& The Weather Mostly Cloudy Tonight Details page two . THE PONTIAC PRESS 118th YEAR x* ~~ PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 15, 1955—26 PAGES Fluoride Issue Expected to Be on April Ballot Sen. Potter Tells of U.S. Listening Pogt Operating in Russian Sector of Germany WASHINGTON (UP) — Sen.; bottled up, Potter said, “Our | asked. Chartes E, Potter, back from a} mission visit to Red-run East Berlin, thinks | means of intelligence.” breaking diplomatic relations with | Russia would cost the United States a valuable source of military in- telligence, The 38-year-old Michigan Repub- lican also said in an exclusive United Press interview that the atomic-armed forces of the free world could defeat a Russian at- tack in Europe—and Russia knows it. Potter said the United States maintains a 14-man military mis- sion at Potsdam, in East Germany, just as the Soviets have a similar mission in the West zone. With the security consciousness et the Communists causing nor- mail sources of information to be “It is of more value to us than their mission is to them, for a democracy can't maintain such se- crecy as a tyranny can.” Potter said that though the Com- munists cork up normal channels of information, “Our men have pretty much free access in East Germany. They can drive military cars around. Some areas are closed to them, especially around the bor- der, and there is a certain amount of harassment. . “But we get 50 per cent of our in- that military mission.” “Senator, do you think the United States should break rela- tions with Russia?"’ Potter was provides an excellent | telligence on East Germany trom | *‘No, I don't,”” said Potter, ‘‘for 'the very reasons I'm citing.” | He took a cigaret from a bronze bex in his cluttered desk provide viet embassy here is probably their intelligence headquarters in the United States, as a democracy we can't maintain the same secrécy as a dictatorship, Most of the in- formation they get would be avail- | able to them anyhow, even if they | didn't have an embassy here.”’ Potter, a legless infantry veteran |of World War II who wears in his | gray flannel lapel a tiny emblem |of the Silver Star decoration, won | (Continued on Page 2. Col. 6) WINNER ALSO LOSES—You'd never suspect this St. Bernard was declared “best of Westminster Kennel Club dog show in Madison Square Garden, New York, last night. He’s Orion winners” at the | of Dolomount II. Morning After Some Tough Competition “4 AP Wirephete Orion is owned by Frances Roe of Brooklyn and bred by Dolomount Kennels, Jamaica, N. Y. Later he lost in “best of breed” competition. Foundry Blast Kills Workman 250 Flee Detroit Plant as Magnesium Flames Trap Crane Operator DETROIT (INS) — An explosion of granulated. magnesium alloy mushroomed like a miniature atom Observers Give Pineau Less Than 50-50 Charice PARIS \# — Observers today gave right-wing Socialist Christian Pineau less than a 50-50 chance to form a new government as France's political crisis continued into its 12th day. Although the Socialist port fully Pineau’s efforts, the candida voted last night to sup- for the ship increased his own difficulties by“pledging to follow vv killing almost instintly a crane | operator high up in his cab. Some 250 workmen on the foo of the foundry fled to safety from the white-hot flames, which hur- Nixon Heading for El Salvador Enjoys Big Indian Fete at Conclusion of Visit in Guatemala pa Hall ll I aT i s if! Aw 3 i | iti the methods of former Pre- mier Pierre Mendes-France and outlining a program — to that followed by Toll Road Law Repeal Sought by Broomfield Would Block Turnpike | | State Freeways toll road law. Broomfield. said he would out the 1952 law setting up with power to build toll ex- pressways between Detroit Michigan en route to Chi- cago. “The toll road law was passed at a time when a lot no other way to handle the heavy traffic on these two it i a i in Favor of Federal,|» introduce legislation to wipe| | the state turnpike authority | © of people feared there was fa Whe eT ms es ct Serene ek ae ao aN ae * # re 4 > : ¥ LANSING (#—Sen. Wil- liam S. Broomfield (R-Royal | — Oak) said today he would) | ~ seek to repeal Michigan’s; ) ™~ and Saginaw and between}, Detroit and Southwestern | | bs n Tanker M ee +t * ees Santa Barbara, Calif. with supertanker Orion Planet. | seamen aboard the two ships was reported injured. ts Another Tanker <> o® -|First of Refunds on Income Tax Due by March | DETROIT W—The first batch ot refund checks on 1%4 income taxes should be in the hands of FF é if ful “til if Twice the former Detroit Psychiatrists Examining Selt-Styled Killer of JoAnn DETROIT (#—Psychiatrists planned to continue their examination today of Richard Ballingall, the 34-year-old convicted Peeping Tom, who police said has confessed the two-year-old rape slaying of coed JoAnn Gillespie. gravedigger was called from his cell at police headquarters yesterday by psychiatrists who sought to learn whether he would respond to truth - > taxpayers by March 1, A. M. Men- | said yesterday. were sent to the Chicago dis- bursing office last week. They should be in the mail by the last The apiece, added. They are the first of 1,400,000 expected refunds to Michigan taxpayers. Girl, 16, Stabbed by Young Boy Janice Sears Knifed During Snowball Fight; Suspect Baldwin Pupil Janice Sears, 16, of 2600 Wood- bine Dr., a St. Michael High School junior, was treated at St. terday. The girl and her sister, Patricia, 17, also an llth grader, said they 5 ¥ ee bod | yesterday, in advance of a Republicans | WASHINGTON \# — Republicans ninger, Michigan district director Plans for a September presidential ‘ef the Internal Revenue Service, tion in 1956 but National Chairman Leonard W. Hall | indicated today he hopes state election laws can be Menninger said some 8,000 checks changed to permit an August meeting. | .Hall told newsmen practical difficulties, such as certi- | fication requirements in certain states, stand in the way week of February, Menninger said.| of a September meeting, first suggested as a means of checks will average $77) shortening the presidential campaign. for September Convention abandoned! ° Drop Plans ) me oF Yay tee 4 File Petitions This Afternoon AB Hae ve ting conven- GOP convention site sub- committee meeting here to- morrow, th will open their convention in cago’s International Amphi- theater July 23 ess their way tome from sched yes-| ——— are made in state | laws fore then. Democratic National Chairman Paul M. Butler said that if these | © changes were made, the conven- | tion would be moved back to Aug. 13. | | The amphitheater, in the Chi- cago stockyards, was the scene (Continued on Page 2, Col. 3) DETROIT—Five hundred addi- | tional voting machines are being installed by Detroit election offi- cials and will be ready for use in the primnary election Monday, The new machines will bring the city’s total to 2,060, and will provide ma- chine voting in 683 precincts of the city’s 1,541. Election officials pre- dict more than half the precincts wil] have voting machines by time for the 1956 primary and general Democratsannounced* : Predicted for Area Warmer Weather Weather in Pontiac today and tomorrow will be a little warmer. | The U. S. Weather Bureau says it will be mostly cloudy tonight and tomorrow with light snow flur- Wednes- | day are a high 32-36 and tomorrow | | night low 18-22. Tonight's low. will | be 24-28. In downtown Pontiac yesterday, temperatures ranged from a low of 17 to a high of 32 with some | Snow. | | This morning at 8 o'clock, the) | mercury stood at 16 rising to 3 | as ‘The Tide Has Turned KANSAS CITY @®—David Sano, 18, American-born son of Japanese | parents, has been elected student mayor of Kansas City by 7,000 high | school students to preside over a) make-believe ‘‘city government.” | In 193 David was barred tem- | | porarily from attending first grade lin Kansas City because of World | War II anti-Japanese feeling. | i mother. St. Joseph M fered in a futile attempt to save the children from the fire. who the children may have ing with matches, said Master’s Best Friend (?) dog. W his watchdog sat ging his tail. Chiang Beli Fred Hampson, AP chief of bureau; 2. The so-called neutral nations from Hong Kong, the orange r . Nationalist China ~ indica i prerennare Corgpanlbe agen tenes |S Today’s Press still mah could be held against a ees seeee Cocsessoseseesaeel Red attack. a c it cena He again declined to \gpell out «Sealing éon'seqhasectahaialaal his version of an_agreement with fanny Bre estes. ycscscsuaues © the United States on joint defense! Emuy Tce of Quemoy and Matsu Islands, — — ‘ Resld ao oe ee ‘ ing only “‘the matter is very clear! Markets .\.........--secceeeseee to us and to the Communists.’ i Sqerte € eh aa . reported the gen- @ Redi> Wrodreme.......-. 2. “seem@to feel that - Sah bao «nthe . a. @uring the Tachen action the Pages. ..cecsoseas : ' W499 Chiang also said: 1. He is “certain’’ his forces will one day launch a counterattack against the Communist mainland. eves U.S. Show of Power Off Formosa Will Not Hold Bac “& 7 > ir é ee ol rif BE é ee 4 * - % 3 7*. THE. PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 14, 1935 5 | : i I if : song B ge — The 700-ton|burne, Vt., Museum from Lake Champlain. . Trip steamer Ticonderoga is moved Overland to Shel- | will.take from six to eight weeks. Sen. Humphrey. Seeks Statement of Policy on Nationalist Isles (INS) — The i tk | i a ii? & Nehru Arrives in Egypt to Confer With Premier CAIRO, Egypt — Indian Prime Minister Nehru arrived in Cairo today for a visit with Egypt's Gamal Abdel Nasser, who 17 miles tonight and 15 miles somerrew. | Teday in Pentiace PF arven temperature preceding § am | » | At @ am: Wind velocity 1 mph. | Direction: Southwest. Bun sets at ae Fe — ‘ednesday at 7:28 a.m. sete Tuesday at 11:30 Moon rises Wednesday ihe ta Dewntewn Eb —aesseseeee | OF G. -Gioscogese MD s. Bccsesceest Ts Bhes odes Per ires | 8G. Micccsceees DD. M..ceeeeee BD BB. Miccsceees 1? BP MB. rocceses. 33 6. = 2 +i wereeweeeeeeeres poli. | Sets Sentencing Date | i. ‘Ze i e 1 1 i 7 if tT} fs # i 7 a be i tl if g § 4 3 aE : Italy W—An Amer- | no sign of life. Officials said they were not cer- tain the wreckage was that of the a airliner which vanished with | Congo ; | Patrols were sent immediately | [to climb Mt. Vettore, a 6.500-foot | peak in the Central Appenine| highlands. Warner Bell, 20, of 20834 Colwell. for Feb. 21. Bell admitted breaking into the John G School, 21030 Indiana, | Southfield Township, last Oct. 15. | In Oakland County Circuit Court | yesterday, Robert C. Lewis, 17, of Farmington, = Callson Dulles fccuier soe" ' to Clarify Policy ‘Stwpid Ol Fool | headed by Hall was reported to, Matusow Says Charge Untrue in a murder trial called Superior . Judge Charlies W. Fricke “a stup- id old fool” yesterday -and accused him of “ very prejudicial manner. 7 FE ¥ ! hower to be the GOP nominee | again. He was backed strongly in) this viewpoint by Sen. H. Alex- | Fairless. the sf be a candidate again.” ; . The site selection subcommittee’ Veteran Sports Medic Expires in Detroit DETROIT — Dr. William E. be giving serious consideration to 10,000 hotel rooms could be made | night. He was 76. available and had cited cool Aug-| A nationally known urologist, Dr. ust weather as a special induce-| Keane tended the Tigers’ aches ment. and pains from 1907 to 1934. New Synthetic Diamonds rede Identical to Real Stones SCHENECTADY. N. Y. Man-, dug from mines in Africa or Brazil, made diamonds exactly like na- ee ee ee : . t carbon, pressure and heat, ture's own were announced today | Dr. A. L. Marshall, manager of the —a scientific dream come true. laboratory's chem They cost at jeast twice as much e —— copertnent. to make as natural diamonds, but; 7), 1 tch matured dia- in time may be greatly reduced. | monde. ‘They have ‘the rey These artifieial diamonds are no | “fingerprint” of natural diamonds, threat, as yet anyhow, to the value of your diamonds, nor any imme- tant in industry and national de- fense. Diamond is the hardest known Hundreds FE ef g & | i | § ? i 328 if [ F a te : Hi z i ? : Z Beg fi i il 4g jt ae a - . oe * - tag ~. _ |his talk at least 20 times as he | praised Texas, Texas Republicans, With exuberance that increased HENRY D. PRICE nearly every minute of the 30-min- _ The fifth man appointed to the ute speech, the crowd broke into pontiac Area United F Fund Budget | Steering -Committee is Henry D. | | Price, according to Rebert M. | iH E SE: }one evening talk ie if this state | From t point attention. He said it was Fhower would E 4 F [ E S fs Ht ae x z 4 ) an artificial Eton Park was raised. from $110.- | -ommittee heads are: at Li ae eee Gee Pians for the building show were would gan mary * 8 «@ | | The Day in Birmingham ‘ Commissioners Approve damage estimates. City Manager Donald C. Egbert was iristructed to first secure spec- ifications from Troy Township of- ficials, as to the quantity and qual- 3 “ccee'« Building Show nti inty come Dates Revealed r action, Jaycees to Back Event ‘in Local Armory From April 21 to 24 Second Annual Greater Pontiac Home and Builders Show will be staged April 21-24 in the Pontiac Armory, according to the Pontiac Junior Chamber of Commerce, he turned | which sponsors the event. his resignation. A business | Fifty-one booths featuring every- change has necessitated his move | thing for home construction, equip- out of town, but he was reappoint. | ping and decorating will be on dis- ed te serve until the Aprij elec- play for the public to inspect. | Named as general co-chairmen Next, a rink at! Other Jaycees wiio will serve as Neil Was- If the band issue | publicity; ,Jim Wilkin- . the son, sales; Paul McMichael, pro- im- : George Heenan, planning ities at the | and jayout; Donald McCracken, at- tendance; Melvin Eller, decora- | | ad . s ; tions; John Benson, electrical and Wayne University president = Benson, advance ticket sales. Harold Jacobsen will have charge of the clean-up committee. the Baldwin Public Library. | made at Monday night's regular | Jaycee meeting. ‘Shtiggy Boom’ Jolts Listeners ‘Round the Clock ii . teen) held as political prisoners. =e twice before.) “We have nothing to lose but - = pas : ‘That's where I went over the our lives, the band's. leader called | pice. It was Jan. 31, 1945." Potter talks about his wound cheerfully, ith reticence. When he “went ever the fence” (Continued From Page One) lai railed at what they termed U.S. ‘ and asserted i i it at H ' a g27 i ek ti i | f ; ze i ff : | | I bigs j i i 7 f " ’ re ' i f [ | 4 pi i rie i HEY ? i : | i ; ii ¥ 5 hour mark today as two dise | hoped to pariay listener curiosity and “‘Shtiggy Boom" into a wining publicity combination. | rest of Mrs. Anderson by Detroit Stanley and Bill Elliott | police Feb. 1 when she was found launched their stunt at 6 a.m. yes-.| sitting in an auto containing rifles terday, the first day of radio taken from the hardware. station WNOE’s 2+-hour broadcast- | fe peed yi I was hit the | ing schedule. The station had been | . . . Bill Stewart, program director , \for the station, said the WNOE telephone switchboard has been | | swamped with calls since 6:15 ja.m. yesterday. Charlies Muhal at 1859 Oakland, | The calls increased as the day West Bloomfield Township, this wore on and the rhythm-blues morning caused an estimated $6.000 tune continued to blare, broken | damage, according to West Bloom- only by commercials and news. field Fire Chief Ben Moshier. casts, Early today, the supply of | Defective wiring to the automatic in West Bloomfield Fire which struck the home of _|the Four Nuggets’ recording and | control on the coal furnace was the disc jockeys’ voices, used al- believed to have caused the blaze | which started in the basement and | the plea of a lover for the aflec- | tions of his love. The pleas are son were at home at the time, but |interspersed with the phrase no one was injured. “‘shtiggy boom.” | Damage, mostly from smoke, approval of | was estimated at $3,000 on the con- tents of the house, and further damage of $3,000 to the building. The home, a ranch-type structure, called only a coincidence. U.S. Policy Bolsters World Efforts for Peace---Lodge PHILADELPHIA @® — Henry! fliers held prisoner by Red China Cabot Lodge Jr., U.S. ambassador | Will be returned. to the United Nations, says the) Among the major accomplish- ments by the administration, foreign policy of the Eisenhower | | gage said, have been the defeat administration is enabling the free of communism in Guatemala; the London and Paris agreements, “which will give back sovereignty to West Germany’; settlement of the Trieste dispute between Italy and Yugoslavia; the defense pact between Pakistan and | which to graft sweet oranges. atet H ! : | | | i} afk i i |! if i : 4 . N * 4 gia « Yager a ‘| ee? pol, td - Ps = F fi 2 # re. Sy ser THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 15, 1955 Soviet Teaching Little Reds How to Say Thanks MOSCOW u—There's a big drive on now to teach courtesy and politeness to Russian children. Schoolteachers are leading the campaign. Teachers Gazette, organ of the Ministry of Education, devoted a | six-column. article to it and there Youth League. a 4 have been articles on the same subject in Komsomol Pravda, the organ of the Soviet Communist ‘‘How can one explain,” demands Teacher Gazette, ‘‘the many cases of rudeness, brusqueness or im- politeness of youngsters — even girls as well as boys... . “We must teach children at school cultural habits, manners in school, in public places, in every CU MME MEAL day life, and especially respect for | their parents and other adults... . | “Sometimes our teachers pay much attention to this and they achieve good results. For instance, in one school, children aged 11 and 12 were unruly. So the teachers | started to teach them’ to say ‘Thank you’ and how to- treat grownups and parents.” The American Music Conference | estimates . that 19,300,000 Ameri- | cans play the piano. % ihn Wi DON’T LET THE FINANCING OF iby, y “Milgh A CAR “SNOW YOU UNDER”... Ask us for information about our economical bank auto loan plan geared to your earnings. so camome we ow ee Member Of Federal Deposit insurance Corp. A } | | | | 195.5 Ninety Fight Deluxe Melidey Coupd A Genero! Motors Valve. OLDSMOBILE EVEN FARTHER OUT FRONT... + A ‘FOR THE BEST USED CAR DEAL... LOOK FOR OLDSMOBILE’S SAFETY- FOR 'SS ROCKETS SEVENTEEN — Princess | Bea- trix, who closely resembles her mother, Queen Juliana of The Netherlands, sits for 17th birthday portrait by court photographer. Nine in Crew Brothers VANCOUVER, B. C. (PB) — Crewmen of the S. S. Oronsay think they have the No. 1 brother act of the British merchant marine. When the ship put in to this West Coast port, the crew list included nine sets of brothers. In a healthy bird, each feather which falls from the body is re- placed by a new one. Gaukler Storage 9 Orcherd Leke Ave. FE 2-4021 no. | specialist in packing! Pd Tourists at White House WASHINGTON (INS)—Well, I | dropped by 1600 Pennsylvania Ave- nue to see how the Eisenhowers are making out in that remodeled |White House they live in and— ,from what I could see—they're | pretty well fixed. Of course, owning to my timid | nature in the presence of armed guards, I didn't see much. It seems that six reoms out of a@ total of 132 is par fer the White House public course. And | me peeking at anything you're not poked into either, buddy, or | you ge PDQ to the FBI. This being the case, a White | House tourist misses many of the presidential manse's delights, in- cluding the bed that F._D.R. slept in, the piano that Harry played, a total of 271 bedrooms, 17 baths, 15 washrooms and any number of pariors and studies. * s . Disappointed as I was at not | being able to see the President or any of his four built-in elevators, I understood completely. After ail, put yourself in Mamie's shoes. She is responsible, with the help of 60-odd household helpers, for keep- ing the place clean. And if you had 5,500 visitors a day, would you turn them loose to poke their 35,000 fingers into everything? Your satin brocade walls would be simply a mess in no time. I was privileged to take what | the White House refers to, cezily, | as the “personal tour.” This is the intimate, Class A tour (ne | degs er known Communists al- | lowed) limited te a mere 35 | egters. | We gathered, after being thought- fully perused for sinister smirks or suspicious bulges at the pocket. | at the friendly family entrance to |the sprawling green lawn. I say | friendly because here the tal! black | gates are equipped with only three guards, and they are all handsome . . s One of these herded us politely up the walk and into a pine-paneled ground-floor parior called the China Room. Around its walls, in glass cases, were porcelain dinner services labeled with the name of the President whose administra- tion ate off them. I was forced to shudder with distaste at Rutherford 'B. Hayes’ choice in scenic service ; Expect PLENTY—of everything—from this newest Oldsmobile! You won't be disappointed! Oldsmobile brings you advanced styling—a “flying color” flair that says “Go ahead!” Then see how Oldsmobile goes beyond expectations with new “go-ahead” power! It's the smooth, responsive action of that new “Rocket” 202 Engine! Finally, you'll find that Oldsmobile value really stands IN STYLE! IN POWER! IN VALUE! up. Come in and see why you're way ahead to stay . . . with Oldsmobile! OLDSMOBILE SEE YOUR NEAREST OLOSMOBILE DEALER JEROME MOTOR SALES CO. 280 S. Saginaw’ St., Pontiac, Mich. ‘ e t ¥ ‘4 Phone FE 4-3566 ‘ >. TESTED _, Actually Don't See Much | By PHYLLIS BATTELLE plates, but was compensated by the sight of Lincoln's mammoth eagie-crested coffee muggs. Good ‘ol’ Honest Abe—liked coffee and refused to imbibe im the deceit of a demitasse. “The china currently being used in the White House,’’ said the guard guide, “is this Lenox pattern purchased during the ad- | ministration of Mr. Trumaa.” | Thirty-five pairs of eyes focused | en Truman's cream, white and | beige choice and, like a crowd of | bridesmaids looking over the | wedding gifts, we ooh-ed. The guard, smiling smugly, led us onward The next room. a round but small one, was called the Diplo- matic Reception Room or the Fire- side Chat Room. depending on winch party you belong to. It has an air of intimacy, especially with 35 persons in it, but the shape im- pressed most. Ten minutes later, I became unimpressed, however, because it seems a good many White House rooms are oval. Makes for easier handling of the silk-covered walls, which are also quite common in a chic, costly way. We were next led into a hallway, which might be called the ‘‘smok- ing hallway ' The guide explained, rather stulfily, I thought, that guests are not permitted to smoke above the first floor im the White House ‘“‘so if they must have a cigarette,’ he sniffed, “they are ushered down here.” On the second fleor, the first reom was the East Ballroom, a | gilt and satin salon unfurnished except fer a few prim geld chairs and a great grand piane the size of five of mine. This is the “Wedding and Lying-in-State Reom,” —Alice Roosevelt, the daughter et Theodore, was married, and Franklin Delane Roosevelt laid im state.” | Through four more oval rooms | we trudged, marveling at the par- |quetry floors which are waxed daily by electric floor polishers, and the great crystal chandeliers that flash more colors than the best rainbows, and the furniture which is either magnificently over stuffed or exquisitely simple and burnished At the end of 20 minutes, we had had it. We'd missed the White House dental office, its doctor's lab, its barber shop and its TV dens, but we had seen a typical | jexample of the decor, said the | guide Certainly I had seen enough to know that the Eisenhowers, who | grubbed along in a two-room apart- ment on a_ second lieutenant's pay of $151.67 a month when they were first married, are very com- | fortably situated today. (Tomorrow: Miss Battelle learns — from the champien— how te give a Washington “cock. tall," the capital's word fer a whingding.) ‘New Zealand Opposes Red Bid for Formosa WELLINGTON, New Zealand —Lining up in opposition to a Chi nese Communist demand for im mediate possession of Formosa New Zealand said today that the strategic island and the neighbor ing Pescadores cannot be consid ered an integral part of the Chi nese mainland. The government stand was out lined in a statement by Foreign Minister Thomas MacDonald. It termed also unacceptable a Soviet proposal for a 10-nation interna. tional conference, excluding Chi- ang Kai-shek's Nationalist Chinese regime, to settle the Formosa crisis. MEDICAL TABLET DISCOVERY rasvwas STOPS BED WETTING! ie epecial diets, Medical! recon elarms or 16% effective. Don't wait envtber év SIMMS BROS.—98 N. Saginew SINUS those ferribie head aches caused by sinus now reieved by tablets taken internally Sinus sufferers go all out in | their praise of the wondrous relief from these tablets. Get a bottle today! + TRUMACG TABLETS SIM AS. 0 N. Saginaw \-Main Floor j - ' where—“among others | ; 4 |, Saver, the wonderful the floor. Never clogs! § : In 10 minutes one half pint wax covers a 15'x15' floor. 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Have you t dollar after dollar for pillo end tablets and in spite of everything you're still too fat? COUNTERACTS HUNGER Recently science discovered and compounded a new tiny all the ted proven aids to reducing found in all the today, proteins that build but burn off excess fat, erals often lost when-cutting off lettening f no calories yet give the feeting of a full actually equal and exceed many a meal, Fat Goes Fast From -All Over The Body fee fan Lee go | be surprised at the lose the inort : oe i ee ee pf THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 15, 1955‘ | - Bob Conaiine Baye Aviation’s Courtesy Code Is Brotherhood in Action NEW YORK (INS) — Brother- hood Week (Feb. 20-27) will find many fine treatises on the value by Howard G. spending Christmas in Korea. Some idealist noted that Thailanders, Burmese, Hindus, Pakistanians, Iraqui, Lebanese, Italians, Greeks, Turks, Japanese, et al, had joined z : é i 3 f i Lekit iH tH] at aie rE? is ef at el . .” or “I demand priority pattern’ then the great planes of the great flags give way at once and the objective of all concerned concentrates on bringing the little other noteworthy house — there were murmurs from the other networks suggesting that one of them handle the whole busi- ness. Man named Herbert C. Rice, 20 years with MBS and for some time its vice president in charge of programs, said nix He lined up the likes of Eddie Fisher, Roberta Peters, Danny Thomas, the Chordettes and, best of all, the Glee Club of Virginia Military Academy. From the looks of him, the President hasn't had a better evening since he hit Wash- ington. The most sought-for show on Broadway today is “Plain and | Fancy,” Richard Kollmar's musi- cal about the prim Amish of Penn- When You Think of Music, Think of Gallagher's! YOU SAVE MORE BY SHOPPING IN PONTIAC BEFORE YOU BUY ANY PIANO ‘or Gelbrensen SPINET PIANO $20 Deposit, $10 Monthly Cariage and Six Monthy Rental _ Allowed om Purchase of Plane need of better understanding | | bly be a record price. . | World, McGraw-Hill Publication, sylvania. It moves from the Mark Hellinger to the Winter Garden in two weeks and in time will move to Hollywood for what must inevita- Most fascinating news story of | the week, printed in its entirety from an exclusive mimeograph from McGraw-Hill Publishing Co.: “A chimney sweep in Stockholm, Sweden, has invented a_ radio transmitter and receiver for de- tecting flaws in flues, Electrical | reports.” Nothing is sacred anymore. Recent sample measurements in- dicated that %year-old American | ClOCautioned "2a tion after|the newspaper Estrella Panama | : | on Infiltration « Counsel Alerts Unions Against Red Efforts to Seek Shelter | WASHINGTON w—Cl0 labor unions: were alerted today against | possible Communist efforts law aimed at Red-infiltrated labor | CIO General Counsel Arthur J. | Goldberg wrote all affiliated | unions, cautioning them to be care- ful to distinguish between ‘‘genuine rank-and-file rebeHions” against Communist leadership and *‘cam- ouflaged attempts'’ of Red labor leaders ‘‘to seek shelter within the boys average 3.8 inches taller and | covering cloak of CIO affiliation.”’ 18.7 pounds heavier than $-year- | did boys were in 1881. A new law passed last summer Board may officially label a union reaches this Penguins in Panama PANAMA (A correspondent of | in motion by- the | reported today that a colony of | a hearing set | attorney general. A labor union so| penguins was |Jabeled would lose its legaj stand-| swimming close to shore off the | National Labor | banana port of Armuelies. The re- | ing before the Relations Board. sighted Monday, | | port said children captured one of | The CIO several years ago the antarctic birds and that it) ousted a number of unions, includ- | didn't seem bothered by the tropi- | ing the United Electrical Workers | ©! climate. and the Mine, Mill and Smelter) domination. © (Advertisement) 4 Workers, on grounds of Communist Goldberg noted that the Comme | Why Suffer union affiliated with the AFL, CIO or any other established anti-Com- munist federation or organization, | is not Communist-infiltrated.”’ Aga Khan Improving CAIRO, Egypt » — The Aga Khan, 77, leader of the Moslem Ismaili sect, was reported last night improving from a_ respira- tory infection but still confined to provides machinery whereby the bed. to nist Control Act of 1954 “‘in effect | sneak into the CIO to duck a new | establishes @ presumption thet a| Bleeding Piles | Even are amazed at this Medicine Threw B+ -4 -4- &-- i+ | emt, harmibess after meals | You too can get these amazing results. 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You can get a proved Ford V-8 ... and start enjoying its brilliant new performance, and new-car dependability right now! he shock from the front as well as straight up. This pro- vides delicate responsiveness to cushion tiny bumps as well as husky “muscle” to flatten the big bumps. Take your pick from 16 brilliant new Ford Models This year, you get Thunderbird-inspired styling in any Ford model you choose. You'll find there’s a variety of exciting new single and two-tone body colors with charmingly color-keyed Luxury Lounge Interiors. : Come ‘n fora Trigget-Torque Test Drive! oe ' Ba { : EST., WEDNESDAY. din +. : ¥ " } F i THE PONTIAC PRESS. TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 15, 1955 ‘ .-. who will represent YOUR interests when- ever — and if ever —there is a difference of opinion between you and the insurance com- pany. When you buy insurance direct from an in- surance company or from an employee of a company, you have no one to represent YOUR interests. When you buy from these agencies, its their job to represent you. This factor alone may mean much to you financially. Prank Anéerses Crawford -Da we- w agency Greve 7 Ageecy Anglomter Siren, Moyneré Jehaccs Renicis Agency ae : Thateber-Pattersea- destin -Nervell Wernet Ageney Ww. A. Pelleck W. Densidsea Wilkinson Inserance Baker & Hansen = Ageacy Bremmeit- Gitdride-Mallaba a. L. Van Wegener Lincicome, Ine. Agency Agency, Ine Pontiae Association of Insurance Agents When You Buy Insurance ... BUY FROM AN AGENT... Troop honor | Court Life ASTHMA and HAY FEVER ING NEW TREATMENT— FREE TRIAL sensational, WIT HELO COL 88 BAY GAVOEE SCY EPFTONS OF US TROUBLE, 1 Scouts Given Eagle Rank Fred Roeser and Jerry Richards Receive Award | ‘reign policy job since the Demo-| at Court of Honor | Two members of Boy Scout) said in an interview he does not Fred Roeser, 16, son of Dr. and Mrs. W. O. Roeser of 22 Neome i oe 2 ROESER the ranks from tenderfoot and late come Eagle | Scouts. . James Ry an, | 14 other members | Of the troop ad-¢ | vanced | They include: | McGrath, Eric Anderson and Cari | Holstein. | Star Scout—John Markley, Ron-| ‘ ike) | ald Witton, | NEW YORK ®—Angelo (Mike) | | ald Newman. First Class—Richard . and | | Second Class—Dougias Roeser, | by police. | Robert Greenhalgh, Robert Os. | In addition, seven boys became | 00d stains on my clothes, I'd) _tenderfoot scouts, and 40 merit |>urn them, not take them to the | badges were ; | Ward was presented his pin as| After Morelli's arrest last week, | new socutmaster of Troop 7. | Rev. Fred R. Tiffany, pastor of |he fact that he had taken his Bethany Baptist Church, and Ryan | clothes to the cleaners early Mon- were cochairmen for the program, | | which included a dinner at 6:30 | preceding the court of honor. Van R. Braidwood, Pontiac dis- trict scout executive, presented the Eagle awards. Red China Planning fo Draft 18-Year-Olds |»: some vicos was detected on hia Ike Doing Better on Foreign Policy | Now, Dems Say | WASHINGTON @ — Sen. Mans- | field (D-Mont) said today Presi- dent Eisenhower has done a better | regained control of Congress. Mansfield, a member of the Sen-| ate Foreign Relations Committee, crats 7, Bethany Baptist Church, | believe the Democrats. should | were advanced to Eagle rank—_ , I highest in scouting-et a court of | NAN? Sty attempt te spell cut a | partisan. foreign policy. But he said. he agreed with Democratic National Chairman Paul M. Butler that it might be wise to issue a Dr., and Jerry | statemen i s t of party principles on Richards, 16, son Someatic iasues. of Mrs. Harry J. . . ry Richards of 35, ‘I've always believed that we, Mohawk Rd.,| Should have an American foreign | both Pontiac High School stu- dents, joined Troop 7 in Sep- tember 1949. | predecessors and he is depending | Since that time, | 0n Democrats in Congress to help | they have ad-|carry it out. | vanced through J St last night. | we have that now because Presi- | | dent Eisenhower has adopted the | | for their Eagle jhave taken over control of Con- | | pins. To date, 27 | gress. He has more confidence in| | other members of | his own leadership and he is pay- | | troop committee |ing less attention to isolationist | | elements of his party." Sen. Humphrey (D-Minn) said in a separate interview he too feels | that *‘Democratic control ef Con- ae | gress has given President Eisen- | hower solid support on his foreign | policies.” ce one Sex-Killing Suspect ica Scoffs at Evidence od of honor. listed at the RICHARDS and Ron-| Morelli, free in $10,000 bail as a materia] witness in the Ann Yar- | | row murder, belittles the import- | | ance of stains found on his clothes | 'newsmen yesterday, ‘but if I had | awarded. Harold | “leaners.” | police said they were interested in |day morning, the day following the Feb. 6 sex slaying of the New| | York University graduate student. 7 . Police said they found some | |residua] stains on the garments ; and had laboratory tests made. | They have declined to say what “I'm not a genius,"’ Morelli told | Spark Blamed in Three Deaths Sets Off Explosions and Boys Club Plans to Send Rocket ‘One Mile in Air BALTIMORE w— Vale Rocket | chute. The projectile also carries nectar epenuaon of aout |® Feo tte 10 boys — most of them high school | Fire at California Gas juniors — hopes to send a home- Storage Plant EL CENTRO, Calif. —A spark from an automobile motor was | blaméd today for the explosions and fire that killed three persons, critically burned another and de- stroyed the Signal Oil Co. gasoline Storage plant yesterday. Fire Chief Jersey Birchfiéld said the motor spark probably ignited a storage tank 50 feet high, that flames set off the blasts in two policy,”” Mansfield said. “I think) others. Altogether, about 45,000 | gallons of gasoline were ignited. Flames shot 200 feet in the air foreign policy of his Democratic | and dense, black smoke hung over | El Centro for hours. ‘ . 7 Killed in the fire were Rosario | Nava, 28, ahd Floyd Williams, 63, | “Eisenhower has been doing a | Thomas Barnets, office manager, | | last year completed qualifications | better job since the Democrats | died later of burns. William H. De | Witt, 52, plant manager, was taken | to Pioneer Memorial Hospital in critical condition. Birchfield said he was told that | Williams’ truck hit and broke a gas line. Williams apparently de- cided to back over the bowed pipe in an attempt to close it. Birchfield said the first explosion followed the starting of Williams’ motor. | made rocket a mile into the when it is launched Feb. after traveling some 400 ‘feet. This time they're readying | FUNERAL HOME 110 WESSEN ST. PHONE FE 3-7374 Ambulance ore | at Any Hour @ Accurete! |the tests showed. Unofficially, it) | wag reported that there were no | |traces of blood on Morelli's suit ee ee new treatment, overcoat. However, this was re- | poet ~~ checkhanes, twp of head, back of bead, dows neck and shoulders | TOKYO @—Red China's Peiping | Portedly too obliterated to tell) dein end Soalenee mese and threat, temporary loss of smell and taste, temporary | radio tonight broadcast details of Whether it was animal or human hard Reacting, cue Sink qosighs or oxo well ot fines, when are blood and the tests were considered couse tr congestion. No matter how much have suff er + | @ proposed new conscription law to | : here goed, YOU OWE IT TO YOURSELF TO WRITE draft 18-year-olds for at Jeast three | useless to murder investigators. EATMENT, FOR A 7 DAY FREE TRIA 7 - Morelli talked with reporters at © tex de A By A oy fey ) ; lee offi oF his lawyer The 77. vers. AMERICAN LABORATORIES. Lod, Califorma A Chinese - broadcast | clething | enlonn | heard in Tokyo said the bill pro-| Ye@rcold clothing cman wes | DR. H. A. MILLER Optometrist 7 North Saginaw Street Phone FE 4-6842 “Better Things in Sight” Open Friday Evenings "Closed Wednesday Afternoons ame a a ¥ rere es _ en a j “all male citizens of China | Close-shaven and neatly dressed, in| 2 and educational background dif- ferences"’ because ‘‘to defend our ‘Carr chens which fatherland is a divine duty of all | citizens of China." Are Expected in Manila MANILA @®—The US. carriers! pose - Midway and Wasp, escorted by/~ Police identified the victims as eight destroyers—part of the U-S. 7th Fleet which covered the Ta-| Christian, 60, and his daughter | expected here tomorrow, a Navy! on the second floor of the house. spokesman said today. Several units of the 7th Fleet| six small children, escaped from sible Communist attack use Ma- nila as an operational base. ‘Hits Virginia Home RICHMOND, Ve.. oe per pe ie Ra FES iers, Destroyers | John Christian, 67, his sister Nell | evacuation last week—are | Eleanor Christian, 36. 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B. & Retent Ottice THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 15, 1955. 4 é - 3 * ba: x ee. a <> % te 2 " Li { f Fs cs ¢ "THE PONTIAC PRESS Daily Except Sunday from Tw Powrmc Press Bulldige & Preseeas, Publisher Entered at Post Offices, Ponting, Mich as second class matter ea MEMBER OF AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATIONS ——E—————————————————_—_—_——_————=———=—=== TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 15, 1955 MSC Begins 2nd Century of Educational Progress An historic Centennial Convocation has launched Michigan State College's year long celebration of its century of service to the people of Michigan. It was on February 12, 1855, that Gov- ernor Kinastey 8. Buvoam signed the act creating the Nation’s first and now largest and greatest of its land grant colleges. * x * That struggling young institu- tion was born of the revolutionary idea that sens of dirt farmers not only could but should go to col- lege. A correlated idea was that agriculture is a science which should be taught like engineering and medicine. Classes began in the Spring of 1857 with an enrollment of 63 farm youths. The early years of Michigan Agricul- tural College, as it was then known, were marked by financial struggles. Farmer-Legislators were reluctant to vote funds for “book learning.” * * * In 1862, however, ApRAHAM LINCOLN signed the Morrill Act creating the nationwide system of land grant col- leges orr the pattern of the Michigan experiment. By that time the institu- — tion at East Lansing was well estab- lished and functioning successfully. Today the school, once known to many as a “cow college,” is a university in fact if not in name. Its enrollment exceeds 15,500 and a total of $50,000,000 has been spent on its magnificent physical plant. * * * All told, 126 courses, 70 of them lead- ing to degrees, are offered in its nine basic schools. These are agriculture, education, home economics, engineer- ing, veterinary medicine, graduate studies, science and arts, business and public service. All Michigan is proud of the school now headed by Dr. Joun A. Hannan and expects that its second hundred years will be even more successful than its first. Old Mistake Again Urged Three bills urging return to rigid 90 per cent of parity price support prove that the die-hards of the farm bloc haven't given up their fight. The 49 to 44 Senate vote of last year crowned with victory the E1isennower Administration's all important battle for flexible farm supports. But it hasn’t silenced those farm bloc legislators who look upon rigid parity as a vested interest. * * * Only the other day South Carolina's Senator Jounston delivered a speech urging return to rigid price support for the next three years. At the same time he introduced a bill to achieve that pur- pose. A companion bill was introduced in the House by Rep. Cootey of North Carolina, chairman of the House Com- mittee on Agriculture. Another similar measure is being co-sponsored by Sena- tors Youne of North Dakota and Rus- SELL Of Georgia. * * * All of these bills ignore the sound economic principles which constitute such strong arguments for flexible price ' supports. They also ignore the present tax eating seven billion dollar total of farm crop surpluses. Certainly, those surpluses are a Benson’s Surplus Cure _ Secretary of Agriculture Benson in his Farmers’ Week address at Michigan ‘State College had some encouraging words for the people who grow the Na- tion's food. * * * In fact, he outlined what sounds like a practical means of avoiding the ills born of ever growing crop surpluses. While not minimizing the effect of the cost-price squeeze on farmers, Mr. BENn- son said most of the postwar adjustment . has now been completed. Evidence of that is the fact that the price parity index averaged 89 per cent in 1954. This is only five points below the level of January 1953. * * * After citing the need for more re- search and education on the develop- ment of new products and new processes to expand farm markets, Mr. Benson continued: “We must face up to the ever present needs of balancing total farm production with the kinds and amounts of products consum- ers want and will take at equitable prices. “This means we must provide forward looking information to help farmers gear their individual production plans to the realities of consumer demand.” In other words Mr. Benson advises farmers to let demand govern their pro- duction. The Man About Town Meets in Detroit And This Area Will Have Large Part in the Event Leve: What's easy te fall inte— but hard te fall out. © ee The Pontiac area will have a close neigh- bor connection when the ‘National Council of the Boy Scouts meets in Detroit on May 13 and 14. This is the biggest get together of the year for the grown ups in scouting, and this is the first time with Michigan as its host. During the last four years it was held in Chicago, New York, Los Angeles and Washington. Execu- tive Director of Clinton Valley Council, Edward H. Leland, already is laying plans for the intimate part this council, comprising most of Oakland - and Macomb Counties, with headquarters in Pontiac, will play in the meeting which takes over the Sher- aton-Cadillac Hotel for the two days. The writer of these lines, a member of the National Council, has attended all four of these most recent annual meet- ings, and knows something about the man-building projects that get their in- Z LELAND ception there, to be spread out on a world- wide basis, Interest in scouting, already hav- ing a membership of over three million boys, reaches a new high in Michigan in May, and the local area has a next-door connection with the doings. Long a close student of bird life in the Pontiac area, Dale Zimmerman kept a close count on the bird corpses he found on our roads, killed by being struck with cars. In driving 4,000 miles he found 1,008 dead birds, including 517 robins, 43 sparrows, 36 blackbirds, 34 pheasants, 33 finches, only 5 starlings, and no crows— you've noticed that they're too wise to take any chances with an auto. The biggest deer herd reported in this area this winter numbers eight. Many northern Oakiand and adjoining Lapeer County residents have seen them, including Arnold Nigque who watches them grazing in a field behind his home when the ground is free from snow. Others have seen them feeding on tree branches, or pawing away the snow to get at the grass. North Branch is to celebrate its centennial June 16-18, and word comes to this column from Garland Davis, one of its top ptomoters, that preparations for the big event already are under way, in- cluding the growing of full beards by many residents. One of my office scouts has received a note from George P. Waller, who is spending the winter in Lake Worth, Fia. George enclosed a clipping from a Florida newspaper calling attention to the fact that March 15, formerly income tax day, is being replaced this year by the publication on that date of the memoirs of fortger presi- dent Harry Treman. EEE Verbal Orchids to«<- Mr, and Mrs. Fred H. Travia -of $40 West Huron St.; fifty-fifth wedding W. M. Potts or 355 Nelson St.; eightieth birthday!) —~ \ . \\ ap And Her Own Flesh and Blood, Too! a David Lawrence Says: Ike Reducing Disaffection Within. Republican Party Last autunm, for example, Hi ea President. If he: does get deeper into the controversy and really has to go to the electorate and tell what's af stake, he can capitalize politically on his stand. For the American | aT We Hit Ht man told a radio audience that the foreign policy objectives of the administration seem to be all right but that the techniques of operation are not what they should be. It's all very reminiscent of the "3s when the Democrats were in (Copyright 1955) ~. Voice of the People _ | Full Cost of Employe’s-Pension Not Paid by City, Says ‘Guz,’ a Local Fire Fighter Federal Governments pay the full same do in Pontiac = : cost of their employes’ pensions. the folks out there haven't felt any tae secectn ege Hope ean ; ~ Here’s an item that every tax- a While only Pontiac residents can payer can jook upon with favor. If I'm writing in regard to the Vote on fluoridation, a large num- the Grand Trunk freight trains hap- Welder's” letter of February 9. ber of people from outlying dis- pened to block a strategic cross- I am a factory worker and a tax- tricts who work and shop in Pon- ing « fire on the West side could pare easy see oe repeal deel mbps get a tremendous start. I regard . too, say the City employes ¢ whole program origi- this ‘s Number are out of line when they ask us nated outside of Pontiac and peo- halla asad taxpayers to vote their retirement Ple have come in from outside to Ohiocan age at 55 when our own is 65. promote it. A Taxpayer There ts a jot of talk about ; _- democracy in action but I never Baering Down a asks me iM witnessed such « high-handed By ARTHUR “BUGS” BAER I S People whether campaign as this ftuoridation (International News Service) want “65-year-old firemen climb- usiness. Personal freedom is The only guy who heard the ing high ladders or 65-year-old Po imyotved here and mass-medica- cease-fire was our janitor licemen trying to outrun a fleeing tion for a whele city is out- com : rageous. It's mid-winter and you could use the main steampipe for a mail chute. Without steaming off ee f . me . Pacific for a moat. The result is Says Fluorine Remains — dor... What is the final limit as in Water After Boiling I r if the people of To make you satisfied? It was equal to TNT Mulligan who promoting tion Or do you don a humble hat... of 39,000,000 foot-tons per mush- Se an ade the wae? peolagrren I And walk your way alone... And roomed vacuum. The motto on : tell yourself that after all... T : in such a minute quantity, still re- cadlt taleags Me oun? ... That oat a eee, Une mains because of the lack of COM Gught to be the answer as... Your _ trol in evaporation after this water |W tie heart ‘endures . . . Because Vv i tap. hd the choice is theirs, and so . . . The et ie ee ee Lnews how fost water belle SWGy blame is never yours . . . Let ethers finally have put doom in n but the mineral content remaing “V? &© you would live... Ard sue form The latest bomb is not in the food and water in a higher ae ee should “jettered. We have run out of the Proportion than at the source Of kind as you are near ee een How can the of poi- nts eee —— son (or fluoride) be controlled after e Tt has a built-in indignation of this water leaves the tap? Are we Lookina Back 60,000,000 dockside tons of TNT SLs ee | eeekn ase in hot coffee or tea, also chemi- —a oe cinders. combinations which may occur? = = BRITISH CLAIM they sank four Pete says we can also control it — se at me any U-doats in six days. like Dazzy Vance’s change of fee aavomactie soli ¢ Stine 20 Years Age pace. The world is divided by three believe more safe and effective HITLER AGREES to discuss An- reat curtains. The iron, the bam- ways can be used beth as health glo-French aero pact. boo and the shower. measures and for prevention of | SENATOR VANDENBERG hits —— Case Records of a Psychologist Too Many Couples in America Marry on Basis of Infatuation Instead of Love Constance wants to know if it is possible to build up true love out of an original infatua- tion which is based solely on serual appeal. Study this case record carefully and be sure you read about Amnon’s fa- mous infatuation that turned sour. By DR. GEORGE W, CRANE Case N-350: Constance D., aged 19, is the girl mentioned yesterday who wanted to know how to tell é ; HE ql a ( = 5 all ¢ f love wherewith he had loved her; nd Amnon said unto her, ‘Arise, © pay the bill. . fn True love is unselfish and willing parry cgaalameali gone. if : “And she said unto him, “There > ; e : JI is no cause; this evil in sending me he — a = a. eee To escape from evil, we must vay is ¢ enclosing a long Je stamped. be made as far as possible like away is greater than the other that ® dime to : thou didst unto me.’ cover t and costa when OG; and this resemblance con- , pn ons of his psychological gists in becoming just and holy . (Copyright 1955) and wise. —Piato. century anatomist and surgeon second tablet, and if ne re- was subject to angina pectoris. third one in another five He used to say his life was in the minutes. bande of any Sacto she Or dene r te the dove brother William, equally 1 ‘5. Or throw away the old tablets years older. He was not subject apyery to angina. Both lived 65 years. anything like angina Persons subject to anginal dis- pectoris or coronary occlusion I'd tress sometimes endure the pain ‘2*¢ ™tregiycerin at lean four or distress rather than take a times every day, in sufficient dose tablet of nitroglycerine which they ° De sure it really kept the arte have ‘in pocket or purse. They la- eta Gene ee ae bor under the misapprehension ‘lated, relaxed, open, for free that nitroglycerine (or other vaso Crcwlation and adequate supply of pfeil ignee oy mune, wale Seden Lorain ie ana ban composes the induce formation of @ habit. heart. aa gd theoreti There is no such risk involved. P@ begin with tablets contain- is typified by unselfishness. There is on record no report of ing 1.200th of a grain of nitre- Get well acquainted with your “"” %% ill consequence. glycerin, I'd try such a tablet on sweetheart long before the wed- _Nitrogiycerine (giyceryt trint- Be 408 and If It falled to make ding day, and by all means visit ‘Ste, glencin) or sodium nitrite ply fern Blane ag. his or her parents, or other vasedilater (dilator or ateaukeen See how ‘many routual interests Féiater of bleed vesnels), pre- lobe tue or three tablets, I there you possess. And by all.means, ‘**tibed for anginal distress te pag tin. 5: eer so be sure you are active in the same _ Prectically harmiess, penal = mag = che | os type of ‘ Yes, indeed, a person who has cm ox an B sagen™ 5 Marriage fs more than a civil. "t been warned about the rapid ope tn Be ee Sacciaetl pani te Retay manoeiea,. omuet mali one he Now if any physician of stand- . the Anti-Reds Seize Commie Center Romanian Legation in Bern Held by Group of Armed Refugees } BERN, Switzerland w@—A small | group of armed anti-Communist refugees invaded the Romanian |e- gation before dawn today and | drove out the Red staff at gun | point. As their price to quit the) building, they demanded the re lease of five political prisoners | held in Romania. Within a few hours the Commu- nist Bucharest government formal- ly demanded the arrest of the in- vaders and their, extradition. The seven-member Swiss Cabi- net went into session at the unprecedented hour of 7:30 a.m. with Bern Police Chief Ed. uard Freimueller, Police surround- ed the legation and cordoned off the area but as the morning wore on made no attempt to attack the building. Neighbors said they had heard a fusillade of shots and women’s screams at the time of the attack, about 3 a.m., but only one casual- | pita] with undisclosed injuries. s ° * A Swiss government communi- que said Charge d'Affaires Em- eric Stoffel, his other aides and their families living in the lega- tion were ‘‘safe and sound.” They build- » TODAY'S ASSIGNMENT FOR: JUNIOR EDITORS wee “t, THE LIFE OF GEORGE WASHINGTON His Youth—2 Washington's father died when George was 11 years old. A few | years later the Bay went to live with his brother Lawrence at Mount | Vernon, a farm home on the Potomac River 15 miles from where the | ©*#mination of Olson he found no | city of Washington now stands. George had little formal schooling, but he learned to read and | Sbility to distinguish wrong from write, to do arthimetic, and to have the manners expected of a | Virginia gentleman. He was good with figures, and learned to survey and make maps. In a country only partly settled, surveyors were much needed. A rich neighbor hired him to survey a lot of land. So, for three years, George | traveled through the forests, cooking over a campfire, following Indian trails, sleeping under the stars. When he was 20, his brother Lawrence died and George became a farmer, tobacco grower and owner of Mount Vernon. This picture shows Washington using a surveying instrument. Color it and add it to your picture story of his life. THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 15. 1955 ‘rogatory statements about the | | United States, making pro-Commw- | nist recordings and informing on | fellow POWs while a prisoner in| Korea. GI s Psy chotic ‘Can Measure His Love | Career Army Sergeant _ MADISON, Wis. @ — Barbara, Being Tried on Charge | cod trovs Rockville Center er NY. of Aiding Reds | FT. BRAGG, N.C. w — Army | Sel, > "oO *§ Sous — to start a Space | bls Ch in Walled Lake Cemetery. She died $ —_-~ | . en epennain n ‘gee Surviving besides ‘her parent Pe WEDNESDAY. IS - MOTHERS! bd Hubert Partridge, 23, are grandparents Mr. iV: Ce te eg cet Taey | George Smail of Eaton Rapids, | iE DOUBLE | The SPACE KIT has been pre- a Cink Je tee ee = ee ; ' pared by experts to help your B. Hartrick entered an innocent|ter'Patricia, both at home. RED STAMP DAY children learn while they NDORSED Schenk Can tun ake Mrs. Walter Foster r) : ‘ WALGREEN - - $10,000 bond pending trial. MPs ‘ lg INCH—Service io” SAM S DRUGS by OCT PALLIATIVE BeLeEE wiTe of 6793 Jefferson Rd. | I ; 5 TRUMAC TABLETS County Calendar at 2:30 pum. Wednesday a hk | 329) Auborn Reed, Aubura Height y your Scientists The Eaterie Coated tables ethodist ar Waterford Township burial in Maple . , and See ee TS |S cet om oe =. ; Educat > ye , at noon j° j 5 : P uca ors Guaranteed ne Alfalfa or any harmful ingredients. ; A The ope Sees Garch wl meet oe joo es AU 4 ~~ a STOP, 3 prtlathine ee J. L. VAN WAGONER AGENCY, ine. 18 E. Lowrence St. RE 49571 ss ) THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 15, 1955 ae , ry) WRIGLEY’S un" poi rs oe 708 Contery Fos ranma WIN A MINK Contest 12 MINK COATS-72 MINK STOLES-320 MINK SCARVES lec Your Mailed Coupons at WRIGLEY’S | RINSO BLUE ge DETERGENT 2 48°+ = 48° bi Withewt Coupon Ife sad bbe LUX 5] LUXE | GET ENTRY BLANKS HERE! * Broedeest Brend — With Boone CHILI CON CARNE ‘= 27 CORNED BEEFHASH ‘= 2Q* | Breedeest Brend 2 LIQUID FLAKES VIENNA SAUSAGE <= 18° & reson | “Sage : Sauce Artur® ST + SS neon 8 "The Sauce of Many Uses’’ Without Coupon 37¢ ond 65e | Without Cyn. -Lg. 294, Gleat S8c y 0 Cc LIFEBUOY soar S J mm tm 228 es fae x Wetewt Cuyss 3G 200 Witheut Coupon 2 fer 276 You'll Love the Delicious Flavor of This Meatless Sauce on MUELLER’S Elbow or Regular BEAN SPROUTS = 27: , CHOW MEIN NOODLES 2,2 16° + SP rel chee vie. 14c DULCITO Mild or Broedeest Brend 3% ee SLICED DRIED BEEF x 3 : Breedcest Brand — % PICKLED PIGS FEET = 25° 8 oz. can eS | Dorsh Goulash 39: cabbage or Peppers ch 3Qe ~~ Stender .». Lender...and S000 Deliciou ‘That's why these daiacy confections of real orange marmalade in smooch chocolate are se popular everywhere — — anytime. ‘ Brance ticks 6 69: 4 BRACH’S Ville — Mik or Derk Choc. Covered Cherries ‘t= iol SEECH-NUT — All Verictics Strained Baby Food 4.4 39* SEECH-NUT — All Verictics Chopped Baby Food 93 mf 3° TORRIDO Very Hot ")°* PEPPERS «.. 25 Delicious Top for Salads SHEDD’S EZY —- French Dressing 2\ic SALAD DRESSING & 39° SALADA Ye. ORANGE PEKOE TEA ~ DD a yee fe “24: . sy 65° S Pea or Vegetable Soup 4 = 49° For Cooking or Seleds SEAZO OIL ome IS Always Fresh’’ S .) FUNSTEN’S Vacuum Packed . wy. . * \ ; = 3 i \ 5 » Be M4 4 .: ~ 5 A as ’ B : |: y J Pe ; Wet Sabet : ; (4% he)’ €3 . © 1 -« ; ‘s 3 ote |: ' ‘a - = - : 1Y% oz. C 3 oz. / | . oe -“ Black Walnut I: ER 3 Size Size . s 3 ~ ‘| Pa % 3 5 _ & | aoe ret ps MEATS 15¢ Pot Holder Given FREE with PECAN ceded ) a2 ! SCHRATZ lotta ALMONDS | GREATER DISINFECTING EFFICIENCY CLOROX ===: 172 33° | 7 U Stark white and feminine lace molds the | delicate lace medallions dotted with sparkly | figure to perfection. This enchanting suit | rhinestones. The back is completely shirred is made of cotton lace lined with nude|with elastic for good fit and a lovely, lean acetate jersey and the bra is touched with | look. Try New Ma One day you decide, if you're the kind who's avoided all make-up ex- KNITTING KITS cept lipstick, that your skin just @ Hand Knit Ties isn't what it used to be and could it Socks use a little help. @ Hand Knit = al The — a baking powder on Knitting Needle nose to a routine as involved as Oppesite Pentiac Hespital an actor’s climbing into a coat of | 433 West Heres grease paint. There are liquid and solid foun- ations, There's the old favorite, cold cream. There are cake make-ups im a rainbow of colors. ~~ acd aoe wilt, dum and hard CLEANED — PRESSED powders to go over or any rn | its base coats. There are ready- $1.20 | mixed and custom-built powders. CLEA | Whatever you select, remember REVA'S NERS | that your aim is to look un-made-up ‘but beautiful. WHY WAIT? Grinnell’s PIANO RENTAL PLAN gives you @ anew piano of your choice in your home! @ option to buy later with all rental payments credited to youl complete 8 e month for only ( plus cartage) Choose from the finest piano names at Grinnell r= “fost im music since 1879" Grinnell's, 27 S. Saginaw, Pontiac, Mich. Pa ke-up Hint | A possibility that’s new is a | pewder with a built-in founda- tien brought out by a thoroughly established beauty house. To use it would make a simpli- fied cosmetics routine that might | appeal to those just beginning the powder practice. | First, cleansing with a cream, has been made very smooth to ng rather than siiow up in grains. Auxiliary Sponsors ‘Card Party, Tea | Members of St. Joseph Mercy | Hospital Auxiliary held a card par- ty Monday afternoon in the audi- Rockwell and Mrs. |Q. Goudie presided at the tea service. It was announced that Mrs. |Charies G. Barrett is scheduled to speak at the March meeting of the group. PTA Activities PTA of Wisner Schoo! will meet Thurs- | day at 2 pm. in the school | “Parent-Teacher Creed” wi theme of the meeting. James C. Covert J » Extre-curricular activities et Central School will be explained by the children | at the PTA meeting to be held Thaurs- Carl Moyers Vacationing in Florida Several Students Receive Honors at Michigan State Vacationing at Naples, Fla., are Mr. and Mrs. Cari Moyer of Bloom- field Hills. * ¢ @ Recent visitors at Palm Harbor, L. Campbell of Monrovia street, Drayton Plains. _ THE PONTIAC PRESS- TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 15, 1955 “i iii aa xm, 5 ReLRe Bac) . Lt. and Mrs. Walter Mitchel] I] announce the birth of a son, Walter | Vann on Feb. 14 in St. Joseph’ Mercy Hospital. Mrs. Mitchell is the former Dee Vann. | ‘The baby’s grandparents are | Mr. and Mrs, William H. Vana of whose names appear on the honor list for the fall term. He was | graduated from St. Frederick | School. udents at | - | spring with the price of a new Enrolled for the spring semester at Bowling Green College of Com- merce, Bowling Green, Ky., is Alva | T. Harrell of South Jessie Street. | ‘‘Double’ Belts Give New Look NEW YORK (INS)—You can get | the newest ‘“‘low-hipped™’ look for | instead of a new dress. It's done with “double” belts, | latest idea from Paris to provide that “long ” effect. ° < x hea ts ee ten ee : tee ed » af 2 op oe ee Fa sk - Y a *. tae eal > “ a % nel we = ‘a lie OO Be ceemnae - ote < Pentiae Press Phote Wilson School- PTA members (left to right) Mrs. \South Sanford street are looking forward to Friday eve- Peter Loncharte of North Ardmore street, Mrs. John Potter |ning’s annual fair. Mrs. Potter is chairman for the event Ir. of Midway avenue and Mrs. Raymond Ellsworth of | Child’s Room Decor Now Versatile |\Wilson Tells | Plans for PTA Fair General Chairman Mrs. John Potter Names Aidés Mrs. John Potter Jr. is general chairman for the annual PTA fair which is scheduled for 7 to 9 p.m. at the school. + The smart young mother or mother-to-be who is ready, willing and able to decorate her darling's room with gaiety and charm is gaining respectful attention from manufacturers. This spring, we'll be seeing so many imaginative and colorful de- |- signs in wallpaper and paint that it will be hard to recall the days when pink, blue and white were the only standard nursery colors. It used to be daring to use yel- lov in the baby’s room and nursery papérs depended on fluffy white | lambs on pale pink backgrounds to entrance baby’s parents. Miss Ruth Strauss, noted in- terior designer and colorist, sums If you want something less giddy, | you'll see new border papers which | could be used to band a painted or | striped-papered wall One such is a circus parade in blue, green, pink and yellow om a} white ground. Or soft plaids in| pink, blue and gray, for example, | could be the background for lively printed fabrics. Wallpapers that | are treated for easy scrubbing are : ; cents. Paris Inspir be appliqued on freshly painted | al abein papers have bold, ertmated {Walls are of particular interest, A |, h4ra, Raymond Ellsworth, Talent Special Designs sketches on clear white back- star-shaped pattern, for example! show committee members are ; nae grounds. looks like a good bet for a nursery. | yrs Leroy Eastham and Margaret in Millinery una lew: : | Suyder. NEW YORK (INS)—Lucky ladies! dogs, silly giraffes and flop-eared | Siamese Kitty Others working en various with $25 and up to spend for an! rabbits cavert on one such paper. ° beoths and features are Mrs. Easter st eee by Paris) Country soraes which make Inspires Idea op Laggeosendinr geome a are going to have some very delec-| plentiful of bright barns, Margaret Scese, Mrs. table millinery to choose from next| Vegew-eaderece ‘neceee, fares | PARIS (INS) — Did you ever! is peynside and Mra. Edward month. feel like a siamese kitten? Well, Sachsen. For instance, there will be a| be suitable for a child's reom this spring. Also planning activities for the “floating sailor’’ by Gilbert Orcel,| for four er five years. The latest word from beauty ex-|event are Mrs. Wilbur Caverly, ‘perts is the “siamese make-up” | Mrs. Jane Davies. Mrs. Ralph Wa- to make a gal look as sweet, sleek | ferman, Mrs. John Neaves, Mrs. {and soft as the thoroughbred ori-| John Hotra, Mrs. Melvin Newton, |ental cat Mrs. Wallace Lacy, Mrs. Ada Dun- To achieve this can. Virginia Otten and Barbara cause of a hidden velvet headband. | ee There will also be an off-the- Church Unit “feline face’ face straw cap, by Fath, which | the foundation cream is tinted pale | Irwin pave a face like a picture = . beige like a kitten’s fur. Eyebrows | Others on the list of committees -_ bows. Elects Officers and eyelashes are underlined in| are Mrs. Lewis Slate, Mrs. Kath- there will also be the hat | . | Siamese brown, Eyelids are col-|leen Wright, Mrs. Louis Haroutu- dripping in pretty posies or shiny St. Anthony Unit of St. Benedict |ored by vivid blue mascara. |nian, Agnes Levering. Mrs. John cherries, revived by Paulette of | Church held a Valentine party and! Lips are shaped to a curly tri-| Zink. Mrs. David Weatherell, Mrs. Paria Lelection of officers Monday eve-| angie in bright red with an orange | Lionet McIntosh and Mrs. Jear Gannon. Planning other forms of en- tertainment are Mrs. Charice Mall, Mrs. Estelle Gerden, Mrs. | Ronald Gilmere, Mra. Kyte Hodge is backing the “floating | ning in the Starr avenue home of touch. The upper lip should be sailor’ as a big item for March | Mrs. Frank Totte. slightly darker than the lower Lip. | ales. a ; | The powder should be beige. ! simplicity of a straw sailor—and/ Mrs. Arthur Perrin, vice presi- peplum. Another “double’’ belt has the | buckles in front, the one at the| waist strap set to the left and the buckle on the lower strap set to the right. The spaced buckles give 'a flat-tummy, contour look. al 738 iLike ALL F/SH - NWOT PART CEREAL! ‘engagement of Mother-Daughter | Warff, Theo Alger, Mrs. Robert Banquet Planned that “floating” brim, or gay rib-| nating committee chairman and | | Lowry, Mrs, John Brown and bons sometimes sit on top. In spite| was assisted by Mrs. Richard Su- | Committees for the annual moth- | Mrs. Stewart Bouchner. of trimming, however, the hat|pernant and Mrs. Arthur Perrin. | ¢T daughter banquet of the WSCS) yin. arthur Beyers, Mrs. Emme focuses main attention on the face|Mrs. Sam Hoffman is retiring | of Oakland Park Methodist Church Clark, Mrs. Clerque Webster and beeps of its “just-off-the-head” | president. The hostess was assisted Se ae ce recent meeting wirs Earl Rinker complete the The G by inne Those working on the event are | — eorge Mrs. Bert Weddle, Mrs. Chester Trempers of ee — Mitchell and | YMCA to Hold Baldwi = ~ Square Dance aldwin Mrs John Lamont gave devo | avenue tions at the meeting. Kathleen Her-| Final plans were made at a re- tle sang and Bonnie Allen told a | cent meeting of the “Y''oung Adult story, | Council to have a square dance at ———EE ° |the YMCA from 9 to 12 p.m. Find Unusual Links announce the Thursday. All single persons be- their daughter, © y tween the ages of 18 and 35 are in- Nancy, to If you've a liking for cuff links, | vited. Sam Julian is chairman for George make a hobby of searching out | the affair. William unusual ones for wear with your! On Feb. 24. Cgrl Christie will be blouses, beach shirts, tailored | host in his hom@ on Silverhill road | for an ice skating party. Members | and their guests are eligible to at- | tend. Hurley Jr. He | is the son of the George Hurleys of Detroit. She attends Michigan State Normal College where he was recently graduated. A July wedding is planned. Coming Events , All Gaints Eptecopal md this evening st 630 for din Faneuil Hall, in Boston, was re- the Rose Kneale room of ste-| Stored with lottery-raised money vens Hall | after it was destroyed by fire in Sewing Ciricle of Capt. David L. Kim- | 1761. ball 33 will meet Wednesday for 12:30) — luncheon in the American Legion home on Auburn svenue ' Dames of Malta. Corinne Sisterhood will Wednesda ts » & meet = L° on z Downtown Dining Pleasant Atmosphere ! Convenient Location! Home Cooking, Baking! iff #7° 5 ei bE | . > = 3 i Waldron Hotel Coffee Shop 96 E. Pike St. . ond clean © Non-metallic, pliable *° > & eh qeneee NB) THE PONTLAC PRESS. TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 15, 1955 Re hae ELEVEN American Hebrew Asse The University of Michigan was. . ° , the first state university, * e ] eek In ngzeies ag . * y , mgt : +Sisterhood Delegate ra Sleasjaoea Students: ar “= oneymooning | rs. Steinman Alten onference t in Northern to Fertorm . ! cles oe in Operetta vain of Ameriean Hetrew Com Sete eee eee ees ee ee nion en w iefs, traditions Mr. and Mrs. pe gregations is being held this week rituals of Judaism. SALON Foster CRANBROOK — Five Pontiac- in Los Angeles. Mrs. Irving Stein- The federation conducts bene || MACHINELESS AND f Sanford. The area students, now attending man of Chippewa road is repre- fit work for the blind; it gives COLD WAVE bride is the Kingswood School Cranbrook, have | senting the Sisterhood of Temple student aid for rabbinic stu- Mary King Cold : been, chosen to sing and act in the » + | Beth Jacob of Pontiac at the con- oe Se eS Ware, Comeiele $628 former a ea i pusduslian ane an inctitete of Hell Carolyn a pion ons “Yeomen | The delegate is a past state pres- ward pat poem mye a dyeing. Louise Killian, The Guar anqual operetta to| | ident of National Federation of ton ef American Hebrew Congre and manicuring. dau hte f be staged by the two schools, “Yeo- Temple Sist ; and past pres- & | ORA OBRECHT ar | men of the Guard" wilt\be given ident of the Sisterhood of Temple _ It also sponsors leadership train- Appointments the Luther | Neb. 5 and % in te audvgrium | } oe ‘aieneee oo vim (4 3 o FE 2-3053 ree tef Cranbrook Sc : : G The sisterhood is one of more | oe 7 aan —_— Killians of On stage as 16th century Eng "5, | than 500 in the National Feder. = Omar street. lishwomen strolling by the Tower “yt ation of Temple Sisterhoods ; ot London will be Barbara Black- Res throughout the United States and : ef Plant and Showroom He is the son wood, daughter of Mr. and Mrs een . overseas with a total member. : 5390-5400 Dixie Hwy. of Mrs. Foster Harold Blackwood of Ottawa drive SANDRA MONROE ship of 100,000, Waterford, Mich. 4 and Jerady Carter, daughter of/ Announcing the engagement of| The performed on be- Sanford of Mr. and Mrs. Stanley Carter of | their daughter, Sandra to Harold| half of Jewish and humanitarian OR 3-1225 Birmingham, Lone Pine road. Ps - Pankner Jr. are Mr. and Mrs.| causes include the conducting of Susan Hodges, daughter of Mr.| Fyerett Monroe of Silver Circle | institutes on Judaism for Christian Ala., and the and Mrs. George S. Hodges of| drive. Harold is the son of Mr_and| Church Women, These institutes | MRS. IRVING STEINMAN the: late Mr Gallogly road; Ann Oliver, daugh-| Mrs. Harold Pankner of Drayton | oe Sanf. d. ¥ Olt : owt Ireqote gard ogee No date has been set for SEE WSS. Hm } anford. a ver the wedding. M W Sh ld SSS ‘ Helsine Wolfe, daughter ot Mr. ature Women ou - > MR. and MRS ) J and Mrs. Richard Wolfe of Ottawa RS. POSTER SANFORD eri are others Several Play Purchase Two Garments ~. Couple Married Saturday vew Auxiliory |For Music Club |; women win cou we wouth'| aquene temecives nto» mane. | . ~ R A tiviti Carol Cotterman was hostess in ager = ki | on = ont a in Candlelight Ceremony |*0Pots Activites Ince Otawa drive home for the practical “Sumnne T# not. sterbed tg tate comfortable . P ical. and becoming. Members of VFW Auxiliary, 1008 | Sunday afternoon meeting of Cho- | | First General Baptist Church|to a navy suit with black acces- met Monday evening at the Amer-| pin Music Club. Fires = a cree | And turther, many miature wom was the setting for the double ring | sories for the wedding trip to| ican Legion Hall on Auburn ave- Assisting the hostess were Sharon | you find en und cian en wear their foundations con- e ceremony during which Carolyn | northern Michigan. The.éouple will| nue. Mrs, Paul Boelter, cancer| Sue Steinbaugh Wayne Barnhart tai like aa th nace ae you stantly and clothes are bought to Just like New - oo Louise Killian and Foster Sanford | make their home on Omar street. | chairman, reported that the group | and Steven Johnson { ay bu ¥ ———— exchanged their nuptial vows. |recently completed 154 cancer i. tine —— a Pe may mean disaster to a wardrobe Pale Gad beckets of wile | Tchaikovsky's “Nutcracker; Almost everyone has had frus- to be unable to replace a favorite . . | pompons, snapdragons and gladioli Flora Shelly Group Mrs. Frank Finkle, hospital | Suite” was the topic of study for) trating experiences in buying un- _ girdle. Yes, your furniture will be | henhed the alter az the Rev, Reb Has Dinner Meeting | chairman, reported on the scuffies | the day. Appearing on the musical derciothes. The most frequent oc- | So, for ithe sake of peace of | - ke d fj oct Garnae’ earl | the candle and lap robes which were sent to | Portion of the program were Lynn) curance of this sort is to buy a | mind. don't rely on the promise as good as t ay you first light ceremony Saturday evening viere Shesty Group of Firat Pree. |the Oakland County Infirmary | Benter. JoAnn Morris, Nancy Par-| girdle er all-in-one that ts com- that the item will be stocked for- * | byterian Church held a dinner | ‘ieee ware aeate ‘0 ‘the sons, Nancy McKown, Mariann En-| fortable, durable and makes your ever and ever. Get two right on bought it... when you have The bride is .the daughter of | meeting Friday at the church. Pa National Home in Eaton gelhard, Flora McCartney, Shirley) figure took just as you want jt. the spot. Or more, if you can Mr. and Mrs. Luther Killian of | Hostesses were Adah Shelly, Mrs.|pooids and also to the Freedom | Bauer and Susan Rogers. | You wear it and wear x end| manage ‘it. it reupholstered by Elliott Omar street, and he is the som | Jessie Snyder, and Mrs. Eva Kel) oy | Rebecca Schutt gave a history | then come back six months later; If it’s bras, be prepared to get Stakes a ee oe oral on Sraceua Gunaaeanal due | of the composer and conducted a to the same department of the a Ralf dozen at o time. The mis- . . . choose your cover from a wr. | y — PEO Sisterhood question and answer’ period and same store for another. matched bra wardrobe leaves the . . L devotional period and Mrs. Allan |Mrs. Cari Clifford told the story Nine times out of ten, the line beholder feeling the wearer sheds | the widest range of fabrics The bride, who was given in H. Monroe gave the mission study figs Program | behind the composition. has been discontinued by the, and dons pounds at will. - marriage by her father. wore a | Port on India and Pakistan. | manufacturer, the store is out ‘of! Pan and have your furniture re- | floor ‘lenath gown of Pela Re | Mrs. Robert Boggs, missionary, Mrs. Max Fell of Drayton Woods 'N Li ° k your size or has stopped -stocking | Praag ae oy pag le type lace and tulle over satin. The | iterature cheirmens of the women's wae a Porgy Porssc-eer cw Ipstic | the line. need be matched only i{ you wear styled by Elliott's craftsmen. ee eee gown was fashioned with a portrait ; S8°ciation, was a guest. ae ia a aheence of the preal- Color Sta Ss For mature women, this is a very special hard-to-get sort. | Upholstered neckline, outlined with scallops, | ; dem. Mics Weldron Xeneey con-| 4 | crushing. While young things can | Puraiture pega poy ppebeard geod Coats Coordinated | ducted the meeting. | How to look pretty even when | " Couple Wed Feb. 5, | 0 E . Wool coats in vivid colors (red,| Mrs. Harry Chapman and Mrs. | you first wake up in the morning ide i n Evenin [ = nek =e ; gold or blue) are often.coordinated | Barney O'Toole were in charge of |is brought to you in — a new Reside = Rochester - mane? i Appeintment Her fingertip veil was held by ®| with print dresses for spring wear. the program. | concept in lip coloring that leaves Residing in Rochester are Mr. | pet ag cE geerersar air al color on even after lipstick is and Mrs. Clarence Eugene Ball. | g2-a-= ‘ 7 s ine- : washed or creamed off at night. The couple exchanged their nup- riones. She wore the brierrom's (COUPE Touring Canada “no er. ie tial vows Feb, 5 in Angola, Ind a Se oe pearls _—— . . ‘fixative that penetrates lip tissues The bride is the former Carol ried a white Bible topped wit "'Followin Saturday Rite jinstead of merely lying on the| Beal, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. arrangement of white roses and g F ceataas in paste form. It. is ap-| Edward Tutty of Melrose avenue. stephanotis. | plied from the tube as with or- He is the son of Mr. and Mrs. with a Distinctive | Touring Canada are Mr. and | ‘ - Mrs. Ralph Isaac attended her | Mrs. Alan Dennis. The bride is the dinary lipstick, then allowed to James Ball of Pine Knot, Ky. sister-in-law as matron of homer | former Bernice Hazel Lilleyman, | “set’’ without blotting for 10 to 20 | SSS Virginia Farrell wearing an ice blue princess- paeree of Mr. and Mrs. Jack T. |minutes unti] surface cream has Former Resident - styled gown in ballerina length. | Lilleyman of Union Court. He is | disappeared. . | Become En d PERMANENT She were o matching hat of i- | the son of Mr. and Mrs. Herman Lip coloring will then stay fresh s gage tes of the valley and carried @ | nennis of East Huron street. all day and night — will not leave Mrs. Norbert Loppnow of St Individual ; bouquet of pink carnations. Fit Hendet Gicch wes Oe agly traces on cups, glasses or ™ Charles, Minn., formerly of Pon- | _ Heir Cutting end Styling Ralph Isaac, brother of the bride. | setting for the candlelight cere- | cigaretes. The new product color —_ are announcing the engage- ) cr at in| ota Sere Se oc ce Tacee = | ROWENA’S BEAUTY SHOP the guests were Billy Brown and | day at 7:30 p. m. before an altar aaa *Shrouah thy oy a es ne, to David Harrison. Joy Batten | banked with white flowers. et yee He is the son of Mrs. Clinton Har. 1 Over : Mrs. Killian greeted her guests Joe Davis sang the bridal recital | possible to improve the shape of rison of St. Charlies. No date has 82 Va N. Saginaw Neamode's FE 2-9382 at a reception held in the church | accompanied by Ponnie Sue Davis. the mouth by ——- ideal been set for the wedding. parlors wearing a gray and pink | | shape over a period of applica- SSNS —————EEE — - bride Itz length | thos. , cine anatancininnt dress with pink and black acces- The poroni xd ete PATRICIA ANN CAMPBELL sories and a corsage of pink car-| 57" of Chantilly-type lace stand ; ~ 7 ; ron - nationg. satin, fashioned with long sleeves Jewelry Lighter Patricia Ann Campbell's engage- 7 FINE DRAPERIES & FLOOR COVERINGS SINCE 1941 The new Mrs. Sanford changed| **#"e im points over her wrists. . _____|ment to Lane VanderHoek is an- 4 ad _ _ | A coronet headpiece edged with Jewelry is lightweight this year nounced by her parents, Mr. and seed pearis secured her finger- and comes in cool color combi- | Mrs. Arnold Campbell of Waterly . tip length veil. rt weigh | vations: lemon and lime, blue and street. He is the son of Mr. and e bad ee APR |smetiys. Bracelets are massive Mrs. Peter VanderHoek of East clusive Dut Not nsive ie : “ but light. Beverly street. pearis and carried a white Bible - rf _ eae topped with a white orchid. bi v ' Gloria Buck attended the bride - ota as maid of honor, and Sandra | MRS. ALAN DENNES Gey. % Johnson and Jean Dennis were | church parlors, the new Mrs. Den- ee Lagd | other attendants. They wore bal-| nis changed to an aqua wool dress ‘ lerina length gowns of ice green/ with black accessories and the and carried arrangements of pink | white orchid from her bridal bou- carnations. quet for her wedding trip. They Cathy MacDonald of Ann Ar- | Will reside on Myrtle street. | ber wore a white dress with an | lee green sash, and carried a mtatatare beoqust of pink carne Start New for tions as flower girl. ‘§ Summer Blooming ELIZABETH FIELDS Mr, and Mrs. Robbie Fields of Lincoln avenue announce the en- gagement of their daughter, Eliza- beth to Robert Johnson of Walled Lake, He is the son of Mrs. Roy Smith of Mount Vernon, Ill. A sum- mer wedding is planned. Each of the attendants wore the bride's gift of a strand of pearis. Frank Thompson served as best | man and seating the 1530 guests | were Bruce Powell and Jim Sau- | don. | BEGONIAS 4rsy TASKER'S | | 63 West Huron | FE 5-626! Sty LANOLIN ENRICHED Permanent Machine and Cold Wave $F) - $50 _ Individual Hair Cutting and Styling by Oscar PARISIAN BEAUTY SHOP © : 7 West Lawrence St, 5 wasur” FE 2-4959 ° Effective instantly and completely because only the special formula contained in Sutton stops odor before it starts. . © Dries at the touch © Never sticky or greasy © Not harmful to fabrics * - Delightfully, lightly scented \ WOMEN'S ECONOMY SIZE $1.00 © SPECIAL MEW'S STICK, 5% AND $1.00 + It Is So Easy to Buy— 1666 S. Telegraph Open Monday and Friday Nights NOTED FOR OUR WIDE SELECTION AND Draper’ Together , a \ *” ssaacoweted The Store That Has Become a Symbol | | of Quality and Fair Dealing! TWELVE | /riter, Wants Militant Su Mary Margaret McBride Says: | By MARY MARGARET McBRIDE To Whom It May Concern: This is to urge that today, Feb. 15, birthday of Susan B. Anthony, brave and dedicated woman, be) set aside from this time forth’ to observed as a formal na-, tional holiday, s, banks, and offices closed, and a full quota her way to the cause of woman's suffrage. In her old age she saw the women of Wyoming, Idaho | Decorative Solves Many By ELIZABETH HILLYER Today's trim and decorative fold- ing doors solve many problems. They are room dividers or mov- able walls, or they re doors to clos- ets that save the space needed for swinging doors. They install simply on their own overhead Loose Sash olding Door 'frame so that they hold the sash | | tracks, Let Us Remember Susan B. Anthony : Colorado and Utah given the vote. Fourteen years after her death, al] of her sex in the United States were enfranchised. — It is almost impossible for to- day’s more privileged women to visualize the world that the quiet, Quaker spinster grew up in, She was not yet five when | her father went into bankrupt- ey. Everything in their home, in- cluding her mother's heritage from her own family, even her needles and pins, belonged to the man of a — =z“ cr Cd $$$ - fragist to Be Honored With Legal Holiday + ‘the house, and all was seized to pay the father’s debts, The young woman's resentment |on Behalf of- women’s situation. was even more actively Awakened when she began to teach school for $10 a month — in a job which pre- viously had been held by a man ‘paid $40 a month. Timid and with- out experience in public speaking | — it was frowned upon as un-| : ladylike — Miss Anthony made her, first important protest at a teach- er's convention. | ! | According te Katherine An-_ “Do you not see that so long as| | society says woman has not brains| - enough to be doctor, lawyer or | minister but has plenty to be a | teacher, every man of you who | condescends to teach tacitly admits Crime for a United States Citizen to vote?"’ * Problems without carpentry. And they get better all the time. The latest folding door now | readying for spring has slim pan- | e sithat hang especially evenly and fold especially flat. The entire door is covered on both sides with | plastic, soft finished to harmonzie with flat paint, and this cover is uniquely removable. For a change | of color, one cover can be taken “Think of it."" Miss Anthony would exclaim, ‘‘the false teeth in | your mouths a joint interest with | ; your husband's, about which you | A —_ ie co PET OM. TR ED A As 4 Te e oe > ‘ peice | ; . 4 iy Ways Vary ° in Choosing Steady Girl Friendliness Best Policy for Gaining Boys’ Admiration By ELIZABETH WOODWARD Some boys use only their eyes in sizing up a girl. She looks pretty— in all departments. She seems to have fun when she goes out. Other | boys give her the okay. And that | |seems to be enough. They have | ‘on? date with her, broach the sub- | ject at once, get the steady deal | clinched. For better or for worse. Other boys drift into going steady with a girl who attracted their eyes at first, and then proved thoroughly congenial after repeated dates. And the proving thoroughl appeal isn’t all it takes to make a steady deal last. As I would ders how to make him pick her for his steady girl. going with him for almost two) by fone Leloms months, and though we're not | gone with anyone, else. Lately semble that gets its picture in the several of the boys have asked me | rotogravure on Easter Sunday! It's are, I assured them. “Then they ask about the gir | With a cover-up bolero. Make the | times. Since we aren't going steady | surprise touch. Simple sewing! I explained to them that he goes| pattern 4567: Misses’ sizes 10, | ne wants. | 12, 14, 16, 18. 20. Size 16 dress and | “1 ached him abeat this | jacket require 5% yards 39-inch; | swer. I don’t have the right to | This pattern easy to use. simple demand an answer and I don't to sew, is tested for fit. Has com- ¢ T do want ts 0 way to make Send 35 cents in coins for this | People tell me I'm good | pattern—add 5 cents for each pat- _ and have plenty of personality. like to remind this girl who won- “Dear Miss Woodward: I've been going steady, neither of us has| This is it! The fashion-new en- if we were still going together. We | a high-waisted, molded princess |he has been with a couple of | bodice in a companion print for a | with anyone he wants whenever | | but didn’t get much of an an- ile yards contrast | Want to make an issue of it. ' plete illustrated instructions. | him want te go only with me. "tern for 1st-class mailing. Send “As things are now he’s with '©0 Anne Adams, care of 137 Pon- ou | detailed tracery of design is employed | available in sterling silver or in gold plate. |me more than with this other girl. | tiac Press Pattern Dept., 243 West are legally incompetent to speak!" | 5, shose skillfully crafted fans. They are| | But I'd like some advice on win-, | 17th st, New York 11, N.Y. Print | all help make it difficult for sound | Susan herself in court was no | | ning him completely, please."’ toe sam ip with him ts still | plainly name, address with zone, rary aon No Criticism ree | fi Tr y. to come through. ' Rising to her feet, the daunt- |, f W k d Lumber and building supply deal- | jes, Quaker spoke words which O ce en pretty new. You're still at the “!2¢ and style number. ers will have the door soon in| will live forever: Need Occur folding door has new resistance to, sound penetration. Its shape, ma-| ' lterial, and neat fit to the floor {OF the Presiding judge in arbi-| Not Difficult cact neti 00". Tom ne Visitor Gives New England Fish Recipe Marriage License Applications According to one of our small and incomplete surveys, for every three window sashes that are stuck so tight that they can only be | moved with the aid of a wreck- | getting-acquainted stage. He's not | steady deal after a date or two with her. So you'll have to play it stoek sizes and will be able to pro-| you have trampled under foot | _ long-range way. the type to sign a girl up to a Vide special sizes to fit the doors every vital principle of our govern. John J Butler, Farmington | . | . | dean H Trezise. Birmingham ing bar there is one sash 90 loose anywhere. ment,’’ she fearlessly informed the | lf Housing Situation, | Restaurant Owner. date. Be a real friend te him. Widuoull Si: Siciemanes: ‘elle soameneeas that it retfles in the frame even court who constantly shouted at) P ; P . The kind that sees to M thet he | Dosss ‘u pinecy 21d W Mepaine” when there isn't any wind at all.| jg her to sit down. “My natual rights, Behavior at Home Suggests Combining | gets what he likes te eat. The | leas & leeds Gaal ts had tee Ga budget conscious — my civil rights, my political rights! (Giver, Thought Scallops, Haddock | "iad that backs him up, cheers | Sonics dk Kamnunh a eeoen: Gail eral reasons. It makes a noise, it are all alike ignored. 9 f ha him up, encourages him, apf ss, por mem allows cold and dirt to get inta | “Robbed of the fundamental By EMILY POST ‘| By JANET ODELL | plaads him, approves of him. | Dolores D Wade. Parmington your home, and if it rattles around | privilege of citizenship, I am A reader writes me: ‘I would Pontiac Press Food Editor The yes acs him feel a Thomas C LaMontagne. Milford enough the glass will eventually | from the status of 9 | very much like your opinion on A visitor from New England eae understanding Patricia R. Robbins. Milford become loose. The thing to do is citizen te that of a subject, and | » kitts and tw sive Wa S's Karte exists between you. Senet Besar. wei to fix it. | not only myself individually, but | the prepemeny of two girls and two ra whe ; fish Do your share of thinking up "Pus#ee!™ M Cook. 1855 Manse Mf you don’t like to work hard af of my crx are, eur | boys, all in the early twenties. =m an aren where fresh and things to do together. Make him| Sémund @ Marten Late Orion you can often fix a | pears Honor's verdict. doomed te po- | going by bus to New York City sea food are common items on feel welcome at your house. See Betty L Porter. Muiford simply by installing weather. | litical under this so | and spending a weekend. We are menus. Mrs. N. S. Clayton of Es- to it that your family is cordial | John M Pambid 474 Midway stripping. The stripping wilt hold | called Republican govern — rn friends and t sex, Massachusetts offers her re- | and triendly and interested in him. | “*'% © Gee. 387 8 Anderson a neal dooms asl anil ment...” ; all just ms ae a & cipe for Scalloped Scallops. In this 50 he'll feel comfortable in your "enry M Yeager Detroit moving & . | sweethearts, in case that makes part of the country we can t . Virginia F Arnold. Walled Lake alse will keep out the cold and | It seems to me fitting that Su- ; Bet home and at ease with your par- the dirt san B. Anthony, the first mftiant | @ ‘ifference.” | frozen scallops in most any large ents Richard J Pfeffer 309 Elizabeth Lake A better method, however, is to reposition the stop beads on the just right and then weatherstrip. The two little strips of wood that hold the sash in place are fastened , to the side of the window frame | either with finishing nails or wood screws. The first thing to do is to | | Choose two-pert formal feshions— nervy wool lece fop with wine red cotton brocede, or contrast white engore sweeter with bleck shirt. | y- pl got the wood strips | Miss B. C.—Separates are im- in place, you'll probably have to Pressive money savers, particu- do a little touching up with some | !@rly in formals for the woman who paint. wants changes. Black satin ba- | , teau neck blouse with pleated black satin skirt, plus jewelry. makes another simple but dramatic for- mal. KEEP YOUR NEW hel V4 | DRIVING HAZARDS — BODY DENTS, SKINNED FENDERS, WEAR and TEAR OF SLIPPERY DRIVING ide the Bus! ‘PONTIAC CITY LINES ) ———-——— suffragist, the first woman to defy, Being “just friends’ does make the law for the political liberty of | difference of course, but even her sex, should be the first Americn so I can hardly give inqualified woman to be honored with a } holiday, And I hope those — approval of young men and giris Washington who are always 380 charming about women voters can arrange things so that we celebrate it in 1956. Cocktail Hats Fresh Feminine, and Bit Saucy PARIS (INS) — A cocktail hat for should be fresh, fem- Yet—if the two girls go to ™AY| one of the women's hotels in stay at a man’s hotel or best of all perhaps, at a fraternity club; I doubt very much if anyone will criticize them uniess their be- Dear Mrs. Post: My husband bought me a diamond ring for our inine and a little bit saucy. | tenth wedding anniversary. I have Paris milliners suggest tiny) been wearing this ring on my left shapes with flowers, fruit and vel-| hand with my wedding ring. vet trimming to make chic spring' I have been told that the third chapeaux. : | finger of the left hand is reserved Gilbert Orcel has designed a) for the engagement and wedding “basket - hat" in pink straw. Like! rings only and as this is not a. a tiny basket worn upsidedown, it| engagement ring I should wear it has two handles covered in black | on my right hand. Will you velvet and placed at the ears.) please give me your opinion? I Near the hair-line a red rose peeks never had an engagement ring. Jean Barthet has come up with a This is perfect nonsense, you tiny scoop hat for cocktaail occa-| Weat yout new ring wherever sions. It is covered with white) You choose. The third finger of grosgrain embroidered with pink the left hand is reserved by « rosebuds and piped in dark blue) young girl for her engagement velvet. A streamer of blue velvet! Ting, but once married this is no trims the back. lenger important. h Paniltiner Sv end ae lng Dear Mrs. Post: at out of a strip of ora : ; He works it to a spiral, looking | conty merriod and om net sure exactly like an orange-peel. It is worn right on the top of the head jout from under the cloche brim. ag an amusing ornament. man 4 Smith. Do I sign my . (Advertisement) name Mary Jane Smith, or Mary Te | Doe Smith. I have been told that : | now that I am married I drop’ all reference to my maiden name. what is correct? Your name most properly is ncw ph WOILIC3 )Liad CEL AVIA MLA hath going off alone to stay in the city. | New York, and the men go and | Will you please advise me as to Nothing prettier for play than | those adorable little baby sets! | Sewing a cinch—embroidery, too! | Flower embroidery for girls; teddy bears for boys! Pattern 760: To fit 6month, 1-year, 18-month babies. Tissue pattern, transfers. directions included. Stae size. Send 25 cents in coins for this grocery store | For a number of years Mrs. | Clayton has operated a restaurant | that specializes in sea food. Dur- | ing the winter months when she is | free, she makes extended visits to her grandchildren and occasionally .| spends some time with her sister, Mrs. V. L. Newcomb, here in Pon- tiac. SCALLOPED SCALLOPS By Mrs. N. 8. Clayton ') pound haddock ‘“ pound ; cups cream sauce Cut haddock into serving pieces and cook in boiling salted water until tender. Drain. Slice scallops as thin as possible across the grain. Add cheese and green pepper to | Cream sauce and heat until very hot. but not boiling. Add haddock | Include him in interesting fam- ily activities. Confide your secrets | and current problims. Ask for his | | advice, talk things over with him. | jthen act on his stiggestions and | progress. You can become so necessary to him that he won't need other dis- tractions. You'll have done it! The woman showed her neighbor | pattern—add 5 cents for each pat-| and sliced scallops at once. Pour 4 beautiful set of cooking utensils | tern for Iist-class mailing. Send into greased casserole. Top with | and the neighbor said, ‘‘It's too | to 124 Pontiac Press Needlecraft | crumbs. dot with butter, and | bad they can't be hung on a kitch- | ‘Dept., P.O. Box 164, Old Chelsea | brown in 350-400 degree oven. Station, New York 11, N.Y. Print | plainly your name, address with | zone, pattern number, size. Choose Your Linen en rack.” She didn’t mean to! | show a lack of graciousness but | she did with that one remark. | It is always ungracious to point | Inspired ideas — pages and Solid color and printed linens, out a flaw when another person | pages of novel designs in our come in both chiffon and heavy | shows you something he wants you NEW Laura Wheeler Needlecraft | Catalog for 1955! Completely dif- | ferent and so thrilling, you'll want to order your favorite patterns. | Send 25 cents for your copy of this I have re- new, new catalog NOW! weights this year. to admire. across 1, 8 Radio singer, Clooney ® City in New ork PETUNIA! Do I hear any bids For my Knob-less lids ? Fix "em, Petunja! Push a sharp-pointed screw up rough the hole 1d twist a cork onto it. Hvatproof — & 3 8338 I i | Hf z £ i "| d i : be i . “ a. . — ob coat handy —easy!, i pet 4 \ A. cw | ( 4 VA « MBIBeees & setessrt Aig i — —_, 4 + a : % ~ i 4 en “Kk Es : ot i | / S282 Stazsx- Betty J. Button. 242 Howard Raiph B Mathers. Rochester Mertiyn L. Coulter, 239 State Sherman Martindale Jr. 19 Benece Lure J. Teague, 232 W. Howard Poster Sanford, 111 Omar Carctyn Killian, 111 Omar Charles H. LeBaron. Davisburg Billy J. Perkins, 102 Willview Clara FP. Lovell, 163 Hillview Donald C. Huscusson, Olga W. gy tg Joseph T. Odartesi, 8 Libert Doreen V. Brown, 562 & Paddock Lee C. Goodman, 665 W. Huron Marguertete = _—.. BR Hawtsworth, 9470 George L. Martin. Rochester Anna M. Peiton, Rochester Glenn A. Werth, Rochester Eleanor Brinkey, Rochester Ployd 6. Johnson, TY Dolores C. Dunn, fre Twp. James L. White, 291 t Carol B Barbe, 549 Pg mn Russell A. Jacobson. 134 Ottawa Barbera L. Chapman, 2353 Bliverdown Gerald R. Barn Bonnie L. Pack Dalep B Karem, 18 Judson Janet M Groat, 110 East Ypstiants Adam Matwyuk. Detroit Delores PF Hutchinson, 130 Perry William W Gaff, 123 Marlene D. Hodges, Battle Creek Marry Hewitt, Keege Harbor Mary N. Hatley, Keego Harbor father. 1623 Canterb . 1 Chippewa “ry Vehan Grigorian, 278 Orcha: Esther Hovespian, 8} haan aaa Edward 3. Mulligan ageten Bernice L. Eisele, 178 pt Lawrence &. oun McCurdy, Mulforg Howard ©. Anderson. Eiste L: Lohr, Royal cat *"*" |Print Chiffon Good ¢ eT + omg, 5 ed ee A Farmer-Snover FUNERAL HOME © ~ 160. W. Huron St. FE 2-817) eeceeeeeeeeeeeseee eeeeeese Coorcccepocccccccesocccccceceecooccce “ e dededndtdedediade dd ddd bre irari ri tiriiiiriiiiiiity etait ced beve's Auto Insurance that pays for those "Small ACCIDENTS” Too! IF YOU HAVE A COLLISION — AND, IF YOU HAVE A STATE FARM "80-20" AUTO INSUR- ——_ ANCE POLICY, YOU MAY BE SURE. THE COST OF THE COLLISION # WILL NOT BE COSTLYTO YOU— Under this State Farm policy, policy holders are insured for 80% of ail accidental collision damages under $250 and 100% of that portion of the damages above $250 . . . 80-20 poli holders never pay more than on any collision loss— plus the extra advantage ol paying only 20% on dam» age costs from 1¢ to $250. Call today. Howard C. Bratt, FE 4-6921 Earl Davis, FE 4-9546 Robert Gaff Jr., OR 3-2778 Vern Hartman, FE 4-9546 Leo Huffman, FE 2-0201 “, Lester Oles, FE 2-0396 Harvey Perry, FE 2-0201 James Schell, FE 4-9546 Franklin Aherns, FE 4-9546 | "THE PONTIAC PRESS, Michigan Fires Kill 5 Yesterday Four Children, Woman Die; Pontiac Mother Severely Burned DETROIT ® — Five persons, four of them children, lost their yesterday. In addition, flames destroyed an automobile sales agency in Port lives in a rash of fires in Michigan 15, 1955 Trains of Future fo Start Rolling TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 3 . a &-% ‘ Cy Huron, causing an estimated half million dollars damage. | Linda Yager. 2, died and her 3-year-old brother Roy was burned critically in a fire that swept through a two-story frame home in Flint. Firemen said .the girl suffocated. ' Mrs. Eleanor Tolowski, 30, died | in a vain effort to save her year- old son Robert from a flaming |farm home near Hesperia, in | northwestern Lower Michigan. } . * s Linda Reed, 3, and her, brother Ronald, 2, died in a fire that swept | their suburban Pontiac Township home. Their mother Myrtle, 24, was burned severely trying to res- Ycue them, The Reeds only other child, an | infant son, Kenneth suffocated in | his crib last May. |. The half - million - dollar fire | destroyed the Cawood Auto Sales Co. in downtown Port Huron. 7 oe s Firemen from Port Huron, Sar- nia, Ont. and other nearby com- | munities fought the blaze an hour | and a half before bringing iit under control. Flames were fed by exploding acetylene tanks in the building | service shop. At least 38 automo- biles in the body and paint shop | were destroyed. Some 30 new mod- }el cays were saved from the agen- |} cy showroom. | Haven, the New York Central and the Santa Fe railroads announced yesterday they expect to place Four Railroads Reveal |. 'lewed completion of a six-month | study by a joint committee. - % * ® new train of tubular design, with | | depressed centers. It is designed 'to be used in integrated trains, i sen | but can also be interchanged with ANCIENT - tiles with vents which carried present standard equipment. The steam to heat walls of baths are among discoveries by archaeologists | PRR plans to use the train be- in new excavation at Pompeii, Italy. jtween New York and Pittsburgh - | and New York and Washington. Mexicans, Texans to Join in Fiesta for Washington | 2, t= % Tm 5 4 The New York Central has agreed to order a complete inte- LAREDO, Tex. #—For Jhe h} hulla and Chihuahua are the type train now being built by the year, in and dance, the Mexican states represented im | American Car and Foundry Co. of Nuevo , Mexico, and citi-| the council. |for the Rock Island Railroad. zens of this Texas border town will| The Minnea Symphony | “Taigo’” cars are low slung. light- join hands for a fiesta salute to faebadea eal dey 4 emcee | weight and designed for use only George Washington. Most natives of the two cities will | *S integrated units. There'll be street dances, bull-| dress in old Spanish costumes, fights, dozens of balls, carnivals, | from tiny tots to the aged men who | serenades, water shows and some | sit in San Augustine Plaza and talk | shirt-sleeve diplomacy on good | softly of other birthday parties for | neighbor relations by representa- | ‘Father Washington.” tives of four Mexican states and | | Santa Fe will soon Gecide upon a Texas. ' | Three out of four traffic fcci-|new design of equipment to be The annual celebration starts “ents occur in clear weather on | used first in its E) Capitan between dry roads. ‘Los Angeles and Chicago. vailable on a third design, to be put in operation by the New Haven. The announcement said _ the ‘ oth. cos & ery e : 3 ‘More Tests Needed in Death of Showgirl BEVERLY HILLS, Calif. oAs| autopsy surgeon says several days of poison tests will be required to determine the cause of actress Abi- | gail Adams’ death. The 37-year-old brunette, former | | fiancee of comedian George Jes | sel, was found dead in her apart- ment Sunday. | Dr. Alexander Griswold, coro-| |ner's assistant autopsy surgeon, | | said hig post-mortem e | yesterday did not disclose any ap- | parent pathological cause of death. | More than a half century ago, 8 group of people of the twin cities astride the Rio Grande decided | there ought to be a fiesta honoring some great American. There al- ready were plenty of fiestas for) Latin heroes. They selected Washington's | birthday because he is revered in| Mexico as he is in the United States. An added highlight of the cele- bration this year is the meeting of the five-state Good Neighbor Coun- | cil and Laredo's celebratiton of its | 200th birthday. Tamaalipas, Nueva Leon, Coa- YOUR CHANCE TO SAVE! SALE AT (1/2 Ti BUY ON EASY CREDIT TERMS— PAY IN SIX MONTHS! Steals the OH's' from the costliest cars! ‘Rules the rood in flashing style... the new Dodge Custom Royo! Lencer with Thres-Tone styling How do you think it feels to own this new Dodge?, Well, the loolf in people's eyes tells you that no car at any price has captured America’s heart so com- pletely. It’s not just its bigness and length —up to 9 inches longer than other cars ee ae i\ a ee al . ie Pa Ce —_ —EEEE — [= r Regular to 39.99 WINTER orders soon for radically new |= /equipment. The announcement fol- | | | The PRR has “agreed to test a] grated train similar to the design | S59 Details were not. immediately | in its class. It’s the fact that the new Dodge has all the features, and even more style, than the most costly road. (You can keep it a secret that a new Dodge costs only a few dollars a month more than one of the ‘‘low price three!’’) ~o- THE NEW DODGE Reduced from group of 39.99 wool fleeces, tweeds and novelties. Come, sove Te 59.99 Coats ...... $29 Te 79.99 Coats ...... $39 Regular to $79 FURRED COATS S49 Reduced from group of $79. Beoutiful fur trims on fine wool coat. Sizes 10 to 20. | Te $89 Fur Trims ....$59 ' Te $99 Fur Trims ....$69 To 39.99 Coet Sets ond cars on the Mothers! Save on these reg- | ular all wool fleece and check coots, 7 to 14 and coot sets. . Sizes 3 to 8 $12.99 Sno Suits $ 8.99 Boys’ and Girls’ Campus Coats . $6.99 GIRLS’ COATS | Les - WEDNESDAY Double Check these velues for Big Sevings! Best of oll you get twice es meny stomps with every purchase you meke! Buy on Eesy Credit Terms! 25° first quality percale. Heavy blue ‘ denim Levis — © pe dresses for double knee — 7 spring. Gay col- Sanforized. Ors. Caeser eeese aso $0 DOUBLE STAMPS DOUBLE STAMPS MEN’S | CURITY JACKETS © DIAPERS as |} SS 397 b USS 2 Values to 1499 ? , campus absor- Coats, gavs, \ se ~ bent, Ist qual- suedes, all sizes SEO ity 7 50% Off 6% Gowns, Kimenas..... 3% DOUBLE STAMPS » 2 . i * £ r p . : P . 4 ‘fy uy 4 yy } ; y oe 7 4 4 . 1 ; Vv a — sFLAIR-FASHIONED ... AND FLASHING AHEADt ¥ ! Wie al Lancer! SO FLASH Me 2 Gust for x Custom Royal Lancers given away. y ¢ Murry to tor details todey! | ; NEIDER B * od as} ROS. | : ae Pontiac, Mich, é : pied 4 4 ' 3 . bel 5 : e ain . ’ ‘ 4 ‘ a . 4 . As. ' . Ay 4 a : ‘ 5 : 4 . . \ Foe 4 » . ? NG eS 9 sl tet 4 £4 i a co . < . 4 4 Shue 3 &: “ pS eee rad yee f CAST 19.99 Girls’ Storm Coats $13 2.99 Flannel Shiets......3.88 Large Sing Dresses. ..,. .8.99 ~ * Margaret Welcomed |7en Jet Pilots , : Finish Training by Dancing Ghosts in South Korea dancing “‘ghosts’"’ wired OSAN, Korea #—South Korea's = areaed first 10 jet pilots graduated in a ceremony which Lt. Gen. Air F i i ‘ i 1; reg | iy gf! Hi a I: at i H ii E i HF if U i EB z i i z i i i Ee F al Hi F z : : i i i i 4 é : EF i 5B li ii -f aes ss 6 2s » “E>, 4 “a v4 ' ~~ Ve 1 i) By MARGARET LATROBE | laundry and cooking and much et oe iS | Dear Tom and Mable, | cetera. | Well hello old pals after 10, Well, to get to the point — we 48 sovennst® years! Imagine our surprise | have contacted some other old pals ligh ‘N : . ckstone ae em to bear that you have pore we woud bersrentine| Always. Top Quality at a Saving and Many Ann Page Items are Included in the Seeorsow cess 878 Grocery Prices Reduced Since Jan. tst F f : see THE Bla bedrooms. it is just too i j 1 ; e | I was just saying the other) tie inre ‘night, “What do you suppose Tom | b = —&@ Dew kind nig hat do you rape Tota pared fo end | when we heard that you are bask- wees er conte at automatic ‘ing in the sunshine and picking| bedrooms brand : wacher orange righ a et oe et ae Gad Pe ee ke Stock Your Pantry At This New Low Feature Price! : . ow come you never an- : Now you can wash any way you want to wash. Not only | swered my last 15 letters?) And I| would just love the patter of little F is your clothing thoroughly agitated to a new cleon- | you are not too far from| feet areand for » while, net ANN PAGE ; . . the beach, Or probably you have having any children of her own ~ liness, rinsed whiter and brighter by a new scurh-re- | your own — doesn't everybody | und all, and would be tickled » Moving rinsing process, but you can blue, starch, “have their own beach in Florida,| to have little folks giving the 12-0Z. E bleach, or tint, too. And, you can handle all the new |) besides private orange trees? house that lived in look. “You GLASSES ‘ ‘ . ; , | Was always such = persnickety fabrics . . . for the new Blackstone is completely dif- | Well, the funniest coincidence! | pousekeeper, Mable dear. Boy! 7 » ferent. You will be delighted. | aad ome oe eee cheat Hove 1 gives oll Size time =p, | | your new house with all the sparé pHoecoornge old pals, you can| ANN PAGE $P. ANN PAGE ; | bedrooms what do you think | ' ; e UP TO 24 MONTHS TO PAY! | Seems ore See _ crycpatin est wok tad | Sot ‘ned to eae any oeer| Wf GRRE ERS orren g | FREE HOME DEMONSTRATION || .'s2lc! Ss ‘as non (smyrna hes et ae xo De ee — Mleriéa. usual swell cooking will be plenty nd PTI || we are loading up all the kids| good enough for the five of us. qa e ngs = 5 y CANS in the car, and the two Great We eat anything ‘that ain't red) . 5 Danes (they are big and lovable) | hot or tied down,"’ haha. And don't and setting right out to renew old even bother to reply — it sounds Phone | acquaintance with some of our so wonderful we've decided to leave | ANN PAGE FE 2-4021 best pals (haha) for four glorious earlier than p! anne d tomorrow | weeks of leisure. Believe me, I'm | morning. See you soon, if not soon- repa | } red Beans ‘chasing three-year-olds and doing (Copyright, 1955) —_ —_ . = — } WITH TOMATO SAUCE | BOSTON OR VEGETARIAN y bao 23: JUST REDUCED Your Coe .- ANN PAGE Grape Jam ..5. Plum Preserves * Orange Marmalade ’“* Vas Ee MORE ANN PAGE VALUES! i a ELS ‘ Syrup... ee ee 2 ae A Red Beans ~omour . . chr 10¢ IT’S CQVER = Ze 7 ff tw Mecaronisvnen 55 35e Pure Vanila Extract . . . i 35¢ Spagheti Sauce... . . ."19¢ Mayonnaise ....... tr 88e Tomato Soup... . 4°." 47¢ Salad Mustard... . . . 2 15¢ Stuffed Olives mc cue, . "53" 49¢ = Egg Noodles ...... . st 25¢ ‘Honey ......+... i 29¢ Strawberry Preserves. . . 2:t 59¢ | Black Pepper sve... $% 29¢ Sparkle Gelatin Desserts 4 0: 25¢ REMEMBER: ONLY A&P SELLS ANN PAGE FOODS! 2 Nena - Ps » & bs, SES: SS e : x oe * : ot Swivel - Base Console ‘21-Inch Screen Our Low Price 319° No matter where you sit you have a front row center because Emerson swivels to face any direc- tion. New enlarged ‘screen gives you a 270-square-inch picture, the iggest ever. New aluminized tube gives you a brighter, sharper, picture with full-screen focus, per- fect detail from edge to edge. Side-control tuning snaps in pic- ture and sound automatically. In beautiful mahogany veneer ~~cabinet at the. lowest price in history for Emerson top quality! Delicious A&P Candies | | Use-xour Creat TW | Caramel Pecan | ‘ *_ 2 Full Years to Pay | LY 4 i De tox 35°" _ | |... Al oseas tn thie wo ottetive te Sat, Pb 19 | Se \ ‘ * . se ‘ an ( 4 i ‘ cme S F ‘ ; fs pa - “25S hee Se a ae -* < pe 2s rep, 4 . : 4 ' es Sis Be : ' . 4 Ly ; Jen figs ‘ e : Y 6 ‘ - i: heh eee NS ; Sore e7 ‘ 3 : wi f ws o ' P ‘ ; : +) | (- 7 : ‘ ; * 2 ~ : . ; é , \ ‘ es ee 8 ; i us -g yee ‘4 \ F * » ae : 5b be . ‘< , i. : ‘ 4 fe ; 3 ‘ : s uy - ae i a4" } i + “ \ ba \ a ¢ - ’ tao BS . Ly ’ ; ws ends Me a* ~ THE PONTIAC TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 15. 1955 m PONTIAC, MICHIGAN . PRESS - situation map for a proposed summer camp exercise. | Birmingham; The men above will be on hand to answer questions | Roy Shepperly, at a meeting at 8 p. m. Feb. 15 at 37 W. Lawrence | Fenton. CLOTHES MAKE THE MAN—One of the openings | this picture Lt. Taylor ,Jeft) and Pic. Shepperily, just announced by the maintenance and supply | who are checking in clothing and supplies for new unit is that of supply clerk, a post which can be | men in the outfit. filled by an enlisted man. Taking on the task in Williams Sends 27 Recommendations to State Legislature for Consideration 55 i i if > j i i af Hi it mining and lumbering workers in| accidents. pavement on the Rezoni Chicago is a tabulation of bids for a water main in Eastview two-inch blacktop Barkell street from Raskob to Colum- } te Beverly — avenue from cou an Air Line . is avenue from Jessie to end of reet. Pirst avenue from Bartell to Puller Frencis street from Pike to Chandler street Liberalization of the state civi] line, assessor's plat 102; state defense law, especially to allow street from Grace to north line mutual aid between Michigan and @s8essor's plat 102 evenue from street from Osmen to Michigan rt from Wilson svenue to from Osmun to Whitte- Fuller Resolutions are slated to receive special assessment roils for two- inch blacktopping on the following evenue from Sarimocr te Bubd ommission — wt ng Faces Cit ae -- : ’ yC H-BOMB DESTRUCTION—Shown, above is an artist's conception | Pacific last year. . eee ;* H ae fe of the destructive force of a hydrogen bomb dropped on downtown | less than an H-bomb’s. | Pontiac. | . van II: What’s Being Done Here The damage pattern is based on H-bomb tests in the | e A An atomic bomb’s destructive power would be Civil Defense Officials Map Area Evacuation Routes EDITOR'S NOTE: This ts the sec- end im « series of articles about ctvil defense ertivities in Pontiac. By ARNOLD 8. HIRSCH persons and injure 10,000. Homes up to a mile from the| But even if it were “only” an center of the blinding blast would | A-bomb that was dropped into our | be little more than dust. the destruction would be Joslyn to Puller. | Pronkiia reed! Buildings in a circular belt one | ®PPalling. to two and one-half miles beyond | Of course, a protective ring of would be damaged less severely, | Nike (guided missile) sites are | and those two and one-half to four miles further would be damaged | Slightly Hospital facilities would be destroyed by the explesion. But even if they weren't, less than a thousand beds would be avail- able for the 10,000 injured. The picture js not pretty. Yet, it is based only on at atomic bomb explosion, estimated to have the | death last night while his three | | classified as ene of 85 critical going up in this area and they| can be evacuated—bat not hap- | target areas in the nation. | If an enemy were to send a jet .| A large atomic bomb dropped bomber force this way, it is as- at the intersection of Saginaw and | sumed by most civil defense Huron would kill at least 18,000 | authorities that Pontiac would be a secondary target. laps, might well cut down enemy air- craft before they came too. near. But CD officials don't count on that. Hardly any defense, they say, is 100 per cent perfect. What officials bank on most is the double, and soon triple, fence | hazardly, authorities quickiy point out. There must be a plas | te follow when the sirens sound. clear out and have them head for Flint, or Rochester or Lapeer,” of radar stations across northern | says Willman. Canada, expected to give six hours | advance warning of bombers wing- ing over the Arctic Circle. Mother Stabbed to Death While Young Sons Watch REDLANDS, Caiifl. @—A hus- band hiding in a closet when five times the power of the A-| Police reported. bomb dropped on Hiroshima Hydrogen bombs are many times as powerful, but they are also less plentiful, fortunately. Although Pontiac is definitely a target city in a critical target area (in civil defense terms), it is not Night Spots Are Glamorous‘ } by Runaway Auto tae a Instructions: ik SAN ANTONIO, Tex. Goch jotted 1 RUQEY rr quer the hed thet 500 werd is re- 2 SUSEG : J} | || Seross a Lackland Air Force lated to my 3 pT eae ant ee pte ag sme | |The chr. first bnocked few os possi- sign post, then continued ble te 5 ly across a street intersection, mM Tt throagh a tennis court bs Meee ; mesh fence and onto the square parade ground by aon bg 2 speed. It finally halted against fet) im Otters sald the driver Ye ae Oa dead. ‘sho ait Ho was aa | ‘ ‘ om : : i z < Hawaiians TTT 87245. ¥ 3 ak z Ferree THEE ‘gki fe 4 3 | to ERE The husband, Rolland C. Beck- 3%, booked on suspicion of his arrived ham murder, wife the Mrs. Charlene Beckham, 32, had was standing over ‘s body when police second time ag station a “Daddy SI called the few minutes before | warrant but did not find Beckham | is beating Mama.” | and left, The killing occurred | tragic climax of long-stand- | about 10 minutes later. ing marital] trouble occurred a half |hour after Mrs. Beckham had police came to his house with | returned home from her work as warrant later stabbed his wife to| 4 title company stenographer. * | power of 100,000 tons of TNT, or | YOURE sons watched in horror, | Sgt. Robert Lansing and other With that much warning, cities | police investigators said that a month ago Mrs. Beckham obtained a restraining order requiring her husband to stay away from their home. He left town but returned about three weeks ago. He had been living at the house. perhaps with Mrs. Beckham's hope | of a reconciliation, but yesterday | + she obtained an assault and bat-| Sgt. Lansing and other officers | went to the house to serve the) ee | tors Welcome Waikiki Beach is a manufactured| Although the language of an| 7 Ey was parts of the ; world’s 2g the iF fe as | 3 4 | | ; : phil | ES i i 2 | ER Vi i Ht Tt has a base of coral rock, | aboriginal people, the Hawaiian | “iliary brought in from | language is easy to learn. While | island NeVerthe- | most of the natives can speak finest, | | and w. Each vowel must be pro- To that end, county and state civil defense experts are now undertaking. a study of roads ‘out of highly populous areas, When it is determined much traffic roads can handle, they will be designated as evacua- | del F J i i workers and would % In the 195 city With the funds, Willman hopes to purchase a fully equipped cue truck, s Dr. Hume, a i FE iy i Hl i Aj Hf — Ss 4 THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 15, 1955 ~ 1 The Broncos have compiled an 114 record overall and their 38- mark in the conference is good | for 2nd place, one game out of Inaugural Ball Held by OCBC Members Oakland County Boat Club held | its annual Inaugural Ball last week end to honor the following newly elected officers: Lloyd Maddock. commodore: Ken Smith, vice-com modore; William Webster, rear | commodore; Harold Wells, secre- tary; and Edward Baxter, treas | urer. New board of directors includes and $1.000 Monday with a 72-hole total of 292. She edged out Jackie Pung of Honolulu. who closed strong for 293. and defending cham- pion Beverly Hanso of Indio, Calif., who started well but finished poor- ly for 295 Mrs, Zaharias came in fourth but that was just exactly what she needed, according to unofficial rat- ings, to win the Serbin Trophy for high-point member of the ladies PGA for the past year Akron Claims Offer for Olson Title Bout NEW YORK w—Bill Daly, man- | | ager of Ronnie Delaney of Akron, ' Gloves, biggest of all amateur box- | ter the ropes without a special type protection. It's estimated that servicemen Ohio, Monday night ‘claimed he ing tournaments, is in a mild tiz-| of sponge head had the backing of “several Akron businessmen” to offer middle- weight champion Carl (Bobo) Kennel Club dog show tonight, but But he sent none other than his | —100. 20-month-old Barrage of Quality Hill won't worry. He licked his old man, once the champion of them all Barrage, a frisky stepper who looks like he'd never run out of pep, still must win the working father, Ch. Bang Away of Sirrah Chest, back to his biscuits in the . Boxer judging last night. The youngster won his class inthe aft- ernoon session, then rested up for the big showdown, Bang Away, as 1%51 champion, automatically quali- Allow Them or Not? zy over whether to permit sailors and Marines to wear protective headgear in its rings. After the ring death last Decem- Today in All-Out Workout Se ¢ day ig “N Day” for’ Rocky Mar- ciano. zai 8 Td i af Rocky, knows what's going to i Hii li it a g ered Nose Test G rossinger Camp punches but I didn’t get hit square. a Headgears for Navymen Upset Golden Gloves NEW YORK u — The Golden | henceforth its personnel cannot en- _ SIXTEEN . | = % 4 e : . a. _§.|| Pontiac Skater = J 5 &|| Hubby in Revue . ty > : ; June Paulas One of - : = | , , : 11 Michigan People in mr ace leis tang One of 11 Michigan skaters per forming in the 1955 Hollywood Ice rr With Fe | Revue is June. Sapelak Paulas of career in joining the Revue, but sd . . alse niet her husband. The Pon- in Playoff Tilt inRoad Game | fs svat = cage, Catholic Loop Second Contest to Concivde |e te the sevne eoctactes and ° : ‘ some musical Division Finals Berth Non-League Schedule) rangement, ° Is at Stake for Pontiac Don Stewart of Hazel Park is St. Michael's once-beaten Sham- _| Pontiac High's basketball team | the show, Others hail trom Detroit, rocks tackle highly-rated Detroit }| goes, to Ferndale tonight for its | Wyandotte and Dearborn. St. Andrew tonight in the semi- final non-league game. of the sea-| The Ice Revue currently is play- finals of the Catholic League's son. at Olympia Stadium, where it playofts. = . eee sonra te Sapey Vay Spaces aad enumee teeesmmens Contest is scheduled for 7:30 p.m. caw ted wind’ up thee schedag {are given each Saturday and Sun- at the Catholic Central gymnasium, | Wy * with home games against Bay day, with nightly shows every eve- Outer Drive-Hubbell intersection in| — ~) City Central Feb. 25 and Arthur |S except Monday and Tuesday. Detroit. Winner of the game will Hill March 4 Tryouts for the revue have been poy ee Us Coach Art Van Ryzin's team | Otympie { >. O Contideses amet in the U of m.), crown Sunday niversity cage should be at full strength tonight ca ce at cas a Pontiac parochial squad defeated | season for Avondale High School, but coach Frank Crowelj has hopes | the left are sophomore Dick Gronski, Larry Herron, Crowell, Jerry | for the first time in three games. | should bring their own skates. Suburban Catholic League co-|for a brighter future with four underclassmen gaining valuable | Paul and Lyn Wright. Wright has been the leading scorer in recent | Guard Bob Johnston, a J-year champion St. Benedict last week- | experience while the ‘Jackets have won 3 and lost 8 games. From | games for Avondale, which meets Waterford. tonight. regular, returned to school yester- ’ end to earn a berth in the play- * ¢ @ oe s * ¢ s * 6 « day after a week's absence be- , rs offs. It marks the 2nd trip to the cause of influenza. . championship tourney in four years e Johnston is expected te regain ’ : “mms ae toae « fe s Point for lourneys === == Win'B Game club bowed to St. ing with Walt Poe. hndevn, a0h, te comitinal ection p . y . ata oe ) after posting an 11-1 mark im | Pochester and Clarkston, two of| has gone on a 6-game winning| hold tournament previews with | Nevertheless juniors Jerry Kruskie eee Wharry’s 27 Points pyre at Gis your test | 22 ews better Ginss B prep) cpurt to rum ie sense vecerd to) Gated (Pub. 22) ee ee a center. Sparks Police Quint Andrew, which basketball to-| 94 and will bid for its 10th victory! Orien (Feb. 25) prior Gillie, a sophomere, doing only one game in the West Side| basketball teams. are Rating’ in| tonight on the home floor against start of the district’ event at ||. Qty cng with Jerry| ae eat wo one canter. to ‘D’ Victory title rece, appears again to be! po itisc’s Class B district tourna-| Fitzgerald. PHS, March 2. iid Dichm. who 0 lest ene ef the strongest teams in the/ ot next month. With ne league championship Meanwhile, it's first things firet | Harmeck and John Woodman, an- , —> Boys’ Club plunged Courtesy circuit. Four of the Flyers’ start- ; ’ Sve! te peg wat |fer Dem Manet’ Clarkstonians, | tr Pair of juniors, and sopho-| Friday in his first varsity appear-| Floors deeper into the City Bas- ers connected for double-figure to- | Gene Konley's Rochester werry about, the Pulses ll ag pe Mt of 13| more Clayton Roth. : (ance. Diehm averaged slightly | ketbalf League Class B cellar last tals Sunday as they trounced Ca- ea —— hott Walled Lake alse has |more than 19 points per game on | night by trouncing the tailenders thedral Central, 62-52. . eo . games hope to make North- jon eneacies Geamk sree’ | the junior varsity prior to moving 55-32, starts this year were a 45-36 upset —— and sophomore John Walker | Pontiac. which handed Ferndale! poyy° club, while teammate Mar- eartier by Cathedral Central and . ony See eee Oe | hay, Neel eels Ges, wel | ee ne el. eg Ds a l-point double-overtime loss to * , men at least a temporary tie with e ; ty 2 tte will be rated a slight favorite over Combs had 13 apiece. Class A Catholic Central. Milford for first place in the wt cophe prommbted trem the 2. |, Ralueplitiers tonight. Coach) “ia, sertelted their Class A sian a ae aa ee 0 ld e e 0 gy < At . ~ =e scorer in|6 ot ite 10 clasts ta date. | contest to co-leader Clarkston. Wilhelm and John Keller at for- ‘ . Wednesday. reserve ball, Larry Dion and| He will probably start Clarence sd cas ee wards, Bud Schwartz at center and| By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS | ballots were more widely scat-| Clarkston also has a date with) Dean Hess started last Friday's) McKinney and Jerry Fry at for) os over Wolverines in Class Capt. Marty Keller and Bob An-| San Francisco, which displaced tered. The Dons received 61, Ken-| Clarenceville prior to what likely| game and saw lengthy service | wards, either Paul Dugan or Dick | 1, iin pose led by Don Walk- derson at guards. Kentucky as the No. 1 basketball | tucky 12, LaSalle 6. will be a climactic game with| against Van Dyke. The Vikings Kienbaum at the pivot and Mark |W. 29 points downed Meteors John Keller, the only non-senior|team in the nation a week ago,| Duquesne's NIT - bound Dukes,| Milford on the Redskins’ floor | held a lead which was preserved | Rudman and Larry Shelton at | 47 59 in another “D” contest. in the lineup, is the Mikes’ top again held the top spot in the! again in fourth place, didn’t re-| Feb. 25. in the last quarter as Veteryn guards. Only Rudman and Shel) osigers GaMms—Chuct's shack scorer with a 15.7 average. His/ Associated Press poll today. ceive a vote for first place but| Then Rochéster and Clarkston | guard Dedo Aughenbaugh coruvd | ton sow action against the Citets jx: Pepees fen A TUE. Loe: Be top effort of the season was a/| The Dons polled 1,164 points on | George Washington, which rose a| will be joined by Oxford, Lake| 12 points. Walled Lake is idle | last year, when Pontiac won a | }'% me.) Blue Devils ve siaybangh's spectacular 43-point performance | the basis of 10 for first, 9 for sec-| notch to five, was No. 1 on 10| Orion, Romeo and Avondale in| tonight but meets co-leader South- | 51-48 decision. , cod pee against St. Rita. ond, etc., on ballots cast by sports | ballots. Marquette's rambling War- | Pontiac’s Class B district. field of the liter-Lakes Friday. | Game is scheduled to start at | Ross ana idsteors vs Wolverines (Class writers and sportscasters. Ken-|riors, who moved up from ninth} ot Canstaten cnt | St games tenight, Utica |S pm. immedintely Silowlng he /5 Seem wees ® The last pitcher to shutout the| tucky, rated second, had 847 points, |to sixth as they stretched their — seeks its 12th straight win at |Teserve tilt. Boys) Cub... Bw es ne Yankees in a World Series was/a gain over last week. winning streak to 18 games, were | Mechester feature tonight's Prep | 1 sieview, and Holly is at home Courtesy fg Preacher Roe of the Dodgers. He| LaSalle, in third place, also! put on top by nine. card in the Pontiac area. Aven | 1, Brighton. ’ Irwin-Rese ..........- eo 17 10 36-47 beat them 14 in the second game | scored higher than last week in| The remaining first-place ballots| ale alse ts in action, entertaim- | 1) nodule: amer $ a p Meteors ..seseeceees- 1B 8 12 O08 of the 1949 Series. points even though the first-place | were widely scattered as North| 6 Waterford. The Skippers TONIGNT a ——| Carolina State, Minnesota, UCLA wen the first meeting, 51-45, at in -1 a at Welverines ........+- vuwDs ° ° ‘ | and Utah filled out the rest of the! Waterford. Brighten ot Molly: Pitsseraid ot Roch- . . Shooting of Pontiac's Al « » Minnesota. the only new-| Both Waterford and Avon have) vist Nowezas' Oumise ares WINS TOL Drug Quintet Z " ‘ mped small of | aie i be at = “: |by beating Hiinois, which fell from | Sousa’ yar enaches Dom Beedle | serene ch Gees La, Beans _._ Ends Regular arkeley Leads League test croup we ih cpa Corey Dom Basile ifot'itke''w'uniee 8 a"| Ron Nets 28 Points Fal Alan Barkeley, Pontiac junior | first. Barkeley has been individual | *¢ consen's records Sevurdey's | liberal use of underclassmen with | fle et taeene crenaeaak as Wolverines Edge | eason n en high scorer in two games, once | 65.4.3.2.1 basis an eye on the future. Ot Patterson: Ot. Rese at St. Preds. Purple 72-70 | Drayton Drug closed the pre- hitting 21 points and netting 25 in| } Se. en, “fee?” ‘yc, _ Al Hill, Jack Greenlees, Toby | rp, . playoff portion of the Water- another. | 2 ke Galle @ cee ru| Aldrich and Don Krupp are| Ousted Penn State Grid | nn ARBOR W—Ron Kramer's | ford Recreation Basketball League 5. George W ae) (83) on | Crowell’s center corps, but Junidr] 44 4. Mal, New T layup basket in the last three sec- | schedule Monday night = $. mort Car mate (a) cia | er ie oe emew ly onds of play Michigan a 72-| With an easy 60-25 win over Water- Ber Zaharias +B ree 3 lw sae a3 READING, Pa. @ — Lenny 70 Big Ten basketball victory over | ford Merchants, g, wa. Uteb cl) cea. a Larry Herron and Jerry Paul are| Moore, Penn State football star| Northwestern last night. And it Poole Lumber downed Beattie 1 maryend “SCgae TEN yg) (he, Usual back-court combination/ who was expelled last week for! save the Wolverine football player | Meters in the Sad game ef the N f h Vict FO Se oo eg neon en ee ee rate, of 8, point total for the second) twin Dll 42. The schedule wi . 0 C | ories AS owes cg TIT =| Myles Watkins and Joe Umprey| a bidoey condition and wit epety | ue — the pacha a oa ae a Aiabama Oy (lea) veneees gare senior —, at Waterford, | fo readmission to the university Kramer collected Se slated Monday, Feb, 21. ‘ emmesere (3) « Yd deewweee ve ft of L Michig 's . alt Aare tate 9 OE ene Brecenty-acqired Jack Campbell cording toe trend. “"| dividual swring record — tthe |, Paul Nadeau paced the Drug vic Open, Babe Is Serbin | — { ever | ory over the Merchants with 18 ' Wolverine 8-70 victory Seth et Trophy Winner Barrage Is Victor iene aged mee lected 12 for the losers; ° service center period to preserve iw ct tm ot gurt worn |, Bang Away Loses to Son in Boxer ag Ser ws rind te | gh Puc Ninewensr retbd harias, just barely slipped through . 2 scholastic mixup, took charge ear- | Jack 12 |te'vcire now se Peeroer| JUAGIng at Westminster Kennel Show (i'm vec es wavtos w'a|*% TS bd 12 tr Beaten a. omen s open. 44-40 halftime lead. "7 @ NEW YORK He may not win | group award, if he's even to get to| fied for the breed final. He holds The Michigan margin narrowed | Gibson, Hasbrouck Win Miss Berg won the tournament | the 79th edition of the Westminster | the final. | the all-time record of best-in-shows | Carly in the second half. From | i i isi ; Z i | | | [ ii aie LT i Gophers Dub Indiana, Near Ay fi ii z g rf 2 ¥ ry ri : F Going After ‘World Record Every Week Too Tiring es rhe if taal: Hi THe fH Orioles Sign Hurler BAL’ HH 3 & bt © f Ett +0 fie> | ae * 3 BS Pua evil ? fy z i i rail Hh F 7? fF + v i} e - ~ » 4 es: arf a‘ é i ed iS. Me —“, - ct CD ee cttte, PE tae Cd THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 15, 1955 SEVENTEEN - Spring Training Near, 135 Still Unsigned S*:"?= ‘Stengel Predicts Pitching Will Be Most | Crucial Problem in Yanks’ Spring Drills team lel age ee my 313 year and now offered last | year’s pay, is still negotiating from his Tilden, Neb., home. Tommy Byrne or Bob Weisler also | available for catching wé should $2 TENTH OF A SERIES March 1, a survey by The Associ-| For the most part, however, the he would ask for a substantial in-| are due to discuss terms with pe see eee deliver we could be sitting pregty. | be in good shape. So far as Howard ated Press today showed that/clubs are not worried. Unsigned |crease. But apparently he hasn't|eral Manager Roy Hamey of the} Washington's chief trouble By. CASEY STENGEL Besides aged pitching, our big-| is concerned, I have no idea as more —_ 135 major league play- ee not — aoe | eet around to talking with the | Phillies in Florida. Simmons has | likely to come from Vernon. Mick-| See es a hen gest weakness last year was at/| yet where he will play. That'll be ers ve not signed contracts.| outs unti] March 1, Seve ve | Braves’ officials. } into the Philadelphia office to, ey made about $27,500 last season Pitching going to the | shortstop. Phil Rizzuto, w | up to him in spring training. Many of them are among the! said they have just delayed in . * 6 | talk while to| and the club reportedly wants to important problem of the Yankees! 1 oh for Poti Frac ‘ns their tive | ” * 6 «6 sport's stars. | signing and will be,on hand when; Hamner, apparently slated for a| take a 20 per cent slice after oteas him to around $20,000. |in spring training. . 8 ¢ the first ball is thrown out. — em —e om I feel the addition of such strong- The unsigned list includes Ted The White Sox have the smallest | armed fellows like Bob Turley and Williams, whom the Boston Red/ list. It consists of just Minoso, | |Don Larsen has strengthened the Sox hope will change his mind| who wants a $20,000 raise. He re- |staff but we're going to miss a about retiring; American League | portedly is getting just under fellow like Allie Reynods very batting champion Bobby Avila of | $30,000, much. If it's true that the Indian | is Cleveland; Sal Maglie, pitching'- The Indians, with one of the) is going to retire, I can only S8Y | kid until he’s discharged trom the ace of the world champion New | longest lists, are not looking for | that he'll be mighty hard to re- | is | { York Giants; Hard-hitting Eddie | any rea) contract trouble. place. | make place Mathews of the Milwaukee Braves; | It is believed that Avila, Doby | -_ *.* | the — . a Roll 997 in Doubles the Phillies’ Granny Hamner, | and Wynn and the club are about | Allie started ball games every | ° Richie Ashburn, and Curt Simmons; | $5,000 apart. four days and he could step in| My present infield and outfield| Eve Miller and Olive Bogard the Yankees’ Mickey Mantle; . f- 6 there and do a fine job of relief | plans shape up something like this; | Posted a 997 actual score in the | Avila's teammates Larry Doby | Neither is the Giants’ front of- and Early Wynn; Minnie Minoso | fice foo mueh concerned over | of the White Sox: Boston’s Jim | Maglie. Only a minor difference | Piersall; Bob Porterfield, Mickey is said to be keeping them apart. | Vernon and Eddie Yost of Wash-| The Yankees expect Mantle in the ington; and Jim Finigan, star | fold within a day or two. work, and just as the TV fella! Bill Skowron and Joe Collins at | @0ubles event of the Michigan says, ‘you just don't get them no) first. The kid Skowron thinks he | Women's bowling tournament at more.’ He was a great pitcher for|can go all the way. He'll have to | Jackson last weekend. The score us for seven years and there's no| show me. Gil McDougald or Cole- | is believed to have moved the Pon- question but that the Yankees and/ man at second. Hunter or Rizzuto | tiac duo into Ist place in. the I, personally, will miss him. But| or somebody else at short. Andy | event. - * his health is of the first concern! Carey or McDougald at third. ! to the organization, as well as to/ * ¢ *@ Three Quintets ° New Leaders ee | meee ede RENT . |er against all kinds of pitching. | Take Over Im I expect to have 18 pitchers in Irv Noren, Hank Bauer, Country | N e e camp and you can bet that I and | Slaughter and Bob Cerv share. the | TRAVIS Added 10 Field State Pin Test the coaching staff will look over | pther outfield duties. With oat HARDWARE \ each of them carefully. In fact it | guys and with Yogi Berra and = Sos could be that when we look over | ston Howard and a couple of others [|S Ovsheré tebe Ave 7m sent for Invitational Louisville, Manhattan, Niagara Accept Bids to NIT in New York NEW YORK w — The field for the National Invitation Basketball tournament was half filled today with six more teams still to be named for the post-season event. Louisville (16-6), Manhattan (14- 3) and Niagara (14-5) accepted bids Monday to compete in the Madison Square Garden classic March 12-19 s s . The NIT previouly had selected three other independent teams — Duquesne, Dayton and Cincinnati. Louisville, Manhattan and Niag- ara all have participated in the NIT before and have a total of 10 appearances among them. For Louisville, this will be its ing round games in both 1952 and 1954 and gained the quarter-finals in 1953. Manhattan, giving the tourna- ment some local flavor, will be . making its fifth appearance in the Garden post-season tourney. The Jaspers reached the semi-finals in 1953 before being eliminated by bowing to Duquesne. More than a dozen other teams are under consideration for the re- LaSalle. | | Nerthwestere. | 11 in the trials Saturday and Sun- | = tat smut al for Texas Open “2 ot scsncun Niagara, a perennial upstate , \ =. oes P| | 2” , power, has impressed this season ja Ga Fifth-ranked George Washington WESTSIDE LADIES ‘B” with conquests of Holy Cross, Cor- | ° a a 1-U bef i w Pr nell, Fordham and Canisius. The Furgol Heads List in rg ge collected 44 points ng p 5 * a * | | } } yo } 50 Links Stars Tune Up Today SAN ANTONIO, Tex. # — Hot shots of the tournament trail go after a little pin money today. Club. Meanwhile 248 golfers will be shooting for 50 qualifying places in the Texas Open in 18 holes at Brackenridge Park Course, scene | of the open starting Thursday. The big tournament has drawn a record-breaking entry of 369 Win Strings Extende ~ | Sain and Jim Konstanty as my relief pitchers with Ed Lopat a spot starter. That means I have hopes of a big five of starters, | including Whitey Ford, Bob Grim, | Tom Morgan, Turley and Larsen. Bill Russell, 6-10 center, paced | Then 1 oa | a second-half San Francisco surge | e after the Dons trailed 344-25 at the Sledde F llowi half. Russell scored 21 of his 31) A 0 ng points in the final halt. Father's Footstep Minnesota maintained its half- af er 5 5 game advantage in the Big Ten! LAKE PLACID, N.Y. & race with an 80-70 victory over|Waightman Washbond, surprise Indiana, while runner-up Iowa kept | Victor in the two-man Olympic bob- = ing Obi 79.63 |*#0d tryouts here, was rated a — ne, State | strong chance Monday to match The Gophers’ league record is 82,/|his father’s success as a U-S. while Iowa stands 7-2. team member in the world com- In other Big Ten encounters last | Petition. night, third-place Illinois, No. 14, Washbond, whose father Bob |overcame an eight-point halftime raced with the American two-man | deficit to whip Michigan State 90- | CTeW in the 1936 Olympics, had a 2 and remain in championship |'W°-@ay total of 5:13.72 for four | contention; last-place Purdue upset | heats down the mile-long Mt. Van | Wisconsin 75-63; and Ron Kramer's | Hoevenburg run. | layup with three seconds left gave |. With Pat Martin of Massena as Michigan a 72-70 conquest over | brake, Washbond bested a field of caged 4 points in leading Virginia to a 106-68 lacing of Clemson. . . . Second-ranked Kentucky, hitting We olter the ladies the same privileges as men jn their own separate department under the super- vision of Mrs. Carrie Glenn. Steam Baths, championship by defeating Idaho as 7-3 Swede Halbrook scored 31 points Division Pacific Coast Cogference | Y’ALL COME— MEN! Try the razor designed to 3, bs ; * Elect. Cabinets, Ex- 3 , *, : 4 players of which 121 are exempt SEE US — ercise equipment, etc, and a CHAMPAIGN wW — Michigan| ~ ~~~ _ Msn. ‘ | from qualifying. . : very reasonable yearly rates State failed, 90-72. in last night's STATE SKI CHAMP—Here's Michigan's schoolboy ski champion. | . . WE FINANCE! oo daily from 9 @ m. to attempt to cool Illinois’ Big Ten | He is Ross Hohn, 18-year-old son of Mr. and Mrs. Charles G. Hohn, The list includes Gene Littler, ; basketball hopes. |3105 Wellington Drive, Green Lake. Ross, coming back after a ~ gle olan: mneney winner, Everybedy s Credit CALL TODAY FOR skiing mishap a year ago at Traverse City, that sidelined him for *" 8 other winners along the INFORMATION The Spartans piled up an eight- point halftime margin but crum- the balance of the 1954 season, recently took the combined downhill coff. the Memphis dentist. who tri ATHLETIC ae under a second half 5l-point and slalom avon = , 98 North Saginaw Saree “contenders Bob Baker of Pitts ~Bear Equipment and Wheel Balancing Thrifty Drug ...; te Huron Garreie oar. 38 | burgh and Rex Layne of Lewiston, Frame and Ante Straightening y seNeowe -osecees, Telegraph: and pve = $ \ 36 | Utah, for a 10-round television bout . 35 Elizabeth St. Ph. FE 4-5941 j Thrifty Drug or eee ee ee «ese. 148 North ‘ gaint i tin oak eeTPG | wt Bastern Parkway Arena, Feb k | Walled ake Pharmacy «oa: a 902, aV \ : « . Walgreen's 0 obeqndessescuscedbeceeeel , ‘ ? P ot ' ‘ é 3 ‘ > : : ; f t - \ w ‘ . ; yy 8 y : ‘ 4 ef } j ‘ - \ j ‘ | ‘ \ , t e) ; ! } | ; / ¢ t +4 *. uf hee 14 : Pe * “A _ RIGHTEEN ¥ "* Motorist Free 107 new i: Ez anyway. ff ughter charges or con- to the support of 10 chil- district judge ruled unique sentence illegal and Sherrill would have to serve : in his care terday ordered a new trial but the! district attorney refused to prose- | cute. Store Guard Admits : Series of 100 Thefts PHJLARELPHIA — A guard employed by a private protective agency has \gdmitted that in the course of a yéar he looted stores than 100 times. Police yesterday, quoted the ex- guard, 26-year-old \Frederick A. | Sherwood Jr. of neakby Cornwell Heights as saying he \burglarized 19 business places. ~ Detectives recovered 9 $5,000 Judge E. C. Fishel yes- wood was held on larceny charges. EXCLUSIVE! FIRST RUN! NOMINATED FOR ACADEMY “BEST PICTURE OF THE YEAR!” National Board of Review an fe fee JULIUS CAESAR i specian / (O} AWARD! 4 —DOORS OPEN—. Tues., 6:45—Wed., 1:45—Thurs., 6:45 Sterting Tu WED. 2 . Time “JULIUS CAESAR” £5, & THURS. 7:15 & 9:40 :20—4 :45—7 :30 PRICES — Children 20c Anytime Adults—Matinee 40c, Nights 60c Incl. Tax. mountain of merchandise and Sher- Don't Need Steel Vest Now in Middle West By EARL WILSON town. And: : | “You can’t hardly get them kinda cities like Chicago no more.” The climate was so dank that the town was spelling its . name “Chismogo.” I heard a history professor quoted as saying: “Malenkov may soon be expected to experience some very ill health.” * * * * | ‘They were already talking about the 56 political conventions, presumably to be held here. In the Ambassador East's Pump Room sat Suzan Ball, Crazylegs Hirsch and | Lloyd Nolan of “Caine Mutiny”—once Mar- ° 'tin Kane, Private Eye’”—remember? “Now that Ike’s press conferences are | on TV,” said Nolan, “he’s got a worry | —will his option be picked up in '56?” Mae West was at the Chez Paree . : |Lena Horne and Jay Lawrence having just | finished. Jay said he'd been very sick. “I was in bed with 104,” he announced, “and believe me, that’s a lot of people to be in one bed.” x « * * He lectured us about not smiling enough. “Just give it some serious thought,” he pleaded. | “If you went around all day long flash- | ing a big smile at everybody you saw, ‘you'd be surprised at how many people here in Chicago would come up to you and | stick out their hands and say ‘O. K. Wise Guy! | funny?” Lena Horne (beaming about her daughter, 17, graduating from high school in Poughkeepsie soon) said that if 12-year- old Juliet and 14-year-old Romeo were around today, they'd be in a let of trouble. “They'd be held as juvenile delinquents,” she said. * * * x Big, cocky, roaring Chicago always seemed to me to consider New York highly unnecessary. And why not? The owner of New York’s most daz- zling jewel, Col. Henry Crown, proprietor of the Empire State Building, lives here —in Evanston. There's very little if any gambling around any more, and some days the newspaper boys don't have one de- eent murder. The strip-tease joints are reasonably quiet. It’s a long, long time since they used to say that Chicago: kiddies would often shoot their parents good night. x * *&* * SUZAN BALL What's so — TSN TECHNICOLOR Edita RUNNING WILD UNDER THE BIG TOP! DEAN MARTIN wt JERRY LEWIS we HAL WALLIS’ rcsccnes iL) 3 RING CIRCUS om JANN DR ZA SA GARR oe WALLACE FORD ~ ELSA LANCHESTER ee I PLUS . RAW PANIC...THE SCREEN HAS NEVER DARED REVEAL! Monday Tuesday | a MUED ARTISTS PRESENTATION _ = THE MIDNIGHT EARL... . David O. Selznick may startle Holly- wood by making a two-picture deal with | MGM . . Joe DiMaggio's very happy . . David Wayne's TV show will make | a sudden switch from film to “live,” with Fred Coe taking over as producer in the shakeup. Marie McDonald, at El Morocco with Harry Karle, said he’s merely in to see their children. (At El Morocco?) ... Luscious Sherry Britton just opened at the Monaco Club. The William Morris office will ask Godfrey's permission for Marion Mar- lowe to play a Las Vegas hotel. . . Peggy | SHERRY Dow, once a U-I actress, visited the lot with chauffered car, explosion of the 1955 atomic test | SiTley Sloan of the police traffic mink coat and rich husband. Jane Powell will play the Desert Inn in May for 20 G's plus a week . . . Paulette Goddard went home after her TV show Monday and slept 19 hours .. . Doris (“How to Marry a Millienaire”) Lilly's writing another book in Rome. NICE THING about those small foreign autos, claims Jim | Reed. If you flood the carburetor, you can just put the car over your shoulder and burp it... That's earl, brother. What’s a poor wife to do? (Get a kitchen © telephone extension, of course!) Sure yourself countless steps. Make your house- work easier. Have an extension telephone tnstalled in your kitchen, where you spend a great deal of your time—and in your bedroom too. (Copyright 1955) — / _ The cost? Only a few cents a day will bring you the extra canvenience of extension telephones. To have yours installed, simply mic HIGAN BELL TELEPHONE COMPANY x call our Business Office now! SY Phenix Murder -_~ \Trials Delayed Prosecution Is Waiting for Important Witness Nabbed in Florida | BIRMINGHAM, Ala. —An im- portant state witness, arrested in Florida, was due here today for the A, L. Patterson murder trials. | His surprise absence yesterday al- ready had delayed their start. 24 hours. The arrest of James Ray Taylor, THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 15, 1955 U.S. Milk Hurts | Spanish Dairies Glenn Ford ~ Decides to End Free-Lancing By BOB THOMAS Product Makes Comparison MADRID (INS) — American-pro- duced milk with a ‘‘kick” in it is changing the habits of wine-drink- Sorry of the issues of the day in Spain. safely and enjoyably.be taken in- ternally has been drawn te_public ments of U.S. surplus dairy prod- of Spain's dairymen. The watered-down, unpasteur- ized milk sold in Spain had never caught the fancy of Spaniards. But now the virtues of the bev- erage—when properly processed and containing some substance— are being discovered. When the first shipment arrived from the U.S. in October, it caused little fuss. It looked as though the gift of at least 80,000 tons of pow- .| dered milk and 30,000 tons each of cheese and butter over the next three years would pass unnoticed. Then the local dairymen went into action, complaining that the American gifts were causing a “crisis of saturation.’’ The Spanish press and government came firmly to the support of the U.S. aid and | the dairymen took a dressing-down for their trouble. The sanitatipn charged: - “The anarchic state of the sale administration te | The newspaper ‘Ya’ reported that of the 1,300 dairies in Madrid, 192 had been closed during the past three years and a total of 4,718 fines were levied against the others in the same period. Free milk is now being distrib- uted in 49 of Spain's 50 provinces. Within three months every public school child in the country will be receiving one glass a day. In Ma- drid 80,000 children already re- ceive their daily ration, as do 60,000 in Barcelona. Milk, cheese and butter also are being sent to hospitals, tu- berculosis sanitori , Poor par- ishes, social aid groups, labor unions and the Red (robs. ing-Spaniards and has become one | Milk as something that might | attention by the arrival of big ship- | ucts, and by the resulting outcry | when many stars are scattering to! the free-lance market, Glenn Ford | | has signed a term contract with | | MGM. How come? | | That's what I aimed to find out. | And here is his explanation: | “I've been free-lancing for sev- | eral years. Let's face it—I've made | | some pretty lousy pictures. Sure, I've made money, darned good money, There's a picture now in release that is earning fantastic | grosses. I have a piece of it, and | I may earn between a quarter and |@-half million dollars. But it's still a stinker. * * ® ‘That's the trouble with the in- dependent market.~Producers are always coming to yoU~and say- ing: ‘I've got a story we can-make cheaply and you can make a lot of money from it.’ They never say: ‘Here's a great story that will cost a lot of money but will; do your career a lot of good.’ . | “Well, the time comes when you have to think of good pictures | and not just money. You can ex-| pect your fans to go along with | you so far. Then you've got to| think of quality films. “There are other things to con- sider too. Like a pleasant crew to work with. When you start out! in pictures, that's not important; | you're only thinking about getting | ahead. But I've been in this busi- ness 14 years now, and the com-| fort of having a director you like and a friendly crew means a lot.” . * | Although he could make much | money as an independent, chose to sign with MGM on | virtually an exclusive basis. The | deal is this: He'll make from 10 to 12 pictures in the next five years. This is in addition to the four pictures he owes Columbia. | He gets a whopping salary; he! didn't say how much, but guesses range from $3,000 to $4,000 a week. And he gets paid 52 weeks a year. This is said to be the first time MGM has granted such a deal Most stars are on salary only 40 weeks a year and languish for 12 weeks on “‘layoff.” } | Army Planning to Get Out of Coffee Business _ WASHINGTON (®—The armed services, following a policy of clos- | ing out operations which compete with private business, plan to stop roasting and grinding coffee. ‘Three Held in $30,000 |Canada Bank Robbery | WINNIPEG ®—Police are hold- | ing three men in connection with | a $30,000 holdup of the Toronto- | Dominion Bank. One reportedly CHICAGO—If George Gobel cares, I've just been to his home| Local, Watered- Down) HOLLYWOOD uw — At a time | was carrying about $10,000 and a revolver when arrested. The holdup was staged yester- day by three gunmen who broke into the bank’ through a window, waited until employes reported for work and then forced two of them to open the vault. lke Cuts Schedule WASHINGTON ® — President Eisenhower, nursing a cold which an aide said ‘‘certainly isn't seri- ous,"’ quit work a couple hours earlier than usual yesterday and rearranged his schedule for today and tomorrow. A weekly meeting with Republican congressional leaders, normally held on Tues- day, was put off until tomorrow. Plans for a news conference: nor- mally held on Wednesday, were canceled. GOOD GLASSES SINCE 1908 (3 NO. SAGINAW ST. . On Our Wide Miracle Screen in Techniceler » Cerkechahhahabathan’. \ New Lake Theater . ora . ® “$1X BRIDGES TO CROSS” With Tony Curtis and Julie Adams —ALSO— . \ \ away A AeLaétdaiés 7 9 ~~~" NOUR * P,Aterfield Theatres! me er aS Lm Pe , mow. TRYIN oo, The BATTLE of the GIANTS in the BICCEST Johan Ford—Four-Time Academy Award Winner, Says: “The Long Gray Line” is My Best . . . Coming Seon! TODay ) tee of Them Ail! | BURT LANCASTER ~~ ADDED ~ 2 Pere } SMITH CARTOON ° NEWS 5 eee CESAR ROMERO The dairy products, though do- The Army has been doing most nated by the U.S. government, are | of the coffee roasting and grinding sent to Spain by the U.S. National | for all the services, and a Pentagon Catholic Welfare Conference. That spokesman said yesterday it prob- organization hands the products ably will keep on buying green over to ‘“Caritas,"’ the main Span- ish Catholic charity. Weather Delays Atom Explosions Slated for Today | LAS VEGAS, Nev. ®—The first | series, which had been set for | @Vision said the radar accounted early today, was postponed for 24 hours by the Atomic Energy Com- mission. The AEC cited cnfavorable | weather conditions. At a 12:30 a.m. weather confer- ence, the AEC decided that winds would carry the atomic cloud from any shot today toward the Cali- | ente-Panaca-Pioche area in east central Nevada and might pose a radiation threat to that district. The AEC and Department of De- | fense test officials wil] meet later | today to decide whether to set off the shot before dawn tomorrow: About 1,100 men and 100 planes had been prepared to take the military's part in the first test | | shot from a 500-foot tower on) Yucca Fiat. | Bob Crosby Recovers HOLLYWOOD (#—Bob Crosby is home after a bout with lobar pneu- ‘monia. He }eft St. Vincent's Hos- pital yesterday and expects to re-| turn Monday to his Bob Crosby Show on CBS-TV. DEAF? — 40-year-old Columbus, Ga., cab | driver, in Niceville one ive elfcer i by the FBI. Niceville ice officer TW. Brown sald'be agreed to Free Book...Tells All |waive extradition on a_ federal | charge of unlawful flight to avoid ---Sells Nothing! \ giving testimony. * ¢ e@ If you hear \=-o™ \ A state patrol car relay was set but don’t un- —_on \ ‘up to speed Taylor to Birmingham, | derstand, per- where two former Phenix City offi-| haps youdon’t | cials face trial on charges of mur-| need a hear- — dering the rackets-busting Patter-| ing aid — as son last June. you'll learn from this re- Special prosecutor Cecil Deason | vealing 43-page booklet, was granted a delay until 9 a.m. Your F g and Your today when he was unable to pro- Health. duce Taylor for scheduled start; Contains such facts as the | of the trials yesterday. care of your ears; the ef- — Arch Ferrell, himself a prose- fects of vitamins and drugs cutor at crime-ridden Phenix City on hearing; whether deaf- ‘for eight years until Patterson's; ness is inherited ; the family death smashed the vice empire| problems of the deaf, and that flourished there, and Albert; many other revealing facts. Fuller, who was chief deputy, are ‘And there’s not a word in it who had promised to break the po ket eo ere oe eames Maximum penalty is death in the Sent for goer frag eeny~totey! wh oman venire wi be drawn| SOMOTONE by Judge McElroy and 12 jurors; $11 Pontise Stete Genk Bldg. will be chosen from that list. A FE 2-1225 panel of “ prospective jurors + was sworn in yesterday, Former Alabama Atty, Gen. Si| gona “Yeer Rearter 6 Teer Reahi”, Garrett, who campaigned sively in a Patterson from office, also is e@ ‘dictment, . bay coffee beans, contracting with | | private industry to do the roasting | | and grinding. Radar Proves Capable | DENVER \#—Radar speed check | devices caught 1,000 speeders in| less than a month after they, first were put into operation here. Capt. for more than half the speeding tickets issued during the period. STARTING SUNDAY THE STORY THRILLED TO BY MIELIONS IN LIFE MAGAZINE! PAUNTE NS © NETe rte Ne BRIDGES \l POhO-REY itecrente } BLACK THE Daxoras } y \ ON OUR NEW CIANT SCREEN! ES DANA ANDREWS in “THREE HOURS TO KILL” MAUREEN O'HARA ia “FIRE OVER AFRICA” PHONE FE 5-8331 LAST TIMES TODAY—RANDOLPH SCOTT in “The Bounty Hunter” ALSO “Massacre Canyon” REAR Sterts et —. 12:20 - STARTS TOMORROW JAMES STEWART ALFRED HITCHCOCKS WINDOW Oi 7 @4. in tie 0144) ©, sed Spear ae 2599 ass Fs GRACE KELLY WENDEL COREY- THELMA RITTER 3:30 - 6:50 - 10:00 ES _— ALSO our or THe Pass , | THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 15,1955 Hal Boyle Asks: | hope of getting himseit., | NANCY . s s | There is one sure thing about the | Why Is Exercise Ignored vse *otists 'e* See AKERY A it's AWFUL TO while we're doing all the brooding: BE SO CLOSE TO as Way to Lose Poundage? |" “ns “" "=| [7 Ze CAN'T HAVE ments by a pavement Plato: Several times recently, for exam-| town if he-has the right kind of yy / Dietitians say it's easier to ple, I have come across the state- dough. lose weight by skipping bread than| ment — by those minimizing the eee: Wa They play down the role of exer-| weight — that a man would have | 5€ ® Problem to keep wandering | cise and play up the importance | to walk 34 miles to consume the | WS ff Broadway. Now it's) of self-restraint at the table. But| calories in a pound of fat. crowded with calves, and nobody | skipping rope. role of exercise in taking off An oldtimer recalls it_used to/| : ry are human bodies as predictable * 8 ¢ minds at all. ) | in the way they burn up calories} What so-called scientist ever se as an engine is in its consumption | figured that out except in a labor-| What cynic was it that said he | of gasoline? I doubt it. atory? I will bet any fat, middle-| didn't intend to leave any money | People not only vary in the rate | aged doctor that if he gets out on | behind, because he didn’t want any they utilize food. An individual|the highway. and walks 34 miles| smiling faces at his funeral? fea-F himself, it seems to me, varies| every day for a week he will take “2° considerably in this respect from | off more than seven pounds — and| If animals could learn to talk, time to time, depending upon -his|he can eat or drink as much as the first phrase their owners would Except erence mood and outlook. Certainly a|he wants to during that week. try to teach them would probably | ;, mt a oe of Aageian given amount of liquor will affect! It’s a safe bet. How many doc-| be “thank you.” But most animals 1955 automobiles from a two-tone a man differently at different| tors are there today who walk 3%4| would prefer to start their vocab- summer shoe times, Why not food? miles in a month? wlary with another word — “‘help.”’ * 6 e@ >. es * (Editor’s note: Or swivel chair ss 28 « The music women like best Couldn't there be days, depend-| writers, for that matter?) The old fashioned girl who saved| comes from a wedding band — ing on how your body was function- e s .¢ her pin money to buy a hope chest | the tune for two. a Revi malted milks A man who spends more time | for her wedding trousseau now has * * put @ pound on you, | bragging about his children than|a marriageable daughter who is| The calendar says five more and other days when they wouldn't) talking about his own dreams is| purchasing an electric dishwasher | long weeks of winter, Where is add an ounce? No human being | regarded as a fond parent. But it|on the installment plan. our wandering robin? reacts invariably like a scientific | doesn't necessarily follow that he ——= formula, so why should we be| is. Often it is only a sad admis- treated dietwise as if we were all he y has nae ~ RSS 2 ~ ; SOW thw’ ONO 2-15 / ibbuens 7) 1998 by teh #. Bile Co T'll bet that doesn't look like it was turn out on any assembly line! v oes Va ~~ ~ CAPTAIN EASY by Charies Kuhn TT FIND WHEN I RVE Lat NEVER HAVE T’ WASTE A RICH, CHOCOLATE CAKE... LOT O° TIME LOOKIN" For = FINGER SMUDGES ./’ > ~ ne Meef GERORTA, WHILE WE WAT.MAY I ASK YOU CERTAINLY CISCO! WHAT 18 ITT WE ARE THE “UPPER NO HURRY / THE CRUST*-LET’S KEEP EVENING (Ss ’ ° STILL YOUNG ! LUSTEN NOW! | WAIT A MINUTE HERE/ I DONT WANT O BECOME A ADDICK ON _ “We didn't hurt anything~tt's only water!" vn V0 ' \ TOPCO E ; 7 putt, ff Gate Ea ce # f = 8 2 z grain: Detroit, cases included, federal-stat Wheat— | Mar ...sss-- 5 grades. ° wr ohnenee Mar ........233% May ......- 1.17% | Whites—Grade A fumbo 53-54 wtd. May ..+. 221k July ....... avg. 54, large 49-51, wtd. avg. 50: ~~ seaeee Ess Recon 1.31 —. bao, wid ae 46; grade B large sccccee -48. w ve BORD cccccce BOOM Mae ciccescs 277 Browns—Grade A jumbo 48: large 47- Corn— MAY c.seeee 2.73 0. wid avg 48'5: medium 48 grade B ~~ occccese +e — eccccece T° fod ed 47, grade C large 31-41, wtd. avg. yro2058 156 pelea 2.50 Checks 38. Lard BORE ccccccces WS MBF . e205: he CHICAGO BUTT ER AND EGGS eS 10% a wos eeee. 1237) CHICAGO. Fed. 18 ‘APi—Butter Daly cercccess H shar 4 steady: receipts 1.540.115: wholesale buy- += sa May eee 11.41 | '28 Prices unchanged; #3 score AA SOOECE 192 A 57, 90 B 5625; 68 C 56, cars iii i i arrivals old and about steady; % lower; U He is if it fs ; i . i : f ‘i if sf “a ts tei! Faz? f hl z i iv beets i! AY if ur 1, i | MARKETS Produce DETROIT PRODUCE Pon Bite 14 — Wholesale Re igo rmers'’ markets re the Bureau of Markets: aii , Fruits: Apples. Delicious, fancy, 5.50- 600 bu; © 1, 400-450 bu; oo F 7 S ° = - & 4 £ z ° ~ M a No 1. 1.00-1.50 dos. nel, No I, 1.25+bu. Horseradish, No 1, 5.00-6.00 pk. Leeks, No 1. 100-135 dos behs. Onions. : .. directors proposed a three-for-one toe 2.60 100-lb bag hubarb, hothouse, 1, 100-125 doz behs.. Rutabagas, No 1, 1.30-150 bu. Tomatoes, hothouse, 1. 8.75-350 10-lb basket. Turnip, topped, No 1. 150-200 bu. CHICAGO POTATOES CHICAGO, Feb. 14 (AP)—Potatoes: stock 268, new stock 17; on track 415 old stock, 17 new stock; total U.8. shipments Friday 844, Saturday 670, Sunday 20. Old stock supplies mod- erate, demand moderate and market | carlot track sales, old | stock; Idaho Russets $4.65; Idaho utili- ties $3.10; Minnesota North Dakota Pon- tiacs washed end waxed standing car $2.90. unwashed $2 30. stock supplies light, demand light, market dull, and no track sales reported. DETROIT EGGS B 56.75; 88 C 565 Eggs steady to firm wholesale 7 prices unchanged to ‘ rge whites 44. mixed ; mediums 43.5; US. standards 42: ; checks 39.5; current receipts DETROIT POULTRY ~ Feb. 14 (AP)—Prices f.o.b. Detroit for Net Market Mixed, Slightly Higher NEW YORK u—The stock mar- . | ket was quite mixed today~ but 9 | there was a slightly higher tinge, orth- |} to the list. No 1, 00- bu; apples, Wcoses,No's"Sah aan? Ow SOME Somé individual issues were strong, but changes either way oe: | usually were held to a point or » | less. Penn - Dixie Cement jumped ahead around 4 points right after $2 50-2 63, out- (AP)—Eggs, f o b receipts 11,036 split of the common and raised the dividend payment to 75 cents as against 50 cents a year ago. After the first rush of buying, the stock subsided a little from its best. : a fraction In early dealings, A block of 2,500 shares of North Pacific traded up 1 at 76. It was ahead 3 points yesterday. Most major divisions of the mar- ket contained a mixture of gains and losses. None was depresed. Airlines were a bit higher. Stocks gaining ground included Chesapeake & Ohio, Standard Oil (NJ), United Air Lines, Anaconda Copper, Republic Steel and Radio Corp. Lower were Seaboard Railroad, Kennecott Copper, American Can, | Chance Vought, U.S. Steel, General | Motors and. Boeing. The market yesterday was & shade lower as measured by the Associated Press average of 60 stocks which was off 30 cents at $159.40, but there were a few Choice of 4 = : Se eS tee malin w Wonell @ Writes 5 times longer than ordinary ball points! @ Exclusive rotating cartridge assures instant starting! @ Indestructible nylon barrel will never wear out! @ Jewelry-finished metal parts. Won't spot, tarnish, or chip! @ 4 barrel colors — also choice of 4 brilliant ink colors! FOR ECONOMY AND LASTING BEAUTY, CHOOSE THE NEW meanenesanem excel | TOWNSHIP PRIMARY ELECTION Primary Election will be held to the Hea " beavy 15-17 caponstion 14-6 Ibe) 30.0 New York Stocks CHICAGO POULTRY Gate Werning Quetetions) CHICAGO AP — Live poultry steady; | Adams Ex 43.1 Isl Crk Coal 313 receipts in coops 181 (Friday 33 coops Admiral . 29 Jacobs ....... 84 34,47] Ib); f.0.b. paying prices tr Reduce 312 Johns Man .. 036 to 2 higher; heavy hens 23-28.8; light | Allee L St! 454 ira _— - 4 a waa WA: gee ae aaa a ee re 123-123:5; ca tes 14-36. Allie Chal ms Kimb Cit - “4 Alum Ltd : Livestock Alum Am... 98 Lehn & F . Am Airlin .. mH capee'e a DETROTY LIVESTOCK Am Cyan. bat Le Menet be . Feb. 15 (AP)—Hogs—sa- | Am Gas & BE] . 434 ) ee bie 600. Market y steady; bulk | Am Loco . 33.1 Lockh Air -. 908 choice 170-230 Ib. barrows and am M & Pay 301 ar * 37 36, 75-17 50, noety 17.80 fer choice Am Motors .. 113 as oe -$ 2 around 220 Tes; few choice 1|Am N Ges ... 40.4 Lorillard .... % | be 17-18. top: most 290-300 Ibe | Am Rad. 3 Pield | 48 15. 75-16 78; Ths. 14.75-16.15; sows | Am Seating .. 35.3 searate Cae. a under 400 Ibs. 1435-1475; most 400-600 | Am a... @ ah on ee ibe. sows 13.56-13.75. Am Pa ‘1. y cp AO + y Cattlo—Saladle 900. Calves 180. Mar. | Am TelTel 102 ie pei. .1068 bet generally steady; ag BR. Am Woolen .. 256 Monsan Ch...116 fresh cows; limited supply | am Zinc ** 91.1 Mont Ward.... 79.2 Sw ppt Ts 26.00-37.50, mostly good | ,nee Cop ___ 634 Pa,.... 32.1 led steers 19.00-23.00; bulk utility and| 40s, wac 624 Motor Whedl.. 301 comme steers and heifers 13 Armee i |. %4 Moterolsa ..... “0.1 7.00; most utility and low com Armour & Co 16 Mueller Br.... 383 cows 11.80-13.80. mainly 13.00 down for) 4.sg Dry G .. 296 nee . 33 utility * and cutters most 2 Nat see 435 ly 10.06-11.50, some heavy Holstein cut- Atl Refin oii 384 Nat Dairy. 38.3 to 123.00; few lightweight canners . Nw rv Aveo Mfg .... 17 at Oyps..... ‘ Spee eenatentng mutate ent come) Bald Lime ... 43 Wet Lead..... 006) mercial bulls 13.80-15.80, mostly | Balt & Ob ... 40.3 Nat Bteel..... a5 steady; most good and choice vealers Beech Nut 206 Net Thee... 87 23.00-30.00; few high choice and prime | penaiz av .. 111.6 NY Air Brk... 38 individuals up te 323.60 or above: wtilit lo La NY Cent oe. 348 commercial grades 11 00-33 00; Beth Steel . 116 M Pw... 332 ee ee. - Air 184 Nort & West... 823 v mm Bohn fully steady at week's 80 cents edvance:| pong Ge” ita Nee me”: =e seares, strong: 164 bend chetee | Borden ...... Nor Sta Pw... 165 me lambs 23.40 most sales good and ¢ | ak igs - oe ones oun ‘ 2 wooled lambs 23.25-23.10; mostly choice | Brist My ..... 306 Oliver Cp 162 yee shorn oy lambs, No. Brun Balke .. 293 Otis Elev 5 ae SO fe Budd Co... 183 Owens Ii Ol..116 | eves 8.00-10.68, S| roe . 281 Pan AW Air.. 19 — handyweight shorn ewes | Calum @ .. 132 Penh BPL.. Ty at 10 ° Can Dry ..... 147 Param Pict... 386 Cam Pac .... 305 Parke Da.... 35.4 Capital Airl 26.5 C.... 8 @ Weeks) eo cigs 2 Figures after decimal points are “ coe High Low Woon | Cater Trae. $4 D503 583 palgutn Rebbere ....... .... PT eee a et 313 -Michigen® ..... : Mer ... Kingston Products* . 5 ‘ 2 a te 3 Pha ont) neSe Gerew® .. ...ccce ccc 31 3 | Coes Mille . 844 pogeces Qneatire® 7 $ | Chrysler Er me oO. ae Rudy © cecceccce 4 “S Proct & .. Screw ........ 14 (16 4 Cities Sve .. 130 = = © sale; bid and asked Clark Equip 7) Bure ofl by Climax Mo 61.1 SSS lo Radio Cp 414 wett Pea “6 Re Rand al STOCK AVERAGES Coca Cola 1's m n . YORK — (Compiled by the As- Coig Palm . = We +4 sociated Press). Col Gas 167 Ls —e Rs xo. 0618 18 © | Con Edis si4 bs Indust Rails Util Stocks Con OF 227 Rey Tod B 413 Noon today 88 12337 713 1887 | Consum Pw a4 RKO Pict ... 16 GOP ascc- 2181 123.3 715 1804) Con Pw pf 4% 110.1 Rock a ee Week ago ...... 2148 1188 687 Cont Bek .. 314 Safeway 473) Month ago ...... 3049 1163 675 Cont Can 79. St Jos Lead .. $63 Year = cocece 1408 844 «87.1 4 Mot 43 edhe fh » 1984-85 high ....2108 1233 718 — jaa Scot 38 1984-85 low 1439 Tre 884 | Copper Rng . 664 Sead AL RR... 774) 1963 high ...... 1518 936 56.8 Corn Pd .... 064 Sears Roed .. 903 WW) ccsee 1303 738 805 Crue Sti 343 Shell OU ... Net change ..... +7 +4 —3 Curtise Wr : 308 —— | _ = : is . 354 Sine . Dis C Seng .. 33.6 Socony Veo .. 06) Odug Aire . 130 on en 06 Dow Chem ... 47.1 . vw Po Du Pont 171.7 Sperks 2 te Bast Air L 416 og! ae ee = ene 1 32 td Of Cal 191 La Mus In 5 8t@ O88 Ind 44 Emer Rad 145 Std OU NJ... 116 | Oh “5 Bnd Jona... 313 Bie ene OP... 378 uo pe wre WE nx O08] . . 125 Pairb Mor 25 a bn Firestone ua of u Preept Sul.... 84 aire = Gen Bakes... 11a Syiv Bi Pa .. 48.1 Gen ** gq Texas C ..... 042 poner Tex GO Bul .. 416 e Cen 200...4. 566 Gen Milis...., 7 Thomp Pa ... Gen Motors 653 Timk R Bear 502 - 3 Gen Ry Sig «6060 Tran W Air oe eee Gen Refrac... 284 oe 203 rc pn Te ey Underwd =e Gen Tire bi 682 Un Carbide . 4 . . Un Pac . 196 pore g B Tl) ont Air Lim 406 Fico 03 0 mit Aire .... 87 Goodrich 635 : b Gintie pag United Cp .s. 69 perfil ead I Unit Pruit ... 82.1 Greh Paige... 27 US Lines .... 23.3 Gt No Ry .... @1 US Rud ae Ot West 8... 1s amet .... $03 pie eee! Seo i Ay CARRY noe ell $2 Us steel pi ..1802 rr ee SB Ted) .....0 19.3 Hersh Choe .. 422 © band 339 Holland FP . 169 Veo aa Ac =H | Homestk 47.1 Walgreen pha” 10.3 Hooker El ... 344 - on eat el i oeer ons West Un Fe sie Indust Ray .. 534 Westg A BE o ; pS ee an Og "924 Wilson & Co 11.7 | Int Harv ..... 37.1 Wise El Pw . 33.1 Int Nick ..... 64 Yale & oe6 oer Heat ab Fae Int Silver... nest Int Tel&Tel . 26.1 Yenith Rad .. 00.1) To the alified Electors Notice is hereby given, that a township THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 15, 1955" News in Brief i Hi z a f f DR. CLAIR L, TAYLOR g 2 F7 8 § | < H zt é i Taylor in Race for School Post Nomination Sought by State Superintendent at GOP Convention LANSING @—Dr. Cair L. Tay- iH i #2 gE | : a ‘ ce i | i sa. cardidacy for reelection today | Friday, Feb. 18, in a statement urging continuance of “strong local control” over the Dr. Taylor, 52, said he would seek renomination at the Republi- can State Convention in Defroit Saturday. The post will be filled Huge Chicago Arena Signed by Democrats CHICAGO (UP) — Democratic Hy Raskin, representing - tic National Chairman Paul M. | Butler, Jacob M. Arvey, Demo- cratic national committeeman from Illinois, and William Wood Prince, of the Union Stock Yards owns the big hall. will be $6,500 a day said an exposition will in the amphitheatre’s ducers, "54\National Product Total $357 Billion WASHINGTON (#®—The nation's output of goods and services last % cent, on year was reported by the Com-' tires 5 per cent. and on industrial merce Department last night at | tires 7% per cent, | = es Sees, a cree ee per cent producers are expected to boosts. —-— -- Canada Chrysler Airs Progress in UAW Talks ..._|department said that since 1954 7 iter Gets 15 Years; Sentenced to Hang @—A Detroiter Detroit Steel Reports p ay - ¢ Bian to $2.16 a common share. At 10,636 feet, Mt. Etna in Sicily is Europe's tallest active volcano. Foreign Exchange Rae | é of rr 5 > SE Eo of 1 (ees) Section 1. On the day of {i ri uF R | i Tt : i I 5 : oj -. & r Parlays $12,000 ‘Into $2 Million Teacher Leaves Large Estate by Using Simple Get-Rich Formula CHICAGO (INS;—An inventory ‘| of a safe deposit box by state tax 3 | examiners revealed how a Chicago school teacher parlayed $12,000 into nearly $2 million, The school teacher, Miss Ida Mighell, who died Jan. 1 at 86, had a simple get-rich formula: She bought blue-chip stocks in. the de- pression days and held them. The original $12,000 was. invest- ed @#%_years ago in a small manufacturing business that later prospered, : Then in the 1930s, she started acquiring such holdings as these: | '°™¢ Westinghouse Electric, 2,000 shares, now valued at $162,000; Standard Oil of New Jersey, 1,200 shares, $139,920; American Tele- phone & Telegraph, 617 shares, , | $110,751; U. S. Steel, 1,200 shares, - | $95,280, and Du Pont, 173 shares, $69,200. Her portfolio includes some 60) other stocks. In her will, Miss Mighell left | $1.4 million for the establishment of an old people's home at the Sugar Grove Township farm where she lived. The remaining $500,000 goes in individual bequests to rel- atives and friends. Two Persons Hurt in Car-Truck Crash fracture and other injuries. D, 1. | Pettengill, 19, of 89 N. Holcomb, mapped | Develops Tooth Paste holding their convention in the air- cooled amphitheatre, located next to Chicago's worid-famed ‘kyards Containing Fluoride CINCINNATI W — The Procter & Gamble Co. announced today it | in New York state, as test markets. Two More Firms Raise Tire Prices AKRON, Ohio @—Two more pro- by B. F_ Goodrich Co. On passenger tires the raise will | 2 per Since last Nov. 1 the price level proposed location. The company is Second Round __ | Burglar on Probation . . : yi] 336 of Vaccinations | oe, “Fitents, sesevtay s . three Starts This Week | "% tact on fn court on Elementary school children by Oakland County Circuit received first vaccinations for George B. Hartrick. Jones ad- theria and tetanus last month are | Mitted Feb. 7 breaking into a store week, along with immunization for | Oct. 19. The free vaccination is ears Probation program being conducted by Oalaann Coun | 20t® 3 Y ty Department of Health in order| Robert O. Jones, 17, of 348 to insure against any possibility of | Hayes St., Hazel Park, yesterday an epidemic in the schools, Dr.| was placed on three years proba- John D. Monroe, county health di- | tion and assessed $100 court costs rector, announced, by Oakland County Circuit Judge Monday the immunization team | George B. Hartrick. Jones ad- visited New Hudson and Sodth | mitted Feb. \7 breaking into Lyon schools. This morning they | Ferndale, service station were at Novi School, Lee Brooks | Jan. 17. School on M59, and Davisburg. This afternoon they visited Milford. About one third of the United Schedule for the remainder of | States is arid or semiarid. the program follows: pS Er 511 Community Nat'l Bank Building Phone FE 4-1568-9 BAKER & HANSEN Donald E. Hansen Richard H. DeWis Res. FE 2-5613 Res. FE 5-3798 Accident Insurance Fire Insurance Automobile Insurance Liability Insurance Insurance . Life Insurance Bonds—All Types ' Plate Glass Insurance “THE DEFECT OF EQUALITY IS THAT WE ONLY DESIRE IT WITH OUR SUPERIORS” —Heary Becque The Happiest Homes Are Financed the Low-Cost “Capitol Way!” Investment Facilities - + « at Your Finger Tips Just pick up your phone ond call us for experienced service on your investments. Your inquiries ore welcome —by phone, by letter or in person. WATLING, LERCHEN & CO. Member Now York Steck Exchange end ether looding exchanges Detroit: 3rd Fleer Ford Building—WO 2.8528 PONTIAC OFFICES 716 Pontiec State Bonk Building FE 4-2895 STOCKS — BONDS Consult us for first hand information in Stocks and Bonds We maintain a direct line to a member of all principal exchanges with up-to-the-minute quotations service available at all times. C. J. Nephler Co. ly? ‘We'll be glad to review your coverage ond bring it up-to-date — no obligation. q IND Ex CL To . ASS 1 . nines, No | es 3 Ss ald rEBR Card old Rey. 18 UAR _ i of Th pat by 820 Vines felp Ww. - toon id ‘ é Flowers ccoce w. Bees Mabe ae TI Male E PO . core at 1 Funeral m Moin = cau M Py N Funeral ove sense wl a Perry 3 home adi a ent. $150 E JO FUN TIA Lace ongl von | Se sorite ee ae eeessene 3 cae rl a Sale ssies ten, noes for ole USIN RESS, EMPLOYMENT a Lae._ 1838 Vines ae Too comm a te ae oat TU Help eeeces bad 4 Myrt pve hee Sa as La — one ESI a eres aa. ile ~ her of ote 1988, LIND: aS Pe Sarre JAY, / w Male . Race and >A am Pike ox selling. by H HERE Hel ‘anted m nesd Be 5 meg ved i YLOR ersh ; Want F setees Perry Se "re dure. SH og oly D be: U Instructions emale +++ 6 ” sgiticiaune La Pai rene ou SA ate reer BES Work sence coven T Ln unas Moving 15, 19 Work Wanted Mae ra “areas =| oe oe: mee ~ eevee ron verses ene seal eer, eb riitbinets a, cme Een ing 19, W wcesenl igi ia — joe e ood Pull | BOB’s rates. a. td. =i -10 aeak ‘held Moc r fo gts — ars. R Seed (oR MESTEN PE po Bebe Child. eres ». H yvMonday. Bugene 8A 194 oe pan wes N eis at BY edn en ° Binsausa Seer | pac Keene Lo Ee none, eaaad at ee Board = Rene 2 ee Safle oe oR Ea ea Ss 26| w Bookkeeping soe 8 | — dson- Bird merece Ris | worm saab land tour habled. < Eas oat POR Ci FENCED anted reais ae Sens ae see oie ae = ae, at ead = ee . . Mic k nt up. v —— & Taxes... ~ * the fa a HAUL ay se = ousehold on ae | N Estate cha +13 | Card of N os a et a as “hate ml ode NEEDED 32A ee eee } Ls ‘ a = - Dreamnahing cecece 14 . LOVIN oo EED at spe Tre ri ey ee CAsH sig, borers poss 27 range (812.0 TOD Furniture mane bee aatnongh, we ED wpe Sa hat Ceres or aia —— pny AY a cee ao part meg SBE aes Sees Garden Refinishing 16 No one ae “ac| C mbinati an wire { treeking FE RSITURE 3 Me Putt re os op come wing No wil at ; we Con 3 ine "8S PT . rE cer —" . RE NEE E bet you Sie e Tax see 16A wy repises : ipto at aed x. Ler Pn wu buy e DE! dw. bare Laundry ee Re Jeu uress reel me L oda UP you D | | 12 ON. \ ve. yo 4 Service... 16B emember. ve a ee. St ter O SZ Piece ‘ jobs. p wants a a moe ae ts. Ont te a { St : % ian sane ne atisti pera xe UCE W eS SUF i 7 oO - gnaw ot. out. Moving & ae Sais Rats Mt Be tmpeen Truck age reo | a se a are ener nage sa ‘Theo Painting eeceee weccul G ne ; E “Ww you. hav N . | Prefers FO 165 | . Tracking arn : -_ xperienc Wont ucks oni | teous abr want URNITUR | : EER | “tata a Photos & Decereting. sane D Flowers and AP need get bate mind a ROCKS a, R joa L hi oS ee fet E Cas tee , : : Accessories Boe (DUNSTAN'S FLOWERS PO PLY » and — tap a Jient OaED FR g Sates Soom snome pa a entrance . 20020 a Nt POO cd sla my bh ont Re mg WANTED S CO. ao “ : fh of a ’ Bt ‘ AC nstruc m and I ia p Trucks rE x oR seee Zl sarEne Flow | Moror orn tion va yet oat ae “ ae aero nook : © : TOR Se ah ie t out t the Open ial Tr and Wtd, _ — i sal ot Bee es 7 uneral PE 23-31 DIVIS Jobe “soen: gh eee his ci office when Se tes G ! 80 tie rms. C. ALL Tay- rooms su Direct 2 Pe SION beak shew’ Exper i | Gee e. - teat ete ° pe oF = CON wil Peet |_E'Wovard od 4 ssonnel D Se itr name rnccein LL CART. ar | cae wa| _Fe Se ad Pe apes ~ S Dept HIGH BCHOd be alas ee ee Floors, bas Bela TRUCKING | oo | , ORAVEL BU i. FE eal w — e | © a. 3. ; ene ame: mitt Pa st en ee rene Se oe ser fem ear oe Ser iors | A = ne -_ : ‘ NTIAC =a ates “HOME haar “Seas Y ws oY Hp eeu n_MOW | FE 2 SEIND. ALSO ine. | lik " an BOx ~~ ew or — vice ee oe eas ro pe O 34879 VINO STBI ted ag "Ml D es . ae terials U 4879. Uni me ot BG. Dower | M 81 : | — pric fully eae ae e | Sou tte RSELF ted for W. borrow weds. pre AHA? BoDY net ’ OM m e du- | dr es cent of . EL — _ 58562 M4 States. "Qa N. ND STOR | Goose w PA 228A pa ape to se? 107 per week ~ hoy AA ge ia Se P. e am aioe | nd _cle Ms! ial lot rowers” ° sw N -.3 | sine om tad “ca | vee eston sding ainting « tN Perry pane er | cra Ou _SECOND a we abd Without lake * press , seine nooM Pree. oa. and a tae wipeul stone me ws ing < x service. Ven | cool iplerest. Paget eae lake ihe baud a 2 os TY C . aris | Modern ee re ‘toa Wall ecorating 20 _ ee eens ir a at ih owt s- Modern eal 3 on San rae mae RATING 20 =| .8 aa FE as ‘avaliable’ will | ea ae a oon wont. pind ? te FEY was to Press, Fe stin REAL’ ons cub. | ROOM al or . FLOO mate ent ex A Pape INTINO . Pg od "fords Rent — ercial | _mished. is ~aline R 6. pepe TINO. 2 ait rES = Larger co a RO pee cra ver SAN “ta went DO = —— PAPE att ad TO 2 and ROOM UPPER = ee Sarre EER ame fe Sse ee aoe see a ena "Eee PER GXRIOE 4 FLOO | ° os ¥ wae ates. NO ness NTL NO TO ALL LAND | yments suburban 80 Susniched. . @ RS re ork il aoe a oe ea ferred. to aC REN ye are r iv after | + PAINTIN — i —" Write Bi n° Pas — sagan searee ver fag | en Xie alien ASTIN AND fins” eee Paice at wring. trans PP. poe i ee Rows. P we ite. w Arch) a n rm oad Be R Call we | re . PRIV OA 0-268 | Rouse or BY 1 Ww. Pat a eer IS usty |“ Adults ~ fers 6 P School. of Peas us. Soe Ground Seat or FE 1, er of tre compan - cisTine S & SON fy | “Competent floor = atest eee i Eeoumne aoe i RM ar Cothol np rE tim sit - yaa CONDITION = "Ror | WANS oe Ree Seenir pr thgb neg | 26% oy K sol es | BUSI _*s ‘vork ce ear cash Lid a y Knauf, R aecaasl| aca p 5-1386 ia cosider ‘bar (Ok Mvens REALS ealtor ! es roo ae = “nt L WANTED. c hin Everything bed SHARE TET con 2am trees wan 39 - FE Upstairs — other 4075 vate s oOM 5 M ~som, ronmms ae oat WISHED. 2 wince, 2a: pefreen. 2 od ee ;-Youno Lapis” Physio- Therapy avevesee Dio. MIPIED SER VICES _ Help Ww ant ed Female 7 Pia ~ NO ‘CHER si | SSON. 06 “specialty. roe ty R BA Carl B NDING re ane A NG, FIN | +265 P 1 AINTING AND ) WALL , Ww ASHI NO. UNPOI RNISHED APT yg Hh HOUSE. | LIS’ T INGS ho W commerce ANT sal, ED on | | @DEAL 1 BACHELOR OR APARTMENT eonven:- Television anion =r a re NOTICES ree th nro “2t|Donelaon-Jot rae “Dem elso 7 _ Notices Supplies... 7 DESIGNED POR FUNERALS” oe errs = weaenae apts gee . 4 ae Wd. et Yoo . yupmaay __. OPPORTU: Wi, owe ote ” “FUNERAL s-5 a ee jane waar oO a L ip] personality an MEET " ianieas Mo yers. ny er BE ee sees ae w w eee 2? en oe — "Blast vee Ww sed LAR me Wat << Clee aston Wat a Son tacos ae Pec : shes fe a os Wanted =n wid. Living Quart + 0BA Gatland" a were ial = pee sarin Male i Sain ae | F ele mare ale ee A AVE . mor ._M e ~ wert. ita e © 1 Ce eee 29 ve. z. rite e ust ment copertsn. w b special PL. eee 0 Se atral. Contracts, Giccater” 7 "eiving ea be 40 e- | C4 me wee - we SATISF. FE Ww. ee 30 rE > Eas local gg Hale a ee . oe So | RR Son K var coeniak *P Ww ue write ere for ta TarekmeT ED = . e ue ry N c vy v --—- Rae eco . JRA ~ i " ~ | AA at porese ¥ Ew sages e i. ASSAG td. Tite e f land pves Realtor * esion. ‘Can't ‘ ¥ ton a ork ans ag Boro ma J Rat OfesSe oe | are Fst bgt ak rEguRD eae owe ee | ta ae aaa a eee ese For =e ..39 F cine a up to anf ry to oat re 48 inES | si ; So T zim ot APY acts, M | MA y Pontiec ea &_jesuice gt 9 ae cowie ron Seago Gl cag ese . one re TAKE oir du seviele re tle Fraercms r —— a AN H | ececve } tre at Pree find FOR 5 “ Ina ANTED. . 4 ic | DaY n 1 the ready , You A : Pe out EST ...41 “crea Tt “Ww Se the D. Hea ATIO xO AND REMOD — B TR es on = Servic a | ue ieee ] ne Se BU | A | m Woines ok Books joss right mate Ns REM are Stee” EN 13, 1GHT Ee e lt : a eee, . Sale TE © EMPL aaron Durer, ees ro = tret wR oD. | Wake ater CH ova ico ow TV ice Med "Ga Ree | stmest “te ereat. RS| For Sleuses FOR: s spanner on di ane ee » ear WER wR a wate oF To HING OWAke FE P TE tse eed he oe * MOR Real ve years af will ¢ od | STUDIO sid ti tae Per aon sey Soe Srcrenry fs coals a Saree ao eee Siena | ee A in scree ucts pe) Sree ea Se ee : Suburb —, XPERIBDCED “¥ Occup 4 ’ $225 | a +7902 con- pene Genet 19 eo & AGE ! " See “1t | ; .& )f ——— sales Mi ieTED- — 2 PE HO tv. 1 = BAGES Dandie a! “a Beal | eee ° Resort . — Gey Ciesnere, Mu y to wee a oo | ick 7 ne Bove D = AP SPLIANCE © y Coit TT11 come an $300 Cone AK VOR AC ba tors, rvice CES 0135. toe | Ty TTCHE Catt bd +08 tet RLE No 100 rty ea we! q For Sale Lots iat ia a wales Mi im or — obi service KOREA Fen me | RON aoe ERVICE _Type ° ELL’S sta, eva ged > 0 Ba Te ate = i : For Acreage | gal oe a on Pusce was poh me evel You ed ealian oa — EF rE soouri eer er CE writer 5 TV SE ASH eingrenh _“:* Sale seeeee ore 7M io ‘ ec Em = wird ie rr 34 eda ER OOMPIELD Beg pide : one Serv re | ee a ak Trade Sale Farms cess --& aan Sion have good ELDER a, -mploym win tyre $-4170_or a an cin jE D watt oe ee ice 22871 | s wc LEMEN RE | Rent, ness “ vee er a on REY | TROY. cack oa - moe gts Tyne oes S pe obliga ee Sai | rPEWRITERS Ld Be he aly Lease a a Sati Tvaranteed., aoa «ign sebaot _ Vicinity ues fall 7 pe ‘Te would lis oun |e = | pre. crcer a at ew © EALT | For “ae " ax. RN iY voowo nk at i wo a EXP1 hi c tion FESS | py = _— «rw AY Ask for or un Sale Bus. ° —— - WG aint i . oae XPER CL 18 ° - iuasiboea ee D cog fe r “ul 49 | _ e . end ful $78 te or GO MA ork work a T ay E 1 Se, 17 —— EN, Ted ative cp. J =e aan i: ————— Shows. 80 Chine” bed ee mn Easy & are Sine | Sa “TREE, TRE aol oe oe rae | are ca Realt FE2 REALTORS | Busines 8) eR a ists cess oa? alias Lee = Sey S| nt ope Boe FES = a a goa Beverian rere th ine weer | ‘lectric—Sev pro 4 RE » ses iene at om le ™ | Sale Opportunities "Seer best onues etal, Ko can ne igh ch | theres Sewer: or ‘OR BORAPI nee rene veer fet Lope Pen i, ied pepe sie "ei et ‘ Sosa eee — "yorK | ie ae eat ee Foch a et ~— cane vee st | coun york W i=} Sp a DRAPES. Li st a a | ie ot tas | RH ag Route No und ‘wae 4 ort td. - ot = teally eat 8 rm © a | wr me alt w State ani —— , to ore machin cloths MEN Dus. mi "Prev bon me Yigg Fema | as 7 wea ied | s “ot = " — or a Prees room ——— meee oe tc caign “engioest we fs eas rie yoma ou Ss ¢ Sew wenied ot Be. Pm eae are ie gerne 0 ie ee ey | - woe 52 = gose dolar amily” a= bie % DES 1) fe Wille er C A ee 4 cueTOM eam client 000 7 cis tot 2 | acme ee olen 3 BE ee Marg | Exper es ara, Ba a nee ren | i kr icon : Swaps se —_ aa E i300 sag! po rences, x re In Poot 8 DAY | pF grees: Ts | Cociey Lene BA. ED iar a contracts, on cK " nae | ROOMS ee os —~ M Lee: . per ry 1 a , too (IN L ate od = BOB — ae Pa. IN ISE vee SM aed pe) Bove anes yecsied | ienced. atte, = aay | Pe MOTOR ONE FREE |” ost & - crag MaMa ace ier ious Peotine © NEY Pe nade MA sais Be i nS eaTUmDA coe noares reste PS Ba sol “yas | Blies OR 7 eee ‘al BW por te snl) Sale Clothing ae RRIEI Loi GENERAL MINGHAM 4 ite! ork Vould- sala a Kresgee ne Ree iT wet | ae ¥ ae Fer Sale Coting — 3 Srear ae bichen work Cees neceage |r soa ws ane, | Tare Vv Household beeen SB | M nets amit Rookhees “ne Bet A FEza Lai | \ et me REE EP DRE | “Crown eiarutl ws SF weons a Te tee Christmas a_i 56. soe. saical apeaitien. BOND exp a moiher. i SOULD anne A pape lige Pree cone M | cinity AEM nirewerd. OM Pomp soos ° ie Lan Hom - and ee wt . t | of OR L 1 ifts . Z ee potmggy Es yoo sf Mace . alt erates = stimates. OL | me 0M BRA dor inet norris Al M nd Con es, F For G sees cocee - LET i ment ate oe + *% WwW. Bt start 9240 HIOK lime! ec ak rag Mo. ae eh —— PE DARK | ors we Real mal: ene JONES trac arms Do oa i = —— Beret over a aes ao Dents mk tare LUMAING ‘taser "woa ‘nat cocky spaniel ete | Ecoae sop Tons * PHONE tracts Do I Your ea eee Se age ne eee OE ei es | eaters wa Bee: “ bi soo = ~ North model | - rom and xs Wg Bs UA rE none FE Rag Hh: 072. waits " < weet, tn 1-0 +2505 r¥ ee .. 60 of Rate oS — na leg 4 ee ys vo PEN xO as | Lost Sees oer ~ Pon- oe WO CL ARK

F TR RECS eee we —“y-E 8 = WY Ito = | ur Property ry Coal & Dirt 65A ard su puny bas an wed, | ior — colic, ber i? OMINOS or bebyet c| at ECISION 3 ce Wil po ROW Mos tht art Efe J ‘o —~ ihe Plants, ee nN 10 Bees: gas Gor p Doi bys: i al TRIM ater TT Wu riot xP _ OR Le pl a o-s10s an Ry & Fuel ° 7° ae 00, opening pach it DY & se NE rt Day mo es MI CH ] H rape A ART rome SS ay area Trees, ooo 66 Ww Write Pe for UR farm 8 applicant or DESIRES » IN F | TR 338 estt NG avis _ Hobbie are Box 0 OFF D CONTAC ’ For . ms he Se Bee ning for “nim nome 2am rE term Mn Dh MY i ™ rE a iS RE MON ED BR obbies & Sup rea FE cae ‘et St epee = | Sale Shru ase learn MID eer hed LAD’ mount HOME. che PE De Da Su = the. bt io wy Dogs Pets = 67) _ms a een 2 cuee a Y wists 7 ref wo “ pode eee Pio re ive iat pplies 2 aie ol se et aes e ——— one . Bo airls rz le RE Ol k ra alr FE | YD eft VI 24 “te ealto R Trained ows -- 68 cane 7 P. Caan s/s rem oo UNDR TO ences. OF | kee ten FI ; t! one = i. oor A PE 383 agg Mh Phose FARM Siesiet 69 s CAR — w. ance te make pone eee, rE | — ping & - aa | ib as aa Wb oe on 23-4316 43 W. pb wi oe OR" ST or e MERCHAND . 2 Aubure hale r =F UST = a anor Mc ee Hay, . q a ge mea Ww. w ry Chee ol rE — retarial K DON FOR Splaidal ly axe = mice a Us a Ps Used __ bad gia 6: — Bay, Gren & emer: ‘i aniara | WANTED. De mae fear serie =m ae & si ay Paris TE teas oi ISE = ad LE > B _& ED DENTAI und on TY MY Pilar Oy) ble 3 ig ov STONE: L a s m de Lives eee “ee ee St remo —aohe irene, wc | * ee rte Ev ecasase aise Fi WE ortbecktT id ris anted ee m : N. I Good On nm. FE ASSIST. ing bed R MY B +3842 BEC- CCO! AY ax AC No mT BB Hur FIL ] R st EA acess men. wih! B Wages ao child. a A hand env Manian: nx ee ae 8. FE po l fit sad — 8sE = a Ww ick _ ear le Paley — Joe ai saan me and have Saco NT. mere on ate ms +0295 VICE. | ae oF F \ “wave “*KER Sale Poultry eee 7 pao ~~ ay! : _ Write colored a wares hte —— dees ———_ Oh TAX VE otic CKENSTOSE., : Paint N = peg gl, SH ee a, while WOMAN Ww ea 6 . 5 PM ype ere sed BI ; 9 1 rt es 4 am t A \ Farm _ poimtiment wood. . Pontiac Pr baa YR MITE. wher ic TAX. Teton ¥ eaves |" «& emaneal = = <4 M Sale 0-8 . rata OMAN FOR ag oe! mu ae an - sega | hie ane s 3G PE 2 _ | AAAA Persor FE ED APL Predece ... m eee area eatne “Prevs, e st | % remo OENER: rE ®O | In Telegraph Ra” TYP! aa | Ble D LAK £ Farm seeee Td pas rt ears NERA ietmity wantep 4 “me 136s po, onrino service. | dome DETECTIV nats” = — m Peupmest i tee ic BBS sara | wore Pe Cate | Peni SO sone gra is 28 L 20S te ten) WOMAN te Birm 1x} WASHING PE_ I sont ANiNa. | Inc = cronia be 5-067 experi aod. come Ro aaah N AUTOMOTIVE aa prves,_ Berea ants Nos inoxtxos us tare a VATE, D PLANNIN rer veel Eran Peete ee ae ne | Sear iat pterye re * ag, | CON eee n es . FO 1 y a » A shachras Housetrailers a men. Re av . On 13 3 12" week. PED monk Youn ne Mp NINGS. F | Baw ripUaLS. TA vice 17 Eaeieat r an an TRA iste bless ea ay full ba ' Trailer ag _ By ° between N TO 27740 wort G@ LAD TRONIN —) ANWEN ley & ors SER - hae g pa The Sa! omiact} ina CT eet ur bom? if cou aa) be “t-Te Ri ob PE Auto tines. ust be neve 3 ’ —learn,_ Oe A os 8 Bag Tax 8 ainxeei capabin EA Salr Mrs. = wee ue none segs > 3 5 ee a SL eee mcr ante a ae S Space ° you follow the e 3 WA 25 ESI SERVIC e BI Bag: ING tion “ cee : ec ant hay emarca aly \o Auto plement _ = artic ANTED: unt a cas ence ~ noaBeRTON ee ences ip acinar Aree nli a Plencea” ing ve es 2 oe . 1 . be M = ie = Gute - deceeel® i aera = bowser KOUS? EN ~ Build ence, Willing - to is z "488s sevice aeeeen wan —— 10. F mited R Bes ha. oe Rent H aleve tnehaded Sale - ee |) tien, ; hospital _ho sare a verses , TYPES < ve bre feed —_! Mog u u ¥. mov < ry nt Houses F Harger Ne For fotor * _ Sagia apply Sonia and Spec ervic 6 | D. nted 3] NV pti nN SS e BE. iananincy F Ce Seven nome FE Dn taken oe | ea or e 18 Maynar: nO is inimen iptroee Ee coo ne e te da AUTIFU urnished . Sale “ 2-0001 commeret poeerere ae -” ory Maat ne a S ‘ = ~ drs aoa wool rier ners Gare tor 3 naneeere at Saree 12) $ arene C Fis ANT MAID ONS cote Sen Y XS to. Sale e pos aged id of s cabinet Oe EM jal eepine Tax een’ | ENA ee — fes H raged , | 2 Ru REAL? O amp liv eda: shed 3s oe 103 830 r 2 r . every PL « HER Vv PP * Fc t uro th _= ton ct u ey ine ° soe 4 ar works. Ms at itTENTIO OP CA resid: A s a | “SH rE R serv t) Sateen Tol an Eves 8 TOR ng r € won LAREFRONT fact eae PIC | wae pee | ae moor San oy MOTE pains cy Sopris ae es lnc R “at Sis & Accessories voeeenf8 | TIO K aher ust ike chil hoor sand . Savane “ an eer goon ARN ABOU EPRESENT aes ot ‘ omen Mesure cn, inate att ‘pace For eee TIO YOUR sod : e ehuldres, A ine aaren 2 OR INCO nee eh end ‘ig 6a 1 ce — ighest of land | BRAUT! Apt suns tut CMBR repat ial" per wy Sale | N ren fAple rape ie le c ME : | ts ord Pe spose iva | aattie po gh eee s. FE ma as 1568 [BRE oo eda dora 4 e vs OS er = fee md £25 | MARIS rriday mo CONTROL . IC meat, room Pris Purnish _ Unige EE &. i r eco 08D ffer the I- Help of NOR ae pdt LARE ROAD: sz pa rte rs 5 ww. mo Clini OL \ H | pe ut Priv Lf ed HOUSES Lake G Reb Wanted s i nea noun a. ee vr ace Tt i Weron e i33 N nwt ate hate 33 Ra. RE ote in. the fine jot Want children ee ET rds, ino AA New P Dow oe Tes Houbay wit a 038 cia HA IE ie ROS eee ~~ Pst oT We, LEGG Wanted sed Cars section Cla yen | _work Alco Pies woat ia antes MONE Sens wit Byes 8 RG Nice fort fence were > ae dae Used ++ ST . Or i _ serene § Acco hy sitprise, ih opening aE jt me fort we = rence. - . Ww pla ssified 8 : sm 8. UNT. | _feierragn at kid Drop TO ene ire co f Rising : wae Appi eR Sale Truck sees ork ce FE +604. Ho job, ton Let SAV oe! at oe fo a WwW ker eens rE aiden APT ~ run y ny : Used 8 W. yo jod VE EWM Go ati e Want Bidg r rey Ne A s \ your CA too Air: E cater A if on af ed of 183 | Pad line wiy PR NC etl Sale ‘Trucks enee ; anted own oun “Scare = MON pene ff Lreaeell Med an -y R yee Aaune” IVAT _ Used ' : ad eat ENTE Wo! nha a? NEY permanent qusinted pre i ~ eal Es noo © lies 5 £) Cars eevee . : rs to kitchens, R : FORKING . tn en - > Ninack aa lems below a ACR ta Dow. CABIN only = EN Care go} able, you’ tell Seheater ite ee ie au TY ort) fre E state 32A _ Downing “COOK aN ew f ou baths, MAN +“ r chas nw. cos or A 2A LA «ct N ’ ooo re aoe A te PRI r_ Tele 1s Orel coe 7; * GE RG — oo Ml : avai elos- M. ¥ comets PRIVATE —_ First wits Pont on 1E—V ~ vs’ po. FE > 9 Fi FA : ee ail- and SER vigae ETE hard t time a aa are ~~ ACAN Fe couple. oak Sais ct. ; ; oft WicE| iy ave. ay oan i to t00 NT | private ens ATR. D rae B bome. be Pt Ao ~ ee VES 3s e | Fd eek mo 100M BASEME: ATR Down. je J EN Linabery. orerweiaht? io 3 YRS. nm 1 w. \ iS aserra \* one = =nT APT . 3 yas Sool Lb eight? a “eat, “cai sar sat T APT aE : yoo iN R. : ana e Tired? C Open oe fout R a COLORED. _ Laundry 7 KU =crenet ur. IN oa ae Bu — esa ? noon SHARE curt Eves > ee Ts. THE _OvEN athe ; — |? aoe BADE pons . yeremme, : Si | Senso | aes Waiti se Sinn do —— av 7| ‘ Oven west side. ‘ a \3 E2108 SEMENT or a LON @ Al 18 . $15,000 ROOM a f m4 gman . baaee I Dedreog 7 ROOM YE fi TE sia " . i. y te 2 AR x. 162. Ae, Pe] sli qetees ROOM A stniord URN- % r en Pies. " ares mv bree ‘pear See pre eazaph Rd. ing 4 Y: If ACA GRE 1 am Be ealtor a ose, 7 ROI you a lon you’ TION nen hes ; Evenings i — ae — , rh g va re « t ; K nor da af wt, z >- 7333. tion. om catio tak E rE fa M - for , ~ st agp ¢ the Pian FFICE 2 ~ t xtr ura you! a, money ial FE ES , ‘ my | \ THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 15, 1955 sti’ Beat. oa.ate. ‘terms. DRAYTON PLAIN$ 7 Gorgeous sanch home, fully mod- NG. ROOM. with gas heat. 30x70 with #1039. breeseway > aarage Have us ROOM FOR show you this home. so. M01 Glew JOSEPH F. REISZ 53% W. OR - Cosperative Bh Real. Estate lt tees 350 W. Huron. A CUTIE! Just rt for i gates. muons | Meet sce es Convenient, At : x Pine St. or phone Tone etates. This you've got to see. Price $5750. $750 down. JACK FRONT for 1 or 2 refineq gen- vee ™ ) LOVELAND LARGE COMFORTABLE SLEEP- foom for 1 or 2 girls. West ea ee Kooge Marbec . PE 23-0016. FE | FE ¢1661 TARGE ROOM. REFINED OEN- tleman, Da: ayemer_ Located ot North Side = -| 6 od b ent yavare ENTRANCE. Lio oudilen. Licwore, dieing sar, kitchen & screened front h, 3 bedrms. & bath full bsmt.. au- tomatic water heater. good fur- pace. storm sash & screens. Laun- dromat in Kitchen. Paved street $2,000 down. ra et x. | Lake Home : . Exceptionally nice location. beau- GUNG t & rooms ae on om near W. side. Private sereened frgat porch, 3 y. bemt car garage. GI Just a few more of hot water heater. Low down pay- ment John K. Irwin, For Sale Houses 43 STOUT'S BEST BUYS TODAY — Why Work So hard. so long. when you can put your money to work for you ea @ gross of 19 per cent on this room, four family home in excel- lent location. near every- thing. Ony $15,750. it has been redecorated on th terior, new and @ Very —— — Pos- sible six amily ome here. Face ‘cca. The Young at Heart Will like this nextto-new home, located on the edge of Clarkston. Very nice lot in Two fine es to give the home a very J 2. Only $8,200 with terms Eom B— 1965 S are ip full — sand. yee pos think thank the sean to day a poe per this home with ali its fruit trees and rape Vines. rooms, living room. kitchen and a breezeway car garage. Full end only $1,500 down. Cute “hl old goon pup. a Clean little fo room 0 tre, ee wteeeaneey tee | Chow ERR AND terres stores. wo rooms cn en and living room ath _ ING. HANNAN LI ¢4000. in Yet, but you can move in with $750 down and the Wwtal price is only “oe CHARLES Edw. M. Stout, Realtor Tl N — St. ] _ 65-8165 re: ° ans L —___——_~__———e | NO MANSION it's true but at HOLIDa yanks HOMES $5775 with $1600 ave including all ORiano, 3110) e this 4 & bath ons SLICE OF HAM é | Th er re ee pe For Sale Houses 43) ON MARORALL 8T., or a" Saw 3 bedroom home Ladies : = Leok inte th Art ie one: iving room B 18 UP end kitchen like you have been Best EP oe $own thinking of Beautiful ceilings. « THE petural fireplace large sited re 56-2128 rooms a dreamy oe ~—WURON HOTEL. CLE |] that's all new’ With steel cabinets mod rll t pnd 7 Formica top counter, new linole- “ st. rE um floor ete four rooms, and beth Up “2 car garage 502150 | lot GAR heat ‘new furnace: Rent Stores 40) os incinerator $13.000 with the very best of terms BRICK STORE BUILDING suze | West Side $75 a month, FE_ 5-255. Lage AL two choice homes tiled firs AC oil heat ce-| MILL sr i EN HURON in the Webster grade — i ment drive garage and over- sad, tecreare, asee, soubor | SAE, aspuetmects at ein | Mat Seer, ndectped pang Fe re Lg gy etn please you. Information and ap- a SUBURBAN New al! on | a a) Mr. — had) liven at any fir 2 BUILDINGS. 66, BARBER sHOP. -_ pe. 3 Sedrms. bedentest W. Huron, Blo. vomfield Highlands | minute kitchen with mica- oomfie ighian | topped cupboards tiled ‘bath. For Rent Miscellaneous 42) Just south of St Joe's and on ol] furnace. dear garage, large 3 We act “ettes and trams bane | fot late privileges sifsee. Ai . yma mnongh Ag A full basement heat, double a Dr. at Pontiec Trait. EM 3355). | Wondertuliy’ conttitioned’ si¢.o0, | NEAR WILLIAMS LAKE. Only WALLPAPER REMO KERO-| with $4.00 dow $2.000 down for this completely cone one all ¢ . sanders lake privileges. Full bath, break- Thee eee regnine, Store| Earlmoor ‘Blvd. | fast nook. Near bus line to jams, _ Haron ean 6 amsinomalein Pontiac. You can buy now al For Sale Houses 43) full Dasement. good gas furnace 96.980 oo aise cnx oon cormer lot | $5850 TOTAL PRICE for }-bedrm 45x125, = floors ey oaee home in Keego Full basement ge ll price ONLY 99500. oith furnace new water heat- '3 Bed mr Meck, from tw, rooms wr BUY AND SELL facd "Vetetrgee to Cass Lake West suburban on one acre. ful! Price $9.350 with 62.000 down. LAND CONTRACTS NICHOLIE Sakis’ arvesoes. a AND HARGER CO. JIC wri, Realtor tsa w. Biren’ ae Ph. “PE eat Real R TER AREA HUNTOON LAKE SUB. bins Soa. Ae eres | Petes ot noe cons, foom in knotty pine with fire- ‘Toom. full basement. auto- a ce of — —_, i. ave ne ange ii 2 car garage. Love, Humoon Late. Pull price $16,000 M. ELWOOD ve +43 J. A. Taylor ~YOUR BANKROLL GROWS N’ GROWS completely ated im Dray- ton Pigins Realtor = i os Since = bedroom home nae lorge living = pce Maat Eve FE 21804 ina cm pan basement auto FOR GENTLEMEN: TWIN BEDS, good location FE 320m BABI i : lake’ ri a ante Le va BOARD. price Some re WEST BLOOMFIELD TWP. This 00M AND BOARD FOR sOUTH- 5 bedroom ) bes » Bving room. com bined kite ining, (w satmsovmrem|BABIFS | itissiivn te * .. on ae So Siraeserey "patch, ake pre on = i 2 SAS -\BABIES | ieexae e very ec ’ beds. FE 54-0103 must be seen to be appreciated men to room & board CLARK REAL ESTATE Pe nt a ree THERE'S EVEN LOADS 1942 W. HURON STREET + Gleam men. ent @ In OWN OF THESE BPA | =n EYE fb 'Pastors. Neat bin "| ‘ we 's| NEAR JOSLYN AVE. OENTLEMEN. GO08 | Rants, inchs be ne. | teres 2 Betroom bungalow Ex: Clean modern home. [ccm oer drinkers. FE 3-038. _| PANCY. MANY With Oas weace.| 3X6 e8t) garage A dn. New lige. 2 bedrm 7 AND MEN | HEAT AND LAKE PRIV}- tablet} Siegert ndi ms ayntn’ to the plant and bus. 624 EGES, FULL S8ALE Possession | Near Lincoln , = | coun ~— WHICH IN dr. School $1500 dow ROOM AND BOARD FOR MAN. DES p Binge FE By -g AND aL cLosina‘costs | PONTIAC RE ALTY tor eid B Mansosta seretiteaky reney TH Beuwe ___7E_sam Convalescent 4'» ROOMS GOOD CONDITION Homes 38 BELT NEAR ORCHARD — large lot, excellent location, HAVEN FOR THE AGED LAKE RD PROWE Fie _ +106. ———__—___—. ee L oom HOUSES AND INCOMES OF ALL patients. 24 nursing y=] THE Kinds. Also building GI. bomes. Wich fire Geiger nace NORTHWOOD Miuren,_ Dunne On¢ Sen. 06 West patbannwumaten ORGANIZATION, wUnaind 3. To CLL REALTOR epeting ing OME — — —| PARTRIDGE 1 i Tht RD TO — | sagen Rates ee ea | EA BUNGALOW — patients. Phone 120 wille for FMhish this attractive 4 room bun- | | gaiow at Watkins Lake Well & | 4. HOME PRIVILEGES | ‘eptic in. 70x350 ft lot, 24232 ft — bus rE i basement, plus 4 room WiLL CARE POR ANY TYPE op| Soor Obie wasY Fenda | Sher re tooth Beet i J. R. HILTZ | Established 1916 erences. 2828. . al | SYLVAN SHORES Attractive mod- Hotel Rooms eke ent w Huron . Riichen with. cormer sink wed aon r mn. Eves th 2 bedrms. AC oil . HOTEL A — ~ — picture wtews 1% Paced oles ~ U URIN A HOME OF YOUR tered garage, landscaped, dovu- Room by Day or Week . . bie lot with fence and shade — TOE ogg OWN ie dots ares. vem 3 BEDRMS. - SYLVAN LAKF AREA Alj in Al INDIAN VILLAGE. Attractive }- bed p mote wn by $1,500 DOWN this rm. home all on 1 fir. You can 4 W. Lawrence FE — eve. siding arage. ce. ost érivewes. ale lasase wr with 000 Full price $13,500 down $700 DOWN. SHELL WITH BASE- MENT. 2 bedroom. plus 1322 ft living reom. combined kitchen WEST SIDE. All on 1 fir. Attractive 26 ft livin: rm. with drapes and wall-to-wa: carpet brick fireplace. mod- chen, full basement, rec. gas heat, Dcar ga Outdoor grill $13,500 with 500 down condition Many extras in this attractive S-rm heme 20 ft B. D. CHARLES, Fit 8 Teletaon apes even e ev Co-operative Real Esta Exchange _ gas jarunee _ basement is @ cosy nest—just right for — ene—perhaps you're the one Ear & HAnceoNE WS With payments $45 pe Realtor Templeton VACANT Near Crescent Lake. New 2 bed- Plas “Sun. 1 _ SEE Our mode! 3} bedroom shel! home wi sie RED HORSE _ For Sale Houses 43 West Side Income Well located . family spartment uait 1362 W. Huron &t. Member Co-Op Real Estate “For'Sate Houses 43 FOR COLORED FAMILIES home pear Lights nate, att Eatin seek Reyne, "Fert = Be ties Realtor, 1 w! Pike, NCOME, SPECIAL —Four fami) aperimene ho house—five rooms tar owner plu ments — 1 For Sale Houses 43 Box 131. two room 4 bed East ment rented tor $240 per month Lt Has man sestases. FE furnac a sa pothe, eakee fr e jour . éova . FAST SIDE | BRICK 6 3 bedroom home, full WANT A FARM?-One of the . best 1arm houses we have seen basement lets of — L. H. BROWN, Realtor FE 2-4810 Exch. -; X= SUBURBAN BRICK bedroom brick ranch home. Full fireplace. Oak floor- Member Co-op Real Estate Exch. y furnished. Cash age. Total $14,800. $7,400 E 7-883 between 8 and NOTHING TO LOSE BUT YOUR HEART A lovely 2 bedroom home with very modern —_-. Large lot, 3 biecks to school and stores. This is an attractive home reason- abiy priced with terms. agg gas kitchen ful Business Frontage th and room, fF An lient suburban home down payment. For 4 s eall t ppor shingled ae ener Se oe ee ee tting. School bus at door. Just “BUD” Nicholie 3 miles from Pontiac rge _REAL ESTATE GI. HOMES 3 BEDROOM BUNGALOWS TWO FAMILY 612.650 MARSHA LVD. ol WE SELL-WE TRADE DORRIS & SON a ae COOP MEMBERS ) W Buren PEE @-1887 # ROOM MOUSE FOR SALE BY 264 Nelson. Gls—$100 Moves You In! NOTHING ELSE TO PaY! CIVILIA $1,150 street, 2 . 1387 Cole. Must sell. $6,600 with $1,000 down. living rm fireplace draw drapes wall-to-wall carpeting very modern kitchen full beth, | extra nice tee rm. with knotty | pine paneling. lavatory attached, | €ali for further information colonial home located desirable corner lot. Large tiled bath, full rm on modern kitchen. istanc I price, $8, FLOYD KENT, Realtor Next to Consumers wer eri? pirier! North Johnson Ge ° Bs s . ’ . . ne Sagina Eres. Eves. FE +02 Pull besrnent. — ¢. Fruit and nice upper ments. ve ate! Peete IN CITY ( UCKL ER REAL TY . +7001 ee 14143 WHITE OR COLORED Back of kitchen electric stove includ Olassed im porch. Is car ge monthly payments 665. Call ppointment Giroux & Hicks Street 2 bed- stairway to attic for future rooms Full basement r cent payable carpeting and extras car garage. Price a3 750 4 Bedrooms—2 Baths bedrooms and bath up. ‘ull basement — gas beat knot- ty cedar recreation on and lavatory. Includes car- peting sonable down payment. KINZLER wo mu REALTOR _ ‘Open eved. oa’ ve Real Estate Exchange - He i Fig i apd f aie r

ia oes — e arpeted basement oil furnace. gas water a Penced yard. Priced at only $12,350 with $2,500 down = for appointment. $75 m ° WM. A KENNEDY oe pep, Ereoines “a ~ South Saginaw Bt. Kay Bidg. 3nd Floor -__Phone PEderel 4-0535 SHOPPING FOR A LOAN? “YES” promptly to employed men. women—married or sifgie. Na- tionwide credit. Single visit joan, | phone first. Phone, write or come in today LOANS $25 TO $500 BENEFICIAL FINANCE CO. 7 W_ Lawrence. FE 23-9249: Pontiac WHEN YOU NEED $29 - $500 You can get tt quickly om your signature, car or furniture. No endorsers Payments to suit your budget We will be giad to help you with your money problems. TATE FINANCE CO. FL 4-1574 __703 Pentiac | State Bank Bidg MONEY WAITING You May Borrow $29 to $500 Today crea Fake wo to Amon to BUCKNER FINANCE CO. CONVER A SAGINAW & HURON Also Dries Fiske 4%) Dirte Highwer Across fror Post Office Phone OR 3 1221 MONEY for People Who Work A SPECIALIZED LOAN SERVICE | j, $25. $50, $100 up to $500 Tf your weekly family tn- come is between 635 and 150 and you are working, this service is designed es- pecially for vou When Nece-sary every effort is made to give vou the money in one day. Your choice of Tepayment schedules. GENERAL ‘PUBLIC LOAN CORPORATION 69 W. Huron St. Phone FE deral 3-7181 7 Mortgage Loans 54 LOW INTEREST Uniimited funds for single family oa. mortgage ee id Peale es die, H. PETE RSON 1310 Penta ag _—_ Len FE 5-8406 or FE_ _Phone F Swaps_ 55 AN EXCELLENT COMMERCIAL frontage of 50 ft.—for putting up aro for me next door. Box BENDIX DUOMATIC WASHER ND oe 4 BURNER TABLE Size 16 Like new Reas. 2-024 After 6 pm 13 men's suits values to $55 $15 and $25 19 men's sport coats values $35 $8 and $14 Tf man's siacks values to 612.96 $5 89 Ladies dresses juniors misses. half values to 617.98 $5 sizes 62 ladies winter coals regular to $65 $28 and $33 LION STORE $1 8. Saginaw FE 2-268 Sale e Household Goods 57 ——eEr A a pancate IN SMALL RADIOS 58755 $5 to $10. PE | ANTIQUE CABINET. MAY BE used as china cabinet or book _ shelves EM 3400000000 A ae R.CA. .# AND FM RA- $35. FE | re WANTIQUE HALL other odds and ends. hg re otis. ANTIQUES. DAVENPORT, HUTCH table. dry sink, chairs, _chest OL 7567, 250 8. Bivd APPLIANCE FLOOR SAMPLES Bpeed Queen electric dryer, $239 95 now $150 1 Maytag auto. washer $2809 95 now $229 85 1 Frigidaire froner, 624495 now $165 1 Speed Queen itroper, $124.95 now $75 1 Frigidaire 30 in. range, 6238 95 Row $199 95 — USED DEPT. 1 Westinghouse dryer, $69 95 3 Coldspot refrigerators. 639 95, your choice 1 Thor sutomatic washer $39.95. CLAYTON'S Furniture, Appliances 3065 Orchard Lake Rd. Harbor rE sesil or FE Seo74 ABOUT ANYTHING CAN BE FOUND AT L & 8 Oll space hesters, al) sizes. school | book case beed board beds, com- plete. 624 refrigerators ge ranges. gas & elec. 85 up ik all sizes $3) up:; TV sets. 625 ip 4 radios. 85 up ii chrome di- nette sets. 3b $40.85 up. chests, new & used ss co ns up. liv rm room suites, $4995 u suites, $1295 up; suites, tems USE OUR_EASY PAYMENT ae PLAN TRADE OUT & LOOK FREE FRI. SAT “é TO 8 bad NIGHT TO 5.30, SUN. 12 L &@ 8 BALES CO, 4 mi. east of Pontiac; or 1 mi. east of Au- burn Heights on Auburn Rd. M50 PE 3-2866 ATTIC rolls ~ SALE. PLAYER PIANO | _ Gishes, lamps, trunk, mode, venetian blinds and treadie Very good | | $505, eet. acquainted pre -inven- | lazy susan- | roder bearings 5 dividers. choice | YOu WANT ry seats attached, new | it $19.50 up. Many other | HOO ANY- | io MODEST os) | | V hewdesteres pa, Arran “My hand was so swollen after I hit him I couldn't get | his ol’ ring off!” By Jay Alan —— nm cas, slight- ecent, _ Orchard Lake Ave - | | DARK GREEN TWIST WOOL RUG \| DNETTE ser. EXTENSION TA. ag ey modern with burn ea stain tops These are ‘ irreg- ulars. You save more than half r e. Michi- Teguiar retail pric —£8n Fiyorescent, 383 Orchard Lk 3 ROOMS OF NEW AND USED FURNITURE a ee ae. eocktall bles, table, floor lamp. 5 lamp tables, : table lamps. $59.50 8 plece dining — suite, Table, buffet and 6 chai 49.50 Dresser, chest 50 ded. New. MANY ITEMS Easy Terms THOMAS ECONOMY FURNITURE CO. 18 inaw St. Pontiac, Jehigan | FOR SALE: USED WASHING MA. | chine, $20 ge Bg 0 an. | _and 290 pm. FE 3-90 For SALE GUARANTEED . RE- frigerators $30. up Wringer washers we up T Washers ....... 968 85 up Vacuum cleaners ..... 708 up Roy's 06 1 sewing machine. 344 W. Iroquois. | ——————_ —— es Aree eet Pag, MABOOAKT | f INOLEUM ....-yd. 39 Hoo ae mirror witty bureau, LINOLEOM — — os AUTOMATIC ELECTRIC DRYER. | Triple Viny! Tile. 100 per month. Laie, "medel ‘model ute nine thee Cal. Gall ei | Reus washer, palnes ot Per!) SYERS, 141 W. HURON BATHTUB ROOM SUITE Le LIVING and ot] burner. OL 27328. Biv LEAP CARPET, 02104. OR On SabanPist— Studio couch $16 Deesser $1195 Bedroom suites Dining room suttes. Gas ranges Gibson refrigerator $7950 New - ol size gas and electric ranges. M. AIN FURNITURE ood ne Next te beens or sess IN ONE. $400.95, now os on $325. BOTTLE GAS 100 Ib. gas mstallation $23.77 com- ate, Pueigas. OR 32401. GE L WOOL CARPET. $333. ~" USED TRADE-IN DEPT. Refrigerator qcuaranteed .. 050 95 Large ot] heater . $39 95 Apt. size electric stove $29 95 Apt. size gas stove : $29 95 Large kitchen cabinet .... 634.95 5 pe. wood aggro nga lai $24.95 2 Lo living room suite . $19.95 dresser $17.95 ALL DOWN PAYMENT EE PARKING WY MAN’S 18 W. Pike Only TOP LARGE 51 TENT.| stove. $15. $1 Kimball st. FE —4 P44 Swap for ilvestock or| #0033. ry Oat dnon N’ LAKE Paiv.| CASH FOR ALL KINDS OF USED Geges West subs furniture or dishes. FE 5-3853. CHROME DINETTE SETS, AS —_* Orel. semble these yourself and save. nll | and table, $69.95 value These are brand famous makes, colors. hice a i ? LiNoLeuM AND PAINT a Perry, _ iy Ors FLORAL CARPET. 20814 03 Mark. FE 7 v CARPE! | LARGE AB GAS RANGE OR _ 35141 Large Duo-Therm twin burner oil heater, like new, $100. OR 3-508], 6-9 p.m, AND HOLLYWOOD beds. All new. You save. Closed on Sat. Hilberg, 62 Williams, FE MAYTAG WASHING MACHINE. aoe each $4465 bination doors $14.85 as € $29.95 3 pe. colored bath sets, al! a a only $140.95 DWARE-PL oa BOYDEL! MEISTER'S AND aaa ri TO $500 ON ALL TALS MAKE SURE IT's BURMEISTER Northern Lumber Co. i 0 CHAIN GAW CIEE ¥ * sheet b trailer. 1% ton conan wa WALL 3 RUNNING. i TNO FF. Smith's a= 158 Se “rales FE ¢7681 CURTAIN STRETCHERS In Gbop shape st reasonable price Also 16 ™m projector that needs smal! amount of work Projector goes for $1 50. OR 3-7665 . Cyr Lumber Co. Commerce Simmons deluxe sleeper. LIONEL & AMERICAN FLYER TRAINS IZED FACTORY SERV- Ens Rs on MYERS PUMPS a room hig fics escent. 503 Orchard Lake ve 1984 PAINT 25% RY Couns at UINTERION -SAgIN Fixism INTERIOR oLoks Phar Also includes many BLAYI 'OCK K COAL & BUILDING Naa: yt 2 PIECE LIVING ROOM SUITE 2 end tables, drum table, coffee- table—all Duncan Phyfe. Westing- eas 3 PEREP $10 each. MI way bed WAYNE GABERT'S ~ fet, 85, 0, ree- r, $10. May- t washer, §10, apt. gas stove, . large gas stove, $14.50, electric stove, 624.50, refriger- ator, £2950, occasional chair, ‘$4.50, occasional rocker, §4.96, typewriter office desk and swivel chair ee oa 42 Orchard Lake 4 Ave, PE 4-7881. 52 Gal. Electric Water heater—name brand Reg. $148 95-—Now $80 95 L. A WAGNER CO. Pontiae R4. For Sale Miscellaneous 60/6 ALL ELECTRIC TOOLS. APPLI- ances at wholesale prices to all. GENERAL W jOUSE CO., 2258 Dixie Hwy. F rank FREE! my “CONE E'S RENTAL. 1251 “sake om 20077 AUTOMATIC | GAS WATER HEAT- seen 8 to 12 am. Sas ae a Gay Tues. on’ d-0703 FE +520 ANCHOR FENCES a "| ALL WITH 1988 LICENSE "Yee wrntrnette 8 aot : 53 Pontiac Cft. 8 4 dr., F FORMER OWowe “ME wn im oar rh ng cha Exchange | —| radio, peater, Hydra... wo REASONABLE DEAL | ‘LAKE C ON uckhorn. Lake Sales & Service FOR eeegpereet toes e@eeo0e, $1175 1G: USTOM s DOOR . REFUSED. M en OR age “Schooner Tard. € eek Way ee eas Gane eceept, trade im. 92) Mt. Ford Cust. 4 dr., Ford XTER finish. Very Dede modetn fete WR Ghooee | ¥, TON EXPRESS ys “O-Matic | $1395] RADIO"AND HEA «ated Sen LOOK $1,085 youd own floor plan Lowest pos- j SUNRMEG Seen es ees Sesh ates ce ee Pontise § green 4 door. Sa ea ee i 1145 ’53 Nercury Cust. 4 dr., may fires’ fed. yan stee This ta nice cleus fea a cor Fea) ‘purebase pa _ "| OD, R&H ....... $1333 tater “Drive ie a pS en BE e Tudor 4 PONTIAC CONV ‘ ee LARRY “et atte tians..8795| LARRY | ae peg rere mem oot ate raph rE auto. tran ié PONTIAC SEDAN, VER Tel-Huron Center : guarantee. 1946 Eves a sunday FM JEROME 52 Lincaln Cosmo. 4 dr. JEROME green ‘calor Meny ‘entres, Dafve | jose PONTIAC POOR” DOOR BEC AMERICAN. re) aad” otners. 3 Rachexter Ford Dealer : $1465 Rochester Ford Dealer greea color, Many extras. luxe. Everything exe = “Demonstrators. 1 40 ft. ees © ess SA \ . matic. PE 93-1471. ; bedroom | a pned a8 late | ‘FOR mone f Pia" w veans ‘| 50 Ford 2 dr,, radio, heat- POFod0D. PLACE 10 'BOY. * Redio “uptes “shin dare erey FonrihG 15.000 MILES gm chs eae cosshaah snake | wes SAE VEOLET to Soa PICK: | ee veeeeee $445 ig oO Oe pak Ser: get Mar caeas tise York: Used mobile homes So on of up. 63C_Joslyn CONDI- | nnn —_—~ 1953 DeSoto V-8 Fordor Dark _shire, Birm —— Rd Basie “Hey = - - = on, = Pesan ster t Goop | ’48 Pontiac 8 sed. cpe. $295 % ane oan" ha Pboby _— grey—low miles. New car guaran- dome aa So Jos! Scat 5 ale 1-VA 2128. “" q ~———~} Parkhurst Trailer $26-FT SEMI - Hutchinson ' CARS to V-8 Fordor Sharp UXE 4¢ DR. = For Sele Livestock 72| ai traers ors oa ie Sralier Gales,’ S preytee I Pian MAT! BARGAIN PRICES P AULSON Cypress brown — +e "Wraramedte. radio. ‘beater ar Demos 1840" La MY 2461! | ge La MOTOR SALES V-8 Fordor, 26.000 | iss; PONTIAC @ DR. 610 ) ad | Beces 2227 Trucks Cental FREE | gemvunnen queer a c Fenton < cellent cond ~/ oa " 81363 1953 PONTIAC 4 . @ Highway gd Pager monthly paym ‘ __FE Cu Tudor Beau- full uipped. Beautiful a BURG BOAR YR, OLD” RICE. 14608 after IEE sosneeessenesess $995 A Lincoln “etsume, parments aa 8 Weed tral “dark blue fiasah an extra rece a se : a Gap Boal A- evrolet ts Ton Pic : - os . ‘ ere = ech rhe . HARDTOP 31. _mingham = ale Bos Weteh Ra's waled pte | CHI 2 .: : a Geler. we a ‘) rr) FORD 6 CUSON BHRFEGT “towner cat. For sule of. trans cary et Ore low price. | VERY CLEAN : ioe | PE «132 N SADD jet Sedan Deliver : __ EM 32180. = of equal value. For| c Chieftain, v English Chevro! 795 ition Low orice = for anything eq DE- 8 i ad oe PONTIAC | stone. 9 Co MECC Sali tae | Basie ei mer” a gg Ray eee ye cus Oo ee $845 [nyo | wes ee tee Eee = eee REO HERD HOLSTEING | aVENS MOBILE HOMES "Fst aa Cara Suburban be ed eee OL_2-0311 _Woodvard, Birmingham: : eStey business vies we willl 9 it to 4s 1. im andes cer ere $645 “You the party wot was advertising for a companion to | |, FORD, GKYLINER FORDO- gy THIS YEAR i : Gateriain ‘offers for sale Camp You! can "hue a tte Mutchinson | “Ford #, ‘x Toa Panel drive to Florida?” ing, "Direetonals" Good condi: | Sui" yt 90. MOTOR SALES GET YOUR FAMILY Sekiand. Inc.” 830 E mame Me | poteSiioacd’ trait’ us iow se i) $595 | hep. drive tion, OR 3-7162 bet. 0-6 1061 SUPER OLDS 08. WILL batr og "ye Years Pair Desling A REAL CAR ; Rd. — Mich. Wil ets gov down. _Chevrolet 's Tom Pickup $545 Used Cars 91 91 FORD aEDAN—* Fetus ‘48 pickup Cana as Week Pike Street COME IN AND PICK ONE OUT. Lf ’ rvs OLD 1 PON- Hutchinson's Trailer Sales| 50 . . “hon, Pickup. ss - For Sale Used Cars 91, Fo For Meylinders Inexpensive transports 1953 0 OLDS, -er- SUPER «DR. 7s 39 54 Dodge Coronet V8 -. +. $1608 4 Wartes Livestock 73 | sis Dine Mey. Dreyten Plaine ‘40. wo cceeseees $295 | ~~~~- ~~~ ‘9 CHEV eeccccceeecncnss eer | = Very good a ne cain ‘49 PONTIAC se Ford Pord-s-Matic = aw Gane oi ponte LIVESTOCK oe AE ttc a — a Chervolet ‘, Ton Utility Pickup. Radio. ‘heater. aoa cadet bay Bos ene Late. Models. aa | GOOD USED CARS — HURON CHIEFTAIN 8 ae DR i: Spee a OD. ee! $ ose “inde Porrect Jones. Clarkston. | agg S_ Dort Mighver Fist Matthews- Weis Gres. 31.000 ectual mie Framepertation Specials ay Pane Camas 6 sedan $1095 MOTOR SALES TNO TONE OR nan’ was | ‘82 Chrys. 4 dr Power steer. § oe $8206 4 ~ Rent Traiier Space 79 sceptinally fine condition: 115 8. Sagin Ee |g deen 1 Pagans PE 320}/ SEAT ¢ See YEARS |'St Seek 6 res we For Sale Poultry 74 : ILER CT Hargreaves SERVICE STATION N, al } -encl Dix. 2 dr. . os WHILE MA UARASGERD 35.008 i cheysies Cho. Coe ar... $ is NDERS. § GEESE. READY — weil Bent, roads CHEVROLET oP ort a ‘90 Chevrolet 46 Chevrolet ‘eT. Pickup 8 Its ‘0 Olds ‘ACTUAL, MI-THIB Is, TMMAC- 54 Kaiser Tar 3% 3 Oa All 7 for $40. | "4nd grounds gchoo! bus , POWERG sures . = iw |“ Chev , iy a WEIONT § ae ow Max AGEMENT 211 S. Saginaw St. ~ REAL BARGAINS baits seateEC oy tet T. ae ae IsH MA Bas 3 RADIO AND MEATER. Your THIS BEAUTY” TRUCKS a Sie HENS AVERAGE WEIONT r railer ae IS | “s NY OTHERS. : ' ie : Bese each. _ Telegraph e oa ery & sem! modern, spaces sev FF 4-4546 Open Till ;| sand overariee. While. side ‘valle Has ‘ie ACTUAL MI. Was a, Or eruse 6-186 - aot gs JEROME'S Ke Beare tin F111” WB. pile ee a & Ward Ra FE 3-9650 —_—> Usea Cars 91le chevie ciud coupe. " ‘SEE LENN SAWYER 2? DR. 6 CYLINDE Is A CAR YOU WOULD = ym) ao nee $e See Farm Prete TN Auta_ Accewories _ 80| For Set ie | ee Me ade Ps pet nia | $6shadbefOSee™ ™] Orchard Take at Case | Pate” POTATOES FOR SALE. The BUDM: | Auto GI Service ! Lote of sharp. car “AUTO SALES Jerome's atc bes DOOR & RA AC 8 SILVER STREAK | ider Bros. . et No Sunday sale Al Johnston. =k ito Glass tried NORTH | PONTIAC PE ¢eist er Weater, 60 at ‘ ee Riemenschneider . Tt weer Gopenee. Se ee eee eee re ee Saud BURGE SUPER 3 DOOR. 3 Orchard Lake at Cass Jerome S ve,£-,-< ° CHAIN SAWS w moiohet. AUTO OLASS CO, | * BUICK SUPER jo ag em ae te | Since Verge beter, Reval TIP TOP “The Cars With The NEW 5 HP. WITH 20| 129 Oakland Ave. L PE 20% edi ean io 3 TONE Forward Look” Pe DAn sk INS, CREDIT ATTENTION a sess ‘W H O ?) issa BUICK ¢ DR, si¢ DOWN AND No Cr CARS! iess PLYMOUTH 1 PLAZA 6 7 TONE ‘as PH USED CARS Fle Sastae Se wollass wrecking Sg ewes e word, Diwinghass . nals, 3.000 miles. My 23-6001 « ae 2-9131 TERMS PE ¢u) TS, tracks. Mp hove several ward, cx. sUPER_AARD_TOF Bad Credit? 4 pm 1981 Chrysler. Phone FE : = KING BROS. eines. Transmission | and rear The new ’55 Buick is the isa gic beater. Dysafiow, Power, C) “tape a a2 =n sler, club coupe, ise STUDEBARER, res, rotriac AD AT OPDTER [arin “serra ona taaas | Py TON SS Bu walve of] geome. ciees ovate ase Here’s the place to buy. I Th VearegevyDhave sig vase! | MOTH OS wr aeoare. = : Mine re Reeser oe es SCHRAM AUTO ape ks the een oe each a Siutcbebe Braween_“'| No co-signers, no past CONDITION! “Ss ca Ma esos “ule very (good condition, After : equ ee ee oa ee | we can pa: . PER 4 DOOR. it references neces- . ar. _330_ Fe toon es argue or Cherie AU eccens. MY 'S-4ten ings to you in a used car. "Haale hesiers Brenton me a If you are 21 and gph wg ML 8 sipoaia, bec eect: ™ gags. ‘“ ‘$3 Chrys NY. 4 Dr. ...... bse xe | Facts: Miswens 6-000. ____ LOUIE'S AUTO PARTS Also, we are located right | well tires ee SNA: havea job, we have a car p Can ‘ster ¢ pm. OR 5.7050 er 83 DOdge ¢ er = OD aD ee acces Se FOLENS TRACTORA | SROW eves. geocraiors”.. here in Pontiac; so if ise BUICK SPECIAL, DYNA for you , lh) ne — i= Poot 31D Myére 0.0. 9 es oo “ty Got Dine | Resa cpringe ‘ ‘thing should happen| "v;,, ; ince oe FY "Good | Cheen Transporation et Dyna... § 08 we. for “@ cars) anything shou P width ; Tr deluxe. Black. 42.000 mile Peotiee 8@ Buick 2 Dr por =. ae | Lets of weed parte ; Soh CK SUPER « DOOR SEDAN VALUE! $185. MI 4500 ina? (41 Cad. @ Dr Blue 202... ; wae Seo at Ginies | we"orifane ave fe re $019) to ens Dg Ee ate est pane een rl tad hi ined «DOOR 1 PLYMOUTS Ghar | wel onset Oe Mere Poe OS cham cows, Lincein farm. weld- Auto Service 81) car you are no 3e.000 ectual miles This cer is ay ~- 1°34 Chev. Hardtop oe, Me Fie | Make Ofter |"@6 Post. 2 Dr... . Sra "Davis Machinery. Poone 45 miles’ from the secvice| (053 soeal ater Ths on: © SATIONAL ‘34 Ford Custom 2 dr. ids! PLYMOUTH SUBURBAN. sie CLARKSTON ' ag hh FRE REE ESTIMATE. garage. RIK POOR SS SIOTOR SALES "$4 Chev. Bel Air 4 dr. (oBotrert Sramgian pr ooon! MOTOR Si JEROME S seers re ‘ansecd MU ALL i. y cane ae 1 S. SAGINAW ST. 54 Chev. Deluxe 2 dr. oientiticn Rosie eo | oa a te Orchard Lake at Cass SAY! NEIG IGHBORt BR AID. Woror’s = BUICKS SQ BUIC 553 DESOTO V8 2 ie Weise 2dr re ein 40 re MA 8 — — pers | 5 2S . 53 Chev. < ar. MOUTH —sPrci MICH. "CHAINSAW Cece ot West’ Puc’ ot ‘33 Super 4 dr. Radio, Dynaflow, radio and heat-) oo ve ang rakes aad om | 'S2 Pontiac Dix. 4 dr. v "tame Radio : —— DISTRIBUTORS __| SA MS AEE eater, power steering SF rene Cle eed ts) feriscorr recente netowssr | 34 Ponti Hardtop a oe MOTTO IS from ti, ‘Mew for siete. Cal] serncy Tevored. Zuck Me | and Dynaflow..... ue) ed glass. Clean “" te ea badge faee eaten ae oe = a OUR from 635 bal . 2-236) y Ps = S : dr. 1954 STARCHIEF. 3 | 38621 for rentals, ; . with| excellent condition ne) “SCHUT 52 Ford Custom 2 cca 6 adewectiine temete: —“Welice Seen It!!! | Fer Sale Motorcycles 83 53 Roadmaster Wo _ | owner. Phone FE 2-7360. | (OMNIS Weogware, Birminenem 31 Old 88 2 dr. | Sel senaiiien gar Mieemes \\ i THE NEW CASE POR PARTS AND, SERVICE On radio, d Dynaflow aot oa DOWN °$1 DeSoto 2 dr. ie “— ; —— "400" Bridson ee oo = $1795 Fide Fir th Mand RET = 51 Chrysler Windsor ee ae (aie: Mraremane : a Srna eee pee BCE "| Can you bump e i ted hve Belaxe 2 a. | timten gies, white wall tres It Has Everything Boats & Accessories 85 'S2 Super 4 dr. Radio,| S™vesuyy. 95 - iste FORD COUNTRY SQUIRE. | I a Gastoa 2 de ins PONTIAC” 4 DOOR DELUXE | ARE PROOF Preview Showing MERCURY OUTBOARD MOTORS |“) and Dynaflow. ’ —— 'S1 Pontiac Dix. 2 dr. tone” ive ieee “mies a1 | CUR PRICES Feb 19 Sux ane boats. Manter Craft Sharp and ready. . .$1095 MICHIGAN'S 4 75 ti 5] Pontiac Dlx. 4 dr. tape $1173. Phone Milford, = a trailers, Diston FINEST 81 Ply h 4 dr. VERTIBLE y boat hoists cB 51 Plymout == . CON THOUGHTEN'S a: RORY sO wens, PE 28200 FORDS on, THE SO roan "50 Ford Custom 2 dr. Low sheers. om A-] " Buys , aN = At Pine Le , Le $28_N. Mai, Rochester OL 14761 | FVinnoDE boats Marine | 'S4 2 dr. Sedan. Plenty of ONE OS Sa Bar Bee Sharp 50 Chev. Dix..2 dr. c ie, wit, tadie & beater, bare 53 Ford R. Wgn. $1199 Auction Sales a __sales a Borvice. TR MOTORS extras and very low mile- tor yen Pe ae pase. Cal PE ‘30 Chev. Dix. 4 oe amt t E STARCHIEP CUS cye if '52 Ford 2 dr......$644 vey Dix. Sed. $599 AUCTION FRIDAY. Peo is ar go ph ng Ld, $1195 jai : Cars "SO Pontiac Dix. 2 dr. tom. 4 ér. All eccessories 52 Hudson 4 dr... .$599 sl Pont. * ee 13.30 PM. located 8 mis owt | Nee trailers. Everything for . 4 et Pees | ean 50 Pontiac’ Dlx. 4 dr. '49 Chev. 2 dr. Dix. $199 ’S0 Ford Cpe. 8.... a woitmore Lane COWEN MARINE SUPPLIES 53 Customline 2 uv with | 8a «, CHEVIE RADIO". AND. HEAT- I 50 Studebaker 2 dr. ; wens - Mee 9 dr — $599 '53 Ford Cpe. 2 dr. $899 8. 2 and‘. mile © | 306 Orchard Lake Ave FE 2-802¢ , heater and one be goed motor a 'SON Statesman 4 dr. C O ‘SI Mere. eee 4X eee eee | Semen tert | to, Seer on en In ery yO Si fond 2 res stat SINah tle $9 Sell cared for 400 Pord Tractor | YS aY take over. parments ae Burne , . , ; Dealer ‘a ; 4 '52 Ford R. Wgn.. .$844 Sd ‘coupment "hey iaeg corn | (BONNIE'S, DRIVEAWAY | '52 Customline 2 dr. with) PE S4i0l er PE son8 On New _| 49 Lincotn Club Coupe Your Ford I 51 Plymouth Sub. $54 Sedan, 9644 ® ars exas 5 : — : . 4 eer Chopper & blower. bey & corm = ined 7 see ino DEnVE. ‘radio, heater, and Ford- °S1 Chevrolet 49 Olds 88 4 dr. OVER % CARS TO CHOOSE |] +54 Ford R. Wen. $1675 52 Dodge Seda 3099 heads, near new, John agg CARS FOR PORTLAND. | Les Ap w A sharpie $845 Deluze sedan with radio, heat- ‘49 Pontiac Dix. 2 dr. FROM. | '$2 Chev. Dix. 2 dr. $699 ’50 Ford 2 dr...... pen, Mccormick 1 Bote gras tio varvewst gexrice| O-Matic. A sharpi oe eee 1955 49 Chev. Dix. 2 dr. EOD et Men A ea i shiee 9 ac .$299 49 Pont. Dix. 2 dr. $299 Drill, Allie-Che mere with chop- re 46139 tw Ont Awa CHEVS . ' "49 Chev. Standard 4 dr, buy. only 1er . “* $399 8] Buick Riviera. .$699 A ome A erating & LEAVING 1 og ag —— MICHIGAN'S tiacs 49 Ford Custom 2 dr. ’ $595- ’50 Pontiac S. Cpe. $: - . fmodera farm Ne junk, or small cupenses and_Griving FE be 'S4 Bel Air 2 dr. Radio, "FINEST on '48 Chev. Dix. 2 dr. $1 62. CADILLAC 4 Dr. |] +51 Hudson Hornet $899 °32 Pont. Dix. 2 dr. $744 reeinntne of pow i This mee hee gis eng le heater and very low mile- THE BIG sek es "48 Merc. 4 dr. E ia ° saa: at cue eat! '40°Ford 2 dr... 419 ’°S2 Buick 2 dr. asis $599 bales Maitatia” & "Brome Ha — : | Wanted | d Used ed Cars 88 Tt {pene oocone $1345 WOODWARD AND ty MILE ‘ROAD | All Cars Must "48 Ford 2 de. ais SiC hae. tile 0 a aut 49 Ply. M.S. Wg. $399 {equate dy hea grees | tae eee . , OS “ t( LET | on W oO . IOS a : ~ , 4 by . ; ;" 4 n “dling” cauipment "Soe HION 8 CHEAP. scar CARS | ‘33 Bel Air 4 dr. Radio ; toes eine ehh reen top Be Sol d Be a ation agon - “ . * "353 Nash St. Wen. $799 51 Ford Conv’'t... .$699 | snare png Bl we. anaes Adar Dey ore & ANY GOOD USES heater and 2 tone paint. | aqua green ——— ike new / 5 . oe 50 i ¢( IR I) \ i (4 ‘ Aucusseet Phone aan See | neers Boom NOM agi | Spx tHlOSS: S.2 65 eee « 2195, & SCHL a Z MOTORS "53 Packard 6 older Fords & Chev s ~ radio, heater. Ready to H dt AUCTION WED NIGHT FEB 6. _ : DOLLAR _ po a ; ‘ ; auto trans.. one ’. | S ei Ror ey RTS | pee en arate ee 8 LH Toot c, Styline 2 dr ORE wll Rete ™ Cumper. Ag, Mave, tran MATTHEWS. | ® GRciops mmourecnre, Easy’ washer eicetrie Neill pey you well. 440, Dime Radio, heater and no rust | iste CHEVROLET 2 DOOR. A 51 Pont. Sta. Wag. 'SO BLICK 4 Dr.. R& H. aE $2 Ford’ pi OTIS: oc swe swses cececcsceseses SOM pe ago "ae pened pester aS , WELT [ccc ccc ccccccceces $795 | — oe 0288. Dix 8 R&H. Hydra. excellent Hargreaves . Fievaliow “Tranu. Skee eRiemiet coven SLES an corer ag ge Nees quarter H. J. \ AN es * = ¢ Se At > SERIES 3 condition. b, | 53 Ford Victoria OOO COT mt W. of Rochester’ Lm. smart OR 3155 io CHEVROLET 2 ea ae $895 CHEVROLET $395 ; \ Sec ecceccccereveces sQlOOe Baie Farm sonltchigan’s cidest PRICE THE REST, THEN GET PONTIACS | tonal sigeats ‘Beat covers. 81.408. ; : ai St $2 PONTIAC 4 Dr. R | 54 Ford Victoria .....-. community ——— after ¢ p.m. 11 S. aginaw Ot. blue. onl,_Lapeh _served "BILL SPENCE § ftain Deluxe 4 dr. pia COUPE. GooD rs ac 2 ; H, two tone ' aucTion WED. FEB. 16. sates ang USED CARB os Gers iat and Hydra- "*transportation or second car. FE bin 8 phot a FE 4-4546 = Open Till 9 $65 eas Cheapies gt ye Sida Mag oo ans OR CHEAP cana | 20/0) "eater and lt $995 DOOR — My ‘FORD We SEDAN 1°52 FORD 2 Dr. R & H. A} fins aairy owe ana "heifers "108 SCRAP ear 9-401 maticee “ Nels. Gee conettien. _OR "00, . “This car vs, realy ——/ one owner. Yours all '46 Plymouth 4 dr.. .$99 ‘41 Ford Cpe. ......$44 vi equ ’ i 2 wth | VROLET Mi s ° v » . ’ form cquipment. dairy equi: | WO BOB FROST (a $1 Catalina De in Maio, heater. turn signais. 4 good tas A Pontiacs ready | TARE ORION MOTOR sacs only. os ‘49 Hudson 2 dr.. $144 39 Ford 2 dr.......$54 Pecperctes. Deb Wiles auctionrer.|eep G. Woodward tron. | radio, heater an ol ea en ee ee as Vale eee ee ee M24 at Buckhorn Lake $695 ’ $99 ='48 Nash 4 dr.......$99 L0cTiOn Van WEDNESDAY al ye gs matic .....csccee. $843) apm. $2 Studebaker i POR wee troop 8! °S)] PONTIAC 8 Cyl 4 Dr. ! 47 Frazer 4dr..... . mate 4 Clb. Cpe. $199 might. L. E. Smart, eo vrs wees - ~~ . tude 1951 . . one : or . focheste TED: LATE MODEL WRECK . Ys ‘a and assume ee . ‘ f those |] ‘48 Ford 2 dr.......$99 EquMinaion AUCTION EVERY “eer rT bn ry wks Parts And Many, Many More iia pl ae a; aa ise fnew eoenon 7 ODOR x a es Ons ° '48 Packard 2 dr....$99 "48 Stude. Clb. Cpe. $99 manic Heapen, 70 auy| Bagley uy ee VJ vonee OS" $495 oni matic. "Ecellen” conaiton “By BO ONS. 49 Buick 2 dr.....$199 "49 Stude. 4 dr.....$199 ection on the. premisee locates WE—FAY TOP DOLLAR FOR OLI ER MICHIGAN'S ’52 Pontiac ee swpes._ 33 $590. 'S4 CHEV. 4 . a '50 Nash 2 dr......$199 "46 Ford Clb. Cpe.. .$99 . 4 miles west and ', mile sou 4 cars. . ms H. Hydramatic, ‘ ve Me mle south of Metamere, ot | “nary. mw mode MICHIG. Catalina Ro i. "49 Ford Low mileage. se nme nearest | COMMUNITY UICK rue gio Pave vor |” §1 295 Paces tee | ON Trucks 7. beginning « er COR OF a "33 Jy: : cate nel ee oe MOTORS B tw _AND 13 MILE ROAD s : ; ae goods WOODWARD. A ILE ROAD 3 Mercury & H. Priced to sell ‘ Besoer Sony bars oes oe 803 N. Main, Rochester 210 Orchard Sa ME WHOLESALE 1] nee Montrey 4 ar B&H. Power MICHIGAN'S quick. 48 Ford % t. pick. $399 ° sia raed . $299 eer. b r ' . 2 > : ; . $699 |. For Sale Housetrailers 78 ore OLive POO OPEN TILL epi sn 1947 Chevie club coupe ........ 8171 harp. $1,695 , FINEST Lor $895 -H. g|| 53 Ford 1 t. pick. $799 at. p - M&M Motor Sales | 9 P.M. F 197 Chevie, 2 door ......... size = CORNER OF ’49 FORD 2 Dr. R & ” 53 Chev. 2 t. tract. $799 51 Ford y% t. pick. $544 MOBILE —- dollar on late model cars. tena Peoties Gomme @/ondan’” 52 Dodge WOODWARD AND 13 oo ROAD Cyl. Hurry on this one. 51 Chev. 2t. tract. $299 .’34 Chev. 4 t. pick. $544 2621 Dixie Hwy. OR 3- teas 1952 Ford deluxe sedan . R & A. low mileage. FORD ‘4? Rae + ag $195 5 ey: eee , PARTMENTS " pieaean ena perce tee | Station Wagon | is GMC". ton “Om CEN sili inst FORD ~ CONVERTIBLE. 4s 49 PLYMOUTH 2 Dr.|] '54 Ford ¥ t. pick. $44 °S2 Ford 2 t. dump $799 nd junk cars. : : = to s. 404)’ p\ . ae etre | FEE aS | ee erate TRue | eda om 'S2 Pontiac sae | pis tonisted Brugia Very clean. Prser p Bw ws RADIO. HEATER, DYN est Si Ca R & K. Hydra, 12 “a . . $195 of wardrobe, er LLS AND PE 42185 ; q : Ee eer) Averill’s | Be Tarhgh pl tan | Seeks rn cuan Pip | Sint" soa | HAROLD TURNER, FORD * ‘BOSE fetes. ee slso tee cerme’s ; Cars RAs 10.000 Se ‘et "8- "40. All makes, Meal BPE | 1952 Ford Station Wagon. ! enk rics. S pert | , ing CUFYAOUET BEL, ATR TW eae, 1952 Nash Rambler—like 2 BIG LOTS ESSERE) ee ermam| Jerome's [EES SSE ae oat |p LEER | 152 2 ae Ge eres a ss _ Ee , *e™, ' 7 ‘ - ' : ) hs WAITING, | Or gpm | eaten : a PON’ rl AC. Cy 1 464 S. Woodward, Birmingham | “ a0 DIXIE RWT. —- manpror. | 6: } : : or PE 46506. 1951 a ey WANTED ay “ com talk = — REASO cc EACH. | ; il Midwest 4-7500 "Liberty 9-400 CARS MUST BE when 7 STORE sii z 3 ELEAN RSHARE "| sour offer through ough Clase aaa eB M7 SSagionee St. || JOdran 4-666 title-Money waiting et fied Ads! Factory Branch 147. . Sagina Fee % 2-8181 for an ad-writer Clemens at Mill FE 5-4101 sa at eay | "GLENN Ss) elect re- . ot. ; . S | who helps you select re- | Phone FE3-7117, » ee, da eae ve etm! ault-bringing wor, : Telecast of ———— + --Today’s Television Proarains -- W Will Attempt: di Channel 2—WJBK-TV Channel 4—WWJ-TV Chanee! 1—WXYZ-TV Channel 9—CKL TONIGHT’S TV HIGHLIGHT’S 6:00—(7) Little Rascals. “Spanky.” (9) Capt. Video. Ad- venture serial’ (4) Time for Music. Jane Palmer sings. (2) Featurette. 6:15—(9) News. Austin Grant. (4) News. Paul Williams. 6:25—(4) Weather. Songy Eliot. 6:30—(7) Ramar of the Jungle. Jon Hall in jungle adventure. (9) Bellamy in Mystery.”’ (4) Traffic Court. Re- enactment of cases before Judge | Watts. (2) News Ace. Ken Cline, Van Patrick. 6:45—(2) Everett R. Pheips. 6:50—(2) Sports Digest. Davey. 7:00—(7) Kukla, Fran and Ollie. Puppet Show. (9) Lone Wolf. Louis Hayward as Mike Laynard and mystery of “‘Runaway."’ (4) Stage 4 Aging actress finds marriage and happiness after starting ‘business career in “Exit for Margo,”’ with June Havoc, Victor Jory. (2) Frankie Lane Show. Music, Variety. :15—(7) My Story. Drama. Chuck 8 2 Follow That Man. Ralph | “The Timekeeper | TV Weatherman. Dr. ; show, Ronald Colmah, star. Danny decides to drop show Danny Thomas, Jean Hagen over Canada. ater. Homeless young parents take refuge in empty house and win over hardboiled realtor with ideas for improving it in “No Place to Live,” with Tom Drake, | Martha Vickers. (2) Meet Millie. joining club with Mr. Boone, Elena Verdugo, Florence Helos star. :30—(7) Steel Hour. Thomas | Mitchell, James Daly, Henry | Hull in “¥Freighter,"" story of battle of man and elements on ship's last voyage. (9) Theater. | Emmett. (4) Jackie Cooper stars in ‘‘I Found $60,000,000". based on true story of man who found uranium. (2) New Red Skelton Show. Mary McCarty joins Red in vaude- ville act on tour of Persia. 10:00—(4) Truth or Consequences. Jack Bailey host on stunt quiz. (2) Hockey. Detroit Red Wings vs Chicago Black Hawks. 9:00—(7) Make Room for Daddy. | 7:00—(4) business for selling real estate, | 9:¢9—(7) | WEDNESDAY MORNIN Today. (2) Morning ‘THE PONT =~ War and Peace Breakfast Club. (4) Romper Room. (2) Welcome star. (9) Pick the Stars. Dick! Traveler. MacDougall with stars from all | (4) Fireside The- | 9:30—(2) Breakfast with Murphy. } | 10:00—(7) Wixie'’s Wonderland. (4) | Ding Dong School. (2) Garry Moore. 10:30—(4) Way of World. (2) Ar- thur Godfrey. | 10:45—(4) Sheilah 11:36—(2) Strike It Rich. WEDNESDAY AFTERNOON |12:08—(7) 12 O'Clock Comics® (4) Tennessee .Ernie. (2) Valiant FF 12:15—(2) Love of Life. © Beulah. (4) | 12:399—(7) “Good for You.” .by Robert; Your Nest. Circle Theater. morrow. | 12:45—(2) Guiding Light. 1:00—(7) Charm Kitchen. (4) Nancy Dixon.. (2) Portia Faces | Life Life 1:30—(4) Bruce Mayer Show. (2) Ladies Day. 1:45—(9) School. 2:06—(7) Stars on Seven. Mama Bronson is pushed into | 11:@8—(7) Story studio. (4) Home. When “Oscar” ceremonies | | were at their slickest they had a | (2) Search for To | | 1:15—(4) Sonny Elliot. (2) Road of | ¢i ‘4 Oscar Nomina , s FAC PRESS, TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 15. 1955 et tions Droops Applewhite Replaces . f LaRosa, NEW YORK (INS)—Amazing how musical arrangements age— the Astaire-Rogers rondelay on the “Oscar” show Saturday had a rickey-tickey antiquity discourag- ing to what we'd believed were sharp memories of its permanent modernity .. . pretab rehearsed look; when they | dropped, they seemed ridiculous OLD TIMER—This U. S. flag was flying over the Palo Alto, Calif. The grouping of winners some- | times had an old fashioned, even downright daguerreotype self-con- | Feather , sciousness. . . We shan't get into personalities, except to say some were funny, | some foolish and some a little ridiculous. Martin & Lewis were fast, furi- ous and funny when they weren't indulging Jerry's stubborn addic- | comedy which must | 5 r Jackie Coogan has a well-adjust- | hairpiect Virus - Struck; | ' Pisele Has ‘Em Gaping library about five months before someone noticed that it only had 45 stars. It was made some time between 1896 and 1907. Holding the flag are Wilma Reed, left, and Audrey Bartholomew, both of the library staff. Quiz Suspect in Attack on Gi Teenager in Hospital With Hatchet Wounds of Head, Throat Two Brothers Sentenced for Bad Check Passing Two Oxford brothers, who plead- | ed guilty to bad check passing Feb. 7, were sentenced to six months jin Oakland County Jail yesterday ‘by Circuit Judge George B. Har- | trick, | Ronald A. Leach, of 7181 | Dartmouth, was arrested Feb. 2 by 6 4 Seen in Toll TV New Threat Looming for Movies in Shows Without Sponsors HOLLYWOOD \(INS) — Just as’ the push-button age finally eman- this means the little woman doesn't have to run down to the Metropolitan Opera House, swathed in best finery, to see “La budge from his armchair, but what about Mable who's been operating washing machines, i electric dishwashers She's all full of vim. vigor and | electricity and raring to go out) on the town. a So far, pay-as-you-see TV emancipated. there is the TV may cinerama, screen right back camera, and the housewife back into her living Lower. California is known as the ‘‘fleshiess arm of Mexico.” TV Studio Training MEN-WOMEN Short, inexpensive training for the following positions in Television need not interfere with your present occupation. Script writers. announcers, set designers, hostesses, re- ceptionists, secretaries, musie librarians, camera assistants, orojectionists, also TV servic- ing and repair. Free nation- wide placement service. Do not answer unless you are sincere and ambitious. State your age, phohe number, hours you work. and home address. For complete infor- thation WRITEN.B.S. Television 10:38—(7) Stop the Music. Musical — r ee first Chief Justice of the . , : mission that it will ‘consider’ the pre nelle tee | (uz (9) International Play- | ?:15—(9) Man's Heritage Dane ~~ we tunued gga Zyearold | asked the official to authorize @ 10 system, puts it on a more Training — — house. Drama. (4) Ray Milland | 955_(9) Myrtle Labbitt. (4) Jean| 7°U™S ie4y 2 a tchet beating | check solid basis. Justice.” (9) Gly Lombardo.| giow Prof. McNulty’s wife | yg 2) Act Linkd fully in tandem with him em | Sunday night of a 14-year-old girl| Long connected the name with Box 14, c/o Press Musie by Lombardo bapd,. 90 writes a -be-bop tune, Phyllis icBride. : Circle Theater was Joan Potter, | left alone at home |a man sought for bogus check | If the system is ekayed by the ° a joists. (4) Dinah Shore. Songs Avery co-stars. , |3:@0—(7) Theater. (9) Wednesday| and adds, really talented and Little Janice Wells, meanwhile, | passing and summoned sheriff's FOC, it could mean a scrambled (2) News. Doug Edwards. alte Gen © 90 F | Matinee. (4) Greatest Gift. (2)| aice person.” was still in serious condition at a| deputies who arrested Leach | dackie Gleason, Eddie Fisher -acel Caravan 7 it Now. Jawaharial| Big Payoff. is Dane for bothering hospital with gashes on her head| Heebert Leach, 29, same address, and wheever else happens to be eas gens (2 J John Nehru of India talks about war 3:15—(4) Golden Windows. == = to cleat | and throat and a sore mouth oe eas we omare| waieg ayze. (2) Jo Staf-| ong Fi India’ |up the mystery and so graciously . ford Show. Romantic Cruise is! [ations with Chine’ on filme|330—(4) One Man's Family. (2) | saying so. ., . ag My Soest ook ene detectives who said he pesed| An entife channel could be put background for pusic. made in London with Edw. R.| Bob Crosby. | NBC wants Ann Sothern if Jack | "posite Chief Ollie Damron said! Dec. 1 ” | aaa ee 8:00—(7) Jumbo Theater. “Paul-| Murrow. 3:45—(4) Concerning Miss Mar | foe” expands into her CBS-TV | 1. was ‘very uncertain" whether} |= |= ————__— — a _— piping ta ate Seatierd ts “Doster's DOWW-| 1 -05—(7)-Seupy's On. Variety. (9) | ‘** Playwright Wijliam Saroyan is | the man being questioned would) Poir Rewed in Blimp |a paid version of a star football fall.” (9) Bishop Sheen. Free- - : - ,. | be held for long. No charges were first-run movie _| National News. (4) News. Paul | 4:00—(7) Capt. Flint. (9) Justice |on NBC's expanding “consultant” | r104 but he held in the end game, @ dom and its Meaning. (4) Mar) winiams (2) News. Jac LeGoff.| Colt. 4) Hawkins Falls. °( 2) | payroll ST Es aah ae Sal, Stare funeeey ansoe rare Pn i vey Cam et aah Ra Sey a , + Ol: ir ater. Ma- ; | in cops and robbers story. (2)|. theson Lang in “Drake of Eng-|*!5—‘") First Love. (2) Secret | radio has dropped gospel shouter) Desk Sgt. Leroy Carson got &|Day by being married a second! Scr'and his singing cot ial. : rg 2 Storm. . | frantic phone call from Janice at time in 3,000 feet over the = Life With Father. Confusion land.” (9) AGood Neighbor The- get ABC-TV's TV rehash of |9. 2, | time in a blimp (There are no commercials reigns over “Second Honey-) ater. Jean Gillespie, Edward #30—\4) Mr. Sweeney's World fred trich’ raliel c, Sunday night: He said. “I' city. Singer, North Hollywood paid TV) pa 3 e a man = moon” when the Day sons go! Norris in “Decoy.” (2) On Your Account —— s sultry off weard an excited voice say chiropractor, and his wife Edythe |“ tye curreht trend in k orris in “Decoy.” (4) little 2 series “Cale Istanbul”... is trying to break in my door.’| Gere’ married in 1850 im another | movie-ma visiting, Leon Ames, Lurene | . Drama. (2) Miss Fair- 4:45—(7) Ricky the .Clown. (4) os her |I asked, ‘where's it at?’ She gave| timp Tuttle star. | weather. Modern Romances. ornare ok, a1; |™e her address and then her . $:30—(7) Twenty Questions. Peter | 11.93 (2) Movie Date. “Figt |5:60—(7) Auntie Dee. (9) Folk! — ores intervened. ... name and then dropped the re-| Brown sugar does not become S. Ford, supreme chancellor of | cr anicn ” | Songs. (4) Pinky Lee. (2) ceiver. lumpy if it is stored in a covered the Knights of Pythias, guest R. Q Lewis. Se ee ee eee I could hear the door breaking | container with half an apple or guesser. (9) TBA. (2) Halls of | 1:30—(4) Tonight. Variety with |s:39—(7) Laurel & Hardy. (9) | Versions, how will attempt | open and the girl screaming. I had | carrot in it. Ivy. Pres. Hall matches wits| Steve Allen, Dinah Washington Doody. (4) Howdy |" War and Peace” .. . |the police redio mile with sodajerk on radio quiz’ Richard Himber guests. Doody. (2) Pirate Pete Charlie Andrews, Dave Garro-| squad cars could hear way's sense of humor for years, | ing. I couldn't , . has switched to Sid Caesar's | words.” M stable. .*. . | Two police cars arrived at Jan- -- Today's Radio Programs -- — “thie” sarie® rv secession) ces time" sin 3s umte | again. kid comic Joel Gray will|Damron sad. | TOP COMMISSION PAID ~“ Pregrams furnished by stations listed im this column are te witheut notice. play the London Palladium. puty Sheri va a et _Are subject to change ge a rege em age OR gra Me lel preven PHONE FOR INTERVIEW = MI: 44-4433 wan, (788) CELW, (see) ww, (ase) WCAR, (11390) WXYZ, (1770) «©6WIBR, (1608) WPRON. (eee) date has been pushed back from) for help as the assailaht prowled LZ — ———— March 31 to April 7; same drama: | around the house, but the neigh- TONIGHT? wave. ae Morgan WPON. News, Milady’s Mush | CKLW, Newa Living “Private Worlds,’ from Phyllis | bor wasp't home. Then she phoned: 6:00—WIR, News a an Cie WIR, Kitchen Clue pS ye lr mt Bottome’s novel. . . . police. wh News ; 9:30— WIR, Mre Page WPON. 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