON W—A weather vane $180, 000, stood mute when ar-|' depicting @ bull has been ordered Laotian ay Saag tell from a nearby Montague firm for day on charges of *emberziement | : President Eisenhower's farm at) and larceny. if cr Whitehall metals Studios, Ine $40. all id the zoe John D. Gould, 40, father of four.) ce vane COS'\ was freed on $5,000 bond pending , examination next Friday. is A complaint signed by Lucille B. Deinzer, a 39-year. old di- © | voreee, stated that she and her © | mother, now dead, were bitked |. of $105,535 between 1951 and 1954. ‘~ | Authorities said information from | iseven other persons might add as — | much as $75,000 to the total. They) © ‘include a Cleveland houswfiee and ‘six men. LOST $6,000 The Ohio woman identified her-| self as Mrs. Esther P. Leedy, a— former Detroit stenographet, now i married to the operator of a small . ‘appliance firm. She said she lost'~ $6,000 but did not intend to prose- |i cute. Ralph Garher, chief assistant! 3 prosecutor, refused to name the!» men who told them they, were! cheated. le = Garber said all told similar — ~ | stories. They said they handed | : | over large sums of money to |i | Gould te invest for them “‘pri- Valentine Dollar Day Buys FREE BOX of CANDY With 3 Poir Purchese STRETCH NYLONS | First quality, good color and size selection, 8'/2 to 11. Men’s or Ladies’ Regular $49.50 BULOV A | vately” and were unable to get | 3:99 toties un eee BAN one ° back either the cash or any kind [ — sp there > Loater Sox $¢é 6 95 | of securities. if | Gould was employed in 1951 by|— $2 yoo ]00 d a Detroit brokerage firm but left Hees Tok 58) Siete Te8 two years ago to set up an em- ployment office. ' | Miss Deinzer is the surviving) ; Lou-Mor Jeweler /member of a wealthy Monroe el (Next te Oakland Theater) ily. 45S. Saginaw FE 5-7421 a Two Lawyers Sue Flynn for $25,000 | LOS ANEGLES » — Lawyers | iPaul Ziffren and Harold G.) NOW- | Wilkenfeld have sued actor Errol HEAR | COMFORT | Eo for motogp logeia that | AND in STYLE! jthey represent m in income itax matters for hwich they have’ with the new MODEL 830 not been paid. The time limit for! | All-Transistor, Ali-Magnetic (he 325.000 payment, they allege,| jwas Sept. 30, 1955. Basse HEARING AID | They sued yesterday. Earlier in| - - Sanforized, Guaranteed Fast Color SPORT BLOUSES §. 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Wool quilted 2 lined, 6 to 12. ® Use Oures CREDIT e Wide 16.99 Parka 16.99 Wool 1.99 Fiennel Jackets jackets Shirts 109) §=—899_ Dir $3 ee et ee ee ee ye ae No : 4 pops ¥ i é ¢: / | Ho og 4 hh ¥ n . 2 iy iF ' XY ee Ae eee are THE PONTIA C PRESS, FRIDAY, F EBRUARY 10, 19567> \ Be Subject locas ™ “Antarctic Expedition The first’ airplane built in wna Finds Mountain Site De "Vivien ‘Pucha, aloo ‘resorted I, i he era der ere) BOStON ROW LONDON. (INS) .— The British AS LOW AS 1149” $5.00 Per Month FHA Terms—No Money Down CALL MAple 5-9021 for Your FREE WATER ANALYSIS |= PAYNE DISTRIBUTING CO. was spotted by/the crew of a re- connaissance plane from the Brit- ish ship Theron, Antarctic expedition has reported|by increasing pack ice —S discovery mountain i ». However, Fuchs said that Pees the BEST water softener we | 1S miles, southeast of the British |the Unloading of stores and equip Policemen Slay Berserk All control mechanisms are bane at, Gheclieten ch the Srenmn ment had Moon comple’. Gunman in Chinatown lly quaranteed for 10 years London headquarters of the ex-| West Germany's oil reserves) Shooting Outburst + , HOW: Bonn a Tel Te ee | TO @ — Boe mm killed and a third injured in a Ue SALE! Special | co Values to $9.99 | Special—Fall iCOATS Values to $19.99 JANE LEE’S | DRESS « COAT ‘8 ) YOUR CHARGE ACCOUNT INVITED » DRESSES $ “The Store With the Friendly Atmosphere” 41 NORTH SAGINAW ST. © | Wong Jayne, 59, mayor. Lee himself was by police # bullets. || The shootings took place on at wild outburst of gunfire in Boston’s Chinatown last night. ; Police said Fum Lee, 50, for- Eimer owner of a Chinese restau- rant, killed Jim Chin Kai, 50, an /\assistant secretary of the Chinese ‘Merchants Assn., and wounded Police said the shootings began Police said Lee went wild cony arid killed.. Lee then fired through a window and creased the mayor's chest with a bullet. Lee, shouting wildly, fled into the conference room and locked ‘ithe door, Detectives fired through the door and killed him with two shots, The hold back from the fun and thrill ! \ \ and pride of bossing a Buick — when you can boss such a big and strapping beauty for the price of a smaller car? Hard to believe? Listen ... If you can afford any new car, you can afford , this brawny Buick Speciat Sedan — for a very simple reason. : This Buick is priced within a few dollars o the well-known smaller cars—and actually costs less than some models of those very same cars. (The price we show here proves that.) . Want more proof? For two years in a row now, Buick has outsold every other car in America except two of those well-known smaller cars. And you can bet your bottom dollar that it takes bedrock prices to stay in “sag, tren Sorwdor Evemng ——_— | the Top 3 of the nation’s best sellers. . | ee op = WHAT'S NEW la The 56 8 Styling—with choice * : : NEW wick SPECIAL? weW sweep-Aheod 564 inside and out But even that isn’t the whole story—not by 322-cubic-inch V8 engine of 8.9.40 1 com. of foshion Color Harm a long shot. poe e. eo ever for this bedrock. eother-Action Brakes with Sate NEW Ae NEW Sen Linings ond Suspended Folks are buying Buicks in record numbers Belong antive Frame and Precision Gress mileoge because they find in these big beauties a lot front Chassis, engineered all new from WEW stepped-UP totes utomobile for the mon NEW » ot [ot sxtrecvaged reodebilty Satety Latches more ai or the money. Ushioned Luxury Ride — wit wew Hetero atety Alt Head Lomps : TT ond trve torque-tube drive Se ail ne WHEN BETTER AUTOMOBILES ARE BUILT BUICK WILL BUILD THEM OLIVER =. 210 Orchard Lake Avenue They find here more styling freshness and distinction — more snap and ginger and power thrill — more comfort and luxury — more ride stability and steadiness—and more structural solidity and pure automobile than the same money buys elsewhere. So if you want to move into the big-car travel world at a small-car price — if you - want to have the time of your motoring life with the lift and lilt and pride and prestige of a beautiful new Buick as your very own —what's holding you back? Drop in on us right quick — tomorrow, maybe? — and we'll show you the biggest bundle of high-powered Buick ever offered in America’s low-price field. S *2-Door, 6-Passenger Buick Special Sedan, Model 48, illustrated. Any state and local taxes, additional. Prices may vary slightly In adjoining communities. A wide variety of extra-cost equip- ment and accessories available at your option. eee Oe thes one SEE JACKIE GLEASON “*e ON TV z Killed, "Hutt (C02 Nerea .|is a former Philadelphia real es- tate man. a Chinese merchants had _*_|gathered to plan a celebration for \the Chinese New Year next Sat- ‘The Braudes have five’ children, | ‘seven grandchildren and eight) great-grandchildren. ey Seeks Special Stamp GRAND RAPIDS —Rep. Ford, after their marriage now live in State Official Resigns _ i Halse in Broomall: near Philadelphia. He|, “ANSING 1 ~ Maxwel Halsey tary of the State Safety Conimis-| sion to accept a research position! They stressed that wedlock is}with the Eno Foundation for High- a 50-50 proposition and advised: {way Traffic Control in Saugatuck, “Be kind and considerate al- Conn, . FE 5.6159 OAKLAND FUEL and PAINT CO. 436 Orchard Lake Ave i | | i d-diomond engegement ring and 4diomond wed- ding band, Both rings 14k gold. | Use Your Credit ! NO MONEY * BULOVA STUNNING DIAMOND POCKET RADIO COMPACTS LOCKETS owen 4949.95 "== $1.95 , 83.95 °° World's smallest rae