‘ * * * * * PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, TUESDAY, JANUARY 12, 1954 —28 PAGES ASSOCIATED PRESS UNITED PRESS INTERNATIONAL NEWS SERVICE eee ee —— 7c | ‘Caution Unnecess Fas Digs Out of Worst Snow in Five Years At Least 60 Left Dead by Storm as Freezing Air Covers Nation NEW YORK (AP)—The Northeast dug out of worst snowstorm in five ears today, as_ clearing skies brought a forecast of increasingly cold weather. The storm, which started Sunday afternoon, caused at least 60 deaths and de- posited up to a foot of snow in some sections. The Weather Bureau here said | the storm was moving in a north- | easterly direction along the New England coast and out to sea. However, the bureau warned that a wave of freezing air was waiting to move in on the area from the northwest and Canada as soon as the snowstorin is gone. -— —— United Press Phete BUT SAFETY FIRST—Bobby Acuna, 9, of Los Angeles, looks surprised and rightly so for the little black and white fellow shown with him is the more scared of the two. ‘Sniffy’ came roaring into the Acuna. home two hops ahead of Bobby, scattering mom, pop and } Sleet extended as far south as North Carolina yesterday, There was snow in Georgia. North of Washington, D. C., the sleet coated heavy snowdrifts with a treacherous icy surface, crippled traffic and brought accidents ‘on roads, streets and sidewalks. Add- ing to the death toll were sleding mishaps, and heart attacks many persons bucked the snow and as its | Hero Gets His Reward i } | | | | | PY, . hom sf AP Wirephete FROM SON AND DAUGHTER—Marine Maj. Walter R. Harris is kissed by his daughter, Emmylou, 6, and his son, Rutland, 10, after receiving the Legion of Merit medal in a Pentagon ceremony at Washington. of five Marines decorated for resisting Red coercion while a prisoner of war in Korea. Over 100 Dead or Missing in Austrian Snow Disasters. VIENNA, Austria (AP) — More than 100 persons are dead or missing in a major avalanche disaster in the Vorarlberg region of Austria, police at Bregenz reported | Young sent the Red request to the boy’s two sisters. Cautious investigation disclosed ‘Sniffy’ already J.6+ afoot or tried to shovel it deodorized and ready for adoption. j Today, this was the state-by-state today. Dems Cry ‘Steamrolling’ to Speedup of Labor Bills “WASHINGTON (AP) — Republican plans to speed — consideration of President Eisenhower's proposals for re- in some places yesterday. Phila- deiphia had 10 inches, its heaviest vising the Taft-Hartley Tabor law today drew Democratic | in seveh years. New York be eater’ | a 96-inch blanket as of gr gt The Republican majority of the Senate Labor Commit-|the most since a 15inch fallin) tee, headed by Chairman H. Alexander Smith of New| '™®- ' Jersey, moved to dispense with hearings and to bring the cries of “dictatorial and steamrolier tactics.” Eisenhower program to an early vote in the committee. Reds Deadlock | iZooint” mromas “rt Big Four Plans death toll The toll was announced as other vast snowslides = a Balks at Ritchie Hunt U.N. Command 72 Wes MSC Sict JAW Discloses Agrees to Peace Talk Thursday Gets Proposition From) Reds but Details Loom Large and Difficult SEOUL (AP) — The U.N. Command today agreed to ;meet with Communist liai- son officers Thursday to | discuss resumption of nego- ! tiations to arrange a Korean | | peace conference. | U. S. State Department | lrepresentative _ Kenneth | Young stipulated in a note ito the Communist high /command that he was send- jing his liaison secretary to |'Panmunjom “for the pur- pose of discussing condi- , tions for resuming conver- sations as well as the date for their resumption.” The Communists proposed late yesterday that liaison officers meet at Panmunjom tomorrow to discuss resumption of preliminary political talks to set up an over- all Korean peace conference AP Wirephote SUE MORGAN This University of Michigan se- nior, Sue Morgan, of Ann Arbor, has revealed her engagement to Don Dohoney, MSC 1953 football captain and All-American end They were sweethearts in Ann Arbor High School and he gave her the ring Jan. | after the Rose Bowl game in Pasadena She is a Pi Beta Phi at Michigan and a figure skater Cold Weather Lashes Pontiac | Mercury Will Tumble Even Closer to Zero Mark Tonight The Pontiac area, chilled by the | bitterest weather this winter, can expect even colder temperatures Washington and the decision was made by the State Department there. The_ preliminary conference, which was to work out the time, | place and composition of a peace | conference, was broken off Dec. 12 | when U. S. special envoy Arthur Dean walked out' after Red Paying $5,000 to Key Witness Ontario-Judge Says He Will Deny Extradition for Fugitive DETROIT (UP) — Cana- dian authorities balked to- day at helping Michigan police-catch a key witness in the Walter Reuther am- bush shooting who used a $5,000 reward from Reu- ther’s own union to finance | his get-away across the bor- | der. | The witness, Donald Ritchie, 33, fled into Can- ada last week after giving |Detroit authorities two signed statements about the 1948 shotgun attack which left the CIO president's right arm permanently crippled. The CIO United Auto Workers Union disclosed late yesterday it had paid Ritchie a $5,000 reward for providing the information which cracked the attempt- ed murder case | Shortly afterward, Ritchie sneaked away from the “‘protec- tive custody’’ of Detroit Police and crossed the border. Canadian officials indicated to- day they were not anxious to pick. up Ritchie and tarn him ever to Michigan authorities. Ontario police at first said they tiators had accused the - United tonight—and frigid weather until could not arrest Ritchie because Massachusetis, 6. 14-point program right | after it reached Capitol Hill | Failure to Agree Upon Site Poses Real Threat yesterday, said lengthy | hearings last year fully cov- | ered the tssues involved. But committee Democrats led by to Jan. 25 Parley BERLIN & — The. continuing deadlock between representatives of the three western powers and the Russians over a site for the projected Big Four foreign minis- ters meeting raised Allied concern today as to whether the conference Sen. Murray of Montana, charged Republican speed-up strategy} amounted to ‘‘dictatorial and | Steamroller tactics Murray, senior Democrat on the committee, said in an inter- view that Secretary of Labor Mitchell should be called to ex- plain the rendati: It | the Republicans refuse to do this, recomr Murray contended,, it would mean “they are trying te ram this down our throats.” Washington, D. C.. area, 7: Maryland, 2; Pennsylvania, 16; New Jersey, 15; New York, 5; Connecticut, 7; Rhode Island, 2; Up to a foot of snow piled up throughout central Europe’s mountainland claimed at least 23 dead and 44 missing. Police said that more than 50 of the victims of the | Vorarlberg disaster were missing in the village of Bions: | i LS | ‘The avalanches blocked the small Lutzbach river and | posal to jree all POWs as civilians | day, many of the missing may have drowned. , Temperatures plunged, hitting 27 below .zero in one spot in Maine. The northern section of the Mid- introduced | west also reported biting cold with a low of 32 degrees below zero at International Falls, Minn. The arctic air extended over wide areas of the central part of the country with subzero readings over the | Northern Plains and the upper | Mississippi Valley, It was around zero in Chicago, Strong northerly winds added discomfort to the cold air in most of the Midwest but only a few areas reported heavy falls of snow. Temperatures were below freez- ing as far south as the central Gulf with the freezing line extend- (Continued on Page 2, Col. 7) Williams Names Man FBI Spy Story ' + The other 50 persons list- | |ed as dead or missing were | \from scattered villages in) | Vorarlberg province, police | said. The oa indicated | that the sudden avalanches | may add up to the nation’s | Told by Attorney . | Only three years ago more than | North Carolina Man Is 124 people were buried alive in a in Red Party 4 Years, Reports to U. S. ‘The snowslides severed com- | munications and isolated hun- | worst snow disaster. | Swiss. similar catastrophe. | WASHINGTON (INS) — A Char- | lotte, N. C. attorney disclosed to- day that he was a volunteer un- dercover FBI agent in the Com- munist party for nearly four and one-half years. Ralph Clayton Clontz Jr. told the Subversive Activities Control Board that he was personally tutored and indoctrinated by Junius I. Scales, whom he identified as chairman of the Communist party in North and South Carolina. would come off at all. Murray also demanded that top The failure of the talks between | Management and labor officials be , the four Berlin cémmandants on| invited to discuss the proposals in arrangements to produce any re-| public session. sults thus far posed a genuine| Smith reportedly might be willing threat to the scheduled Jan, 25! only to ask Mitchell to brief the opening of the big parley, some committee informally behirid closed Western sources said. * | doors. One competent diplomat as- On the other side of the Capitol serted that. further failure to Rep. McConnell (R-Pa), chairman reach agreement would pose the of the House Labor Committee natural question: “Do the Rus- | called the Eisenhower recommend- sians want the meeting at all?” | ations a “moderate approach’ to The third meeting of the four| (Continued on Page 2, Col. 5) ' as Cosmetology Head | He also testified that he was LANSING uw — Gov. Williams awarded a scholarship at the Jef- today appointed the first male sec- ferson School of Science in New retary of the State Board of Cos-| york City because of a commen- metology, recently torn by in- dation by Scales vestigations and dismissals. Board Chariman Thomas J. He named Michael J. Murphy of Mt. Pleasant, a beauty shop op- | Herbert is conducting hearings erator and former Air Force po- liceman, to be secretary of the board to replace Mrs. Evelyn Hickman of Flint who was re-| moved by the governor recently after an attorney general's in- vestigation, a | commandants wound up early this | ~~ morning after 11 hours of fruitless | Ik talk, The West maintained its posi- | tion that at least three-fourths of | es Flexible Farm Plan to determine if the Jefferson dreds of villages. Rising temperatures were melt- ing the snow, bringing threats of more avalanches, The slides dealt death and de- struction through picture postcard villages in the Austrian Tyrol, the Bavarian Alps, northern Italy and Switzerland. . Thousands of foreign tourists and winter sports fans ‘were isolated. The snowslides are the result of the most severe blizzards in several years, | Rescue squads toiled by lantern (Continued on Page 2, Col. 3) | Rogers, 8, son of Mr. and Mrs. | &rees by 1 p.m. States of ‘‘perfidy — Earlier, India offered the Ko- |‘ Weekend. rean repatriation commission a| The U. S. Weather Bureau secret plan for solving the tense | Warns that thermometers will drop war prisoner problem after the | t0 two to five degrees above zero gréup turned down a Swedish pro-| tonight, rising to 16 to 20 Wednes- D north to west winds Jan. 23. and a few snow flurries also are Rejection of the Swedish plan | “Te » P = ~ upon the law school Parkwood Ave., was hospitalized| and Mrs. Richard Frye and Miss hourly pay boost, plus additional nay rey aon oo am aie wanders Juniors end | with a concussion, His condition | Myrna Vaillancourt, special assis-| benefits to reduce existing geogra- him as started up an outsi ts . . set of stairs after closing his bar|in some instances sophomores are | today at Pontiac General Hospital tants. » a ow and re differentials — oe teh eey | ° ‘ Some members have recently proved holiday and vacation bene- . at 2:30 this morning. eligible to take the tests. reported good. ciub ranks andmembership | fits ll. ' ‘ commenced firing soon possible from the law a 33 caliber revolver he pon drag schools in which he is interested | 38. of 983 Cambridge, Berkley, | Robert Bunce, publicity chiarman. | said the struck plants are expected i choo 'Dr. A. J. Zuko will be guest to be “‘in full production during guard tavern receipts, The whether he should take the test and| were stopped behind a school bus,|Dr. A u" men returned his ng _ on what date, Pontiac Police said, when a car| spaker at the meeting this Thurs-| the course of the current week. | han is tops 2 is | jo | He said they announced a hold-| Each applicant should find out) tossey and Stewart McArthur,|\. sti open, according to Mrs.| A spokesman for American Can| i) ate Matt said he believed he wound-| Application blanks and a Bul-| driven by John C. Thompson 22, of day at $ p.m. in Pontiac High) Affected by the walkout of 20,000 "eee tl ed one of the bandits in the ex-|letin of Information describing | 119% W. St. Clair, Romeo, ran | School. USW members were 32 container change. registration procedures and con-|into the back of Tossey’s auto, | manufacturing plants and ands ma- : Police said Matt carried $238,|taining sample test questions | pushing it int McArthur’s car. All| Giant squids can attain a length | chine shops in the U.S, at ? P a portion of yesterday's receipts.! should be obtained four or five’ were northbound on Perry street.' of 52 feet, including the tentacles. | Vancouver, BC. __ | Now at Waite 4 paperman, demonstrates his read-a-bed gadget, made of wire clothes hangers. He invented the “book holder” so he could read without | strain while undergoing treatment for a back ailment at a hospital in Hartford, Conn. ae | Hey, Mom.. Tomorrow Only! It’s Lake Orion Resident || New 3D Maps Awaits Court Date || Give Congress - A Lake Orion man waived ex- | Weather News | amination yesterday on bad check | WASHINGTON ®—The govern- charges and wes bow over to sent hen } Ned new 3D maps Oakland County Cjrcuit Court 108 | 0 tell a = evervti about the weather except how po- arraignment Jan. 18 5 4 Jack Joyce, 29, of 707 Lakeview, | litical winds are blowing in his gh Cs) tM EF Oe appeared before Orion Township | heme town. | Justice Helmar G. Stanaback, three | A dedication service was sched O 68ec on amous hours after his arrest by Michigan uled today for the elaborate multi-| ‘ State Police etective Charlies Leaf. colored weather maps just off the Joyce, a businss manager of 8 moor of the House and Senate. manufacturing company at 3279 Rain w or shine, two Weath- e * Lapeer Rd., Pontiac Township, is er Bureau experts show up at 9 ¢ accused of making out checks to a.m. every day to fill the big rs . non-existent employes and cashing glass panels with red, yellow, f them himself, Leaf said. . . So far $400 worth of checks -have| “te, and green symbols which > been taken, Leaf said, and a com- plete audit may show q greater loss, portray the weather from Mexico to Canada. > when they are through a congress- man can tel] the temperature in ; . jhis home town—plus wind direc- , Choose Pink, Green, Blue or Yellow! ition, precipitation, atmospheric pressure and so on. | George Winthrop, head of the | Weather Bureau's daily map unit, | said it was “pure coincidence’’ to- | day's ceremony coincided with the 1 @ Sturdy, easy to button Gripper closing! | worst snow and sleet storm of the | It takes them three hours, but ay/ Regularly 2.25! Sizes 6 Months to 4 Years! | Can a congressman deciper all 1 @ Worm for inter arctic weight with feet! | “You'd be surprised,” Winthrop + $ ; j ! ‘oii “Meee ouvemnnen oie bar Sure protection for baby during cold nights | are | ter meteorologists than the people ' Master : | who ke the . The i - j j iti Nee even with the marvel- | | ty in t : i te weather e Slight hard to-find irregularities! re ; | Ous new Sonotone ALL- here and back home. They can i transistor instrument. It | | make wale oon Sirecnats.” giving a printed } cams lees dan sinay other The weather bureau has had old | Reg. 2.50—1-piece style—sizes 4-8...... 1.99 proof of accuracy. all-cransistor hearing aids. | | giass map cases since 1902, but No $75.00 bargain this, but | | they included weather stations) lant 4 —* sh ; which had been closed for 2) you can own it on an easy pay meat plan. As for the three-dimensional ef- save 99c on I-pe. knit THAT OLD fect, that was obtained by laying save 50c on absorbent SONOTONE out three layers of glass, each Hearing Service with its own symbols. Winthrop t - . WATCH 357 N. Saginaw called it “amination” on a “del | | Infants’ Creepers | Birdseye Diapers Pontise FE 2-1225 | |cately grained glass surface.” That makes it easier for a con- You can afford gressman to distinguish an oc- Reg. 1.98, rayon or Reg. 2.49, 27x27 SY CAN GIVE SONOT cluded front from a high pressure cotton. Sizes 6 to 99¢ soft ary om - ONE area. 18 months. In blue, irritating. ite. white, or maize. MARY MORE | dae — 5 Seow a rs K, of P. Lodge 211 YEARS OF | Installs ‘54 Officers _Bletiag Pies saree] SN 23c on reg. $1 full cut of Pythias, were recently instal- power By 8 TN Other 1954 officers installed were ° . and mjest table- | Lester R, Frownfelder, vice-chan- sponta! ue nactOhaL, aiter mest | collor commander; Claude Willey, On Our ee & Save 1.08 on 4.98 AR. 9 Gives fast, amasing re- | prelate; Earl Downing, master at ? lowed. secretary. a y Teeterchare is 3.90 Av : 2 A sturdy chair swing, at t eo. complete with tray and ¢ (| 4 \a play beads. Will not tip. - DON'’t/BE A e STAY J/AT HOME 70 KEEP Your whe wane <— N ni. ) : Save 3le on Reg. 690. : : . ain Infants’ Shirts BRIQUETS|A @ Sanforized! @ Cellophane Wrapped! ou @ White, First Quality! 30 { * Slip: on aind tle side. Cotton Knit, sizes 6 months to 2 years, . Save 1.99 on Reg. 3.98 "| Contour Crib Blanket | ot and low ashcon- Save 9le on Regular 19¢ ||| Training Pants tae. Cotton knit, double | 20-for SIBLEY SNA Oo | -. | 3 COAL and SUPPLY CO. ~ : fi _ MAIN. Com Ave’ res-8163 atm * , pins ; " ; x AY rer ‘ f pe “f A bs y . | OMe ’ i Ze Ege Re, RISE eee Ste iit I aaa > din oe ahbe BE3? Mt il f at is necessary to select can- idates for the -Feb. 11 election to fill the state legislature vacancy in the third district created by the resignation of Rep. Howard Estes. a - * The Nellie Clizbe Guild of First Presbyterian Church will hold its luncheon meeting at 12:45 p.m. tomorrow at the Auburn drive home | C. M. Greenlee. present costume plays “My Name is Jacira” abd “Correa.” . * > This week's noon Lion's Club luncheon, to be held at the Com- mitmity House, will be the monthly business meeting. > * e Little Theater of the high school, THE PONTIAC PRESS, \' tuespay, JANUARY 12, 1954 ’ ' Oo Vote t DR. JAMES VAN PUTTEN Speaker fo Address AAUW on Far East BIRMINGHAM—A former inves- tigator of vice and opium prob- lems for the King of Siam will speak on “New Views on Old Lands” in addressing the Ameri- can Association of University Wom- en at 12:45 p.m, tomorrow at the Community House, The speaker, Dr. James D. van Putten, visiting professor of polit- ical service and history at Hope College, in. Holland, Mich., will discuss his experiences while in the Far East. From May, 1950 to June, 1951, Dr. van Putten was acting director for the U, S, Information Service in the Republic of South Korea. i * - e In its and last production of the season, Children’s Theater will present the Proscenium Club of Birmingham High School on Jan. 2, in the club's preduction of “Daniel Boone.” This also marks the club's |Morse to Fight {Committee Plan .|a margin of one on each of the Austrian Avalanches But Easy Win Predicted on Formula to Permit GOP Control WASHINGTON . — Sen. Morse (ind-Ore) today promised to fight a Senate committee reorganization formula worked out by Senate leaders, but they predicted it would win anyway. The formula is designed to per- mit the Republicans to retain con- trol of all important legislative committees even though they are a minority by one vote in the Senate. Senators Knowland (R-Calif) and Lyndon B. Johnson (D-Tex), the party leaders, agreed upon the plan yesterday and said they ex- pected it to win easy approval. the two which go automatically to | each senator. Some such device as this was needed to let the Republicans con- trol the committees, since there are only 47 GOP senators to 48 Democrats. WILLIAM 0’CONNOB .. 40HN C, COWE s. Jaycees Hand Out Awards at Dinner (Continued From Page One)’ Highlighting the annual affair was main speaker Wally Weber, University of Michigan freshman football coach. His topic, ‘“Ath- letic Values,” drew a parallel be- tween civic achievement and the “golden rule of sports.” “Modern civilization is drifting The new plan will give the GOP | Senate’s 15 regular committees ex- cept those on which Morse sits. | The Democrats decided to go) along with an increase in the Re-| publican bonus seats, one Demo- cratic source said, so that the Re- could not contend that Democrats kept key bills bottled | ‘to in committees. ‘away from the teaching | contented, “As a result of hard work in this push-button age,’’ he our edu- cational system is slowing down “Hard work, character buaild- ing and enthusiasm are the key exponents to one’s ultimate potential,” he said. (Pontiac Deaths Paul D. Robinson Geraldine McNeill Robinson of 110 Jackson St. Burial was in Oak Hill Cemetery. The baby was dead at birth Monday in Pontiac General Hos- nial. : Rau! Valez Funeral for Raul Velez, 19, of 294 W. Wilson Ave., will be Wednesday at 10:30 a. m. from the Pursley Funeral Home, the Rev. Paul R. Havens of First Metho- dist Church officiating. Burial will be in Mt. Hope Cemetery. Born at LaPray, Texas, Sept. 5, 1934, he was the son of Julio and Juinita Alguiera Velez. He came Junior W ‘s Club wil as the play will be given at the is the sportsman's way.” at § tonight with Mrs. Arthur King | Bumingham Theater : Urging Jaycees to foster high . bf ay gpd mabeaalear yl md **e Bring Disaster to 100) cativer “sportsmanship in Pontiac, | Mrs. Lewis Walker Betty Bricker will speak on her|_.-n¢ Interment of Imagination- he said that a football game of) 14. Lewis (Harriet) Walker, 29, trip to Mexico and illustrate the talk ewe bain as ye (Continued From Page One) ~ yn ee bP geese sd high ©5-| 4+ 101 Mechanic St. was dead on with slides speech to ven! | tight through the night to dig out |"ee™m Ts revenge OF &M | .rrival at Goodrich Hospital Mon- ee © e at the City and Country School undue willingness to win ; | PTA people buried by huge masses of . . day. first Methodist Church Women’s | $3 Te tall, wil ber given by-| melting snow which carried tree “§ player is supposed to grace | Born in Pontiac March 13, 1924, af40 a.m. tomorrow for cancer | Luis Fraiberg, an instructor of ro Dwayne rower} fty pode = Y |she married Mr. Walker in Ohio ad sewing. Members are re-| —"Ssh et Wayne University:— a — ntain sides indicated | or business,” he concieded. | in 1950. See bet resided ded her entire | ‘ P ° . . > Among those present were Mayor lifetime in ee Sere OF om one Birmingham newcomers are: Oe ee aa wth 85 | arthur J. Law, City Manager Wal- Besides -her husband and par- te he Mr. J. 3. Collins and his daughter | high as 13 feet. Up to four feet of | ter K. Willman, C. of C. ents, Richard H. and Allyne Taft Mrs. Robert W. Voss, chairman | saben iva, {rom Mighiana | Dew snow fell on mountain tops im | Robert J. St. Cait and Herkert |Kimmons, she is survived by two et Gis bediget corumitice cf Cie ec ine Oe eat entate one te | Bavaria during the night, but at| Auer, president of the Michigan| sisters and two brothers, Mrs. League of Women Voters, will host | &¢ Western High School, Detrott. many points drifts were thawing | Jaycees. Beverly and Richard H. a committee meeting at her Puri- | tnetr Fa a LAR rapidly. Chairman of the annual affair | Kimmins Jr. of Pontiac, Robert D. tip road home at § tonight to plan | Sot, t2"i, ts win Patsarge Bleck Railway traffic on the main comumittee was Allen V. Peters. | Kimmins of Detroit gnd Mrs. Mary t ‘ebruary general meet of Detroiters age y 4 -west railroad between Vien- Munsil of Ortonville. the LWV., “= an Sullivan and thet Gat . Pe ak diana Gar ob, 6 The body is at the Voorhees- a w- @ pote ys aod 1400 Brantey ™ | standstill, West of the Ariberg WJBK-TV to Turn On Siple Funeral Home. , Regular meeting of the Women’s lt; 204 lve, Wittem T, Beste ond Pass avalanches reared down on Te ae eG: Cee Nancy.’ S shouts, Tormatiy “ot Warten, | the tracks and a key bridge was Mor P T ; ht : will be at 8 tonight at iy BEM Southiawn. | believed destroyed. The line was e ower onig it “Stet. 8:9 _ iss Olive Wiggins and Misses Eisgnor | blocked alse east of Inasbruck- | nerrorr (INS)—Televiston sta- ‘sions in 1-H Fire Chief Vernon Griffith has |Wescbers, whe recently moved here trom | As new storms piled up fresh | tion WJBK-TV aniiounced today it of Revisions im i- estimated the total loss by fire drifts in many areas of northern | 11) dedicate new transmitter and during December at $175, with that Italy, rescuers after a week's P (Continued From Page One) amount as the total estimated m-| KOFRAN P@ACE Talks |dsttc. txcush Blocked mountain | antenna fachities formally 6 7:301 4.) sroblem, but be did not im- surance paid, Total estimated in- ; passes reached five villages iso-| tonight with a telecast “Power| _sately introduce legislation to surance —— ath om with to Resume Thu lated near Udine. The hamlets | and People.” carry them out. as amount of property rsda were nearly out of food. program, replacing the Doug wy See. y In Switzerland, railway men eS an Murray and other Senate nt alarms res _fire| proposal, the . commission © ad-| the northern approach to the St. ation’s telecasting from | Mer propesals contained “some investigations, with 4 runs made | journed until Thursday. Gotthard rail tunnel, the vital rail re oan be aoe good and some bad.” Sen. Leh- commission -did not reveal | link between Italy and central Eu-| mum permitted by the federal man (D-LID-NY), « committee Frontier Nursing Service ay came ot the sates plan, | rope. indie line traffic was re- poy oh controversial . appeared possible it might | sumed this morn facilities needs more revision” Founder to Give Talk bo Mamie one sovesiod Mon- sia ot Eaanaieae wae Sookie than suggested by the President. ’ a source. . BLOOMFIFLD HILLS — Mrs.| The source said an Indian plan| Marriage Hunt Wild neon ope nati ere cagrag am Se Saas Salar ar te Pelitat alana cheat eae ta a tiie on SALISBURY, South Rhodesia| gan, 1,057 feet, — that Congress require a govern- Service, Inc., of Kentucky; will | Red commands sulting the tethers CNS) =, Merringe-aaahen 20 ener wy ant address @ group of friends. and|and the commission off the hook| Ove Sephensom, is on a lone hunt | Volcans Esupts Twi workers to determine whether they 8 Sroup of friends. and | re Me Comnmmlawion pt {he Nook! in the wikis of central Afries Sor pts Twice —| approve of a strike. Martel drive home of Mr. and | #8ainstseither side. ee to ae ten oe TOYO @—Mt. Asamia, o vol| The Fisenmel mes and ad “ -one of | cano 100 miles northwest of Mrs. Warren S. Booth tomorfow| The defeated Swedish proposal her cihobte hes cocenuted, hemes: | ccumiog Suter today: Mostar aches] wat apeaiiy ation qui. cnteel Bloomfield Sey Saiceieaiin be scteanen a re has — her to| over two nearby resort towns. No | ballot ee Ot ' a woman “ own | damage was reported, Mt. Ashma| However, Smith ‘i 28 years, Mrs, |. as civilians after midnight Jan. | teeth and a high forehead.” hag been active since Dec. 27, | implementing jegislation hé pro- : speak on the | 2%. The Reds insist they be held posed that such a vote be taken 5 Eee, rs and babies | until a Korean peace conference under National Labor Relations oi Board (NLRB) supervision after if Although the United states a strike had begun. 4 The Weather agreed to discuss reopening of the Be, BE a saoihs Sehensiatter. a perro cy Na ls | e pone 6 v Get Twice As Many Stamps With Every Purcha 4 ee whee. * sae a i= | | PAs, . 4 — > x | hailed ee eacia oP Seabed Plas i — . ee jae eee gt ade. 78 Tay rt: Pe ied “6 se) Re I ee ta b Your Unrestricted Choice of *. 3: . Ladies’ Coats | O% or + hots ” oa | Sane 8735 ip % om e 18.95 “Metro” Ladies’ Coats....15.15 |» “e 29.99 Hampshire Coats 23.55 | 35.00 St. Mary's Coats 28.00 — %: 49.90 “Betty Jean” Coats . 39.99 a 7990 “Stroock” Coats 63.99 * rq BUY ON EASY CREDIT TERMS! | = * 4 . “i SPS ed te, + rua ck 4 batched see eae 2 , 2 Groups of Juniors’, Misses’, Large Sizes - Ladies’ Dresses | r O” on. 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OGRE NL RARITIES Out They Go! . . . 39.99 Tots’, Girls’, Teens’ TERMS! se 3. ¢ eer eee meee ears Settee eae ee eeee ee eee eee eee 2400 Bore Suite, 10.16 7901-1808 yd Jecketa.... besssnsses S000 “ON EASY CREDIT TERMS! se bweeee eae e eee eee ee ee eee eee 4 ~~ ———wT — =| — - ee On ppraniigiatmaape Be > + + THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, JANUARY 12, 1954 1954 Packards Unveiled Friday Will Feature All-New Clipper Line; Tubeless Tires Optional Packard's 1954 model cars will go on dealer display Jan, 15 with an entirely new model in the Clip- per series, a 212 horse-power en- gine in the Packard series, and tubelesg tires as optional equip- ment, It will be the first time that tubeless tires have been offered as original equipment by any manu- Miller’s Furniture 144 Oakland Avenue ; “Where the Best People Shop and Save” Greater Values Now! 4 During Our ) January Clearance Sale! Three Floors of Fine Furniture facturer. TERMS EASILY ARRANGED List prices generally will re- main unchanged, although some models with added equipment or optional items of last year made standard, will in¢iude the cost of the equipment in the tag. PACKARD CLIPPER CLUB SEDAN—New Packards will go on display in dealer | have increased power, with the new Packard engine developing 212 horsepower. The Packard said dealers’ authorized *»owrooms Friday. Shown above is the-Clipper deluxe club sedan. Major styling | new cars will be shown in this area by Mazurek Motor Sales, 245 East South Bivd., handling charge will be increased changes have been made in the medium-priced Clipper lines, while the company has | and Vreeland Brothers Sales & Service, 490-500 Pontiac Trail, Walled Lake $3-on four” models, to make the returned to more conservative ayn & changes in its high prices Packard line. -Engines charge uniform on all models. At we TT $10 to $15 increase in the pre-de- | - publishing speeches to The United States Congress ap | for engineering, signal and trans- livery charge has been authorized ‘Clarence Jacobs Facing: by several opposition propri ated more than $50 .000.000 pe rtation supplic s and equipment i by some other makers with their It 1 pleasure to have you come in and look. FREE PARKING FOR MORE THAN 25 CARS NEAR OUR STORE, Open Friday ‘til 9 SIT a i é \ é p. -1953 ‘ é ISe r f e abilit ation new model introductions Th M mer for fiscal years 1950-1953 to pay! used in Korean rehabi The Packard price range vans |JUIZ in O] ] 1PSOI ] ur ler ~ — - $s —— . , trom $2,506 for the special ad Clarence Jacobs, named as the! Orchard Lake home revea sedan to $3,125 for the Panama . nine P : model in the Clipper series. In the | Summan in the Reuther assassina- | Pole mentioning © errons : | Packard series it runs from $3,344/ tion plot, faces questioning in the =o note , ot Be tae , = . ”, ompson andwriting, sak if for the Cavalier to $7,250 for the | unsolved murder of Lydia Thomp ae hap ens to ay - —_ — passenger, chauffeur - driven) . — ni Lap} n mm imousine Capt. Howard L. Seiler, head of ' The new Packard series engine the 4 higan State’ Police Post Although the name Was mis is a straight eight, claimed to pos- et Redford. said Jacobs will b spelied (Perrone spelis his name sess unusual acceleration proper- questioned for the following reas with a double “r”), polic © and ) ties. Other engines are the Clipper one . special investigators questioned special at 150 horsepower; a Clip- , him at length. per deluxe at 165 and the Cava- lier with 185. Packard said the new 1212 1. An anonymous informant, whe in 1950 linked Jacobs to the Reuther case, referred to the suspect as “the key to the Lydia But Perrone steadfastly denied even knowning Mrs. Thompson, let alone having any knowledge of : horsepower engine is its leading Thompson case.’ ’ the — . The pet ut suspect mechanical innovation. However, sought in the current Reuther in . all models have advanced styl- 2. Jacobs is a former employe | quiry, even took lie detector test ing, numerous new color com- | of Santo (Sam) Perrone, whose | said Capt. Seiler. He was released bination inside and outside, anda name cropped up during the The Reuther assassination at variety of upholstery fabrics. | Thompson investigatior tempt and the Thompson slaying | Added to optional items this year| The captain said, however, that |“i“fered greatly, added Capt is a four-way power seat. This and | bis men would delay the questior SESer. Une was & prom nal-type power steering, power brakes, and | '"€ until it wouldn't interfere with ‘ “ U r appa electric window lifts are among/ the case against Jacobs in th t was a sad r of improvements made standard on| Reuther shooting passx , , the Packard Caribbean model.| Jacobs, accused by missing wit Pte ™ igh pou : arts uae They are optional, extra-cost on/ ness Don Ritchie of shooting UAW | ““H® Progress foward solving the all other models President Walter Reuther in 1948, | }tia Thompson case, Capt gave every indication that the in- The Clipper and Packard series provide a total of 14 separate body styles for 1954. New in the Clipper models in a super model. A luxury hardtop, called the Pacific, is new ) to the Packard series _- — — Was arrested last week by Cana- dian authorities. He is fighting ex tradition Capt. Seiler said Jacobs has been sought since 19 but had eluded arrest in the United States | by returning te Canada each tim | authorities got hot on .his trail He said the questioning might be delayed months dus to the extradition proceedings. Although —pointing—out that Ja- cobs must be considered a suspect in the Thompson ax-slaying, Capt Seiler said, “We aren't too ex cited.’ * He pointed out that “officers investigating the Thompson case | get anonymous tips periodically, but “nothing of major importance has shown up yet.” Besides the anonymous informa- tion linking Jacobs to the murder, the captain pointed out that a Perrone tie-in with the Thompson | case never has been proved. After Mrs. Thompson's savagely | slashed body was found in a wood- | lot in White Lake Township in 1945, a search of her fashionable a Poti. Our former $26,525. Kay Bidg., Suite 202 Hours: 9 s. m.-5:30 p. m. eluding Saturdays. Open ye nlehts “m9 Dp. m. | the U SS.R. has a better agent Cleared of Disrespect vestigation a far from ended Atom Scientist Urey Attacks McCarthy SCHENECTADY, N. Y. @—Dr Harold C. Urey, atomic scientist and Nobel Prize winner, last night criticized the -congressienal probe of alleged espionage at Ft. Mon-| mouth and said, “I don't believe |in this country than Sen. Mce- Carthy.” | The scientist called such inves-| tigations “an irresponsible type of | activity.” i He said he had been told that / the Ft. Monmouth investigation conducted by Sen. McCarthy (R- Wis) had “ruined morale’ among scientific personnel at the Army radar and communications re- search center there. He expressed the fear that such developments | might discourage young people | from going into scientific work. | Urey made the remarks in reply | | to questions from an audience at- tending a lecture sponsored by the Schenectady Freedom Forum. Cowboys’ Feet Getting Bigger; Boots Prove It DENVER @® — Take it from a man who knows, cowboys’ feet are getting bigger. “Yes sir,’ says Theron Brooks, sales manager for one of the South- west's oldest manufacturers of cowboy boots, “the cowboys of yesteryear didn't begin to fill the boots of the modern-day range rider.” Brooks said cowboys of the early 20th century rode their horses wherever they went and, as a con- sequence, their feet took an av- erage 5% size. Today's cowpokes currently av- erage a size 9% boot. Chile Newspaper Chief VALPARAISO, Chile @—An ap- peals court has declared Alfredo Silva .Carvallo, general manager of the newspaper La Union, not guilty of charges of disrespect to- ward President Carlos Ibanez del Campo and other government lead- ers. © 4 GE. 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