. ¥ * ri. THE PONTIAC PRE ‘ 113th YEAR vsti ea e ASSOCIATED st : INTERNATIONAL NEWS SERV Ford Agrees to Huge GAW Settlement Talks Go Past Deadline as Hopes for Peace Rise Halt Production as 68,000 Strike xk & & & & PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, MONDAY, JUNE 6, 1955—82 PAGES mney Strikers Mass at Louisville Plant Traffic Mishaps Meet 1955's Miss Pontiac Kill Youth, 19, ‘Hospitalize 3 Walled Lake Tot Dies in 2-Car Collision in Unauthorized Walkouts as on @ Upper Peninsula Se = 2 | Across U. S. Today heeded A 19-year-old Hazel Park | ar Oo = youth was killed when he DETROIT (INS)—The Ford United Auto Work- stems vey was thrown from his car ers Union today announced agreement for a new con- | tract incorporating the epoch-making guaranteed jeer Sunday and three persons 2°) were hospitalized after a annual wage. 3 . , 4 plane crash and two auto The end came with dramatic suddenness nearly | - 7 accidents over the weekend. 12 hours after the strike deadline. UAW President } be i ; Richard L. Murray, of Reuther called the settlement the largest package ‘ £ ° 20733 Caledonia, Hazel | ever granted by the automotive industry, and added it would total more than 20 centse per hour per | worker. | Agreement was expected to grease the way for a similar contract covering the 350-thousand General Motors employes tomorrow. Park, was dead on arrival at Pontiac General Hospi- tal. Oakland County Sher- iff's deputies quoted wit- nesses as saying Murray ap- parently lost control of his at car on M59 at Pontiac Lake. PICKETS PEACEFUL—These UAW pickets were | aP Wirephete | Meanwhile, in the weekend's assembled on the road leading to the parking area of | Pickets were not attempting to sfop office workers or worst auto accident, Jerry Frey, A + the Ford Motor Co.'s Louisville, Ky., assembly plant. | non-union workers from entering the plant. 3, of Walled Lake was killed in a is eeatiiemeeenitiaaitnamnantaiiaead 4 | | DETROIT (#—Usually reliable sources reported today ‘that the Ford Motor Co. and CIO United Auto Workers | were near agreement on a new contract that would avert a general Ford strike and stem sporadic walkouts at +E my —— —$—$_—___—__—_—_—_————_ | ?-car collision in the Upper : | Peninsula Saturday company plants across the nation. I qe . M torist S Francis Teifer, 35, on Shingle- Ford announced that 68,000 workers were already Olorists oee oe pate was (milled penen ether! idléd in 28 plants and 12 parts depots over the nation car, driven by the Frey boy's tod Show as Truck | father, Richard, 32, crashed head- ay |on with a semi-truck on M28 near Shingleton. Teifer was a passen- ger along with another man in the Motorists in Southfield Township car and Frey's seven children, police said Three of Frey's other children, | Still at the bargaining table 10 hours after the UAW’s somewhat flexible midnight strike deadline expire, com- pany and union officials were said to have agreed tenta- tively on these provisions: A guaranteed wage plan to provide a laid off Breaks Down "Reject Back-to-Work Plea | a8 a result of the King Brothers had a free ‘“‘road’’ show yesterday 4 LONDON \®—Britain’s striking railwaymen today re- | and Cole Brothers Combined Circus oe teed eh ed cn worker with 60 to 65 per cent of his normal take jected Prime Minister Eden’s broadcast back-to-work plea. performance here Saturday. at St. Luke Hospital, Manetinl home pay for a maximum of.26 weeks. This figure i . Their leaders accused the Conservative chief, re-! The show was put on unwittingly The truck driven was unhurt. would include state unempleayment compensation | turned to power in a general election less than two weeks by Jenny and Shirley, two 40-year-| He and a passenger, Miss Billie benefits. : | shi “y | A. Wythe, 15. of White Lake Tow: old elephants, while they grazed on ; e La own- ago, of getting a lot of his facts about the strike wrong. | Gee tetema tes the teddies ot Norte |B. were thrown trem the car as They said his appeal did nothing to change the situation. | western highway near Telegraph |'t Carened across the highway i Eden warned in a nation- | road. into a ditch. Miss Wythe was County's 1955 | treated for a possible chest injury’ wide broadcast last ne The elephants were enroute to ane of Reyat Tax Rate Final 'an economic smashup. after a 6-hour wait and threatened | at Pontiac Municipal Airport, Such a plan would be in line with Ford’s sabagi—oval ha pon on the subject, given to the union last Tu ° e UAW sought an 80 per cent guarantee. An increase in the “annual improvement factor” from. five to six cents an hour for the duration of the contract. These are yearly raises to compensate workers for in- creased efficiency of men and machines. Turncoat Wants. , Continuation of the cost- Pontiac Press trhote REIGNING BEAUTY — Charlotte Stark, a 17-year-old Pontiac High | School senior, will reign over special activities here during. the next 12 months as Miss Pontiac. Charlotte, of 365 S. Marshall St., has gray /eyes and brown hair, is an all-A student interested in a modeling and ' secretarial career. She will vie for Miss Michigan honors this summer. lof-living wage system, | which has governed auto industry wages for the past five years. City High School Senor Come Home at ; j them broke down. is pushing Britain toward | The animals started to fidget| suffered when his light plane crashed during takeoff Saturday . and released. Z ‘= = 5 that the nine-day-old strike | Canada where the circus Is to | i. + ' OQ | Oak, was listed in critical con- / Allocation Board Lists He appealed to the strikers to to overturn the trailer, so their | , 7 William Drett, 31, of 67,000 locomotive engi-| »*s" 3 aged _— “nen eee | neers, firemen and cleaners, ""° ° ‘he truck tractor Bauling | dition at Pontiac ‘General Hos- | pital with a severe back injury : . go back to work and then start | keeper, James Mitchell, 27, of Po-| Witnesses said the plane. a sin- Figure of 4.37 Mills ; mona, Calif., put them on the is- | gie-engine Swift, failed to ain sul: i . negotiations again on their claim | The marathon talks that began i for Current Year Toe more ® | land to stretch and munch the ficient altitude to clear utility 10 art supe ti a ; pay. | grass. | (Continued on Page 2, Col. 2) | am — A aioe : { A 1955 Oakland County tnx 5) But Noel Pinches, president of | Seeing the giant beasts caused throughout the night and were still ef 4.37 mills ($4.37 per $1.000 of valuation) has been.made final by the Tax Allocation Board, Chair- | the Associated Society of Loco- } motive ‘Engineers and Firemen, | told newsmen today that Eden's | passing motortsts to stop and gape and State Police from the Redford | Post were stationed at the scene | —, 7. . ) re | _ GI Who Stayed in China Hunt for Suspect “® Miss Pontiac for 1955 encouraged by Wite ’ A pert, poised Pontiac High Schoo] senior is Miss to Return to U.S. going in mid-morning. These were punctuated by re- cesses lasting up to three hours, | : | appeal “will find no favor’ with | to keep traffic moving. man of the Board of Auditors | ; j ; : - Robert ¥. Moore said today. | his union executives, _ | es . | Pontiac for 1986. i | s : Z =e | . “ | . = ; en ; The rate is .77 mills lower than! Pinches claimed his union. had, Nehru Stops Off in Rome in Jeannie Case | Charlotte Stark, 17, who received the crown at cere- last year's, but property owners /monies Saturday night, will compete in the Miss Mich- generally will pay more anyway Ae lite . ; | Man With Sandy Hair gan contest this Samimner. behind the Iron Curtain rather! throughout the night. E. Marvin because the rate was computed i this year on state equalized valua- So . The grey-eyed brunette, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. | than return to his young wife and’ gegpy head of the Detroit of- ught for _Molesting Charles Stark, 365 S. Marshall St., is an all-A student daughter in Olympia, Wash., has} ‘ie oe the Fede ; Meas bai Other Girls in Area | | | fice ral Mediation tion instead of the lower county equalized figure.. . . . . oan | peate ChaneelGl heast | taking a college preparatory course. She likes dramatics | Now = wa 1arume home. | afd Conciliation Service, said he sider their next step in the costly! The Premier arrived here from) yar aytazoo PA sandy.{ 224 has played the lead in a school production. | Mrs. Otho G. Bell says she is. Was ready to intervene if the walkout by 20,000 men which has! Cairo. He declined to comment on | hai 2 — - “ | She stands 5 feet 6 inches+— ‘encouraging her husban1 to re- Company and union were in dan- partly tied up seven seaports for | his forthcoming visit with the aired man seen accosting young and weighs 123 pounds. Her Guards iured ger of breaking off relations, | called by first one side, then the OLYMPIA, Wash “®—A 21-year-| other to study proposals and coun- old American soldier who, as a ter-proposals already called off one threatened | ! : , : prisoner of war, chose to remain) Federal mediators steod by strike on the promise of wages | OM Way to Soviet Capital | talks which did not reach agree-| ROME, (P—India’s Prime Minis: | ment, © ‘ter Nehru stopped off briefly in| Meanwhile, leaders of the strik- | Rome today en route for a month's | ‘ing stevedores union called a con-| visit to Moscow and Communist | ference in Londori today to con-| East Europe. | The final figure comes after a hearing last Thursday at which school beard and township offi- cials expressed general agree- ment over tax rates allowed them, Moore explained. iturn. ‘“‘And if he's sent to prison. | two weeks, Kremlin leaders. ‘ school girls the day Jeannie Single- | : ‘Tl get a job near the prison SO; While efforts ‘to head off a gen- = ; ton was kidnaped was sought to- | Measurements are 34-24-34. I can see him from timé to time,” ,eral Ferd strike continued, reports nen RE: tangent Meee eae | Aae 4 ee : | Charlotte said she ishe says. |poured in to both the company Wateriocd Townekip Bee oo All Are Christians [day in the rape slaying of the 8- 7 ; ae : . , | The status of Otho G. Bell is aa Valen of walko i i Ford pealed to the State Tax Commis- | | year-old Kalamazoo child. couldn't believe it when cake ‘beclouded, legally. He was one of plants and parts depots. sion claiming tts aati M . . t P t t A Cc t Police said at least* one witness they said number 6” at the in ONnld 10 Ing 1/21 American prisoners of war who! A aoe ehwed ee than 30 ‘ factor was set too high, this year | 1n]1 Ss c I Ss. I O (S S and possibly four can identify the! finals at the King Brothers | |refused repatriation, but stayed 66 pong installati re b = a by the County Equalization Com- | < = . man they saw trying to lure school | and Cole Brothers Com- os ‘with Red China. ley = Homans me a 68,000 mittee. The township asserts that of ampaign ( ‘om mittee girls into his car. . ~ : Reformatory Officials pion! teen enia kis sectors leat’ oy roa . ica Bush core unless the factor is reduced it will C On each occasion he pulled his bined Circus Saturday. a s hapiobe bone ated ck Ask State Police and Sheriff for Help — eated that he apparently had been told that two American POWs who at first declined ot return to the United States, then did, had been executed. Actu- ally, the pair was sentenced to prison. / has 140,000 hourly rated employes Jin all, The walkouts spread from Mass- achusetts to California. Affected were plants in Cleve- land, Cincinnati and Canton; Ohio; Sommerville, Mass.; Chi- cago; Buffalo; St. Paul, Minn.; Dallas; Monroe and Livonia, have to pay a higher-than-fair per- centage of county taxes. “If the township’s appeal is granted, the Tax Allocation Board might have to meet later and make | a few slight changes in tax rates,” i said Moore. ° . Draper Shoots 71 + in Open Qualifying Tom Draper, amateur from Red Run Country Club, posted the low score among the early finishers of the first 18 of 36-hole qualifica- tions for the National Open golf Yournament, under way today over the Red Run and Birmingham Country Club courses. car alongside the children and night. estes them to go | Shee pled “I just didn't realize it was ac- im, police reported.. When they ath Pees 0 refused to enter the car, he laughed cualy happening, in a “crazy manner” the wit-| Charlotte plans a combined mod- nesses told police. | eling-secretarial career. | friend, David Ballard, | Army -at Fort Riley, Kan... | hasn't learned of her copping the | | crown. The following fetter has been received by the Pontiac Press, signed by 20 Pontiac ministers, bearing on next Monday’s school election: A religious issue is being introduced into the forth- coming school board election by a local committee which designated one candidate as the “Christian” candidate. We, the undersigned ministers, believe that no such issue really exists. All four candidates for the Board of Education are active Christians and loyal members of local churches. The incumbent members of the; )o, oday.. Board are also churchmen. Very appropriately many seneeatore Geet Casatian,princples'are important wins iw bk oe Sc e eve tha “ks Singie- | in public aftalrs but we believe it unfortunate rae ia sete pani aera eee word “ stian” shou a edi ae Fook Desetlnne negeek nn poe Rlonasimagi any one candidate, or representatives of Senne’. boty a oi | Sines a ot 6 N Eat deab J Sains pacha ‘Det hotel = ony ee William H. Marbach, Pastor, Wednesday in a lonely wooded area | Bivd., also a Pontiac High senior; | 1000 inmates. last of a series of caucuses ran Edward D. Auchard, Associate in Allegan County 15 miles from) Jean Serraville, 21, of 106 Augusta | she beamed. | | | IONIA, Mich., ®—State Police reported a riot at the State Re-| Her boy \ is in the formatory today. ‘They reported | and several guards had been injured.| Mrs. Bell is living at Olympia! TWo injured guards were rushed With their 4year-old denaiger on le —— Paula, whom. Bell never has n.| Mich and Long Beach, Calit, to the refermatory hospital. [He shipped overseas with tle 2nd| , 4 ’ Her mother was responsible | There were reports others had Infantry Division in 1950 before the, Violence was reported from Chi- for Charlotte’s entering the con- | been hurt. i daughter was born. | cago. Two strike leaders were ar- test. ‘Mother always wanted to © Reformatory authorities called ;Mrs, Bell said her husband in- | Tested- at the gates of Ford's jet enter one herself but never got assistance from the Ionia t¢Mded to get a passport to return | aircraft engine plamt on charges around to it. My entering and | County Sheriff's Depart anait? the United States. She said she | of attempting to overturn an atto- winning was a dream come true (CUNY Sheriit’s Department and hag been informed the State De- mobile carrying salaried, workers. for her, I guess.” late Police partment would gid and issue docu-, The company and union met | The reformatory is a medium! ments for his return if he reaches' Sunday and caucuses were held Detectives have ermed the lead the “‘hottest’’ they have un- covered so far in the case. Witnesses were to be shown pictures of known sex deviates at Kalamazoo police headquar- | } { i | i | for | security prison with more than a ,™ bs Police said the riot was appar- Drfaper registered an even par 7i over the Birmingham course. He had a 2-over par 38 on the Pastor, First Presbyterian Church. Milton H. Bank, Pastor, Central First Presbyterian Church. Duncan D. McColl, Pastor, First Christian Church. her- home. She had been raped Ave., a clerk-typist; Janet Ander-| ently confined to one building. and strangled. = Meanwhile, police in Flint and) son, 22, of 834 W. Huron St., an Guards were reported to hape Press Offering Tips to Bonanzagrammer. from 4:20 a.m. EST to nearly 8 a.m, Then joint sessiong resumed, Spokesmen .for both sides : : Oth, | Methodist Church. P ced IBM operator, and Barbara Loo- | : re nd tr In an effort to find a winner for | cated the next few hours would gee pela ne va Malcom K. Burton, Pastor, First mae: pena Pastor, Macedonia) Grand Rapids were questioning ney. 18, of 2330 W. Walton Bivd., | he ten ae . So Bonanzagram, we are provid- determine whether there would be “ nine | Congregational Church , Donald .E. Morris, Pastor, st.| ™" about the slaying. la senior at Waterford High School. | @Sked aon potice to stand by in| ine contestants with some of the|4 strike or settlement. t ; . , . J ok S, , . : : . Fi ‘ ip is needed. _— : : the thodist Church. i" Miss Pontiac was awarded a/|C4je of he Other scores among early Ralph C. Claus, Pastor, St. Trin- | John Methodis ure finishers. (all at Birmingham) in- clude Bob Inman of Detroit Golf Club (73), amateur Bob Whiting ity Lutheran Church. James W. Deeg, Pastor, Oakland Park Methodist Church. In Today's Press .| Church. John W. Mulder, Associate Pas- tor,, Central Methodist Church. St. ‘Scattered Showers showers and thyundershowers are ed for tonight and tomor- trophy and a $150 wardrobe. The | court members received rhinestone | bracelets. ° SYRACUSE, N. Y. Gov. G. Mermen Williams of Michigan says as y Russians. Will Appraise Miss Europe Finalists | Soviet meén are maintaining a democratic interest in the June 11 ; . with a high tomorrow of 82-86 | Adlai Stevenson can have the Dem- | event. } , County News: .....'..6.... 9 , = ocratic presidentiz! nomination| Two Soviet diplomats have have | —— Keitorials: y..csereepesee ees @ tonight is expected, to be|Mext year if he wants it. - booked front sefits beside the, judg- the! qavtupeoseoeepecss BB: SB. @ degrees, Yesterday's} The Deocratic governor ‘added | ing platform. It was suggested they | lor pur) Theaters y praaagey plsaeaee was 89, low 63. in an interview yesterday that if | are trying to discover whether the today, TV & Radio Programs. :... 31 At & a.m, the Scneerpeste in | Stevensén should not declare his | qualities displayed selhbos Euro- C needa eae woke 1a ‘wide open" Face could develoy: ally e a ie ae, ee Dad é 3 \ ¥ we | i : = ‘ ; fet ; : : i \ | 2 3 : | ne ‘ 7 ¥ ye : ‘ 1 ( 5 bd . ge 5 of Red Run (75), amateur George John’s Lutheran Church. d ed . 1 ‘contrast The beginning of three new cities Linklater of Red Run and Steve arp H. Dixon Jr., Pastor.) 1. G. Oesterle, Pastor, Bethel Pre ict for Area |Way Clear for Adlai, | HELSINKI (INS)—There may not oe and a village may appear in Oak- 3 Isakov of Glen Oaks (77) and Baptist Partly cloudy skies, continnued | : be a Russian girl competing in the ih a Kocals of Pontiac (78). when soleperunares acd scatered Gov. Williams Says Miss Europe beauty contest but _ tite | nt Panty entinen, Soa Se Sixteen. in Michigan Killed on Highways Over Weekend By THE ASSCCITED PRESS . Michigan drownings shot up to nine over th ehot weekend in which 16 died in traffic accidents. Among the drowned were five) children. A young Flint father and his two sons, whose borrowed boat cap- sized in the Tittabawassee east of ‘Boost Death Tol =e oo: a = = ee ae eee AU 3) PONTIAC PRESS, “MON DAY, JUNE 6, 1955 |Finds Daughter Dead in Lake | Moron Farrell on Fishing Trip | Taken by Death CLINTON, Mich. & — Ennis | Hardin was fishing yesterday in | Sand Lake, seven miles west of | this southeast Michigan commu- | nity. | Coming ashore for bait, he spot- | ted the body of a little girl float: | ing in the water. He carried it to | the bank and there discovered to | hig horror that the child was his | : | will be heid at 2 p.m. Tire Company Owner Dies Saturday; Rites Planned Today Morton B. Farrell, owner of the Market Tire Co, here. today from Service for own 18-mouth-old daughter, San- | : ‘dra Sue the Brown Memorial Chapel of Temple Beth El, Woodward at Hardin had thought she was (jadstene, Detroit. Interment will miles away with bis wife, their 4. in Beth £1 Memorial Park three. children and two neigh- | Cemetery bdr children from their home in | s Gladwin, were among the drown- ing victims. They were Richard P. Miller, 26, and Daniel, 7, and Michael, 3. ee ler Lake ‘after dropping Hardin for an afternoon of fish- ing. of the car at Sand Lake and Mrs. ‘| Hardin didn't miss Sandra Sue un- til she coumed noses at the other lake She raced back to Sand Lake : only to find her husband bending eld daughter, Sandra Sue. helplessly over the body of Sandra A tather drowned in another | Sue. tragedy, going to the rescue of his | a oe eee Se os atic Kill Youth and Hospifalizes 3 the Thornapple River near Ada in Kent County. Richard E. Long, 29, of Grand Rapids, drowned, but Richard Jr. did not. (Continued From Page One) Billy Fairchild, -10, of Owosso,| | drowned Sunday in the Shiawassee | | wires at the north end of the air- River at Owosso water works. | port. , . Joseph Stewart, 35, of Jackson, Drott's brother, Robert, 28, of drowned in Vandercook Lake Sun- Detroit, a passenger, was treated day for minor injuries. George L. Brunner, 28, of Con-|. Waterford Township Police said Cond wen killed Sunday chan his lack of wind and hot weather ; caused the crash. HAZEL PARK GIRL HURT ot Miss Barbara Grooms, 18, of Hazel Park, was reported in good ton, saw a little girl's body float- ing in the water and. sped te it, only to discever te his horror the child was his own 18-month- car struck a tree one mile east of Jackson. William Dobberstein, 15, Rte. 4, Dowagiac, was killed Friday night when the car in which he was ricing crashed east of Dowagiac. Thomas Cobbell Jr., 41, of Lin- coln Park, was killed Friday night when hit by a car in Wyan- dotte. = . Floyd- Bogart, 65, of Taylor Township, was injured fatally Fri- day night when hit by a car in Taylor Township. John Cross, 57, of Detroit, was injured fatally Saturday when hit by a car while crossing a Detroit street. Joanne Carpenter, 5, of Detroit, was killed Saturday when she was hit by a car near her home. William H. Edwonds, about 20, of Flint, was killed Saturday when the car in which he was riding rammed a of Hozel Park, was unable to negotiate a curve. He was treated for face cuts: and | bruises and released. Two other tenagers in the car were unhurt. After his car struck a tre at 14 Mile and Halstead Rds., in Farmington Tewnship, Le Jen- kins, 65, of Wixom, was ad- mitted to Pontiac General Hos- pital with a broken left kne and head cuts. Hig condition was listed as good. Adrian. They had gone to Wamp- | off | All the youngsters had piled out | condition at Pontiac General Hos- | pital with injuries sustained when | She attended Kephart schgols and the car in which she was riding | was married to the now late Orin tree at Porter and Brown in Brisban, Pa. Mrs. Brown Hitchcock Rds., Whit ke Town- ship. . | Driver Cla > E. gz, 19. | told deputies he | jat 1:30 p.m., Deputies said he swerved his | Mr. Farrell, 41, whose home was was at 19962 Renfrew, Detroit, |died Saturday in Sinai Hospital, | Detroit. | Tire Co., 1 West Huron Sts., years. Prior to that time he been in the costume ne ss He was a member of Temple Beth Ei, The City Club of Detroit and the American Radio Relay League Surviving besides his wife, Doro- thy, are three sons, Stanley, Rich- | ard and Dean; elie, and his mother, an Freedman Funeral arrangements are | made at the Ira Kaufman Chapel, | Detroit one daughter, Mrs. — Mrs. Orin Srown Sr Mrs. Orin Brown Sr. died late Saturday in Hospital, after six ness. Her ' beverly Born Feb. 14, Pa., jah and Lauretta 1877, had lived in Pontiac Dames of Malta of Pontiac. | Surviving are ton, Del., | Mrs. Ruby Segiar of Baltimore. |and Mrs. Nellie Clark of Halliddys. | burg. Pa.; a son, Orin, of Pontiac jand one sister, Mrs. |of Los Angeles, and a brother, Os- | car Kephart of Avis, Pa. be held Tuesday from the Huntoon with Dr. Milton Methodist Service will | Funeral Home, Bank of the Central Church officiating. Mrs, Brown will be sent -to the A graduate of Hillsdale College, r. Farrell had owned the market now located at Cass and for the past four had jewelry busi- Jan Viv- | tist Church with the | Rapetje officiating being (Della M.) Bloomfield | months of ill- home was at 461 East | military in Kephart, she was the daughter of Isa- Kyler Kephart. | for the past | 26 years and was a member of the four daughters. Mrs. Susan Buffington, of Wilming- Alice Brown, at home, “THE | his mother, Des - Moines; Malmanger of Mrs. three brothers. Bessie Turk of John Truman, E. Eg- and Sam. Turk ‘of sister, Mrs. [Des Eggert of Des Moines, P |gert of Pontiac Des Moines Minn Service and one ? gill be held at 1 Wednesday from the Huntoon Fu- neral Home Mrs. Thomas G. Nichols Mrs. Thomas G Nichols (Delia A.) 73. of 182 South Shirley St turday General Hospital where she had the Born Feb 10 Unt 5 0 pm evening in Pontiac past Tl days ISS? in Bayham Township she was the daughter of Martin Bentley Tinba. Mrs to Pontiac’In 1932 from Winchester Idaho, She was a member of the Memorial Baptist Church of Pon tiac and Tame Nichols came Surviving are two sons. Joseph of Pontiac and Thomas Nichols of Ukiah, Calif; four daughters, Mrs (lara Flovd of Kooskia Idaho Mrs Violet Bake! of Lewiston Idaho Mrs Jayce Allen of Roch ester and Mrs Jacqueivn Ardelan of Pontiac. 16 grandchildren’ two vreat-grandechildren and one sistet Mrs Almy. of Gillette Wisc Service will be held at 1 p.m Tuesday from the Memorial Bap Rev. Gerald Burial will fol Melvina low in Ottawa Park Cpmetery Mrs. Nichols is at the Farmer Spover Funeral Home Soviet Bloc Command Formally in Effect BERLIN setting Pact unified eight- into (P—The Warsaw anti-NATO for the has come up the command nation Soviet bloc effect formally. The East German news agency ADN announced last night that the last two nations Romania and Albania, had deposited their ratifi cations of the treaty in the Polish capital, The other nations who signed the pact last month in Warsaw are the Soviet Union Poland, Hungary. East Germany, Czechoslovakia and Bulgaria | proposed 1955-56 city budget. The Day in Birmingham a Commission to Consider $1,405,308 City Budget BIRMINGHAM—The will 8 p.m. tonight in the Building to review the City mission hearing at Municipal A final hearing will be held a from today. June 13. at time the budget will be con- for adoption week which sidered The budget, aceording to City Manager Denald Egbert, would call for no hike in taxes. Ht totals $1,045,308, some $69,155 mere than fast year’s. new said the increase, ap- F-gbert uy cent, comes proximately 3.2 per primarily trom budget boosts in the police, fire and public works departments. The three account for $55.000 of the $69,453 increase, with the police department's budg- et up $11,000: fire department up $17 000) over last year and the DPW budget up by about $27,000 SLATED FOR ACTION At its meeting tonight .the com nission also is scheduled to act on A request from the Troy Town- ship Board that a joint authority of Birmingham, Bloomfield Hills and Bloomfield and Trey Town-- ships be set up to determine the best solution for sewage disposal problems “in the event that plans for the Evergreen Interceptor sewer are delayed.” A petition that 2-hour parking meters be installed on beth sides of Woodward between Park street and Ravine road. The petition ts from property and business oWners in the area. They maintain the on- street parking facilities in the area are used by all-day parkers who work in the downtown area A recommendation by the city manager that construction” start immediately on sidewalk on the west side of Cummings between 14 Mile road and Bennaville Egbert recommended that con- struction on the east side be delayed until proposed construc- | Com- hold a preliminary | “sa immediately tien of a water main is com- pleted. Renewing the contract for plan- ning consultant Scott Bagby the fiscal year July 1, 1955 to June | 30, 1956, which calls for $2,400. Bagby in turn would give 240 hours of services on planning problems, at the City Planning Board and the Commission City . ® ad Brien, city building in- said in his monthly build- | 7. ¢. spector, ing report for May that 81 permits for new buildings and alterations issued during the month. It boosted value of construction in the city for the first five months of this year to an increase#of $153,460 valued at $603.535 were $2,318,710, ‘ovef the same period a year agu Brien said 244 building and alteration permits were issued fer Birmingham during the first five months of this year, down five from the total issued during | the comparable period in 1954. | He said 87 permits with new construction and alteration valued at $695,425 were issued in May last year. * a 3 300) «6Birmingham = High School seniors will miss classes to- day in the annual “‘skipday Chairman Marilyn Strasler said seniors will leave for Camp Ohiye- after homeroom class. There will be all types of sports and refreshments at the camp and a movie will be shown in the evening. A] s ° The Birmingham High Twelve Club will hold a golf tournament at Indianwood Country Club tomor- how. Some * s ° Mrs. William Arlund, 2727 Lake Rd Square will be hostess tomorrow at her home for the final meeting of the season of the Women's Fel lowship of the Congregational ‘Church for up to discretion of the # | Two Meetings, Award |to present the George Washington |Carver Memorial Instityte’s gold hon Nixon's Busy Slate | metal to Joseph H. Lederer, broker NEW YORK (INS)—Vice Presi- | and philanthropist. | dent Richard Nixon was to make After a lunch there with a | two awards, attend an American |women’s Republican group, he Legion flag exhibit, and meet with | | was to attend the flag exhibit i ‘two. Republican groups in New | the lobby ot the Chrysler Building, York today. | ang§return to the hotel for a meet- His tirst scheduled stop was ating with a men’s Republican the Waldorf-Astoria. where he was ‘' group. ee Due to the Death of Morton B. Farrell Owner The Market Tire Co. Cass at Huron Will Be Closed All Day Today IT’S NEW IN DRY CLEANING PROCESS LINT FREE irned entirely ree regardless of fabricl Plus OUR MARTINIZING MOTH PROOF PROTECTION! GENEY CLEANERS Pickup and Delivery Phone FE 5-6107 Dark colors retu 12 West Pike St. Ida Woomer struck a tree 15 miles south of/car to avoid hitting one being Easley Funeral Home, Bainsboro, Flint. driven by Mrs. Geraldine Rad- | for burial. arrangements in Union Francis Tiffer, 35, of Shingleton | cliffe, 52, of Farmington. Wit- | Cemetery, Hastings, Pa in the Upper Peninsula, and Jerry | Frey, 3, of Walled Lake, were killed Saturday when the car in| car in tromt of Jenkins’ car which they were riding collided with a truck in Schoolcraft County. Paper Claims Harvard The Frey boy's father. 32, and six of the youngster 's brothers and sisters were injured in the crash. Four of the childrefi were in critical condition. Richard RK. Murray, 19, of Hage! Park, was killed Sunday when he was thrown from his ear on M59 in Oakland County. Edward M. Westerlend Jr., 19, Detroti, was killed Sunday when | his car hit a tree in Livonia. William Bonker, 49, of Detroit, was killed in a four-car pileup Sun- day in Detroit. Charles Adams,.15, of .Brown City in Sanilac County, drowned Sunday in a far mpond near his home. Mrs. Myrtle Sarnia, Ont., Clair Sunday. Sgt. Raymond Boone. 23, of Er- win, Tenn., was killed Sunday when his car rolled over on the Willow Run expressway near Belle- ville. Mrs Johnson, 52, of drowned in Lake St Louise Kaffin, 21, af St lgnace, was injured fatally Sun- day morning when the car in which she was riding hit a deer near Sault Ste. Marie. Harry Howard, 50, of Detroit, wag kifled Sunday night in a two car collision in Detroit. Charles Zeitlar, 45, of Flint, was killed yesterday when struck by an auto while crossing a Flint street. The American Federation of Labor was founded in 1881 as the Federation of Organized Trades and Labor Unions of the United States and. Canada, changing its name in 1886. The Weather ~ PONTIAC AND VICINITY —Partly cloudy and continued warm with seat- tered the morrow. Lew tonight, hosed high to morrow, 82-86, heast te south 10-17 miles tonight. Seattered showers or thandershows and somewhat eaoler temerree aight, low, 56-60. Teday in “le Pontiac Lowest temperature preseding § am At ® a.m.: Wind velocity 15 Direction; South-southeast. Sun sets today at sw? tt mph Sun go e Tuesday at ¢ am Moon sets Twestay at 6:31 4m. wn Temperatures Le eee, ee Sere | TB. Mh eseeess 88 12m seseeres 04 BR. Whe sswegessT2 AD. Mesias 8B. Bivccneves 10 & Mocei cess OO Sunday in Pontiac (As recorded downtown: temperature somgursters eee re Ee Pere ceed Hy freee ter Tt ia ti MS nesses said Mrs. Radcliffe started | across 14 Mile and stopped her | Theodore Cc Eggert Theodore C. Eggert, 53, of 437 ; hens Saginaw, died last evening n Pontiac Genera! Hospital, to Give Truman Degree “CAMBRIDGE, Mass... u— The Harvard Crimson, student under- graduate daily publication, says | Harvard will an honorary. de- | | Peutinc in October, 1926. gre to former President Harry S. In the city since 1926, Mr.. Eg- Truman at the June 16 commence- | pert was employed for the past ment. ; 29 years by the Pontiac Motor Di- In adhering to tradition, Harvard, vision and was a member of the which never awards degres in ab- | Oakland County Sportsmen's Club. | sentia, will not diselose its forth- | He served in World War I. | coming honorary list in advance. | Surviving besides his wife are Jotm and Bessie Marsh Eggert. | | he attended school in Des Moines, | Iowa, marrying Marie Davis in Bparks-(riffin | ‘uneral Home “Thoughtful Service” 46 WILLIAMS STREET DIAL FE 2-584! 24 HOUR AMBULANCE SERVICE Onn) OPEN STORE HOURS DOWNTOWN I "sora Juss IT 1901, the son of | ALWAYS ALIA QUALITY! ee a ee me With OPEN MONDAY -FRIDAY 10 TILL 9 TUE., WED., THURS., SAT. 10 to 5:30 allt COMPARE THE THREAD COUNT... COMPARE PENNEY’S LOW, LOW PRICE! Maize! Green! Blue! Rose! Orchid! Pinkt This is the season for color! And Penney’s goes all out to bring you Summery shades in sheets of won- derful muslin quality! Smooth as they are strong! Long-wearing as they are thrifty! Nation-Wides are generations-famous, ‘first quality, lab-tested sheets. Choose now for summer living at home, at your sum- ‘mer place...delight yourself, your family, your guests ation-Wides in color. ge” 72 by 108 inches, 2.19 Coses 42 by 36 inches, 49¢ a 81 by 108 inches | —— —s merce & JUVG GINU JAVA THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY, JUNF. 6. 1955 an 2 Pe] a Inquest Begins on UP Newsmar Singapore Police mos Investigation in Killin. of Gene Symonds SINGAPORE «&®-—Coroner y Alexander opened an inquest “ into the killing of United /y Troy, | correspondent Gene Symof rioting Chinese school # May 12. The coroner’s court w police witnesses that Sy ignored police warning ‘ 8 give birth ya an addi- | ow. entering the riot area,” Southfield and following day after Athips are sched- ing at ired rst Of polls for ballot- a Mages on the change Deputy Prosecy to city status. stone said. Sing, Commerce Township made continu decide whether or not up the rioti Oakley Park annexed | tear gas mated up frine Lake village. supporting for ed with Livi’ gath possible creation are Southfield and op Madison Helghts, and the es of Troy, ager Village of Bingham Farms. sv re Although there has been a great deal of confusion over the Troy | vote, it is still scheduled. Late Friday the Vickers Corp. asked the tomorrow's election. QUESTIONS POPULATION Company officials said that the’ area to be incorporated did not meet the 500 residents per square mile. A hearing is scheduled this after- | Russel Hol-' noon before Judge H. land on the matter In Troy, on whether they favor incorpora- | election of a nine | This | group would prepare a charter for | tion, and also the member charter commission the new ipproved. Thirty-four residents filed nom- inating petitions for the Troy charter commission. Southfield at the same stage in the changeover proc- ess from township to city, and will be voting in incorporation and the naming of a charter commission 383 SEEK POSTS There 37 residents seeking a place on the nine member char- ter commissiron Ring mile area in Southfield Township There are five ¢ andidates for the village posts. Residents in Madison Heights are a step ahead of those of Troy and Southfield. They have ap proved incorporation, and are balloting tomorrow on a pre posed city charter, and city of- ficials. In commerce Township, the area designated for annexation is city, if incorporation is residents are are Glengary, Oakley Park, Benstein roads, and the boundary of Wol- verine Lake Village Polls will be open from 7 a.m. to 8 pm Cub Pack to Hold Couft of Honor at Romeo Tuesday ROMBOQ—Cub Seouts-ef Romeo's - Pack S8(.will meet at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday the First Congregation- al Chur@b,,jnstead of in the Romeo High Sc where meeting custo- marily are held. The meeting will open with the flag ec ony followed by the singing ©The Star Spangled Banner. : Some boys are scheduled to receive awards during the Court of Honor. Eight Cub Scouts will re- ceive t st award in cub- bing, \ dges, to cap the evenin : All ys attending the meeting, along with their parents, will be @rtertatried by a magician from Detroj To cle program, the Cubs will jofn taging an Indian dance, usi uipment and cos- tumes they have made themselves. Civic ngert Group Formig@ i Waterford WAT TOWNSHIP—Res- idents interested in establishing a | civic congert group trrve been in- vited to sday organ- izational > Waterford teacher’s conference room. Infor- mation Oy the” proposed pfoject | may be sived f either Miss | Helen ‘ar M mund Win- deler yo! Oakland County Circuit Court | for a restraining order, preventing’| state’s requirement of | residents will be voting | ham Farms is a one-square- | held in the | Slated in Five County Areas Tomorrow | |, WATERFORD TOWNSHIP— Ss y stalled, ‘irs. Wor 45 Milford Boys Will Take to he Fields Pontiac _Lake PTA will meet atl Officers for the 1955-56 fiscal year Fiset us as _the installing officer. | 0 'Under Vocational Agricultural Program MILFORD — Forty-five boys | will be kept busy this summer working on the supervised farm- ing program, according to Her- | Get. schel Krebs, vocational agric ulture | 'teacher at Miltord High School. * * Field corn a poultry will make | up the major enterprises, with 22 of the boys carrying these proj- 'ects. This includes 49 acres of com and the raising of 1,164 | chickens, There are 20 projects divided equally between the other live- stock projects. These include the care of 50 head of hogs, 70 sheep, 46 beef cattle, and 23 various home farms of the boys participating. The 21 projects made up of other | | crops include potatoes, oats, corn, | | wheat, and gardening. 64 PROJECTS | This makes qa total of 35 bovs | accounting for 64 productive ects on Lee own farms, while the | | | , 4 Ry a | NORMA SALLADA Harry Sallada of Commerce has announced the engagement of his daughter, Norma Jean. to R. B Keith. He is the son of Mr. and Mrs Claude Keith of Rochester. No date has been set for the wed- | ding. Mrs. Harry H. Hendrix OKFORD Service |Harry H. (Delila Mae) Hendrix, 67, of 1730 Oxford Rd., will be held at 2 p.m. Wednesday at the Allen | Funeral Home, with burial in East Lawn Cemetery. She died Sunday. Surviving besides her husband for XIrs ‘are a daughter, Mrs. William G. | Spence of Pontiac, three sons, Ce- | + cil of Oxford, Roy and Homer, both | of Lake Orion, a sister, Mrs. James | Hendrix of Black Rock. Ark., five grandchildren and one great-grand- child. Mrs, Jessie Roberts ROCHESTER—Funeral arrange- ments for Mrs. Jessie (Julia A.) | Roberts, 78. of 1757 W. jare pending at the Wilham R. | Potere Funeral Home. She dicd sudde nly early today. Child Study Group Two Plans Potluck Dinner | WATERFORD TOWNSHIP Members and families of Child | Study Group IT will meet for a pot-* , luck dinner at 6 p.m. Tuesday at the home of Mr. and Mrs. John | Hackett, on Lakewood Drive. | dairy cattle, all located on the | - pro} | Hamlin Rd. | other ten boys will be working on farms other than their own in the farm placement progrem. Krebs eepiained that the voca- in high schools teaching agricul- ture. However a boy may enroll for other types of practices such as placement for farm experience, improvement types of ee Milford hi gh school is pri- | Additional County News | _on page 19 - i FE "| tional agricultural program is set, up to introduce production methods | projects, and supplementary farm practices. | DERAL: marily Hsted as an agric ultungl | | school. David Chariick, meoming Fu- ture Farmers president, was the | outstanding student in the agri- cultural class at Milford last year, Staté Farmer Degree next year. Krebs explained that this is the hghest degree in Future Farm. ers organization in Michigan. David's projects included 41 swine, 8 beef cattle, corn, T' acres of wheat, 2 acres of potatoes, 5 acres of oats, he carried 34 approved practices. David will graduate in 1956. Use Federal’s Purchase Coupon Credit! OPEN MONDAY NIGHT to os well as Fri end Sat. nights i oS oe * - Inner ponel flattens tummy! Gives more control,” comfort! Get more comfort, too, with an expert fitting! more Ltn cite nylon power mesh girdle by FORTUNA 500 Matching panty girdle The girdle desjgned for the figure that needs extra con- trol at the tummy. White rayen and nylon mesh. Girdle or Panty with Talon closure ............ 30.40, see am |)1) ‘stores | next pay day. THIS SYSTEM REALLY WORKS! Budget your savings just as you do your spending. -Each | payday set aside a definite sum to add to a profitable sav- | ings account. at PONTIAC FEDERAL. Say you can afford | "to save $9.50 each week . in 52 weeks you'll have accu- mulated more than $494. That “more than" will be the generous dividends we add in. The current rate is 2% per annum. So get started saving with us WE HAVE NEVER MISSED A DIVIDEND! Pontiac Federal Savings and LOAN ASSOCIATION : 16 E. haneppnce St. © NORM ADVERTIOING tae He will be applying for | 15 acres of and The | 8 p.m. Thursday at the school. | wil be installed, with Mrs. Alva + EDERAL’S Open Mon. Night to 9 as well as Fri. and Sat. Nights is =~ You save more now at Federal's on these famous-make appliances by... = \) ae lin. Giant 80 Ib. freezer in this automatic defrost custonetic’ METTIGerator “Customatic’ Reg. 419.95 freezer and moist-cold compartments, ends defrosting! Hurry to Federal’s and save! 3 [ Easy Delivered, Installed and Serviced There’s no other refrigerator Wo it at any- This big cold system in both where near Federal’s low price! Norge with ‘Customatic’ maintains correct ils temperatures Terms . + 4 } | ani | ae eee eat | ek 4 == | || I Stores a week's food! 1 w e | ie i ee a y° Prom ol 85" Refri Pt sme WT : e os | 1 ii by . Easy care Seen e ne | | | Blficc eed ; . | Jj ~ A good value at its regular price . . . truly sensa- " *s ‘hee tional at Federal’s fantastically low $178. Just look | : 5 at these Norge features! Has big 31 Ib. full-width freezer, full-width chill tray, new Handidor storage shelves, half-shelf for small packages, plenty of tall bottle space and. full-width crisper! Big savings! Delivered, Installed and Serviced r flexible washing cycle, aoe washing, St) Teed i ine SAGINAW AT WAR TH stores OPEN MON. FRI. SAT Lod an : ad : Inquest Begins {Smithsonian Keeps Original n Se Singapore Police Open) WASHINGTON @—Smithsonian A . ° Killin | Instituition workmen are putting ° Investigation in Killing | the finishing touches on a plaster | Detroit hardware merchant of Gene Symonds model of the world’s biggest hunk | $5,664.98, Bennett considered ask- of native bie tal : ing Congress to order it back to ss = = . SINGAPORE &—Coroner K, T.| The mode! is being made for a| Michigan. i } xande inquest today | eoppe | However, Bennett gave up the “e the ve 9g =f brah Press | Mich / paver irriae at Ontonagon, | idea when he learned thaf no pro- ; ymonds b . ‘ | posal to take anything out of the correspondent Gene Symonds by | ! rioting Chinese school students Rep. Bennett (R-Mich) asked | national museum has ever cleared May 12. for the model after the National | a congressional committee. The coroner’s court was told by| Museum declined to give up the The boulder caused quite a police witnesses that Symonds had| 3.718-pound enero! _Devemte of | ignored police warnings against _— historic scientific | entering the riot area. He died the portance. Julius Eldred, hed schemed following day after a savage beat-| When the job's finished it will| three years before devising a | ing at the hands of the Commu-| be hard to tell the model from! mechanical contrivance that dis- | nist-inspired rioters. the real thing by appearance. lodged the rock from its wilder- » * 143. The Detroit merchant, balked at relinquishing the prize, for which the government paid a) THF ?P : > lU.S. Makes Model of Copper on UP Newsman for Ontonagon. Celebration Next Week Boulter over again, this time paying $3,365 to some Wisconsin miners who had a War Departmént permit to | search for minerals in the area. FINALLY GOT ROCK The second payment was made after Eldred already had spent two summer seasons in unsuccess- .ful efforts to dislodge the boulder from a bank of the Ontonagon River 26 miles from Lake Superior. stir when it arrived here in | * * * Eldred returned the third year equipped with wheels and castings for a portable railway and car. With some 20 other men he got the rock up a 50-foot hill near the They cut timbers for railway tracks. Placing the rock on the ear, they moved it with capstan : _._ | A dingy, dark gray, the model | ness resting place near Lake | Fiver. Deputy rigasinced H. a ues will even have a few reddish spots Superior. stone said Singapore police had’ hike the original. Those are where | : fe cing wit ah ce SENN anne. TM ao he fra i ri night sticks, | poy, : . é . ral | up the rioting with nig | have ru with their thumbs to government stepped in and claimed tear gas and firehoses. He esti-| p,j coppe ; mated up to 7,000 rioting cana - = _¢ ae | the rock. It took an act of Con- supporting a bus lines strike clash-| 4 committee was formed in, gress before Eldred got his money. ed with police the night of May 12. Michigan’s Upper Peninsula to | * 2° * Livingstone said police investi- push for return of the copper | The whole story is told in an gation showed Symonds, UP man-| boulder to the area whence it | 1844 Senate report which reads ager for Southeast Asia, had in- came in the mid 19th Century. ‘like fiction. Eldred bought the sisted upon entering the riot area /boulder from Chippewa Indian and was critically injured by bot-| CONSIDERED APPEAL | Chief Okondokon for $125 tles, stones and sticks thrown by| After Smithsonian officials; But later he had to buy it all ‘and chains for 4', miles over , (Advertisement) GETTING UPNIGH If worried by “Bladder Weakness” (Gett Up Nights (too frequent, burning or ene ing urination) or Strong, Cloudy Urine} due to common Kidney and Bladder Irri- tations, try CYSTEX for quick, gratifying, | X tablets | years prove safety end | under comforting help. A billien used in past os success. Ask druggist for CYSTEX satisfaction or money-back guarantee. ONTIAC PRESS. M ONDAY, JUNE. 6, 1955 peer cg | hills and through deep ravines | . * - SESE err S ‘Satisfied Customers | | A Z laden boat ever the lower rapids | | and down te the lake. From there the rock was taken by boat to Sault Ste. Marie and then to Detroit, where it . was shown off to persons paying 25) eents each. the nice things his custom A government revenue cutter to say about their newly i | Philadelphia salesman added a new gadget to his tricks. ‘carried it by way of Buffalo, the | gas house heaters. So, he bought a | Erie Canal, New York City, and tape recorder for $150 anc Atlantic Ocean, Chesapeake Bay these satisfied customers and the Potomac River to Wash- the machine’ how much th ington. | his product _ — | The second call he mad Ten drugs developed within the | ing the recorded plug, brot last 20 years are credited with other sale, and Linsky fig | Saving as many as 10,000,000 lives. | machine paid for itself rigt treshet carried the heavily | Played Back in Sales PHILADELPHIA (UP)—A North recently Hank Linsky was impressed with bag of ers had nstalled i asked 4 to ‘‘tell ey liked e, play ight an- ired the it there. COMPTOMETER NEW DAY AND EVENING CLASSES FORM EVERY WEEK—ENROLL NOW Individual and Group Instruction Demand for Operators Continues Steadily Free Lifetime Placement Service 314 Hubbard Bidg. Return Coupen Below for FREE Literatere. z * 8 . : ~ Pa . 3 . ' Specializing in the Training of Comptometer Operators— THE COMPTOMETER SCHOOL FE 2-1611 Be Smart, Look Sharp!- Call Fox Fax for fresher, @ TX cleaner, newer. ~ looking cleaning. ' 3 ORY CLEANERS \ 719 W. Huron FE 4-1536 the mob. SS oe zs * * » He said police picked up Sy- monds and he was admitted to a hospital 40 minutes later. | The United Press has charged that Symonds was allowed to lie _ semiconscious in the street for at leagt half an hour before the police would cooperate in getting him to the hospital, The UP has asked the State Department to ‘help in getting a ‘full and fair’ investiga- | tion of the killing. Two doctors testified Symonds’ chances of survival after his terrif- ic beating, in which he sustained a fractured skull, had been ‘re- mote’ regardiess of what time he reached hospital. Arrest 3 Detroiters on Narcotics Charge DETROIT (UP) — A Detroit| ‘ woman and two men awaited | iti charges of dope-running in Wasbh- | tenaw County Jail today after the'r arrest at Willow Run Airport Sat- @ urday, Detroit police said. Inspector Russell McCarty of the narcotics bureau said Lillian Bax- ter, Emmett Henry and Frank} _R-e gers were arrested as they stepped from a Chicago plane. He ' said seven ounces of heroin was : found on Miss Baxter, who will} @q be charged with possession of ‘ ee ee narcotics. ) The two men were to be charged | as accomplices. Henry was at ‘ liberty under $2,500 bond awaiting trial. on another dope charge in federal court, McCarty said. Woman Given Degree While Gems Are Stolen BOSTON @®—While Mrs. Helen V. Rose was receiving an_hon- orary degree from Emerson Col-| lege yesterday a thief was busy stealing $3,000 worth of her jewel- ry from a nearby cloakroom. The Newton housewife, a grad- | uate of Emerson who is active in its speech clinic, had worn the jewelry but was advised it was customary not to Wear any while . receiving a depr-c. et She placed the jewelry in a hat- box in the cloakroom, After re- ceiving a master of arts degree, she discovered the jewelry and a handbag containing $24 had been stolen. GOP Chief Challenges Dems to Use Truman WASHINGTON — Republican National Chairman Leonard Hall has informally challenged Demo- crats to put former President Truman “on the campaign train” in 1956. He suggested this would help the GOP cause, Democratic Chairman Paul But- ler, appearing with Hall in a tele- vision debate yesterday, replied that Truman ‘certainly’ will be on the train and will help bring a Democratic victory. Charke0 FUEL KIDS OuR FUEL OIL, WE ARE GLAD TO YELL, WILL OO ITS WORK The most moclerm truck for your money! Only in Chevrolet’s new 1ask-Force \ine will you find all these advanced features . . . the marks of a truly mo Most modern in design With new Work-Styling. New Task-Force modeds are . exactly suited to the job—and look it! That's because two distinctively different design treatments are put to work—one for light- and medium-duty models, another for heavy-duty jobs. Both, clean-lined and modern! New Custom Cab. Features include — Nu-Flex foam Most modern in comfort and safety New Flite-Ride De Luxe Cab. Stronger construction throughout, a big safety factor! Seats are softer; more shoulder and head room. Newly designed. instrument cluster is easier to read. New Panoramic Windshield. Wider forward vision that means safer driving! New glass-guard molding ern truck Most modern in eY-Varel guile lates Shortest stroke V8's in any leading truck, most modern sixes, feo. You can pick the right power for your job. All engines have a modern 12-volt electrical system. New Suspension, front and rear. Takes you over back roads and’ rough terrain with new, smooth-riding ease. Drivers find Task-Force trucks easier to handle. - rubber seat cushion, harmonizing two-tohe intenor, base completely surrounds side windows, reduces chance bright metal outside moldings; even an optional full- of breaking. New Overdrive and Hydra-Matic. New gas-saving ” ’ ani 10 . -»rdrive c srateal rear! t oe nr view rear window to match the panoramic windshield. New High-Level Ventilation. Air is drawn in through he Sa sd Optionat on ¥2 ton models New Cameo Carrier. The sports model of the truck louvers at cowl level. Regardless~of the weather, etli- ; “ od i ee Ban Exner yas -SuMmMmer_ spreads. Over 65 spreads in this group. V/y lo UP, OFF MISCELLANEOUS All Ready-Made Drapes, Except Plains........ V2 Off Koolfoam Rubber Sofa Pillows and Covers... 10% Off Plastic Shower Curtain Sets................ 5 Off Koolfoam Bedpillows..................... 2 Off Cotton Ruffled Curtains (wide width only)..... / Off Minuet Bedspreads (twins only)............ 10% Off | 27 by 27 Upholstery Squares............... 50c ™ | Fabric wrens --- One to Four Vard Lengths » » 90 ® Practically every ASSORTED RUGS BRAIDED RUGS COTTON ACCENT RUGS Sizes mostly 27x28 and 3x5 All from ae ar PHILIPPINE HEMP SQUARES Special This Week 9x12 RUGS Reversible, Rayon and Fibre Rugs These colorful rugs are ee) durable yet inex- $34° pensive. VINYL BRAIDED RUGS Assorted Colors — Just wipe clean with a damp cloth. No washing necessary! Floral Designs ALL V/3 oF 39: EACH SPECIAL PRICE $9? fabric in our stock reduced for this sale 4. ® No workroom orders . SPECIALLY PRICED AT EACH ASPHALT TILE 6: Light C” Colors a | EACH on sale merchandise ®©Credit terms, up to 24 months to pay — CARPET REMNANTS ~Ends of Rolls We don’ t have too many this time. ALL ARE A WONDERFUL BUY AT. Sale Starts - Plenty. of Paring tarsal Tonight ‘SPECIAL! RUBBER - VINYL - CORK - LINOLEUM MISC. TILES _ LIMITED QUANTITIES Vp Prices: on PRADPPAAA THIS SALE LASTS THIS WEEK ONLY! Shop at Your Leisure . Plenty of Parking Space . f THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY, JUNE 6, 1955 National Newspaper Advertising | Wheat Eases Cent or More 373| CHICAGO u—After opening on. Mart Up Some in Early Trade NEW YORK (® — The market advanced today Produce DETROIT PRODUCE | DETROIT, June 3 (UP) ~— Wholesale rices of No grade on the = public armers' markets as reported by the -Bureau of Markets stock | Pruits: Apples, Northern Spy, J 45-3 in early | bu: Steele's Red. 330-400 bu. Straw-| 9 t 1 dealings in a modest manner. berries, £00 ew) oe Demand was oooh specialized | beh Bests, topped, f2s. 175 bu. Broc - - mt r ineta nea: oli, iy-bu Cabbage 2:°50-2 73 | in many individual] instances, and 0. Cauntiewer 900-260 dca. Mob alt the same time there was a good | Lert Ji dos bchs Locks. _— as dos | = a } ; behs mions. dry. 125 50 bag, sprinkling of small losers in the | onions, green. 60-2) dos bchs Parsiey.., list ‘Y curly, 15-100 doz bchs Potatoes | 2:35 50-lb bag. 400-4 50 100-Ib ba Motors held fairly steady in the | ishes, rea, -1.10 dos bens: se | face of critical negotiations be- | cme. 20-110 des oon rerio, el ' 2 § oO dee tween Ford and the United Auto| house, 250-300 14-lb bskt Turnips Workers in Detroit | 125-150 doz behs Squash, summer, | : : ; >» 1,2 Greens: Cabbage, 1 28-175 bu. Collard, 15-125 bu Sorrel, 100-1 25 bu Turnip, | Steels Were mixed with U.S. Steel in) brisk demand after | 15-100 bu Mustard. 75-100 ba. Spin- | ach 78-100 bu opening © block of 8,000 | * ' & .. . 1 Lettuce and salad greens: Lettuce, | shares up 44 at 4443. It con- j blb. 100-125 pk bskt epucpe | Ps f | 1.80-2.00 bu ettuce, hea 0-4 tinued trading fast at that level | doz crate; head, 100-200 bu, lettuce, | and a little higher. leaf, 100-125 bu. Romaine, 1.00-1.50 bu. ‘when issued,”’ the | issue in Friday's mar- Sperry Rand ‘ st activ CHICAGO POTATOES | mos ctive CHICAGO, June 2 +AP:—Potatoes: ar- | ket up 4s. was shghtly ahead to- | rivals old stock 11, new stock 78: on | Sau r track 13 old stock, -186 new stock, total | day but not active. Pan American Ug shipments 984 Old stock supplies Airways, secon mos ‘tive Fri- too limited to establish a market; car- | . ond Mord bis Pn lot track sales, ald stock Idaho rus- | day off 15%. was active-today at sets fair condition $3.25 New stock | ; rhe i : q supplies light, demand moderate and | and mastly higher with Anaconda market for whites slightly weaker, for | Copper well out infront. It started reds weaker: cariot track sales, new | on 1,500 shares up 44 at 63! and [Ck ena cee then extended its gain to beyond a 5 28 point ~ Also higher were U.S. Plywood ‘which started on 2.000 shares up s at 39%n, 20th Century-Fox, Beth- | lehem Steel. Boeing, American DETROIT EGGS June 3 1 AP) included, DETROIT Detroit, cases grades Whites—Grade A average 30. medium 33-36 small 28, grade B large 36 Eggs, fob | federal-state large 38-42 weighted wid avg 344s, Telephone, Kennecott Copper Browns—Grade A large 37%2-40 wtd American Cynamid, Allied Chem. ®¥8 317'2, medium 35. grade B large 3° = “ . grade C large 27 teal, Santa Fe. and United Air Checks 23 Lin jote | Pontiac Deaths weekly receipts 8.245 cases Lower were General Motors, Schenley Industries, Southern California Edisen, Du Pont, In ternationa] Paper, Chesapeake & Ohio, and RCA. Mrs. Leonard C. McKinley The market Friday made a sub- Mrs Leonard C. Mckinley stantial advance with Me ae in Pontiac General Hospital, after hater *ress average of 60 stocks ; . liwecke ati : 1» $1.0 at $6660. only 2 cents 1 wecks of illness. Her home was under the record high of Apml 26 at 323 Liberty St. Born Feb. 18, 1897 in Pittsburgh Pa., ward D New York Stocks Late Merning Quotations: was the daughter of Ed- and Sarah Moss Watson, she Adams Ex 425 Cert-teed 8 Admiral 281 Ches & 523 and was married to Leonard Mc- ie jaf { NV rar} , ~ 2 A * 8 awe ¢ ae ; 372 Kinley.in Pontiac, Sept, 30. 1926. cea oe ys Clade Beuip ca «6Mrs) McKinley had been in the . e Uy er vt “87 ity since 1902 and was a member Aiu I “9 Ciuett Pea a44 . : = Al AR 1 Coea Cola 1324 of the Pontiac Women's Society Airt 2 ‘olg Pain Am Can. aaa Sta aa and a former member of the Child Am Cyan Bee © Ei 496 Stury Club An yas & 446 Cons > Ges | . Mn F ) Con Pw ark 4 Surviving besides her hushand Am Motors LO Con Bak 385 are her mother, Mrs. Sarah Wat- Am Rad 24 Cont Can 6% Am Smelt aoc Mot 192 son of Bloomfield Hills: a dauch- oe 1) bt { Cont O11 822 ter. Ann, of Pontiac; a sister, Mrs A T & Tei 1846 ¢ ser R 29 : s : Am Tod 68 Gorn Pr 35 HLomer McVean of Bloomfield ane ay i St ‘12 Hills: three sons, Edward D. and Anac ( 64 Cur Wr 705 A Anac W & (¢ 78 Det F 2, George M. of Pontiac and Homer We s pie C. of LaJooa. €alif 4 = — a Service will be held at 3:30 p.m. ay Wednesday from the Farmer- o, Snover Funeral Home. Cremation no 4 will follow at White Chapel Me- 417 ~ 4) Morial Cemetery 142 - 94 . 21 Wendelin R. Kuenzel ty) Wendelin R. Kuenzel. 78. of 792 Manton, who until five years ago $56 was a Pontiac resident, died late 456 Sunday in Mercy Hospital, 715 . e771 Cadillac 46 6 Born March 5, 1877. in Germany, 2 $ he married Maude Ellen Pender in 6 Pontiac in October, 1950 3° Mr. Kuenzel had been a member 7.7 of the Reorganized Church of ee § Jesus Christ of the Latter Day 21 Saints of Pontiac. He had been , AS ¢ ai . ~NI 9 rs STOCK AVERAGES employed as a tailor at Me Nall y NEW YORK June 6 Compiled by Clothing Store and previously was The Associated Press gg «=a teacher at the Conservatory of Taeiat Rails U il Stocks Music, Pontiac - 4 ‘oe = 8 ‘ 14486 736 1868 Surviving hesides his W955. one Pr i 2 Bs oe son, Lester Kuenzel of Phoenix. oe 1343 ; Atont ? i381 24:43 Ariz: a sister) Mrs. Amol Glanz Year Do seeees ie) 920 88 Hs of Grand Rapids: four grandchil- rm Mil we wet ‘ ~ f Y pm 8 q88 ice ort 1149 .@72 1488 dren and seven great grand- 1984 high 2119 #1230 83 15? ay Bt pe 1984 low igo 6778 «$84 ‘oso CMIdren Mr. Kuenzel will be at the Purs- ley Funeral Home after 7 p.m. Christ ‘Scientist today Church Elects Boston Woman BOSTON (INS) — Mrs. Gertrude Golden G. Carter Golden G Carter. 50. of 520 Oak- | land Ave., died suddenly at 11 p.m. | Saturday | W. Eiseman, of Boston, today was, 3orn in Scottville, Feb. 19. 1905, | named to a one-year term as presi- he was the son of Omer T_ and! dent of the mother church, the Julia Christiansen Carter. Mr. Car- | First Church of Christ Scientist. ter attended Scottville and Luding- in Boston. a ton schools and married Martha | Mrs. Eisemen, a native of New 1, Schoenberg in Pontiac in 1926. York City who now is a Christian Science practioner in Boston, was appointed by the board of directors | at the annual meeting of the moth- | er church attended by some 7,500 church members -from many parts of the world. He was a member of the Ascen- sion Lutheran Church, and had - lived in Pontiac for 33 years. He was a supervisor fh the trim department at the Fisher Body | Corp., and was a member of the | Oakland County Sportsmen’s Club. | Prior to devoting her full time to the public practice of Chris- tian Schience healing, Mrs. Eise- man was active on various phil- anthropic and civic boards. Dur- ing World War Il she served on the Christian Science War Re- lief Committee. | | tha, and his mother, Carter of Scottville, are a son, | | Richard A., of Pontiac; one sis- | ter. Mrs. Erliene McComb of Ad- | | rian, and two brothers, Burton of | Scottville and George Carter, of | Ludington. | Mrs. Julia | Service will Church members from Australia, Africa, Switzerland, Germany, Great Britain, Sweden, Japan and other distant points, as well as Canada and the U.S., were advised | of a net gain of 31 branches of the | . mother church in the past year. | This brings the total to more than | 3,100 in some 46 countries. Business Notes | George Garver officiating. Burial will will be in Ottav in Ottawa Park Cemetery. LEARN TO Pontiac Motor Federal Credit | Sately Union's 3-month membership drive, || Correctly Pp Indi- which ended recently, set a new vidually national record for the number of members enrolled, DUAL CONTROL Some 2,007 persons became mem- METHOD. bers of the organization during the oo Wide Pick-Up and three months. Oliver Korb, of 221 Return of Students * instructions 7 Days a Week an Driver tai 4-568 - aki dierar on ndlt was pager gage ty ign Sega a 1955 Pontiac, and also was first "in the individual contest for ‘sign- 1 28-1 78 ssn the Board of Trade eased as' | the Bureau of Advertising of the | much,as a cent or more. The new! Association. May contract which opened for bus- | | iness at $1.99'4, promptly lost more | than two cents. pendent and\_steady July | lower. Surviving besides his wife Mar- | be held from the | Farmer-Snover Funeral Home at 1 p.m. Wednesday, with the Rev. | Chalks Up 2nd B > | NEW YORK (UP)—Newspaper | advertising on a national basis | chalked up its second biggest year | in 1954 with outlays of $594,120, | running 1.2 per cent below the’ | 1953 record of $601,224,000, it was | announced today. Giant General Motors led the | list for the eighth straight year, | boosting its budget 13.5 per cent to fairly steady note, wheat today | | an all-time high of $37,391,415, said GM’s expenditures topped the combined’ outlays of the second and third biggest advertisers— | Ferd and Chrysler, which also run behing GM in that order auto production. soybeans Most spectatular jump among | strength. | the nation’s 100 largest advertisers Other grains were fractionally, was scored by Monsanto Chemi- | cal which increased its 1953 budget | [ee per cent to $4,101,841 and/| ! jumped from 53rd to 12th spot. $1.97'%; corn was unchanged to 1, higher, July $1.40%; oats were | OUTLAYS RAISED 4s to Su lower, July 65%; and | The top 100 national advertisers | rye was % to %4 lower, July | accounted ‘for $208,183,461, or | $1.0542. Soybeans were unevenly | slightly less than half the total | higher to % lower, July $2.4244, | volume. The 100 leading firms ac- and lard way unchanged to 10 | tually raised outlays 1.2 per cent ; cents a hundred pounds higher, | over the — figure os $24,818,435. | duly $12.10. | | Two oil aoe ea broke into | _ the exclusive list last year more | than tripled advertising outlays. * * * d a generally inde- course and) little Corn pur showed a Near the end of the firs¢ hour wheat was '2 to 's lower, July Grain Prices (HICAGO GRAIN wee June 6.4AP) — Opening These were 6th- -ranking Texas | Wheat Rye ' Com 40th-pla } Si Ae te re pany and -place Gulf Oil. | a bery pee oot POEs Automotive advertising, which Mar 200%, Soybeans accounts fer the largest single a eg ag 74\'*| chunk of national ag dollars, duly ae es i | Foe 7.9 per cent last year to eo A an Dee 1124, New Contracts | $139,861,000, This category in- Mar 135% Bep 232: s oe ld 23315 cludes such items as gasoline July 65". Lard | and tires, as well as new cars. | Sep 66 CLC Beocopce 12 07 | | Dec 68 ee 2 2 | The food category, running sec- cr f : ree 1175 | Opd to the automotive, dipped 2.8 | per cent to reach $129, 446,000. Radio and television advertising | showed a sharp drop. It fell 36.7 per cent to $17,072,000. | SAME FIRMS | | The top nine advertisers, al- | | though several switched positions, were the same firms heading the list in 1953 | Last year’s leaders made | advertising outlays | 1. General Motors—$37,391,415 Ford—$17 999,652 Chrysler—$11 787 596 these | Colgate Palmolive —| | $10,990,682. - | Distillers Corp.-Seagram’s | 6. General Foods—$9,251.441 7. Proctor & Gamble—$7,251,400 8. 9. National ofall Distitters—oe. 718,373. Brighton | Murder Weapon Found CADILLAC w—Skin .divers have | | Tecov ered the high-powered rifle | police say was used in the slaying of Lawrence Jackson Jr., of Bright- jon The 32 DONALD W. NEAL City Man to Get Achievement Award Donald W. Neal. 114 Wenonah Drive, chief production engineer at General Motors Truck and Coach of William Joles, 23, and his broth- in Pontiae will receive one of the er. Daniel. 18, in Mesick. four Alumni Achievement Awards Police have quoted the pair as granted annually by the Lawrence admitting the kidnap-slaying of the Institute of Technology. | 18-year-old gasoline station attend- The award is given for outstand- ant. ing service in industry and will | : be presented during commencemnt Jackson was kidnaped after his ; : ; killers held up the all-night serv- exercises Tuesday evening in De- ee “Py ice station where he worked alone troit's Masonic Auditorium. * ; on the morning of May 19. His Neal was graduated from Law- ‘ ; a | body was found a few hours rence Tech in 1938 with a Bachelor ; : ‘ ; later alongside g country road of Science degree in Mechanical | Engineering, He first became as- three miles south of Brighten. He on . ; had been shot twice through the caliber weapon was fish -— ' vision. Kaiser has been with Pontiac since 1928. A vice president of the | St.. and charged him with reck- | | see White Bros. Rea] Estate. OR And most amazing of all—this 3-7118. — Adv. Orie Full Year Guorantee improvement was tonintained in —_———_—— From Houses, Apartments, Cro- cases where doctors’ observations cery Stored and Restaurants. Re- were continued over a period of Lodge Calendar | mio oriv wee tous. No] mary month! signs used n fact, results were so thor- Regular meeting of Pontiac ough thet suceners were able to , r e cen astonisnings White Shrine Wednesday, June Rox Ex Company | ae “Piles kage coated cas Lever Brothers—$6 803,797 | - from a pond a mile from the home | sociated with General Motors as a | heart. technical cooperative student in The Joles brothers were arrest- | 1929. securing his Lawrence Tech. | degree in night school ed following the later holdup of He and his wife Drucilla have ,a Manton gasoline station. Police three children: Drucilla, age 7,.| linked them with the Jackson slay- Deborah, 5. and Darcy, 3 months. ing when it was learned the Man- He is a member of the Pontiac ton holdup men used a rifle in Yacht Club, Lodge 810 of the BPOE | the stickup. and has served as trustee of Kirk-| The two admitted the |robbery, police said. in-the-Hills Presbyterian Church. You don’t have to wait an. other day to fix your home or repair your car. Borrow the money you need at Household Finance. You get fast, friendly service, with- out endorsers. Borrow with confidence from America’s oldest and largest consumer finance company Get *20 to *500 MONTHLY PAYMENT PLANS Easy-to-meet requirements a em | pecua| pou | pass Lad paymts —One-day service $ 50 sii $5.03 § 9.24 Choose your own 7100 % 6.65 . 7.20 | 9.98 | 18.39 repayment plan to fit 300 | 13.11 | 14.21 | 19.77 | 36.59 _ your income 300 | 19.55 | 21.20 | 29.55 | 54.78 Loans alse made to pay 500 | 31.39 | 34.16 | 48.09 | 90.02 old bills, shopping , Honsshold’s charge i the monthly rete of 3% on ne eee ten eh ais a mento $90 tt Phone of stop in today! $300, ond 45% on omy remainder. OUSEHOLD FIN. FINANCE —Coyeoration of \ sents gy Foeslie’ PHONE: FEderal 4.0535 | Loam made te residents of nearby inom "5 bs a4 . Manton = ‘Italian Film Slated =“ lat Science Institute | An Italian realist movie, called | i“‘one of the best of all time” by | critics, |p.m., Tuesday, | of Cranbrook Institute of Science. | “The Bicycle Thief,”” winner of | ' five major international awards, is the story of an impoverished | streets of Rome for his stolen bi- cycle which he needs for a job. British film | ‘I short experimental ...fast, friendly, courteous serv- ice, with repayments arranged to easily fit into your income and budget. For extra-fast serv- HERMAN 8. KAISER W. R. MILNER ~ Appointment of Herman S. Kaiser as body engineer for the Motor Division of General Motors has been announced by G. A. De- laney, Chief Engineer. Kaiser succeeds W. R. Milner, Franklin Village, who retired last week after more than 30 years of service with the di- Pontiac | ice, ments in advance. PHONE | Society of Autorhotive Engineers, a member of the Society of Body phone and make arvange- | using the camera and sound track |as the leading character telling a | peony. Sponsored by the Foreign Film Club, a non-profit organization, the | programs are financed by vol- will be offiered at 8:15) untary contributions from in the auditorium | audience. the ‘Now It’s Their Auto BUFFALO, N.Y. (UP)—Mrs. worker and his son searching the June Calkins had a quick solution when police impounded her 11 coupe after two parking tags had Second feature on the program is | been placed on it. |“The Gentleman in Room 6,” a told Judge Arthur J. Cosgrove. “Keep it,” she t costs me too much anyWay.” $20 :- $600 On YouR ) SIGNATURE > AUTOMOBILE > FURNITURE HIGH PAYMENTS REDUCID FE 4-1574 Engineers and the Engineering Society of Detroit and a member of the Pontiac Chamber of Commerce, Kaiser lives at 1337 Kirkway, with his wife Evona and son, a |Consumers, Employes News in Brief Conclude New Pact Pontiac Police arrested Clarence | Seek Ay Et Paul Payne, 20, of 103 E. Howard | JACKSON u—CIO Utility Work: ers of America have ratified a new Announce. Ne < labor contract with Consumers jless driving Sunday night after | Power Co : police said Payne had been driv- he ac ing his motorcycle in a rec ites | Agreement on the pact was) manner on Highland drive near | reached last month | Woodward avenue. | The new contract provides for wage increases ranging from seven | to nine cents an hour, liberalized ported to Pontiac Police the theft fringe benefits and an improved of two fender skirts from his auto pension contract over the weekend while the car - _ was parked in front of his home. | The brighter green the vegetable If your friend’s in jail and needs | is, the richer it is in vitamin A, bail. Ph. PE 5-9424 or MA 35-4031. Other vitamins and minerals. «| COCKROACHES New York, N. Y. (Special) — For the first time science has found a new healing substance with the astonishing ability to shrink hemorrhoids and to relieve pain—without surgery. In one hemorrhoid case after another, “very striking improve- ment” was reported and verified by doctors’ observations. Pain was relieved promptly. And, while gently relieving pain, actual reduction or retraction (shrinking) took place. Clinton Caffey of 81 Lake St, re- To buy or sell in Waterford, Drayton Plains or Clarkston area 8th, 8 p. m. Roosevelt Temple, 22 1014 Pont. St. Ha, Bldg. FE 4é-peat? STATE FINANCE CO. Room 702. Pontiac State Bank Building ew Way To Shrink Painful Piles Science Finds Healing Substance That Does Both — Relieves Pain— Shrinks Hemorrhoids ” problem!” And among these suf- ferers were a very wide variety of hemorrhoid conditions, some of 10 to 20 years’ standing. All this, withodt the use of narcotics, anestheties or astrin- gents of any kind. The secret is a new healing substance (Bio- Dyne*) —the discovery of a world- famous research institution. Al- ready, Bio-Dyne is in wide use for healing injured tissue on all parts of the body. This new healing substance is offered in suppository or ointment form called Preparation H.* Ask for individually sealed convenient Preparation H suppositories or Preparation H ointment with s cial applicator. Preparation is sold atall drugstores. Satisfaction guaranteed or money refunded. “Res. U & Pat State. Bessie Howell, scribe. Adv. L | Strawberry Binge! Strawberries are in season and folks who love them are going wild. Those wonderful fresh, plump, rosy berries look so good they often buy more than they can eat. But that’s no problem for those who own an electric home freezer. They eat their fill, then freeze the rest for winter feasting. There’s no such thing as out-of-season delicacies when you own a freezer. You eat what you want when you want it. Find out more shout an electtic home ~ freezer, today. : or. i We: “gr confer | . sigan _ THE PONTT. AC PRESS. MOND: AY, IU yr 6. 19 -- Today's Television Programs -- Missing Cherub Seokaresere Channes lta DY die Albert plays cabbie who gets Channet 4—WW4-TYV in blood donor Channel 7—WAXYZ-TV drive to get TONIGHT’S TV “HIGHL 1G iHTS have been responsible in . death 9:00— (Ty —T dd Purse “Shaw 6:00—(7) Kukla, Fran and Ollie, ©f a man. Luther Adler, Jack tomper Room. (2) Garry Gems (4) Sonny Ehot. Mullaney, Luis Van Rooten star . ei ne a 2) Decqmt er Bride Spring By- 9:30—(2) Arthur Godfrey io )— Dinner water all Lie = sinchits srt Ve, Rascals in “Free Eats.” (9) | mgton Plays springhtly mother le: 00—1(7) Wixie’s Wonderland. (4) — : in-lawsliving with her daughter Austin Grant. News. (4) News Home. Paul Wilhams. (2) News. Ken 9:00—() Boxing. Bout to be an- . Cline nounced. (2) Studio one. Cyril '0:30—(7) Strike Jt Rac ' “Ritchard, Ernest Truex, Alic =e : 6:23— (4) Sports Bill «Fle mming Pearc A mae Me ne ey tt ny 11:00—(7) Story Studio. 4) D 9 bed 7 at. Te Ga. Onvers Ct ; : , »ather ; Jong. (2) Vahant Lady = y Weatherman. Dr. Everett edy about married couple living Dong aes ve ~ ue _ wee bel as (9) Wolf describes races at Motor Search for Tomorrow tange lider. Jac ahoney “ : ¢ oek . ale ae City Speedway. (4) Secret Pile ) * > cid * +” hy ris - ral . ; ic k Jon ae “ stern Fug) | SA. Maj. Morgan tries to locate , 1b: $6—(2) Guiding Light, ce WAN Uae, "i arin cede fascist group and half their ter- ee A yeens ay. (2) News rer raids in.‘’Mission Drachen- TUESDAY AFTERNOON 5 BB 4 “UW ards. fels."' ; i (4) News Caravan. John 9:45—19) BR ie R heal 12:00—17) 12 O cue mies. 44) oe T, ade ‘ ZSi . Wed \ Ae ie Be > ’ , \ ‘ameron) Swayze. (2) Pert Neat EN ae Bob Maxwell. (2) Inner Flame Ycomo Show. Songs seo a oe World =-90—(7) TV Reader's Digest. Ed- | 1@:00-(9)) National News (gy) Pst) ay of Se a Mayor of the Town. Towns com- Channet a KLW We Road of Life. le - ' involved in a kidnapping and a eS t t 12:30—(7) Beulah. (4) Hour of maternity case in “Human Na-| ™edical center to be donated by | gnows. (2) Ladies Day ture Through a Rear View Mir centric millionaire ino “Thick- 1 aR Mir- ; As . row.’ (9) Million Dollar Movie ev Than Water starring Thom- | 1:00—(7) Lunchtime Drama — ves me ers > as Mitchell. (2) Backstage. Lorna ue nreid in “So Young, So Thaver in “The Buster.” 1:30—(9) Prayer, Sign On (4) Sad." «4) Caesar's Hours. The. . oon —— : . , Lt ‘ Good Cooking. (2) Linkletter’s Commuters ‘build backyard play- | 10:15—(9) Yesterday's Newsreels Houseparty. - ground to solve summer vaca- Films of past events . x me : ) ¥ tion problem (2+ Burns and Al- 5 1:43—19) Cartoon Time. \ : thinks 10:30 — «7! Wrestling Workouts en racie thinks ‘orgte ! P= c Ch err Sata ON sr die a oi Films Heart of the City. Pat %@0—(4) Stars on Seven. 19) Mary ex-convict whe Moshe TMIisun de ' Nu Ven ] ine x hy in Big Tow n Nlorgan Show f 1) Te d Mac AS stance ice ft . - ies ' tands his relerenee o old Stone, “Crime and Punishment Matinee +, Baseba vaudeville ac . . tt) [ts a Great ife. Comedy with 9:4869) Toby David Show 1 64 7 ia (yao 1 Nile j » _ 1:30—17) Voice Program. Mildred James Dunn, Willam Bishop Greatest Gift. (2) Bob Crosby Miller, mezzo-soprano, sings \iichucl O'Shea, 12) Mowe Mu . ner a 7 ler iechar * a3 i *oncernine \] < iy = songs by Irving Berlin, Richard Sent Squaw's Love’ and*%$—th) Concerning Miss Mar Rodgers, Greig: aria from “Bar- Drummers of the Sth." lowe. ber of Seville ’ Talent Scouts Arthur Godfrey host to marmmba | !!:00—'7! Soupy’s On Varrety with 3:00—(7) Heartthrob Theat a group, comedian, pop singer Soupy Sales. (9) Film Theate Tuesday Matu io 1 . : Johnny Longden ind “Winner Falls. 42) Ga 8:00—'7) Wresthng Films 14) ( ies eon cear 7 , i ) YePMS 4tti vi 417 - . : Medic. Blind prano player breaks Nona Let 3:15—(4) First Lave A a wes Leta) Into ehuren to ptay U oryin ; ; . -3:30—(4) World of tr Nua and is befriended by a priest who Ub1S Lrinehair Theater fil persuades him to have operation turn Stone in “The Judge ef) 3:43—(1) Modern Poma to restore his sight in After th The Little Show John Alexande: 4:00—17) Captain Flint 1 _ Darkness Mr — Lawe Lucey ] antes in Law 42) Miss Finder. «4) Pinky Lie ‘ R pits Live { t { Fair Weather Bette Wi t (4 In attempt t teach her to b een Sreduienatiey 4 Cate . ; . . on time. Lucille Ball D Arna . ; . ‘ 4:30—19) Howe > Wel . . Se * Conrad Velat in Thief { Ba aR tiar iad mie Vary ele 8:30—170) Holiday H Denne : 4543-17) Ricky 1 (1 11-38-00) Tonight Stews Allen pire Cole Cooper show films on , - , - ‘ “Nich An 5 , cepts underwater show from a 3:00— ‘7! Auntie ‘ S lichigan Holiday 4) Polith : ' ; ; swimming pool in a theater Colt cf) Biff Ba eal. Ontario elections (4) Rober ; , = ; : . rush Short Montgomery Presents — "T h« TUESDAY MORNING Killer ai ima of personal t 7:00 — «4) Today (2) Morning 5:30—'0) La 1 & Ita i) Ten of people who feel they muicht Show nessee | / ’ -- L;OQQYS NAQIO Frrograms Programs ee “dd stations listed im this column are subject te change without notice. Win, (768) CKhLW «nO WWws. is5e) WEAK, Crise WXYZ, tht) WIBK, (live WPON, (1eee@) TONIGHE CKLW 1 Biren vy IS—-WJIR Pete and Joe WIFK. News George 690 WIK News WPON cme CeLW, Good Neighbor MCAR Ne Mu ww News io 1+— WW biidersieeve WPCN News. Platter CKLW. Newa SDOrte CKI reat Manic '@. 00 -WJR_ Arthur Goctrey WPON News WXYZ. Top of Town | WWJ McBride Peale oe WIR Ma oe @IS—WIK Ciark Quartet WPON Ere Ors tite WXYZ, My True Story heii ae WWJ Bud Linen - CKIW Homectats iI J ‘ oe tad) ners Weal Jews Temple a ; RS WPON News WPON F CKLW LI Artists ' 4 ; ; ‘ 10 15—WWo Stars Sing te ts ww e an c¥IN e WPON. Pontiac Party J BE 6. bone A New Ms fil ae aul cane WW } Bruce Mayer 1@W—WALS whispering 1 6—-WIR G ry lene : : : ! CKLV eus WWJ, Fran H pom Wak Mrs | * an “ Le | WPON News Sports CKLW, Mary Mares? ee we ‘ ) a ‘ na ar ae : ed x j } ' WIPO Mal Boer 1S 0a earth WCAR Waied Lake High \ x CHEW Sportsn ertem M y 6 1>—-WIR Lo Thomas PON Zee & Ortiise UN en tal o Bes WPGN | WXYZ, Speed World = - WXY2 Girl Marries WPUN Alt wan: ne 11:40—WJR Midnight Music ele wd Ee % sasvo tt 5 5 .. CKLW Jim Dunha: {tee Ww Strine it HI Pp i eo wy Re | WPON, Thirs. of Hits WXY Companion CKLW. 5 8 hd ded a ee = CKLW® Piorica UBA ; WXYZ. Stars at Seven { WJBK. George 227A a Drake CKLW Fulton Lew terre. i¢ ALESVAY MUBNING | JBK, Georg hws l ; spits a WEAR, News, Music tet WJBK, News Goose 6:30—WJR Agric Voice le WXYZ. F E Whe Rees WWJ, Bob Maxwell }08:1S—WYZ Curtain Calls crew ‘ WPON News Don Zee WXYZ Frea Wout WPON Hyer Pime Vitel. | 7 to—cCKL Ww fuy SnD { CKLW Guy Nunn WPON. Ga WWJ H Mu jand | WJBK. News 11730—WJIR_ Elsenhoser fir 5 r Day WCAR Sian Off | WPON. Rise 9 Shine \ WWJ Phrase shat Pay: WW TBA 7.%0-WJR Serenade Puy = CKLW Queen tor Day WCAE (rari ee vralt¥ 6:45—WCAR Coltee WJBK, George Sie Wo he Warren Stranes ' 200e-WJK Jim Vinali WPON iv AJ at Love nrir Heatter CKLW News. Davia WXYZ Fd Mitence Aentve WJBK Gentile Since 1-45—WIk 2 Hush: WCAR Game Kina WWdeo second Chance 4 S cveemnce Murrow | T.IS—WJK Music Hal '‘“JIBK Ne McLeod 2 ee ‘ Mabe Family | CKLW. Lerrenve O'Dell $an-WWJ Pe er voune WXYZ—Saga 5 19—WWU. News 12.m—WJK Jack White WJBK Don Mcleod CK W ip the Mose . . WWJ News Si. WIR Galdoniey B.O—WIH Jack White CKLW News. Music WWJ Right to Hat ess #.00—WJR, News Keen WWJ Bob Maxwell WJIBK, News. George >y M eH ww, A J. Taylor WXYZ Dick Ossvod WCAR. News 4 a an H IRIE ac WXYZ Show Stoppers | CKLW, News Toby WPON News Sel Gee ee ape CKITW Top Secre’ | WJBK, News, Gentile i * Wiz Wa kK Mo Renzte 8:15—WWJ, Strat Ford WCAR, News 'i21s--WJR farm Roundup SN ee ee WXY% Snow Word | WPON News | WWJ Paye Eltrabeth WJBK * - A > ! + > = = . We Ste Jalias i — Vy aient scouts 6:15—WJR Bud Guest i CKLW News 3 Suns i weed ella | wwe Ga | WXYZ, Pred Wolf WCAR, Music W CAF “ WRYZ Vandercook WCAR, Coffee WrON Lunckeon Serenade ae . Brows CKLW (Broad nave coe me WER) Rise) ee ee 12.49-WJR Time. Out, Musie | WIEK Cor Meteo 8:45—WXYZ. Manhattan 8:0—- WIR Music Hall | WXYZ, News, Music : s , | crew 4:15--WWJ) Woman House ow WIM Perry ome $.45—WWJ News | CKLW Rud Davies : Me WJ. Telepohne Hr | WCAR Radio Re-tval WIBK, Georce cK i ght WXYZ Votee Yrexram 9:00-- WIR News WCAR. Music fens CKLW Hour ) WWJ Minute Parade 1245 WXYZ Charm Lady " = Deland WPON. News. Zee Orville WXYZ, Breaktast Club WPON Farm Mits St ad 9ti—WJK. @ine Crosby { WJIBK. 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Perry risS paid a dowry of 10008 EE —— —- Pounds ($28. 700! to the bride s 1 ie I noon starts Thursdia ; ha AM til then Queen Aha is stayu “| f= VAY th her brother, who represented 2 Ree at the: alkwiale portion af tt For Factory Authorized Service os) » Files Vesterday & Fulima is 40 and has been ma FE 4 1515 }t0 the King 22 years. All 1 Call = I their children e die sees eae Fe coe fe CGV TV Pontiac 993 Mt. Clemens Deen i f several Vears z ‘i s al tlhiiwed four io we So oppinet ho teins PONTIAC’S FIRST » opposed to the Kk aA ‘ last year assassinated the court | not met her until the™ geremonies minister arranging the match. The | killer later was tried and executed. The new queen's age was de- scribed aS a family secret but she variously reported be- / has heen } yesterday. | Capacity of the U, 5S. steel in- | dustry is about 126 million tons per year. Famous Moke USED TV SETS Only $5 Per Week! HAMPTON TV ava Ww PK ¢-25°8 Heron 3149 W. Huron TV SERVICE DEALER! 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