—————————— t—‘isé ~~ 6s anon THE PONTIAC PRESS} Tuesday: Warmer, Snow , Details page two y 1lith YEAR * *& & & & PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, MONDAY, JANUARY 18, 1954 —s0 PAGES “*3OGiATED PRESS uw Would Back Health Insuran Taken by Death HARRY A. MAURER Ex-Clerk of City Big Four Parley to Open Monday in West Berlin Second Week of Talks by Foreign Ministers to | Be in Russian Zone BERLIN (AP) — Experts today to plan security and housekeeping details of the Berlin foreign ministers conference. A compromise last night on sites for the session as- sured that the parley will for the Big Four set to work | . open on schedule next Mon- day. The American, British, Dies at Age 86 Was Official in Pontiac | Officer With 17 Years’ | for 26 Years; Service | Pontiac city clerk for over 2% years, previous to his retirement in 1947, Harry A. Maurer, 86, of 16% Cherokee Rd., died Sunday at Bloomfield Hospital. His last illness covered a period | of six weeks and he had been at the hospital the past month. Born near Altoona, Pa., on Oct. 4, 1367, he was the son of George and Eliza McCartney Maurer, and his early years were spent on their | ters will meet for one week — the Department in 1937 and was pro- His education was secured | second — in the Soviet Embassy | ted to detective in 1948. He is a | farm French and Russian com- | mandants of the divided | city appointed deputies to/| meet late today to work out |detailed arrangements for ‘the conference on German ‘unity and the Austrian peace treaty. Orders from their home govern- ments ended 10 days of wrangling over the conference site. The three Commandant Sergei Dengin| agreed last night that the minis-| ALF C, STRAND City Detective Dies Sunday Officer With 17 Years’ | Midvale, Birmingham. Service Succumbs to}, 8 -Months’ Illness ALF C. STRAND Detective Dies Pontiac Detective Alf C. Strand, | 48, of 220 Tilden Ave., died at his | | Western military chiefs and Soviet | home Sunday morning after an ill- ness of eight months. Strand, joined the Pontiac Police | Mother, Twins Killed as Auto Skids in Snow Crashes Into Oncoming Car on M59, Injuring 4 Other Persons A 35-year-old mother and her twin sons were killed on M-59 Saturday night when their car skidded on the snow-covered pavement and crashed head-on into an- other car. Dead on arrival at Pon- tiac General Hospital were Mrs. Edna June Sallada of 667 E. Grand Traverse, near Milford, and her 9-year-old sons, Jerry and G . The car driven by her husband, Edward, 37, skidded out of control | east of Hill road and slid sideways into the front of an auto driven | by Charles E. Lowe, 21, of 2843 aymond E. Dibble, 50, of 3658 Samuel, Rochester, and Dibble’s | 21-year-old son, Phillip, were in- | | jured. They were returning from | ice fishing at Duck Lake when | the accident occurred, Lowe and his two passengers and arm fractures, and face cuts. His son was admitted with mul-| freezing cold today but the weatherman insisted it was | tiple face cuts and severe back in-| actually warming up in some sections..: At the same time Northern California, battered by a juries, and Sallada, a Pontiac Mo- in the rural and Altoona schools, 'in East Berlin, and for the first | 2@St President of the Pontiac Police | tor pivision employe, suffered pos- and in a business college there. Egt ere: HHH : S | ! : § i | 3 & . Maurer always was regarded as a courteous and obliging public official. He recalled 1930 as being his most exciting year as city clerk. At that time an attempt was made to recall four of the commission- ers. It failed, but the usual z ue Fr HH ui i and third weeks in the building in the American sector formerly used by the Allied Control Council. Thereafter, a communique, | sald, “the place of meetings will depend upon the course of the CHIE Beare Fa Te atipts t F A z ietbah day for last-minute strategy dis- cussions. Soviet Foreign Minister V. M. Molotov is expected Satur- day or Sunday. New Zealand Crater Active After 50 Years Officers Assn. 19, 1905. He had lived in Pontiac | for 256 years. He had been in the grocery business prier to joining the police department. Two Risk Lives « fo Rescue Pilot Naval Reservists Pull Protesting Flier From Flaming Cockpit ATLANTA (UP) — A Navy pilot who steered his crippled Corsair AH i iF $ & :| Boston Gets Insulted, |Asks Army Apology sible internal injuries, and rib trac_| violent wind and rain storm Saturday, prepared for a| By International News Service Born in Dawson, Minn., Jan. | tutes. Both are listed in fair condi-| new storm and blizzard-weary Montana got more snow.| Twenty persons were killed and | at least 14 others were injured in Seven Men, Boy"... >... tion today. Lowe was treated at the hospital for face and head cuts. ICY INVASION—Crewman Joseph Zemeitus of from fishing grounds to Boston’s Fish Pier. Near the trawler WAVE ponders over the heavy coating | zero temperatures and snowstorms continue to of ice which formed on his craft during the voyage | plague two-thirds of the East today. East Two-Thirds of U.S. Auto Accidents Storms and’ Snow Still Plague East an 4 United Press Phote in Grip of Arctic Weather By UNITE D PRESS } A numbing blast of arctic air engulfed much of the| eastern two-thirds of the nation in sub-zero and sub-| | The mercury plunged be-* low the zero mark from Temperatures were near- the northern half of the 3 L as oy fry i i i abit i ‘ 8 i af : i z : : th : 10, died Saturday Page 2, Col. 8) LE Th g zero elsewhere throughout ‘Lost in River | } Kill 20, Injure 14 Six Teenagers Dead When Speeding Car Hits Bridge lke Proposes Aid 7 by Government, Nof Social Plan Also Asks Expansion of Rehabilitation Program for the Disabled WASHINGTON (AP )— President Eisenhower pro- posed today that the gov- ernment bolster private in- surance plans as a step toward bettering the health of all Americans. In a special message to Congress, Eisenhower asked for 25 million dollars to start a system of govern- ment re-insurance of private plans, to help take care of extraordinary expenses be- yond those now covered. The President also pro- posed a five-year plan for expansion of the program for rehabilitation of the dis- abled. Under it a total of 660,000 dis- f ae SiEey Ht Boats, f. _ troit River, They'd been missing overnight in @degree weather. Helicopters from Selfridge Air Force Base and Grosse Ile Naval Air station joined the search at dawn. Coast Guard boats had searched most of the night through the treacherous, moving ice. Walter W. Riley, 54, Grosse Ile; Paul Noland, 44, Gibraltar, Otis Nelson, 45, Trenton. Rain May End Cold Wave Here i i tite f oe g side of the road and struck an on- ‘| Plunges to Her Death fashionable Park Ave. apartment. J a att Hf li ¢ | FH es i ; ? ai £ Soa by for what I am doing.” that (Continued on Page 2, Col. Benson Wants OK to Use — : Hi =e ih i en 9 eg sage Deegan ne se ef +t z 45) ve se on pe PT. 3 is ' ie ff , | 7 — — weee we ‘ Sf. ¢ y - ADUSY ae 3 * a ie 1 ee face vee aac al a cia Ea ee I a ne Na ok » ce ae "9 eee gs ‘Municipal Parking Lots will be decided at a hearing held for that purpose tonight. stead and will coincide with Na- tional Bey Scout Week. Three departments of the Wom- sessments against benefiting prop- rties to finance about half the . a . will address the group on ‘ We All Should Know About the ~~ Pontiac Deaths Albert O. Brewster Albert Osborn Brewster, 72, of 348 Going St., died yesterday after a year’s illness. He was born in New Jersey on Jan. 6, 1882, the son of Joel and Anna Miller Brewster. He married Nellie Reed in Pontiac on Aug. 21, 1920. He is survived by his widow, Funeral will be Tuesday at 1:30 p. m. from the Pursley Funeral Home. Burial will be in Perry Mount Park Cemetery with the Rev. George L. Garver of the As- cension Lutheran Church officiat- ing. Mrs. John Kudner Mrs. John (Lillian May) Kudner 89, of 166 N. Perry St., died Sat- urday at her residence after an illness of several months. She was born in Waterford Township on June 5, 1864, the daughter of Fred and Effie Rod- lam. She married John Kudner Other equally important items face the lawmakers at tonight's session. The manager will rec- ommend that plans for the pro- posed east side fire station, to be located at Adams and Bowers, be placed on the agenda for Jan. %. Meanwhile, revisions in prelimi- nary plans for the west side fire station at Maple and Chesterfield | Pilgrim road home, will be discussed, with emphasis on Clarence Vliet speaking on atomic placement of the building, traffic energy. . ee control and ing space. A $28,000 bond issue for the sta-| High Twelve members will hear tions will be put to the voters on | Ry bert M. Frehse, executive sec- the April ballot. [retary of the Detroit Chapter of A plan for closing the North | the Round Table of eypeg a hyn Woodward-Hunter intersection and | J¢¥ when they meet at 6:45 to- re-routing traffic will be consid- | night for dinner at the Commu- a | nity : -_ ee ea pada President Floyd Franklin § an- extended across a strip of land | Ounced that the wheel chair the there connecting with Hunter, | club purchased as one of its pro} , | ects last year, will be formally pre- Creation of a special assess- (sented to the Community House at ment district for improvements (tonight's meeting. to the Maple-Chesterfield alley * * United Nations.” Mrs. Forbes Hascall will pre- Broader Way,"’ by Seo Mishina, | when the Fire Arts department | holds its luncheon at the Devon- shire road home of Mrs. William S. Anderson. Mrs, William DaLee will host the literature department at her + Circles I and Il of the Congre- gational Church will hold 12:30 re p. m, meetings tomorrow, Circle ee I will meet with Mrs. Alfred P. "| D_ .. at her home on Yorkshire, : while Circle II holds its meeting at the W. Brown street home of Mrs. John A. Watkinson. with Mrs. p who died in 1913. A resident of Pontiac for 70 sent a book review on “The| years Mrs. Kudner and her hus- band operated the Kudner Bakery for Many years, Surviving is a daughter Mrs. Edith Montgomery of Charlotte, two grandchildren and three great- grandchildren. Funeral will be Tuesday at 2 . m. from the Sparks - Griffin Chapel with burial in Oak Hill Cemetery, The Rev, W. H. Colly- cott will officiate. Charles W. Mann Charles W. Mann, 35, of 6212 Hatchery Rd. died at his residence yesterday after a brief illness. He was born in White Cloud, Kan., on May 17, 1918, the son of Andrew D. and Daisy Keller Mann. He married Geneva Medien here on March 2, 1946. Mr. Mann served in the Army during World War II and was last employed by Dostal Foundry and Machine Co. Surviving besides his parents and widow are a son, Charles W. Mann Jr., at home; two brothers and a sister, Gramer L. and Rab- ert D., both of Pontiac, and Mrs. Opal Gardiner of Clarkston. Kenneth L. Hallenbeck, director of the Huron-Clinton Metropolitan Authority, will show slides with | p. m. from the Huntoon Funeral Funeral will be Tuesday at 1:30 Home, with the Rev. Charles the talk he gives at tomorrow’s| Deeg of the Oakland Park Method- meeting of the Exchange Club at | ist Church officiating. Burial will to Speak Here noon at the Community House. . s * Some $647,000 worth of equip- ment will be placed in the almost completed third floor addition of | need arises. At an inter-club meeting at 6:30 tomorrow at th Commue- of Kiwanis. Paul WALTER J. L. RAY Stocker wa have charge of the Twelve Club dinner; 7 p.m—Ford Trac- ter Division Male Chorus practice Tuesday. Jan. 19: 10 a.m —Ruth Shain Exchange Club luncheon; 12:30 p.m.— Christ Church Men's Club luncheon; 3:30-5 p.m.—Girl Scout T: 363, 408; Club dinner: be in Perry Mount Park Cemetery. Joseph Metz the office here. The addition will|shire Rd., was dead on arrival | also have space for 12,000 connec- | Saturday at St. Joseph Mercy Hos- tions, which can be added as the | pital. a. m. from St. Hugo of the Hills will officiate. Joseph Metz, 73. of 90 W. Berk- He was born in Oran, Mo., on July 6, 1880, the son of Frances and Theresa Klipfel Metz. He mar- Stubenrach. is a son, Leo Metz, with whom he made his home. . Other survivors are three sisters, 7 ame Some of this week's events at | Tot. Mrs. pon agg oo oes 3 ev avings iCla the Community House include: | Bertha s ach ot Monday. Jan. 18: 6:30 p.m. — High | Souri. > REGISTERS GRADUATE—Mrs. Alfred Wagner of 1370 Mt. THE PONTIAC PRESS, MOND z GREETS ALUMNAE—Sister Mary William, ad-| ministrator of St. Joseph Mercy Hospital, greets | Osceola Dr., and Miss Mary Shove, 1700 Linwood, two alumna of the hospital’s School of Nursing.| Royal Oak. Some 250 attended the alumna reunion They are Mrs. Orrin Huntoon Jr. (left) of 124) yesterday. Clemens St., of the 1930 class at St. Joseph Mercy Hospital's School of Nursing, registers 1953 graduate Miss Christine Zaffina, 105 | YAY, JANUARY 18, 1954. 2 ener ey £ eeehye 7 ee aes. a ee =e te sortie 3 Alumnae Group to Be Revived Graduates of St. Joseph Nurse School Restore Association Some 250 alumnae of St, Joseph Mercy School of Nursing voted Sunday to reactivate the alumnae association, map out aims and objectives and choose officers Jan. 26. Sunday's program, an alumnae reunion that drew graduates from as far away as Chicago, Lansing, and Cheboygan, featured the Rev. Thomas W. Murphy of Detroit, Cardinal's representative for hos- pitals, as main speaker. Father Murphy emphasized that the alumnae association is organized so nurses can serve the community, mankind and themselves. “You helped create each other's personality in the school of nurs- ing’’ he said. you are of one mind, one with another. It is hoped you will con- tinue these bonds and strengthen them; keep to your ideals and keep your lives up to the dignity of service. "’ Sunday’s program opened with mass in the hospital chapel. Sisters |of Mercy, hosts for the reunion, Henry Clay. Looking on is the Rev. Thomas W. Murphy of Detroit, | served a breakfast in the nurses’ Cardinal’s representative for hospi reunion. tals. He was main speaker at the home, | The breakfast program included lke Would Bolster | Health Insurance (Continued From Page One) ; . | these voluntary organizations can | Mrs. Caroline Beirkhurdt of De-| reach many more people and pro- | vide better and broader benefits.” | Not to Free PWs Eisenhower said the government | Funeral will be Wednesday at 10/| need not and should not go into Burial will be in J. L. Ray Is Scheduled 6:30 p.m.—Kiwanis Club dinner; Torch Repub- Holy Sepulchre Cemetery. Rosary service will be said Tuesday eve- & p.m.—Pythians; mittee ing. Wednesda the insurance business to furnish | Class in International Affairs: 12 noos— | Church, the Rev. Francis Howard | the protection which private and of the St. Hugo of the Hills Church | nonprofit organizations now pro- ©@ns and 1 Briton captured by the vide. * * @ | “But the government,” the Presi- | dent added, ‘‘can and should work | the disabled. 4. Assistance In construction of nonprofit diagnostic or treatment centers for patients who are not to ; Allies Are Warned (Continued From Page One) Allies and 327 Koreans, 21 Ameri- Communists. All have refused to go home. Thimayya re-mphasized in his at Real Estate Board's Wednes -38th Dinner a Thursda “Bpeaker for Pontiac Real Estate | Matiron.5'sp's' > 2 eb Newee Board’s 38th annual dinner Jan. 27 378; ¢:30-8 aS Ay 4 will be Walter J. L. Ray, president | Sup dinner: § pm et Columbea nine of Standard Federal Savings and Society: Bes Scout merit badge commit- Loan Assn. of Detroit and imme. | ““Priday, Jan. 22 10:30 a.m.-3:30 p.m.— diate past president of Kiwanis In- | Senor Workshop; 8 p.m. —Tailiaferro fs- traatona eng oe . ure ir concert The —_ be at 6:30 p.m. tonal Benkhe n the emple, 114 Orchard * Saturday, Jan. 23: 7 Lake Ave., according to William p.m. — Horticul- Mrs. Gratz B. Bowles qualified to discuss financial prob- | Gatz B. (Isla) Bowles, 76, of 6345 lems,” said Knudsen, “‘being a | Orchard Lake Rd., will be at Em- member of the Advisory Council |erson, Mo. tomorrow. Arrange- of*the Federal Home Loan Bank | ments are by Bell Chapel of the Board and past president of the | William R. Hamilton Funeral Co. United States Savings and Loan! Mrs. Bowles died at her resi- League of Chicago.” | dence Saturday after a long illness. Chairman for the dinner is Ken-| Besides her husband, she is sur- neth G. Hempstead, with Maxwell | vived by two sons, Paul B. of Pon- H, Doerr acting as co-chairman. | tiac and L. Parker of West Bloom- Edward A. Maier will be toast-| field Township, a sister and a master. A limited number of tic- | brother. kets are available from any mem- Mrs. Stella E. Fisher bey of the board, said Knudsen. | service for Mrs. Stella E. Fisher, 2 81, of 546 Ridgedale wi _m. The Weather & Chapel of oe tomorrow froni Bell Chapel of the William R. Hamilton Co., with bur- ial in Greenwood Cemetery, She died suddenly at her residence inds | Saturday. A daughter, Lucille of Birming- ham, survives. Harmon D. Besancon Teday in Pontiac heres heme cg y preceding s m.: ¥ a a i Service for Harmon D. Besancon, Sun Fines "Tueoday st Yt om 93, of 1069 Glengary Rd. will be meee eee | Ween me rieann ce oon o . Hamilton Co. veined ro ®. =. 4d 9 0B's one 19| arrangements were not announced. . + fee 3° He died Saturday at the home of 3 his daughter, Mrs. F. Charles Dur- ‘ary "pete et apr be e- $1 one ter y ~~ gametes ar iee | survived by two other daughters thoperetare,. clicti222 $] Miss Ruth Besancon of Birming- cloudy. ham and Mrs. William E. Burnett of Detroit; a son, Charles of De- troit; a brother, one sister, three grandchildren and five great grandchildren. ee eheee a Detroit hospital. include his widow, Funeral Home. Ernest A. Pearson Ernest A. Pearson, 48, of 6) Ardmore Ave. died at St. Joseph | Mercy Hospital Saturday after an | illness of three months. } 1905, the son of Petrie Pearson. erine Johnson. Mr. Pearson was last employed as manager of the meat depart- ment at Farmer's Market. He was a member of the Oakland County Sportsmen’s Club. Surviving besides his widow and mother are a son and daughter, Mrs. Earnestine Brisson of Detroit and Richard at home, and three grandchildren. Two sisters and two brothers, Wyvilla Pearson and Mrs. Gladys Cornfeot, both of Clio, Walter Pearson of Detroit and Roland Pearson of Pontiac, also survive. Funeral will be Wednesday at 1:30 p. m. from the Huntoon Funeral Home, with the Rev. Walter Teeuwissen of Drayton Plains United Church officiating. Burial will be in White Chapel Cemetery. He married Cath- James R. Tippen James R. Tippen, 49, of 25 E. Hopkins Ave. died suddenly at his home today. He was born in Prosperg, Md., on. March 27, 1904, the son of Frank and Anna Murphy Tippen. He married Cora Filsinger in Prosperg. Surviving are his father, widow and two sons, Richard and Ber- nard, both at home. Also sur- viving are two brothers, Omer and William, both of Pontiac. . Funeral will be Wednesday at 9 a. m. from St. Michael Church with burial in Mt. Hope Cemetery. Recitation of the Rosary will take place Tuesday at 8 p. m. at the Brace Funeral Home. The body may be viewed at the funeral home after 7 this evening. Hero’s Widow, 94, Dies with them to study and devise | /atest letter that he is returning better insurance protection to meet | the 22,400 “as prisoners’’ and that the public need. | freeing them would violate the “I recommend the establishment | armistice. - He was born in Caro March 4, | Clarence and Ruby of a limited federal re-insurance service to encourage private and nonprofit health insurance organi- zations to offer broader health pro- tection to more families. This ser- vice would re-insure the special additional risks involved in such broader protection. It can be The UNC has informed the In- dians it is ready to accept the prisoners. An Indian spokesman said the Communists have not replied. The spokesman said Thimayya |} was planning a “final report on launched with a capital fund of | whether war prisoners would be 2% million dollars provided’ by the | returned on Jan. 20,"" as soon as government, to be retired from re-| the Reds answer. This touched off insurance fees." Although Eisenhower did not go into detail on what he meant by in mind something along the gen- eral idea of the system by which the government insures bank de- positors against loss. The private health plans would pay a fee for the insurance against major losses, and these fees, it was. contem- plated would in time repay the 2 million dollars set up to start the system. * * * Most existing private plans cov- er only a specified number of days of treatment at a specified maximum cost. Presumably, more benefits might be allowed if the financing was more assured, The House Commerce Commit- tee has been holding hearings on a bill which would set up a pro- gram along the lines Eisenhower suggested. In hig message today, Eisen- however said there has been rapid progress in the United States to- ward better health. ee * “Yet, much remains to be done,” he declared. ‘‘Approximately 224,- 000 of our people died of cancer last year. This means that cancer will claim the lives of 25 million of our 160 million people unless the present cancer mortality rate is lowered, * o * Calling for expanded construc- tion of medical care facilities, the urged 1. Additional federal assistance 2, Assistance in the building of nonprofit medically super- vised nursing and “re-insurance,” he apparently had | | speculation that the Indians might change their decision, which they originally described as “‘the final say.” ‘Island’ Annexation on April 5 Ballot BIRMINGHAM — The Oakland County Board of Supervisors offi- cially placed the annexation of the 4-acre Troy Township ‘“‘island’’ within Birmingham on the April 5 ballot today. Their action also called a spe- cial election in Troy on that. date to reach a decision on the ‘‘Por- ritt” property slated for a 240 unit | duplex and single family residence project if the annexation is ap- proved. ‘British Plan Transmitters | LONDON ~The British Broad- |casting Corp. disclosed today it! idea will build 51 frequency modulation transmitters to overcome inter- ference to its sound programs by European radio stations. —# an invocation by the Rev. Thomas | Currier, hospital chaplain; welcom | trom Sister Mary William, hospit- 'a administrator and memoriam for deceased graduates by Miss notes were presented by Ms. Ms. James C. Greene, ing, scheduled for 7:30 p.m. at the hospital auditorium, will be Mrs. James Greene. Steering committee, which will present aims and ob- jectives and nominat officrs, in- cluds Miss Hazel Pace, Miss Bar- bara Kemp, Mrs. Chapman Best, Mrs. Kevin Ritter and Mrs. August Boucher. Baby Unlocks Door When Candy Calls KANSAS CITY, Kan. @—How do you get a 2-year-old ‘oy to open the bathroom door after he has locked himself in? Mrs, Donald E. Martin, wife of their seven children pleaded with little Donald B, Martin for half Howard Hughes a Genius Uses Fortune Many Ways With Mechanical Things, “Because of that light, yet making news. Howara Hughes, who has enough y to do what he wants and does it—with the flair. In five stories, of Ww this is the first, behind the scenes Hughes is really to tell ‘yeu wnat like.) By JAMES BACON HOLLYWOOD i®—Houston, Hollywood and Las Vegas are | three fabulous places. And the most fabulous citizen of each may well be Howard Hughes. All unwillingly, if you listen to the friends who paint him as the | shy, retiring ype. Yet he's always | doing things that get him in the) papers. What kind of man is this phan- tom, who sometimes acts like a throwback to the rugged individu- alists of another century? Is he genius? Or an overgrown | boy who toys with movie studios, | and oil wells and airplanes? : J LJ Let's try to smash through that small army of high paid public. relations men and executives who run interference for him. | No executive in the country, in- | cluding the President, is harder to get to than Hughes via normal channels. It's amazing how many | in Hollywood, including some of his high priced help never have | seen the man. Yet once you get to talk with | | him, he’s easy going, charming and courteous. And not too hard to find if you keep late hours. * * - | Hughes, first of all, is a mechani- | cal genius. It’s not difficult to un- | derstand why. He is the son of a | man who did almost as much as | Henry Ford to roll America into the motor age. Hughes’ father invented the | famous rock hit oil well drill with | | 166 cutting edges that chews | | through flint as easily as mud. | | With it, drillers al] over the world | first were able to strike the 16,000, feet depths that tapped unknown | petroleum riches. | Howard was born in Houston but | spent much of his childhood in Dallas. Serious, shy even then, his | favorite toys were tools. Before he | entered high school, he had in- | vented a practical muffler for. bettering by half the record of the late Wiley Post. It was a typical Hughes opera- tion, without fanfare. His scientific devotion almost killed him in 1946 on the first flight of his XF11, a highly experimental plane reputed at that time to be the fastest long-range craft built. He knew for 25 minutes ahead of time that the ship was going to crash but with a designer's curi- osity he loosened his safety belt, inspected the plane and convinced himself that the right propeller was causing the trouble. Then he tried to pancake it on a golf course Instead, he hit three homes and a garage. * . * His chest and left lung erushed, skull fractured, nine ribs broken, burned, bruised, shocked, his doc- tor announced he had little chance to live, The next day he summoned two aides to the hospital and wanted to | conduct business as usual. A hor- | rified doctor stationed a deputy sheriff outside his door with orders to admit no one but doctors and nursés. * * uw Hovering between life and death, Hughes asked the doctor to deliver a message to the military that the propeller caused the crash “Tell them to study it,’’ Hughes gasped, ‘I don't want this to hap- pen to anyone else.'’* Soon he improved enough to find fault with his hospital bed and design a new one, ordering his engineers to build it immediately. “We were amazed,”’ said one hospital official. “‘If he had flown that bed out of the hospital, I wouldn't have been surprised."’ Among his get-well messages was one from President Truman. Enclosed was the medal awarded Hughes five years earlier for his round-the-world flight. He never had bothered to pick it up. Next: The Flying Lumberyard. Mother and Twins Are Killed in Crash (Continued From Page One) of injuries suffered Friday night when he fell from a fire escape at St. Johns high school in Jackson. motorcycles, consructed his own | hot rod of parts from automobile graveyards and monkeyed around with a steam automobile. * Ld s He was 19 when his father died ernment appraised the business at $650,000. By 1949, when 75 per cent of the world’s oil wells were drilled with Hughes equipment, it was worth better than 140 million. That's the price, according to the New York Times, that a Wall Street syndi- cate offered Hughes then. He didn't sell, for it's the fountain of in- come, estimated at better than 3 million yearly that juices yond the county attorney, and five of Two years later he took the same ship across country for a trans- continental record of 7 hours and him big money for the plane but Hughes refused. A friend explains: “Howerd was and still is Holly- wood’s most violent anti-Commu- nist.” ue * * Hughes’ greatest air feat was the 1938 round-the-world flight. He and his crew made the trip in 91 hours, in 1923. Hughes says that the gov- | | 28 minutes.- It stood until late in World War I. The Russian government offered | Leon Struble, 53, of Covert in Berrien county was killed Sun- day merning when his car smashed into a jackknifed seni- trailed on US-31, 12 miles north of Benton Harbor. Earl Heimerdinger, 48, of De- | troit, died of injuries suffered Sat- urday as his car hit a utility pole in the Detroit outskirts. | Henry Olexsey, 34, of Wyan- |dotte, was fatally injured Satur- jday night when his car collided with another in Ecorse township. Sellers, 24, of Ecorse, | was fatally injured early today as | the car in which he and two com- panions were riding hit a Detroit viaduct. Richard Kozlowski, 2%, of De. | troit, was crushed to death Satur- |day by an overhead ¢rane he op- | erated in.the city’s salvage plant. John Deuling, 56, of Fremont, was killed Sunday two miles northwest of Newaygo as the car |in which he was riding struck a tree, throwing him out. Benson Wants OK of Surplus Program (Continued From Page One) that we are not suffering from commodities which are already in overabundant supply creates a false demand.” Referring to Eisenhower's call for a new parity formula based on prices and production costs over the past 10 years, instead of the 1910-14 period, Benson said this would mean a decline in pari- ty levels of no more than 5 per | cent a year. He said: “I believe that all of these changes, taken together, will provide us with a farm program which will keep future production in better balance. It should pre- vent buildups in the huge surpluses of some commodities which we have accumulated." OW... Complete Material SAVE '2 KOREAN BOOTS SPORTSMEN here are values for you! Care ee on our finer quality mixed wool and nylon hunting socks. SLAYBAUGH’S. 287s Open Evenings THERMO SOCKS buy ‘em now! 13 Mile at Woodward ‘World War I poet-soldier hero, convalescent mies, Ged ot, tne ieee : ' n today. . Aid: fn construction of non in health for some time. | profit rehabilitation facilities for 600 Cutlont: Ave. : Phone FE 5-6189 <¥ ‘ 5 . \ ; . > i Sart fj ’ ; hb titers Ge BS p Ah dS ben i eh Ag Nae sk ig? tel ee On ae ner a Nee ee ee eee Wee Cn mee RRS Ss Pee eee ead. “By : my / ; ay ‘ Ba: Beds : Infra-Red Ray Baked Only Michigan’s psin’step Paint Job Included Li S-1 100 ¥ $ 40Vd WIA0 TVW SIXTEEN > ee a | — \ THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, JANUARY 18, 1954 Newlyweds to Make Home in Pontiac Following Wedding Trip in Mountains Before an altar banked with palms and white chrysanthemumg Saturday evening in Salem Evan- gelical and Reformed Church of Tonawanda, N. Y., Norma Jane Stahl became the bride of William Lee Martin, Norma is the daughter of the R, E. Stahig of North Tonawanda, and the Calvin C. Martins of Or- chard Lake avenue are the bride- groom's parents. For the candlelight ceremony, the bride chose a Dior-length Mrs. Roger E, Kaiser was her sister's matron of honor in @ mint green gown of faille taffeta styled with a high court waist and Dior- length skirt. A crown of ivy matched the ivy streamers of her white carnation bouquet. Richard Thomas was best mah, and seating the guests were Lee Masters and the bride's cousin, Peter Hayes-of Tonawanda, N. Y. For the 7 o'clock ceremony Mrs. Stahl selected an emerald green silk taffeta dress with molded bod- ice and flared skirt. She wore a white hat and a corsage of white camellias to complete her costume. Mrs. Martin wore pale gray lace over pink taffeta with pink ec- cessories and a corsage of pink camellias. After a family reception at the home of the bride’s parents, the » MRS. WILLIAM L. MARTIN Sun Season Under Way in Florida Mrs. C. E. Wilson Enjoying Holiday in Southland Honeymooning in the Pocono Mountains are Mr. and Mrs. William L. By ETHEL TOMBRINK Martin who MIAMI — The season officially | . , | arrived this weekend with the were married opening of Hialeah. And more and Saturday more winter residents finally land- evening in ed in the sunny South. Tonawanda, Big doin's ahead will be parties N.Y. The honoring General Motors officials hack 05s who'll be coming down for the ee bride, the 194 Motoramg here next month. j former Norma| Mrs. Charies E. Wilson, wife ae J. Stahl, is the| of the United States secretary of defense, arrived Friday to open daughter of her Surf Club apartment, She Mr. and Mrs. wil} be joined shortly by Mr. R. E. Stahl of | witsen. North Daughter Rosemary and her hus- Tonawanda, band, J. Phil Hoyle, came down from their home in Delray Beach N.Y., and the to welcome the Wilsons back to bridegroom is | Forida. They'll be here with the the son of | Wilsons for a while. Jessie Wilson could be considered Mr. and MTS.\ 1. the “‘best-dressed” list among Calvin C. Cabinet wives, She wears lots of ° w Martin of Peer And he’s 0 vivecions perecs Orchard Lake | with brown eyes and a ready * . avenue smile who thoroughly enjoys trip- ping the light fantastic at the Surf Club parties. new Mrs, Martin changed to a traveling costume of a white flannel sheath dress with a honey and mink searf. Flora Shelly Unit Meets at Church The January meeting of the Flora Shelly Group was held Fri- |day at the First Presbyterian |Church with hostesses Cora Bax- jter, Helen Griggs and Lila Red- her corsage of white cameliiias. After a two-week honeymoon in the Pocono mountains and New York City, the newlyweds will re- side on Parkway drive. The bride is a graduate of | mond. Rochester Institute of Technology Mrs. Louella Minard and Mrs and a member of Phi Upsilon Phi| Margaret Lehman conducted the sorority, William attended Southern | Bible study and devotions. E Illinois University. | Grace Clark introduced the new mission study topic for the year, . |The Church and the C Air Out Oven Pes and the Commun: Before lighting the oven, keep| A short business meeting was the oven door open for a few) conducted by the president, Lulu minutes to make sure leaking gas| McGregor, with plans made for ig cleared from the oven. ithe coming year. Legion Groups Meet in Berkley Legislature, national defense and membership were assigned to American Legion Auxiliaries of District 18 when they met in Berk- ley recently Mrs. Ralph Bogart of Auburn Heights spoke on the Legislature and Mrs. Emil Schwartz of Holly reported on national security. Mrs. Harold Quinn of Farmington spoke jpn membership, as did Mrs. George Danuk of Ferndale. Members were reminded to at- tend the service and rehabilitation| Gorce Island. They were | school of instruction to be held| her mother, Mrs. Doran P. Broth- at 8 o'clock this evening at Old|er of Detroit, who winters at the | Mill Tavern. | Sea View Hotel. evening enjoyed the parade of styles just as much as the women. Don't let them tell you differently! Among the spectators were the E. E. Potters, former Bloomfield Hills residents now living on La with You can speed your WSCS units of Central Methodist | Church met last week in various | Mrs. Emma Blynn was hostess | own Telephone calls 2. Wait for the dial tone. 3. Dial the complete number carefully. For FEderal numbers, always dial the first TWO LETTERS “F” and “E” and then ALL FIVE NUMERALS. TEag MICHIGAN BELL TELEPHONE COMPANY ‘ Save time—help yourself to better telephone service Central Methodist Church). WSCS Groups Conduct Meetings in Local Homes ; was the devotional topic given | by Mrs, George Fisier, who also spoke on “Where Our Missionary Money Goes.” were married 14 North Saginaw __ BOBETTE 223 iy 4 Thursday at her home on Williams | s *- 6 recently in street to members of the Gertrude; Mrs. John Garrison gave devo-| . Howe Unit for a dessert junch-| tions when she entertained the | Christ Lutheran eon. Co hostesses were Mrs. F. J.| Fanny Crosby Group at her home | Church of | Titsworth and Mrs, R. V. Deland. | on Cherokee road a a] om W aterford. “Toward King ’s Goal” | Assisting her were Mr. John ors | . 2 _ — and Mrs. Earl Decker. Members She bed the ; i sewed cancer pads. forméeP Rae y * « om Thursday evening the Lois Par- sen andr 9 i ker Group met in the Hamilton ughter of the : street home of Mrs. Philip Miller. Leland Mrs, Dwight Lantz was a guest. Trarops of Devotions were led by Mrs. Les- Willi ter McClellan Jr., and Mrs. Irwin remencaes Brockie read an article on the drive. Pullippines. The E. N. Members of Lucy Webb Hayes Smiths of Unit gathered at the home of Mount Clemens Mrs. George Dietrich on Pres- . tom avenue for an afternoon salad street are his huncheon. parents. Mrs, L. B. Rubey was recog- nized on the occasion of her 74th birthday, and she gave devotions | MR. and MRS. JOHN H. SMITH on “Unselfishness in Service | Clubs” and read a poem, “Self.” . | Mrs. Aca Sabisch; Mr. and Mrs. Mrs. Eleah Patten spoke on a | Wisner to Have | Rance i a Caden ous politica] issue and Mrs. Arthur Sweet gave a talk. Assisting the Cub Program | those selected hostess were Mrs. Mary Smith! . | een and Mrs. Sterner Anderson. Parents of Wisner School pupils | Women’s Chorus 7 fr * jinterested in a Cub Scouting pro- | : _ ANNE CAMPBELL Mrs. Harold Boughner gave de-| p+4m met Thursday evening in Planning Activities . . votions at the meeting of the Mar-|) 4) alee Pontiac W '. Chk sans “Poetry in Everyday Living” is| tha Sheldon Group in the home of |“ S000! Bymnas | Fontac Women's \norus execu- the title chosen by Anne Campbell | Afleen Cook on South Edith street| An organizational committee of | tive board made plans to revise of Detroit for her talk to be given | Thursday evening. brian i. os a Stanley the constitution of the club and | Tuesday when the Pontiac Junior * 7 8 mer, Mr. Mrs. Fran . orthcoming spring by Child Study Club meets in the} Clara Swain Group met with | Brooks, the Jerry Ryans and Lor- seed aotire when members Bloomfield Hills home of Mrs.| Mrs. Fred Ferguson on Henry | enzo Ramos arranged the meeting meet wth Mrs. iareid Tripp of ; Robert Bannow. Clay avenue for a schoolgirl Representing the Boy Scout of- Dakota drive 3. 4 luncheon, Cohostesses were Mrs. [fice were R. W. McMillen and ~~ ' Auxi | iar C, L, Clough and Mrs. Martha | Harold Wright. Mr. McMillen ex- " te »|Plained the history, aims and | * Y | Torreon, Fear Tow, not Gy thet Seow poe | WILLIAM K. COWIE | gram and seven den mothers and Has Health win and Mrs. Percy Jones led | tathers were selected. | Custom Upholstering * 2 « Mr. and Mrs. Bruce Allen, Mr. | §2! Years of Practical Experience Conference Mrs. Carroll Porritt reviewed the and Mrs. John Jess, the Jesse | )378 Orchard Lk. Ave. FE 4-2857] Grand Rapids: was the setting| Progress of women in the past | Adlers, the James Foxes, Mr. and ' $.-»-a»-as-ae-a~ae-ae-s a tly for the Area “D” confer- century when Fern Bank Group |. ——— ence of Rehabilitation Committee | ™¢t_with Mrs. Arthur ot American on, Quidand avenue, tisen Kinney 1 SEE US FOR QUALITY Speakers at the Wednesday ses- — ona eee sion included Harry Shafer, Amer. Guteg Ge me ican Legion national repre- . . oe ine T h chief of nurs-| *Teet Tuesday evening with Mrs ing service, Fort Custer Veterans aioe Sele aad Ms. Emery Your gorments are safe in our expert care! Core- comb assisting the hostess. Hospital; Dorothy mig Con Mrs. Wesley Johnson gave de- ful spotting, pressing ond expert handling of the therapy at : ew fabrics assure your satisfaction. ter Veterans Hospital, and the Rev.|YOUO"S- —a oo arts yay of Dearborn Mrs, N, E. Maytag presented ; Call FE 4-2579 Today for Govetions om “Spictinal Help for Free Pickup and Delivery Others were N. E. Schieb, | the New Year” to members of ‘it Veteun Mepis; den | stadeoettadernae we || GRESHAM CLEANERS inaw Veterans Hospital; John | at Se oe | Engesather, vice chairman of the | liams street home of Mrs. ii, Ockland Avenue Phone FE 4-2579 national committee and hospital | Simpkins. 7 director, whe led an open dis- Mrs, Arthur Sweet spoke briefly. —_ workshop. + Susannah Wesley Group met with | duded Bradley R. Taylor of the | rest Quien \aced devotions on -_ American Legion national legisla-| "> f Notice is hereby given that in con- | the trouble; exp a around a point hig Motorama opening Thursday in “? ““" ©! second with a 20,000; rmity with the “Michigan Election | non-surgical, non - medical treat- lower. New York : candlepower red flare: lasting a, Laws.’ I the undersigned City Clerk | ment which has proven successful The railroads, steels, motors, and Thos . he minumum of # seconds will upon any day except Sunday oF | for the past 35 Years. aircrafts were mixed. On the high- are R epg beet " d ar in a — oc specie) casction os primary election You now ne obligation in —<- 2 - . . . m ° 1G, Vision ee YTICE 1s J REBY GI” EN THAT AT receive for registration e ame of | ing or t instructive book. er side were oils, air lines, utils general manager; G. A. Detaney “etd hen f ibe Brandon Township any legal voter in said C { Pontiac may be the means of sa you ties, coppers, chemicals, rubbers, i - : H. A. Deeter. ¢ 4 +e Bra Township Hai not already registered , wi > 0D sy apply years of untold misery. Wi to- : chief engineer; : . r i 4 anua 11, 1954 personally for su registration mail orders, and distillers. The ra- al troller. M. F. Rum * wer 8 Notice is hereby further given that 1 Gay to The Badl Clinic, . 1624, . 4 hang- | visional comptr . * —s A Re r the opera at the City Ha n Monday Excelsior Springs, M \o dio-television section was unchang | mel, purchasing agent; W. R. Mu r g of . store ed to lower. : ’ S ROR) Huteh. | 24 a antling : ; |ner, body engineer; R. R. Hutch engip J ; \ Trading was fast at the start MRS: LOIS COTTRELL linson, assistant chief engineer; 2s xiang ¢ y Michiga at = sie ey ate and J, P, Charles, assistant chief ali operate c ereafter pace siowed. lag- aintein a ‘ ‘ os 999 ; ngineer. ; . ‘e rne ara Mohawk Power, last week's eng) lemant.ing et n- May we serve you: most active issue, opened today on Others are B. E, Starr, gen- os the bu . a block of 3,000 shares up % at 29. | | eral manufacturing manager; K. mot e nt w Cities Service started on 1,000 |. hour J, Longpre, production manager; .icense | nat ~ , «A & shares up a point, and American ; H. E. Crawford, general sales * vis , Telephone opened on 2,200 shares manager; E. J, Chapman, assis- | Jun ' ne anti > Joe unchanged at 158%. . tant ae ——, and | Dotiers for each year ce 11 a The market last week with four | . . ©. Jamieson, assis gen- [ot A . ‘wy | oays She Didn't Know erat sates manager expire on tne first day of Pebruary | straight advances broke into new | : al sa Ker. lowing the date of ance INSI IR ANCE |high ground for the current recov-| 3-Year-Old Would Die 1. w. Walker, sated promotion | nereuner inti tic sppuitust abil ha piv, De ‘: ANCE ery movement from the mid- . manager, R. W. Emerick, direc-| ¢epositee with the cerk a bond Mike Daniels ‘raw September low for 1953. The Asso- | From Beatings tor, public relations; G. M. Watson, | form and with suretics approved t AGENCY a its | chest le a "| tt | An expectant mother held in Oak-| personnel director; J. B. Meid-| bosrd, copditioned that tne applica stood at its highest level in aroun : lein. traffic director; and L, V.| visions of the state law and of - ° . é ai or “f zat . , . tlor 4 th ¢ 4 » * 4. eight months. | land County Jail for inve suigation Ostrander project engineer, also — a during the continuance a 8 15 2 W ° Huron St. I h. FE 4 7644 of murder in the death of her three- "Mectian P f plan to be there | eecton 4 All appilicatior roa New York Stocks | year-old daughter told today how! Attending also will be B. B, Kim- | Heen*e unde ; pm all Ie | Pigures after decimal points are eighths | She went to Pontiac State Hospital | ball, advertising manager | Turmishe ” e aa aan, Zeon Adams Exp... 1 Greyhound 136 | “to find out what was the matter nen shall] be filed with the township clerk | fi a lair Reduc .... 246 Gulf OW 46 MacManus. John & Adams, | *ccompanie ear |Alleg L Sti... 312 Holland P 114) that I didn't want her.” ; " | whieh, 4 © applicat ‘| |allied Ch ...,, 73.1 Homestk 351 Inc., Bloomfield Hills advertis- | and the jicense issued —Mre y ») P . t ene fund of the t | [Ailed tre 2: 384 Houd eran "143 |—Mrs. Lois Cottrell, 22, of Royal ing firm, has formed a Canadian | the semeral fund ofthe ane Alum Lid .... 402 Ul Cent 76 Oak maintained she didn't know! subsidiary with offices in Tor- | If the applicant a corporation. part- | Inland 8tl 426 | > mone . . nersh) r s8ociatior e p tion ‘ an ring A inapir Cop ... 226 that daily whippings since last Oc-, onto Ronald Cross has been | (54) a e the names and addreagne Am Car & Pdy 33.7 interte is bo 3 tober would result in the child’s| @PPointed production manager of .— persons interested therein, Each 4 y ) Am Cyan Sa iaet the new office itten apr f at least sevento-five | estroys Unpleasant {nt Nick 65 . € written a eas ver ive om Gas & m=. 8 int Paper 563 death. “If I'd known what | know The subsidiary will serve | per cont of e owner fat att ng. con Y ' Am 4 & Pay.. a 3 wry ER ae now this wouldn't have happened,’’| Dow Chemical Co. of Canada, ¢ . oy ) a "la Household Odors A Gas ; 167 | 7 . bounder . Am Rad 142 pone Darr = she declared | Ltd., Bendix Eclipse of Canada, — . posed loca | 9 2« $1 Am Sesting .. 24 Kresge 88 33.1 | Ltd., and other of the company’s Section 5 All applicatior 6 oz Bc + oz |Am Smelt 296 Kroger “6 The mother and father, Mar- Jiente which have Canadian op- ndéer this resolution she Am 8U Pd 4 tehn & P 16 tin. 27. of 823 Etowah. both ad CHents ‘ . by the clerk to the towns | = Lie Tel y LOP Glass 421 mn, si, @ tow ° ad- erations regula , meeting ra j Anac Cop 314 Prvdigrag® ty ot mitted in formal statements to — such application’ The \ _ 7 Armour 95 Cockh Aire 274 Assistant Oakland County Prose- General Motors Do Rasil, deemed advisabie. adjourn Poaow — Loew's Mu y subsidiary of the U. S. corpora on any application fer th at st Line | ; st : S° | holdin ’ hearings At] Refin 29.6 Sack Trecke 108 ee ee tion, has a ‘‘green light’’ today ad tonal taformation sesardis “Ee y latins Pdr |... 374 Senet pig 243) had repeatedly struck the girl, (yy) | Pilcation. No license shall issu or our Avoc Mig : Martin O! 116!) Lots Ann. He is being held in | to start a five-year, $100,000,000 | tne application therefor is “0 | Geld Lime 1 May D Str 293 ; | expansion program intended to | proved by the majority of tn J . | Cc | ger Ohio . 188 eesd © 227, Royal Oak Jail for investigation ste Bros soon more locally- | %f,,'2¢beerd. The board may ewe ry ase Mid Cont Pet. 673 of cruelty to children. wwe ; t r Benguet ...-- 7 sonsan Ch .. 83.5 produced motor vehicles a year. public YES. both your furs and your ou. $2.3 . . - moral aire . Seth Bu 82.3 oe He They insisted they struck the President Getulio Vargas yester- | section € No leense hereunder shall jewelry are worth plenty. Boeing Airp .. 2 Victorola 325 | child because “she wasn't exactly| day authorized the firm to pur- | >t, sranted for any business to be lo- Could you afford to buy them Bohn Alun 206 c O-£ pa) . ’ ; cated m one hundred feet from the all over again if they were Bond Strs ws 5 4 right,"’ and Cottrell said he had to! chase cruzeiros (Brazilian | nearest limits of any state or county b Borden . 02 —— oe 10 |strike the girl to “make her oney) at the special rate of 25 | ™shwey Within ome thousand feet accidentally lost or d | Sorg Warn % Cont can. $62)... mone’ ; iid om o m ihe intersection of any pubiie stolen. burned? Srigge atts 4 Cont Mot 42) Move to the dollar to finance neces- | bishwars, oe, crete Sovowe, beasnes Sect A jewelry-Pur policy querds | peed Co ay oot St. ..--- sé! Lois Ann was returned to her sary imports. building. All premises shall be enclosed you against these and a long | Qurr Add 165 Cruc sti...... 23.1 parents last Oct. 4 after having as | Seam coven fect haat. oameeea ath oe list of other perils. Ask us png H = Curtiss Wr.... © | been boarded out since April on . ® ® | least two coats of white paint. No mo- . | Can Pas D1 Det Edis 20 : | tor vehicles or any part thereof. or any | Doug Aire . &2 >the recommendation of a city | equipment or material used in such bust- Copttal Atri 10 Dow Chem.... 364 nurse y | ness, shall be used. stored or parked at — 4. Ay ey OwPont 106.4 | ; . | any time outside of such enclosure. No Celanecs mage Pim 4 | Plankel said he was told by. Mrs | otvertening ign ‘a connection with |Ghet & Onto 47 Gastm Kod... st1| Cottrell that she hated the girl t |e eee ee rel ie Ei Aute L ~ 43.6 | cece . nearest blic high } oo . Ei & Mus In.. 15) since I saw her m the hospital PES u Section 7 Every pereen licensed under Crests Pea Emer Rad.... 106 | after she was born.” T ~ _——— +} he provisions oY Uhls Fesolution shall] Geen .- Mueller Br... 4 7 . | keep & suitable book in fui | moce Cola... Cp... +« j font conidia: seaien mamelt evs Lashes at Depression Se i “<<. 324 | her like I did the other children,” - on hot Net Cosh W.. 61 | she said. . ‘alk, Predicting Only | id saa comps : End Jone +: SOT ESt ienaeccc, 5081 The Coftrelis have two other Adi purchase Such record shall be — - 8 Nat lh vesee am Overall justment inspection at any time by any law en- aan a3 Net The... ¢7| children, Charles, 4, and Made- forcement officer of the state. county or Preept . -.» 7 any municipality. No purchase of any Gen Bee . ms id Geosral. ; rh line, 1. By UNITED PRESS ” | Property ~ be mate from any per- . eee ‘ ic © e age © enty-one years, | —e oa — ~ 4 Nort & West.. 41 An autopsy Saturday night re- ‘Henry Ford II took an ror 154 without the written approval of his or | Gen Ry Sig 29.1 No Am Av..... 715 vealed the baby’s death was due | view of business prospects for Sor Sasent or guardian, poe soe nn oo pn ss ter Bta Pw... 1440 & beating and the mother ad- | Sunday and lashed out at Persons | "Section 8 Any license issued hereunder | Olllette 411 > age Airl.... 81 | mitted in her statement that she | “preaching gloom” for the nation’s may be vovehes ty the tennship board | | as tt i . y ve ° y t Iteensee of the Ip owl Br wna + wor Sry eee _ | beat Lois Ann Friday afternoon | economy in the new year [laws of this state or the ordinances of | ‘ | Sooavear 58 Pan Am W A.. 102! and put her to bed about 3 p.m. | The president of Ford Motor Co. any municipality therein. or of the | 4 |Grah Paige 12 Param Pict -_ “] t he . all right | told news fe e at Phila- provisions of this resolution. Upon re- | ; é ee aa an tor work the | dlohia incre was mo. basis for ion tine worssiy outa” shat fits | sy @Ai Proviaeat, employed cd or single—evi « prompe | : . . w y 4a (Off ° ° | Secwe Der 43 Texas Co 50.5 | when my husband left for work t del there = date for hearing thereon, and the clerk rt “W by Certainly!” wo theit loan request. Every effort is w ft LJ | Penney JC). 771 -Tex G Sul #97 | next morning,”’ she continued, ‘‘but | fears of a depression. ao} shall pire the , Meeneee written notice §] joan wo your specific seeds and income with a payment date that's * Tho Pa 513 . ; ¢] dev | thereof at least five days im advance | ; A rs rare 7] Pepet cole .. ia8 Twent C Pox 23 | later I was afraid something wasn't| In a related > nmr tole [of such hearing Upon the date of | ,| coavenient. You'll like the friendly, neighborly stmosphere at Provident. |§ Phelps D 324 guterweed 4 1| right and called my doctor. President Walter P. ay | peareie. oF = es Seo. | 4 | And you will Gnd chat your loan transaction is truly a pleasant experi 44 J | . $ } = 5 iW | board i \ j . : . Phiise ict 39.4 On Carbide un7| Mrs. Cottrell, who is expecting | in Detroit listed a five-point legis-| iting upon such ‘allewed ticlation, | #5 @mce. Phone, write, or just drop in. e P Pet $74 Unit Air Lin 23.1| another child momentarily, said | lative program to ward off threats | and. i it appears that the licensee is| ¢ Loans mode on Signature, furniture or Aute ‘ Pit Plate Gi 53.5: Unit Aire 4a A . ed gl : and “help meet the | Sullty thereof the board may adopt a} ¢ < * ‘ oct G 1 United Cp 5 | she couldn't recall what prompted | of a recession P resclution revoking the license theretofore! 6 *® - Unit Fruit ... 47 j growing unemploy- | granted. but shall not be liable for th Pure ol iis u's Lines .. 162 | the final beating. problem of Y return of the license fee theretofore paid | ; ta” Provident Loan Ps RKO Pic . 3.2 4 . Bed 30.5 ment.’ ny the Beanese. - si eee ‘ —9 r it 01 is resolution shall ome | svsTem Detroit ee . oy O 8 Steel ... 404 Despite rumors to the cOm- | effective ‘at midnight on first day of | ** and Savings Society of “% Reo Motors :. 30.6 Yen Real ... 38% oun alls trary, Ford said, “There are |Fepruary is4. 2nd Floor + Lawrence Bidg., 7 WEST LAWRENCE ST. ya Met $45 Warn B Pic | 137 Joan Forster definitely no layoffs scheduled at ‘ HELEN TUCKER JENCKS Gerald Harvey, Manager « PONTIAC « FEderal 2-9249 Scovill Mf .. 266 Waukesha M 13.6 oan * Township Clerk - te of off Sead ALAR ©. 3.7 W Ve Pulp -. 281) SAGINAW — Service and burial| Fords. Jon ¥6, SA —_— ee eee Sea $ = Shell ol... 4 WwW A Brk 247 | for Joan Forster, 33, of Saginaw| He said, however, he believed - a = FS ba a od $4 |will e held here tomorrow. She/ the auto industry would produce eae Sou Pac... 382 Woolworth 43. | died Saturday. | 70,000 to 1,400,000 less vehicles this Pe a akse Saree ws" Young ea m3 | Surviving are 11 brothers and | year than in 1953. ps] Sperry St fnert 8&7 2 | sisters, including Andrew of Bir-| Reuther's program called for an , ' aii , Std Ol| Calif $8.4 lark Equip .. 33.7 | mingham and John of Royal Oak. | increase jobless pay benefits ta on Ns |. ts Sones 43 Jack D. Jocye from 65 to 85 per cent of the state Btd Be LAKE ORION — Service’ for|or national average wage and “nr STOCK AVERA Jack D. Joyce, 29, of 707 Lake-| extend the duration of paymen piled by the Asso- | view, will be tomorrow at 11 a. m. | periods. 1s « |at Farmer-Snover Funeral Home,| He also asked that the minimum Indust Rails Us So, (Pontiac, with burial in Perry | wage be boosted from the current ms ss 308-9 Mount Park Cemetery. He died | 75 cents an hour to $1.25. ry : : bos ba? 1138 | Suddenly Satruday at the home of/ gig other three proposals re- Be oi i83 his father, George, of 152 Hillcliff, expansion of social se- ns w&. ; 8 848 118.7 | Pontiac. curity coverage and increased 7° 307 ste | Surviving besides his father are!) ) .ofts to a maximum of $200 a r 4 " “ Se i A ang ge eu * \ . rails Italian Group Zemo, a doctor's formula, promptly relieves itching of surface skin r eczema, prickly heat, athlete's foot. Zemo stops scratching and so aids faster healing and clearing. Buy Extra Strength Zemo for stubborn cases. Ca) Keego Theater “Little Boy Lost” With Bing Crosby « —ALSO— “A Lion in the Street In Technicolor with . oe ee es oe I *ssshistii New Lake Theater WALLED LAKE 420 Pontiac Trail . N N N ‘ a See Ly ey ee a a Wi 7s 4 a eee Se] Se i ee oe \ a iil . es i i ed ee ne ee i ‘ ie « hrs 4 ? — ep ng ~~ —e~ * © TIE PONTIAC PRESS MONDAY, JANUARY 18, 1954 = * ee CSF > — Middle-Grounc Tactics for lke? Say President Fencing for ‘Center-Course’ Tag in Political Arena . WASHINGTON # — President Eisenhower was said by close as- sociates today to be prepared to press for legislation he believes congressiona] leaders that while s0Me compromises may be in or- der, he is prepared to turn on the heat to get major proposals en- acted in this session. A case in point apparently in- volves his recommendations for changes in the Taft-Hartley labor law. os 7 * The Presiderit' sent Congress a series. of proposed amendments that set up’ a how! from two sides, with organized labor objecting to some and-management to others. Associates said Eisenhower ex- pected just such a reaction. The administration aim, as dis- closed by one of those who has discussed it at the White House, is to get Congress to pass amend- ments which will be accepted in the public mind as “‘liberalizing” the Taft-Hartley Act. The prospect that union leaders will criticize the net result as be- ing too little and segments of man- agement will say the changes fa- vor the unions is calculated to give the whole business a middle-of-the- road look to the average voter, - . ao To get some amendments to the act, there are clear signs that the administration is prepared to throw overboard the strike vote proposal which union leaders have attacked and which ‘he President appears to have included in his message with reluctance. = +. * Eisenhower's social security rec- ommendations, which were warm- ee Re ee Detroit Pastor Preaches Here Inter - Church Meeting Is Ald at All Saints Episcopal Church “Ye are of more value than many sparrows,” Matt. 10, 31, was the text Dr. Chester A. Me- Pheeters chose Sunday evening for his sermon at All Saints Epis- copal Church. Dr. McPheeters, pastor of Met- ropolitan Methodist Church, Detroit, spoke on “The Glory of the Gospel’ at the second in the series of Inter-church fellowship meetings of the year. “To you this text does not bring a thrill, but to the folks to whom Jesus spoke, they were words of hope to a nation that was helpless. When Christ said to them, ‘You are worth something, and God will do every- thing he can to redeem you,’ it was ray of light in a dark world,” the speaker said. Domestic Ritt Is Lamented by Ida Lupino By BOB THOMAS HOLLYWOOD w—Looking back on the wreckage of her third mar- riage, Ida Lupino sighed: “I guess he just didn't want to be domes- tieated.”’ | “There was no other reason,” she said. “He just didn’t want to be settled down. It's too bad. I feel sorry for him. He may feel that Way now, but wait until he gets a little older. He'll feel awfully lonely. He'll wish he had someone | to hold on to.” ” . . She was speaking about her es- tranged husband, Howard Duff, A | lorg-time bachelor, he is the fel- | low who played Sam Spade on the | radio, One day he walked out of the house and didn’t return. “After Christmas, he brought his mother by the house to see Bridget, our daughter,” Ida said. ‘Other than that, I haven't seen him in the last 10 or 12 weeks.” Being an actress, writer, director and producer, Ida is an active) woman. But she said she tried to} He said the validity of one’s religion is manifest in the kind of a God he has. “When God made man in his own image, he also designed that every man should have a special identification and purpose for his life. - “Christianity teaches that human life has great value, that God gives to each a personality, an ap- titude and that he made each different in uniqueness,"’ he said. Many do not know what they are worth and few live up t6 What they are worth, he suggested. He quoted Luther Burbank as one saying, “A weed is a neg- lected plant. If weeds have a value, certainly human beings have.” “There are no insurmountable handicaps in a Christian land,” he - “ | | opportunities do not come in pagan | said and in this connection he|@ happy marriage | spoke of Dr. George Washington | who will give and take |Carver and Helen’ Keller. “Such | ther and who are emotionally make Duff a happy home. During the four months of their recent | recenciliation, she stayed home and | tended to the house, she said. | = . . “But he just doesn’t go for the domesticity bit,’’ she said. | Ida's two previous husbands were | actor Louis Hayward and producer | Collier Young. I asked how come she always chose husbands from | show business. beans will yield about five gallons of castor ,oil, College Handyman Loafs Around Home |—5570 sur CARBONDALE, Ill. (UP)—Rich- True Detective tasides ond ard Hoffarth is working his way | Front pages, through Southern Illinois Univer-|] All True Detective Magazines. sity as a sort of collegiate ‘‘Availa- | Piper's Magazine Outlet ble Jones." a5 Auburn Ave. FE 3-9869 Hoffarth, a mathematics junior | | About 100 pounds of good castor a from East St. Louis, Ml., advertises | himself as a specialist in “doing | the odd jobs husbands hate." } Hoffarth has fought wasps in an | attic, washed windows in a 200-| pane house, picked pears, done | gardening, and cleaned gutters on an almost perpendicular roof. “One woman had me tar the | cracks between the floorboards in her apartment to keep the beetles | out,” he said, Hoffarth's odd jobs keep him} busy about 20 hours a week. His wife and fellow mathematics stu- | dent, Hallie, is not completely in | favor of his activities. “I can never get him to do any- | thimg around the house,"’ she said. | Phone FE 5-833! | Prices: Mat. 35c-Eve., Sun. 55c Kids Always liée Today and Tomorrow } Open 1:45 P.M.—B. O. Open ‘ttt | 11:30—Mat. 406, Eve. @00, Child 180 | : | “Because show business people |are the only ones I meet,” she! replied I hazarded the observation that most of the happy marriages in Hollywood consisted of one mate who was out of the picture bus- iness. Would that be a solution | for her? * . 7 “Oh, no, ducky,’’ she answered. | “It really doesn't matter what | business you're in. All it takes for Need I say more?” is two people | with each | “Little Boy Lost” ’ y rece eimed tn te oes vereting| ARMS AND THE WOMAN—Jeff Chandler and Maureen O'Hara | countries, but they do in countries | Duff was originally slated to be With Bing Crosby psa Jaints that his party has been | 5t@F in “War Arrow,” Universal-International’s outdoor saga of the|that have heard the story of | directed in “The Story of a Cop” —ALSO— 4 haatiaeary, | West. Based on historic events at Fort Clark, Texas, the Techni-| Christ,"’ he suggested. wore = ne Gret place ane fs “Half Hi oo 5 The President is represented as| color movie stars ( handler in the role of Major Howell Brady. Suzan “The glory of the Christian Gos- | wot going to direct the picture. Alec This Exciting Wit Starts a Hero | having reached the conclusion that| Ball co-stars, with John McIntire, Charles Drake, Dennis Weaver and | pel is in that God knows your, «rm neither directing, producing At 11:10 2:20 - 5:30 - 8:40 With Red Skelten ” | it isn’t enough for him n some Noah: Berry in leading roles. ed | hame and you have worth. This is or casting,” she remerted. “Tf | Sy | He is said to want = misen er| | the metivation of the revolution-| toward is not in the picture, it WWII ODA AA E® samp pu on t apeinicen | Ss M | ary Gospel. This is the hope of the | is not because of me. The fact of re ° record by congressional enactment | top ay | world. ‘Ye are worth more than the matter is that nobody has Kiwanis of his major proposals. Yi Id t Vi ld a ers rue |many sparrows,'" he closed by | heard from him.” tai | sayin | : Entertainment —. eo Ra a since ° ‘St “Si le | | Dr. William P. Lemon gave the ment == ainee mal | . some elemen is party are not 71) op igns | Bible exposition preceding the fel- Series going to like being ‘liberalized’ ‘Uver ved GY) iowsnip hour. “The New Testament | itchhikes Ri and will fight it openly. Some} CHICAGO (UP)—"Yield” signs A . ‘Man Hitchhikes Ride, Pontiac High School Auditorium at 8 P. M. is necessary. GOP lawmakers think Eisenhower may replace the traditional ‘‘Stop”’ signs in some communities, ac- | | German Beam Center cording to the American Municipal of Controversy Among an improvement, The signs say ‘Yield the Right Capetown Men CAPETOWN, South Africa (UP) ~—A German “death ray” for kill- ing whales has stirred up a big controversy in Capetown whaling lat a single view,” was his topic. Cities Find Profit in Investment in U.S. Securities CHICAGO (UP) — Cities and towns which put their idle funds jinto U.S. government securities of Way.” They are placed at in- Attorney Tells What tersections where the flow of cars taverns as fleets from throughout | may earn as much as a property the world assemble for the most | tax would bring in, according to Wins Race With Stork WALLINGFORD, Conn. (UP)—/| When Everett Beeman received an| emergency call that the stork was} At 2:00, 4:20, 6:40,9:00, 11:25 pe STARTS WED. “Impact” and “D.0 Ingenuity solved his problem. On Starts Wed. “TUMBLEWEED” a large piece of cardboard he ~ Ak drew a picture of a stork and under it he printed the name of his in ome direction ig not heavy scientific whaling campaign in his- the Municipal Finance Officers As- tory. sociation. Whalers from the United States,| The association said Columbia, y| 5S. C., is earning about $6,500 a enough or constant enough to | warrant ordering all cars to stop. | to Look for in Jury in-|the driver must slow down but | ‘eabenert cludes participation in 207 murder | may proceed without stopping it| rea in wartions cera tbngg toes trials gives this advice to young) there are no other cars crossing | applied to pinpointing hales. Beware of the juror who is an At one Laygm crossing, there hed| Electric harpoons that can’t old guy with one foot in the grave | been 10 accidents during the year| ™iss gleam on the spotless decks =—he will electrocute you in a! prior to installation of the “Yield” | the modern fleets which are sign. Since the changeover, there| ©quipped with*helicopters to spot TUESDAY January 19, 1954 burry.” Filmed in the Lovers’ Paradise of Florida's Cypress Gordens ! _Arthur Treacher Earl Wingo added that the most lenient juror generally is one un- der 40 with a good education. If he’s fat, all the better. have been only two accidents, the association said. . Logan city officials say that the “Yield” “A Little of This, Something | “A tat man who laughs at almost | stop" signs frequently are. of That .., Mostly Humor” In ! The stage and screen celebrity who achieved fame as “the perfect English butler” em- barks on a new phase, the lecture platform. It’s great entertainment! A Few Seats Available at $1.80 each, including tax Proceeds te be used entirely for boys’ and girls’ organisations in this area. anything and likes a good joke is | good too, for the defense lawyer,” | Wingo continued. Skinny people generally won't do from the defense standpoint, | Wingo added, especially if they | have “‘little, old, mean faces.” “This type is inclined to wear horn-rimmed spectacles and _ go! around studying and thinking all | the time,” Wingo said. | LOO SINGER: PORTABLE ELECTRIC Sewing Machine RECONDITIONED PINKING SHEARS With Every Sewing Machine Purchased! ~ Judge Hartrick to Try Leaun Harrelson Jr. Oakland County Circuit Judge |George B. Hartrick is scheduled to preside at the negligent homi- cide trial of Leaun W. Harrelson Jr. 18, starting tomottow. Harrleson, of 26 Delaware Dr., is charged with the death of Mrs. Veda N. Coon, 37, of 49 Dwight Ave. who was struck Oct. 9 by the youth's car on W. Huron St. and Dwight avenue. Chief Assistant Prosecutor the ‘state in the case. “RP LADE TECHMICOLON signs are not ignored as | surfaced spouting whales. Controversy among whalers pre- paring for the season which opens at midnight Jan, 2, i954 was cen- tered, however, on a German “sonic ray.” Oldtimers who can bough recall adventurious days of jug-| bale dosed July 2 to mature Oct glihg heavy harpoon in an open|1 ‘The net cost to the city was boat believe the device will bring | ¢<37 134 hich wholesale slaughter. : th , which meant @ $2,966 gain ae German sonic ray of beam, = sent. jeved to have been developed +. from wartime experiments, emits a| New Head for 4-H Fair pinging noise from which the); REED CITY w — A. James whales flee. The noise is so pierc-| Norman, Reed City newspaper ing that the mammals swim in | man, has been elected president straight line away from the ship| of the Osceola County 4H FFA on which it is installed, that being fair board, succeeding Francis the quickest way to get away. from The One Wonderful, TECHNICOLOR BE z° . 5 as : e is ia * Se +: 2 ME 8 PS ' Godbold, Reed City High School the irritating noise. teacher, who has served for six The whale’s straight course, | Yes. operators claim, makes it an auaPtEr anes! easy target, A nudge on an elec- The Mayflower was broken up tric harpoon button assures the | 900m after carrying the Pilgrims kill, j from England to America, Its The Cape Arghus has reported, ee eee or however, that ‘early reports indi- - cate more is claimed than the method deserves.” Sometimes, yi whalers say, the whale goes on BOB S a straight line, all right — but straight down. Chicken House Often, the Cape Argus said, “a whale dives 75 fathoms escaping Noon-Day under the beam” and “the beam ¢ Lunches can be blanketed out by an ice block.” Rooms for So dogs might become hunt- Portis, ers, Tewa Indians of ion lacie Cusinese Partios have been known to grind up bum- Elizabeth blebees and put them in. their FE 3-9821 * food. ; ‘, MO ep) WARDROBE be / ‘CLEANERS > > Big Musical Show! WALT DISNEY CARTOON “THE NEW NEIGHBOR” —AND— “TOWER OF DESTINY” | —=NOW SHOWING = FEATURES AT: 1:20-8:20 5:20-7;:20-0:20 CinemaScoPE * M: | * e 10 ¥ : Ki How lo Ma ry WAY FARRTITITRA Le FEATURES AT: 11:00 A. M. 12:40 | 2:25 - 4:10 - 5:55 7245 eon a 2 ae 12 Mt. Clemens FE 3-7514 ar 1038 Baldwin FE 2-5628 iy ae MAT 50e / EVE. 80¢ - KIDS 25¢ “\ J sal ( “eA my ; { ‘ , ‘ b ft t i j 1 , gee Se ea rae pe ee SS I et CIS oD eee 2 Ge } eo Le we 8 | Vy. 4 Ne ios a eee a bs) find Pe, Cie te J \ f