— To SSeS ee i et wel ey ‘ ‘eT Pood aa 9, { - Syati tretors } ' rey + Me eR, hier EREaY a6 feat ; vie f . ; The Weather ; , : VE 2 DAS te | PAG | - - _ 13th YEAR. * & & & & PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 1, 1956—36 PAGES “con Bp reme_ 4, WUT IES #uoTos qe Political Leaders Urge City Adopt Vote Machines Two prominent local residents, one a former chair- man of the Oakland County Democratie Committee! and the other a well-known Republican, yesterday came out in favor of voting machines over paper ballots. The City Commission must decide by April 9 whether Pontiac is to have voting machines or adjust 25 of the city’s 44 precincts that are tered voter limits. over the state's 800 regis Lynn D. Allen, Oakland County clerk and Repub- lican leader, said yesterday, “I am 100 per cent for) voting machines and hope* some day to see every pre-, | WILLIS M. BREWER cinct in the county equipped with machines.” “IT am in favor of machines for + — wait in line for any length of time | jand thus become discouraged.” |INCREASE EFFICIENCY “During my tenure as chairman son told farmers today a of the Oakland County Democratic |Committee, the returns from the | | precincts having machines were called in or brought in personally | | soon after the polls closed, where- las we would have to wait all night, jor longer for the returns from the! precincts without machines,” Brewer declared yesterday. Allen added that in the 198) for the election and since the ma-| three basic reasons,” Allen added. ‘First, it allows the voter to leave the polling place with the assur-| ance their vote is not going to be questioned or thrown out because | of a technicality.” Secondly, he said, any munici- pality using machines can save enough money to pay for them in 10 years. “In creporting the election, the city doesn't have to wait until] “tit next day to get the results but | can have same by at least one} hot and a half after the polls|munities between then and 1952, year. are closed,’ he emphasized. OTHERS HAVE DEVICES Allen noted that practically! every community in the county had voting machines but Pontiac, Farmington, four townships and a pertion of Royal Oak Township. | | “In Pontiac's case, since the | new City Hall is complete and if the money is available I would say the advent of voting ma- chines is almost a must because | of the size of the city.” Willis M. Brewer, past chairman of the Democratic party in the) county, said he favored voting ma-| chines because of the accuracy,! their speed in tabulating the vote) and that they are ‘‘more represen- tative” as voters do not pbave to Near ‘Accord on Middle East LYNN D. ALLEN chines were added in many com- the county has only had to supply} 6,080 pounds of paper thus saving a large expense. City-Owned Garage Planned in Saginaw SAGINAW \W—City officials to- day proceeded with plans for the first parking city's municipal garage, a $900,000, 3-tier struc- | ture to be built in the heart of the downtown shopping area. The garage will rise on a site now used as a municipal parking lot. It will handle 606 cars. City offi- cials said a 25-year, one million | dollar bond issue will be offered shortly to finance construction and other’: costs. Ike, Eden Vieon Red China , WASHINGTO to deal with Red China. However, the two leaders were close to agreement on other vital problems as they went into their third and final day of cold war strategy conferences. Included among the issues of near-accord were ~a policy toward the troub led Middle East, plans to develop and strengthen Western European unity and the judgment of what Sov iet Russia is trying to do and how she is trying to do it. The President and the prime minister are getting together with their foreign secretaries and experts this , afternoon to put finishing work and to write a communique or joint declaration. ' | The Yesterday's meeting touches on their intensive ended without any final decisions on any one of the many subjects that have been discussed. The gro undwork has been laia, however, for agreement on most issues. This afternoon, Chairm Atomic Energy Commission and Sir Anthony about the difficult an Lewis Strauss of the will talk with Eisenhower problem of whether to continue testing hydrogen bombs. 1 Auto Dealers Appeal to Conner Seek to Stabilize Trade Practices WASHINGTON ip — Alito deal- ers today organized a mass march on Congress: in support of legisla- tion aimed at stabilizing dealer income and curbing questionable trade practices. * * if Several thousand delegates to the annual convention of. the Nat- jonal Automobile Dealers Assn (NADA), which ends tonight, set this morning aside for the informal “Jobbying” campaign. They had the word of Senator Monroney (D-Okla),) )whose Sen- ate commerce subcommittee now. is investigating alleged auto marketing abuses, that Congress will act if dealers’ complaints ry against motor companies are not resolved by Voluntary negotia- tions, The dealers also were equipped with leaflets explaining five bills fficially endorsed -by NADA, and measure. FIVE PROBLEMS The bills, and the descriptions of them given by NADA are: 1. Phantom freight — To ‘‘pro- hibit manufacturers from making ‘-harges for freight for which they had not in fact been required to pay.” Monroney fold lhe idealers yes } Ask Court Annexation Rule Benson Decries Price Supports for Hog Farms | Says Aid ‘Will Hurt You | | More Than Help’ if Pork, | Surplus Is Created AUSTIN, Minn. ? retary of Agriculture Ben- government program to buy hogs at supported prices “would hurt you help you.” Benson reiterated on the’ isecond day of a swing ithrough the Midwest hog) jgeneral election the county sup-/belt that the U..S. govern-| plied 11 and a half tons of papers iment is stepping up its ‘pork- buying program—but that it won't purchase and store vast quantities of meat products to bolster prices. “There are those who because of ignorance of the problem, mis- itaken judgment or for well-inten- |_ tioned political Lea insist that’ your government go into the live- stock buying businéss.”” the secre- tary said in a speech prepared for the Minnesota-lowa Swing Pro- ducers Assn. “This won't work,” he te “In my judgment such would hurt you more than - would ever help you.” |program to purchase live hogs and’ lcattle at supported prices “would jbe good politics—particularly in an jelection year." If we were to raise the price of hogs 5 cents a pound as some |suggest, it would cost the govern- ment almost a billion dollars a "he said. ‘‘That’s just for | hogs. \fT WILL COST ., .’ | “And, of course, we could hard- jly deny similar supports to cattle. \If we add 5 cents a pound to cat- itle, it would cost another 144 bil- |lion dollars. | “Then I'm sure you can imagine the delegations of broiler growers, turkey growers and others who. would descend upon us.” * If the money . a“ manpower were available, he said, and the 'government began a direct pro- gram for buying livestock, these things would happen: 1. “Pressure would develop for uniform pricing without proper re; gard for differences in quality. You would be encouraged to pro! duce overfat hogs that would build \barriers against your product. You | would lose your market for pork; it would be mighty hard to get imore than it would ever Benson said he has been told a Snow Paints Bright Picture for Winter Scene face . | | City's Acquiring Courthouse Site Under Question Attorney William Ewart Doubts Legality of Move in Commission Report City Attorney William A. Ewart last night recom- mended that the Michigan Supreme Court rule on the legality of a 1954 annexa- ‘tion of a portion of land from Waterford Township which is slated as a site for the new county courthouse, He ruled that the city’s annexation of an approxi- mate 100-acre section lo- cated between West boule- vard and Telegraph was not in compliance with Michigan statutes and that it is of “doubtful validity.” The opinion resulted from a re- quest from Pontiac attorney ~George A. Cram last week who said the city iy + Pentise Press Photo ¢—-— MORE PROMISED TONIGHT — Many scenic spots in and near | Pontiac take on added beauty when covered by new, white snow. The stone bridge above spans a small stream on the spacious grounds n the Cranbrook area of Bloomfield Hills. For those who like such | ae puceneny more snow is Lo oa olen: Soviets Unseat Internal Minister | Terse Story in Pravda Dismiss Charge Against Widow City to Convert 3 Routes Announces Removal of to One-Way Use Monday D> Ne SEs | As another step towards solving city traffic prob- MOSCOW — A new Russian lems, thee more streets will be converted to dne-way| government shakeup has unseated Operation effective Monday, the suctessor of the Kremlin's late Theodore M. Vanderstempel announced. ‘secret police boss, Lavrenty P.| Beria. of Husband's Slaying | * ® * i | Thé Soviet government early to Water street, Vanderstempel stated. Jail. aiae day armnounced the dismissal of Water street will be converted to one way west-| S. N. Kruglov, who became jternal affairs minister in July 1953, ' shortly after his former boss Beria was deposed and condemped’ to |death as a traitor. ‘O'Rourke, \ceed with a trial. | Kehl’s galesman-hasband, (‘TERSE ANNOUNCEMENT . It will also facilitate, Snow Due in Pontiac two years ago: but he had con- sion often encountered with! the militia. inches of new snow for the Pon-|tyrng off Water into Perry sitheatt the outskirts of Filnt Jan. 16, confusion often encountered with page of the Communist party city about midnight eastbound Water traffic. — *wanting to turn east into Water street. Two fo Four Inches = {police were removed easier left turns off Water | re secret police were remov from Kruglov’s ministry nearly into Perry. without confu-| tinued in command of law enforce-- The U. S. Weather Bureau has eastbound Water traffic. ment police, known in Russia as forecast between two and four | It will also facilitate easier left The terse armouncement of the tiac. area tonight and tomorrow. new change, published on the back The storm is expected to hit the! paper Pravda, said Kruglov had A low of 20 is predicted tonight,| The sectign of Water street be- .|been ‘released’ from his post and followed by a high of 26-30 tomor- ltween Mill and Parke Streets will | ‘the murder charge. succ — as Evie s deputy a Sates “wes ane colder remain open to two-way operation | “It would be a mistake,” the mayor, | udoOreyV. WwW ver 18 predicted tor tomorrow “ “eed * @ * nic re P , according to Vanderstempel. [prosecutor said, “to proc to y trial and place this Dudotov also is listed as chief The lowest temperature preced The second one way conversion of the construction department of ing 8 a. m. this morning was 12) will make Thorpe Street between Flint Woman Freed as Police Continue Probe FLINT w—A first-degree caged Feb. 6, traffic exgunect) der charge. against ‘Mrs, Betty|/mvestigation showed there |Kehl in the slaying of ter-busband | rome, as county employes. The present one-way conversion of Mill street be-|was dismissed in Municipal Court itween Huron and Pike southbound will be extended to! ‘today and she was released from who said the state! | County of lacked sufficient evidence to pro-) The prosecutor told the court, | the City - Commission's however, that Flint Police Were |. .eting Thursday night. continuing with their invesitga- tion of the fatal shooting of Mrs. Board of Supervisors reaffirmed the parcel of land after the Wa- terford Township Board agreed to detach it. lelectors residing in the two residing in the county electors in question did not Judge John W. Baker dismissed the '~bound traffic between Mill street and Saginaw to the charge at the request of = ere Se voting residence jn eliminate congestion at Water and Saginaw by vehicles ecuting Attorney Jerome F because they were sciais beg uaraaien tee of Oakland. | Mayor William W. Donaldson moved the matter be referred to [i Monday, the Oakland County itheir decision to build the new ert, 34, at an isolated dump ©8 (.ourthouse on this ‘site instead of building a ten-story structure on The dismissal came as Mrs. Kehl|the present downtown site as pro- |was to have an examining trial to|posed by the Chamber of Com- jdetermine whether she should be merce. ‘Hedi to Circuit Court for trial on| ‘How's That, Again? ISOLA, Miss. (}—A masterpiece respondent|of brevity and action was com- \(Mrs. Kehl) in jeopardy when we | posed the other day by a first ido not have all the evidence that grader called upon to tell a short it back.” the Soviet Communist party's Cen- depyrees. The mercury rose to 20 Huron and Elizabeth Lake Roads \may be available. Once the re-| story about his pet. The story, * * * tral Committee, a watchdog post degrees at 1 p. m. | one way northbound, while the lspondent is placed in jeopardy it| recorded on the spot by the teach- 2. “It would, of course, stimu- checking all government construc- = third change will convert ad-_ it - were determined there is in-jer, Mrs. E. E. Tinning: late more production. . Thejtion, and adviser to the Soviet | jacent Mark Street one way “My calf—he bull. He butts.” (INS) —President Eisenhower and added hog numbers would soon Council of Ministers (Cabinet) on Prime Minister Sir Anthony Eden are still split on how mean that the government would construction. (Sn ath on Page 2. Col. 6) | Union Local Favors More City Parking | The City Commission last night received a communication from sub-council & of General Motors Truck and Coach UAW-CIO Local 394 in which the union members |voiced strong support of the ctom- mission's stand for increased! mu- ni¢cipal parking for the city. letter said the members favored more municipal parking iin Pontiac and that they would “continue to support any further proposals by the commission in the future” Voters must decide March 5 whether they are in favor of add- ing 624 parking stalls within the city. terday arbitrary freight charges add as much as $141 to the price of a car sold in California and cost the public a total of 280 mil- lion dollars each year. 2. Auto Bootlegging — Permit- a list of the Congress members ting a manufacturer to cancel the on the committees handling each franc hises of dealers who ° sell new In Today's Press County News. ....6..005.5: 14 Editorials ........ ae 6 Sports: 2.2.2... 25, 26, 27, 28 Theaters : 16 TV & Radio Programs , 35 Witson, Earl 6 Women's Pages 19, 20, 21, 22, + i 4 oe Western newsmen in Moscow. { “ remote at one of the last public'the ‘most disliked nation” in “§ { Ri | Ho f functions at which he has been poll of grammar and junior high end e Va § ope u seen. school pupils | re porte d_ today. PORTLAND, Ore. * * * * ‘the dealers themselves seem to be — = en | (Continued on Page 2, Col. 1) | southbeund. Both streets will | have parking on the east side Russia Betters he is unknown to US: in Japan’ S Otherwise /Elmo E. Smith Takes Over | only. , . ° f | Western newsmen recalled that Dislike Contest | Vanderstempel instituted the lat-| Krugiov, usually one of the more , fer changes to promote a smoother | overnor O affable memberx af the Soviet MATSUYAMA, Japan h— Russia flow gt traffic on both streets. hierarchy, had seemed pensive and outranked the United States 21 as A veteran police official, Kruglov A school teacher from the small once had charge of Russia's labor southern resort city of Beppu told, prison camps. During World War'the Japan Teachers Union in con- Ww ASHINGTON (” — Opponents ‘Wayne Morse next Ay Oregon Dies; Heart Attack _Vittim at 55 (P—Gov. of Gas Bill Defeat loreean who was the top choice éf Republican party leaders in Oregon to try to unseat Democratic Sen. Paul L. Patterson of died of a heart attack last If, he served as vice commissar|vention here that the same poll said today prospects have im-| night. for internal affairs and acted as placed the United States as the proved for Senate defeat of the j the Soviet security officer at the second ‘most liked” nation, be natural gas. bill. Patterson will be succeeded by the new State Senate tees hr : . Switzerls but ahea f : eee Malta and Potsdam con en te Games a. Sponsors of the measure to ex- ‘president, Elmo E: Smith, 46, publisher orth peed _ __ iswering that question, only three €Mpt gas producers from direct N€wSpaper the Blue Mountain Eagle in the small eas | coted for Russia federal price controls have been ern Oregon town of John Day. Smith also is a Re- He Should Know CHICAGO (INS\—Dr. Willy Ley authority on interplanetary flight, was asked what he thought of re- ports of space space Japanese education officials ex- confidently predicting victory surprise that the report Voting is scheduled to start Mon was made at the convention. Some day, government officials have said the’ Sen. Humphrey (D-Minn), an ships from outer union's leadership is Communist opponent. said he has “real hope” ferring with political His reply: “Bunk!” dominated. that the Senate will turn down the Visers at the a seer: ———— bill which, in a slightly different Arlington Club ‘in Portlan ‘publican. pre ssed ithe House, 209-203 terests in the gas and oil business, disqualify himself from voting. He ¢ named no one. | Two Red Airmen Flee BRUNSWICK, Germany U»—Two airmen of Communist East Ger Cars valued at 16 million dol--many’s fledgling air force fled into lars were furnis'ved to schools last West Germany today. The desert- | year, NADA argues, and dealers ers reportedly told interrogators should be relieved of ihe ‘10 per they were dissatisfied with serv- cermt tax on factory cost. ice conditions. { 5. Federal Liens — Providing TT that cars may not be seized from Ford Steals a Chevy innocent purchasers in payment . | TULSA? Okla, (®—Henry Ford, a of tax claims against a previous who defaulted ‘on his taxes, Mechanic, has been ae with stealing a Chevrolet 4. Driver training — Exempt- ing from federal excise taxes the cars wich dealers furnish free to driver training classes in schools, cars to unauthorized dealers for resale to the consumer.” NADA said such supposedly new_cars, ‘often driven or towed thousands of miles with discon- nected speedometers, are not really new.” 3. “Territorial security’ — Amending the Federal Trade Com- mission Act to permit the grant- ing of exclusive dealer rights cov- ering specified areas. Monroney told newsmen his com thittee problably will delay consid . une? eration of this proposal. He said “divided about 30-530 on the ques _income uss meters evence 4 Income Tax “Betere Prepared . } Vodek, tam consultant. Perry Shopping Angus Campbell--Tax Consultant . - @ TH tion Center FE 8-243! 995 W. Huron St, Open Eves, FE 2-3615 ELMO E. SMI . { i P F « : . \ FA . ’ > 4 i . i exclusive form, last year sque aed through when he collapsed. He was Patterson, who had announced only four days ago that he would make the race: for the Senate, _was con-" ad-*— minutes, said Patterson died “with. in 10 minutes of the attack at 9:50 d The doctor tentatively blamed 5 Sen. Morse (D Ore) aekeredli Dr Ernest Boylan, «ho reached a coronary occlusion. in a Senate speech yesterday that h — ue five! The only other Republican who any nenalor. hav financial in- he overnor’s side within five . AE EAULMOS WS Wael Ub jhas entered the Senate race is |E:lmer Deetz, a dairyman who was elected to the State Legislature ltwo years ago when he led a suc- cessful campaign to remove Ore- igon’s Milk Control Act. \NO OPPOSITION | The party primaries will be held jin May. Morse has no opposition jamong Democrats. | Patterson became governor be- _,cause he was president of the State 'Senate in 1952, when Douglas Mc- |Kay resigned to become secretary jot the interior in President Eisen- hower's Cabinet. After stepping into the governor | ship, Patterson was elected to @ jfull four-year term in 194. Smith 1 serve until qa successor cam be named at the fall general elec- ‘tion. ft | = Wie Re at eA 1 ‘S9Vd 43 Arraignment Set for Killing Planned for Thursday in Tax Charges Former local teamster leader British Prepare Death Warrants for Old Jalopies fully on overcrowded roads. * « * The government is LONDON u—A death) warrant appears to be on the |way for thousands of Britain's “old crocks” —prewar cars still chugging man- framing | a new law to force owners to Singer Daniels Facing Charges “W's All a Blank to Me,” Entertainer Says About Harlem Shooting NEW YORK (INS) — Singer Daniel J. Keating will be a cupmit the jalopies to stringent Billy Daniels said today he raigned before Federal Judge Fank A. Picard: in Detroit tomorrow, on charges of income tax evasion. Keating, of 2902 Oak Grove, was indicted by a federal grand jury during a four year period of 1949-52, while he allegedly earned $5,- 578.16. The indictment alleged the con- cealed income was from QOak- land County contractors, to gain. favorable union contracts and alleviate grievances. U. S. District Attorney Ered W. Kaess said that Keating as an individual had been indicted, but the, union or union officers had not been. “It shouldn't be assumed that such shakedowns are prevalent in all labor - management relation- ships," -he added. nected with AFL Teamsters Local Keating, 53, is not now con- 614 in the city. He worked with the local from 1940 to 1953, and was business agent of the local from 1943. Maximum penalty if convicted would be a $10,000 fine and five years in prison, or both, on all four counts of the indictment re- turned. Flint Drops Charge Against Mrs. Kehl (Continued From Page One) stronger evidence were later se- cured, “I want to give the Police De- partment sufficient time to pursue -all the facets of evidence in the isafety tests. Those that don’t get 'by will be refused a license. | The postwar car shortage and a cars out of reach of many people. A pilot testing scheme carried lout by the government has shown '97 per cent of pre - 15 vehicles have major faults making them unfit for the road. 2 Ld e s Some trade sources have esti- ‘mated the new law might force ‘two million of the five million vehicles now used in Britain off the road. Others put the figure lower but still in the hundred ‘thousand bracket. Alaska General Dies of Injuries Victim of Plane Crash Succumbs in Hospital; Led National Guard NOME, Alaska (8 — Alaska's National Guard commander died in a Nome hospital last night a few hours after his heroic rescue from a barren mountainside on which his plane crashed Friday with four aboard. Brig. Gen. John R. Noyes, M4, succumbed to injuries and frost- Ex-Pontiac Man Safe Included tn the stranded party was Major Francis F. Siegwart, a former Pontiac man, who from the ordeaj wun- scathed. His parents are Mr. and Mrs. Fred F, Siegwart, of 1915 50 per cent sales tax have kept new | ‘couldn't even remember being in 'the Harlem Bottle Club where he, ‘allegedly shot a fight trainer who “insulted’’ him. “It’s all a blank to me,"’ Dan- iels said. ‘‘When you get a bit woozy you don’t know anything. . * * “T had a night out which I never should have had.” As for the victim, James ‘“‘Chink"’ Jackson, 33, struck in the right, shoulder with a bullet from,a .32 caliber automatic, Daniels said. | “I know a lot of people — but ‘I don't know him.” Daniels was ordered arraigned teday in felony court on felonious assault and illegal weapon pos- session charges. He was freed in $2,500 ball at 2:15 a.m. after spending nearly 12 hours in custody. ‘ His detention prevented him from appearing at the Copacabana night club where he said he is getting $10,000 a week for an engagement scheduled to end tonight. OWNED CLUB THERE Daniels, 40, whose rendition of places." ‘ However, Assistant District At- torney Thomas Samson said Dan- jels once owned a club at the site of the Seventy-One-Ten, where thé shooting occurred at 9 a.m. Tues- day. + Samson said Daniels was re- turning from the men's room in the basement social club when there was an exchange between him and Jackson. “I ought to punch you in the case to a conclusion before being forced into a trial.” Bley ston, Bloomfield Town: | nose” Jackson reportedly told the Mrs. Kehl dashed into police | — ————_____ singer. headquarters here shortly after {bite suffered in the subzero-cold Daniels Gane aes out the the shooting and sobbed out an [below the Arctic Circle in three Oe oe etiod pode : je rename aie ot os nights and four days of exposure.) ind the other slugs lodged in her husband at their garage The West Pointer’s three com-|® juke box, the only music pro- forced them to drive to ipanions, all National Guard Vided by the private club. dump. She said the man led officers on an inspection flight OO UF City Will Mark’ 34th Birthday of Guard Unit Mayor William W. Donaldson has proclaimed Feb. 14 ‘National Guard Day” within Pontiac to help celebrate the 34th anniversary of the city’s 107th Ordnance Com- pany of the Nationa] Guard. The company, which served in World Wars I and II and the Ko- rean War, is ntly engaged in a recruiting e to become one of the first 1 strength com- panies in Michi An open house -xt the National Guard Armory will be held Feb. 14 to honor the company. Grand Jury Continues Probe of Bar Exams LANSING (#—A 23-man grand jury investigating, charges of cheating and bribery in the last state bar examinations continued its secret probe today. The jury is working behind closed doors at the Lansing City Hall. The press is barred from questioning or photographing wit- nesses, appearing at the rate of two to half a dozen a day. Perry W. Maynard, assistant at- torney. general handling the in-| vestigation, said the jury probably, would continue to sift evidence through next week. The Weather VICINTTY—Increasing | mess and cold today, high 24-28 Snow tonight and temerrew, possibly t-4 inches of new snow accumulating w east te southeast 16-15 miles per hour - Today in Pontiac peta temperature ,pfereding 8 am At @ am: Wind velocity: Calm. Sun rises Thursday at 745 am Bun sets Wednesday at 5 46 pm Moon sets Wednesday at 10:07 a.m. Moon rises Thursday at [2:07 a.m. Dewntewn Temptratures 1 ci+ ee @a..m......,...123 lleam 18 7s. m. wee 34 12m 19 8a. m. oe. 14 ip m 26 ® a. M...,......18 10a. m... 17 Teesday in Pontiac (As recorded downtown) Highest tempe Bos Sotid peso 21! Lowest temperature.............. 14 Mean temperature .......- oe eee 21 Weather—Pair. One Year Ago in Pontiac OUTS cies Scesivcesie on 30 anreaccariac 24 e Weather—Snow, - Highest and Lowest T rateres 54 im 1933 This Date in 84 Years -4 in 1808 4 1 a“ {all were in good condition today, eve 301 with him, almost miraculously sur- vived the ordeal of the crash and the bitter cold. Jackson staggered to the street where he appealed to a motorist, Louis Williams, to drive him to Knickerbocker Hospital- GOOD CONDITION National Guard officers reported although one was reported to have suffered severe frost bite. One of the men was rescued from the wrackage with Gen. Noyes, The to the plush Daniels recently had sub-leased. summoned by hospital Acting on a tip, detectives went apartment which other two were found as_ they - |hiked along the tortuous 25-mile route to Nome in search of aid. | Noyes had suffered head in-| juries, cuts and “nearly frozen face, arms and legs,"’ the National Guard said, * s L Noyes and Maj. Robert Kolb. the plane's pilot and an Army advisor with the National Guard, were res- cued from the wreckage by three, bush pilots and a druggist who carried them to the plateau-like top of the mountain against which) the plane crashed. After a paramedic team dropped, to the scene yesterday, Noyes and| [Kolb were kepf in the wrecked plane, which provided some protec-| jtion from the winds and cold, until, a doctor reached the plane. Kolb! suffered only minor injuries and) some exposure. Fire Hits House; Occupant Arrested Flames swept through a one-story frame house at 661 S. Winding Dr. last night causing $3,500 damage to the exterior and contents before it was extinguished by Waterford Township firemen, The fire started in the structure's | kitcheh, apparently while a con- tainer of coffee was being heated on a stove, according to depart- ‘ment officials. | ‘Bivens, was arrested by Water-| ford Township police and jailed ‘certain ‘‘presumptions” of guilt or no ‘‘presumption”’ could be drawn when he reportedly interfered with innocence acocrding to the alcoholic! The bill was advariacéd yester-;| Utica Woman Injured in Bloomfield Crash en by her husband, Edward, struck West Long Lake road ear into the other car. The wounded man refused to dis-! cuss the shooting with police, who| were officials. THE PONTIAC PRESS, { WILLIAM W. DONALDSON Two Commissioners File Petitions With City Cler Mayor William W,--Denaldson! Donaldson's petition, filed by yesterday filed a nominating pe-; 0 titian with the city clerk for re-ifiled this week. Mayor Pro-Tem election to the City Commission for a second term representing Dis- trict 3.- Claims Beating by 2 Policemen Pontiac Man Files Suit, Alleges Pair Injured Face and Body ' A $15,000 damage suit was filed in Oakland County Cireuit Court today alleging that two Pontiac Police officers beat a local man and called him “abusive” names last Sept. 3. The bill of complaint was filed by Pontiac attorney William John Beer on behalf of Clifford A. Mero, 24, of 34 W. Columbia Ave. Named as defendants are po- lice officers, Patrick F. Weaver, of 170 Opdyke Rd. and Wayne E. Long, of 451 8. Telegraph Rd. Mero claims the officers ‘‘un- lawfully and without cause did de- tain, arrest and search , . .(him) | He was forced into a patrol car, about 3 a.m., he alleges, abd driv-| fen ‘to a remote area, believed to be within the city of Pontiac,”| where the alleged abuse took place. Mero, a Korean War veteran, asks damages on the basis ge re- ceived face-and-body injuries and as result of the experience “is per- manently afflicted with a psycho-| neurotic anxiety.” The officers are ordered to file an answer to the charge within 15) days. | | Fireman Receives Cuts in $1,300 House Blaze | BLOOMFIEL D HILLS — Mrs.! About $1,300 damage was caused €rs & 60-million-dollar annua] ta | Bernice Tews of Utica received by fire early today in a home at/saving by exempting them from face lacerations when the car driv- 61'2 Pleasant View Dr., firemen) paying the federal tax of two cents estimated. ! that of Floyd Wellwood Scrase, of | The hour-long blaze was caused farms. |Detroit, as Scrase turned from by an improperly - installed fur-| onto pace, they said. | Vaughan yesterday afternoon.| \Scrase’s vision was obstructed by 160 Douglas St., who suffered cuts his farm relief program, ia truck, he told police, As Tews above the left eye, was released was passed by a roll call vote wit braked, a skid on ice swung his after treatment in Pontiac Gen- both Democrats and Republicans Fireman George Kielhorn, 29. of ieral Hospital, authorities said. : Drunk Driving Bill Faces Final Senate LANSING —A controversial bill to make results of blood, breath move in a campaign to steM press to waive taxes on lubricating A former cabinet. maker, and other tests admissible evidence Michigan's rising traffic death toll. 4i) put the House Ways and Means Sheck is survived by his mother; in drunk driving cases was up for a final vote in the Senate today. Legislative veterans predicted the bill would pass the Senate; as it has in the past, but again be ‘killed in the House Judiciary Com- mittee. The bill, somewhat weakened by amendments during floor de- bate, would not force a person accused of drunk driving to undergo any form of chemical test. But if a driver did consent to per cent or more the driver would yjcCormack (Mass.) called regarded by courts as leading to | | Vote Today I 22 other states, was the latest Its showdown in the Legislature came on the eve of the start of! enforcement of the state's new 65- |55 mile per hour speed law and as State Police were building up their | ‘forces to enforce highway safety. Under the bill, if a driver's | blood was found to contain less | than .05 per cent alcohol it would be “presumed” that he was not | under the influence of intoxicat- ing liquor. If the alcoholic content was .15 ‘The house's occupant, Donald such a test, the results would be be presumed to be intoxicated. {other conversion” by the If it was between these figures firemen while they were fighting content of the blood. Tests could day to a final vote after “Sen. the blaze. He was charged this\be made of a driver's breath, Don Vander Werp (R-Freemont),'the Democrats they had 20 years Home. The Rev. Gordon Lindsay ld Only ajits sponsor, asked his colleagues of Democratic administration and of Five Points Community Church \department in the performance physician or registered nurse to do something about “these po- had failed to voté an exemption Will officiate. The body will then morning with obstruction of a fire, \of its duty. | Bivens was alone in the house \when the fire occurred. Firemen! from Staffon 3 answered a 10:58. ‘p.m. alarm. His Wife Specializes _|in Intoxicating Kisses DALLAS (®—Patrolman stopped a 43-year-old man staggering down ‘the street. He denied he was drunk They pointed out that his breath re¢ked. of. whisky. | ‘Right! But I haven't touched) a drop,” he insisted. ‘My wife) ;was drunk when I left home —' I got this way just kissing her | jgoodby."" | Light Bulb ‘Guarantee ‘Means What It Says PROVIDENCE, R. I. w—News' editor Bruce Williamson was busi-| ly at work early today in the news! |room of radio station WHIM when! ithe bulb overhead burned out. He unscrewed the faulty bulb to replace it and read the, in-, scription on it: ~-~ | “Installed Feb. 1, 1955. Guaran- teed = year.” blood, urine or salvia. could administer a blood test. i / i ‘ tor Wednwsduy High Figures thaw tow Terje ves kaportes 5 tential murderers on the high- | The bill, patterned after laws in ways.” JOHN A. DUGAN . himself, was the second John A. Dugan, District 5 commis-| sioner, filed for’ renomination Mon- day. Dugan's petition was submit- ted by representatives of his dis- trict. WEDNESDAY, EERE ARE L 1950 Detective Trails Entry Suspects Cache of Stolen Liquor Discovered by Hazen; Juveniles Confess An Ookland County Sheriff's de- tective slogged three miles through fields knee-deep with snow yester- iday to arrest three Commerce Township boys a few hours after a Monday night breakin of the Detroit Gun Club was discovered. Following tracks leading from a club door at 2775 Oakley Park Rd., Det. Leo Hazen discovered 18 quarts of whisky which the juve- niles admitted they stole and hid in a pine forest one mile away. Also hidden there was a large slab of bacon. which the trio con- fessed stealing from the Birming- jham Gun Club Saturday, Hazen said. Ito the youths:homes near Wol- 'verine Lake, according to Hazen and his partner, Det. Harry Maur, \who also questioned the three. They said the boys, ages 15 and i16, were released to parents’ cus- itody. jing and entering will be filed in Oakland Juvenile Court today, they City Clerk Ada BR. -Fvans sald said. the deadline for these petitions is | Tuesday, Feb. 14 and if three | or more file from one district a | district primary must decide | Pontiac Deaths Two miles further the tracks led | Petitions charging break- The Day in Birmingham BIRMINGHAM — State Rep. Richard Van Dusen of Birmingham ‘and three other Southern Oakland county representatives, Theodore F. Hughes, Vernald E. Horn and Walter T. McMahon, will point the way to better highways at a South- ern Oakland Planning Council meeting tonight at the Huntington Woods City Hall at 8 p.m, Herbert Herzberg, chairman of the city planners, will present ex- perts to trace growth of Woodward and its north-south and east-west arteries and: on the survey of where the traffic is going. Survey books will be given to the legislating and planning agency members attending. Herzbert will then pose the question on what interested citi- zens groups can do to hasten Prophet Jones Gunman Caught Cleveland Man Admits Firing Shot; Says Aides Refused Interview Legislators, City Planners Look to Better Highways new highway development in this area to the four legisinters. Clifford O'Sullivan, National Re- publican committeeman from Michigan said last night ‘‘the Dem- ocrats in our state are the most highly organized, well-financed pol- itieal prty in the United States.” ERIE, Mich. — A Cleveland He told the first membership jmeeting of the Birmingham-Bloom- |field Republican Club that “we've got to use just as much color and persuasiveness and do a lot of hard work, or the Republican party jin Michigan may disappear for a 'generation.”’ |, The Port Huron attorney told 150 listeners at the Birmingham . “compelling necessity” te have more young people working for the Republican party in Michi- gan, es .* = day R. Cooley ; Service for Jay R. Cooley, 64, 1238 Massoit, Clawson, who died Tuesday at home after a long ill- ness, will be at 10 a.m. Thurs- day at Bell chapel of the William R.. Hamilton Company. Burial will be in Jackson, where he was born. He was owner of the Gein Awn- ing Co., Clawson, and had! owned the Maxwell-Gratiot Aueopeenee Agency. He lived 50 years’ Detroit area, and two in Community House there is a | ie the Claw- son. He leaves his wife, Marie, son, Lloyd J., of Pontiac, and a jman described by police as a which two candidates will be | | | jreligious fanatic was held here. placed on the April 2 ballot. George W. Carter Donaldson, 50, a native of Pon-| George W. Carter, 8, of 51 today in the gunfire ruckus two, Srandson. tiac, was elected to his present jiovey St. died yesterday. He had avs ago at the S-room “French ._* term as mayor in 19M after serv-'}.., in ill health two months. Castle’ of Detroit's Prophet Jones. Maurice G.(Ben * * * ing two terms as mayor pro-tem! porn in Corrinth, Ont. Canada The body of Maurice G. Bell, from 1944 to 1948. March 31, 1870, he was the son of State police of the Erie Post.near who died at his Seattle, Wash., Just recently elected to his fourth William and Priscilla Clark Carter the Ohio border, arrested Robert home Jan. 27 at 52, will be at term as president of the Pontiac ..q was married in Canada-July E. Rhodes, 28, yesterday when Bel! Chapel from 1 to 2 p. m., Foundation, Donaldson received a@ 9 199). they found three loaded guns and Thursday. Burial will be in white degree from Colorado University, 1- Carter who had retired as three knives in his car. |Chapel cemetery with a graveside after spending two years at the 4, excavating contractor, Came) ‘Troopers said he admitted un- ‘service. A service for Mr. Bell, who University of Michigan. here from Perry Sound, Ont. 36 der questioning that he fired had lived in Birmingham many Donaldson operates an insurance years ago. | one shot rh TE the years before moving west, was agency in the city. He lives with © tie jeaves his wife, Lionia, and prophet’s palatial home in De- | also held in Seatle. He was a De- his wife at 153 W. Lawrence. The two sons, James E. Carter of Pon-| troit Monday. They sald he told tKoit Technological Institute gradu- Donaldsons have two children. = tiac_ and William H. Carter, at them he had come to Michigan (ate, was research director of the Dugan, 46, has been an employe home. te hunt rabbits and on the re- |Ditzler Color Co. in Detroit from of Pontiac Motor Division for 26 The body is at the Pursley Fu-| turn trip decided to pay a visit |1922 to 1948. He founded the Bell years and lives at 363 Nelson St. neral Home where service will be’ to the prophet, a Negro religiows Color and Supply Company operat- He is a member of Local 653, held at 1 p.m. Friday. Dr. Tom) AW cult leader with a wide follow. jing it for five years. Both firms UAW-CIO and is presently serving Majone of the Emmanuel Baptist ing, “to talk about the Bible.” make automotive finishes. He has on, the executive board of the local. Church will officiate with burial j ; Sp ree since been a research engineer Dugan is a member of the Oak- i) white Chapel’ Memorial Ceme- Rhodes ‘said he burst info the with Boeing Aircraft. land Park Methodist Church and is tery. & jhouse and fired the gun when he | ’ active in the PTA. He is married, | |was xe ages deat ia i — . with two children. | ‘tance because he had not made ; Mrs. Rolph Reed pint Brazilian Chief tl Ralph (Sarah) arm as | who was born in Pontiac April| “[ was just mad," troopers 22, 1889 died yesterday in Three quoted Rhodes as saying, ‘I didn't eee Wal ‘intend to hurt anybody.” She was the daughter of Walter) ini He didn't. But the invasion . « jand Minnie Morris and attended tcached’ ott’ a tarmac (ta the Kubitschek Off to Early school here and in Clarkston. In Seabees komm rig ae at 5 | Le = Start to Give Country i i ; Arbor. 8 Unanimous Vote Given; Arr ceived training as| off and Prophet Jones. who had | Progressive Years Federal Tax Exemption 4 practical nurse at Harper Hos-, been resting on a chaise lounge ! Now Up to Senate pital, Detroit. A resident of Tiree nee aE ae — RIO DE JANEIRO —President /Rivers since 1914, she was a mem- uge =: J lino Kubitschek got an early ber of the First Presbyterian) Moments later the gunman)" yesterday voted 387-0 to give farm- member of the Order of Eastern sped off in a station wagon. igive Brazil ‘‘50 years of progress x Star. Detective Melvin Kaufmann said jn the next five years.” Survivors include her husband, Rhodes apparently was “a re- * © *# ue poe se ea oa crows fonaiey Still facing a round of functions a gallon on gasoline used on their Ch vex oF el water end) Rhodes was scheduled for a iN connection with his fnaugura- Sod LOG: ree ver el es ourt tion yesterday, the fast-moving Mrs. Reed, 66, JUST MAD | . Begins Schedule Passes House | |1911, she was married in Ann tendante fled when tho gun weet WASHINGTON (®—The House Church the L. R. Club and a life dashed out the front door and Start today on his program to A brother, Dr. Frank Morris, is hearing in Monroe Municipal C * L * * ee Proposed by President Eisen- hower as one of the nine points of bill ~~ h Three Rivers side Cemetery there. living in Cass City. today on a charge of carrying anew head of rele cepiletet eb Service will be at 2 p.m. Thurs- concealed weapon. Troopers said ¢st nase oe oul WWE Gin day from the Halverson Chapel, he probably would be turned over; mecOng for 1 am: with burial in River- to Detroit authorities for further! Kubitschek has set his Sights | questioning. on a tremendous increase in the ee ea ination's supply of electric power Clyde Wi sherk Mason Youth Named and transportation to open the way Clyde W. Sheck, 41, of Des to greatly expanded utilization of Moines and a former Pontiac resi- 'Brazil’s vast industrial potential. Following his trip to the United dent, died Monday morning in Uni- Sti versity Hospital, Iowa City, Iowa.| fo Scholarship Finals s:ico "sa" western’ Furope he He was born in Glennie Aug. 26.' ci predicted foreign investors would WASHINGTON | — Forty high stream into the country after his. 1914, the son of Wilbur N. and school from 20. states inauguration. throughout the nation today were FACES LABOR PROBLEM Mr. named finalists in the 15th annual He faces major problems with science talent search conducted by : th pile Clubs iiAmerics “his own people, particularly Bra- we mene’ a + ie * Already there are seeking to claim credit. * * «& The bill now goes to the Senate. The tax exemption applies to gasoline and special fuels used for “farming purposes,’ but not for fuel used on the highway. | FILE CLAIMS LATER The President also asked Con- Mary A. Houck Sheck. seniors Committee passed over this rec- two brothers, Joisa and Suen | ; j She iac; iv isters ommendation on grounds the book: Sheck of Pontiac; five sisters, a. i keeping was not worth the incon- Mrs. Jane Marsh of Seattle, Wash.,; The eight girls and 32 peyas a general’ rise sequential savings involved. and Mrs. Wilma Mitchel of Pastel, chosen from a field of 20,828 a ef living Farmers will pay the tax when Wash., Mrs. Cora Skinner, Mrs. ®rmive mS vane : “ aS pen The new regime counts heavily buying gasoline but can file claims Lizzie Rice and Mable She¢k, all in ine five-day score nie on the prestige of Vice President = “ > \ § ¢ with the Treasury for refunds. The of Pontiac. | oO arch & 4 w } Joao Goulart to restrain labor ex+ ran se | The body is at the Pursley Fu- On March 5. the Westinghouse | 7, , can eae Se ach atl neral Home where service will be Fducationa} Foundation, which is tremists. Goulart is head of the Sept. 30 of each year, w q s tae _, Labor party and former labor min- é yaa ‘ct held at 2 p.m. Thursday. The Rev. supported by the Westinghouse ~ ar the orci refunds to be om ifr the first A ee OE | the Apostolic Electrie Corp, will present cash ier va oe phen it abc inonths on ms ee !Church of Christ will officiate with awards to the pupils for applica. [/2°S0S: tie fale ves’ “oo : Vargas A > ILA ori tion toward a science education, 5 . Demo- burial in Oak Hill Cemetery. * * . . *' Goulart pulled more votes than \vilian Jaber. shouts for:a minimum wage and in labor's standard Claiming credit for the | crats for the bill, party Jeader — The top prize is $2,800, second Kubitschek, AlGoneereativelintine it ‘an- Mrs, Joecephas Woody is $2,000, the next eight are $400 Clection: and yesterday's inaugural Repub- each, and the remainder r ye Procession drew a much greater sevice for } ee ach, and g receive licans who have opposed excise| Service for Mrs. Joecephas (Lou $100 each. ovation. Ellen) Woody, 80, of 2064 Dexter, iRd. will be held tonight at 7:30 GOP Leader Martin (Mass.) told tonight in the Huntoon Funeral The inaucuration, at which U.S. Vice President Richard M. Nixon and former French President Vin- cent Auriol led the foreign dele- gates, went off with only minor disturbance. Police in the street erowd arrested two Communists shouting slogans and holding up The finalists include: Robert L. Carroll, 17, of Mason, Mich. 2,500,000 Motorists Still Need '56 Plates tax reductions in the past. td * * until it was requested by a Re-.be sent to the Poland Funeral publican administration. ,Home, Cameron, Mo. for the fu- _—jneral at 2 p.m. Sunday. Burial SR it ET mn a t “world peace” placards. =~ will be in the Cameron Cemetery.’ LANSING um — SecTRtary of ian Dato feor i a0 sae Mo US WEATHER BUREAU | 4 (ev peer: + Mrs. Woody died yesterday state James M. Hare said today morning in her home after a two come 2,500.0 Michigan motorists month illness. ‘have not yet bought their 1956 li- Lo Benson Decries Hog ere (2285 — | Price Support Plan “Sales to date are actually run- With rashes, men? (Continued From Page One) Losing Your Hair, Men? Then Stop That Drinking FRANKFURT (INS) — Troubled Going bald” said, “but this generally repre. SO says a U.S. Army dermatolo- jsents the increase in the number gist, Lt. Col. O. E. Heim, in the ef vehicles on Michigan's high- current issue of “Overseas Week- production. The Lu government maining in which to buy the plates, are blamed on the water. It’s not would have eo ration your right Hare warned motorists to visit the water. to ratse hogs. branch offices as éarly as possible “‘It’s too much alcohol, especially “We will use every resource to ae . develop outlets forzpork, and we'll Dear Wonmenplaced Birmingham Resident purchase to the limit of all avail. Vearborn Sentenced to Jackson ning slightly ahead of 1955.” Hare Then stop drinking’ : ways.” ly.” He warns: shave to step in and control hog. with only 20 working days re-. “Skin ailments and falling hair He said the government will do to avoid long lines during the last- too much bad Whisky and brandy.” this to help the hog farmer: Pinutelrish! : able outlets to bolster hog prices.” gn Two-Year Probation | E Benson said huge existing sur- | Peter A. Orlando Jr., 22 of 24588 pluses of basic crops have pushed | June Smith, 31, of 22207 Military, Yorkshire Rd. Birmingham, was é ee taser : SNOW FORECAST TONIGHT—It will be colder in the \south central states tonight and tempera- tures will continue low throughout most of the rest;of the nation. Precipitation—rain or snow— is expected in the southern Rockies, central and oes nessee Valley. promises 2 to 4 / fh Ge i 4, idown farm income “by the stag- Dearborn, has been placed on two-/|sentenced to 1'2 to 2 years in Jack- 'gering sum of more than two bil- year probation and assessed $150 son state prison when he appeared mtb ee re ‘court costs by. Oakland County before Oakland County Circuit lion dollars in 1944.” | | southern Plains, the middle Mississippi Valley, | vm ‘Circuit Judge H. Russel Holland. Judge H. Russel Holland recently. the western Great Lakes and the eastern Ten- | Winchestér, oldest of the English Forecast for the Pontiac area | “public” bad $26 check at Hudson's North-\a bogus check Dec. 19 in Birming- inches of snow tonight. 43382. | jland last Dec. 1. ham. ~ We. , Sthools, was fouttded in | She admitted Jan. 9 passing aj. Orlando admitted Jan. 9 passing™ é \ THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 1, MAKE for Foundation Assets Total $29,813.57. for Civic Auditorium, Report Reveals vote ontSret FRESHER r) | With record receipts for 1955 of | | $12,101.92, the net worth of Pontiac |Foundation climbed to $29,813.57 last year,’ the board of directors said today. Assets of the Fou m com- prise $20,186.32 in cash, and $9,- 627.25 in stocks and bonds, the di- rectors said in a -approved annual statement. The . Foundation was incorpo- rated in 1953 as a non-profit or- ganization which promised to “promote, encourage and aid the werk of benevolent, charit- able, hospital, scientific, literary or educational organizations of | the city of Pontiac and vicinity.” | Specifically, the Foundation is | trying to raise funds for a proposed | Civic Auditorium. Two contributions, directors say, | have been designated for use, The | Y.M.C.A is to receive $500, and| $1,000 has been earmarked for fur-| nishing the new addition to Pontiac General Hospital. Cash _ contributions . last year hit a record $8,414.27, with stocks PER H os just test ‘em! Flavor’s baked right in Premium saLtines! 4 In-Er-Seal Wax packets keep ‘em fresh! Compare 'em...you'll prefer ‘em! in 2-lb. family package. PREMIUM SALTINES | iNATIONAL BISCUIT COMPANY | | and bonds bringing the total con. | tributions to §11,397.52. Divi. | dends and interest on stocks and | bonds added another $704.40. | \ Expenditures for the year came, to $154.77, the directors said, of! which $150 was used to pay Cer- tified Public Accountant G. Stanley Warne for his auditing of the report. 9)) OONT TUG UNTIL YOUR FACE IS RED, HAVE THOSE GARAGE DOORS, OVERHEAD Brothers Die in River CORBIN, Ky. \®—The bodies of 23-year-old twin brothers were re-| covered from the rain - swollen Laure] River near here yesterday after a passing motorist saw part) of a car protuding from the! stream. The bodies of Robert Ray| Carter and William Jay Carter of! Hodgenville, weren't discovered) until after the vehicle was towed) from the river. Officials expressed belief the cars had struck a bridge) before plunging. | Juan Peron ruled Argentina for, |10 years before he was forced out! ‘in 1955. | for making us ~ Champs! — More people bought Schlitz in 1955 than any other brand. Schlitz is today 7 r_, \ 13 the champion of beers not only te, in America, but in the entire world. We helped set this record, and you helped us set it. For this we thank you very much. When you want the best in refreshment, ask for Schlitz — the Beer that made Milwaukee famous. Vreeland Bros. , Distributors ; 500 Pontiac Trail — Walled Lake y yo Phone MArket 4-3131 Funds Climbing.” * taco” Just a Little Error—: Republicans Elect Dem . 36 Heart Fund Since 1913 the average nearly earnings of factory employes have! National Assn. ef Manufacturers. [ae oY THREE increased by 746 per cent, says the i | ALVA, Okla. u—Blushing Re- : publicans have corrected an error rive Dens - [committed in the haste of last | | weekend's Woods County conven- i tion, | Ike’s Physician Predicts, They elected W. D. Myers Jr., an |Alva banker, county GOP party! treasurer by acclamation. But My-| ers is a registered Democrat, So| |Miss Gertrude Myers, his sister,| {was quickly named to the post in-| stead, She's a Republican. } 4 Disease Can Be Beaten Through Research CHICAGO \—President Eisen- hower’s chief heart consultant says : heart diseases in young and middle “ ; aged persons aoe reduced [cepick Thief Jailéd’ markedly “if we go about the task! HOUSTON, Tex. (®—James Les- |vigorously and adequately.” ter Coleson, 32, pleaded guilty be- * * ®& ‘fore Dist. Judge Langston G, King | Dr, Paul Dudley White voiced to an Oct. 27 burglary in which lthe prediction at the kickoff ban- only an icepick was taken and got quet of the American Heart Assn.'s a two-year sentence. Then he went 1956 Heart Fund drive last night. | before Dist. Judge A. C. Winborn, | Dr. White also read a message Pleaded guilty to felony theft of an , |from the President who urged ®dding machine Sept. 4, getting an- ' |Aamericans to support the fight Other two-year sentence. But the va ae * |against heart diseases which ‘com: Sentences will run concurrently, GUESS WHO? _ If this SNOW: situte a foremost national health’ = man in Knoxville, Tenn., looks problem and... post a constant} familiar to Little Nancy Eliza- threat to the welfare of almost beth Fooshee, it should. It was/eyery American family.’ | made to Fesem bie her famous | The Boston cardiac specialist Dita Soath e SG As Dem- | sid that, thus far, inadequate pri-| ~ nee a P ~a arr *o ocratic presidential candidate. It's vate and public funds have been| Thurs.. Fri. & Sat. Only SPECIAL PRICES, 2nd FLOOR BARGAINS Bright Finish Metal complete to the glasses and coon-, : aaa SHOWER : ‘provided for the research and) skin cap. itraining needed to combat the CURTAIN HOOKS io diseases. | N . | Dr, White said’ a majority of, Pkg. of Orwa e e .) heart patients ‘‘not only can work| but should work’' because “‘idle-| 12 for iness breeds unhappiness and is R d | ibad for the health.” ] 5¢ Cd ifaWwiers Pel ee In a news conference, Dr. White | Package of 12 shower hooks in bright lsaid, “I personally don’t think |B metal finish. Regular 25c value now Navy Called Out to Halt stress and strain is as important Encroaching of Fishing as diet’ for patients who recover : from heart attacks. Waters by Soviets He said it will be up to Presi-| ident Eisenhower to decide whether) OSLO, Norway UF Norway to run for re-election following a) moved on land and sea today to mid-February physical examina- repel a continuing invasion of its tion and then “knowing in full Stops Dripping—Holds Heat fishing waters by a fleet of Rus-{what the hazards are.” | FIBERGLASS sia tre le rs s | sian traw ers. 4 ey 8 | In reply to a question, Dr. White PIPE WRAPPING With 13 of the Soviet invaders said that, even if tht examination | | ¢ already bagged since Sunday, the|shows the President 8 heart in good 25 Foot | Norwegian navy rushed more tor-|condition, there will be other Length pedo boats and the trigate Tromsoe|factors to be considered.” | to the rich herring banks’ off He djd not say what these factors) Alesund, on the western coast. The 4re. Stops cold water pipes from drip- ping. Holds heat in hot water pipes and also protects outside pipes. 25 Russians keep returning every ~~ B IdI: feet long, 3-inches wide. With vapor time the naval ships chase them , seal tape ue Argentina Boldly I te Heng Shell "WHAT-NOT'’ Utility Wall Shelf Foreign Minister Halvard eee Trying to Muttle hurried home from the Nordic Council meeting in Copenhagen to H A tos summon Soviet Ambassador GP.) orns on u Arkadiev to his office. Lange in structed his embassy in Moscow to deliver a sharp protest to the Soviet foreign muimster. Captains of the seized Soviet trawlers were taken to police pe to muffle quarters in Alesund for question- The average Argentine behind BUENOS AIRES u®—Argentine | leader's have embarked on one of their boldest/ ventures since over- throwing Juan Peron. They will automobile horns. * « Rs, if p* | | | ing. All but one refused to talk hibits a devil-may- Select kiln-hardwood shelves with while they waited for a representa- the wheel ex AY y nearly 4 feet of shelf space Ample | . care independence which makes) size for figurines, house plants, ete tive from the Soviet Embassy in Black with gold trim. Oslo Reports from Alesund said be- tween 30 and 80 Russian trawlers were in the fleet it a fascinating question whether | the government ean silence him.) There is no traffie light system) in Buenos Aires. Authorities tried| install them a couple of years) L XN Saginaw —2nd Floor home permanent Never before a home permanent like DuBarry! For the firet time you ean cur! lano- i “<< lin-softness right into your hair, For DuBarry Backs See brings you the only home permanent that's lan- The only _all-lanolized il : = ONS olized all ways. ‘ Lanolin waving lotion, lanolin-treated end io North Ue@ — wil —Main Seed DEM M D secre: Floor Ss papers, lanolin neutralizer! Carls are softer 4 . +. yet so strong and long-lasting you can" lose aya them unless you eut them off! im ee So fast and easy! Just wind, wave, new | La tralize! No test curls or drip-drying. Ne eye stinging ammonia fumes. You're done in min- utes... set for months with curls that look . born beautiful! _ FS P.$. There's a Perfeet Pin-Curl Permanent, too! ayo en to —_ hock but motorists ignored them. Woman Returns Clock with no traffic light, what do} you do speeding into a busy inter- Stolen 30 Years Ago |section? Just blow the horn, keep! PROVIDENCE, R.1. W—A wom- going and hope the other fellow) an walked into. the Burke Tarr stops in time | Furniture Store and placed a large’ Starting April raf ot ex may banjo wall clock on the counter beep “only in cases of extreme “I wish you'd take this to ease emergency and when the driver my troubles.” she said. “Ever has no other recourse {0 avoid since | swiped it off your wall 30 an accident.” Violators will face ‘I've license suspensions, ” years ago at the other store, ” Ld had nothing but hard luck.” | The manager quoted the woman’ As for the problem at intersec- as saying also: “I'm really re- tions, the government has ordered penant. I'm going to join a church drivers to observe the widely used and in order to do that I have to rule that the vehicle on your right return this close I stole. Thank has the right-of-way you.” = Then she walked out No Pacts for Jordan . ie AMMAN Jordan (® — Premier ‘ Memphis Loses Title jSamir el Rifai's government has - MEMPHIS, Tenn. (®—Memphis won its first vote of confidence in was once the murder capital of the Parhament 35-3. El Rifai took of- * world but the number of homi- fice Jan. 9 after widespread riot-' : cides Jast year dropped to an all- ing protesting a previous govern- time low of 27. That's 10 less than ment's plans to join the Western- the 1954 figure and considerably backed Baghdad Pact. Ue has under the 105 in 1932. And there promised to abstain from any were about 150,000 fewer residents pacts, to maintain order and td then. uphold Arab claims in Palestine | Water Pipe Bregks!. . . SALE ©F WATER DAMAGED yy Za! 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You get 140 Reduce-Aids, a 4-week supply at just 2.95, complete with a purse kit to carry a day's needs. Start taking Reduce- Aids, and start taking off weight, today! | *T.M. ( oe aie er a ee tee ee ate nit em ne Sm Please send me_________packages of Helena Rubinstein'’s Reduce-Aid at 2.95 each. Name Address. ; City Zone. State bs ECONOMICAL-—140 TABLETS, 2.95 Check or fr OrderO + Add 25c for Tax and Postage Lo » ee he eed Od s Wd HAO J Af Hi vi THE PONTIAC PRES ‘e S, WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 1, 1956 Citizens Group Wants Atomic Secrets Unveiled Within Security Limits WASHINGTON (INS) —-A Con- | press-appointed citizens panel called on the government yester- day to unveil within security limits be lifted. from present nuclear de- vices for peacetime power, and a free market for uranium be estab- lished to replace the guaranteed price system. The panel stressed more infor- mation and “maximum interplay of ideas” are needed in man’s | Irrigation Canal attempt to achieve un- limited energy by harnessing the H-bemb. One suggestion was that elec- trical or magnetic forces might hold in suspension gases in which temperatures of ‘‘several hundred tuillion degrees’’ wotid ph al ated by hydrogen fusion The temperature at cent pad is estimated at 36 million * wrha rept call ne oréleary con: WANTS DATA RELEASED enormous. ent within such machines would be extremely small." The panel called for release of thermonnclear data only “within the limitations which national tainer could confine such heat, but that electronic or magnetic fields “conceivably” could act. to insu- late the walls of the reaction vessel, , The report said. that despite ations were -divided into these main categories: 1. Thermonuctear Power. ipeople should be allowed to con- tribute ideas. Investers in ‘‘nu- clear fission power’’ should get enough information on “the feasi- bility of nuclear fusion” to enable them to judge the future. 2. Control of Information. The AEC should free -all “reactor tech- |nology” data, leaving it to the Defense Department to classify “specific mailitary application.” 3. Uraniam Mining. The AEC should agree to buy enough urani- security considerations impose,” | thus leaving in doubt how far the group would go in unveiling the government's many-pronged pro- | gram to harness the H-bomb. Lewis L. Strauss, chairman of the Atomic Energy Commission, has said that security forbids re- lease of further information, while mittee, contends no security is in- volved. The panel report was based on & 9-month study under McKin- noy’s direction. Its recomimend- More a period of years. 4. Atomic Dev: 1960 pacity sbread Ms 5 advantage of such vessels gives ‘a um for military requirements for , |\development."’ Atomic-powered air-| at 1 liners and locomotives were men- The group urged a definite U.S. program to provide at one million mire kilowatts of atomic generating ca- 5. Atomic Power in the U.S. The report estimated atom gener- ated electricity will become cheap-| oped {higher living standards.” program of nationwide education in atomic medicine, together with steps to provide low-cost equip |/ ment and materials to hospitals and other institutions, were recom-| mended. The panel said “controlled ther- monuclear reaction has stimulat- ed widespread enthusiasm because it could conceivably provide an un- limited energy resource,” but that “it is too early to make any pre- diction as to whether electric pow- er can be generated commercially” by this means. The report continued: “It is virtually certain that no fuil- degree of urgency to this line of: tioned as possibilities for’ the fu- * * * 7. Agriculture. The report said atomic energy can increase food output and affords ‘‘a dramatic opportunity to lead under-devel- , under-nourished nations to 8. Medicine. Knowledge gained from the use of radioactive tracer atoms may enable man to “‘under- stand what life itself is’ and prove to be of even greater value. A Coating Studied | Use of Bentonite Clay as Lining Material Researchers at Colorado A & M O Gollage (ara! oxandiing study of a new and promising method for lining irrigation canels, The method involves the use ot bentonite clay as the lining material. R. D. Dirmeyer, in charge of the . research, says bentonite has been jused successfully in tests during ithe past two years to seal ditch However, more research is needed on the method. well in certain types of soil but NEWPORT'S more answers are needed before bentonite linings can be recom- imended in variations of the soil ORDER Clean Winter Comfort NOW! Brew] says often as much as Dirmeyer half the water carried by irriga- tion ditches is lost - seep * ween be irrigated FORT COLLINS, Colo. (INS) —| channels and prevent water loss. |; Dirmeyer said the method works | & Wut Dfsneys True Life Adventures ~,BETWEEN A LIZARD AND A SA Tin,” ‘ WHATS THE DIFFERENCE... LAMANDER ? & | fairgrounds bean dinnér interrupt- | s| ed frequently with applause for | Adlai Hits GOP in Western Talk Raps Administration at Launching of Campaign in California SACRAMENTO, Calif. «—Sharp barbs against the Eisenhower ad- ministration set the keynote of Adlai Stevenson's appeal for sup- port in his California presidential hee scale thermonuclear reactor will dovelaged in Gp neat year or ; it Is however, highly prob- able that success will be achieved eventually.” The report said an H-bomb de- vice could be used to create ‘‘fis- sionable material’ in the same way as present reactors. “In other words, upon the achievement of the goal of con- trolled thermonuclear reaction, one may achieve the corollary of an thus appear to be required.” SINUS DISCOVERY terrible facial seersigit due we fel with Yeast Tithe We 5 Hi il i rE Ws i ri primary campaign. ‘ “We've had enough of piety and peaceful proclamations by the President to please half the Re- publicans,”’ the Democratic con- tender declared last night, ‘‘and enough of threats and bomb-bran-; dishments by the secretary of stat to please the a Balt. | ocNerantomens rete |British Author, A. A. Milne © « Succumbs at 74 ministration to please its stock- holders.” A capacity crowd of 1.200 at | LONDON (INS) — British author | the kick-off speech ‘of his cam-: ‘and playwright A, A. Milne, the’ paign. The Sacramento area was ‘creator of “‘Winnie the Pooh,” died | A. A. MILNE : one of the few in the state carried last night after a long illness. He by the former Illinois governor in was 74. his 1952 race azainst Eisenhower.! Milne underwent a brain opera- | - * * tion in 1952 and had been partially | The 1952 Democratic nominee paralyzed ever since. Death came | |moves to the Oakland area on his in g hospital near his Sussex Coun-_ jeight-day stand far in advance of ty home south of London. é Aa vertisement How To Hold FALSE TEETH More Firmly ia Place’ Do your false teeth annoy yee barrass by slipping. oe = bling when you eat, la or tar? duet. nkle « Httie FA on your plates Thts alkaline (non-acid) tt - ‘atse hand more ly not . ugly parasites that medical — oay feat one owt of every sons examined, Entre families | the June 5 primary. He arrived’ Although he be fe ting | baivistiess und net kat Dad, Son Study Algebra i 1 Sa pegeraey from hee! nix, as \earcer eriegs oat ae . cana “Te oa wd at Pine Worms, (nese . a ' | en tes Kefauver o ennes- Pests must not on ——————> Together m Night School World Rights Reserved | see also seeks California’s 68 Dem- pisys) sued movele Mine war bet they live and multiply: That's ex whe MARIETTA, Ohio )— A father A LIZARD is A REPTILE A SALAMAN DER jocratie ssleisse me vate tour books, “Winnie the Pooh.” “The ac wand here's how they do i: lets do gether at Marietta ‘College, 'The| RELATED TO THE DINOGAURS 1S AN AMPHIBIAN —scutnern California atthe. same House at Pooh Comer.” “Now We (fica slntie coin, ar ege ooo , en sa ; ries the tablets into the bowels be- fore they dissolve, ~ Jayne's Are Six” and ‘When We Were Very | known for his series of “Pooh” i: high-school-age pped time as Stevenson next week. He , : (AY sat na lige ne °e HAS NO GILLS... RELATED TO FROGS... ceca word’ the debate on the netar: | YOUN.” modern, medicaly approved it: turned back 21 i Gen eis DRY TO THE TOUCH e HAS Gi LLS... al gas bill would keep him in Wash- They related the adventures of Pin Worms quickly and easily. r years. Pop is Gor vee ington Monday and Tuesday. Both|® little boy, Christopher Robin , Don't take chances with Lead f | i | WI =i +d Bocaaied 4 AND HAG SCALES. bd A MOIST SKIN eve are scheduled to address the Cali-| and his teddy-bear fr ‘end, Winnie —_ ry be ge Air tien ~~ = CALL: a high sch anlae s ” : _ @ AND DOES NOT HAVE SCALES, fornia Democratic Council in Fres-|the Pooh. Werma, ost ask your druggist for Both attend evening algebra “> Distributed by King Features Syndicate. no Saturday. Go a pert pe vos per- FE 5-6159 classes at the college. Cry" _— . Stevenson saute ott - sugges- | Fall Kills Workman Praxegpdlodia “egy die D. Jayne & OAKLAND FUEL pre-engineering po Clipe E S ] C . . Argentina’s ‘La Prensa’ tion. of a “‘new" Stevenson. His | DETROIT uw — Edmund Wyrzy-| for over 100 years. eh ' itinerary is light on formal kowski, 38, of Detroit was killed| JAYEI and PAINT co. ‘wanted neem mama oes a ster ea Ss ampalgn speeches, heavy on bean dinners. | Tuesday in a fall from the ‘roof of! Hits the Streets Friday BUENOS AIRES (INS) — Ar- Set to Begin on March 10 g 4 gentina’s great indepent newspap- The 1956 Easter Seal campaign|Sea! funds remain in the state for er La Prensa will resume publi- |to benefit crippled children will be/direct service. The remainder sup- =|canes iMag = Lang is s a nationwide program of ed-| years er was clos y de- I held March 10 to April 10, it was|Ports a ana dine eeicen aad Ce ‘posed divtaer Jean Perce. fannounced today by L. C. Megee,| a subject that interested him but which he hadn't studied before box lunch socials and street corner) talks. 436 Orchard Lake Ave for Pusss btn’: working in Sterling Township, Ma- : comb County, Did this mean a a in oa — campaign from 1952? No, Stevenson said vemarday | but ‘I hope it will be better.” erg Seving Towra, Na Woodworkers! Homecraftsmen! Builders! at any Thrifty —-NOTICE-- ALL PRESCRIPTIONS FORMERLY FILLED AT WALGREEN’S — DOWNTOWN STORE MAY NOW BE REFILLED Walgreen Agency 148 N. Saginaw | West Haren oe * ‘et Telegraph — —— Neer Sears Drayton Plains Drug Stores -- ‘ Advertivement Mrs. Charlies Scott, T CoeeL. Bitters has cer- tainly been a Godsend to me, 80 I welcome the opportunity) ed ; to tell others about it. I was| afflicted with! canker sores in| 4 mouth, mthroat and! even my eyes) constantly for| 16 years. I took all kinds of! tests and treat- without finding out what was wrong, or receiving any relief at aJl I couldn't go anyplace, or do anything, except stay home and brood abgut this ter- rible condition. I began to think I was doomed to-this life of misery, and frankly, at times, life seemed hardly worth living. AMAZING! BUT THE TRUTH ABOUT O-JIB-WA 9 Edgemont, Battle Creek, Mich- ie aa wrote us the following about O-JIB-WA | |surprise, inone veek, my mouth | Not have a minute’s relief from .;a week, I just | what IT have told you ig God's (Advertisement had to drink liquids through a eee While in bed, I inniep arthritis, One day I picked up the newspaper and saw an | advertisement for OJIBWA |'BITTERS, so thought I would | try it for my arthritis To my was all healed, the red blotches were gone, and my arthritis was ‘all better. In 16 years I did those canker sores, and now they were gone. I was truly amazed. This was seven years ago, and I have not had a can- ker sore since, I recommended O-JIB-WA to a girl in St, Joseph, Michigan, who was afflicted | with the same kind of sores in her mouth, and it cleared them up for her in a week also. ! always keep O-JIB-WA BIT. | TERS tn the house, because once in awhile I get a little lame,’ and this wonderful medicine al- ways takes care of it in about ‘Fpeak too | highly of this medicine, and truth.” AVAILABLE | AT YOUR DRUGGIST 44 y \president of the Oakland County| Society for Crippled Children. This year's colorful messenger ifor crippled children will reach’ more than 128,000 residents in Oak- land county when mailing begins| will mark 35 years of service. The 1956 Easter seal is bright | and red. A white lily, sym- the Easter Seal Society, | crippled child make up the modern design, along | words, “Easter Seals Crippled Children.” wheel chairs, braces and crutches; doctor's examinations, x-rays and dental care for the physically hand- ieapped. Donations also will sup- port a two-week camping program, the free cerebral palsy diagnostic clinie sponsored each year by the society and other services to dis- abled children and adults. Over 90 per cent of the Easter! Trays @ Copper Tooling Supplies e@ Aluminum Tray Etching. Material @ Glass Etching Materials @ Craft Master Oil Painting WwooD FIBRE Regular 45¢ Pkg. TOYS — GAMES Funds will be used in Oakland County to furnish physical therapy| jand pre-school instruction for crip- pled children, equipment. such @s isearch conducted by the Easter! Seal Research Foundation. | SE | Reformatory Escapee Gets Extended Term | IONIA W& — Orvel Simmons, 19. 1 to 4% years in the State Reform- | ‘atory here for escaping from the | prison earlier this month. He was sentenced to the extended term in ‘Circuit Court Tuesday. Simmons iwas serving 5 to 15 years for breaking and entering in the night- time. He will bejsentenced Friday on charges of breaking and entering three gasoliné stations near Ionia) following his @seape. He was cap- tured in Battle Creek. 'GOP to Hear Potter TRAVERSE CITY «m— Sen. day. Republicans from Grand | Traverse, Leelanau, Antrim and Benzie Counties will attend. @ Coppersmith Sets @ Copper Sheets in Any Length, 12” Wide @ Dek-All Paint @ Textile Paint @ Plastic Lacing @ Bends @ Leather Hand Bag Sets Sets @ Moccasin Kits sax 2B¢ Phe. MODEL A @Airplane Motors and BOATS IRPLANES @ Outboard Motors |Scarlett’s \ 20 E. Lawrence St. BICYCLE SHOP FE 2-7221 Charles Potter (R-Mich) will ad- dress a Lincoln Day gathering here, Feb. 14, it was announced Wednes- Back in the director’s chair is| ~ Dr. Alberto Gainza Paz, who re- Gov. Knight to Speak It Deccan exile in the U.S. last DETROIT Soy. Goodwin J. The paper will reappear on the Knight of California will speak on 104th anniversary of the Battle of ‘Why Organized Labor Should Sup- Caseross which overthrew tyrant port the Republican Party” Mon- Juan Manuel Rosas. Argentina day at the regular weekly meeting | | March 10, Megee said. The appeal lof Flint will serve an additional jived jn freedom from then until of the Economic Club of Detroit. Peron's rise to power in 1945. \Knight will make speeches in sev- SS jeral other cities during an li-day Grover Cleveland was the only trip through the Midwest. president of the United States who) ever served a second term after having been defeated for re-elec- tion at the end of his first term. UIndians. Twisted strips of birch bark were used as <. y it Checks 33-34 ietd ayvb 137, International Paper, F. L. Jacobs, Commercially grace: Bethlehem Steel, Chrysler, and whites Grade A large ie, ere dium 38-40 Dougfas Aircraft. | Brown Grade A clarge if), 4 jdium JT Market steady Demand tar New York Stocks Supplies erie and carly ts iLate Morning Quotations: CHICAGO POTATOES Admira. 2046. Johns Man 44 ; Au Meeution 4 denen ATL wt | CHIC Pate ysgels, Te Allied Chem 1077 Keisey Mayes 33.2 20s pe et mills Allied Sirs 8216) Keanecoit 119 Uv ahipmerits $04 kup: Allis Chalmers 666 Kimb Cik ae see Leela © sem itd tag Kresge, 86 303 sr asete pase 4s bakers 4465 Alcoa 86 6 Kroger 474 ies 82 tan faite ux Am Airline S36 uae ran 16 2 Hava Am Can . .. 44 washed ae eed fini Am Cyan 66 Lag & My 113 Dexota Pontiacs 33 2p:350 8 Am Gas & El. 404 poe Aire in waxed New stock arrivals 1 son b m 46 40 supplies moderate demand a ro perp teed gir Lone 8 Chem. nu § and market about stead Car tta Am N Gas 86.3 Loriliard + 203 sales Florida round reds in 40 Am Rad wae. 226 Lou @ Nash . 83 come frozen $225 Am Seating 326 Lenpey ‘Trk ; * : : Am Smelt $1 artin, O Am Tel & Tel 1647 May D Str 423 Am T 2 Menai Cp 126 ; Poultr Am Viscose... 491 Merck 52 DETROIT POULTRY Anac Co 686 Monsan Ch 423 DETROIT. Jan 3) 'AP: Prices AnscW&C... 68 Mont Ward 86 per pound f o b Detroit ta | Armeo St! .... 496 Wotor Pa . 53 quality live poultry up to 10 Armour &Co . 162° sotoroia 45 Heavy hens 32-34 light hens melon ck 148 Net Bise . J84 heavy brotlers or fryers 1342-J', ace sO 452 Nat Cash R jo i whites 24. Gray Crosses 25-26 Atl Refio aim 367 Nat Dairy ... 372 Rocks 26-27, capbmettes (3', 4'y) Aveo M Nat on wae - 26 ie, * on rooaiers 42 Net Lead .... ducklings 3 neavy ducks 22 Bait a Ohio os Nat Thea ... 62 Market steady on hens Receipts Benquet i NY Central .. 414 creased and appear adequate to toda; Beth Steel 183 Nie M Pow 324 fair demand Caponettes steady § Boeing Air.... 123 Nor! & West 636 ample Demand good Pryers Borden .. 6 No Am Av 814) steardy Offerings fully adequate Borg Warner 407 Nor Pac 726 trade slow Budd Co 207 Nwst Airline 166 te Burroughs 30 =Ohblo Oil - 386 Camp Boup.... 411 Owens WO! 6 Canc ws isn portrms can Pae 166 Pan AW Alr pity fully stew on Bene , a aut 2 Panh Epi ye , balance. feceipts In coops 466 cararGs (Mi pou ae 193 coups 75891 Ib fob unchanged heavy hens 24.25 ase 17] pa R ‘a4 : = = Ca Trec 594 Pepsi Cola 3 {18-195 broiler 1 © frvers ~ roosters 145-188 (aponettes Chea & Ohio 556 priser ; me roesters ieee au Chrysiqr 783 phelps D reg) Be cabehs Gl) a Ue 2 ei) Ae pba vi & 3 Phtico “322 ar wip .. J2 Phili Mor 454 * Climax Mo. 652 Philip) ; Livestock Col Gas. 1 esr 17 Come Bel... 4g FE Pete Oe DETROIT LIVESTOCK Con Edis... 84 Prot & oo. .BETROIT Jan 30 (AP) —-Hogs pacar Pow... he Pure onl a 1100 No early sales. wskine Jont Can... 2 higher Cont Mot berate ay $17 “Cattle salable 2000 Slaughter Cont Oil ...... Po Repu “* pg ond hetfers epening slow earty Corn Pa re 9a) Rex Drug .. about steady, but trading retarded Curtiss Wr..,, 28 Rey Met . 50 ‘heavy anow. cows active fully Deere .. 12 Rey Tob B SJ no early sales bulls, stockers or feede: Det Edis .... $2 Rock Spk 207 early sales good) to low prime 1 Dis C Beag .. 37 Safeway 81 44 «good and choice fed steers 19 00 21 be Doug Airc ., 626 St Reg Pa 423 some held higher’ early sales utility and Dow Chem . 884 Scoville Mfg 376 commercial steers and hetfers 1 Pon 220 Sead Al RA 73 most utility cows 11 00-1250. canners and ¢ 4 ier East Air Lb .. 451 Shell Oi) 703 cutters mostly 9 80-11 00 Eas Stn: 57.1 t Kod ...,, Th) cair O 7 Calves salable 250 Vealers El &@ Mus. 42 Socony Mob 68 fully steady but market not ry Erie RR 21 Sou Pac 54 ‘lished account small earty reect Pairb Mor ar Sperry Rand 233 sales good to choice vealers 2 Pood Mach 8358 Btd Brand 426 few choice and prime individuals Freept Su! Pe “e er Cent Lea 3300 some held higher utility « na af) ommercial *s 15 00-21 60 Geo Dynam 595 gia Ol NJ 194 Jand utility 5 00 uh Mada hea bak Std Ol Ohio 41 Sheep salable 2000 Few early en ds Stever IP 26 slaughter lambs anc heep about Gea Motrs 432 Stud Pack oe cucemarke! ae fully veatatuesied 5 Gren Shoe $65 8un Oil 716 jots good and choice wooled lamb Gen Tel 407 Swift & Co 476 to 2100 some held considerably Gen Tire 882 Sylv El Pa tile . pa Gillette 424 Texas Co isis Gesavucn Gs 4 tex O Bul 6 8 ( wn Faco LIVER TOC K Godyear “e1¢ Transamer Jt LSE ealacie et Twent Cen 73 savlive Crrah Paige 2 pt Gt No R An « ue Pai $ lower on spat ¥ Aue: Jn ac te 25 lower Ger) Bowne me Unit Air Lin clearance most ba M Unit Aire 220 Ib butcher Holland PF 1320 Unit Fruit 7 ao few hundred Hooker fi "6a Un Gas Cp A ia Tl Cent 622 Us Li waa Ing Rand 614 US Rubber < Inland St! 42 US Steel 100 36! Inspir Cop aq US Tob se . Interlak Ir a9 @ Van Raa! , > 1) ry Int Bus Mach 395 War B Pic ° 1 around 1350 Ib ane ight Int Mary 7 aa ie na . Int Pauper 109 © Weste El : Ralable cattie 8500 salable cai. Int Shoe 4) Woo.worth 486 prime Int aft & 7 Fj Yale & Tow 616 unde is! Cre Coal 19 Yong Sh & T &14 “tea . rm STOCK AVERAGES ate M NEW YORK Feb 1—Compiled by The! Mor Associated Press tea 10 5S 15 60 ere and i St c average Previous day steer Week ago the Month ago 17 50 Year ago « 1955-56 high welahts 1685 a Joed of pr 1954 high choice heifer 18 $0 197 1954 low miners ow ySO-1 r th gna on ou DETROIT STOCKS mometa Va j 1 VR iv (€ J Nephler (oe lve pale Mf FW ; Pigaren afte ¥e Mal poi nce rrrin pete Higli 1 ‘ a batt 4 1 18 . p gan “ ‘ " th t] . ue ee ‘ Ahra "* i ang 4 tte Berea? ‘ ho 44 t4er if a? J ‘ r : —_ a var Arraign Detroit Woman ine : souk sand peinn wo tn on Charge of Larceny te e Arraigned on a charge of larceny ee from a building, Bernice ebb all Bie eee OISIen caren Brother waived cxamination yesterdas From Hongman s Death before Berkley Justice Ralph H Finley, BESTON HARBOR = She was returned te Oakland vearold Bobby Basselman County Jail after failing to post ane nothing more than $1.000 bond. and was bound over to, Circuit Sour : burns today ifter anging bimself from th Few Addicts in Detroit EET HANI | +" DETROIT [toss BRS tS a ce ot vty trict supervisor of the Feira I, : ne Fs ~~ van of . Narcotics Bureau. savs Detroit has ieee ted as 7 between 72.400 and 2.000 driz ad) ihe jeer od dicts. Nevertheless. Ellis told a po wipee van) ale lice seminar Tuesday Michian cued has a good record because of jt excellent state narcotics laws | ; enforcement agents of three coun 0°" P ties in the Detroit metropolitan area attended the seminar [lan shed Nie off moments befor: his | Propose 5-1 Stock Split“! ‘ CHICAGO ® — Directors of Us Bound Over to Court Atchison, Topeka and Santa ,F Railway vesterday proposed a the Examined yesterday on for-one split ef the company’s com. of assault with intent ta r mon and preferred stocks. liam Naegle was bound If the proposal is approved hy Circuit Court for arraicr state Commerce Commission, it mar G. Stanaback vester will become effective Aug. 1. A Stanaback reduced band wv special meeting of stockholders but Naegie failed te post will be called April 26 to seek ap-was returned io Onkland proval of the directors, action. Jail. S |Grains Become Highly reget ences produced a highly irregular THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, FE ae Se eee + Soybeans dropped tarot. and then partly 1 i! and then firmed under Toes AND SAL chy GREENS ery Grain Prices _ alton | ~ Rams Into Dock Heavy Ice Fog Blamed | as Cause of Boat Crash at St. Clair River Pier Hard was in Atlanta tu “as reported injured and said the extent of the The skipper said the crash oc by a heavy ice tog. The car terry check but contents freight cars apparently affeeted the compass which indicated the FRED J. NIEDEDLSON ~~" Merchants’ Group *. | Re-electsNiedelson screws out of the water ferry’s normal dock ing place in Port Huron ered dock formerly the Port Huron Coal ; Car Leaves Road; Two Suffer Injuries Hittie below 19 2 suffered cuts on the Parking Problem Aired {0 City Residents By cyt Su ssioner Jackson Prison Term Given Detroit Man table and Bobhs daneled for This followed by a day state. ed bv a “landsh ment Feb the stockholders and the Inter-6 by Orion Township Just uhives of the three GM plants airman during Woo > Viet seven-foot, seveninch David turalls tle s shown with petite Tally Journal whe easily fits under his arm News in Brief Arraigned yesterday before Mu Micipel Tad Miaeit ioe de -barine ‘an, Pachard Poalaska Zo, aif Da bur pleaded ginity ta a charge of drinang under the influence of hh (qitet He was eoreitted fa Oak and Cannts Jail 1 days aftvay fail ta pas STOO fins 4 $05 ee rowingh Was reported NI ae, av fron im alilomyes bile wreeker parked at a gois sta tion at TO0S8 Byabdaiiy Ant police said Phe Woben epeerbedi\y Woes Promipneed meal fa) eittins ferch they sau Pleading guilty to a charge of fixe ays do fail ba Farmington Justiee Atlen C) Ingl yesterday Big gigantic rummage sale. toys, clean clothes atid furniture Thu Fri and Sat 9 to 6 Corner of w and Pike By the Church i Buffet dinner at St. Vineent 11 Hall, 197 S Parke St. Sat, Feb 4 fram 5 to 8 $1 for adult ald we fey children 12 and under th Aa 1 ; tummege sale Stephens Hall, TF “tt il ag hartge S , CE Taree 4 Ac i Wf vour friend's tn jaull and needs Pe bail P FR S-9424 MA 5 +O loaf Ac Rummage sale Youth Center, Lake Orb # ' Arty Doe .eu have a carpet problem? Liteon € Wi Ser Ft 8103 Ads Give Prison Terms ' ; ha mitted | ms pNaata alt a han MTS bem Sontenced no terms in Jae Me mo state ] ys Ookland Coun fs Crsmt dudve If Vussel Tf ‘ Kat td | I) Mf [> fo4 St Ras i , { crit sal | in chit af 4 Wd lis taki ‘ ates : 55 Earnings Quadruple, Reports McLouth Steel , LOE TO MelLowth Steel , : { 1 et arert cliniherd my y SST ES (al Last r fron a Td vt at S ( Comte the : Pa ! 4 troria Whe - ; fo ere) See statement ae ore-elect- le vote He said orer the President hax “breathed new has Wall: lift And has imected hip ind faith responsihilth” yw oa saveine ward 7 * Lhers Consent ef the enndicdate os not requiped in Minnesota But the baw Ve pn pede that Loisenhower eould pe- « awe his name from the ballot by a : # $ j ’ 2) A ‘ Ve i = aa ff eee = BRUARY 1, 1956 ANN ARBOR — The Univer- plans to a news conference yes- sity of Michigan has announced terday. plans for a possible headquarters py, watcher said a plan to in Tokyo to coordinate activities work with Tokyg’s Waseda Uni- among three university study versity on a cooperative course teams and possibly a fourth in industrial engineering and a Se ant clear management is now before Des tbertan Unto itatcher, pres the university and the Inter- dent of the university, Just back eetieaal Cooperation Aduninitirs: from a month-long tour of the tion (ICA) Far East, explained the projected He said the university also would like to establish somewhere in the Fay East an English-language in- Sums for Probe stitute for Oriental students who plan to attend the U.S. universities and colleges. * eget . fe . OF riticize Tuo university teams are cur- rently working with the Japanese: Dr. Thomas Franis Jr., evalua- Ellender Says Groups tor of the Salk polio vaccine, and . n . + Dr. James V, Neel, a geneticist Asking Unconscionable of the Institute of Human Biology Amount for Inquiries and associate professor of internal medicine, are making heredity studies of atom bomb victims in VASHINGTON we—-Sen Ellender } Japan (D-La) suid today the Senate Ju- ,diciary Committee is asking an NO STATE FUNDS “unconscionable” sum—more than A field study group of univer- a million dollars--to conduct in- sity mesenrct cs 1s making socio- vestigations this year There was no ‘immediate com- UM Plans Work in J apan logical studies south of Tokyo Dr. Hatcher said a sort of head- ‘quarters, located probably in To- kyo, might be needed to coordi- nadte the activities and act as branch office for university per- sonnel, None of the money needed for these activities, Dr. Hatcher said, would come from state funds. All of it would be provided either by scientific foundation or ty the by scientific foundation or by the federal government, Dr. Hatcher completed the trip to Manila, Hong Kong, Taipei, and Tokyo It was made partly as a final inspection of the Uinversity mission at the University of the Phillippines where Michigan edu- cators under an ICA contract have been teaching pubhc administra- tion. ab The four-year technical cooper- ation contract ends June 15. The ICA said the project was “immen- sely successful’ Under the pro- gram more than 4.000 Filipinos were trained in American methods of public administration ment from Sen, Kilgore (DWV Oil Lies Beneath Surface who heads that committee * * * Filender commented tn an ter OF High-Level Discussion view on the heels of a Senate Re publican Policy Committee an- NEW YORK w—Oil is the big nouncement that it will seek 09147 underlying the talks of : ; President Eisenhower and British cratic - controlled session of Con pine Minister Eden this. week ges over what to do about the Russian curb investigations by this Demo- * * * Sen. Bridges «RNID poles threat to gle dite Se mmittee chairman, tolds, news- men spending for House and Sen ate investigations will exceed $i.860.000 this wear and set a ree- ord unless somebody steps in’ He singled out the Judiciary Commit fee saying it ’now employes 106 persons although its staff is sup posed to be limited ta 10 He said Senate probe expenses hist year were $209 42279 He said appropriations now proposed for all Se nate investigations total $2.271.000 “with more to come.” Pending before the Senate now ire resolitions proposing to arm 10 Judiciary subcommittees with $1,980 900 for a variety of investi- reserves of petroleum ‘lie under the richest prizes operating in the Middle East, ations sy I think that’s ameenseionable,” Fllencet ‘Sard The Judiciary Committee is the worst offender.” * ~ * He said many other committees so are seekine appropriations for mvestigations that scem to him Ot Generous tHe Said te be lleves some committees carr oan thei staffs" hancers-an who dont = * * The Hose approved vesterday A 19%) budget of $275 000 for the mittee on Up American Activi ws which got $225 000 last vear Stork, Airliner Arrive PAUL FOLEY at Willow Run Together YPSILANTI OP A voting moth ve es" Gets Ad Firm Post Oy Hospital bere today after EB atl Balex ats 12 Williaw Tn tis ty nterpupted a noan-stap Birmingham, has re Wpounted manag { , retro iffice Anmietican Airlines flicht from New hanger Of Tht Detroit off ; MeCann Firiekson Ine. aceor yoy t | Kei { . ses William Fo Berehtold, vice presi Flaine over Mechicun vesterdas dent of the advertising Aen} the pitet raderd Willow Pun Air: central region a Uta {it OPER ee he The mew Ful) { mer] | it a \ crated thy “baa Mer Tat It e bith toa & Avlams as exes F rer | wont ind a thibes | ree . . ‘ MecCann Frickson last ve | ‘ president and eha ini iS Dh 1 Wd the bat i be trait plans overseas The flash engineer and twin stew Fulexs atione ime was a memibe ardesses assisted at the birth of the foreyrn staff of the A The plane with Of passengers crated Press restiined ats flight te Chicaus The mrine declined to teomfifs ve Westingl Ouse, nion. not married Chi f | Be ings. WASHINGTON (®—The gover ’ n the ° e feu ment prenared. ty prod top ne i. , 4 trator teats iy pewtorbibe 'hoe yy ' © 4k ‘ F acon ; - he le Copp striks Ru WCE? F Yoleniatid | 1 ph } ky ‘ ‘ ea te ' ms ! 11 : : tliree to, of The Fecle | Nediatiar $2 0a) a All save Tties aed Conciliation Sera tee SUiE} { $1 6455 4K e524 1 | . iy sbiare jer hae : sae. Toned company and anion leaders ad R474) 4oR f $25 5 ; re from Puttshburch te Washington s * ; : “review the whole sutiation” at NEW YORK ?fINS ‘ea oe B. Carey, president of the Inter hate national Union ef Rlectrical Work : ers 11UE) * - * * t ‘ € tT eat a in weston a nee 6 The strike, adi about 55.000 é TENE atid chaverent ; em for the companys workers, ays one of the longest rre 4 faced major walkoity since the end of c Torts eS Inter hat St World War Tv ra. ce aiea & vont gh 414 pom oe . shade i | have bern efomiy West ey neg ar Utetite +h offered a fine vear 40s 80 contiact, claiming of equals + ie 7K4 Hi 4 ‘ t n- acpeed to last simmer bx the TUE ; : © and Westinghoitse s principal rival F ' treneval blect filing be beh 2a an ing he is not a cag Mies if * seek re-elect n NO OBJECTION . << - * Eisentfower is due for a neW Son Bridges (R-NH!, who says pbysical examination between Feb. he is uncertain about what Eisen- 10 and I) by check on his recovery hower will do, told a reporf@r the from a Sept. 24 heart attack. Thus procident is a vigorous participant he may announce before Feb, 25 Two thirds of the world’s: proved sands of that area—nearly 100 bil- lion barrels, one of the world’s There is keen rivalry between American and British compames 4 ns in 1955 the firm Finnegan said he planned ta a talk with Se ot D. Blasier, West- inghouse vice president, and James innesota Primary iffidavit say- or dissent does not mean he has dictate made a decision on whether to Western Europe relies more and more on Middle F ou to meet its fast-growing demand for power to run, its industries % = And ‘Russia doubtless eyes the jarea With keen interest—not only as a peacetime prize but also be- cause military experts believe that Middle East oil mught preve a prime essential to her in another world war Some 22 American oil companies are interésted in the Middle Fast British, Dutch and French com- panies operate in the region. The daily output Approaches 234 milhon barrels. The annual take is around one billion dollars Western Europe, which once looked to the Western Hemisphere for most of its oll, now gtts about four fifths of its supply from the Middle East. If this should be cut aff, either by Communist penetra- tion or by war, Western Furope would be hard put to find a quick alternate source American companies profit mch- lv by their peacetime output in the Middle East.. But if the source should be cut off by gwar. the United States could easily through speeding ip its own pro. duction (now held back by state regulations! and bx tmaiporting more from Venesiela and other Western Hemisphere oil fields It's the peacetime development of the Middle F.ast that interests American aiimen most directls They have ameh oi) concessions there. And t! Selec et n building pipelines ta get oil Tocthe Mediter- ! ranean, expandingtWeir ol tanker Birmingham Resident eee fecd the fist crowane demand of tries for power and Fuirepean (Pea Fy UroOpean A ', Automatic Drive Tops ding to MOverdnve in Economy Cia onan vit trar cane tion oof pyobor ' comp Iste bets tian y wlpteratiertal ond | i ai hye | {no od { 1 i uf | cars Packet “4 ! n oof | 1 «alt TI c " pe pert that a 196 Pot eorlippedd with (in chic baton trans 7 ry |, 2 na ti Hon of e while yr Packard ret ro test a el STR piles per Three-Year Probation . Given Melvin Foust Nike \ { ( t 4 | | } Pousr 1s oof fob 4 ‘ fon tht Ee i {oes 1 <7 iat a iis ‘ | 1m } 1 om i ' fie nz nti tht Nubirn Lanes bowling alles on Squirrel read Jan. 4 Crawford- yi 1ce before Feb. 25 i, weekly conferences with GOP Dawe-Grove whether he will seck a second -aders congressional leader term “The President looks a little thin- . ; ; : : —— Insurance of Al st His antered po objection when ner than he used to Brides { All Kinds lis nate was filed. without formal said. “but he seems to have the 716 Pontiac St. Bk. Bldg. consent in the New Hampshire same zip and zest he always had and Thnois primanes, But he has in attacklhe the proble ms that con cireeeed that: his lack of assent front us. - me . é ’ ‘ is l f Ph FE 2-8357