yom =, 'y { ; / / ‘ { { faa THE PO Sunday: Fair “an Details Page Two e . 118th YEAR kok ke ke TLIAC PR PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, SATURDAY, APRIL 9, 1955—32 PAGES j poe OVER Pa “INTERNATIONAL NEWS SERVICE - Darkness Over World Wayne Finds More Election Errors 3 Killed as Car = Hits Witnesses Pontiac Mother Gives Birth to 21st Child A Pontiac mother gave birth to her 21st child Tuesday in St. Jo seph Mercy Hospital. Mrs. Blas C. Ortega, 44, of 138 « at Crash Scene 2 Midland Women, Man. Die Viewing Damage of Minor Accident —— pe BS et re a sa « ¢. Sd ‘ MIDLAND (#—Two wom- en and a man were killed | Shortly after midnight as a| | Speeding car plowed into a group of witnesses standing beside US 10 examining a minor accident. Killed were: | Mrs. Edna Bradley, 32,' Midland widow. Mrs. James Caroll, 52, of . | Midland. The Life of Christ—30 | Kenneth Skutt, 36, of | ~ Jesus’ Sacrifices Are Lesson a2: -@ to! -~ “There is darkness ever the world today because Christ is recrucified .. .” Midland County sheriff's | men said witnesses reported a car driven by Ear! Adrian ~ for Whole World of Today sin tte. | speed. By BISHOP FULTON J. SHEEN (Bishop Sheen has told of the the birth of Chrirt death on the cross. the Resurrection and Ascension Bishep Sheen writes that Christ mile west of here. | hes promised His disciples thet they would follow Him te heaven ' Bishop Sheen concludes his story of The Life of Christ ; | It was about 12:30 am. a half in @ manger His The group was standing on the The Ascension was necessary to equip His Apostolic | “*wder of the highway viewing | Body for their universal mission. By withdrawing His . ,oiving threecars—-The-cars-had bodily presence to that unseen region, which bears no, been in rear-end collisions. special relation to any nation or people He proclaims in| __the Ascension the common destiny of The bodies of Mrs. Bradley, | Mrs. Carrol and Skutt were flung | living children, three girls and five | Lake Township, drowned yesterday minor damage from 4 collision in- | | ehild. Irwin Ave., and her four-day-old daughter, Vickie, went home from the hospital today. Eight of the Ortegas’ other 14 boys, are at home. Five attend school in Pontiac. The father, who brought his family here about 3g years ago, works. for the city. The Ortegas originally came from Mexico. Tot, 2, Drowns in Pontiac Lake John Hamilton Found in Two Feet of Water by Mother, Boys Join B. Hamilton, 21-month-old End of a son of Mr. and Mrs. Cass W. Hamilton of 9135 Waltham, White | afternoon shortly after the tot was_ dressed for play. Oakland County Sheriff's Deputy Charles G. Rahn said the drowning is the county's first this season. The child, whe was to be twe years old June 29, was found in twe feet of water on the nerth- east section of a peninsula on Pontiac Lake by twe youths i ing the mother search for the While the mother called the White Lake | Dept. | | 150 feet, sheriff's men said. All were dead on arrival at Mid- of God. Even the best of men would not feel at home in | Heaven with all of its splendor unless they would find ind Henpiesd. there, One Who was their brother in the Fatherhood of two of the group by the road. God. Joseph's brethren would have felt ill at ease in one Ernest N. Crosby of Route 2, Far-| ford, said they escaped by jumping not already there upon the throne. | into a water-filled ditch. When He ascended into Heaven, He took with Himself His human nature like our own in all things, save sin. of the most regal courts 6f the world, if their brother were well. and Mrs. Roy Hahn of San-| Harrison Hicok, 15, of 2265 Hamp. den, and Charlies Judge, 12, of 9464 Bonny Brier, attempted to revive | the child, Dr. L. G. the child dead after further at. tempts by firemen also failed to The tragedy was the second in’ had driven up to give aid in the | When He took upon Himself this human nature from! cartier mishap. a His Mother Mary, He made it possible for Himself to suf-| %*#4 Make told them Biades was | fer. She gave Him a body on which might be visited all| == “" “5 © 3 mes mm the effects of sin, though He Himself was sinless. Blades was held temporarily for | His birth and His life, therefore, made Him a victim | questioning by Midland County for sacrifice and identified Him with the human race. | Prosecutor James R. Rood. He The Ascension was necessary in order to bring Him into! iter pending further in- a state of perfect union with the Father, and in order) prior to the time that Blades | _ tosend the Spirit that we might be other Christs. | drove up three eastbound cars had | His continued life in Heaven, with His Glorified| os 5 ae . Humanity, is accepted by the Father on His Mercy Seat | Monts ey pape wer dum’ our Intercessor. Once He offered Himself for us, the age. Blades also was driving east. | just for the unjust, whenever we identify ourselves with! Mrs. Bradley and Mrs. Carroll | Him as victim, we behold in Him the expiation of our sins, | “*T "ding in a car driven by/| Mrs. Sadie Ensign of Midland, and also our admission into the presence of the Father. | mother of Mrs. Bradley. Also in| | vv Thirty-five Boy Scout members from three troops immediately be- gan collecting funds trom neigh- bors to help the Hamiltons. Over $100 had been collected by this morning. ; Sun to Be Pleasant on Easter Toggery | It looks like a dry and generally | pleasant Easter weekend for most of the nation. All humanity is potentially with ‘this. car was Mrs. Hubert Rands | Pontiac will enter the Easter * . | Him in Heaven after His As- of Crown Point, Ind. | Parade under clear skies and pleas. Officers. Ask | cension, inasmuch as he is the! The eae cars were driven | ant temperatures, ——__—- ——— sa erpby and —Raiph—Farver—of-——-— aera . new Adam or the Son of Man; Route 1, Hope. After tonight’s low of 39, .the | the actualization of each human being as His brother or as an/| adopted son of the Heavenly Fa-| 40. ther, depends upon man’s response | Cc rAK ley said all| to the Spirit. In Heaven, He lives Request Appeal Sunday to make intercession for us. In| ‘ree were killed almost instantly. its | Him, all humanity will stand in Safe co" a Saree Apparently Skutt was a bystand- of Churchgoers Mamie Stamps | ‘ ‘ | : r | Oakland County Sheriff Frank W. | ay ussome he Father wit pour |Top Secret’ Tag | Irons today asked the Pontiac, Him, the same blessings that He On) Eqster Outfit | Press to publish his appeal urging | Once poured out upon him as the | WARDNGTON io~2ire ; st every church and clergyman to re- and at Meneeey. D. Eisenhower apparently has pat | : quest parishioners to render help During His earthly life, He so- | “top secret” on her Easter outfit. | in the stymied investigation of the| Melted us to avail ourselves of | Not a hint will the White House | . Barbara give on what Mrs, Eisenhower will aeyeg. et eens be yogring Sanday. She bee spent! that the Father will love all men Gaca. eifixion of the Goed-man. The “Our leads have dwindled to| worst thing that sin can do is Gettysburg, Pa., farm. nothing. We have hit a blank not bomb cities or kilt children, | but to crucify Goodness. No man | White House she has waited until | wall in she investigation, but we fee] that someone, somewhere be- sides the killer does know some- (Continued on Page 2, Col. 3) | which gown to wear. row, with fresh to strong winds. | Temerrow night will continue | fair with little change in tem- | pera Temperatures in downtown Pon- | of 32 to high of 64 by mid-after- | noon. This morning at 8 o'clock the | thermometer registered 50 degrees, | rising to 69 by 1 p.m. Hund dé acter Wes. co | huge natural amphitheater in Okla- | cented by bright yellow daffodils | and pussy willows bloomed in the channel gardens of Reckefeller | Center today, Rockefeller Center planted more | bearing six to eight blostoms, in| the first of the annual 10 seasonal | Rawley eT . | daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Sidney EASTER BUNNY — Susan Hall, 16-month-old | St., makes a fetching little Easter bunny as she | shame those of the toy rabbit in the basket, a Margins Sliced — Search for Floppy Ears for State Posts —— But Apparent Winners Keep Leads Pending Official Canvass DETROIT (?—Errors une covered in the unoffictal Wayne County vote tabula- tion have narrowed the slim margins by which Repub- licans won two offices in Michigan's spring elections Monday. The errors were dis- \covered yesterday by Mrs, |Marguerite Mont gomery, chairman of the Wayne County Canvassing after completing the re- check of Detroit's 22 wards, “Other obvious errors that have shown up may have to go uncorrected un- less there is a recount,” Mrs. Montgomery said. On the basis of the unof- ficial tabulation, Republi- cans appeared to have won Related Story, Page 2 three races and Democrats |five. However, the count was so close in the contests Won by two Republicans and one Democrat that the apparent ere may lose nt In ’ r eee the recheck of Detroit wards, Hall of 2303 Crane | reaches for a packed basket. Susan's “ears” in Three Races By GRORGE CORNELL AP Religion The story of Christ's resurrec- tion will ring out across the land | in” this Sunday—in music and words, in pageants, parades and stirring panoramas. From the high vistas of the Rockies to the quiet woods of New England, hundreds of thousands of Americans wil] gather under the open sky to celebrate the wonder of Easter. - There will be colorful, moving services in parks and stadiums, on waterfront piers, besides splashing | U.S. Weather Bureau says the (waterfalls, in churches, theaters, | er associated with none of the, ™ereery will rise to 68 tomor- cemeteries and city squares. Many of the spectacles will begin before dawn, and the drama of Christ's passage through the night of death into splendor |tiac yesterday ranged from a low | poo amy pole ypehoai pigs |Church, where several ministers presented meditations land, More than 75,000 people are ex- pected for predawn services in a homa’s Wichita Mountains. A :cast of more than 1,000 will take part in the pageant, called ‘The Pathways to Immortality.”’ An ocean of calla lilies and peo- ple—about 75,000 lilies and 20,000 the downtown service. the week at the Eisenhower's than 1,100 white lily plants, each | people—are expected to fill Holly- wood Bowl for the 35th annual sun- Even for formal dinners at the the gardens. The floral display is rise services there. Another throng of approximately almost the last minute to decide displays which, will conclude with 35,000 will jam Salem Square ing Pontiac citizens fitied the First 'chrysanthemums in late October. | Winston-Salem, N.C., where Mo- Predawn Services of Praise to Open Nation's Observance of Easter Sunday D. Smith at least 33 votes in bid for a seat on the State Board of Agriculture, Smith finished with an unofficial lead of 2,661 over Dale Stafford, Greenville Newspaper publisher. Margins of Democratic Victories in |ravian Bishop J. Kenneth Pféhi, for the 2th consecutive year will intone at sunup “The Lord is, and music. risen." Then a_ procession will | Principal services in Washing- | move to the Moravian graveyard ton, D.C., will be in Arlington God's Acre. | Cemetery, at the Army's Walter At the Grand Canyon im Ari- | Reed Hospital, the Carter Barron. zona, former Gov. Howard Pyle, | Amphitheater and the Nevy Medi- now administrative assistant to (cal Center at nearby Bthsda, President Eisenhower, will nar- | Md. | Worshi ppers Fill Churches rate the Easter story, against a breathtaking background of earth proportionately, Mrs. Montgomery said. Mrs. Montgomery said the official canvassers can change the totals where an error, such as a failure to add the straight votes, is found. Some other types of errors cannot be fixed unless there is a |noon to 3 p.m. commemorating Christ's death on the ‘cross more than 1900 years ago. | Hundreds gatheted downtown in Central Methodist gate. City Valuation Up $24 Million Totals for Tax Spread Reported by Assessor as $216,590,480 Property valuations in Pontiac, for tax assessment in 1955, total | $216.590,480, according to Pontiac City Assessor W. R. Ransom. This is an increase of $21,001,930 over the total a year ago. on “The Seven Last Words from the Cross.” Prayers were | offered and familiar hymns sung. Parishioners flocked to+#— flocked to All Saints Epis- | Churches last night, serving those ‘copal Church on Williams! who found it impossible to attend ‘St. for the annual Tre Ore an afternoon service. | Service. | Catholics have thronged St. Vin- | Bethany Baptist opened wide its | cent De Paul, St. Benedict's, St. doors to hundreds unable to go to |Michael’s and _ St. Joseph's . | churches for the Mass of the Pre- The Salvation Army Citadel wel- | Sanctified., Veneration of the Cross. comed worshipers for prayer and | Way of the Cross, Stations of the meditation. Favorite hymng were Cross and the Tre Ore Services. sung by those. attending. Mass has been read both morn- | ing and midnight and sermons | preached, Baptist and Marimont Baptist thing that Will help us,” said Irons. “We think that the girl did know the slayer. Much of*our investiga- . We have infor- mation, which can't be revealed, Plan Public Meeting Monday Night The president of the group op-| “And posing the proposed toll road from winds all over so it can pick up heavy traffic. A free read wouldn't have te do that.” Toll Road Opposition Favors Free Expressways crowded conditions at intersections on already existing roads and if Report of the final figures was released today by Ransom, follow- ing complétion of work after the annual city board of review ses- sions. The increased: valuation will en- able to city to increase its. reve- | nue over last year without increase “We have uncovered a great in the actual tax rate, as each deal of information concerning the | ill. spread on the tax roll will side of Telegraph, through the | Bloomfield area and then under bring in additional cash from the roads were widened, that would “adequately take care of the high- | way problem.” The Michigan Turnpike Authori- | ty Thursday announced the defi- nite route of the proposed practices of toll road authorities > which should interest every civic- |minded citizey in this state,” | VanderKloot said. The Michigan Turnpike Author- ity notified communities affected Flat Rock to Saginaw today said the organization definitely favors a road to Saginaw—provided it is free. es “We definitely favor a road to Woodward avenue. The route would then swing east of Pontiac, then turn northwest for the com- pletion of its 113-mile length to Saginaw. '$164-000,000—north-southTaripike, | ne——Citizen's. ~association...is.; It would travel thréugh Dearborn, Detroit, then enter Oakland County near &Mile and Telegraph Rds. VanderKloot added: “If a pro- |gram’ is undertaken to alleviate ; a In Today's Press pledged to seek a court injunction ' ; within 24 hours after the turnpike authority confirms the route, Van-| derKloot said. no intention of “ramrodding this | project’’ down their throats. William E. Slaughter, chairman It would continue just . west lof the authority, said: of Telegraph through Southfield| The association, which had its “We will go over the project! on Page 2, Col. 1) Township, Franklin Village and | beginnings among Bloomfield and detailed location of the 113-| fueeme Reterns Prepared Foxcroft, - Township citizens, will hold a (mile route with proper authorities | hen Just north of Lone Pine road, | public meeting at 8 p.m. Mon- of every community involved be-| eet We Huron btn Open’ Bren Pe 2 9018 the turnpike would cut to the east | day at Devon Gables, | fore we come to a final decision.” larger tax base. The assessor's valuations for this year totaled $217,492,630, but the beard of review reduced the 5 + figures by about $900,900 after Thy the Tete yesterday tat Te wae — hearings and study of the The final valuation total for this year is broken down as follows: Real estate $126,290,380; personal property, $90,300,100. were: Real estate $120,286,375; per- Bo ] nanzagram — for . o * ‘ * $400 Now Waiting F . 6 r * ¢ Se: \ ae wa Winner Kin 3 Oy td ee ‘ pe . F a an Seer poe Eee — — f= an Wo ¥ ‘ & j ae oe, ie =! a} oe ees Ce OE Ko OR. ee 8 eet ; . , \ wc . \é pt ; f i Amn ~~. . THE PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY, APRIL 9, 1955 oe as 2 eb > OS 208 42 et aS SRE a 2g : rey — is innocent of any crime in the death. George Joechansen, 50, gave a statement to Assistant Oakland Township. LaFond’s death was ruled acci- after getting out of work on the ~ Joehansen today, “but there is lit- Named Fund Head Army headquarters in Chicago pauses to ask a ques- pressed approval Redouble Efforts to End Chrict’c Cacritice * Seuthern Bell Wolkoor \CHNiS! S Sacrifice wAaiaaa a netrnet | wend Cuda Mooney pethaanen | ‘Mrs. Frank (Pearl N.) Gad- of Detroit. - tdum, 80, of 58 Clara St., died | \early this morning in Farmington | after an iliness of 18 months. | Request Churchgoers 2 May °, 284 in wet }and Amelia Green Nearpass. fo Watch for Clues Mrs. Gaddum came to Pontiac | (Continued From Page One) | amd is survived by two sons, 12 years ago from Ashtabula, Ohio, | you may have about such a sick | George Winchester of Cheisea and | pon William Winchester of Elk Horn, | “Usually, a wife, a brother, sis- | Ne. i ter of some other relative or | A brother, Fern, of Ashtabula, | friend of such sick persons sense #80 survives. something wrong about that per- Service will be held Monday at son's behavior. That's the informa. |! @-m. from the Voorhees-Siple ; | full intensity of sin until he real- izes what he does to a person. Many an alcoholic does not know he evil of his sin until, driving | while drunk, be kills a child, So | when we look not to a broken law, | but at the broken Person of Christ on the Cross, we begin the see the | full gravity of sin; we see: it in | the nails and in the crown of | thorns, but we also see what is more, namely, the love of God’ = sins, On the Cross, Our Lord poured out His Life's Blood, not because bleed-shed pleased His Father but — because the sinner deserved to) die, and Christ, willing to be one | with sinners, chose to bear pain | as they‘ should have borne it. He | bore all of the iniquity of evil be- cause he deigned to come into the™ world disorganized by evil. If we would see the werld at its werst, leok at the Cross on (iced + Friday! The world will never do | anything quite as evil as it did | that day! There was dark fusing te shed its light on the | crime that would extinguish the Light of the World! There is darkness over the world | today as there was then, and for | ; | whe goes on loving us despite our | | ' tion that may give us the lead Chapel with the Rev. James W. | we need. Our imvestigations are rmhade privately without involving the ‘low in of Oakland Park Methodist | the same reason. because Christ is | Church officiating, Buria} will fol- | recrucified in those who believe | Perry Mount Park | sid confess His Name. Giant cur- | ; tains are pulled over the Light of | MacArthur Data to Be Released U.S._Will_Air ‘Material Bearing on General's Stand on Russian Aid ‘WASHINGTON (INS)—The De fense Department will make public secret wartime material bearing on urged Russian entry into the war against.Japan at the time of the Yalta conference. | after dawn, the Franklin Commu- The Day in Birmin igham Local Churches to Hold Special Easter Services in four churches wil] highlight the Easter Sunday observance in the Birmingham area. Metropolitan Coupled with its service~ soon | 6:30 p.m. Monday at the Commu- nity House before the HI-12 Club. nity Church will break ground for * *¢ *& a new building on the Village Mrs, Clare’ E. Pardee Square. The ceremony at 7 a.m.! Services for Mrs. Clark E. (Mar- will be under the shadow of a huge cross, Following this sefv- ice and the Easter breakfast, serv- ices will be held in the existing jorie M.) Pardee, 58, of 571 N. Eton St., will be held at 11:30 a.m. Monday trom the Bell Chap- el of the William R. Hamilton Indications are that a “narra- tive’ of “relevant” material on the controversial issue will be re- leased soon, F The former Far Eastern com- mander has requested that mes- sages between him and the allied chiefs of staff be released to the public to settle the dispute over | whether he recommended paying Russia’s price to get her aid. MacArthur has emphatically denied assertions that he urged giving concessions to Russia - at the Yalta meeting in return for Red aid. A Pentagon announcement yes- | terday said the department is . studying its files ‘to collect papers| Rev. Cletus A. Parker superin- pertinent to the question of Rus- REV, CLETUS A, PARKER Former Pontiac Minister Dies Rev. Cletus A. Parker, District Superintendent, Suffers Heart Attack STANDING TALL —_ During review in ranks at | tion of Pfc. Curtis J. Batten, 67 Matthews St. At left ©@%ed that the mater last night’s federal inspection of Pontiac's 107th Ord- ,is Capt. Carl Yarling, commanding officer, of the nance Co., Lt. Col. Dean H. Finley (center) from 5th 107th Ordnance. Inspecting officers generally ex- | of the local National Guard unit. Pontiac Guard Company Stands | Inspection Visiting officers from 5th Army headquarters in Chicago last night conducted the annual federal in- spection of Pontiac's 107th Or- dnance Co., Michigan National Guard. . Lt. Col. Dean H. Finley of the 5th Army Inspector General's Dept. conducted the inspection in the Water Street armbry and com- mended the local unit on training and recruiting programs. Other officers whe took part in the imspection of the unit were Lt. Col; Ray D, Lam. | phear, commanding officer, and Capt. Thomas A. Pitts, executive officer, of the 746, Ordnance Battalion, Lansing. manager, other National Guard of- ficers, representatives of local veterans organizations and fami- lies fo the men of the unit also were on hand to view the inspec- tion. i Accompanying the inspecting of- in Tacoma Fire Flash Blaze Is Believed to Have Been Started u Bay City Conference sia’s entry into the Pacific war.” — oy 2 -_.. | and former pastor of the Baldwin A department spokesman. indi- | jal may be | Ave. Evangelical United Brethren rather than | Church, died suddenly yesterday ‘morning at 10 a.m. following | The controversy began when (a heart attack. | Sen. Herbert Lehman (D-NY) | ' | issued in “‘narrative’’ | “documentary” form. | A native of Michigan, the Rev. Mr. Parker was born Aug. 6, 1901 in Owendale where he at- tended grade and high schools. In 1925, he was graduated from the North Central College at Na- perville, I., with an A. B, de- gree and in 1928 was graduated from the Evangelical Theological based in part on MacArthur's recommendations. MacArthur called Le n's statement ‘‘utterly unfounded and without the slightest basis in fact." He said the secret messages will prove he was strongly opposed to Roosevelt's plans for bringing Rus- sia into the conflict. MacArthur said he had already advised Wash-| gan Conference, he preached his ‘© the newly organized Rochester | ington that Japan was a beaten Widow Is Charged in Oilman’s Death |Mary Clark, 46, has been chargea } aS af accomplicé in the 1953 mur- der of her wealthy oiman husband, William Clark, 61. Gays before his death his wife of marrying him for his |money, was killed May 19, 1953, by three police characters, charges jagainst them said. Named in the murder charges }were Leroy (Tincy) Eggleston, Ce- ci) Green, and Harry i $10,000 prize for her husband's mur- __j der and that the trio took her up. | Clark’s body was fond in his 722- __| room mansion killing. F.D.R., Truman Evicted by Washington, Lincoln Seminary in the same town. He was assigned to Ida, where jhe served seven years. Appointed | to the local church by the Michi- | fist sermon here June 9, 1935. He was married to an Owendale girl, with whom he was a class- |mate from sixth grade through |high school. She is the former | Edna Wolf and a graduate of the FORT WORTH, Tex. u» — Mrs, | Evangelical Deaconess Hospital "med with the American prosecution | As a mémber-of the Ministers’ | Association, the Rev. Mr. Parker | |had served as its president, had) | Clark. whose annulment suit a been chairman of the juvenile court __and—had directed the + Sunday School work at the Oak- | |land County Children’s Home for | two years. | He had served as director of | the YMCA and as committee- | an On the Veterans’ council. |..Other civie services include | | Huggins. ficers was Capt. Carl Yarting,com- All are held without bond the chaplaincy at the State Hospital Pmanding officer of the 107th Ord-| state claims Mrs. Clark offered a| and serving on Community Chest | nance. Drives. | church at 9:30 and 10:45 a.m. Ascension Lutheran Church's service also ig scheduled for 7 Co., with burial in White Chapel Cemetery, A resident of Birming- ham for 23 years, Mrs. Pardee died Friday. a.m, The Club sponsor a canneries tami teen Surviving are her husband; a tival Service will be held at daughter, Mrs. Judith P. Tucker: 2 om a son, Clark Jr.; and seven grand- . children. First communion service at Christ Church Cranbrook is s . s planned for 6:30 a.m. in the Chapel | p of the Resurrection. Other commu- | Il 0 S| | nion services will be at 7:30 a.m! }in St..Dunstan’s Chapel and the | ® . | festal Holy Communion at 9 and Ta es Ipel SuNday First Methodist Church's special | Tites will be at 7 a.m., followed | Admiral's Trip Linked | by the annual sunrise | ° "and service at 9:30 and 11. The | With Red Development | rites of baptism will highlight a ategi Bases | special service at 3 p.m. | of Str ic Jet | ‘The first Easter worship of the | TAIPEI, Formosa @—U.S. 7th new Northminster Presbyterian | Fleet Commander Vice Adm. Al- _ Church will be held in the Pop- (fred M. Pride is due here tomor- pleton School. |rew On another visit and many Special music will enrich the | observers think it is connected with Easter service at Kirk in the Hills | a development which for the first Presbyterian Church. Guest trum- | time places Chinese Communist | Peter will be Francesco DeBlasi, of | jet fighters within easy reach of | the Detroit Symphony Orchestra. | the Matsu Islands. | Stanley Kimes and Horma Heidi | This is the newly completed base will be vocal soloists. Their East-| at Luchiao 175 miles north of the er portions of “The Messiah” will | offshore island group guarding the | be played and sun at both 9:30! north entrance of the Strait of and 11 a.m, services. Formosa | The Reds are remodelling four * * *« “Genocide.” the murder of whole closer fields for jets. One—at the races or populations, wil) be the subject of DeHull N_ Travis, 1027 | | Forest, when he speaks Tuesday | Rotary Club. On the basis of long Rotary service—he was a charter mem- Flint in his subject—he was associat- ; Berg—Travis” Will speak to the club in connection with the 50th anniversary of Rotary Interna- tional. ' +. Monday has been designated as) | collection day for dead elm} | branches on private property as the | | first step in Birmingham's prepar- 1 cae ation to prevent further spread of Dutch elm disease, | | of Nazi war criminals at Nurem- | | Sew i CMINA BEA |Fukien provincial capital of Foo- Possession of such wood violat es | chow only 35 nautical miles from a city ordinance, W_ R. Lebold, | the Matsus—may be completed. No city forester, points out. It mest | Jets yet have used it, however be disposed of, and city trucks In any case, the Red air force's | an 1947. the Parkers were trans-| Will pick it up Monday without | Russian-built Migs now can reach | ferred to the Mack Ave. Evangel-| charge. . | troit. At the time of his death, he’ t | the Matsus 100 miles northwest of here were 163 cases of the disease |&8 the Foochow field is ready to was superintendent of the Bay City in Birmingham, all but 30 of them | S¥PPly them with fuel back to Conference. Surviving are his wife and two | daughters, Mrs. Otto (Audrey) | |Flaschmann of Evart and Mrs. | 600 per cent increase over the pre- vious year. . . . | Om private property. This was a/| Luchiao, they may be able to stay long enough to control the air over the Matsus. WASHINGTON (UP) — The Re- publicans ir the White House have | Cari (Phyllis) Silvernail of Naper- moved from the front entrance ville, Ill. | foyer the fSrtraits of former Dem-| The funeral will be held Monday . large, threatening to strike again. Baptist Church, Kingston, will ‘tiac = Trail Cemetery. ‘John Ballard Hamilton innocent publicly. Their identity will be withheld. Making the same appeal today was Pontiac Potice Chief Herbert W. Straley, whose department also Hamilton, 21-month-old White Lake is working on the case. Township boy who drowned _yes-| “The slaying of the little girl 'terday afternoon in Pontiac Lake, | who was found in the Oakland | will be held Monday at Keyker | County dump should be a warning ' Funeral Home in Kingston, Tenn. that such persons should not be at! Church service in Pine Grove the Worid; Iron Curtains, Bamboo Curtains, and Plush Curtains. Iron | ern Europe where in Stygian night, hammers and sickles beat and cut, But a day .will come when He | day and burned seven children to| Harried, Hurried Count Is Usually Accurate 2 Without Newspapers, You'd Wai will lay hold of that hammer, hold: it aloft ‘in His resurrected, by Faulty Refrigerator TACOMA, Wash. ®—A flash fire| | ocratic Presidents Roosevelt and | Truman. ; at 2:3 p.m. from the Salem | Evangelicat United Brethren 3 .. Their portraits have been re-| Church in Bay City. Burial will committee which numbers Har- Funeral service for John Ballard ‘Urt#ins are pulled down in East- | petieved to have started in a faulty placed by paintings of George| follow in the Grant Township| old Hagen, Dexter Horton and | refrigerator, roared through a two Washington and Abraham Lincoln.! Cemetery at Gagetown. Though contributions still are being received, the Community House Roll Call still is short $3,300 of its goal of $52,400. | Russell Robins ts chairman of a Detroit Pair Held ‘in Assault on Girl Two Detroit men are being held | for investigation of attempted rape | Mrs, Alvin Knorr, | today after they reportedly ‘assault- | Story frame house here early to- | | death. | The victims were James Clifton, be | Scarred Hand, and make it look 15, Nancy McCarley, 12, Thomas. jed a 19-year-old girl, Haze] Park Police said. | The pair, Maurice Garrison and Albert Anderson, both 26, were ar- rested after a high-speed police chase at 1:30 a. ; . ‘protect ; : : ; y, -tt-€yndia-McCartey-3. other children trom the same fate. ment will be in Laura Bluff Ceme-| 2PP¢ar as the moon under Our | Dareil McCarley, 8, Susan McCar- “This man may strike again. tery there He did it once. We need good | Surviving are his parents, Cass authentic information.” W. and Laura Stanley Hamilton of The girl disappeared the morn- | 9135 Walham, White Lake Town- ing of March 24 when she was on ship: and his grandparents, Mr. | her way to the Assumption Grotto | and Mrs. Lenoir Hamilton of Har- School on Detroit's northeast side | Fiman, Tenn.. and Mr. and Mrs, She was found one week later om a | Willard Stanley, Big Stone Gap. dump near Halsted Rd. and Pon- | Va. Also surviving are brothers | in West Bloomfield | Tex William, Jack Donald, and’ Township. That's over 20 miles Rex Willard, and a sister, Reva away. Jean, all at home. Police believe that the abductor « Friends are being received at wag familiar with both areas and ‘Coats Funeral Home, 3141 Sasha may live in either. They further ‘baw Rd., Drayton Plains. believe that: : You may be the one that is able Mrs. Gust Nelson to furnish the information police need. Mrs. Gust (Mary C.) Nelson, 72, }of 4127 Arlington St.. Royal Oak formerly of 15 Grandie St., died Lady's Feet, Bamboo curtains have been pulled over China, where in the “dry martyrs,”’ ridiculed before other Pilates, slapped before other dren of Mrs. Jean McCarley, 23.| election night tabulation? How cor- Caiphases, and beaten in other Praetoria. But as hundreds of thousands of Chinese suffer and die in His Name, and in union in their beds. Cyndia’s body was | who won a Michigan election? with His Cross, they prepare a day found close to an upstairs window. | when the sun will rise again in the East, and the sun will be the Light of the World! Plush curtains, too, of American and Western civiliza- tion have been pulled over Christ, until we work in the murky mist of self-sufficiency, of plenty, of con- fused ideatism and deflated moral- ity What do We see written across the map of the world but blood! The Weather PONTIAC AND VICINITY — Semewhat cooler and temerrew. Lew te night =. hb tomerrew 66. fresh to streng aterty winds becoming tenight. Temerrew aight a, °** litle change in temperaterc. Teday in Pontiac Lewest temperature preceding & am yesterday after a three-year ill- Soldiers’ bleed poured out on | ness . Korean rocks; martyrs’ blood | Born Oct. %, 1882 in Omaha. rimsoning ee Jew: | Neb., she was the daughter of < Cn pw | ish blood but recently dried from | Nazi persecutions in Buchenwald, and now dampened again by Christian blood in the Commu. | nist persecution; pagan blood | Erik and Elise Hansine Larsen and was married there in 1908 Mrs. Nelson lived in Pontiac 23 years before moving to Royal Oak ley, 3, and Magnus McCarley, eight months. * * @ | Six of the victims were the chil- James Clifton was Mrs. McCar- ley’s brother. Six of the children were found Fire Chief Harold Fisk said the children ‘didn't ve a prayer’s chance of escapjng that fire.” He described the ie as “a scorched shell.” | Police Detectives Al Waters and |R, D. Roberts said Mrs. McCar- ley, a divorcee, was attending a | movie at a drive-in theater at the | time of the fire. She was held for | questioning. Larry Amundsen, Pierce County deputy coroner, quoted her as say- ing she thought the older children could “‘take care of things.’ Boy Who Fled - From Red Rule Weeks to Learn State's Election Results | By JACK I. GREEN | LANSING—What's this unofficial | rect is it? Why do we sometimes | have to wait for weeks to know These and probably many other questions are buzzing in the public | mind since the Monday spring elec- tion wound up in another Michigan ] } ; Se maybe it would be appro- | priate te take a look at how the system works. ; In the first place, surprising to | some people, there is no official tabulation of election returns in and hundreds of legislative, mu- nicipal or other special elections. The Associated Press relays the state tabulations back on its wires to its members, along with news stories outlining the developments | in each major contest. Ninety-nine times out of a hun- dred it is correct. The official canvass a month later may show the totals for this candidate and Michigan until the city and town- | ship results in each county are brought into the 83 county clerks’ offices, tabulated, mailed to the | Secretary of State's Office in Lan- | sing, tabulated again and then released by the State Board of Canvassers. This usually takes at &@ am: Wind velocity 5 mph five years ago. She was a member “Direction: West _ : ’ : i |. poured charitably inte bleed gue tn Saturday ai 7 06 of the Oakland Avenue United banks to aid rs wounded in Presbyterian Church and had been employed’ at the Chase Depart- Soyetien, Temperatures ment Store. GARR... cccvess 4 BO O.Whisiwccces “6 Surviving are three children. | Mieebceses-48 . 88 M...0cc00. 67 | S Seceeee OO 1 >a .eo9 Mrs. Oma Holms of Chicago, a. seeees 7 Arthur M. Nelson with whom she | cae ators lived, Mrs. Florence Erhart of ate Wesslase Deestseni Peoria. Ill., ten grandchildren and / o four great-grandchildren. Also surviving are two sisters— _ Esther Schmidt of Independence, “ pe Calit.; six brothers —' EF. J. Lar- a8 sen of Omaha, H. V. Larsen of Lect Tekaman. Neb., Albert Johnson of “Highest and, Lowest Temperatures This Bellaire, Tex., E. E. Larsen of ore ts in 1914 Pasadena, Tex. E. W. Larsen of —_- | Texarkana, Ark., and James John- Per en, Gon 72 52 son of Omah. = 7 34 dectony ii 4 1B lip ay brig Reborn Ang G2 Bitte sore alcbah of Oatoad he Hag pe a i Scam © § Fl Wiste Cooper Memorial Cemetery: \ h au PS pal ee, - iis t the bloody business of war. In the sight of all that blood, shall we not ask ourselves if God ever intended us to live in a world of constant hemorrhage? We know the answer! Neither animal blood in sacrifice, nor hu- man blood were meant to cataract and cascade over this globe. “Catra Jessen “of “Omaha and CTirlst’s Blood alone paid the debt of our sins! It is because we in- voke not the Blood of Christ that | we shed one another’s bloédd in war. When we lift-the Iron and bamboo and Plush Curtains and see His Death as Redemption, be- lieve in Him as the Son of God Who made amentis for our sins, | return. | then will this crimson scourge cease! ~p The End his entire term of office without ‘Returns Home | BERLIN @—A Soviet youth who | defected to the West and asked for | political asylum last month was returned to his parents today be- hind the Iron Curtain. This was done at his own re- quest, U.S. officials said. a | The youth was Valery Lysikov, officer stationed just outside East Berlin His defection to West Bertin March 18 stirred an international furor. Soviet Foreign Minister V. M. Molotov charged that U.S. au- authorities said later that he re- about 20 days afier election and | newsgathering cooperative, Associated Press. ted , ~ “This is how it works: | port that the girl was running ,down a street with her clothing | torn. Witnesses said she was of men who enter them on county _— ing. punch cards. ice spotted the suspects’ car There's the girl who punches the — — nearby. cards—and finally, the six , Who was turned over cincts from Baraga County ‘are her parents, and the men were chewed into the state totals after | Scheduled for further questioning traveling nearly 600 miles by car, later today. and telephone and blurred pencil | . | point. | The giraffe is absolutely mute | And these, you will recall, are | 24 Rever, even in its death ago- the first and often unchecked | Mes: Ulters @ sound. counts—not those which have been Soaneineemeen —_—— canvassed. | Despite all these hazards, the unofficial election night count | | has proven itself 99 99/100 per’ | | cent accurate. But what do you do, what can : you expect when, on top of all this, | Franklin Pierce went without a single cabinet change. fused to return to Communist East Germany, ‘ \ fe grr.) lf : bial i i! hi HH a iL ask : | Se: Ox 2, Fi ee ee ‘ /\ { ” j ‘ / “ ‘ ce eet en 4 _THE PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY, ‘APRIL 9, 1955 THE LITTLE BLUE DUCK I WANT TO THANK tira OF YOU FOR THIS THE COSTUME IT WAS NOTHING~“JUST A HAPPY A Little Each Week ; Bank of $305,000 NEW YORK @—Police and the FBI say they have mapped a mas- ) ter plan in their hunt for the bandit trio who robbed a Queens bank Add s A two-hour conference yester- fe : | and James Kelly, special agent in i apeed | charge at tne ate tests," Jail Texas Couple Denies Bid fo Block Th N T M || meters and two radar units. The | ee for Seven Years Rehiring of Teachers e New lerry oore vader ests ave paced in the trunte combined strategy . police cars. inate duplication of effort in track- : ° ing down the Gove men who car [22 FOrgery Spree | ovine, toe w-duige Curirl| LAKES Acting Seriously || tx. commer sis waxy } een Be smoothly amin AUSTIN, Tex. @—A nomadic lite | Long has refused plea from 14 By EARL WILSON cui ee eee looting the Chase Manhattan | was over prison beckoned to- highly successful | Bank branch in Woodside, Queens, | day for a talkative, friendly Dallas, a er tn tee cee NEW YORK—Terry Moore was in her bedroom getting dressed | “very favorably received by | Wednesday Tex., couple sentenced to seven|.-hool board. and I was in her sitting room sitting. motorists” stopped by policemen In addition to Redmond (Ninny) | years for check The board was appointed by the} “Sweetheart!” crooned Terry from behind the curtains—a cer-| smd warmed they bad been speed. | : Cribbins, partially but not posij-/ Alvin Witherspoon, 31, and his| county after voters March 27 abol-| tain urgency in her voice. ' ing. tively identified as one of the rob-| pretty wife, Billie, 29, said they | ished the Irving Independent School x k *& *& Cost of the speed meters is $400. | ber band, authorities listed as|were glad it was all over. Wither-| District and its board of trustees. ° The radar units cost $1,100 each. Auabects”” two other ex-convicts, | spoon said he had cashed checks—| Petitioners for the injunction said} _ Naturally I thought she was in distress and was eager to | pisvins said the devices would Archie Stewart and Joseph Kress, all bogus—in ‘Almost any place |the board was rehiring teachers| assist if only to sip up her bikini bathing suit. I also thought be effective if used in the vicinities who served prison terms for a| you can name” since they started | fired by the old school board which she meant me when she said “Sweetheart.” As I rose te {of schools and parks. He said: | Brooklyn robbery in 1934, their cartrailer odyssey eight years | had ousted Supt. John L. Beard. rush chivalrously to her aid, her nice mother—who was alse “First, they are not in any) Officials also disclosed that | ago. Beard’s Feb, 16 ouster precipi- in the sitting room sitting—called back: ' | sense a substitute for the motor- threatening telephone calls were * * ¢ tated a walkout of about 200 school “Yes, dear.” cycle officer or scout patrol car. ) received by the bank's manager} They still face many more|employes, most of them teachers —— ° . They are intended to complement and by the teller who was kid-| charges. The sheriff's department|who protested the manner of| “Where are my earrings?” caroled Terry. 5. | the ‘existing force which must be | naped outside his home by the/| said it had 21 “holds” on them—|Beard’s dismissal. A new election| “They're right here,” sighed her mother, as mothers will. strengthened. _ \ robbers in order to gain entrance | nine from Texas and 12 from Ala-|has been set for April 16 to re- . x « « * wee ee an lal aaa (morn pom Se es ee ee | ee Seek one oe The “new Terry” soon bounded out in a completely backless oo . devices The phone threats. however.| more. 7” s blacks toreador outfit that hugged each little—and big—curve. only motorcycles and patrol cars were put down as crank calls. Witherspoon, redheaded and py {Ge ° I've known and like Terry a few years and she’s never looked| are effective.” freckle-taced, said their forgeries |41ONOF O Tgia sizzlinger. Yet nothing about her was uncovered except her Piggins said permission must ° probably amounted to “‘many thou- back. obtained Me I oes, |sanda of alas” Bath were con | Upheld by Offer k kk t Ciaeamiecie Cooma ee sree nat woeth| 0 will say with grandparens tO Buy New Bike | “were moving to New York so I can study acting here,” an-| fore the radar units can be put | HOLLYWOOD (®—Rita Hayworth | vit the Witherapoons are in nounced Terry, popping onto the sofa beside me. into we. SESS SS a Rac] oem eee pe manent pn ot | cee | Save Today for Your wi umb ic- J two | tures Corp. leds ; aa de ua aie Gln me being a sexy playgirl wasn’t true.” The left shoulder of y | She stated in a complaint filed | Japan Wants Russia unidentified Georgia motorist} Terry’s union suit—as she called the toreador pants—feil Death F ds Ca yesterday that the studio tailed to|4 Rush Peace Talks knocked him off his tricycle, is| down, and Terry put it back in place. | n reer N T start “principal photography” for getting a new bike. “Why, I could be out in Hollywood now sitting beside a swim- ; Omorrow ses a1 film, ‘Joseph and} TOKYO W®—Japan released to-| And the honor of Georgia is UP-! ning pool, sipping my root beer—I'm a Mormon—but I want of Early Songwriter Nothing beats systematic saving — A certain amount saved EACH and EVERY week soon ads up to a sizeable amount and you get 2% interest — Savings added until the 10th of the month earn from the Ist of the month, the picture before it got started for| talks ‘‘be started promptly” in| public relations counsel, wired the x k* & * this same reason. New York City. Associated Press last night that! ‘Terry's mother, who's so de- The red-haired actress, previous-| The note, which was turned over| the story of the hit and run driver voted that she took up cameraing ly suspended by the studio, signed|to Russia's U.N, representative | who J @ contract with Columbia Dec. 28| Friday in New York for trans-| paid pA rc candor eee for | mission to Moscow, had the effect | ages 000 agreed | of rejecting Russian suggestions | all . on as her salary for making the | to hold the talks either in Tokyo To reestablish Biblical drama. "lor Moscow ‘a = *| so she could take the proper pic- * . tures of her daughter, spoke up. Se a ee creer” ae aubed, *analdan our state’s honor | you turn the music off during é the interview?” A recorder was playing Terry's favorites. “No, but I'll turn it down a Httle.” ; “In Hollywood,” explained her mother,” she constantly has music in every reom. I've SAVINGS. INSURED TO $10,000 ...§ ee ee aS as Sa ’ ‘ a tle ‘ ta ‘ _. ' ' { ! Association } PART OF A SYMPHONY may've escaped het music but 1piger a I haven't.” The id's first interview to TERRY MOORE ie i _ The Fons frat interview to Now Theyiiieint | ald Loan a Brethren,” by the expected| day the text of a sternly-worded | held. . ” | starting date. She walked out on| note to Russia urging that peace| Robert M. Gamble, an Atlanta/ ‘0 prove I'm an actress. oe = £ GAFFNEY, 8. Cn — Tuve Terry confessed how busy she is. She'd just done the big] of bedclething got shet uheitt’ Te 16 E. LAWRENCE ST. Theater Guild TV show, is reading movie and stage scripts, and theft was from the county prison will soon be seen in “Daddy Long Legs” with Fred Astaire and | camp clothesline. Leslie Caron. SE oS “There's a nasty rumor that I was dropped by 20th Century a mee nim e| Westridge-of-Waterford | _ x «* * * Northern Pontiac’s Finest Suburban Area Featuring Custom “I made much money Fox last year Marilyn ; Monroe. My salary’s in scar figures. 1 Kher $45,000 Designed and Built Homes, $19,900 to- $40,000 — “aGeme | : Sait aie. Mo tea eee in 3 weeks at Las Vegas.” VOORHEES - SIPLE FUNERAL HOME )Siz.°* ~ °° 7. "),tssseeed te Terr tat the wore incdent nat he, tough 906 M. Perry Street gacne — automatic pistol and $100 in| «on now they gave it tome. But only in Hollywood.” Terry shot over to the record-player and put in a new record. She came back and sat down on one of the shapeliest derrieres in America. 4 “All because somebody who didn’t know what a bikini was = > | said it wasn’t a bikini! “Anyway, they say I'm No. 1 with the Air Force,” Terry ad- mitted. x * *&k * W Greenlatid With him at Christmas. The Air Force said ‘No, sir, we want Terry te have her own show.’ “And with my mother and father along, we went to Iceland, Scotland, the Azores and Bermuda. But you still hear about a bikini which wasn’t a bikini.” x «k* k& * Terrible Terry's strategy now is to study at the Actors Studio Pixies etre, wr ema! TO See. This Custom Home! _ @ Robins : @ Phony. Humus Peddlers @ “FREE” Landscape Plans ® “One-Shot, Cure- All” Spray meses |! EURNISHED MODEL HOME i not married men, either!” Saturdays and Sundays 1:00 to 6:00 P. M. ts x ke kk * or by Appointment Don’t miss visiting this furnished model home, drive through the wind- ing roads of beautiful Westridge . . . notice the many fine homesites Fly-by-night truckers, eager salesmen representing unknown nurseries and ambitious advertisers use the spring season to trap unwary owners. with their magic devices. _@ still a cee Woteriora . «+ « @ planned community near fine schools, churches, transportation, shopping . . . ideal * Humus, — os i —— of the lawn looks swell and is location to raise your family, or enjoy your raticament a. . * “Free” landscape plans are not free. You pay for them — in New Designin DIRECTIONS: % There: probably is no such thing asa “one-shot, cure-all” PHILADELPHIA #—A Russian - ervie agri ann ere <— state spray. Regardless of the promises made te you, always check cetty group ins invited YOUR DREAM HOME with the County Agricnltaral Agent or the Pentise Department Baptist clergymen, three of ON PAPER Model Beautifully Furnished Parks and Recreation. Americans, to visit the Soviet Un- Our designer, Mr. Aylesworth, will in Heywood-Wakefield by ‘ . : fon on a preaching mission this incorporate your ideas to make Ec Furni Co ‘As with all business transactions, your best bet is to deal only with local, Ose ¥- Gael Ke so the moaal homeshotundors ee well-known concerns. ; groves, president of the and Sundays. Carpet and Draperies BEFORE YOU INVEST, INVESTIGATE Baptist Convention, said last Drayton Floor Fashions — £ : , that he had received such a bid | —_+—Mrayton Flos ——— ~ prog Ee ah bg BUSINESS: ETHICS BOARD #0 ""™""°™ HELTMAN & [RIPP * * 6 -. of the cM tat We De ‘deena - Pon & tne. “of ‘sey oe Shen Sslioue, sconviony- | CimemaScope. Technicolor, Jack Palance,|Iraq teamed up _ with _ strong, Virginia Mayo Tuna Clipper Cinema- 1 : F R -»-for this was i Scope, Technicoior modern Turkey: in the new alli- Milford ance = Bat: “The Outlaw Stallion Techn ss 2.4 j color, Philip Carey Dor y Patrick sec: y i “Valier of he Head! Johnny Iraq is the ond strongest ! Debra P Woionaie military state in the Arab world \ n ues Vanishing Prairie by . } Walt Disney Te lor Willie. the next to Egypt. She has 50,000 to i a = THOMAS GOMEZ | Operatic Whale 60,000 men under arms and is “< Thurs, Sa Smoke Signal . . micolor, Dana Andrews Laurie enriched by oil royalties total- ad Helly ing $140,000,000 annually, And, Bat: “Cre the W Gene Kelly , zs John Justir unlike #gypt, she has been very Sun, Tue } ne cencerned about Seviet aggres- Powe! Tor Ma } i Thurs Sat aptain Lig sors trying to grab her riches. | Reck Hudson 8 ra Rust . | Birmingham Lebanon's allegiance to - the | agg dg at Heart.” Doris league is qualified because half of eet: “2 Bloomtieta her population is Christian. The MID) Pacman Rob N M hn Mon. | Christians look toward the West i WMAK \Y roe; “Jot Guita 8 Hay- , for protection and the Moslem part . oe —“~ I Is Pa Tony Of the population is pulled toward nen for the screen by LESSER SAMUELS Amociore Producer omecte oy VICTOR SAVILLE Curtis . G orie DeHaver g k gyptian leadership pessexteo oy WARNER BROS Signal, Techni r Dana Ar “ ; Piper Leuri« Jordan's British-trained Arab le- ee = a Se Paige esr gion military force is considered Brande, Eva Marie Saint the best combat-ready force in the | | Sun., Mon De ee Marion }\ die Fas 5 . arcadia tbeaatatircs Be 2 ) Middle East but has only about | Holliday, Jack Carsor 20.000 men. Jordan also subsists . r ® Rix trids ‘ Tony ur de Adnan ht much on British financial aid. | Jos i" William Holde Libya also is dependent on Brit- Sat je n4 Hiet v = i Richard Wider at es te. ish financial aid and like Yemen Dakotas.” Wanda H rix has no modern military force. | Biee Sky ‘betes. bom : | @at: ‘The Lone Gur or -Georee That leaves Syria and Saudi } Montgomery I th Ma! t g j obsess ha 1G og = Arabia on the Egyptian side in | Atoms ” : Cairo’s frantic efforts to create 3) Rg} f yorum acme of Fel-\ an Arab collective defense alll- | Janet Leigh T Gambier from ance instead of ini western Natchez.” Dale R« n Debra Paget joining west | Pentine ‘Drive In defenses pinned on the original Get: “Six B ‘ Turkish-Ira Curtia, Julie Ac Overland Pacif a 4 pact. | Jack Mahoney. Pegeie Castic Syria has approximagely a 40,- ' the “T? ay n ad = * The Brain 006-man army but an unstable gov- Sane ork Kar . | Mon “The Par Country.’ Tech- ernment, There have .been five TE sien tae j James Stewart, Ruth Romar liters : 8OSTON ROBBERY? t Remance Marjorie Main, Military COoUups d'etat in as many j : years. i es - Cavemen Knew Fire JOHANNESBURG (UP) — Evi- dence that Stone Age men knew and used fire s just been pro vided by the dit , in the Ma kapan cave in the northeastern Transvaal, of Stone Age fireplaces ¢2 The archaeologist who unearthed the cave, however, pointed out that this ie the second discovery of its kind, for the Chou Kou Tien cave, near Pekin, also provided evidence that Stone Age Man used fire. The new find, nevertheless, is valuable confirmatory evidence. } ARE YOu MOVING? WARNERCOLOR . STERNOMEREC Sound co stanmme AUDREY DALTON MARISA PAVAN 2 soseet xen - nooouro acosta 2 JAGUAR remeron WRITTEN AND DIRECTED BY DELMER DAVES: remcren or WARMER BROS. ~~ FRED CLARK LYWH BARI MALIE ROSENBLOOM A URNVERGAL-OTERRATIONN. PICTURE r Co Starr 4 ak. SEN tC Wee Pa _— NN ee