a a “+ — ae The Weather Friday: Partly Cloudy Details page twe 112th YEAR Police Evict Ziegenhardt - HE PONTIAC PRERSVR ** *& & & PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, THURSDAY, APRIL 8, 1954 —64 PAGES af ASSOCIATED PRESS UNITED INTERNATIONAL NEWS SERVICE + Small Twister Strikes Swartz Creek Second Tomado! Lightning Raid Roars Over Area at Battle Creek Minor Thunderstorms Lash Pontiac, No Heavy Damage Reported by last night's severe thun- derstorm injured two per-/ sons in Swartz Creek near Flint and ripped the roof of an apartment building in Fulton Township near Bat- tle Creek Although alerted for pos- sible tornadoes, the Pontiac area escaped with only a rel- atively harmless thunder- storm. No one was injured in the Fulton het Gory 4 twister which struck at 7:15 p. m. in the southeast part of the township, skipped over out- lying homes and descended on the apartment. The tornado‘ struck Swartz Creek, just a few miles from Flint, at 8:15, caught the fire hall, lifted it into the air, scattered ce- ment bloeKS and dropped the roof on top of cars parked nearby. Loss was estimated at $5,000. Herschel Wise, 38, and his 14- year-old daughter, Virginia, were cut and bruised by flying debris as the storm ripped roofs from several Swartz Creek homes and wrecked garages and power lines. Swarts Creek fire chief Jack Adams watched the fire hall from the door of his home across the street. Wind ripped the door from his hand and dragged it into the yard. Some witnesses reported a tor- nado-like funnel dangling from clouds near Flint's outskirts. The larger city, still jittery from last summmer’s storm, was battered by hail, a thunderstorm and 71-mile an hour winds that twisted tele- phone poles, uprooted trees and shattered windows. A similar storm hit Detroit Pontiac residents waited anxious- ly until the second tornado alert in 48 hours ended officially at 10 p. m. Winds here did not rise above 55 miles an hour. Areas just south of Pontiac suf- fered heavier damage at the hands of thunderstorms A storm that mingham knecked out a main power line and left the homes —of 450 -Graetield- Terrace —resi- dents without lights for three hours starting at 9:10 p. m. A bolt of lightning wrecked the! ‘The story of Merl Young's rise | overseas mail, and so will have its | home of Adolph Swceicaki at 70 on Ziegenhardts | Bars Bloodshed | Split-second timing and the pre- cision of a well-planned Army at- | tack marked the. lightning raid | early today that resulted in the | eviction of the Ziegenhardt broth- ers. Senators Claim Indochina Policy as Edge of War t #4 Pa’ ! - | The raid was planned yesterday | afternoon by Lapeer Sheriff Clark | }Gregory and State Police Capt. | | Earl Secrist. _It_was kept secret for over 22) Request for Coalition on Asia Protection WASHINGTON ( AP )— hours Both Chris and Paul Ziegenhardt,| TWO Senators today spoke of who earlier had threatened to the sending of U. S. naval shoot it out with police, were suc- and air units into the Indo- | ames Sateen eee chinese fighting as a possi- | Twenty-five state troopers con- bility and one said, “It verged on the farm from the | ; I north and 11 sheriff's deputies |!0oks to me as if we are On moved in from the south. Both | the edge of war there.” traveled M 53 and side roads. | Sen. McCarran (D-Nev), The raid was carried off so who made this estimate in quietly that Lapeer’s streets were ‘ | deserted and farm houses near the an interview, said, “If we Ziegenhardts were dark when|Should send in naval and squad cars rolled toward the 240-| air forces now, it would only | acre farm. brin . Scout cars dropped out of the g the Chinese Commu | State Police procession to blockade | , (Continued on P , Col. . n Page 2, Col. 7) | avoid sending troops.” The sober comment in Congress followed renewed expressions by President Eisenhower and Secre- | | But Soberly Favor us. i | tary of State Dulles of the admin- Court Affirms Perjury Opinion i ee care Witness at Investigation that U.S. allies are not | of RFC Lustron Loans ‘isn im torming a coalition on te Ruled Guilty fease of Southeast Asia. ; _ | Dispatches from London and _WASHINGTON @®—The U.S. | iagis indicated both British and Court of Appeals today affirmed | French leaders might consider the china must not fall to the Com- | the perjury conviction of E. Meri time inopportune and want .more | Young, a key figure in the Senate's details on the “united will” and headline-making investigation of | ™ited action Dulles has advo- . cated. | Reconstruction Finance Corp. | The court overturned the perjury | and when conclusive decisions are conviction of Young's older broth- | reached and some public statement | |is made, it must be not simply | er, Herschel Young. janother “hands off’ warning to) The brothers, tried separately, aay , a an of rd the Chinese Reds but an announce. | meee ao ment of determination with real | istration’s determination that Indo- | All sides seem to agree that if | &.5 ein. AWAITING AMBULANCE—Chris Ziegenhardt is shown on the| County farm home. He was later removed to « Marlette hospital | =; Visits DRIVE. Defenders of Fort Ziegenharadt Evicted by Troopers | } > WE i ADwiT Tan t 1 x x . ground, wrapped in blankets, after being evicted from his Lapeer | by ambulance, for protection from the weather. French’ Destroy \% Red Trenches Slow Commie Buildup Around Besieged Fort | of Dien Bien Phu HANOI, Indochina (#—French Union troops, fanning out over a wide area around Dien Bien Phu today, destroyed a long string of enemy trenches being built for a fresh assault on the northwest Indochina bastion. Sixty rebels were killed in the | operations, the French said. | A French communique said the | garrison defenders again last night months to two years. Both have | teeth. been at liberty on bond pending ‘the outcome of their appeals. The question at this point is a ae ene -_ what kind of teeth should the } oung, 39, was-cony of qweering falecty four times (Continued on Page 2, Col. 6) before the Senate Investigating : subcommittee and the federal lk Will | grand jury which returned the e | naugurate indictments. The Appeals Court, however, | New Stamp on IV } dealt only with the one charge— . involving Young's denial that while LW ASHINGTON ™® — President | employed by the RFC he ever had Eisenhower today scheduled a™15-| | anything to do with loan applica- | tions made by the Lustron Corp., a prefabricated housing venture. | to be ‘‘clearly valid.” The court said that since Young [received four equal sentences to | Ual postage issue. jrun concurrently it need concern itself with only one count of the indictment. from a $25 a week RFC examiner | minute telecast from the Post Of-| had an “easy night’ as the Com- fice Department to introduce | munist-led Vietminh still did not | America’s “Liberty Stamp” to the| resume their direct infantry as- | battered Bir. | It held his conviction on that count | U.S. public. | saults on the fortress plain. The program called for fanfare | never before accorded any individ-| The rebels halted their second | round of such frontal charges Printed in red, white and blue.| yfonday after six days of mur- the stamp is in the 8¢ denomi- P - nation, the standard letter rate for ° largest.use on foreign deliveries. But the Vietminh troops kept up | Knollwood, Clawson, and blacked was ene of the highlights of the| With the Statue of Liberty in its | their feverish digging of new fox- | out a five block square area. An-| RFC investigation. other bolt destroyed an overhead Another was the history of the | center, it is designed to present the theme of American life to lands | s and winding trenches within Zigenhardt from his farm home in Lapeer County traffic light at Rochester Rd. at 9 459 pastel mink coat of his wife, | abroad. Postmaster General Sum- | 600 feet of the barbed wire mazes, 14-Mile Rd. Ferndale suffered heavy rains that flooded an area near Liver- Lauretta, a White House stenog- | rapher and previous to that on the staff of former President Truman (Continued on Page 2, Col. 4) | when he was:a senator. | We Trust.” merfield calls it “our postal am-| Svarding the heart of the French | bassador.” It is the first U.S. | Union stronghold 175 miles west of stamp to carry the motto “In God | Hanoi. Observers believed Com- munist Gen. Vo Nguyen Giap again | would send his black-clad legions | Garage Is Razed at Swartz Creek TORN ADO Jean,Dorothea and Janet Clark (left to right) sué | small tornado: Marva | vey ¥ pouring out in another attempt to overwhelm Dien Bien Phu. Thunderstorms and rain in- creased in frequency, heralding the approach by the end of the month of the monsoons. The big seasonal rains annually halt large-scale op- | erations. Time obviously was, growing short for the rebels in their try for a big victory before | the Geneva conference, scheduled | to start April 26. the main Vietminh force up in the hills around a She exttadd Vor Qastere wer, | . iF | i i eae fat k H A + I 4 : fighting the third World War starts | the Press _ Pull Dawn Raid to End 19-Year Farmers Battle State Troopers, Lapeer Sheriff Follow Court Order Peaceably LAPEER—Chris and Paul Ziegenhardt were evicted today from their farm home by 36 State Troopers and Sheriff's deputies who de- scended upon “Fort Ziegen- hardt” at dawn. wrapped in blankets, were carried bodily from the $40,000 farm they lost through failure to pay a $280 assessment in the 1935 bankruptcy of a mutual in- surance association. Police equipped with tear gas and riot guns immedi- ately blocked roads leading to the 240-acre farm as ru- mors persisted that Ziegen- hardt sympathizers planned reprisals. A report that Flint CIO union- ists would attempt to crack the cordon tonight was officially de- nied by Charles Ziy, UAW-CIO in- ternational representative for the Flint region “If any members did attempt such action it would be- ag in- dividuals and not in the name of the CIO,” he declared, ©” The lightning raid was such a might as well take us out us,"’ Paul, 73, told Sher- “Gregory of Lapeer Coun- as they carried him bodily 'from the farmhouse. | Their eviction was a sudden | move in the 19-year-old legal bat- tle, of Lapeer County farmers and timber “Fort Ziegen- hardt" on their farm to defy evic- | tion @5 i) 2 The eviction was a closely guard- |ed secret by police, who sought to avoid alerting resistance by the Ziegenhardts and their neighbors. The Ziegenhardts were asleep when a 16car police party sur- rounded the farm on M53, four miles south of Mariette. sat Chris, 15, and his brother on the edge of their beds while Sheriff Gregory read the evic- tion writ ebtained by Mrs. Grace 8S. White, Lapeer attorney whe bought the farm fer $13,000 at an auction ordered by the Michi- gan Supreme Court in 1948. The writ was issued by Circuit Judge Timothy C. Quinn of La- Pontiae Press Photos by Jim Mahar CARRIED OUT—State Troopers carry Paul| tion ends a 19-year-long battle over possessjon of in an early morning eviction raid Wilson Reveals Security Policy Secretary of Defense Tells Senators of New Plan for Ousting Risks WASHINGTON «®—Setretary of Defense Wilson today announced a | revised security program designed “to clean out and keep out” of the armed forces persons deemed to be security or loyalty risks. Wilson announced the new direc- . law. and the security-loyalty yard-| tian air force plane plowed through | ism,” he told a news con- | sticks it lays down, at a public |hearing before the Senate Armed | Patients and staff were unhurt. The | French. ‘fighters . and American- | Services Committee. Its objective, he said, is to pro- | | vide uniform standards for the | Army, Navy and Air Force and “to speed up our procedures for such individuals out of | the service and for keeping them | out.” “T have come here this morning | with a single purpose in view,”’ | | Wilson said in a. statement, ‘‘It is ; to give concrete assurance to this committee and to all concerned that the matter of subversives, Communist sympathizers, or other such security risks in the armed forces i¢ being carefully worked out.” ’ | ro Res: fa0s. Tel pesiens, Pontiac the farm in receivership of a mutual insurance firm and assessment which owners refused to pay. today. The evic- Counsel Ordered to Begin McCarthy Quiz on April 2 WASHINGTON (AP) — Trial lawyer Ray H. Jenkins | had orders today to be ready to launch 13 days from now | | public Senate hearings aimed at finding the truth in the | McCarthy-Army row. | Jenkins, a 57-year-old grandfather from Knoxville, | Tenn., took the job of special counsel yesterday with a) public pledge te fulfill it with “no prejudice, no bias.” eo ~~“ T have no record, pub- 'licly or otherwise, as to Sen. | 'McCarthy or what has come CAIRO —A single-engine Egyp- | to be known as McCarthy- Egyptian Plane Plows Into Hospital; Pilot Dies a hospital in suburban Cairo today. | ference. peer. “We own thig farm,"’ Chris said. '“Let Timothy Quinn come here like a man.” “Just give us a little time,” Paul said. “We never got no no- “Im not here to discuss the case,” Gregory said. “I've got my The brothers were carried te the edge of M53 by sheriff's deputies. They were then taken te a Marlette Hospital though neither was injured in the evic- tion. Sheriff Gregory ordered a trac- tor dispatched to the farm to tear down “Fort Ziegenhardt” and rip | (Continued on Page 2, Col. 3) Ath of 6 Countries Join in EDC Plan i but the highest stil! looms and probably far ahead. |e As special counsel to the Senate | Tiny ‘ Luxembourg ee bm : pilot was killed. , investigations subcommittee, he | cation t aggreve The plane was engaged in DDT | ; repean Defense Community Trea- | spraying when it suddenly lost alti- | said, he intends to dig for and pre-|ty last sight when the grand | tude arid hit the hospital, It crashed | sent the facts in the bitter charges | duchy's one-house Assembly rati- ithrpugh the building and broke | involving McCarthy and high Army fied it 464, The Parliament's four into pieces in the hospital grounds. | jrriciais “without any favoritism, ' Communist are, cast the only. >. in as fair and impartial a manner | Others approving the sir-veatian In Today's Press as t koow how." | puct 00 for ere Siem, Oo Me : erlands and West Germany. iy. & es An Army report has accused and have yet & omtes se | McCarthy (R-Wis) and two of | ee has ayeonyye Me we Deus’ ieovence é his aides of seeking favored lin the | gs Free -csee 8 | treatment for Pvt. G. David | 4. | Bastcteans ei 8 Schine, a drafted former assoct- eee bn: Hal Boyle ar McCarthy disputed that and said) A fee (rts: “% )| Army officinls sought to. “black- | debate. 52, 2, 36. | mail” him, to dropping a search Deputies, TV Beate Programs ete reves in the Army. ee from ove Poses wee ee y denies that. , > " The elderly brothers, NE on Alle 4 ge es ae ae : . i x ;— * 7 ‘ — ) VW : ] ae maambodtcs oF ait ______ THE PONTIAC PRESS... THURSDAY, APRIL 8, 1956 a + ee = : aft EG ta ae f : 1k Dat away as Bay City joined the La- Approval of Fire Station, Senators See Policy |Ziegenhardt Raid | ser strates ‘ . s . ' ’ . The strategy differed from the Bonds Brings Action; Set as ‘on Edge of War’ |Avoids Bloodshed | evi stemet in ism G d-Breaki f r Jul (Continued From Page One) | (Continued From Page One) | dezvous area for fear. the dis- roun 5 Ing O y policy decisions be backed up by | strategic roads to bar possible vio- turbance would alert Ziegenhardt From Our Birmingham Bureau Mrs. Albert W. White —— ofp Seneen, goveall lence. gr a BIRMINGHAM — Voter approval| Service for Mrs. Albert W. 7 of | ‘The remaining cars pulled up in | tortified the farmhouse and vowed . Monday of a $225,000 bond issue | (Lucille) White, 61, of 6870 Colby . front of the farmhouse simultane- | never to leave the farm alive to finance two new fire stations| Lane will be at 10:30 am. Satur- Eisenhower's refusal at his news | ously shortly before 7 a. m. They | Observers believe that threat for the city produced speedy re-| day at Holy Name Church. Rosary conference yesterday to spell out| had maintained contact by short- | was not carried out today because sults. ‘ service will be at the Maiey | probehie tree world actiee if’ the | wave police rales of the strategy used by the depu- ~ ea nie See ee ae Communists Sees aie aoe State troopers from as far ties and the state troopers. to the Michigan Municipal She died Wednesday after a/| tors to speculate that a program of | Commission at 8:05 a. m. Tues-| jong iliness. A Birmingham area limited counteraction is in the) day, he said, and work on final| resident for 20 years, she is sur- making. plans for both stations was under-| yived by her husband; a daughter, Among these, Sen. H. Alexander | os taken, |Mrs. Jane Mitchell of St. Clair; Smith (R-NJ) said he sees no need |/] 6 Ft Jointed Wood Handle Landscaping werk on the site of }five sisters, including Mrs. R. R. to use U. S. troops in Indochina, the west side fire station at | Hackett of Allen Park, Mrs. Ana i a a eg el penne Sah ey ne “ncaa «ces oe vel QIMAIL NETS | with the moving of several utili- | may need to use naval power and ties poles there. p ti D th pr aganan gd a ee ose hand i anyt we ar now Z j dwood le “The bond market is fav- on lac €d S contemplates Peat fowl American soe Laepelaagaion heavy duty iy 998 in Asia but quite con- orable, and I estimate it will take caneeuer | ceivably it calls for air and naval eight weeks to complete the sale.” cotton cord. Legal 18° net size. Egbert said, “We hope to award contracts and break ground Harry L. Keller Harry L. Keller, 67, of 304 Lee power.”’ . . 6-Ft. Aluminum jointed Handle. .... . $5.98 8-Fr. Aluminum jointed Handle... .. . $6.98 10-Ft. Aluminum jointed Handle... .. . $7.98 [MAS BROTHERS Ponting Press Phete | Smith, who is chairman of a Sen- from their farm. “You might as well shoot me,” | ate Foreign Relations Far Eastern | Paul told the sheriff. The eviction was accom- | subcommittee, applauded Eisen- plished without shooting. hower’s call for concerted action | - |by the nations of the free world from Whittemore street near (to prevent an anti-Communist de-| Perkins Wednesday afternoon. feat in Indochina and resultant | Black - funneled twisters also | falling-domino collapse of Burma, | — slammed into Illinois and Wiscon-| Thailand; Indonesia and other Wednesday, killing one woman | Southeast Asia nations now out- L side the Red orbit. ; eve it! ception sena- agreed wi . Run in Poland, Ohio, died at Pon- tot tiac General Hospital at 3:10 a.m CONFERENCE—Sheriff Gregory of Lapeer “Television — Good or Bad?” today. confers with Paul Ziegenhardt this morning before is the topic of a panel discussion, Born in Bowling Green, Ohio. State Troopers evicted Paul and his brother, Chris, pas | Oct. 77, 1886 he was the son of Lewis J. and Audree Luce Keller ee a He married Genevieve Grant in slated for tonight's 8 o'clock Top- Flint May 29, 1936. Mr. Keller | pleton School PTA meeting. with lived at Keego Harbor from 1936) Hackett, Troy High School to 1942. He was formerly employed by July 1,” he added > Additions] Birmingham social news om page 26. aS eee Evict Ziegenhardts Sc He was formeriy employed in Dawn Raid Today .| (now Pontiac Motor Division) andj to the ground signs the brothers at the time of his death was self- used to advertise their fight. employed as an : Two moving vans pulled into the | Mr. Keller was a member of' farmyard as the brothers were tors who commented | a Ht rtf : , imber through her body. | Formosa, the Philippines and also struck Iowa County | threaterr Australia and New Zea- in southwestern Wisconsin and land. Highland, Wis. Other wild thunder- | storms were touched off all through | midwest. | 4 There are six Indian reservations | in South Dakota. | will’ take place April 17| he is survived by two sons, Harry | . at the Y. The search J. and Dale Lee at home. | be for cards which may be Also surviving are two brothers | and a sister, Lawrence of a a reported ready to occupy the home. | were each sentenced The interior of the Ziegen- | prisonment for obstructing | eviction of Mrs. Stevens, Russell is Brand New! Latest Model! At Cut Price! Nationally Advertised $ 95 for| Funeral will be Saturday at 1) Plus 6c Tex $18.95 Value “NOW AT SIMMS CARTON Except Premium King-Size ter. , ‘Twe performances, at 1¢ a. m. and 2 burial will be in Flint. ‘ 4 : 4 4 : : 4 4 ; P..m., will feature a chil- a | convicted last Dec, %4 for con- |] Stock up at this low price! Price drea's of space adven- A Ki , a a Se eee spiracy to obstruct the widow's | § includes regular size and some free pepesrn fer the | After an illness of three weeks, | dead chickens and cats were found. | ing his sentence of 4% to 5 years > brand at & maida Proceeds wil] be used by the Joseph A. Kircher, 73, of 1861 Eighteen head of undernourished | imprisonment. : firemen for their family welfare Opdyke Rd. died at St. Joseph | cattle were in a barn. | Cinmend spearhended.o members . and recreation fund. Tickets are | Mercy Hospital this morning. Harold Jarvis, 37, who was & -comittee of farmers fighting the | | being sold through the schools. Fire, Born at Chicago April 7, 1881, belper on the farm, was asleep iM |b siirunecy assessments. He at one | 4 officials request that any callers do| he was the son of Nicholas and | 8 gatehouse office when author-| time unsuccessfully sought a 23-|$ not use fire department emergency | Katherine Haas Kircher. He mar- | ities arrived. | man grand jury investigation of the | 4 numbers. | ried Edith Anna Vest Jan. 31,| He was taken into custody to| | 011° aspects of the assessment | $ Marking the last week of Lent | 1901 ‘there and came to Pontiac Prevent possible agitation by | Liye 4 prior to Holy Week, tonight's Len-| 28 years ago. She died March 25,|2iegenhardt sympathiters. No) 1, an appeal to the embattled | 3 ten service at 8 at the First Meth. | 2951. | charges was placed against him. farmers to end the long dispute, Jo- | $ odist Church will “Personal; Mr. Kircher was a retiréd GMC = Gregory also handed the broth- | seph M. Navarre, state insurance | 3 Imported Copies of Prepagation for the Observance of Truck and Coach Division em-| ers a $3,750 levy on their per- | commissioner, once said > ; the Last Supper.” ploye, who was previously em-| senal- property, a judgment ob- “Every mature person has at‘ *% RONSON *% ZIPPO FREE—Pack of 5 Pride of Oakland Rebckah Ployed at Dixie Cash Market and| taimed by Mrs. White for the | some tine ip his life felt that he | { *% BOWERS Extra Cigars with Ledge 445 will sponsor a card W@ 4 former partner in Little, Ziegenhardts occupying the farm | suffered an injustice. Usually |‘ ’BANKER’S CHOICE’ party at 8 p. m. tomorrow at Joe's Market on Kircher Ct. | after the Lapeer woman pur- | he will go to reasonable lengths |} Cigarette Lighters the lecal YMCA. ee 2) aoe SS ew (pene Ae te see that It is corrected. 3 CIGARS The city assessment role for 1954) both ‘of sor Ase surehane em eared at- das ae ee ee Our $1.00 Value! $ 49 taxes shows residential ro Pore nl . per | tempt by police to possession | when he concludes that the | 7 Bow ; grandchildren eight | of the 240-acre farm that the! past must be left behind, and that | ‘ Replicas! of “Best _ paying approximately 72 per cent| sreat-grandchildren. Rosary serv- ; ral > iB seller Pre- of 50 ' of the total of $48,807,260. Business |. will be Sunday at 8 p. m.| -yplorraigae-herprbend pouting Sager igang rosie Spam l b | @ cision made’ some C and industria] accounted for 13 per | A March 13, 1951. police evicted stroy_his value to himself and to | § =” sureme # ci out, |in the Voorhees-Siple Funeral | put irate neighbors moved =n peel > A Cr ae ns ee | Home. Funeral will be Monday | pack | l this price. a | at 9 a. m. in St. Michael Catholic | The Ziegeuhardts and several ee (Ne Fea tas). of cigars given at no extra cost. {(@ BROTHERS LOOK at These LADIES’ EASTER SHOES al Such Low, Low Prices! ~ LADIES’—MISSES’—GIRLS’ $3 FLATS and | PLAY SHOES | Church of which he was a mem- | hundred Lapeer County farmers Ice Cream Vendor ber. Burial will be in Mt. saci [magn ——- assessments Nipped by Ordinance oa | Assn, collapsed in 1935. They were | i Tho pson | association members. BIRMINGHAM—The first wn oe e ¥ | Their battle took them to the | Lightning struck two transformers case resulting from a 1953 amend-| .AFchie ‘Raymond Thompson, «#6, | Michigan Supreme Court more than | in Dearborn blacking out an eighty- ment to the city’s peddier’s | ! 2335 Dixie Hwy. died in Pontiac | 50 times. Violence ended in prison | block area. ordinance forbidding vendors to, G¢neTal Hospital at &a. m. today | sentences for three men involved in| The storms ended Michigan's sell for more than five minutes | “ter & six-month illness. | obstruction of justice | two-day summer — at least, tem- in one place took place Wednesday. j ‘Swartz Creek Hit (Continued From Page One) nois and West Eight-Mile road. | F SIMAS Fy Born in Harrison July 31, 1907, Ice cream vendor Robert W. Car- beck, of Detroit, pleaded guilty to | violating the law, and paid a $10; * fine and $3 costs. 17 He said he had ‘‘never heard of | such a law.” i he was the son of Silas and Gladys Hal Division. In protesting farmers challenged Besides his widow, the former | the legality of the assessments and Mary Jeffery, and his father, he | charged mismanagement of the as- is survived by two sons and two S°ciation.— daughters, Theodore, Harold, Fort Ziegenhardt.” a three- Shirley and Loraine at home. sided bastion near the farm house, Driver Loses License, Pays Fine Wednesday BIRMINGHAM—Leo G. Zulin-| iso survi | Was never used for a pitched bat-| weather Friday after a chilly low ; y ski, 44, of Royal ak, pleaded ers and re M rom | tle with the law. It served to | of 24 to 26 degrees tonight. Winds a 2 10§ now! guilty to drunk driving before As-| and Mrs. Maybelle La ot | dramatize the fight against the as- | should fall and temperatures rise a —sw — i =) sociate Justice John Emery Jr | Pontiac E. Ralph of Leroy can s | to 56 to G4 degrees Friday. ‘or —— wear. , or ; — ; | Wednesday. He paid a fine of $60 | of eed ton. Darath peed |. Friends estimate the Ziegen-| While Its neighbors to the north oo pave ones sie i Compare E ASTE R re (UMM), ‘ and $5 costs and his license was | worthy of Tustin, Alvin ae ret | hardts have paid “‘at least $13,000" and south took a beating from rials. Buy at Simms lower 4 Anywhere oan revoked | imams Welsh of Flint. M ivin | to fight the $280 assessment. | Wednesday's storms, Pontiac had prices and really save | = FJ = { oe a ile CQ » Melvin! Paul once said that “I only went | almost no damage. money! ~ ’ ireenville, Clarence, Phillip|to the fourth grade. but I know PONTIAC’S LARGEST SELECTION } and Mrs. Gowen. Funeral will be Friday at 6 The smoothness of the eviction Pp. m. ‘in the Huntoon Funeral; *#* in contrast to Sheriff Gre- one-half hour period without | Home. The Rev. James Luther of | S°TY 5S ™eve to evict the late electricity hit approximately 150 | Silvercrest Ba ist Mrs. Elizabeth Stevens of nearby Church will) —” residents in the Graefield Terraces | Officiate and ield E icity | Irene Rentsman of! what I believe in.” for 3% Hours Last Night BIRMINGHAM — A three and | urial will be in| =o section at 9:10 last night when a | C@dillac. CLOSE-O ("CLOSE.OUT SALE! | Temperatures that soared from | a low of 53 to a near-record | 80 degrees at 4:30 Wednesday | afternoon had tumbled to 43 de- grees by 8 a. m. today. Ther- mometers stumbled up and down the scale for several hours and stood at 38 at 1 p.m. But the U.S. Weather Bureau jforecast “somewhat warmer” The Detroit Edison Co. said lighting. knocked out one trans- former in Leonard, cutting off 25 customers’ lights for half an hour. Pontiac City’s forestry ' crew removed one fallen tree 4 ts at ae \) NN 2 Big Groups of $4 and gee” 6 EASTER SHOES LADIES’ and MISSES’ aD « — Siacs .eeeieea elk. ee ieee. ches Moieeencen ace eee a line ed int 1 : power parted in two places | Sal wil ’ Hi / | em ison . a . nit Tele Low, Low Price White They Lost! a) The Weather | Funeral for Salem Wilson, 49. of ; ‘ELGIN AMERICAN” ‘Compacts | Hl i PONTIAC AND ViCINTITY—Cciearing | 191 Fisher Ave., will be Saturday 8 ’ Tt? A ’ if 9 ona cota tonight. Low M4 te 8. Yriges| at 2 p.m. from the Frank Car | Famous “ELGIN AMERICAN a ; eek Sear ra rte Foneral Home Tae Ae a} Priced Less Than You Expect! my jalter Johnson, pastor of the Free | 8 iP and i } te senth [6 te 15 miles sn hour Friasy. | Methodist Church, will officiate |® COMPAC S er Candy Toy Filled ; Getus’ tn Bente * land burial will be in Oak Hin ® J | se as 0 on eee mea ‘| Easter Baskets | mt locity m.p in Peters! . Va.,’Dec. 4, | } - | "en seta Srureany et 1. 1904, he was the son of Jim and |f Guaranteed $3.00 to $5.00 Values! §\ Farge selection c fi _Fannie Rose Wilson. He came to 8 + i ee -o- i —— from there 32 years ago |8 Y $ 46 ah Se Pack them ; and. married Anna E. Stutson in | r at poate pes- } Patmy--...+38| Toledo in 1941. H Choi HY Chinca.™“ to $2.98 | 3s| He was employed at Pontiac | oice HT Empty Easter Basket... 10¢ to 49« Motor Division: “~~ = *-+—abfh en ic te 8 ER we | Grass for Basket.-.... 106 he is parle b ag FH Beautiful merican ay Hi “ . iter eee ee ann y a son, Paul, at |8 utiful ~Bigin-A re compacts, Y 33-Inch Easter rer ‘cs $8 \home and @ sister, Mrs. Mary |8 “round 4nd square Shaped ‘compacts. 8/1 — —— - 48.5| Stutson of Pontiac. 8 ‘ Cloudy, .04 inch rain ih ae 8 ait Molded Chocolate Rabbits... ...',.3 for 25¢ an | a Molded Chocolate SMaedeaiges ccees A f fees ...--+044-3 fer 3Se Hl ddress Corrected 4 HT | Sand Pail with Candy... ......c.s0. 5. 508 oeeee The mother of Hugh T. Cox, 21, |8 a 4 Easter Benny Bank ........ etee +. 98 one of two men suspected of hold- aT Basket of Candy i vaséaeesigues 2 Years "8"! ing up a Dearborn bank, said to |® ab ndy Eggs + 2S = 31 im i920 a | Buany Cort with Candy....... soteucue day that he and his wife formerly e chert Sved.1t 8 Ww. yrs H aL Chicken Cart with Candy...............6% , Pontiac, not at the &31 Inglewood |® Hi Cellophane Wrapped jumbo Candy fgg... .39¢ St. address. . Phi ait , ] _ Transparency of high grade op-|% 98 North Cosmetics © wad A » ¢ Seginaw {{@ Main . fea pared with &% to % cont fe Street ROTHERS 98 N. SAGINAW Main Floor a ae yy erdinary window siass ble LLLLLLLLLLLLILT Ltt) ~— . ; | tai , vl a, os a y Bic ORE A SE a { | i | oy I I a es ou Stravinsky Gets Boot at Opera Famed Composer and 2 Companions Ousted | Because of Attire | ROME «#—World-famed compos- | er Igor Stravinsky and a party of | friends got the bum’'s rush at the Try ALPHA TABLETS, the new amazing treatment for arthritis @nd rheumatism. Contains vitamins and mineral rich alfalia plus the best known pain relieving ingredients. No sodium. No increase in heart beat. No upset stomach. Satisfaction guar- anteed or your money cheeriully relunded = 100 for $2.49—300--for $5.95 SIM AS “& Bias Floor Rome Opera House last night be- cause their suits weren't of the | dress variety. Wearing dark, but not formal, attire, the trio showed up for a performance of a new German opera, Henze's ‘‘Boulevard Soli- tude,"’ being presented in connec- tion with the current International | Conference of Composers, Perform- | ers and Music Critics. Stravinsky is chairman of the; conference's musical advisory | board. His companions last night, | conductor Robert Craft of Holly- wood and composer Ned Rorem of New York and Paris, are attending the congress. A late meeting had prevented _ changing “serine The Conterence soordliony, Nicho- las Nabokov, also was along but he was dressed up. Later he told what happened | “We were stopped at the door | and told we could not be admitted | because we were not properly attired. I explained who Mr. Stra- Sure, | Always Compare Prices Before | Buy! And Simms Camere Dept. Hes Prices t Like! New Lower Prices ON FAMOUS FILM ~ vinsky is. The doorman said, all admitted. We asked for the man- a = } 2 right, he could go in—but not the | others “Mr. Stravinsky said he would | not enter unless the others were | ager, saying Mr. Stravinsky was being stopped at the door. The manager sent some helper to say he was too busy to bother with us. . * . When we protested, a strong- arm squad appeared. There was quite a noisy and violent scene. It | really looked like a scramble for | a moment “Well, we left. Apparently the Rome Opera never heard of Igor Stravinsky. Anyway, he didn't beer | the Rome Opera.”’ Despondent Widow Dies Under Train DETROIT (INS)——An elderly Detroit woman died of injuries re- ceived yesterday when she jumped - in front of a diesel switch engine | at a Grand Trunk Railroad ae} ing in Detroit Witnesses said Mrs Katherine | Dlugosielske, 64, whom relatives | described as despondent over the | death of her husband. appeared to wait for the train to come abreast | before she leaped. Engineer Frank Stanish, 38, said he thought the woman was waiting | to cross the tracks. The engine was traveling about 20 miles an hour at the impact Team Sponsor Arrested in Theft of Equipment | CLEVELAND ®—The FBI says a Mansfield, Ohio, man stole a set of basketball uniforms from an Air Force depot to outfit a YMCA league team he sponsored. Charles E. Taylor, 39, was ar- rested yesterday in Mansfield and brought here for arraignment. Since the uniforms were worth less than $100, conviction would a in a maximum of a year in jail. The uniforms were stolen last | year from the Wilkins Air Force | Depot at Shelby, Ohio, where Tay- jor worked as a business machine [| operator. His basketball team, | which the FBI says played this? year in the uniforms, was called | the Taylor bombers. NEW! Simms Has ‘em! Sunbeam Automatic Electric Frying Pan ee 2A S | MMS Electri Cc Appliances FINE Crease tinely tans, g ANOTHER NEW SHIPMENT Spring Style Boys’ Sport Coats Sizes 8 to 18 Years $ °° ~Easter's freshest finery for boys and girls is priced tess-than-you-expect-to- pay here at. Simms Newest Spring Styles! Boys’ Suits All Sizes—6 to 16 Yeors sig” Si te or 0 " 7 GABARDINE resistant, holds press longer. tailored. Choice of browns, rays, navy and light blues. TIE and CUFF LINKS with These Genuine Broadcloth / \ color or Black & White ya iu Movie or Snap-Shot Kedeh Now in effect, new lower prices on all \ our film famous brands color film black and white film, movie film snap- shot film our entire stock of film at prices you'll like. Compare and save! Famous ‘SYLVANIA’ Blue Dot Flash Bulbs Press 25 10-79" Carton of 1@ Press 25 fiashbulbs ot this low. low price Friday and Sat- urday only! Pamous Syivanies’ Blue Dots for Sure Shots! Limit 6 cartons SSCHSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSCCHSSCCSCS Lowest Price Seen on Large Size — Zipper Top ‘Gadget Bag rerler BE Yau 1 49 Large size gadget bag with ample room to car- and flash sccessories Zipper opening. ‘Short-Date’ Full Guarantee Ansco Roll Film Famous ARGUS ‘75° Flash Camera SIZES With Flash Unit Set * 120 3 Rolls 4 [I< No double exposure, * 629 *® 127 A FREE roll _of Lane if Bs pared get perfect take ut every is fully prcebin oom 5 wee cccopoccecanconcocercesconnencebecceces 15 Piece Outfit! KODAK ‘BROWNIE’ HAWKEYE FLASH CAMERA SET $4495 a Complete 15- piece outfit, in- cludes camera unit, FRIDAY and SATURDAY ONLY! Uncle Sam Reduces Simms “Sale”’ebraies New Government AX CUTS Tax 10%! YOU SAVE Simms Cut Prices’ Another’ 10%! NOTE—“Yolr Trade” tury TY SR ga ERR HUTT ™ We are so happy about the gowerhinient’s” TAX CUTS that we've REDUCED OUR PRICES on most toxable items so it’s like buying with NO TAX at all! Actual 20% SAVINGS for this week-end, FRI- DAY G SATURDAY ONLY! inclenting net all tems this offer. 98 N. Seginew —Porttier’s Bargain Store Buy Now! Ua THER Why pay $!2.5C? Popular patch pocket wool in biue or style just like Dad's. 50% A brown check pattern Crease Resistant Gabardine Boys’ Dress Slacks Sizes 6 to 12 iy) Sai Half elastic wast Crease R ese acetate — to keep clean. Two-Tone Coat LEISURE STYLE Boys’ Suits Sizes 3 te 6x ae Styled As Pictured Check front jacket, wo color back. Zipper fly, boxer lon- b 3 Water Popular Good Looks—Long Wear Navy. brown or gray ~ belts Resists wrin- of kles, holds its press Fully lined, celan- gle breasted styles. * Topceoats Sizes 6 to 12 Yeors Nylon and rayon Boy s’ Oxfords | eu wrtte wearing qualities. School and Dress Styles Boys Oxfords Rab You'll find it a pleasure to shop at Simms . and what you see cots so tittle. Pontiac and all this store their headquarters for bargains. . +o For Easter and All Spried? SOFT and FLEECY . Sizes 7 to 14 Yeors GIRLS’ “Sell $opoe $6.89 Popular Flare-Back 1954 Styles Durable wearing fabrics in popular pastel colors. Round collars, two pockets. round yoke. just 100 at this price. Smart Styles—Fine Fabrics! SIZES FOR EVERYONE c& Girls’ Coats Sizes 1 to 6 Sizes 7 te 14 Bier ‘yeare White ae soll col- or GENUINE LEATHER ” fo or Western Style ™ neve Belts bd Sizes 22 to 30 Browns, black or tans Seif Lustrous Satin—Flanne/ Lined Boys’ Baseball esistant—Easy to Clean GABARDINE — acket Boys Topeoats ae wit S589 y 459 Lerger Sizes, 5 to 7 Years $7.89 Cheice of Colors Knit collars, cuffs and waist. Zipper nd front. Spread Collar Style Boys’ Broadcloth DRESS Shirts’ $489 Sizes 8 ‘to 16 years. White of e solid colors = Gisls’ New Spring Patent Pumps Guaranteed not to crack or peel. Sizes 3 to 8 eeeseeeeeeoeoeseee $99 TRENCH COAT Style °s i 8% te 12........ $3.79 Boys’ Spring |}; 7. 33s Girls’ Black and White Saddle Oxfords $4349 repellent treated gabardine extra long wear military s ENDICOTT-IOHNSON styles. rh Nad Dea! i> Every Coat Is a Great Value! Such a great variety of styles and colors that you are ¢er- tain to. find ‘just-the-c for your own little girl, Great Value Groups! GIRLS’ PERCALE Dresses Sizes | to 6 Sizes 7 to 14 Greatest variety and values in our entire history. Guar- anteed tast colors, easy to launder : Easy to Launder New Spring Stylec GIRLS’ 1009 NYLON GIRLS’ STRAW Blouses Easter Hats ate Sizes 3 to 14 Ey Frosty 2 whites, lace ‘trim. Cami- % sole style in- cluded. But- ton front i Whites, col- ors and na- tural “straws. New great selection. TITTITITITT TTT Fine RAYON Gabardine NEW EASTER STYLES Girls’ Suits 3 to 6x sO. Short or pancho coats, pleated or flared skirts. Full rayon bnings. Navy and red SOHSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSES ° Lace Trim—Ruffle Bottom : ° ° be) Lad ° Girls’ Slips : ‘ : ° Sizes 2 e<; ° to 14 Years 2 ° * e Built-up shoulders, : : tine oa | me, ene to 3 vecccccccccccesccoccscooooseseseeooeseeeeees ANOTHER SHIPMENT Now! Little BOYS’ and GIRLS’ Oxfords and Pumps “ae I te3 Genuine |e ath er uppers composition soles, rubber heels. Long wearing qual- ity. : jm, $549 Ng need to pay more! Com- hte with higher priced Rec ont @ Tov oe fone SAGIGW FT, af { smart styles. ede hei titit ts | uh i i Lrg | : i" t A z THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, ‘APRIL 8, 1954 DUCKLING WITH SPRINGTIME STUFFIN “ This year wher you plan your Easter menu, duckling as your main course. Garnish it with tur- ab ree nip “calla lilies.” Cut very thin slices from a-peeled have} turnip. Curl into lily shape, fasten with a green. pick and tuck a pointed carrot pistil in the center. fad fey li , add and mix in Lightly stir in pars- i f ee ~ w ue (i EA ry —Close | per cup in minutes. \ One Coffee Tree Supplies Family Only | Coffee is cheap at about 2% cents home. Fifty two trees takes an entire coffee tree to sup- | ply one American family with cof- fee for one week. | A crop in five years—It takes a | | coffee tree five years to bear after planting. If frost or other things kill a farmer's trees, it will be five years before he can hope to have | any income—if he is. not too broke to start over * Hand picked—4500 to the pound— hand, one berry at a time. There are approximately 4,500 beans in one pound. Coffee in the depression—During the 1930s, coffee growers were on such starvation prices that a great many allowed their trees to die. They plowed up land for other products and there are no new trees. Yes, you not only cleanliness that prot depend on CLOROX - for real cleanliness ! ects your family’s health, white... removing | Coffee trees must be picked by, see with Clorox . + + YO" get no gritty particles and washer. I's ex from caustic, made formula exclusive W Let CLOROX help you make your kitchen clean, fresh, sanitary! One Week about this time, people all over the world gradually began drink- -more—eotiee.__After World | War Il, many European countries started buying coffee—some who had used almost none before. Coffee countries try to catch up | er crop this year i | frosts (worst in 35 years) hit Bra- zil. Many a planter’s life's work was wiped out and there were) several suicides. Others have very | friends are among thg coffee | little coffee to sell—therefore, must get more for what is left. | The mysterious “‘They’’—People jask, “What are ‘They’ doing to coffee? What are ‘they’ going to do | | about coffee?" There is no “they.” There is positively no _ nation, | | group or any one person who is For in addition to stains, even 100. dinginess, by « potented ith Clorox! making a “killing.” Also, coffee is one of the few products price is affected only by and demand. ' The ideal way for a coffee grower or coffee reaster to make money is te sell a lot ef coffee at the cheapest possible rising prices chases help, in a big way, to keep The kiss of death—Then the big | our wheels of industry turning—to make work for American labor. In our fight against communism some of our very staunchest countries. Soak Saucepans Get in the habit of soaking saucepans and baking pans as you empty them; they’ll much easier to wash later. as be that — | your soon eer — oe : he ¥, 6 ae # oS eee te eS ae ao Se * 3 & Ps § Lapps Languish as Lapp Lasses | nd Shun Lapp Lads. | Minp‘sriae, the bachelors are|f || 54” Benson Says: ‘ wou a. domestic crisis in on among the less Busnereus Lapps y ¢ USE c |over the border in Finland. That | ONE OF THESE + aaa an Os ay ieee, ‘a. ae part of Lapland because Lapp) presumably adds to the shortage | girls won't marry Lapp boys. | of brides there too. Some authorities here believe the | ; Lapps, now numbering about 30,000 Oo : 1} rganizes Gol Ager in Sweden, Norway and Finland, | ga ha va i. may be a vanishing race if the| REVERE, Mass. (UP) — ' tendency continues | city eer ly org +f : at jthe Golden Age Club and more | than 100 men and women over 65 |; ; NEW spring = YO JACKETS .& I Could Sell for $8.95 Om mere MY PRICE “One of the biggest problems in| \”°say are members. The idea is || TERRIFIC STYLING Lapland is for a young man to find | to inyp Ne rgreMerenighir aid | 4 a wife,” said Erik Thulin, a Swede oldsters can get together for en-| | j - $ 87 | who has lived with the Lapps in| tertainment and mental improve |! 4 “| their tent homes to study their | Ment. __ ; | ways. “Few of the Lapp girls are | Open Till 9 P.M. willing to marry them. They want | with to escape the hardships of life | CHOKED <=. GAS? EVERY NIGHT } THANK HEAVENS! Most attacks When they can, the girls ip are acid indigestion. When it strikes Swedish Lapland marry Swedes, | take Bell-ans tablets. They contain which insures them a higher living the fastest-acting medicines known standard. Swedish girls, in ret are unwilling to marry Lapp boys urn | doctors for the relief of heartburn and gas. Get Bell-ans today. 25¢. Se ~ Cut Out These “Good-as-Gold’ Coupons and Save Money! SHSSHSHSHSSSS OOO SOH SOSH OSH OOOOH HOODOO OOHOOOD OOOOH 4 © o¢ ® 0000000000 9909000000000 POOOOOOOOOOSD Sf SOOSOSSSSSSSSSOSSSSHSSHSHOSHSOSSOOOSOSOOOOOOOOOOOD: . . ‘ * . * > r4 e 2 6 rs lA 4 > > @ (sJ -¢ >4 > . . ¢ “XH ¢ ; ‘ Ps $ ¢ At) ¢ * > } > + x ¢ } ; : . . : rs @ - FACIAL © @ No. SPHOTO © @ COTTON @ $ Tissues $ $ FLASH BULBS $ $ TH swans @ * e With $ i 23F 3 g 10-04" 3 © Srece tos core tee @ BET + D gen coders a D © Stn tow ies $00000000606600000050000000060000000006000000000: 40¢ EPSOM SALTS, 5-lbs......18¢ @ 59¢ BATH CRYSTALS, 3-lbs. .. . 39¢ POHOOOOOOO OOO OOOO OOOO OOOO OOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO OOOO OOO: > 83 ai 999900099990 OO - nt wo Reg. $6.95 value Ritz scales. Accurate and , modern. Save $2.60 $000O0O6646000000000$60600000600066000066000000006: 39c ASPIRIN TABLETS, 100’s.......8¢ @ 50¢ WITCH HAZEL, pint ......19¢ e 99999999099 OOO pap abbppaibid 99909900000 OO Se bp en be ind ¥9 9990900000 OF } OBA g a a as - np eee a . 4 <=> o * 4 * * * ® + 4 ° * e 3 3 3 3 * 3 . Sd & S 7 ® ~ @ * * ca + + 4 50 ¢ ® . . Sg : Reg. $1.00 jar of Lady 3 3 3 1.000 tablets: % 3 r¢ Fair pure homogenized * * + Save 60c w ith * a a Coupon. a . 99O00000400006000460000000000000000006: Susan Hayward Divorce | Trial Is Set for June 14 BURBANK, Calif. @ — —— been unable t to resolve any of their | Wee ee es eS lle Susan | lowing the failure of a pretrial Hayward and Jess. Barker have | conference before Superior Judge ee eh a | = THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, ‘APRIL 8, 1954. marital disagreements, and Miss Hayward's divorce suit will, go to trial June 14 { The date was set- yesterday fol- Tyrone Power Defends Actors for Job Refusal By BOB THOMAS Herbert W. alke c —— es — ses | | TONIGHT! Not much meat but what there is, is choice!” on her M.G-M hdartonsty presents SPENCER TRACY: KATHARINE HEPBURN “PAT AND MIKE’ St sanoem ALDO RAY} HOLLYWOOD «#—Tyrone | today sprang to the defense of him- self and other top male stars who 4 have been accused of partly caus- ing the production slowdown in Hollywood. An independent producer recent- ly rushed into print with a state- ment decrying a lot of top stars for refusing to work, This has| helped stall filming in Hollywood, | he claimed. He also asserted that he sent John Wayne a $400,000 check to do a picture and it was returned uncashed. Another producer claimed to have sent a $350,000 check to Clark Gable for a film commit- ment. It was also sent back. - * * * Why would stars turn down such |fabulous offers? Ty Power ex- | plains: | “Supposing Clark had taken that $350,000. When it is added to his other earnings, he'd probably get jto keep $15,000 or $20,000 out of it. So the salary itself doesn't represent any great profit ‘But it's not just a matter of j money. Actors like myself, Wayne, | Gable, Gary Cooper, Burt Lancas- ter, Kirk Douglas and others named | by that produeer—whose name es- capes me right now — no longer have studio contracts to protect us. @ PLUS e P “The only real security we have M-6-M presents is our talent. Our livelihood de- | pends on getting good scripts. If we are willing to d6 just any pic- ture in order to make money, we | might find out eventually that we af have hurt our chances te continue Sako aes earning good money. It's not the | sranaine salary that attracts us; — -MARIO— ae Tie Tis between the Two covers of LANZA: BiYTH ocrat DOROTHY | Power illustrated with his cur- KIRSTEN: NOVOTNA rent film, ‘The Long Gray Line.” | Although he and John Ford— suancut 1 HEBOM Irishmen both—were long at 20th | Century-Fox, they never did a pic- Webb's Real Southern Pit Barbecue 2001 Pontiac Road (between Perry and Opdyke) Real Southern Pit Barbecue, Hickory Smoked Ribs. Chicken and Sandwiches With Old Time Southern Barbecue Sauce Phone Fl deral 4-9806 Dixie Hwy. (US-10) 1 Bik. ~eowrwrrweeeweeevrwrvrure. A i A hi i hh he hh hh he i> STARTS TONIGHT! <— }ture together. The director always swore he would find a script they could do together. He finally found it at Columbia, the story of Marty Maher. long-time athletic trainer at West Point. Ty ages from a young man to 70 and talks with a brogue. Don't be surprised if he gets a long overdue Oscar for the role Orders to Take Out The United States was , without a public debt in 1835, but thereafter a new debt was weates by reason ot war and economic depression. YMOIIa aw Am, - New Lake Theater \ 420 Pontica Trail WALLED LAKE On agar sire Wide Vision N. of Telegraph FE 5-4500 “THE NAKED cas nickle ‘ In Technicolor with HOTTEST SHOW IN TOWN 2 Terrific Pictures! Charliten Hesten and Eleanor Parker —ALso— “CREATURE FROM THE : . \ alta -~oeereeeeeeeeeeererereeeerrerererereeererererererrrrrrvrvrvevrvrvrervrvrvrvrvrvrvwerrvrwrrvvrvrrvrvrvrvvrvvrvrvvvvrvvrvrvvrevrereee.,’ Ae be be be be be bn bn bb J by be bi hh bh Ai hn hi ht hi A Ai hin i hi hi hi in ti hi i Ai hi hi i hi hi i i Mi Min i i Mi li ll Al ll ll lt Nl Ni i Mi Mi i Mi dd 4 : —_ * BLACK LACOON” \\y With Richard Cartson _ uta aa aa a wm. A HARD COP and a SOFT DAME! {~~ =e COLUMBIA PICTURES presents Keego Theater f “The Stranger Wore A Gun” With Randolph Scott 1 and Clair Trevor | —ALso— “The Tom and Jerry” Carteon Festival "then it was broken again, along ONE PRICE TO ALL WONDERFUL FUN—Rosalind quishing her role in the New York stage hit, “Won- derful Town,” to go to Hollywood for a new movie role, seems to be having | a wonderful time at her cast’s gift, a oliver cigaret lighter. Russell, relin- Bob Considine Says: farewell party. At left, she beats out a farewell | tatoo on the drums, and at right, coproducer Robert Fryer rates a high-kicking hug as he presents the | dL yur ARAM f Shovel ¥ ee |. e i i a 7 cA cy ‘ pa ae a Two Fine Old Editors Die, Belonged to Rough Days | | -Howey—and—away-cab- broke off a Mall BOX MT | Jack Lait died within days of each other recently after a half century and more of the rough and tumble journalism whose gradual disap- pearance brings sadness to 80 many in the business. Their obits read fine, even in the newspapers whose circulations and prestige suffered in bygone days at their nimble minds and willing hands. Fine men, hard workers, heavy contributors to the lore of the game, etc Talked today with a man who worked with both Howey and Lait — Charlie MacArthur, coauthor of “The Front Page’ and a lot of other hits Bishop Probe Group it's al NEW YORK (INS) — Two great. with a lot of ribs, when a run- | Oxnam Talks i in Detroit, | — Walter - Attacks # a Boston street and the thing hit | him like a shell “While he was in a coma he' caught pneumonia and the wife he idolized died. They had to tell him she was dead and buried when he came out of the fog .. . but he carried on. Was full of beans and ginger the last day I saw him He was sitting up in bed, editing his obituary. | “Quite a man, Howey,”’ Mac- Arthur mused, “You know, he was the only Chicago editor te back Big Bill Thompson when Thompson ran on a ‘punch King George in the nose’ platform. | Thompson was so grateful he as- “Lait probably started more | reporters writing plays, novels, | shert-stories and the like — on this side — than any other work- ing newspaperman,” MacArthur said. “He was a miracle to the rest of us around Chicago in those days That's when he was on the Herald, under Jim Keeley. story, write a feature on the side, and show up at the ball game. There was never anybody who could touch him for output under | pressure. Sure, there was sure. The Herald's circulation staff carried guns, like the others.” MacArthur worked for Howie. “He was Walter Burns, aging editor in ‘The Front Page’ pore by pore,’’ Charlie said “He pretended he was mad when he first saw it. But he got over that. We were great friends . . | shared a lot of assignments to |, gether — great assignments. “I went up to Boston to New | England General to see him not | long before he died. You know | the circumstances, don’t you? I¢ was the Book of Job all over | again. “Broke his back a few years ago, No Extras! No Switching! 3 = 5 S if you need bifocal glasses, ing offer is for you! individual prescription. 2150 Opdyke Rd. Ph. FE 4-4611 Dozens of Style and Colors Finest quality lenses are encased in 1/10-12 Kt. choice of frames in @ Flesh @ Blond @ Amber @ Mahogany this amas- Here are top quality glasses specially made te your You pay ne extras — nothing more than the low $13.45 price which includes lenses and gold-( led cye wires — @ Briar @ Mink ©@ Biack @ Slate Bine Colors any cheice of seat =~ te price ae. u-Vision glasses beat. SINGLE VISION GLASSES Single vision gineses complete with your ewn exact foxes is the quafity Why Mig mere or take chances ith prices. WN a 11" @ Tous Presciption REFRESHMENT STAND AND REST ROOMS | Filled omen ae a FAST... me pres- | the man- | signed a police lieutenant and two. sergeants to help our city | staff. ‘We broke the Carl Wanderer case by having Carl‘ arrested’ by one of our officers and taken to a Chicago Hotel. We sweat him aq bit confessed he and not the ‘mysteri- ous stranger’ had killed the old: newspaper clippings, “Jack would cover the main jady We came out with his con- hearsay, allegations made by mis- h fession af the same time the Trib cellaneous individuals or organiza- turn out a novelette during lunch, wa, saying the city was going to tions, and rumors. . They are unverified and un- decorate him for bravely trying to defend his wife. “I could go on . . .” Charlie said. | Uses Over 200 Knives POWNAL, Maine (UP) — During the past 46 years, George Pike has uséd more than 200 jackkniyes whittling farm animals out of white Pine v wood. Hearsay Allegations DETROIT G. Bromley Oxnam last night at- tacked the House Un-American was and lacking in ‘Bishop Oxnam, who is from the Washington are ture series at Methodist Church. He appeared the House and since has country the committee derogatory “This committee has files on a through the night and he finally | million persons,’ called public fi | evaluated,” he tee assumes no responsibility for their accuracy material released does not repre- sent a conclusion of the commit- . tee. reputation in t Activities saying it “incompe committee last summer speaking group's methods. Bishop Oxnam said the files of reports about him personally and many other per- — Methodist Bishop Committee on tent, irresponsible integrity."’ a, talked at a lec- Detroit's Central voluntarily before the the been touring against At 11:00 were packed with he said. ‘‘Its so- les are composed of tetterheads, said, ‘“The commit- | and insists that the Wate The Adventure At 1:00 — 4: a= _ 8:05 “Such derogatory statements can gj “—_——_—_ easily take the earning capacity @ Starts Sen.: “Toke 1 the , High away from a person and ruin his ™ Ground,” Also “Golden Idol” ‘hemueeeeeeeeeeees Le he community.’ sn ware coors | WARBOE Ti ALSO 6:18 - 7" & j WORLD’ MOST | TERRIBLE WEAPON! cee e Opens 10:45 A. = PAnorami¢ Features 11:10 — 1:55 7:20 WIDE SCREEN — 10:00 _ VAL LEY OF , HEAD HUN. TERS — SONGS TO THRILL! | ROSE MARIE SONG OF THE MOUNTIES 1™ A MOUNTIE WHO HEVER GOT HIS MAN FREE TO BE FREE RANDOLPH SCOTT © Thrilling Love Drama! Romantic sonas to lift the heart! M-G-M presents the FIRST BIG «MUSICAL in CINEMASCOPE! Eye-filling color grandeur! in COLOR gory! STARRING ——LAST TIMES TODAY——— n- THUNDER OVER THE PLAINS” ——_—_——PLUS — NOW SHOWING THRU SATURDAY. Official Pictures — The World’s First “Hell Bomb” BERT TARR. 2 MARJORIE MAIN ..JOAN TAYLOR RAY COLLINS ADDED ” In CinemaScope and Technicolor—"“POET AND PEASANT” Overture = — ALFRED ee wnat MGM | oe ORCHESTRA | Ge a [Dutch Architect | prinicc™* “Bronson Man Faces a ile, | “If America could come to Tee: ils ra | Says U.S. Needs ognize se nooll tex toe Shnaae M s| ht C f . Says: . | T Pl : }on a large scale, expressing a clear an aug er oun Sam Benson own anning | form, it would be a country of un- COLDWATER UP)—Paul Bak ARE you A WISE GUY! ‘| CHICAGO (UP)—Willem Dudok, limited architectural possibilities,” er, 35, of seo hele panera Come tn, I'll Show You |} Dutch architect and town planner, | he se tion today on an involuntary man- Best Buys In Town .. . HOLLYWOOD! New Spring Drape |. SUITS 1 Could Sell for $55 ‘| sharply disagrees with the advo- | slaughter charge in the traffic || cates of extreme functional archi- Averages Make Question | death of Frank P. Yesh, 75, also {| tecture. Perfectly Reasonable “ . 1 ee | A warrant was served on Baker | *“Why only visible construction | \ionTPELIER, Vt. @—Two ho-| Wednesday as he left Memorial a} {| should be considered as honest] te diners were asked if they rep. | Hospital at Sturgis. He was in- || work has never become clear to resented a delegation to a meeting | Jured im the accident that killed <| me,” he said im a lecture here. {of the Young Republican Club of | Yesh last Sunday. — | “Architecture is simply a | Vermont. The two men looked at Held in County Jail here, Baker MY PRICE game of space. We must play ¢ach other in surprise, smiled and was i appear before Justice of | that in cur ctu Wag. expressing politely said they weren't | the Peace Irving Stansell. 91 : }| the time in which we live.” | They were State Highway Board ‘3 3 ; | Chairman Cleon A. Perkins and Marquette to Get TV a copies he = are | State Tax Commissioner Leonard ; daring in architecture engr| w. Morrison—the only Democrats WASHINGTON (UP)—The Fed- S a Mm Q e fl S 0 n 20 plannin bet lock organise ten | holding high state positions in Ver- | eral or peeeng Commission Seuth Perry } i a. % 'mont, a Republican stronghold. gragted a permit Wednesday to | For one thing, he said. it is now ; Peninsula Television, Inc., for a ol Ress. linicmelenea ae Till 9 P. M. necessary to begin thinking about L } 3 : =. * television station at Marquette. The : Open TE NIGHT . » } | limiting the size of cities to achieve | One-a Day Delivery Marquette station will operate on 2.2. “= & a} “-— = A _— So am-~—npeoeecnneeneneee: g-gn name § | decentralization. NEW BRITAIN, Conn. (UP)—Dr. Channel 6. { . ; ; ™, >| One way to do that, he said, is John J. LaCava delivered 352 —_ ‘ Men Pnemonek ae . ~ “}| by surrourning towns or sections | pabies last year, an average of Ores which produce silver almost _ - ee ===* | of cities with parks and landscaped ‘nearly one a day. invariably also have traces of gold. | —— . _———— ee — |Outfit Your Whole Family! for the See Ed and Milt at MAY’S PAY as Little as “It’s O.K. to Owe May” Yes! Complete outfits for everyone in your | family ... all on. one easy May’s Credit | «Clothing Account! Pay as little as $1 a week! Complete selections Forehitdt men. “a n, ladies and | | MA °§ CLOTHING SAGINAW STREET . | Opposite Auburn Avenue ___THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, APRIL 8, 1954 | ' i | OFFERS YOU PATENTED PROTECTION AGAINST BRUISE BLOWOUTS, PUNCTURES, SKIDS WITH LIFE-SAVER Tubeless Tires The tire that earned its name LIFE-SAVER. A patented sealant under the tread seals punctures instantly. Patented liner protects against bruise blowouts. Thousands . B.F. Goodrich new cars! Be safe—trade now is backed by the famous mileage at low cost. Has fa- for Silvertown extra safety B. F. Goodrich lifetime guar- mous Silvertown tread. Long ead greater mileage. antee. lasting cold rubber tread. | aie | x i Te | 6.00-16 600-16 6.00-16 EXCHANGE EXCHANGE EXCHANGE Pius Tex Piws Tax Pive Tex B. F. Goodrich Defiance Tractor Tires As Lew As $100 LOW Prices B.FGoodrich — veer, Tractor Tires Brand New Detiance TRUCK TIRES As Lew As $] 25 WEEKLY $21.04 $82.00 $52.44 Size Ply Price Don’t delay—Act now! Because '°-34 $55.76 600-16 6 $16.25 present stocks ere limited, we 13-28 $125.65 $80.44 650-16 6 $19.75 he ehile te 700-15 6 $23.75 ae a repeat Pay — less when you swap. 825-20 10 $56.95 the tractor tire buy of the year. as * Ww Sad wo + — “ FRONT END | WHEELS BALANCED ALIGNMENT | DYNAMIC and King Pins—Tie Rods STATIC Complete Front End Stop Shimming—Aids Steering Re-Building Prolongs Tire Life—Cer Rides Easier Front End: Check $00 ate FREE! tacluteo Weighte Attention! New Car Owners! Do you know that you can get the saf ety of Life Savér Tubeless Tires for as little as $7.60 per tire? Have your car dealer install them or drive in while your tires are still new. Compare the Safety — Compare the cost and you'll buy — Life Saver Tires by B. F. Goodrich. ~ See Burns and Allen on WJBK - TV — Monday Night — 8 P. M. LR FEF. Goodrich 111 N. Perry St. FE 2-0121 3 BFGoodrich Open Friday Night ‘til 9 of grip-blocks in the tread get you ae . i? “aa started faster, stopped quicker. —— Dover Bt SOTO MORE protection -yet it 95° 95° 95° costs less than a regular tire 30”. 34”. 37 and blowout protectingtube 7 | _ “Phos tan ond your old tre Silvertown Defiance BFG Recaps The tire that comes on This economy tire Be dollars ahead with new ~ Grandma of 6 } Still Dives Afire Tours With Carnivals Performing Feats That Defy Deaths | ST. PETERSBURG, Fla. (UP)— | Ella Carver looks like the hun- 4 | dreds of gray-haired grandmoth- ll \ers who have come to the Florida THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, APRIL 8, 1954 = ee 3 | ef Optometrist 7 North Saginaw Street Phone FE 4-6842 - Your Choice of “Better Things in Sight” | Gult Coast to relax in the sun, iN ‘Any Two! chat with their neighbors and knit \ SeSSEe re eae ee _— sweaters for their grandchildren. v :) BLOUSES . . . SKIRTS AND But Miss Carver, who uses her WHIRLING PETTICOATS! maiden name, doesn't knit or gos- | sip for relaxation. a ——s —— - -| ler idea of a good time is to ‘| climb a 90-foot steel tower, coat Closed Wednesday Afternoons You select any two from our % giant stock of regular $2.59 f e3 skirts or blouses and petticoats herself with gasoline, set it afire, nat sell ee aes P a Es 6, 97, || — @ Since the Sweepstakes, everybody's | been talking about SURF. @ Women everywhere have written | saying how wonderful it is. @.So now Lever Brothers offers you another chance to save on SURF. @ Here’s why | know you'll like it... The-new princess line, empire waist and fall s skirted or sheath slim styles are all gathered here <> in our grand Easter collection for you. Sizes for Misses, Juniors and Women. Sale! 3 DRESSES ‘4-'5!| | Children’s COATS, SUITS and DRESSES DRESSES Glazed cotton, nylons These days just about every detergent gets things clean- looking. You know that. Actually, there isn’t a product that can beat Surf for getting dirt out. Or for making white things really white and colors bright and sparkling. But Surf does more. It gives you a wash that smells every bit as clean as it looks. And that’s important because you can’t fool your nose. When things are really clean, they and sheers. 1 to 3, 3 smell clean. When you wash them with Surf, they smell like — to 6x,7to 14. sunshine. You know that they’re clean clear through. = your clothes with Surf $199 To $299 ce a A POOLE CA Re IT eee ee Or Oh ee Clip the dividend coupon at right and put ond theyll smell like COATS ; it with your shopping list. Cash it in next ‘ig . sunshine! a - Yr’ ll be b 1 “ ine! | Wools, blends, textured time you go to the store. m sure you and failles. Sizes 1 to j - as happy with Surf as the thousands of ’ a LUCKY LEVER SWEEPSTAKES DIVIDEND a } : rf ff eed = , eli Ss SUITS Jackets fitted or boxy. Flare or pleated skirts. |] 4 to 6x, 7 to 14. jo NNN = 4 - women who’ve written me are. rit. \/ 2 i 0 Al ltl tl 9 HOO / OFF on 1 Money- ’ Saver Economy Size = Size iS 99 —— or.2 Large of ; iS $5 = To dester You are suthorized to ect 21 our agent in the redemotion of thin coupon (Our satermen wilt Ke Up « you for [Ge in sccordence with the terms of thin offer | Any other wee constitutes \ant — frend. Thin coupon te ann-trensterabie, een-ensignehie, end goed only on trend specited. We wit et = )4 \ . ne! homer redemption through outside agencies, brokers, ete. and compons will be vord when te presented on . - Any sates tax must be paid by the customer. Void in any place where its use is prohibited tered or —_ i Charge Fam | quiches fae. Cath vahon 1/200 ot 6. Lever Brothers Go, 980 Park Aee., W.¥.. 8.1,; 6200 Cant ast » ,* ; | hatin, Loe Anges, Cat.se/e fyren, Trane. © Sige, 2208 First Ave, &., Seattle, Wash. Qi Accounts ¥.9,0,7.0,9.7 Fi" iY OFF AY oT al a? oF 0% a¥ al af a oF ah a al al af aT ah al al ah at at (10¢ Invited 10 scr OOOO OOOO TOO CLOOOOTUCONCOUCCROUNN J - cineimenaa sae macel | + - : & ‘THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, APRIL 8, 1954 Lions Are Given Rochester Citizens Group: sition ee eon ees Will Aid School Planning} ==. areas Nominations |,noqusretconenn sr! ps, = for ee cord Clean-Up Week help has requested of ROCHESTER — Members of St. —— Frank Voll, Roy Plaaman, Dr. ey ree Philip Episcopal Church here an- — Rochester together peace meee Bagat Geist and Mrs, Edward | vai at a fheeting last week. nounced today that their fifth an-| ASKS All Organizations Club Holds senthge Com |W. Wiltlame, with tacelty mom |, ‘The fefival will be held in Sep- " ‘yual smorgasbord will be held) to Work on Campaign Dinner Meeting, Lists | mum, Schoot District Thursday, April 22. During Mayy 1-10 develop ROCHESTER — By proclamation of Mayor Clarence W. Burr, May . Mrs. Walter F. Swords will - of iemaein 1-10 will officially be observed as Rochester Lions Club held its regu- | ti ” Clean-Up Week in Rochester. i Ay mostng oe night in Di ns room chairman will be| A special call has been issued - , yee — ted wil] | 108 decided then to ask them back Mrs. Thomas Everhard, with Mrs. | for all departments of municipal Robert Ebberts as the assisting | government, commercial organiza- kitchen chairman. tions, civic clubs, schools and Mrs. Jack Goodman and Mrs. | churches to take an active part in Robert Lucas have made posters | the campaign. for the affair tee will R. . i. _— - aomcene you iT to- Pampa grote aio sea- | Farm and Home Show | # day ic Feu would ty let F ; . . b. > vice president, and Kenneth Su in Lapeer This Week Pe thitking of ine tor the etfice ef third vice prest: | tecaliy mesbers, Morey Clute, {Lapeer County Farm and Home | Rochester and | | | 1 i Frank| At the same time, the Roch- Oe aca Oy ers ee be.| ester Garden Club will take part ree- im an active Plant-Up Campaign. a nadine coe ef ae eee oe a | taken by Mrs. Harold F George Gels, Mike Littell (i h , i second f Flowering | i= paar eet enaee Gate Taking over the duties of secre-| planners asked are Mrs. Richard | “The show, slated to run through | _ Member F.T.D. an Improvement Committee, headed Treasurer will be Bud Maynard | well Collins, Mrs. Robert Rowlson, | strations and entertainment. Hours © OL ive 2-9411 wr by Mrs. William Potere and Russ Johnson will be the tail | Gordon Miller and George Long. | are from 1 to 5 p.m. and from 7| > . —s . . e | twister. | Faculty help will be given by Ro- | 4 m to 9:30 p.m. | Pega eae Four nominations were ‘also| land Semble, Ward Reid, Prank | » Oe tna ercorat ™ a ! Di i : ‘Irish and Eloise Tallant. I rance ‘Disabled Veteran Begins REHEARSE FOR PLAY—Allen McFarlane sits astride Ian _ ~ Lracharonge aa gaat OA Industrial amiaieg diviaion has ° re . eee ° i Need” \Work as Mail Carrier Keith’s shoulders as they rehearse a scene from the all-school play | Vine Syracuse. , _| requested the following-lay mem.- | * A Distinguished Oervice .. e “For Gvery MARLETTE—Thomas Elliot, a| 4 Milford. Shown in the background are other members of the cast é oe bers: Mrs. Leon Trumble, Mrs. e e DALE and NINA | disabled World War II veteran, this | for “The Doctor in Spite of Himself,” which will be presented at 8| | Two directors ter two-year | Norman Day. Robert Cook, Cart || . li t . MARTIN | week took over his new position | tonight, Friday and Saturday nights in the Bertha Baker School. nar cue Seen Batad, Weaek —-* ; yo — er : l lam . © Cre ; rural carrier Route 1, , | man Wagner, ace es OL 2-976! fpesainet is expected soon ~ Firnchild, Wes Holyoke, Don Kel- | Lou Hetzler. Faculty assistance | . ; = + 412 Maia Se Rechester Bf! of another change in the postal Merchants for a Day lar, Claire Magoon, Louis Mitsel- | wij) be provided by Ernestine | ‘ FUNERAL HOME m : —__]]\ gene in the area. | eld, eerie: Clinton Smith | Miles, Robert Middleton, Willame- pa oe oa een sais 0nd = |High School Seniors Plane srecse—crarear tor woes renee ct spect cooctc, \[_ One Reseed ROCHESTER Oppaste F. 0. : C “tr the ures of -speeial-services, —— : : Cane Week, announced the dates | ee = SS an . = to Run Milford Business “2: ZA The election will be on April 19. By REBA HEINTZELMAN luncheon’ meeting ‘at the high - a Cute oO t | school Wednesday to work out de- in your headlights brighten at MILFORD — Community high | tails for the day when you step on the gus ¢ Easter i 7 trouble and you should school students will try something | Seniors, with the sophomore and | means ar ! | | different this spring. , junior classes helping, began a= your battery checked quickly. | Instead of their usual day at the advertising campaign today urging | = HATS $2.98 |reins of village government, sen- | Shoppers to patronize the stores | | a day. May 5. in Summer Furniture! |/ie'sa wove suiscsmen tor” tore, wich wey oe For Your ‘ Under a plan suggested iy | Poteerters oa otty cone ey <) ) to ' A wonderful selection o George Richardson, a merchant, | 5 Seniors, it was ag 1 East LF JUST pane ; . 80 seniors of the Huron Valley | take the profits from sales be- | ef +3, EN $3.95 . , las. iy May 5. excess of $500 will go into a rs ~ Chaises, Chairs, Tables and Umbrellas | pantord ore a . oe . tnt. * Angels! &, Make your selection now while stocks are son Goin sae ae rong ne ae ae ee ie ¢ = complete at surprisingly attractive prices. win Johnson and a committee $500. To make them conscious of ihc Dapay ai Sen) | | representing the 30 stores beld a| the business problems they must |] E®N eat Gay ce | c pay $100 toward the advertising | ; for Easter h ; campaign before figuring their net | perading Nylons Wools Curls it 1 Teachers Reject “sm .0 me. Sundial . || fachi 510% » $2795 /f | eae oe Se an | OS TON yap 10 ad 27 (a | ; a we : for boy é : Pay Raise Offer | === pepehl | ii . paign. FIRST IN FIT Sharp Easter & ! | Grievance Committee senior ciass officers will meet|] WITH EXTRA WEAR! DRESSES $695 $1095 | 330-332 Mein Street Rochester, Mich. Holding 49 Contracts oo aa ee Fea eee OL 2-212) — OL 1-9642 _ Without Signatures hua | Girls’ Easter ee caanannaaasaauaaaseava| 2% = Retween the Hily| Richardson heads the committee a, | DRESSES $]98 » 359s ‘ 2 © Area School Board and 49 hholdout | Which represents 4 posers a Se eeees 3 | teachers who have demanded more } mores. on com- | pump also in : . 1 ee re Ser ee ae ce Lae Bence (tl smooth leathers |] ALSO KATE GREENWAY DRESSES =: \S| must be in the hands of the board | Warren Spitler. i: ae : Sen ree ee termed a| hemmser: weddec Rebext. | 1.65 Irregulars of a Famous Make a : : Stalismith, vice dent; JoAnn | A : s| commision to sir (hele greivences. | heaton, becretary, and Margaret TROUBADOUR NYLONS, 79¢ pair . . Of @9 teachers im the system, is Leste oa i iG Box SEW and SAVE * » : e 49 have turned over con- Sra, Baley, Pcocer $12.5) | Sucre renner ee SMART EASTER SHOES ona . Lucille Thompson, Jean Bull @| fuse and offered $250 pay in- | if C eefers ‘moots ly! PFAFF 5 | crease, Fry said. They have been | ™ * * for the family: Hy AVON BEAUTY SALON : rive nan cailiany Sire itil S ks M ond Boys’ Two-Tone Sewing Machine 1008 N. Main Se Rechewe Oe 2-011 | amomend their decision to not| SPEC dy | Oxfords... .3.95-4.95 gi | come back to the system next yar. eoctea {| : Hundreds of operations TILIIIIIIliiitiiiiitititiii iii ; ir-eooled | without atincimente The remaining six are undecid-| Detroiter to Address nylon mesh | ’ ’ ee ee cuomites § “pond Holy Week Program Baran By for}\| GIRLS Men’s Dress Oxfords TRADE %.xc8 f TRANSMISSION oe ee Se en Sponsored by Kiwanis vi 42s Te 695 | male" oe 6.95-15.95 MACHINE TROUBLE? = ji™ oe the tng we Bae weeioaeie tl] $3.95-$4.50 Ladies’ “Connie” P 5.95 - 7.95 s ‘We speak for these | u y. program we sa \ es nne um Ss . — be Powerglide—Dynaflow 4| 2,%,tu7, il not let the comm vel speaker, ‘Dr. Chester A. Me || 7@ feature Sundial Shows |) = Hydramatic——-—~{| ttt vo ot _the, stx__ wae [Procter oie Metrpatne Me | Prescription Footwear ||| CEPARTMENT board’s offer.” | Dr, McPheeters will use as his Filled TT itzel lal We Are Equipped The teachers met a week ago|teme., “Living Under Pressure,” | To Service All Three the ‘Hol School | et Wil be tntrodesed by George | : | ston at y Elementary Patterson, president of the Kiwanis oS | CRISSMAN. CHEVROLET C0. |“twctetis em = 2 ree Parking Fry would not say what the) The program, which starts with | ied Open Free Parkin s Il oom du eet oe | a 6:30 p.m. dinner at the First || 320 Main Se. OL 2-081 | , s ’ 755 S$. Rochester Rd. Rochester OL 2-9721 oe by J bone which | myer gi be tolowed || ROCHESTER | Fri. and Sat. Nights ROCHESTER Rear of Store iii; itt i ity The $350 raise is asked in addi- ee ’ tion to an annual increment pay . , , LAWN CARE ‘increase, which this year amount- . Factory Official Cars! js; year ne ; : PRODUCTS +: | The school board originally plan- | s : ; P increment but a delegation of We think we have the finest assortment of mad th grant exty"the eckoddied 53 models available in Michigan. These cars teachers at a March meeting of | Church were used exclusively by Ford Motor Com-: : Rev. Fr. Francis Kolb, the board prompted a $250 offering st. Rita’s Catholic Church; 42 pany executives ond are in like new condi- in the contracts handed out April 1. | com scDoneld, of the 4 tion. Some have actually been driven less Avetage yield per acre of tobac- | erick Sernsth, satieud penlat than 2,000 miles. Our prices make it possible co in Canada in 1951 was 1,293 | First Baptist Church. All are for you to have new car performance, styling pounds. —_ | Holly. and even that new car smell and still save up a soto $800. an ae A ap io ge a bs a ra sarge ae 2 25a . - 3 : ee . “! a . Most have radios, some with Fordomatic . Drive, other extras include whitewalls, tinted Cold Wave for Every glass and leather interiors. pruancorrrucwr || Betty’s Beauty Shoppe jj "0" OPEN EVES . OL 1-971 Now Located at 1598 a Auburn — Brookland iam “— = ne “yy a SS ee ee ae ee eG ee = > =. 2a EE —— ae : $ i s . MAKE UVE f THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, “APRIL L 8, 1954 Pe a . , Ortonville MOMS Plan’ | Girl Scout To Present Play tunnegs Seid bonnes ! i quiets talcieas aattaae ! by Mark Twain Cine I '| Clarkston Juniors Set | The MOMS members are asking Friday, Saturday for 7 .| ‘Connecticut Yankee’ ~~ Gut ~~~ _— | the play will go up at 8 both will be presented Friday and Saturday nights by | and Don Turek as the magician. ; , ' , , 7 , } | of the high schoot. A ‘ To be presented is “A Connecti- $\cut Yankee in King Arthur's Just for Children $ | Leading roles will be played } | by Jack Brooks as the Connecti- @ special cut Yankee, Vern Carmean as | King Arthur, Ariene Gaynor as Hallmark {| the queen and Don Turek as the Easter card » | magician, ( Others in the cast include Jackie 4 | Hadley, Roger Johnson, Lanny Puary ducklings, Easter rebbijs, ) Leak, Shirley DeConnick, Wilma : oeMcclored cape—yort fied | Miner, Nancy Thayer, Dorothy Mc-) CASTING A SPELL—The magician tries his Pontion Prose Photo | a ie ous mee eh. » | “Directing the fe ge ey be Miss | ttieks on King Arthur, his queen and » Yankee from | the junior class in Clarkston High School, Jack |] Helimert Easter Frere ) { | June Cooper of the faculty and Connecticut In a rehearsal of Mark Twain's “Con-| Brooks (lft) will appear as the Yankee. Arlene | nee | speech department. The curtain for necticut Yankee in King Arthur’s Court.” The play | Gaynor as the queen, Vern Carmean as King Arthur |] |. recsiving these guy 4 , 4 , { , , j ait = ee PARIS HATS FLOWERED SAILOR with bowed clip © ALL ° , . . . * 4 | } beet ne a on cotesion : 1200 Mothers Township Meeting High School Senior Wins | Pastor at Conference PURDY’S 2 millinery . . . inclydi ¢ OUR HATS 2 dD h ° State Farmer Degree DRAYTON PLAINS — The Rev. ; i . ; and Daughters Set for Saturday WALLED LAKE — Already the |W. J. Teeuwissen Jr., of the Com- « Flown Hals > 1.99 & 2.993 Gather at Keego owner of eight head of dairy cat-| munity United Presbyterian Church Dru P ° be ° SOUTHFIELD TOWNSHIP—The | tle and 21 hogs, Sam Smith, of| i, attending the Calviaistic con- % Pill B ones k Shells Me ____$ | _KEEGO HARBOR — Two hun-| ,inual township meeting, sched- | Walled Lake, was one of 205 young |. on christianity, Psychology |} 321 Main St. ee ees Sat ees : = in The NEW STRAWS © NOME [trot moters unt daughters sattruied for Monday, has Ween post | rmeee "oomey Sone a Sal I Vaadiishy te Unend Waals. colors. ) ; program of singing poned until 8 p.m. Saturday. It tien. —_n i All new Spring e © lel ing y night | Farmers of America conven i High foshion at low prices. © HIGHER 3/274 dancin Tursda will be held at the high school. | A senior at Walled Lake ) Held in conjunction with the Citizens attending the meeting | School, Mona High : Sam of. Mrs. : b | Roosevelt PTA meeting, the event) wil] be asked to pass on the an- Smith. He assists an uncle | featured the Roosevelt Girls’ Triple | nual budget, which includes an in-|in operating 500 acres of farm | @. ; . | Trio, a solo by Jane Adams ald | crease in the police department al- land. In addition to his livestock several tap, toe acrobatic t. ownership, he cultival 12 acres UMW als dance sequences by 14 costumed | “Ais. iscussi ; me ; 2 girls. .|department, road maintenance »| Piano accompaniment was bY) nish disp =~ eassauseent Perky, flattering new styles 99 2 Mrs. Lillian Doevre, with Helen |" the he aad PTA at Green Schoo | oppealing to the teenager. $ 2 ct lg agg ry rll di-| to See Travel Movie Variety of colors ond shapes. Emeritus Educators . \ { ; rected the s trio. Alt so kind to your budge — Will Meet on Saturday SHIP — Mrs. Elmer Kime of High- | Bible Class to Meet ° land Park will speak on ‘Gur South , LAPEER — Annual meeting of | American Neighbors'’ and show Imported Domestic DRAYTON PLAINS — Monthly |the Emeritus Educators Assn. of | films taken on a recent trip at Gabardines ‘ |meeting of the Fellowship Bible | Lapeer County will be held in the | the meeting of the Green School } |Ciass of Community United Pres-| supervisors’ room of the -county|PTA at 8 p.m. today at the |i Wersteds , a | 13 North Seginew Street ) | byterian Church will be held at the | court house at 2 p.m. Saturday. | school. Across from Strand Theater lchurch at 8 p. m. tomorrow. It} On the agenda are an election| Refreshments will be served by Sharkskins PPP - ~ | was announced today by Keith|and a discusion of state and na | Mrs. Mogens Klopp and her com- Johnson, class president. tional legislation. mittee. | | | Youre money ahead all the way! 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You'll like the way we're talking business! « ’ MOST TRUSTWORTHY TRUCKS ON ANY JOB! __JACK HABEL CHEVROLET Co. | "™52""| (TTR = = Ae af —- ‘ * “e tery. OLIVER HOLES OUT—Ed (Porky) Oliver drops his last putt on the 18th hole during practice round at Augusta, Ga., yesterday for the Masters golf tournament which gets into full swing today. Look- Waterford Archers Hold Weekly Shoot Tonight Team No. 2, currently leading the , Waterord Thursday Night Arch-| Making up Team No. 2 are Corby - mar Saginaw at Lawrence Nuss West Huron Street <* wei ( 222i 22 LLL nh hod ddd du > SS ee ee ees ONE MAN TELLS ANOTHER eee Button Down Style Shirt in many colors or white. 450 Popular Rounded Collar in white and colors. 495 from from adds all the fine details to = Basle - style picture... Ppnncien When your furnishings are labelled Manhattan——you can be confident that you're right in fashion! Step in today to choose Shirts, Sport Shirts, Pajamas, Ties, Handkerchiefs and Underwear. Then step out in style for Easter—and for a long timé afterwards! Handkerchiefs — plain or initialed styles from 35¢ SPELL TERE ST Eatery a hal Di SAGI NAW at LAWRENCE Tom Hughes at Avendale > 7 Most folks think Ben's 14-under- shot performance last year will | give the boys something to shoot | at for years to come, although | Jack Burke Jr. has bettered it | Ist place holders in the all-events | and team all-events standings of | The picturesque course, where President Eisenhower likes to play, | makes a man earn every par he .| half of the Upper Peninsula. win_his second Masters title New loaders Arise in ABC 112th hole in 1952 when he hacked IF our Holes-i | Been Posted By OSCAR FRALEY NEW YORK (UP) — . He played it out to within inches of the cup for a birdie. Snead was leading going to the three times into a bank below the green — — and then holed out his | n-One Have in Masters blind shot to protect his winning margin. Sarazen canned the most famous | ,| Shot of all when he holed out a 230-yard spoon shot for.a double | eagle which tied Craig Wood —| and then won the playoff. Young fellows with hot practice | rounds have been getting a big pre-tournament buildup but “Wee Bobby’”’ Cruisckshank could warn | a oe. In 1938 he had a first nine practice round of 29 "|— and finished 18th. Anybody can blow hot and cold, | as Wood proved in 1936. Craig opened with a fat 88, and scored a 67 the next time — a difference of 21 strokes. Imagine being dis- | gusted with an 88. MSC Netters at .500 EAST LANSING (UP)—Michigan | State’s tennis team, which ended | .| its training trip with three wins and three losses, opens its regular | season with a home match — Wayne April 27 ' Pat McCormick is the only wom- | an ever to hold all five AAU diving titles within one single year’s com- | petition. Delay Is Seen-for - Allen Appointment LANSING (UP) — It appeared today the state senate wil ad- journ this week without confirm. ing Shirey Aen of -Ann Arbor asa tmembet of the dl hip : fi hi AS titi ile ily wy ea tee SIEBERT! Bae i an li FESS HTP aH A TBH lige ra bk eae all itil alee Jane palit iat ti oa NS tall 6 ieee ie Hele LH REE cl Hee it nea Sze i gleneeshis ny sings Ek el ti Palade ‘ail THA ‘iy ula HH hee i : ‘\25 i ii IBA Ht Hue te z | 3 sis S S58; s : | ghee] © ae ‘iti Hey = Bus itagead Ett vulluing 2 2 i { mile a $22 *. Hilal i eae & TEE lt “TUTTEE 1 a3!hp val ETA EE cA el | Ez i il Siugliht ik, 2 pl ae ea He a isi WE il geo Pe 5 gee ua hal B atte yt Heelies neeaea Pere ae: i a TE Pp acapirers ie di M a fe aargeate yf 7 oe a : 2 é } te iF yl S : tabs: abl e de - th te lee “= at i 3f i HT] cit Be gs Lit g a vil > . Qe iyi. Le : «46 i ink i i. Hh phe . ca, deteaat de Wa ln } inal F . «BBR ae = eli Sat edn "il i lip “eRe 1s a ny girl 7 egal ate Adee a in A tig i | | ial sli ae oe ale (Ht 4 rll tig i va Mest ilu ei Hy : tinh i ih ie Mee fi , ah eee Felis hat ee tes fe DL bloat el fe aoa enisgiit aL Hell { istiae | ELM $5835 nd |S Theat eat iil ipl ee tll pfiigu brea | fh ft eewoslesyl a Fe fee tt oo caine HEE etch ae ta el Reece rece (Mace tae i fe alk eal tical Me HE be ‘i pi i i il 7 it Hea eb ee eee a : | F Hits ita, bh siuiclpgnlgelaitepattie | Sat Palin st tets ait tcttt |i 4 ee E tn PE nll. MEE } iH, : Sip a ieee je all Ta i oh te a r =| 5 pyeldcelie i He BB bb in ie RET sien “eraser ithe (es Sny il Eat jis ban |B 8 Eh le cain (fy ui eal A 4 AE i {SS Raat bas eg a: yd be bat lesiht ell itty aunts BE AP hil ile 7 i f l; i The HD ltl eth . fies = . go ifs paibatcudadi PERE Hat Hy ‘- > umber of 81 Listed 4 Years Ago as Reds in Stal ‘ >< ; nued from Page 57) -McCarthy—I” don’t “recall the | : A—Of course there is, I think it} As“Abraham-Lincoln said some | branch, we ofcourse would have Reverses pose information already in your oe. Ff phrase being used in connection |is impossible to fight communism | time ago—I can’t quote him ver-|to expose them We have only i possession rather than trying to ‘hed been dor 30 years, tn tee (erin Communiats, 1 think T was] unless you know all about it, Us-|batim: 1 will et you do tha— found them in the Army so far. I Army Suspensions uncover rand referring to teachers who act like, | fortunately, many people have con-| @—¥ou flatter me. think we should emphasize the) 1 said “General, why did you | People. electronic work. McCarthy—He ‘said, “All” the | fact, that the vast majority of the . cat of ‘day we served | think like and do all the things that fused teaching what communism is | 4 mies of Europe and Asia com-| officers in the Army who have | “it until we started our investiga. your Dee. 13, she did | a Communist would do. You don’t | with advocating communism. bined, with all the wealth of the | contacted me in regard to this in-/ tion before you started to suspend)" ,_1 am agent | know whether they belong to the; Q—You would draw a definite | world in their military chests, with | vestigation—a great. many have, | these people with Communist rec-| you on that. or not | party or not. line between telling school students | a Bonaparte as a commander, in| especially in the last week—are | ors?” secret ma-| Q-—In your own mind are those | what communism js and in some |a trial of a thousand years could | heartily 100 per.cent in favor of} He said, “Your question | that terial to espionage agents. ey oon Coan | es 8 Set not make one track upon the Blue | exposing any Communists that are | answer, senator.” He said, “I | that Q Levine? jour government as a Communist; A-—There ig no comparison. It| Ridge nor could they take one | found. wouldn't get the backing until you | how, Cohn—Ruth Levine, a ee re Soe ee in oe Our difficulty comes principally | started your investigation.” Then | ings not ‘McCarthy—She was before munists te teaching about dangers From whence then will danger | from the civilian tagon politi-| he went on to tell'us of all the | but : committee on the 16th, called on} A—Let’s not talk about think-| the evils of crime or advocating | come. If this country is to be de-| cians, if I may refer to them as| cases that they had suspended, the: Si. Sncidentelly, the socert | Be." Lat ote. OPC ccansaniats | eer eat ae, stroyed, it will be destroyed trom |that. ste | 0me, With very bad records. They | are ty officer over there I think things Communists | Q—In same Fian- | within or live for all time to come Q—Are they services, would get by the Ist Army's loyal- | by been doing @ pretty good job, don’t | would > a ge ny act Se ee = Oe eee Dee I agree with that heartily Civitian Pentagon politicians” or ty beard. Thon, of semen Mf tos Roy? school, they while you are active in point- ; are they only in one, the Army? Army’s loyalty board agreed | public *Cohn—Yea. He is @ former FBI ate Coy ate ee en ee ing out the dangers of communism | Red Spy in Moscow A—Our principal difficulty has pe Br gg know McCarthy-No wiatter how, good |the Communist party line. if they | gers of corpmunism. without, tha Does Little Damage =—_ Sorts, om the legal ” | Gee bound in Ge" Poutagen, ‘They | oapeeesed, a job they are doing keep in mind | #fe acting as a Communist is act-/ you seldom mention Russia. Is Q—In your investigation— Q-Of the Pentagon, represent-| call it the screening board, or | informa =. pet a witness under eS ee ee oe there any reason for that or is that | A—Let me finish one other thing. | ing all the services or the legal | something like that. Almost with-| There and swear them, subject them | ™unist certainly anyone true? One Communist spy in the State department of the Army? out exception they would reverse | There to indictment for perjury if they SS ee ee Pape pg apes it oo Department, in policy division, can| A-—Both the defense establish-| the findings and send the man back | some, testify falsely. So the committee | should have ptive audience me to about dangers | do tremendous while one ment and the Army. A good ex-| and order him reinstated and back | American has quite an advantage in digging | im @ school. of communism from Moscow. That | Communist spy over in Moscow ample of how officers feel, I think, | pay would be paid to him: That | what their them. out. il is very easy. It is a very popular | can do us very little damage. was demonstrated by Gen. (Kirke) | board was disbanded, incidentally, | ing. I Q—I want to ask you in connec- Teachers Must Te sport. You find politicians from Q—Tou mations’ the Hate Do- | Lawton, whe is the commanding | during cur Ft. Memusuth hqurtags. | Cnt: attitude} About Communism coast to coast during a campaign | partment. When you get around to | officer of Ft, Monmouth, which we | A different board was set up with | to know toward the people in government waving their arms and talking | the armed services, however, you | Investigated. He was before the | different personnel. I think past, they are not teach-/| about the evils of communism a/| seemed thus far to have investi- | committee. I can't quote it verba- Q.—There has been some ques-/} to bring How |ing conspiracy and treason but/| couple of thougand miles away; | gated only the Army in any major | tim as I don't have the testimony | tion in the minds of some people, whole a et ee as eee te aie which they have expressed pub-/| lic officials which | is there a difference your | from without, biggest danger| A—lIf we found any Communists; Roy, see if this isn't substan-/|licly, that your objective in this | public. view? . is frofh within, in the Air Corps or in any ‘other | tially what he said. committee investigation is to ex- a _ - went Funeral Directors 4| Help Wanted Male 6| Help Wanted Female 7| Help Wanted Female 7 Building Service 12 Business Services 13 — tii ti tl a tt i ti i it | ~ . 5 ° cnet, EXPERIENCED. TO | EXPERIENCED WAITRESS AND | WHITE HOUSEKEEPER POR | BLOCK. BRICK, CEMENT WORK EAVESTROUGHING Voorhees-Siple| = a en) ee ied bene. ne seah_gitiiven, | 200, Despioees, PE SS, FUNERAL —e , Seuens's Riding ‘Babies. w. ZapenienCen —warrneas iF. salary. Retorences f wired Write at ope amD ark EERV- —y “alr eating a eet metal Mile Ra. between Labser & Tele- | ierncons and ¢ q Mrs. A. K Bergel, Route No. 1. 54381 *. garage. wes, fA ES RE IE IO RTT sastatenne Sprcinn, pease oo tests _ graph Ras. bs Bentwics ‘Onan 1010 Jex.| Bloomfield wills Mich en __ | ELECTRIC MOTOR SERVICE RE | HELPER ON SMALL DAIRY | _iyn. : WAITRESS NO FOOD LiquoR| 4C4ll ME IP YOU NEED os Pres SS eee 4 form, MU 6, , EXPERIENCED WAITRESS. 31 OR | **Perience ‘and references re) No! 3 te save money - ‘Denelsen-Johns. EN] seer g, Dm ti teem. | SPT Pare time nichts Clog ie) Re. } Momecae to de,eued wert! CEWER CLEANING momen EMAL, HOME PLUMBERS ee ee a PE Eirms | sinks Sunday Ser: Pe PE 4scts ; _| work tm Birmingham and Pontiac | _'¥eee 10 and 5 23-1685 after 1 PM in = 7 ORK RESIDENT area. on new construction. Lloyd ELEVATOR | WOMEN Wirt 2 OR MORE AP: | “and commercial, “ave, ootmatee | ETE TROUCHIKG EPLI near Crooks Rd. OPERATOR Bay of —- _FE 1-418, James Weatland oo EAVES 1G BOX REPLIES {| TAID OFF? HERE 1S| seers bevwene 8 and me| Serr co7, Ne ceiwerng No et| CARPET SERVICE _ | _Suaranwet_re seme eg a ed At 10 am, today |} AN OPPORTUNITY) 2c “Secesssry. “sis Communiy | te? 12 Fins, and wall vesvering tm | Licensed electrical contractot. OR @: husband of Mrs. there were replies at FOR $100 PER WEEK. _ National Bank Building __| WOMAN POR HOUSEWORK, CARE | stalled. FE 46976 oF 1 34. Genevieve Meller; dear of EXPERIENCED SINGLE MAN ON | Of ome child. May live m acer tore greed poe ire|| the Press office im || STEADY EMPLOY-| "hrm ierimcnm. apy m porm | eS “ery |e er bene ms! ACE DOOR dree P. Gear brother of the following boxes: MENT 2 miles north of Roch & GEMENT WORK? RES & COMIL Pict Lowrence, Lesnaré Keller, We three full time EXPERIENCED WAITRESS. AP- ~ —' . SERVICE eR a dO ed a day, 10, ot 3 p. mot the | | 22, 26, 25, 2, 31, 28, . 158 Oakland Ave. EXPERIENCED LADY WITH _ Ses Write all qualifeetions | COMPLETE Line OF MASONRY Service: and adjust your . SS SRee eis s Sop wa Sones erds"t tear Feceus’ "= | NATIONAL ADVERTISING COX. |“, CARPENTER Wome | door for top perform- wil te in etate et ihe Huntoon | 20% in eee et ee ic. SEPERIEECED TO CLERK Ti! Se men ce Semas ch ce | Oa | ance. $5 plus parts. Puners!_ Home = =. “os ,, re Phone PE 23-1782 in» up a. CARPENTRY. 4 A | BENMARK GARAGE generators starters.| after 6p ms s_Producis. Perry ment work ete. 60782. NM a i w A lett Opares, o> i meeret | __Help Wanted Male 6) fue Fora San Batten, FE | SLDET Taina’; Gees day On| Instructions "9 | COMFLETE REMODELING 25D) = DOOR SALES wee 2 Ei ietan ancl 12, | ASSISTANT MANAGER. OLD RE- : _2457!_Detore 3:30 Pm. | ACCORDIONS LOANED PREE To| feerestien reome dormers. o6és ot © a.m. ot Ot. Micheel Cetne- wae Soe Oe wees EO pe gh LE LO — yd beginners. Lessons given st, your ons, Cunow ‘veiling PRA | Greet DOORS Roeary eit m. Sunday to mest customers, cstimeting, fae, SS freee _sizes at factory prices OR }- .K...! FE 5-0201 at Vourhess-aiple — ee MAN er ———- | S0LORED MAN WANTS work | CARPET SERVICE Open Sundays SP ees | Shoe es Se ae | eae pecere eret Batlle to wort wit manager. | COLLEGE GRADUATE Witt | _FE +a or FE TRENCHINO pate neral ——$————— you quailty, 5-3380 ——---——--—we= | family desires part time wort. | COMPLETE MASON PE bane ~ PAPERHANGING | aver eee RS Yate wun vor a | EA ec hy REE POE goyre ee vercy| PAPERHANGING | Eee stat iibaamnow: Sage moaber "EL aie eercaty be eeepes | Sane Fe ean” | Work Wanted Male 10) Sass er Fiten PCASTERING AND PAS | Fitwring FAPERNANOIG ANE | SP eee tat "tg "has A _— “ose — ——4 | . 5 - Schhutow. x. and ee ae ee 5006 hout FOR PENSTONFO | CARPENTER. YEARS OP EXPERI. | 'n ig — | ee Wise Pree cotimaies | members salt ont Gt ee Charles J. Jr beloved Rd. st Union Lake Re. lady tm exchanee for baby sit | ence. PE 17-0274 | coerce Silinen Gad OPE | 73 PE 5408 Leo - a - tates of the Linus, use peas doughter of Frank ao RAWLEDGN DEALER WANTED at | _“™S. Coll PE T0790 after ¢ 0. | CABINET MAKER & CARPENTER | ing and schedule for immediat Fanta PLASTERING SEASON Der removed. wall = Beb| the expiration of 10 days from Funeral arrangements wil be go ones Good apooranity te ety | ORL. WHITE OVER 20 AnEIST | Kitchens speciaity 7B 22602 _| start “ot 71 Vor 02 better class | ghle roter All weer guaranteed. | _ cane Decorsiors, VE _¢05 | _ dete nereot Detet. ort ven meanest inter by the Pursiey Pu- anager Taree. couniy wre wi case | Ro. cooking or. waundry, (Private | CARTE rr caer basis” Also. co.amercial Sné- re-| PLASTERING DONE ALL TYPER | " anteed reasonable ye | "toe Nonwoed Country Chub whose THOMPSON, APRIL 16a aK : Preepet oo. ss +07 oa | SARPENTRY_AND. TELEWORK Socal beet relerences MePrie | Excellent wort ree | 4000 . AA . PART TIME WORK MAN WITH | GIRL TO LEARN BOOKEFEP %O “MAN WaNTS” PAINT PLETE LINESCAPING 3S PLASTERING NEW AND KE Piemored,, Tasormane », Caer epetied to the Michigan Ligue ph gh ---—E Trainee saige of similar superience t2| corre a os amie to tepe Tras | ee Pe came Conte DAIFE | COMLETS Umcee PE 1-0081, . OA 8.3807 or PE +1607 Control Commiagion foro ctut fetes of Soenter, mare . Soniment, fost eoeomes eck; | Ponting ‘Prove hor Satine | EXPERIENCED, HARDWARE Aw | odding,'sed vendgeage Co 33 PLASTERING cctimets YE. $41 air sat watt Ms the teeta tres oe a mk 5. Our new expansion program re _eve ear, rE ennai. _ untae 403 Ive ON Years exuerience in local” store DOOR, EXTRUDED, ALUMINUM, ROC aN POURING = phy poe eee ee bad sw Tuiegssn Mare Maytele | @uires young men to start im new Sromtoes. or talee For imerview | il HORDE POWER TWO WAN | cedows Li ot An Wrpe | and heating. ve Soe. | —~ R irom: date ring. bare. Doreity a ' SALESMEN + | wwe Micon _|_ has soe. Trees out towont reve. |" FA VESTROUG Saws—Lawnmowers SrromTONTTy —ENOCKS. ONCE ind. kira. Florence’ Welsh. Pu- ™ ut you ore teattar tov a ng = | Housekeeper ey Rash ESDGTO_LAWW BERTI. “One sed 08 Furnaces Acceretely therpened. 18 Cham women vet tor free 410.50, family service wil be heig Friday, | ‘resting, varied oftee tm oulsite! renee program wi, Star: | housework at FF. 4-505 | "rolling. raking and runbusn bee ; SAWS. LAWNMOWERS |" : a Ape! at 8 p.m. at the Hun- a = | -@s_ FE +n : i. Ee SAWS. LAWNM Call for eatimate. PE +0988 fell once deren vaniiie, 1 tons toon Home with Rev.| ‘Wert . = pod rom > wor Kr~S | GARRIED MAN WANTS FARM | PLOOR SANDING. LAYING, PIN. MACHINE SHARPENED i Washing. Paintin Sreduet Mo strings attached. FE sen came ane See Sree ee | ee ee ere aerg aaaE| mete Bak te Bm | GOP corre panra_OS home night« rr owe | oes ae FNC ia’ t) \AY : } nat mee | NO SELLING rocketing experience, Se Fraareariction nathsn necterted’ | , POREMASING xaeet—— | PERCE YORE OF Aig ave ealssnare lane ove. iy Seat, | Wall Washing & Painting Sere Me Sa a ~ sirable - a awe abanTe = BOART ANT ence: married man, immediately | FLOOR LAYING. SANDING. AND Pree estimate FE ¢4905 FE| ——— April 7. I wil not be re- Givent, age ©; Wonderful Opportunity for lifetime ogy i 1 Meron te conaenia!” veonto fer | Svallable, LI 10008. ____| fuishing. 10 years experience.| § ca3n Photos & Accessories 21 | 2003_ __ | OR if 00 answer trees _ trees, shrub time. 6225 Hichiand Rd WASHINGS. ALSO CURTAINS. rr . ae and tree @OMEN TO LIVE In MY Couw. || West side_ Ow pans sanding finishing. OLive a try home and help working’ moth | WASHINGS. TRONINGS AND $0802 . er. More for home than wages stretching curtains. FE 40897 i R ING shrubs. Spring cleanup and trim- Can have some outside work WASHINGS | ND IRONINGS. . Topping. rolling Mn ee eee een | mending free. PE. 3-7250. 2 ebebebretenad EX ck rarden MIDDLFAGED LADY TO HELP | WRITe Woman anF 5 care for small baby Stav nights | work PE 5-089 ond 4 ny og "| weekends free PE 40836. _| WASHINGS, IRONINGS. CURTAING | FE 2-2006 “ os ‘WOMAN TO CARE FOR 2 SMALL | washed and stretched. PE a 2 7 Tren ~~; Lt housework and live) ~~ — rnin tine — i PE? WASHINGS AND IRONTNGS, WATTRESSES FULL OR PART Witt LOOK A E _6-9008. me. Good wages and good work- 4FTER ing conditions. Apply at the North. | toes “Dein mother: OR 3-6651. Fille Golf Course. W. Maple Ra, | ——_Dwhs e. 3 7 ite : | , Bi ———. —_, ———. | FOR HIRE NEW FORD : DETROIT warn Building Service 32) "Tia en attest oo and ple. | 4-1 PLASTERING SERVICE com-| APPLIANCE SERVICE BROACH = rh peal nome a co. irae Ms ators. t p> ee a ee rors 6 ae Stenographer Clerk you Apply @ M Telegraph ALSO A poy Comptometer Clerk WANTED Oirl over 2 bookkeeping, and TAGe ROWS APR Were? BAT tame hele Sek G08 eee Oo tAe coweet eh Taba fetan Fe 7008 9°" Adame gece Mote OA — pa fa pee aS uu A ee Sear SS See | S| \ Dish . FE 30006. Place ; ares. <4 i , : : ; ; : ) 2 ) Ls : an ) ; b af } Molly Bee, 14, Thrilled to Be on Television --Today's Television Programs -- Channel 2~-WJBK-TV ' Channel 4—WWJ-TV Channel 1—-WXYZ-TV TONIGHT’S TV HIGHLIGHTS §:00—(7)—Detroit Deadline. Bud Lanker interviews widow of Pvt Eddie Slovik, shot for desertion. (4)—Time for Music: Songs by Janie Palmer. (2)—Film. ‘‘Rich- est Hill on Earth.” 6:15—(7)—Sports Show. Don Wat- trick. (4)—News. Paul Williams. (2)—Detroit This Week. City News. §:30—(7)—-Famous Playhouse. Dan Duryea in “Kaprillian Cipher,” film short. (4)—Time off for Sports. Bill Flemming. (2)—Tele- news Ace. Ken Cline, Van Pat- rick. 6:45—(4)—Tricks and Sticks. Golf | talk. (2) — Weatherman. Dr. Everett R. Phelps. 7:00 — (7) — Cisco Kid. Duncan Reynaldo in western adventure. / (4) — Liberace. Piano impres- sions. (2)—Meet Mr. McNutley. | Peggy MecNutley leads campus | crusade against unsightly tele- | phone wires. 1:30—(7)—The Lone Ranger. Ran- | 11:60—(7)—Soupy’s On. ger and Tonto foil oil swindle in | “Black Gold."’ Popular ballads. (2) — News | Doug Edwards. | 1:45—(4)—News Caravan. John | Cameron Swayze. (2)—Jane Fro- | ——Ian_Show, Highland setting for! _eyspay moRxina Scottish songs. 8:00—(7)—Talent Patrol. Armed | forces talent show. (4)—You Bet | Your Life. Groucho Marx host on quiz show. (2)—Life With Elizabeth. Comedy with Betty | White, Del More. 8:30 —.{7) — Where's Raymond Chorus cutie and puppy get con- fused, by Ray Bolger. (4)—Jus- tice. “The Baker’s Sons,"’ drama | from life of Legal Aid Society, | Dan Clark, Oscar Homalka star (2)—Four Star Playhouse. Dick Powell plays big city newspaper man threatened with murder as he makes his after dark rounds in “A Study in Panic,’’ 9:00—(7)—Wrestling. Film. (4)— Dragnet. Sgt. Friday hunts sus- pect in mufder and robbery. (2) Video Theater. Joan Leslie in “Pick of the Litter.” gambler gets lesson in human kindness 9:30—(7)\—Kraft Theater. Nancy Marchand, Jayne Meadows in‘ 10:00 — (4) — Martin Kane. Kane 8:00—(2)—Morning Show. 8: 45—(7)—Cartoons. 9:00—(4) Playschool. m Breakfast 9:45—(2)—Brighter Day. Zoe Aitkens’ ‘“‘The Old Maid,” drama of woman who loses her daughter. (4)—Theater. Joanne Dru, S. Z. Sakall in “Yours for a Dream,” girl recalls her days working at bookshop and sale of expensive book. (2)—Big Town. Daring fur robbery provides headline for Steve Wilson, Pat- rick McVey, Beverly Tyler are stars. hunts only witness to murder of partner in shady business enter- prise. (2) — Public. Defender. Young fighter is accused of pos- sessing narcotics after refusing to throw a fight in “Prize Fight- er Story,” Richard Jaeckel, Tom eta star. (7)—Janet Dean. Registered Elia Raines—in the ‘‘Kit- tering Case.’ (4)—Michigan Qut- doors. Mort Neff and outdoor news. (2)—‘I Led Three Lives.” Richard Carlson as counterspy for FBI. Variety. | (4)—News. (2)—News. (4)—Dinah Shore. | 11:15—(7)—Motion Picture Acad- | emy. Jean Porter in “GI Jane.” (4)—Jane Fulton. Music. (2)— Suspense film. Film to be an-| nounced. 1:06—(2) You're What You Eat. (4)—Home Theater. 1:30—(2)—Garry Moore Show. 2:00—(2)—Double or Nothing. (7)— My Life. 2:30—(2)—Houseparty. (7) — The- ater. (4)—Jean McBride. 2:45—(4)—Nancy Dixon. 3:00—(2)—Big Payoff. (4)—Kate Smith. $:30—(7)—Air Base. Day. 4:00—(7)—Cowboy Colt. (4)—Wel- come Travelers. \ 4:30—(4)—On Your Account. (2)— Feature Theater. 6:00—(4)—Pinky Lee. (7)—Auntie Dee. o 5:30—(2)—Bob Crosby. (7)—Barn aby Bear. (4)—Howdy Doody. 5:45—(7) Weather. (2)—Sports. FRIDAY EVENING | 6:00—(7)—Detroit Deadline. (2)— Rocky King. (4)—Music Time. 6:15—(7)—Sports. (4)—News. 6: 30—(7)—Ramar. (2)—News. (4) | Sports. 6: 45—(2)—Weatherman. ee re (2)—Ladies (4)—Man" THE PONTIAC : PRESS, THURSDAY, APRIL 8, 1954 Has Real Poise, Can Dance, Sing Is on Pinky Lee’ Show, With Over Million of Records Sold NEW YORK — Molly Bee, the featured vocalist on TV's x FA 5 s $ if a ge f i i ine HT 7: Hitt 5 2 a rE E g 2 z ¢ GE 7:00—(4) Today. Club. 10:00—(4) Ding Dong School. (7) | Charm Kitchen. (2)—Jack Paar | Show. . 10: 30—(4)—One Man’s Family. 10:45—(4)—Three Steps. 11:00—(4)—Home. (7)—Breakfast | Playhouse. (2)—I'll Buy That. 11: 30—(2)—Strike It Rich. FRIDAY AFTERNOON 12:00—(4)—Bride and Groom. (7)— Comics. (2)—Valiant Lady. 12:15—(4)—Hawkins Falls. Love of Life 12: 30—(7)—News. (2)—Tomorrow’s Search. (4)—Betty White. | 12:45—(2)—Guiding Light. (1)—| Stars on Seven. (2)— | Avout ‘Town: = 7:00—(7)—Range Riders. (2)—Life With Father. (4)—Art Linkletter. 7:15—(4)—Adv. Special Delivery. 7:30—(7)—Stu Erwin. (2) — News. (4)—Eddie Fisher. 7:45—(4) News. (2)—Perry Como. 8:00—(4) Dave Garroway. (7)— Ozzie and Harriet. (2)—Mama. 8:30—(4) Life of Riley. (7)—Play- house. (2)—Topper. 9:00—(4) Big Story. (7)—Family af f y u Pride. (2)—Att’y. Gen. Brownell. 9: 30—(4)—Soundstage. the Boss. (2)—Our Miss Brooks. | 10:00 — (4) — Sports. (7)—Black | Spider. (2)—My Friend Irma. 10:30—(2) City Detective. 10:45—(4) Fights. 11:00—(4) News. (7)—Soupy’s On. (2)—News. 11:15—(4)—"Rasslin’ ". (7) — Mo- tion Pic. Academy. (2)—Theater. -- Today's Radio Programs - - Programs furnished by stations listed im this column are apbject to change without notice — we, 7, CKLW, (nee) wwii) wxYZ, care WCAR, | (1138) WIBK, (1498) —————— —_ mae ae TONIGHT | FRIDAY MORNING | aes. = McLeod Marriage Pays | €:30—WJR, PF r j . News CLW, News 6:00—WJR, News ng Oy = idee \2:15—WJR, Aunt Jenny WwW, News WXYZ, Fred Wolfe CKLW, Austin Grant FRIDAY EVENING WXYZ, Wattrick, McKens CKLW, News WCAR, Noonday Caller le WIR. News CKLW, News ‘ WJBK, Rise & Shine 12:30—WJR, Helen. Trent wa News WCAR, Hews, Ballade 2-We ; WWi News | WXYZ, McKenzie 6: x J, i | WXYZ, News, Crocker CKLW, Sports WXYZ, Pred — | CKLW, Your Boy Bud WJBK, Horseman €:15—WJIR, Clark Quartet | WCAR, Coffee WJBK, Don McLeod WCAR, News, Ballads wave. hg | 7:00—WJR, Dick Burris WCAR, Club 1130 WCAR, Talk Sports | WWJ, News 12:45—WJR, Jack White | @:15—WJR, Clark Quartet | WXYZ, Pred wolfe WWJ, Pran Harris Wy, Bee Lynch €:30—WIR, Reynolds CKLW, Newa, David WXYZ, Curtain Calls CKLW. Eddie Chase Wwi, Fran Pettay WXYZ, Bill Stern “wsBK. en WCAR, Ballads Ws. 6:45—WIR. L. Thomea, WXYZ, Bd McKentie 7:00—WIR, Guest Bouse CKLW, te ned Skeit wrxT elton ~ CKLW, Fulton Lewss WCan, wiBK, T George WCAR, Shona Ballads wx 7:15—WWJ, Alex Drier pS. CKLW, Guy Nuns WJBK, WCAR, liers WCAR, News, Coffee 7:15—WJR. Music Hall WCAR, Coffee | 9:30—WKYZ, Osgood, Wolfe | WJBK, Gentile, Binge | 7145—WWJ. News CKLW. Toby David 8:00—WIR, Jack White WWJ, Bob Maxwell = 1,00—WJR, Life's Austin Orent CKLW, News, Bu Harmony Hall Dick Osgood News, David News, Gentile News, Coffee CKLW, Dick CKLW. Ginger Rogers FRIDAY AFTERNOON WWJ, Ross Mulholland | WXYZ, Charm Time | WIRK, Tom George WCAR. News. Club | 1:15—WJR, Ma Perkins CKLW. Paint Harmonies | 1:38—WJR,. Dr. Malone | WXYZ, News, McBride CKLW, Your Boy Bud WJBK, Tom George 1:45—WJR, Guiding Powell 6:%—WJIR, Bob Reynolds ww WXYZ, Bill Stern WCAR, Ballads | €:45—WJR, Lowell Thomas WXYZ, Ed McKenzie 7:00—WJIR. Guest House WWJ, Three Star WXYZ, Red Skelton CKLW, Pulton Lewis WJBK, News WCAR, News, Ballads | 7:95—WWJ, A. Drier Light | CKLW, Guy Nunn WJBK, Tom George Road C] an Beatty 8:15—WJIR, Bud Guest | “pearr ef Space WXYZ. Pred Wolfe ee a Te Ie. Spmphenette CKLW, Gabriel Heatter 8:30—WJIR, Music Hall WXYZ, Paul Winter wx Lene Ranger 46—Ww. Ed. R. Murrow WCAR, Messenger CKLW, Your Boy Budé CKLW, Gabriel Heatter wwi, Tass Pamily 8:45—WCAR, Revival WIEBE, Tem Gooree 1:08—WaR R. Merrew CKLW. Eddie Fisher WXYZ, Breakfast Club “a ww 1 Man's Pamily 9:00—WR, Meet Millie 9:00—WJIR, News 2:15—WIR, Perry Macce Say perc — WWJ, Roy Rogers WWJ, Minute Parade ‘J 2:30—WJR, N. Drake fl Geer py 3 City By-Line WXYZ. Breakfast Club WXYZ. Betty Cfocker 8:00—WJIR, Mr. Keen CKLW. Official Detective CKLW, News, Special CKLW, Your Boy Bud WWJ, Dinah Shore WJBK, Bé> Murphy WCAR, Sports ware Counterspy 8:15—WXYZ, Show World WCAR, News, Raythm 2:45—WJR, Brighter Day = pm 8:30—WJR, Jr. Town Meeting | WwW, Bix Shooter CKLW, Crime Pighters WXYZ, Band of the Day WJBK, Hockey 8:45—WXYZ, Vandercook CKLW. CKLW, WwCaR, 9:15—8unshine Sue CKLW, News, Heatter 9:30—WJR, Mrs. Page 9:45—WIR, Pete & Joe WWJ, Here's the WCAR, Club 1130 Good Neighber Club 3:06— WIR, Filitep Tony Martin Temple Academy CKLW, Peasy Lee Ww, Life Beautiful WXYZ, Paul Winter CKLW, News, Piano WCAR, News, Rhythm . WJBK, News, George 8:15—WWJ, FP. Sinatra WXYZ, Show World ‘Fei Answer 9:00—WIR, Meet McNutley 1 eS ae n Part , WJ, Proudly We Hail ww, elcome veler 3:15—WJR, House Party WxvZ, Paul Whiteman, ‘WXYZ, My True Story Ww. Road of Life axre pee Harris CKLW, News, Henry; Roth CKLW, News, Homechats CKLW. Eddie Chase CKLW =a Roth WJBK, Bob Murphy 3:30—WWJ, Pepper Young - Wane Tae 9:15—CKLW, WCAR, News, Temple WJBK. Don M1 1 rid JR, That's Rich 9:30—WJBK. Kostelanets 10:15—WCAR, Temple | 3:45—WJR, Our Gal Sunday WXYZ. wo :. 7 WWJ, Swayze. Cantor 10:30—WWJ, Bob Hope ww, Rt. to Happiness ecm tien, Tasae proto | GOL tecy teeape | COR W2R, Lien Lesene | Oe women @: . Tenn ckstage G 10:00— WJ, Fibber McGee pay Paphaaes 4 WXYZ, Wattrick, McKensie Ww. Pitber Meaes — WXYZ, Headline ary Morgs WJBK, News, McLeod Boxing CKLW, F. Edwards Nae ten cere Bank WCAR, News, Music CKLW, Prank Edwards t Con 4:15—WJR, Country Tune "Hh toe _— WEAR, Baeang Eee WWJ, Stella Dallas o| (Ree WER, Musto Rstrepel. ware. OK 11:00 W), Strike Th Rice wear, CREW. athnwend tne WXYZ, Modern Romances : ¥ id n 10: oie Go noe te ~oe CRLW. This Stor un se 10:30 WIR, Escape WWwi,, Jane Pickens 7 oy 4:45—WWJ, Woman in House — WXYZ, ¥ CKLW, Don Riddler CKLW, News CKLW, Ray ay Ea 11:15—CKLW, News nal WXYZ, Ever Since Eve 5:00—WJR, News 10:45—WXYZ, Top of Town 10;45—WJR, To_Be Announ WCAR, Harmony Hal! WW, Plain Bill CKLW, Quiet Sanctuary CKLW, U. of D. Engineers (1:30—WJR, Make Up Mind oe one. — kK. tn: wan, ewe 11;00—WJR, News . WXYZ Follow pa Woman| WJBK, News, WWJ. News, Roth WwW, News CKLW. Queen for a Day WCAR, News, Ballads CuLW: — CELW. News 5:15—WJR, Music Hall Marea WJBK, News 11:45—W IR, Rosemary WWJ, Second ce WWJ, Front Page Farrel) | 11: 15_WwIR. Be Reynolds 11;15—-WIR, Bob Reynolds WXYZ, Siagle’s Party 0 w Ws, L. Jones Ww, Ueure a ic. CRLW, Muse * ORLY Gare teen | CKLW. Wild Bill kaa 11:30—WJR We Trust God wws, Elizabeth WJBK. Bob Murphy ' a WXYZ. Sports | WXYZ, Curtain Calls 5:45—WJR, Curt Massey CKLW. Phil McKellar Michigan Youth Gets| 3 Years in Arkansas MONTICELLO, Ark. — Jus-| tice followed swiftly upon the two) hitch-hiker robberies in this area One day after the crimes John vet: ser, Mo., were sentenced to prison terms Wednesday. Circuit Judge John Golden sen- tenced Raymond to two 3-year terms and Sexton, an ex-convict, to two &year terms. The pair pleaded guilty to. two counts of armed rob- bery.*Their sentencs will run con- currently. The robberies were perpetrated against Ti-yearold.. James C. Adams, of Cullendale, and James T. Edds, 19, of near Hot Springs. Mamie Tops 10 Best Chapeaued Women in U.S. NEW YORK #~Mamie Eisen- .|hower tops: the list of America’s “best-chapeaued”’ =women named - PoahnORy |. designers. Mrs, Eisenhower was selected by Sally Victor, who said: “She has done more for the American hat business than any first Lady since Dolly Madison.” ; Others on the list: Rose Saphire; Bothywere gagged and bound to after the robberies. e We, j ‘ ' | per club singer, named by Mar- | garet. Cody; Ruby Mercer, radio commentator, named by Marion Valle; Barbara Gibson, opera and eoncert singer, named by Helen Liebert; Jan Sterling (Mrs. Paul Douglas), movie star, named by Walter Florell; Dorothy Stickney (Mrs. Howard Lindsay), eongey nad (7) —Who's |* | forming for them. From that point on, Molly's ca- reer gained momentum. Soon she was starring on her own television Teachers Told to Keep Sanity by Being Human OKLAHOMA CITY «®—How can teachers make sure their mischiev- ous charges won't drive them insane? Dr. Percy Teska, professor of special psychology at the Univers- ity of Oklahoma, listed three sim- ple rules.in an address before the senior high school section of the Oklahoma Education Assn.: 1. Admit to yourself you would like to hit the little demon in the back row with a baseball bat. 2. Don't try to act the role of a superman, with 100 times as much patience as thé average human being and 1,000 times as much understanding. 3. Don't feel guilty about dis- ciplining students. . * . By recognizing that you ‘really hate” that little terror in the back row, Teska said, you will be less inclined to actually smash his head in. He said only one in every dozen children that are brought to the q University of Oklahoma’s psycho- logical Clinic cum be helped ‘‘and we have near ideal conditions for were sent to the clinic “have a feeling of guilt because they failed.” . . . The psychologist added the quickest way to the asylum is be- lieving the theory that when a Ban Television Drinking and pitstic | MICHIGAN | FLUORESCENT LIGHT CO. Orchard Lake Ave. [al Boyle Says: NEW YORK @®—If you have met with repeated failure in trying to get something from life, do you) try to forget your own mistakes? “Why not, instead, put your fizzles out in the open on a shelf— so you can keep learning from them?” This theory helped Lloyd Preston neer, to develop the world’s most powerful vacuum tube. It took him 10 stubborn years and 2,000 sepa- rate fizzles to fail his way to vic- tory. Ta aw ei a ete parts—enables the U.S. Navy for the first time in its history to keep ‘Yn instantaneous touch by wireless with any of its airplanes, surface vessels, submarines or land out- posts anywhere in the worid. . * . It is also used in secret gov- Engineer Makes Progress by 2,000 Fizzles on Shelf Gardner, an RCA electronics engi- | 25 patents, was given a lab in the | RCA plant at Lancaster, Pa., and many times more powerful than | any then known, a tube needed i n | | far surpassing the power require- | ments of television. + * Most of the nine engineers on his staff were freshly out of college, and that gave Garner the idea for his fizzle display. . 7 . “We were heading into uncharted waters, and I knew rough sailing lay ahead—plerity of it,’ he re- called. “If I could keep my boys from becoming discouraged, from hiding their mistakes under a car- pet, I knew we could make better progress. “So I built these shelves and started with my own mistakes, accumulated over the years. “You'd be. surprised how that perked them up. Just getting a look at something that baffled the boss put over the idea, better than | words, that in this business your blunders are the stepping stones to success." | * . > a mission. The mission was to de- | hi |@ museum of his failures—at least sign and build a vacuum tube | i, his qwn mind—he's hiding from |. things that could help him most.” hush-hush military projects, a tube | Mica nal who is 530, is still a e ‘That's my biggest fizzle of all,” he said, smiling wryly. to turn that mistake into a profit baffles me. I love children dearly."’ Is there any girl with shelf room for a pleasant-faced engineer with a steady job, 25 patents and brown eyes’? Prince Aly Khan Buys $200 in Cowboy Clothes HOLLYWOOD « — Prince Aly Khan has bought worth of cowboy shirts, pants and | LOS ANGELES #—High wide-brimmed hats to wear when | student Jack E. McNees he returns to Europe The prince, shopping in a San) Fernando Valley Western — test = and a 4,000 store while his heart interest, tress Gene Tierney, was busy ae her studio, duly impressed a wom- an clerk “He was wonderful,’ adding that he fitted the clothing | | Some visiting engineers shook | “absolutely beautifully.”’ “And how himself $200 | tie a | City, Kan., is the American ai* | if a Pope if F i i F F : od ite j [ FF a | aF American Legion Contest Won by Student Speaker ot winner tevion Canetti feet st xe “* *20 » Credit on These-Notary Bonded Certified Perfect Diamonds! | For Your Old Watch egardiess of Age or Condition their heads on seeing the crowded; Aly plans to go to New York | $2,300 for higher education; —and— fizzle shelf. They felt almost as /| next week to visit his former wife, | George J. 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