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Thursday: Cloudy, Cooler
Details page two
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-THE PONTIAC PRE PONTIAG, MICHIGAN, WEDNESDAY, APRIL 6, 1955 SHAK —48 PAGES
oe eee
About This
a ote
Evie Verna, of Phi ° ree . | ° ATP
Time in Spring Pyblisher Wills a
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= |
YOUNG LADY'S FANCY — Let a lady loose in.a hat shop and it's
the same routine, whether she’s twenty-two or two. Pert two-year-old ©8289 = |
wide her eyes in first photo above Most of Estate
to Two Trusts McCormick Establishes
Funds for Charity and
Education
CHICAGO (#—The major
portion of the vast publish-
ing empire of the late Col,
Robert R. McCormick has
been left in trust for charity
and education.
This was disclosed yester-
day in the reading of the
will of the 74-year-old editor |
and publisher of the Chi-
ribune, who died Fri-
day after two years’ illness. |
- Seid &
and rejecting —
Scelba Appeals
for U.S. Capital Tells Detroiters Italy
Needs Money; Promises
‘Reasonable Profits’
DETROIT @® — Premier Mario
Scelba of Italy last night appealed Philadelphia, opens
as she opens hat boxes. Then picking
their money in Italy.
At the end of a banquet which
600 leaders of the Lodge Italo-Am-
erican Community of Michigan of-
fered him, he told his audience that
“in Detroit there is plenty of
“We did not come to the United
States to ask for further sacrifices
from never faced such a great danger
as that of communism.”
He went on to say that he ‘‘feels
sure’’ of victory in the fight in
favor of civilization.” Scelba, how-
ever, pointed out that in order to
carry out such a fight, he needed
the solidarity of all the Allied
countries and “above aljl”’ the Unit-
ed States.
He said that yesterday during a)
visit he paid the Ford Motor Co. | “T'll take this one.”
Easter Egg
Hunts Slated year was ‘just about the sanie as |
that of the Italian government.” to Detroit. businessmen to invest | _The will was executed last)
| Dec. 18 and is expected to| be filed for probate this
week.
After disposing of numerous in- |
| dividual bequests and annuities, the |
will provided for the remainder of |
the estate to be established in two
trusts. No value of the estate's
holdings .was disclosed. They in-
clude, however, McCormick's |
shares of stock of the Tribune and |
his beneficia] interests in the Mc-
| Cormick-Patterson trust,
[ At the time of bis- death Me-
| Cormick’s beneficial interest was |
the largest individual holding in
the McCormick-Pattersen trust.
| One of the charitable trusts set
up in McCormiék’s will was al-|
lotted a million dollars to main-| The Frank Elkins family pre-| scattered throughout the first floor | A child's a aD See Churchill's Successor
a
Sir Anthony Eden
Fire and Vandalism Strike
Homes of Brighton Family * May Have Been Murdered Girl
{ured Into Car Medical Report Shows |
Slayer Possibly. Used
Candy | ¥
| A pathologist's report to-
day indicated that the ab-|
|ductor of Barbara Gaca |
}may have used candy to|
‘lure the 7-year-old girl into! §
his car.
Dr. E. W. Kivela of the)
State Health Dept. in Lan- |
sing said an analysis of
Barbara's stomach revealed
traces of chocolate-covered | DALE STAFFORD
mints and chocolate with a
gelatinous filling.
He estimated that Barbara was
} slain three to four hours after she
was abducted on her way to school
March 24.
Barbara was raped and stabbed
to death. Her body was found
Thursday.ip. a secluded mp near
Halsted and Pont Trail in
West Bloomfield Township,
The discovery that a cottage
;mear the dump had been broken wrapped in an army bianket last | After ru@ning in third place in
Tuesday's returns from the state
election, Dale Stafford, Republican |
candidate for place on the state
|board of agriculture, moved into
| second place .today with a slim
margin over Connor D. Smith. Two
are to be elected.
| Late Tabulations
on Monday's Vote | into and an army bianket stolen U. of M. Regents [set police working yesterday on a (Twe Elected) ine theory that the abductor may (4,733 Out of 4.783 Precineta) ve held the girl a prisoner be- | | fore killing her. Adams—D e686 6 616 6 510,976
502,569 “eee eee
’ LONDON (®—Sir Eden,| The . with all its| peared at ease and ‘confident. A! small crowd ‘ed on his re-| ticians are expecting a vote as ister in ‘this country’s darkest sis Unie ahenaatatel aoe dienes suialias on otha: oon woe of crowd of 3,000—many unaware, be- | turn to the Foreign in Down- | early as May 26. bour—1940. of the flaming | Ment, Father than ‘wppense -Conti- the historic changeover in a palace ee ea ae ing street to wind up his business| Eden, like Churchill a friend and |
Here are some dictators, became Britain’ read over the British | what was gdéing on—wat S| there. ’ _| staunch ally of the United States, | ——-wortts-that-brought-tears-of-pride- ar : > aroueeenen JOD gg aera eympeney nays BEEN IB yee iar eB ar “ar Very wes To carry out many | 42nd man to the nation’s! “The received the Right| “Good luck to you, Sir Anthony!" | much,” he replied with a wavé/ the policies he and his old chief | > te es St eee Cremeans a hpid agro vy (Oy Pago MP, ia . aan pal of Ne weneny ae | Werte out tagether in Ge yours ands in three decades. audience this morning and offered , La His first was 22 SRS RS Sea oie SR be was appointed Prime Miister)| The St-yearaid diplomat—first |hitm the post of Prime Minter 112 TOCay’S Press | his caniect and several important aes eee, voters on —"I would say to the House, a&| divorced man in history to be| and first lord of the treasury. Sir| pirmingham «ses ..sccssosssseses 2 jchanges were expected. * The} PSse | I have said to those who have| named Premier—kissed the hand) Anthony Edefi Her OWN | of their close partnership. Tha
nothing to offer byt blood, toils,| her appointment to succeed his the | 1938, when Eden—then 41—quit the tears and sweat. long-time political mentor, Sir Win- government of Neville Chamberiain “You ask what is our policy? I | ston Churchill, who retired yester- in a dramatic protest against will say it is to wage war—by sea, | day at 80, peasing the Axis dictators. . _our , the Horse Guards forceful refusal to give poses one of the political can cal era, mu under the s. ne, debonair states- eo persenel wing of Churchill, who
a. sunshine to drive his Gallons” eerie in ‘the ae the general election he is expected | ing to the threats of Hitler and as ved | back to his new duties, — = et bres Seen aes enteritis Pe ye ee e
mee ri ” ” i ; : pe Z lees | 4 ‘ y st ‘ : ; | N\ "
‘ oS eee he cong AD 3 Paige fet 2 peer as) Ven Bas es eo : i hee oS Fag | I, 2 \ 2 De kg a we { ; _ three parks Saturday afternoon, “y .
at Three Parks | ia een The first Easter egg hunt spor-) much more difficult to run a sored by the Pontiac. Parks and) country like Italy than a factory
Recreation Dept, will be held in| even as large as Ford,” he |
|
Cloudy and Cooler
Leonard activities super-
visor, said 1, eggs will be
secreted around trees and under
Cooperating with the parks de-
partment in the venture is the Pon-
tiac Junior Chamber of Com-
merce. The Jaycees will supply the
7 prizes to be awarded special
lucky egg finders, plus guides at
each park.
Buzz, who said the hunt is main- After shower forecasts for the
last few days failed to materialize,
the weatherman says cloudy and
cooler is the outlook for tonight
and tomorrow.
Streets. |
morning at 8 o'clock the ther-
mometer reading stood at 47, ris-
ing to by lpm. _ He was one of 17 men honored by the University of 'to rebuild their burned out home.
| Michigan at its annual Michigan breakfast held in con- | He has the floor in and. with the
| junction with the national AASA meet.
Smart’s citation read “for
service to youth, to commu-
nity and to state as a school~
administrator of exception-
al ability and achievement
and for leadership in the
education profession includ-
ing* your service as
president of the Michigan
Association of Schools Ad- |
ministrators.”
Smart served.as president of the
MASA during 1954-55. He is past-
president of the Michigan Educa- ;
tion Association and is now legisla-
tion chairman of the Michigan
Winston's Fiery Words iia carving knife, a hunting knife
> | adults would have taken these. Probable in State Elections
Ballot Boxes
os Latest Returns
Narrow - Margins
DETROIT (#—Michigan's
ballot boxes and voting ma-
chines were ordered safe-
| guarded today as recounts
appeared likely in several of
Monday's election contests,
Of the six educational
/and two Supreme -Court
|Seats at stake, four Demo-
|crats and one Republican
| appeared to have safe mar-
gins on the basis of nearly
| complete unofficial returns.
Only 76 to 81 of the state’s 4,783
precincts still had not reported in
the various races.
The five apparent winners had
leads which seemed sufficiennt to
withstand any late inroads. In
the other three races the differ-
ences were as small as 105 votes,
although more than a million votes
were cast,
front of a Democratic rival by
yim 467 votes this morning in =
jhelp of his wife, is beginning to
put up the frame.
He's building the new home,
larger this time than the original |
5-room frame home, on the foun- |
dation of his old home which
burned last month. ,
The fire broke out while Mrs.
Elkins and the children were tak-
ing Frank to work.
Meanwhile Oakland County Sher-
iff's detectives are hunting the
vandals, believed to be youths.
Deputy Charles Rahn said only Berkley, Lathrup,
same time.
and a 10-pound beef roast were |
taken. “A number of valuable |
were left behind. Rahn theorized
Jet Helicopter a Flop
TOKYO (#®—Japan launched its ef the vote.
first experimental jet helicopter
yesterday. It went up three feet,
ing the ‘pilot, } to Cyuaty Clerk Lynn D. Allen, ‘South Oakland Cities Get
‘Fast, Accurate Returns
ROYAL OAK — Voting machines gave a quick count of election
| returns in the cities of southern Oakland county.
By 11 p.m. Monday, returns from more than 50 precincts in this | Pointe, by 5,824.
populous part of the county had been tabulated. Cities which had| State Board of Education—Steph-
completed their count included Royal Oak, Ferndale, Huntington Woods, | en S. Nisbet, of Fremont, veteran
With nearly 30,000 registered voters, Royal Oak has approximately
60 machines acquired over the years under lease-purchase plans.
qj. | Rarely does its tabulation go beyond 11 p. m., election night, the hour! mate, Eugene B. Power,
ertiches, ugh 20. am tectrio Gril, | when most paper ballot precincts find election workers just getting| bor and Traverse City paw chai
started on the count, after a day already 16 hours long.
Of equal importance with the speed of tabulating is the accuracy
of returns. In the more than 25 years Royal Oak has employed ma-| ‘otal appeared out of reach for the
chines, it never has had a local recount or a challenge to the validity |‘hitd man, Republican J, Joseph
Roused Britain’s Spirit
LONDON (UP) — Iron entered
the spirit of the British people
when the stubby man with the
fighting jaw became Prime Min-
“He seems to me at this mo-
| ment to embody the life-hope of the
| Churchill reappointed him to the
| foreign secretaryship soon after he
| took over as Prime Minister May
| 10, 1940, eight months after the
| outset of World War II, Again
| when Churchill returned to No, 10
‘the war leader called his protege
to direct foreign relations.
| Their association was so close
that it ultimately led to a merger
lof their two families. Eden i- | voreed his first wife, the wealthy.
(Continued on Page 2,Col. 3)
lot Laborite rule in the country, | Mec 4e— hatte —of_the—l2-room farmhouse ——___+- othe; Herbert—R _. ovr 506,61 olficial tabulation.
home estate in suburban Wheaton. | against misfortune today after fate Canned foods were opened and cottage, but it was proved later -Cudlip—R ns 8 Sie¢ oi 491,847 | as a public park and museum . emptied on clothing and the few | the prints were those of the own- All the returns were in from
after his widow “shall cease to|%#t them, two. stunning blows pio, of furniture. Sugar and} ¢™’s and the blood- tendent heavily Democratic Wayne De- money and in Italy we need much, reside there.’ Included are the | Within @ month, syrup were poured on the floor |. tains were o & different type (4,388 Out of 6.785 Proctnets) | treit County. Se early Denio-
land, buildings and contents, in-| La March 3 they tpet all and walls. Gan Satawh Taylor—R........ 699 a cea yo * cluding McCormick's library on| theif possessions when fire lev- | Every window Was smashed. The new lead was further weak-| Bastleti—D 502,875 | cements cccntee a’ nee freedom of speech and of the press | eied their modest home in Brigh- The refrigerator was overturned ened when it was established that pei , wepesees. and on military science. ton, leaving Frank, his wife, | and its motor—torn from the the blanket stolen from the cottage Beard of Education This dampened Democratic The second trust, to be known Jona, 32, and thelr seven chil- | mounds—was lying on the floor. bore no identifying marks such as| - (4.981 Oet of 4,983 Precincts) hopes of a sweep that would oust | a8 the Robert R. McCormick Char-| dren to start anew after five | A tiny puppy—only a mutt, but | the one used by the girl's slayer. | Nishet—R 501,992 Republicans from every major-ot- | itable wrest, © @& be ane fr years of hard work. | @ favorite pet of the children—was| Albert Urbaniak, regarded byigg a n° | fice outside the Legislature except religious, charitable, scientific, lit- | = oe “their | lying near the front door—beaten | police yesterday as “the best Veale—D see eeeees 496,267 that of state highway commission- \erary or educational purposes. | Monday, vandals broke into‘their to death. | yet,’’_was-still-bet : py Republ still hold-that and | Largest of the individua) be- | 'mporary home at 55550 F. Grand | : ye ’ as being ward Board of Agriculture substantial trol of the quests was to the widow, Maryland River Ave., Lyon Township, while| “I think that was the worst ag nied pore yed although | (Twe Elected) ture. = McCormick, who received one mil- | the family was away. | part of the whole thing,” said sat connected ar the “ he ml ‘cer ueks ae Saalaal Gov. G. Mennen Williams, often
lion dollars in trust, to be disbursed | Clothing donated by neighbors | Walter Willard, the children's |i) —_e | Baker—D 510,667 | mentioned as a Democratic presi- at the rate of $100,000 a year.- and friends was torn, knotted and srandfather. — ! Urbaniak, 28, a Waterford Town- ~~ Ho ‘ dential candidate in 1956, cam- “Most of the clothing and furni-| ship trailer court dweller, appar. | Sn". - - +--+ 497,833 _Paigned vigorously for his party
ture can be cleaned up. but it’s! ently was cleared of ' suspicion | Stafferd—R....... 498,300 | slate and was given strong back- E H ed going to be hard to replace that | yesterday when his instructors at j R 492.891 jing from his Democratic-labor co- ounty uCca tor onor pup,”’ Willard stated. “I gave them | Lawrence Tech confirmed his| #2... ’ alition.
J . that dog a few weeks ago, and statement that he was at‘ending| Supreme Court — was the picture:
t C] ] d Convention they loved it. classes at the time of the girl's | (Two Elected) ate Supreme Court (two a eve an The youngsters, Russell, Frankie, | disappearance. icon webaneenn , elected(—Chief Justice Leland W.
Dan, Marie Ann, Paul, Lois and) (Capt. Clark Wheaton of the. , ’ Lansing, a By HAZEL A. TRUMBLE Joseph, who range in age from 7) Pontiac Police said today taat a, C@fF............. 481,396 | nominee in the nonpartisan contest, Pontiac Press Staff Writer |months to 12 years, are staying | report from the crime laboratory Black............ 396,335 jw ee field. by 82,621. Circuit
CLEVELAND—Clifford H. Smart, Walled Lake’s super- cal age chal even polly in Detroit showed stains on a Braho.......-..«. 388,589 bm wagene Y. reds Port 4 | pair of galoshes found in the trunk | former Republ ttorney auto plants he was told that the intendent of schools, was cited here Tuesday at the temporary home or find another | of Urbaniak’s car were net bhod.| Roth............ 297,389 | seneral but running as a Demo- income of the large company last annual convention of the American Association of School- one ees was second.
Administrators for his outstanding contributions to the | he ae who former Republicén
schools of the state of Michigan. | aula sahae, iia hater ates Sa es Stanton, by the smallest of the |““safe” margins—8,421, Circuit
Judge Stephen J. Roth, of Flint,
Black's Democratic running mate,
trailed Brake by 88,458.
Superintendent of public instruc-
tion—Dr. Clair L. Taylor, Repub-
lican incumbent, led Democrat Dr.
Lynn M. Bartlett, superintendent
of schools in suburban Grosse
| Republican member, led Democrat
| John M. Veale, of St, Clair Shores, Royal Oak's 23 precincts had been completely tabulated by 9:45 by 5,235.
and Ferndale's returns from 12 precincts were all in about the | University of Michigan Board of
Regents two elected—Democrat
Paul L. Adams, 47-year-old former
mayor of Sault Ste. Marie, led the
| field by 8,407 votes. His running
| Man, was next.
Since two were elected, Adams’
Herbert, of Manistique, present
chairman of the board. Herbert Outside the city of Pantiac, which still uses paper ballots, only 21 was 1,958 votes behind Power and
somersaulted and crashed, injur- | of the voting precincts are now without voting machines, according 8,912 ahead of the fourth runner,
| Republican William B, Cudlip, of
| Detroit.
State Board of Agriculture—two
elected—William E. Baker, Nesick
school superintendeng and Demo-
| cratic nominee, led the field by
|more than 12,000 votes. The board
| ig the governing body of Michigan
| State College. ;
| Republican Dale Stafford, Green-
British nation,” Churchill said at ville newspaper publisher, moved
inte..a.461.votelead-over. Democrat
Dr. Connor D. Smith of Standish
|today in late returns in the
‘scramble for the second seat, It
| was the first time Stafford held the
lead since qpunting of Monday’
ballots began.
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a th oe Bee ee Os Sig Ba ct
: . Te) SES fare ae v7 ah a ‘ ‘ 3
} wl ; aan me 2 6 hel Pe BUYER TAS THE PONTIAC FaEes. bed ) 7 INew York Area Judge Suggests CD Study fies
Geis (D:
or 11 per cent Preliminary Sudistoheie decnion are as- BIRMINGHAM ~ meeting of } Multiple-family
or 56 per of lsat ations Vien ae sessed at array Sh Hs .
35 League at Se SN at dd tered cent. Work on Plans
ot Mr. WT, Kell 158 Nor |S and improved cal ce Mrs. Ley Get
S Amok Ose,
he wei rade vey bg de eae” and Srproimaly Per . ley
if Attack
conjunction personal property. Minis . cod Bond Sac Settee fi Minimum Sentences
NEW YORK
New
others in the tate rg mel 0 -ora hacia lew England are
leagues for study. se beginning eo rin
fan eat
aces lode mann on be eld at mate dee a recommended
ing on New York
June and League end import! «| the by Corporate Noel P. Fox for Mrs. Lois
people from the of a nu-
survey of export and opin- vont “epg yron sentences today ;
; in the event
their sections
—— Inc., @ de- mum
Seeley
area
in various
wil) help Enterprises,
ts u and G. Palmer
politan
trade
consultant firm, aan Moon Ley , to de.
clear attack Huebner, New
jons of manufactu ; vestors
men .
Cc. R.
policy
acquaint eet es ako on cee be
sch se elit datoune ehiet, ove
bg ir for] ened te sequal a deals. a minimum of
VE gy NE Ridge - o MGT | ane on and their opin | ios eee go omy cay gh pager
be shved although wil take HAROLD
oe inthe fiona. el oS ee we. 12 months
at Detroit
be solved preparation.
med ions ad Ferndale
Leslie Walker ths to five years s last
ime, education and
do ne Na Royal Oak ahd urvey with Service for hegan, who died House > action makes her clighhle RUSSELL CAUGHELL Huebner ates tot aoe Mul MW y! cena aoe oe omy: at ay hs home air 8 et | ior immediate
was : ‘ poser yohotey yar Community C -. * an Leaguers | ness, was held rar the Willian ow ANSON HEDGECOCK 7. i eke bee ormer Pontiac closed meeting of 35 civil
elected president) saore soo. soba aa Geos’ som . on oe a a
i
POD-| in the three in the com-| p in made for Seeley chiet in
officials.
time| U yak | baseball leagues play purchase
first
Communi
:
of better ift Revealed: Grand Hala Sree te | JOS |,.2,meing as te sun ing LE oa om ees tone Be years. Seeley ‘becomes under Merchant les New Sere and New Ergin ha downey will serve neo 100 for Gevlopmen oS ete Ges September
New Jersey a plan the post Mrs. Charles | i cue Eton Park b Consumers
;\~ Ley, Muskegon real estate F. Russell Caug caenteg each
ore are, Mrs, | tegen education the anda backing orercyge de Fane Beate " saidjan ¢ This year pape elo beca: ?
prec
Some
, which
the state, low.
erty meer Ay pagedy er See
reer eae
orn
oy on en ee ee siden’ | minded citizen in T draned talcuidentiel prop been revised AL PRINTING ment-support ual, we would by ™ This fire should serv nes y Toone of Conn m in 1945 | Safety in their utes wp nalvigs Bed in Soar tiliees Robert VanderKloot,
formed to business property has in line,” GENERAL
Y oes tale if, supported rac
rves as |in the an ehridom eq | Marooned
Me ahh ts enitcteen
group was first as pro- “to get them
SUPPL :
ae
iso serv
refused
have mov nights.
be able
best paid teachers The
a toll road as | upwards
& OFFICE public — ts or even on hee idition, ~~ tulten is Mossel it too would
» st
mploy the
ppose building idential areas he said.
residen-
Lewrence private in paoage
od until warning that a ide of Pon- home the House of Lords.
I
. Del ghts
vay world.
.
through
between Detroit Assessment
of wae SLED
17 Ww. individual ing was adjourne the | 3 on the west s: ms a. him to
motion
in
the American Ty ce
decided to
totals
total.
= 1.30 p. aoe of Mona's ean | tte sa ot Hae _ erect “UM Law Dean Eden’s First Wife_ ~~ Said be brought et De. Pets prt all such ¢ an expanded Sagrovy busiease im rot Bm heen - official canv de. Postpned of |™ there is no plan immediate | jections
should be believed that Michigan and support
iy = a Sa there in the Lists Obje
Anthony | sald he alse schoolroom, De- program. Jaklan station
;
W YORK w—siF lay she| * ld be in the d in the | freeway poe Oe 7 seperate: * *| future. o-~
re MSC Change
Eden's first wife at her former elaring that mreaceane ol
€
-
? :
” te eat gD Aer hes Seta ee Sos - In the undeve' in sou ave Pontiac
fom. of the: todayy alas mir ory
whe bds ai hee tats al
Ti Asia, two pe ations are 20 |
"4 | Michigan Law Committee Mrs. Beatrice "York since separated.
J
op : ical popul in
Iton
te Judiciary te
in New
offerings
. int Gt a ol oe ‘Joe Thomas He . nove my. jet on the proposal t totally Fhe Rega a ae ee
tions \is over 60 }
ck, Ao oe se give of extrensiay.
an | Said ‘on =p lie minister:
the most important on”.
| The Weather
nego “atiohett tha *was seni | MO Stason ag Bee M. a am delighted at od bower 8 ie sie PVT ype pallor
knou — Partly
; Middle’
. -Siple | jon of Atty.
. that there
this well-deserved
guc-
the AASA
in pee eae ee ee ae "hidesbor, Ky.,| Kavanagh which “State, College cees and happiness." ee ae Pov ae oe CUAL TF
i ed crn. partly ae ae. ww
ral Home in ! >
precterte
Michigan
iversity.
3 4
and coves aa oe sam for a eenployed | TS . hae
Admits. Check sac late rature prece
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.
. H
declaring:
.
ington "
F
. yam. Suet wer 60 =p ‘by the Detroit Septic Tank | points at issue, “Michigan State | Coorge D, al Oak. and Beverly Predicts Lake Rise ats . aa as ati een a=. | Detroit,
.
| 1—The. mame “
B Idwin Royal
nd Alexander,
‘
. on ih U.S. 5 EAE at ba pm | Mrs. Walter J. Parle | University” coms r eager u ve halt. Fe — GRAND HAVEN ® - son sane sane at 5.25 om rs.
held | very of Miition =
Royal S check
aiamaa
level is expect ed i
%3| Grave service =. the hairs
provided for | guilty ~ ee : set —— nine a ae Foe ~~ feta Beni * Thursday at Cemetery acendon | 2-7 Cotton provi Usiveraty of)" seine rt Apel 11. They ad shih he sume April pe met ° —* Parle, 85, of ae. university, the
mitted cashing bogus check for | 852 high thi sumin noe pest - as eeereeee
(Walter J. : Seer PUNE ate
cashing
. engineering RE ss: armen _ - St Deele-and «or ‘Tomes | Michigan. "aeage, ol nnt SGiat & Maes & the level dropped’ 48 of a a S| Fg pt ees Father Catholic Church | «The only tena change, ad #75 iq ; pond March. i’? a —~ nes ag
ict's
such a- be .
‘
during
ve ———e ha a en 45 of St. Benedi
effect
held, would
Conservate
y
. os ate ane = a
| will officiate.
_ home iversity dean of @ com Isle
.
’ seeps
» eve Parle died . her heid | Uni ission to the people
Belle icated Today Contracts Awarded gg oe
e - 49 Monday. The funeral ic Church of stitutional
ar /®
j tg f
— The Belle
DYKE @— awarded Lewect ee aint” | at St, Theresa Cathot
Toke Sweep | ‘DETROIT eines aide ng 1.7008 have ae tempera’ light
sit at 8 a.m. Thursday:
?
Conservatory
Seripps ; ‘ ‘Weather— Thunder teres Tete | Betroi
Democrats
— Democrats | Isle
of Ana [toes ewionming
. eee ea ee r Pleads Guilty FUATORT © skng al | Wut Tnter of te, ee Van Dyke High School. The 7 eer Chart Drive
Circuit Court > slettion
~ ing family of the today. nasium will Sapte Tie" Loe “Amecies "6 82, Oakland County of Votes 1 & proposal ceremonies at 4 p.m, con- eparate Me we fi} de Oaks Pedy oon the sale of alcoholie a pee has | four ee 7
‘
. . ’
be
; ie “ Garr "ended gully 1 in addition to bee arc
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s ik ' ’ “THE PONTIAC PRESS PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, WEDNESDAY, APRIL 6, 1955
SIR WINSTON CHURCHILL
Churchill Surrenders to Own Old Age
After Defeating All His Other Enemies LONDON @®—Winston Churchill
gave up today, beaten in the end
by the weight of years.
The advance of time did to
Churchill what dictators’ armies
and warplanes failed to do. It made His personal story in recent |
years has been the story of an
old man who has his good days,
and some not so good. The battle
has see-sawed, but it has been
dogged
In 1951 a sudden stroke laid him ‘ter Stanley Baldwin, Steps Into Role
After Long Wait! Sir Anthony Receives |
| New Appraisal as He
Becomes Tory Leader
| LONDON #®—If ever a man was
trained to be prime minister of
Great Britain, that man is Sir An-
thony Eden.
For more than half of his 57
years, Eden has been a member
of the House of Commons. For
about a quarter of a century he |
has been ‘the fair-haired boy of
the -Conservative party. Most
prime minister. * *« *@
But for years historic personali-
ties stood between him and the
top. First there was Prime Minis- |
who man- |
aged the abdication of King Ed-
| ward VIII, and took an affection- |
| ate interest in Eden's future, Then |
there was Neville Chamberlin, ad-
| vocate of appeasement, with whom
Eden disagreed
Finally there was
Churchill. Eden labored for him
with selfless loyalty. Churchill re-
| warded him, several years ago,
|by unofficially naming him his |
|“*heir apparent.”
| Now Eden steps into his heri |
| tage, master of 10 Downing St.
| Problems hammer constantly at
| the door of No. 10. Peace or war,
cold or hot, East or West, the
| seven seas, the British Common-
| wealth, socialism and how much |
| of it, coexistence with the Commu: |
|nists, the atomic age, relations
| with America—the new RBrime Min-
ister is bound to be about the busi-
| est man in Britain. He wil] need
ithe health and strength which
were restored to him in a Boston
hospital in 1953
The British themselves are giv-
ing him a new scrutiny. He has
| been on the scene and in the pa-
pers since 1923, when he first came |
up to Parliament from Leaming |
man | everyone, including Eden himself, |
| felt that someday he must become |
ten—He—was—_the_promising—young+
a hustling man who got| | rie —U WL Over 54,000 Circulation
Largest in Our History ar
ide x» ©
\
Eden Takes Center of Stage
THE EDENS AND CHURCHILLS — Sir Winston Churchill and Mrs
Clarissa Spencer-Churchill, niece of Sir Winston, at No. 10 Downing
Street in 1952. This picture was made shortly after marriage of Sir
AP Wirephete
Winston } Churchill flank Sir Antheny Eden and the latter's bride, the former Anthony and Clarissa. With formal announcement of Churchill's re-
tirement Tuesday, Eden will become prime minister of the British
Empire Sometime today.
Lady Eden Ready for No. 10 LONDON @ — In her younger, of New York, favored daughter of
days, politically conscious Clarissa| Leonard Jerome, American mil-
Ss . on _ | lionaire pencer - Churchill did more de Her mother died in 1941 and her
bating than dating. And at 32 she | tether, called “the Churchill no- made Anthony Eden propose sev-| body knew,” died in 1945. He was
eral times before she said yes. | not wealthy. Clarissa inherited 200
The blonde, blue-eyed aristocrat pounds ($560) a year and a small |
is now, at 34, completing a round country cottage.
trip. As the niece of Prime Min-| She grew up in London and
ister Churchill she left No. 10; Paris, went to excellent schools
Downing St. to go to her wedding.| and learned to speak with the
Now she goes back as the wife of | “correct” accent so necessary in
Chur¢ehill’s succefsor, and the | London society. She wore properly
Edens take over the official home | subdued, often black and grey,
of British prime ministers tailored clothes. Silkk scarves,
—— Tmatching her—eyes;
Like her husband, she has been | color. Her shoes had outlandishly
ered over him. They ordered him | things done smoothly, and served | understudying her new job for a high heels.
to be quiet, stay put ‘and rest.
. - +
Instead the old man insisted 0M | th. Prince of Wales | his prime ministers and his coun-
jtry in highly important but in
somewhat junior. capacities. Like | ing the years of the later Church- | born Englishwoman. In 1938 she} Then in late summer came the
(now Duke | i) era. Lady Eden has been study-| was named London's most beauti-| social bombshell, Clarissa moved
helping te phrase a misleading of Windsor) before him, there was
communique for reporters puzzling | a tendency to think of him as be- | him surrender. j ean ee ee Se ere ee etaiie the» house. Then.
power that ie loved and clung 10| the newspaper publisher. The news|
Te, ee © | was kept secret and Churchill was | the statement to newsmen, slip-| That's all over. He bowed to the pleas of his Put to bed W ee ee ake ew apprat
He gave in to the urging of his Churchill Paid Tribute
“tsa he wane Sogn |10 RAF in Fomed Tolk ir surrendered to > — —| LONDON (UP) — It was in the urgent — suggestions some | ; Conservative party lead whe | autumn of 1940 that savage air
want a younger, more vigorous | ‘els of the Battle of Britain were
man at the helm Mm Britain's com- | being fought. A skinny force of
ing general election campeign. Spittires—_and— Hurricanes _ beat
But he yielded iniy. friend back the ‘Luftwaffe. Winston
say, to a growing awareness on
his own part that for him time | the British planes:
and strength may be running out.| “The gratitude of every home in|
He is in his Sist year. He is an|our island, in our empire and|
old man who has doddered, as’ old | throughout the world, except from | men will, on one day, and risen | the enemy, goes out to the British |
to great heigtits of oratory and in-
in -surkden sleep
meetings of the British Cabinet. their prowess and their devotion.
Sometimes he has momentarily and chasing hig associate down a
drafty hall. He wanted to make
another change in the communi-
que. And pe did
> *
His love of words and lust for
work recharged his strength. -
Two years ago a second stroke
paralyzed him and left him sPeech-
less. Men of his age rarely recover
People close to Churchill expected
him to die.
One admirer gave him a mod-
ern wheel chair replete with in-
genious gadgets to make life eas-
pendent upon gadgets. all, just about the most present: | minister's wife can best do — able man in the Commonwealth.
He has a hot temper under-
neath, but the first impression is
one of easy charm. He has been
everywhere. He has seen just about
everything. He fought in Flanders
like most Englishmen of his age.
There was no easy command for
| Capt. Eden—he went over the top
Ciurchill said of the youths flying | from a stroke of such severity. |0" dark night. Once on the Somme,
| under star shells and machine-gun
| fire, he dragged back a sergeant
whose thigh bone had been shat-
tered
Eden radiates a_ reserved
| well dressed. The Eden moustache,
forgotten the names of world. | Conflict was so much owed by so! gered him that he fought his way | ly cropped English hedge.
famous mén—men of power with | ™any to so few.” back to health.
whom he has wined and dined and |
matched wits across the table in
wary intimacy. : e
7 >
“I am now nearing the end of
my journey,” he said in tones
tinged with regret in his 80th
birthday speech. last November.
And while at times the old man
has seemed to be fading, he has
revived regularly to mow down
eS. 7% Ths Ee
tee in the House of Commons.
Churchill at question time lately,
with his quick and impish wit, has
been a delight for political en-
tf Hr H fi
i P . E
it (Continued Tomorrow) ito putting on weight. She is natu-
n | cared little—or said they did, any-
airmen, who, undaunted by odds, | ier for chair-bound invalids. It de-| warmth, as befits a man of cen-| way—fer social activities.
unwearied in their constant chal-! lighted Churchill at first. Then the | turies of aristocratic background. Her mother long time. Sir Anthony has watched 7. *¢ *
| and learried from Sir Winston dur-| She looked and acted like a well-
ing under Lady Churchill. ful debutante.
Because of the admiration she| She studied briefly at London | ment was afnounced. Their friends Occasionally she gave a cocktail! checked to see if it could be a
party. No one recalls seeing Sir church marriage. The answer from
Anthony at one of the parties the Church of England was “no”
Eden got a divorce in 1950 from | because of Eden's divorce. So they
his first wife Beatrice. She had were married in Caxton register
gone off to the United States office
“bored to tears with politics,” Eden, at 55, was 23 years older
and saying she ‘was not cut out than his bride
to be a foreign minister's wife.” They have been.living .in fash-
Their son Nicholas had been living jonable Carlton Gar =~. “Lone
in Canada. Another. son. Simon,.don's West. End with a country
was killed in Burma during the! place in Buckinghamshire called
war Dorneywood House. Now in addi-
As midsummer of 1952 passed tion to 10 Downing St. they will
jthere was hardly a hint that| take over Chequers, the country
Clarissa and Eden were thinking home Britain furnishes its [first
>; added —-a—tittieabout—marriage—-They saw each ministers.
other occasionally but they did not . * .
|appear. to be particularly close) Lady Eden is expected to con-
friends. tinue traveling with her husband,
She also can be expected to launch
a few ships, help lay cornerstones
for hospitals and welfare houses,
visit auto shows and let tankers
be named for her if the owners
insist.
She will be hostess when Queen
hs pause the couple was married. | Elizabeth visits No. 10, and hostess
| Somewhere, sandwiched among/also for every type of political to Downing Street and the engage-
jok by being occasionally seen and |
never heard. Lady Eden fits the
mold. | victory, she
* meals mostly came from a Greek
She is 5 feet, 7. She's trim, a restaurant nearby. She has a
little on the lean side and not given homey side.
_QOnce she was robbed and _ it
developed she kept her jewels,
some pf them -Churchill - family
heirlooms, in a butter can buried
underneath tbe tomatoes down
below her sink,
Believe Strike rally shy.
Before World War Il, when she
knew Anthony Eden only as a col-
league of her uncle's, Clarissa was
one of Britain's bright and politi-
cally conscious young women.
They debated political issues and
Lady Gwendeline
about | Spencer - Churchill was the daugh- . e
~tatt-and+ter-of the seventit cart of Abingdon. ~
Her father was Maj. John Strange |
“Never in the field of human! His‘friends say the idea so an-| Once quite a bush, is like a proper-| Spencer - Churchill, a descendant |
of the Dukes of Marlborough. Her,
grandmother was Jennie Jerome, Londoners Feel
Retiring Chief Merited
Front Page Tributes
LONDON (#—They never thought
he would do it in the middle of
the newspaper strike.
That's what they were saying in
pubs last night as word spread
that Sir Winston Churchill had
stepped down ag prime minister.
.And most Britons, even the left-
wing Labor party members who
had been his severest critics,
__| thought it was a pity it had te
pages this day,” said a Scottish
janitor who never voted Conserva-
tive in his life.
“It must have broken the old
man's heart to go out with none of
them fine. obituaries the newspa-
pers got ready," said a hard-faced
taxi driver. ‘‘A bloody shame, it
was.”’
The British Broadcasting Corp.
gave the nation the news at 5:30
p.m. but a lot of Londoners were
still working then or riding sub-
way trains and buses home, and
they didn't hear it.
Ordinarily they would have
learned about this page in world
history ffom their newspapers. But
London's three afternoon dailies,
along with the city's 10 morning
-papers, have been closed since a
week ago last Friday by a strike
of maintenance men.
So a great many people didn't
know Winnie had done it until they
stopped in at the neighborhood
pub—the poor man's club in Eng-
—e their evening pints of
Churchill Art Accepted
band helped steer the Allies to)
took a sixth-floor |
‘Holy Grail of True Peace apartment near Regents Park. Her |
LONDON @® Sir Winston
Churchill remains a knight with a
mission, The old warrior bowing
out of the prime ministry is lured
on by his holy grail, the hope he
can yet help attain world peace.
| At 80, he wants to “bring nearer
that lasting peace settlement
which the masses of the people of
ever? race and in every land fer-
vently desire.”
He first entered Parliament 55 peace. And he led the Conserva-
tives te victory.
Cheering Britons almost mobbed
him. Nearly 77, he swung a gold-
headed cane, smoked a big cigar
and held two fingers high in «his
victory sign
Problems tumbled upon Church
itl: The old rift between East and
West; warfare in Korea, Indo-
china, Malaya; the Formosa issue:
inroads upon British holdings— in
Iran, Egypt and other far places;
That |
end like that.
- - *
“He ought to have had his front | “creaky economy at fhome—
He solved some. He kept digging
at others. But the load was heavy.
The administrative routine was
too much
| Only twe older Englishmen
hung on as prime ministers—
both before the turn of the 20th
Century, when the job was vastly
simpler, Lord Palmerston at 81
died in office in 1865. William
Ewart Gladstone gave up in dis-
appointment at &83—in 1482—after
trusted colleagues deserted him
in his campaign to keep down
arms expenditures, .
Churchill is primarily a foreign
affairs man—but he prides him-
self, too, on steering Britain toward
free enterprise, years ag0.—
of service through twe terms as
| Britain’s first minister are be-
| hind him. War and cold war have
been his lot under two sover-
eigns, George VI and Eliza-
beth I.
He took the helm in Britain's
darkest hour and steered a course
through ‘“‘blood, toil, tears and
sweat'’ to victory over Nazi Ger-
many, Then, in his second term,
he started Britain on the road
back from socialism and swelled
her voice in world council.
He retires from Downing street |
|with probably more of the world’s | laurels than any other man alive.
| Age has slowed Churchill. Some-
(times his memory plays tricks with’
him, For a time he was paralyzed g : by @ stroke: he has met frustra- He inherited a welfare state in
| tions and even humiliations. | 1951. Many of. the nationalized
| stamps imposed by the labor gov-
But none of these has dimmed |ernment still remain—the Bank of his zeal to crown with peace a | Engiand, coal mines, railways,
career made heroic largely | utilities and civil aviation.
through war. | “Socialism brought us to the
| ‘The very existence of the British brink om ; bankruptcy,”” Churchill
Commonwealth was threatened | *4id. “We were standing on a when he assumed the prime min- treacherous trap door leading to
| istry May 10 1940 | economic disaster. : q
| Britain stood virtually alone then | He found it wasn't so easy \to
| against Hitler's legions. By his | furn beck. Of the. igdustries na finely tooled oratory and. his in-|‘ionalized by the labor govern-
| domitable will, he rallied ill - pre-|™ent, only steel has been freed pared forces in a fight for sur- and the first steps taken toward
vival. He became a moving spirit | Putting transport back under pri-
in the Allied master strategy vate ownership. His government
| which finally crushed the Axis. | opted the tax-supported national Voters weary of war threw out health scheme as its own.
Conservative govern- With a mantle of fame securely
| Churchill's
ment in July, 1945. Clement R. Att-| around his shoulders, Churchitt
| leé’s Socialistic Labor Party as-| is sfill restless as he muses, “1
| sumed control. am now near the end of my
Churchill became leader of his | journey.”
majesty's Jeyal opposition in the . , ,
House of Commons while-the La- Of gto A ene
borites started converting Britain : : . line @ welfare vtate 8 |my remaining years in explaining
or withdrawing anything I have
But six years of socialism sati- | said in the past, still less in apolo-
ated many British voters, The | gizing for it.”
wheel turned again in October Always looking ahead, he had
1961. Churchill pledged in the
Lo) Se ee ee ae Gh i wieges } ’ / } f + WOEtA 7 hy pt od. eee 4
Baa . 35 THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY. ‘APRIL 6, 1955. Be ; selection of colors on leaded
_ ‘Visitors Find High Prices i in Russian Department Store rats teen ate A\- Gimble’s, Wafamaker’s and Mar-, Visiting GUM Saturday, we were, American living room 30. years| We asked for the most expensive
eS ("the | shall Field all rolled into one right | jostied along in a good-tatured| ago, $90, men's suit. The manager showed | ™¢n!
Micke ot | 2cToss historic Red Square from | crowd of Muscovites, Red Army We found footwear customers | % ® two-piece, three-button single- A
5 the “cash, | the Kremlin men and peasants in quilted jackets fitting shoes themselves as women breasted blue serge tagged at a ,
4 a pate of Heeow's oe % can Held boots. clerks stood-gossiping nearby. | mere $346.50. where GUM will cheertalie 3 ue Se » cries | te denens.ot departments, wel tears oxfords - with| Appropriately enough the fabric | time payments. Srranée |] Shankless-Half By ALFRED G. HILL | or more merchants under a | found everything from steel can | composition ranged in price|Was called, “Boston,” a brand) ‘Terms are strictly cash, dash|| “REDI-EAT c ff and GEORGE JOHNSON | glass reof before the revolution, | Openers to mink coats. from $3 to $47. ‘Sensible’ | name survival, we surmised, from and carry, we noted, as two collec- MOSCOW (INS) — We visited) But during the lean period ef | Here are some of the‘ prices—/ women’s oxfords with composition | the capitalist days. tive farmers toting a TV set ran SMOKED b. the Soviet union's biggest depart-| stalin’s industrial five-year | Using ‘the official rate of four| soles were priced at $17.50. We could have bought # Sey | interference for us through the ment store and found a hint of plans, the arcade housed gov- |Tubles to the dollar: In the outdoor footwear depart-| flannel suit for $227.25, or a sporty | exit doors. HA ME | bigger changes occurring in the erament offices. A small table model radio, | ment, we found a sign of spring—|elt-beck tweed number for a Ss ee year ago, we were told, GUM| $75. The same set with a bullt- |farm women trying on rubber | bargain $77. ‘Birds Dunk in Comfort This valuable : Ge : a svald Gis Gans hae in two-speed record player, | boots to replace winter models of| Zippers, odd slacks and sports tities the bearer ~~
When it opened 15 months ag0| ‘Ling advantage of the annual| $112. A table medel TV set with | matted felt. coats are unknown here, but the | YOUNGSTOWN, Ohio ut—James |} {te « I-Mb, limit PRESH Good c ) erie ye Maat Sieewephers i ak t price reduc-| ® I4inch tube, $675. Another H Ferd is posed to | stylish Russian trouser has bet- |L. Wick Jr., retired industrialist REMUS Thurs. . b. é chew Dar eid eiene | tions on April 1. with a 17-inch tube, $850. have said of the Medel T, “You | tomé wide enough to gladden the | provides the birds with a winter Only
tte inate cauabemabe's| Now, Malenkov’s successors} A four-cubic-foot electric refrig-/ cam have any color you want | heart of an American collegian | bird bath. The water temperature BUTTER Whh bese «Oe ” of the twenties or a sailor on (in the garden-variety bath is kept eee Purchase pledge of better living for the | have returned to a program of|erator costs $500, a tank type/| so long as it’s black.” Hf you Rs eaemettig redline.
working man. steel instead of butter, and price|cleaner $125, fringed silk lamp-| make that “black or dark blue” | Shore leave. obave zing by a r a
) Here is the Soviet Macy's, | reductions were skipped this year.! shades like those popular in the' you have a fair idea of the The least crowded department, ' ically controlled heating element.
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[E PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, APRIL 6, 1955
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FE 2-7257 28 W. Huron The Life of Christ_27
In His
Christ om
WM y en Visit Grave, Find Body Is
goes back again to His Passion, | grave, were bidden to go to Peter
for the angel speaks of Him as aoe “Jesus of Nazareth Who was cra- | Lord once from the © and eified.”” These words tell: the three times denied Him. Sin and |
Rame of His humanity, the hu- denial cannot choke Divine Love. | 1°
mility of Hig dwelling place, and Paradoxical it is, that the more | the ignominy of His Death; and we sin and the less we can be-| all three — lowliness, ignominy |jieve in His Love, and yet the and shame—are brought in com- | more we sin and repent, the more |
parison to His rising from the | we wonder at the marvels of His|
dead. Bethlehem and Nazareth | Love. It is to the lost sheep pant-
and Jerusalem are all made the (ing in the wilderness that He
ying marks of His Resur- | Missing. announced, It is to a fallen woman
that His Resurrection is announced.
Those who saw the empty
comes; it is the publicans and the
| harlots, the denying Peters and
The angel’s words: “Here is the | the persecuting Pauls to whom
place where they laid Him,” con- the most persuasive entreaties of
firmed the reality of His Death and | /0Ve are sent. To the man who the fulfillment of the ancient proph-
ecies. We wander through a grave- |
yard and look at tombstones al-|
most all of which are headed with
the inscription: Hic Jacet or ‘Here | | Was named a Rock and who would
have tempted Him from a Cross,
risen Saviour now sends
through the women the message:
“Go tell Peter.’
lies.” Then follows the name of |
the dead, and perhaps some praise
of one departed. But here in con- | Town Made-to-Order
trast, the angel does not write, but | aaa = speaks a different epitaph: “He _LAWRENC E, Mass. (UP)—The
is not here.” city of Lawrence is the only made-
The angel calls on the women! to-order community in Massa-
oe ee ke ee a ee In 1845, a group of ‘s id, as t | ind so
its mere desertion were evi- rialists headed by To Be Continued
dence enough of the fact of the Lawrence formed a company to |
Resurrection. They are directed lay out a city on the Merrimack
immediately to hasten and give| River. A dam was built, hills
intelligence of the Resurrection. | leveled, valleys filled in, buildings
It was to a virgin woman that| erected and an entire community
the birth of the Son of God was! moved into houses. cent of all U.S.
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Sadie, Sagi enh et Vy \ not what do.” after these Bours | ¢ \
denver ovo mo MT By BISHOP FULTON J
In the dim dawn of Sunday 4
ing, several women are seen ap-
proaching the tomb. The
fact that the women brought spices
proved that they did not expect
Resurrection. It seems
that such’ should have
case, after the many
of Our Lord to His Death
Resurrection. But evidently
disciples, as well @ the
whenever He predicted His Pas-
sion and Resurrection seemed
notice much more His Death
His Resurrection. It nev
curred to them as possible thing
it was foreign to their
When the stone was
the door of the sepulcher
Christ was buried, but
of their hopes, The onl
the women had was to
body of the dead Christ,
that was born of despairing
yet unbelieving love.
Twe of the women, at
witnessed the burial, hence their .
great concern was a The Resurrection was no mystery to the Angel whe told the mourners,
one, “Here is the place where they laid Him.”
Nine is to roll the stone @WAY | countenance was as lightning and Saviour’s grace, one soldier more
from the door’ of the tombr”| is raiment was as asow and| then Pilste hed appointed. It was the cry of a heart of little “No need a
faith. Strong men had closed the ° to amayed;
entrance to the tomb by placing You have come to look for
this huge stone against it; their Jesus of Nazareth,
worry was how to remove the bar-| Who was crucified; He has risen
rier in order that they might carry again,
out their errand of mercy. The men | He is not here. Here is the
would not come to the tomb until place where they laid him.
they were summoned—so little did} Go and tell Peter and the rest
at Wea ae Ge of his Disciples y use, y
sought consolation in embalming mr aaa before you
ang There you shall have sight of
that the stone, great as it was,| _ Him as He promised you had been rolled away already.| To an angel, the Resurrection
But they did not immediately jump | would not be a mystery, but His
to the conclusion that His Body | Death would be. For us, the Death
had risen. Their conclusion is not a mystery, but His Resur-
be that later on someone had re-| rection is. What was natural
moved he Body. The Resurrec-|to the angel, is now made the/,
tion was not in their expectations. | subject of the announcement. The
Instead of the dead body of their | angel was one keeper more than
Master, they saw an angel whose the enemies had placed about the
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— You want ROGERS
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aes | +
umn pomeaerin veel Ge Wik nhad eC Oeee Oeee You've undoubtedly heard about the NEW 1955 Detroit Jewel
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take anybody's word for it! Come in... browse around ... see
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ERS POWER COMPANYhike dente ae PO
1956.
Sparkman, Stevenson's 1952 vice
presidential running mate, said he
is convinced Gov. Averell Harri-
man of New York “will not be a | nomination for the asking.”’
de
Willidms . ang said
| inee has a good chance of winning.
cs * ~ 3
Sen. Gore (D-Tenn) said any-
body who thinks it may be im-
possible for his party's candidate
to defeat President Eisenhower in
1956 “ought to start adding up the
city halls, the courthouses and the
statehouses the Democrats have Sparkman
they believe the Democratic nom- |’
) Fly (ie Se £8 og |_THE/PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, APRIL’6, 1955
HMS ANNIE R SMITH. THREE RIFLES SHIP ARE } AND A SHOTGUN, BOUND FOR DUNKIRK.
Both For *12% seoeebing, Wedding Bands,
han ly tailored bands
in 14K ye gold.
candidate for the nomination Stevenson.” | taken over.”
“Stevenson is the only candidate! Eisenhower has given no indica-
we have right now,” Sparkman) tion whether he intends .to run
again. lewelry Department
GEORGE'S: NEWPORT’S oa = ”
There have been reports some| Population of France is increas- | —
New York party leaders would like | ing about 300,000 in each of recent
to get Harriman in the race, de-| years.
_——
/
UJ
There was a 3.7 per cent de-, sold in the United States between j crease between 1952 and 1953, | to increased use of king size ciga-| Food and Agriculture ~Organiza- | crease in the number of cigarettes | 1953 and 1954 a3 per cent de-! some but not all of it ‘attributable | rettes, says the United etis| tion,
g
4 WE 4: 4 FIC Tole) diate mm (eo) ame ilelglelel—mm —t-1-3(-) at la -F-| tet | => desi ilale a-t- halal l-wrg pe 4 Z y
your yes ES: JANE PARKER BAKED GOODS! chain cua A Aa! JANE PARKER Quick like a bunny, scoot to AaP for that important eye-witness effect! Your eyes e i will dance over our gay display of famous food favorites, designed to catch the
_ | Easter Layer 8 INCH
SIZE
It's AgP for favorite
EASTER CANDIES!
@s Boo
Worthmore Jelly Eggs wee xe, 89
Marshmallow Eggs assoxr> covors 'rxor 29¢ 0¥-4 wer
eye ... tease the taste ... and please the budget! Stellar attractions, of course, are the AaP Exclusives, among them Ann Page Foods, geared to speed and ease; Jane Parker Baked Goods, each a package of perfection and A&P’s treasured trio of fine-tasting coffees ... Eight O'Clock ... Red Circle .. . and Bokar! plus many more items to delight the fussiest of food fanciers! Your complete satisfaction is the order of the day at AaP! It’s only a hop-skip-and-jump away ...s0 GO... today!
we quiden layers ind wlth vanito oncea, guecene @ _ ALL-PURPOSE, @B . Marshmallow Eggs “woenmons” ‘tm 23¢ | Sees re ceased: dexo Shortening Pia 2 3 = 75< Fruit & Nut Eggs cise"towma He 29 . - e Cocoanut Cream Eggs wormmore '-57 29¢
Dry Milk Solids bale Fs mouse — Choc. Covered Eggs ister wear Ors 25¢
7 Fruit Cocktail “siiwo . . 3 Ske 1.00 Grapefruit Sections... . 2 RE 29¢ ARP WHOLE KERNEL Orange Juice mitttacairy. . 2 aes 49¢ Tea Bags mom... 9, 49 «~Golden Corn ‘% 10c Evaporated Milk wwe nous . .,SN70¢e Vacuum Packed Coffee as” srano 11% gQ¢ aay oan eau MAY
Dog Food on‘nu raven. . 10 \S2F 79¢ Cut Green Beans suuns , , 3°29 95° ue rn er Sunnyfield Rice ‘ove om. . 2% 29¢ White Meat Tuna Fish uo 72 99, Lomeato Juice 2 <<: 43c sti teeny OO a ———————————————— a,
dant paren CHOCOLATE a Feast your eyes on these AP buys in ANN PAGE FINE FOODS! : Easter Eg Cake | you eyes on ° , , | Egg Noodles .. eae no. 25¢
gi Salad Dressing aes 28 29 Sparkle Gelatin Sit As 4 22 25 | SO - : a “_—s—s«wGragpe Jam 5... 1. ee Se 25 ae St 44 i Oli sen pana au 49. Dried Macaroni ....... me. 49¢
= . U ive en Mayonnaise .......... ine 59.
79: | Chili _ 9 Ly Garden Relish ........ $2? 29
sty atte ten ns eee gs Y il Sauce ANN PAGE some Preserves STS... «3 4¥e
ANN PAGE Pure PINEAPPLE
3% Preserves = 25: ANN PAGE TOMATO
35 Soup textured cake lavishly hand-iced with chocolate... Y, with festive Easter bunmes! — —
Y, Ground Black Pepper 4» Pct 7 17¢
] Prepared Beans varres . . 2 Cans 25¢
Ketchup “Yast. . « 2 bore 39 JANE PARKER
Hot Cross Buns “ | PeanutButter anneace PREPARED
Spaghetti 2° 25« TASTE BETTER ry
25: oF te Regularly 29«
For Easter enjoyment try these raisin-rich, citrus- studded buns, topped with snowy frosting. A delectable treat! So thrifty, too!
sant panxtn CHOCOLATE PKG. OF 6
Easter Egg Cakes 49: SANE PARKER PRG. OF 6
Easter Cup Cakes 39% DELICIOUS FOR EASTER DESSERT
Strawberry Pie
49% A NEW, JANE PARKER TREAT
Peach Pie “ss str"
Brown & Serve Rolls mn 2 2F°S. 29¢
Fruit Stollen corree caxe . | | | tach 4Q¢
————— ae -Sreel—ine bees Co er
Potato Chips vem rourtovesm box 59¢
Raisin Cookies * Nick aint? «8% 95 25¢
* — Dimmer Rolls no SL... aE, 15e
Sandwich Cookies pivies . . . ofS: 19¢
Skea RE Se | sea gionareee hae
10'-OZ.
CANS
8-INCH
SIZE
seats alte \ 8 ‘ : >
» j s
“ ’ ; . es ‘ 2 5 ¢ i . * - j 3 f ;
: 7 f t . . . a" ; ‘ b , soc ; Pe { bic p . 8
4 nee : “ = te es \ f : we wef sioidiy sth NFL DD SEE, = OE) SM SERS FUSS M TS INE me WN SE a _ we é = 4 ‘f lire : Sp. ——scnanr ee ae eee een . = 3s e - ey ié o : 4 i. a. ae 4 a i ae tee i he eas id - ‘ z. ’ . ? . 4 tf we eae eh Ea Se Se. ee ee Be PE a SRS | - Te oe. OM Se Oo Se eee eo pdt tee fe, ee —— es , za |
{
Bob Considine Says:
Let’s Dip Into Book of Irish Folklore. DUBLIN (INS) — What's better
” to do crusing at 19,000 feet towards
the Emerald Isle than dip into a|
little Irish folklore?
The cruise is aboard TWA's new
Super-Comie-G, and the dipping
is done into a ‘Treasury of Irish
A reporter from the Freeman's
Journal asked him before his de- |
parture, ‘What message, Mr. Par-
nell, shall I send from you to the
Irish people?’
“ ‘Tell them’ he replied, ‘that
I will fight to the end.’ "’
Folklore,” edited by Padraic) Irish bull (which meant a biun-
Colum. Matter of fact, there's a
column in Colum, thus: |der in speech)
“In a debate in the Irish House
Oliver Cromwell (Bah!) reports | 9¢ Commens, Sir Boyle Reache
some three centuries ago, on the |
taking of Drogheda:
our endeavours, After battery,
we stormed it. The enemy were
about 3,000 strong in the town.
They made a stout resistance,
and near 1,000 of our men being
entered, the enemy forced them
out again, But Ged giving a new
courage to our men, they at-
tempted again, and entered,
beating the enemy from their
defences,
“I believe we put to the sword
the whole number of the defen-
To Quiz Pat Ward
About Income Tax NEW YORK #—Counsel for Pat |
Ward, star witness for the prosecu- |
tion at the Minot F. Jelke vice
trial, says she is schedujed to dis- | ..
cuss “a certain tax matter” at |
the Internal Revenue office Mon-
The lawyer, Stanley Nussbaum,
said yesterday he will ask for a
10-day postponement of the order |
to appear. *
Miss Ward, 21, testified at the |
trial that she gave Jelke $10,000
to $15,000 of ber earnings as a call |
girl.
When requested by Defense!
counsel Washington Herz, |
she testified she did not file an
income tax return for 1951 or 1952
— years involved in the vice
charges,
Jelke, %-year-old heir to a mar-
garine fortune, was convicted Fri-
day om compulsory prostitution
Marguerite Cordova, 26. He is to
be sentenced April 238 declared, ‘The profligacy of the
| ae © ah Sat we me
“it hath pleased God to biess | children not able to walk or talk
running about the rect and
| cursing their maker!’
Proverbs:
The Irishman half drunk, the
Englishman fed, the Scotsman hun-
|ary = that’s how they are at their
| best
| Three things that could be bet- |
tered without being improved:
Poor clothes on a drunken man;
a plain wife married to-a blind
man; a wooden sword in the hand
,of a coward.
The. lake is not encumbered by
the swan; nor the steed by the bri-
nor the sheep by the wool;
the man by the soul that is
um
The son's seat in his father's
™ thouse is broad and steady, but |-
the father’s seat in the son's house |
is cramped and rickety.
Idieness is the fool's desire.
Long loneliness is better than
| bad company,
Jokes .. . begob’ — friend that he had never heard
what he had so often heard of
— the wit of the Irish peasant
us try the next one we meet.” The
next man they met was leading |
by the halter a horse with a white
bidze on his face which suggested |
to the parson the mild remark,
“What a white face your horse |
has!" “Faith, then, it's your own |
face~would be white if your neck |
had been so long in a’ halter!”
retorted the man if a tone which
| Suggested that the wish was father
to the thought.
The name
“Ireland” comes frewm the } The parson complained to my |
But you have never spoken to an |
| Irish peasant?"’ “No.” “Then ‘let | used — (herale Ire- | “They (at the fair> were more
land) and Pela” (intellectual ||ike French people, though their
| Sreland.) |gaiety' was mingled with more
Donnybrook Fair — it was not| humor and mere genuine good pa-
|necessarily a place for cracking |ture; both -of which are national
heads. In 1828 Prince Puckler- Mus- | traits of the Irish and are always
| kau, a German travel-writer, came | doubled by poteen — the best sort
up with; iof whiskey, illicitly distilled.”
Che Gewelry of Your-Eyes’ af
| PERSONALITY GLASSES | |
ompiete with
eye Te BO - MORE
3} * ist QUALITY LENSES!
* FULLY GUARANTEED !
* SHOP US and COMPARE !
© FAST SERVICE!
* HO APPOINTMENT NECESSARY
SUN GLASSES ONLY $11.00
Bifocals If Needed—Only $3.00 More
Repairs and Specie! Frames at Saving»
Sefety Glasses ot Sevings _ a
THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY. South Africa Quitting
‘United Nations Group
| CAPETOWN (INS) — External | ie 2nd
Atnie Minister Eric Louw has | Louw said this was because ot tricity, APRIL 6, 1955 /
| announced that Sou
has decided to withdra
Wnited Nations Educational, Scien- |
and Cultural Organization
Ty? =
© FROM YOUR PRESCRIPTION!
119 North Saginaw St.
(enchants. tess dien dates ase |
Open 9-5:30—Fri. ‘til 9
‘ican’ Cancer “Society says, about 75,0000 Ameri-
MAKE AYERS a from dying of
. oot This figure could have been
Ten tons of falling water will| doubled #{ every case had been
generate one- kilowatt hour of elec- | properly treated in time, the Amex.
Hear the State “Champions”
POA HIGH SCHOOL BAND'S
SPRING CONCERT
APRIL 14th, 1955
with
Miss Judith Dickstien, Piano Soloist
All Seats 75*
Get Your Tickets Early ... Now on Sale at
Calbi Musie Co. Pontiac's Oldest Locally Owned Home of Conn Instruments and Baldwin Pianos and Organs
e Pree Parking at Rear of Store
SPECIALS FOR THURSDAY - FRIDAY - SATURDAY — FREE PARKING AT BOTH STORES — OPEN MONDAY AND FRIDAY EVENINGS UNTIL 9 P.M.
‘GIVE YOUR LIVING ROOM A BEAUTY TREATMENT FOR EASTER!
~-ALLOWANCE ON YOUR OLD LIVING ROOM SUITE _—_.
REGARDLESS OF AGE OR CONDITION -- NO MONEY DOWN!
TT
; iy ‘Saay ae ee
ig a ee eo Ae a Nd ___as a DOWN PAYMENT _ Covered in long-wearing frieze. Sturdy spring
construction. Here is your chance to get rid of your
old suite and enjoy a nice new suite to brighten your
home for Easter!
A REAL BARGAIN AT A LOW PRICE!
Use Your Old Suite BY
EASY TERMS AND YOUR OLD SUITE
2-PIECE SUITE ...... “199”
Your Old Suite . .,. .. . * 50
YOU PAY ONLY
Frieze Suite. New Loveliness for your living room at a
tremendous saving! Both the beautifully styled roomy
davenport and the deep matching chair are luxuriously
upholstered in _tustrous frieze.
Bargain Priced... Only
Use Your Old Suite io | q 9”
as a DOWN PAYMENT
EASY TERMS AND YOUR OLD SUITE
2-PIECE SUITE. ..... $229”
Your Old Suite......%* 50°
YOU PAY ONLY
EA RT RS BESS LAT A TT TT
YOU CAN USE ONE ACCOUNT FOR PURCHASES AT BOTH STORES
BE SURE TO
ASK FOR Wyman's Blue .
Trading Stamps...
Good for Valuable
Premiums WYMAN’S Pontiac's
FURNITURE Progressive ST ORES
17 E. Huron St.—2 STORES—18 W. Pike St.
FREE DELIVERY WHEN PROMISED!
Phone FE 5-8222
="
Bay , i, 4
* ¢
P Pontiac High School Bandl
Presents Annual Concert
14 is the date announced for the 28th Annual
Concert of the Pontiac High School Band by Dale
Harris, conductor of the band and supervisor of instru-
mental music in the Pontiac public schools. The concert
will be ted in the boy’s gymnasium of Pontiac
“¢ content of the program will be varied, ranging
from com tion of symphonic literature to marches 2 / ‘ i j ; ¢ ] t ¢
é ft l ; j . / ‘
THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, APRIL 6, 1955
apc’
You're the Most Fascinating
Woman on the Easter Scene ©
In our Costumes and Accents pale
Bloom eld ASHION SHOP.
and novelty numbers. 1662 S. Telegraph Rd.
Open Every Night ’til 9—Sat. ’til 6
Park at Our Front Door! | and has also served as accom-
~} panist for student soloists in the
instrumental music pr Sa re
during ber junior high school
senior high school years.
The band has been accorded the
special distinction of being chosen
to present hte premiere perform-
ance of a new composition for
band, “Hiawatha Land,” by the
well known arranger and composer
for radio and television, Glen
— title implies, the work is! Coats Can Tell is |
descriptive in nature and is s
on characteristic Indian themes.
Tickets for the concert are avail-
able through members of the band
and are also available at Calbi
Music ¢ Co. and Grinnelis.
by Edythe McCulloch
Let’s Do an
Original
, RALPH J. HERMANN |f These many years, fashion | i , | has decreed a certain trend in
. New York City, who will conduct |} coiffures, and we have tried to Long or Short Story
the band in two of his own com- |
positions.
Soloist of the program will be follow. Our friend appears
if with the latest... and we get
the urge to follow suit. There
'} is nothing wrong with this if
Shown Here Is
SPORTLEIGH’S If you’re
it happens to be a good style 5 feet 5 Judith Dickstein who will appear | _ = but — it isn't.
with the band in the presenta- | ause it is “darling” on our neightbor doesn't mean it .
tien of the first movement of the |] won't be gruesome on us! Opulent boucle in navy. The or under Mendelssohn Concerte im G | A, hair style shouldn't be
- Miner. || used to decorate, but should , j ;
— worn to enhance the natural line is newest... It Ss straight, our Print Miss Dickstein is one of the stu- | attractiveness of the wearer
dent accompanists for the high |[ We should want people to say simp e : - how nice we look, not how , bs schodl vocal music department, | beautiful is cur hairdo. Jacket dress
| The hairdo which will really
make you the most attractive
is the one designed especially
for rm Your ee weight,
a and ty are portant
Thursday at Grotto Hall, > al ag choosing
West R ng on | wwe Wie Postes if hair style. Why not go origi-
a a a 2 “iT nal this spring? If you do, WSCS of Baldwin Avenue Methodist | you'll find a new thrill in your Church will meet at 1:30 Thursday eve- hairdos
ming at the church. -
Prances Willard Unit of WCTU will
meet at Pirst Church of the Brethren
5 = o* Thursday. Principal speaker
Mrs. L. G. Rowley of Drayton $45.00
You'll find other long coats in all
spring shades $39.95 - $59.95. ~ Coming Events A cooperative luncheon will be served
at noon when Royal Neighborhood Get-
Together meets is for you
Step right into the dress, for
those who wear a brief. Sizes
: 12 to 20. No alteration neces-
— sary for perfect fit. ———— —Ea ster-
cme Fashion $24.95
Short coats, too, —
in spring colors
from $29.95 to $39.95.
You'll Never
Be Caught .
. Rain
or Shine!
Lily Gilding Accessories
In wonderful J
all-weather
—beautiful shoes; T U Y t bl ‘
e designed with all the fresh une p our EnsempbDie coats to fi
esigned with a the freshness, your nxt ba
the femininity, that stands for Springtime. any Lind of day.
Have them for Easter parading
‘—you'tt cherish their high fashion
the season thyough!
22.95 » $29.95:
$16.95
Glove fabric is dyed to match Nylon and Dacron Blouses handbags of leather, faille = Brow!
anced: o* lesther, patent. to frost your Easter suit. Navy, Red, Avocado, Coffee Frost,
Gold, Ice Blue and Pastel Pink. + «+ in White and Prints
$5.98
$3.00 Handbags $5 » $10.95
‘TODD'S Shoe Stor RAR. eee 30 W. Haron : ! Gloves
‘ a
f jf » 6 oe eee ll
‘THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY. APRIL. 6, 1955
~- Township Pa
Hikes Approved Salary Schedule Set
for Police, Firemen;
New Post Created
SOUTHFIELD TOWNSHIP—Pay
raises, a salary schedule for po- lice and fire departments, and the
hiring of additional personnel have
been approved at the Southfield
Township annual: meeting.
clerk and treasurer position pay
was increased from $4,950 to $6,500.
A post ef administrative as-
sistant was created, with a salary
of $5,000 annually. This will be |
filled by someone with college |
training in government.
A police and fire department
salary schedule Was adopted, show-
ing merit increases raising the be- |
ginning pay of $3,872. |
Two additional policemen will be|
hired, to bring the force to four |
patrolmen, a sergeant and chief.
Private Salk Tests
Please Parke Davis DETROIT w — Harry J. Loynd,
Parke Davis & Co. president, told
an annual stockholders meeting tees
i 7h.
goon
$ “e
s aoe SP g
bs
PASSION PLAY CAST — Checking their lines prior
to. a performance of the Avondale High
School PTSA performance of the passion play
‘Pilate’ are Mrs. A. E. Atwood, PTSA president, « rith the yesterday that his company’s tests . oy — ™ with Salk polio vaccine are ‘‘high-
ly gratifying.”
“I won't say our results were
amazing, but they were highly
gratifying,”” he said in a report
on a private study his firm took
on Salk reaction with a group of
Illinois schoolchildren.
The firm’s survey is pot con-
nected with a test on two mil-
lien children conducted by the
National Foundation for Infantile
Paralysis, Results of the founda-
tien’s test will be announced
April 12 at Ann Arbor.
“I don't know what's in the
(April 12) report,” said Loynd
“but I have some idea from our
own clinical studies in Illinois.”
Loynd added that his firm is
is expanding its Rochester labora
tories where the vaccine is made . Braidwood, treasurer, and Richard / Townships officials were selected Snover and Mrs. Ruth
County Monday ; .
Almont Township
Everett Bristol was named su-
slate of Republicans to office. as. treasurer
Donald Burley ig clerk, Florence | Richard de Beaubien, 144-98
For other posts, Grove C_ More
Bristol and Mitchell Currey, two) took the highway commission.
year trustees er position, 141-104 over Roy
Elections in: Four Out-County Townships
Put Democrats, Republicans in Office Albertson
in four areas adjacent to Oakland! were placed back in office, with
14 and 129, respectively, com- |
pared to 101 for Mark Rusell and
A. P- Stocker, with 114. Lyle Allen |
pervisor, leading an unopposed | had little trouble retaining his post
when he defeated
to double produc-
member of -the beard of review. Cleve Hunt became board of re
2 view member over Edwared ( Edith Waltz, Gladys Farley and Parker. 138-105. and Paul Groff
James Rollo were named mem- 140. 125. Clar
bers of the Library Board. ufacturing the vaccine
National Foundation.
Say Missing Minister: for the
Ernest Grumbace,
ience Skellenger, 146. and Edward 4
‘ oo
}and one half hour play is open to the public, and
is being given at 8 p.m
It depicts the betrayal of Jesus of Nazareth, and today at the high school
final trial scene before Pontius
way commissioner, also were unD-
opposed. They totaled 574 and 586.
Republitans were also victorious
with Harold Dewey. 5333 and
Clarence Saunders, 474, being
placed in office, over GOP. mem-
ber John Bush, 385, and Deqocrat
Bill Touchette, 311,
An unopposed non-partisan slate
for mem-
They of six was approved
bership on the Liberty Board.
Lengemann, Mrs. Howard Chur-
- chill, R. A. Grettenberger. Dr. L
'M. Zimmerman, and Mrs. Howard
Hoadley.
2 Area Pastors Attend
Psychology Conference
DRAYTON PLAINS—Rev. Rey
Lambert, pastor ef the Lakeland Mariette Township | Schenkel, 142. were named con-
H . : stables. Republican Keith Albert-
| Local attorney Ward Atkins was e — > | in an | son. 115, failed to place in the
> | defeated in. the race for Probate top four
BUTLER, Pa. # — S Judge of Sanilae county. The non- .
i . tate Pe partisan township slate was unop- Imlay Township | «lice say @ Methodist minister naan
. ; | posed.
Ee ee arch 28, worerd for; Net" Woods s_ township super-_C_ Barclay, for supervisor
visor, with Alex Morrice as town- Laurence Thatcher, for
and Cecil. Dawson, were successful, but
posts went to Republicans.
then disappeared again
Officers said yesterday it det. P clerk treasurer a time in a Flint auto factory,
‘initely was establisheg through
| photographs that the Rev. R.
Blaine Detrick, pastor of the First |
' Methodist Church in nearby Slip-
»pery Reck, was employed jn the!
* Flint plant. He quit his job before
“ members of /ijs family could con- bictk Pec be ae mee publicans Mrs. Frank Moore. 173,
Seiffertein and Mervin Eilts 29d GOP sticker candidate How-
gained trustee positions. Cary ard E. Lee, 307, with his total
King and George Teale are jus- | ° 312, while ThatCher, unopposed,
tices of the peace, and Harold _ polled 369. ras .
fact him, / Doyle and Evah Mahaffy toek Republican incumbent treas-
t+ “At Shagd we know he is alive | MOTAry beard posts. | wrer dames I, Lancaster de
: 4 * a state trooper said. Melamera Tow nship | feated Democrat Mrs, Lewis
Worthy, 586 to 250, and Repub-
liean trestees C, Muzzy, 490, and
Levi Spencer, 487, were placed minister's disappearance! A full slate of Democrats was
off a widespread search | Feturned to office in the balloting. |
this area. His auto, overcoat) Incumbent - supervisor William | jg office’ ever Bill Treadgold
‘and wallet were found near New | Hainds defeated challenger Jack! nq Jack Schonfeld, 254 and 323
Castle, Pa., last Wednesday. The Brown, 173-80, and incumbent seapectivety.
find raised speculation he had been| Clerk Gordén Ribble dispatched |
robbed and slain by a hitch-hik-_ GOP member Lawrence W. Smith, |
rn Ties —. _ » Rev. Detrick has a wife and two; Incumbent trustees
mal) children. When he left home | ~ ~~ GOP member Fred Hoeksema
LaVerne | View, and received 561 ballots, and
——— | Neil Blank and Lewis Pritzel, seek-_
ing justice of the peace and high- Democratic candidates Renan |
clerk,
Barclay narrowly defeated Re- United Presbyterian Church, and
This conference is planned fog |
doctors and ministers to foster a|
closer cooperation in their related |
areas .
2 Lake Orion Youths |
LAKE ORION — Two 17-year-old
youths were placed on two years
probation and assessed $100 court |
costs yesterday by Oakland Coun- |
ty Circuit Judge George B. |
ralph Parker, of 99 Shadbolt, | and Thomas Beaudoin, of ‘."
Martha;
Pastor W. J. Teeuwissen Jr. of;
ian Church recently attended the |
the other | second Calvinistic Conference on |
Psychology and Psychiatry. | OK Hiring New
» Special Deputy | Approve Pay Boosts.
for Township Clerk,
Treasurer in 1955 |
AVON TOWNSHIP — Additional
police protection for the Brook-
lands area of the township was
approved at the annual meeting
at the township hal!
A group of residents from the
Brooklands area attended the ses- |
Sion to protest alleged inadequate
protection eo
Approval was given hiring a
special deputy, raising the aum-
ber of deputies to four in the
township.
Salary raises were approved for
two township officials. The clerk's
pay received an $800 increase, to
the level of $5.000 for 1955
Also approved was a $900 boost
for the treasurer. The post will
pay $4,500 in 1955
Under discussion was increasing
the membership of the township
board from two trustees to four
The fasure passex Dt il
take ‘elle " ite "ae a me Share PTA Honors
The township board approved
appropriations for township ex-
penses, and also the township's
portion of the Rochester fire pro-
tection funds
Dr. Louis Newlin
Elected to Head
Rotary at Rome
ROME&0—Elected to serve ‘as
president of the Romeo Rotary
club at a meeting of the organiza-
tion held recently is Dr. Louis R
Newlin
Also named to serve during the
coming year were the Rev. Ellis
Hart, vice president: Lucien Fay
secretary; Thomas Schultz. treas-
in taking the two constable posts, urer, and Roy Davis. member ol R
the board of directors. Other mem-
bers of the board include outgoing
president Kenneth Mosher and
Louis Verellen
| The newly elected officials wi!!
assume their new duties July 1.
To Hold Family Night
NEW HUDSON — The regular
Family Night of the New Hudson
Methodist Church will be held
this evening. beginning with a 6:30
P.m. co-operative supper.
|
|
_admitted March
stealing golf clubs, fishing tackle |
land other articles‘from an Orion |
Township cottage.
‘he told his wife he planned to
call on some parishioners. County Deaths | SSP, FAIA RIE A SERS EE OES
‘Detroit DPW Movi Gottiried Miller |
on ing | UTICA—Service for Gottfried | F A 4
into New Building | Miller, 89, of 74541 Russ Rd., Rich- | ETROIT (INS) ~ Movers to-| mond, was held at 2 p.m. today |
y Rw wilt- complete the job of at -the Schwarzkoff-Milliken _Fu- | §:
shifting the Department of Public | 2¢@! Home, with entombment in | 7
1Works—the city’s largest unit—into | White Chapet Mausoleum, Birming- FREE 510°
CRIBS from $1 quart |ham. He died Sunday.
dale ers in the City-County Surviving are two daughters, i
The DPW quartered in old City Mrs. Amenda Russ of Richmond |
aa Hall since 1874 becomes the first ) and Mrs. Lydia Priehs, of Detroit,
department a son, Walter A., of Royal Oak, |
in genieen an {13 grandehildren and 24 great- |}
Estella E. Spencer
IMLAY CITY — Service for
Estella E. Spencer, 67, was at 3 * Tomorrow the DPW's new tele-| crib mattress with
every $30.00 crib or more. |
Small Down Payment—Easy Monthly Payments!
KAREN’‘S TOYLAND— 4528 Dixie Highwa IBS
9.95 » $58.95 | . e Protection for Brooklands Area
GAIL LEFEVER
Mr. and Mrs. Homer LeFever,
of Washington, have announced the
engagement of their daughter, Gail
Annette, to Dale Ashley Penny
; the son of Mr. and Mrs. George
Penny, of Leonard. No date has
been set for the wedding
Mothers, Daughters
KEEGO HARBOR —‘Mother-
Daughter’ night was observed last
night at the 8 p. m. Roosevelt
School PTA meeting
Tribute to the mothers was
given by Sandra and Sara Rach-
iele, with the response to the
daughters by Mrs Benjamin
Rachiele
Sixth and seventh grade iris
conducted a square dance pre-
gram, and the Triple Trie, un-
der the direction of Mrs. Charles
Seavy, presented several selec-
tions.
PTA to Hear Lecture
on Retarded Children
TROY TOWNSHIP — '"Mentally
etarded Children will be the
topic of Dr. James McHugh at the
8 p.m. meeting of the Poppleton
PTA today, at the school
Dr. James McHugh works with
patients at Pontiac State Hospital
Plan Thomas Meeting He | Lapeer County
Votes New Jail Construction | Measure
With Tax Increase
Wins by 200 Votes
LAPEER — A tax increase to
| finance the construction of a new
| jail and county office building was
| approved by a 32 vote margin in
voting Monday
Residents favored the measure
2.331 to 2,288. It means a one mill
boost, or $1 per $1,000 of assessed
valuation
The tax increase will run fer
seven years, and is within the 15
mill tax limitation.
Previously, the County Jail had
been condemned several times by
the State Department of Corree
tions
Members-of the Lapeer County
Board of Supervisors back the pro-
posal for the new jail. If the new
building for prisonets had not been
| approved, eounty officials would
have had to close the present
structure, and transport prisoners
to nearby jails
Trey Tewnship
The 500 Club will meet at the home
of Mrs L Dyer 511 Wattles Rd at 8
pr today
The Ptnochle Hot-Shots will gather
at the home of Mrs George Keenan
656 Vandervool, at 8 pm today
There.will be a special meeting of the
Proeréssive 4-H Club at the home of
Norman Huff, 3431 Crooks Rd at 730
po today
Waterford Tewnship
The Lakewood Parms Ladies Auxiliary
will meet at 8 pm today at the home
of Mrs. Harry Carlisle on Geneva St
Aubern Heighis
Members of the Secred Heart Church
Altar Society will hold a regular meet
im at 8 pm today tn the church hall
{with Mrs Ernest Gray and Mrs Charlies
Thayer as hostesses
Rochester
The Plymouth Guild of the Wor
Peilowship of the Pirst Congeregationa
Church will meet at the home of Mrs
Wallace Furbur 7
+ Dm__loda;
Pilgrim Daughters
home of Mrs Paul
Thursday wtll meet at
Flintoff at 1 pm
Drayten Plains
The Ladies Auxiliary of the Pirst
tist Church will meet at 73 pr
Thursday at the home of Mrs
Mehiberg. 1268
for the evening
Levely and Mrs will be Mrs
Louella May en's.
448 Parkdale at 7 30
the
Bap- Rochester Club:
to Hear Talk
by Sarah Jones | ROCHESTER—Mise Sarah Van
Hoosen Jones will be the guest
speaker at the April 12th meeting
of the Rochester Branch of the
Women's National Farm and Gar-
den Assn. at the Woodward Memor-
jal Library
Miss Jones will speak and show
pictures. of her recent European
trip m
The occasion is also commemor-
ating the 20th anniversary of the
founding of the Rochester Branch
and Mrs. Henry W. Axford will
| give a history of the club and its
| activities during the program. Tea
will be served and arrangements
will be in charge of Mrs. Charles
Haynor, social chairman.
New Trash Dumps
Open in Waterford Two new trash dumps for use of
Waterford Township residents have
been designated by the Township
Board following closing of the dump
at Hatchery and Crescent Lake
| roads.
ra ee | They t 15 North ¥ ital
County Calendar ris “taznucen Lane rosa and at 6818 Cooley Lake Rd.
These are for trash and not gar-
bage, Supervisor Llyod Anderson
has announced
Democrat Wins
Trustee Position
by Three Votes
PONTIAC TOWNSHIP — Demo-
‘crat Mont D. Bodman won a po-
sition as township trustee Monday,
polling 409 Votes
Other trustees elected were Re
publicans Wade H. Harris, 415,
Thomas W. Shearer, Jr., 452, and
Leonard Terry. 453
It was previously reported that
~a tult state of Republican trustees
had won. including Archie E. Allen,
who polled 406 votes
OES at Ortonville Set David
Sashabaew Rd Co-hostes
“ice to Hold Friendship Night
ORTONVILLE—OES 236 will ob- j
Imiay City
The Gacred Heart Rosary serve “Friendship Night’’ at the Altar 8o
THOMAS — A public meeting | ciety sul meet—at 8.30 p-m—tedey oi 8 pm meeting today at the Braa-
“of the Oxford Area School Study
Committee will be held at 8 p.m
Thursday at the Thomas School.
The meeting is sponsored by
the Thomas PTA, the Rectory
The Celery City Bowling League will
hold its banquet at the American Legion
Hall at 7pm today don Township Auditorium.
There will be a special program,
and county officers and OES mem-
Aven Towaship bers from other areas will be The Executive Board of Elmweod PTA
will meet at 2 pm Thursday present
a
New Hudson Hornet Hollywood hardtop —- available with new V8 engine, of the famed Championship ¥6 engine.
You see more...ride 3 times better...are twice as safe
SS a - *-
t
f
emweee sid
2 Se S25 SAS see ee ee
‘phone number will be WO 5-4200. 5m. today at the Lester Smith .
| and Son Funeral Home, with burial | ,
‘Rochester and Royal Oak in Imlay Township Cemetery. She |
‘Men Put on Probation w surviving ar s _— port TO THE VOTERS OF . men who March Floyd Schell of ty, , ss >
28 stealing. $40 worth ot copper | * bother, Otto of Flint. | [INDEPENDENCE TOWNSHIP -wite from a Detroit Edison crew Mrs. Florence Dice
near Rochester were placed on) NORTH BRANCH — Service for | ‘s
‘three years probation and assessed| Mrs. Fidrence Dice, 75, of 4949
$200 court costs yesterday by Oak-| Millis Rd., was at 1 p.m, today’ aon ou ‘land County Circuit Judge George | at Muir Brothers Funeral Home, |
B, Hartrick. Lapeer, with burial in Grand Lawn | :
© They are Fred C. Moldenhauer, | Cemetery, Detroit. She died Mon- | We deeply appreciate your fine support. 41, of 3306 Rochester, and | day.
“James W. Luth, 2%, of Royal Oak.| Surviving are two sons. Ralph|! PLOYD ANDREWS, HERBERT T. BAYNES. : {Ram Brae wd many Supervisor Member Board of Review lose Attica, seven brothers, Elmer El- ‘Romeo Schools to C , Hutch- HAROLD J. DOEBLER. — Ti
“on yd cx - Constables:
. low heed, high space-quide fenders
improve forward vision, help you judge
space in tight spots. You drive
laxed. Hornet V-8, Hornet Championship
Six, afd Wasps have widest wrap-around
windshields of any car.
in the new Hudson Hornets, Wasps, Ramblers
aA o—©- ES OTHER MAKES
more re- in other cars. Mount
. . = Phree times softer springs in all Hud-
sons, compared to shorter, stiffer springs
“Sea-Leg” position, these springs provide
new Deep Coil Ride and anti-sway safety
—make Hudson easier to handle,
tiful_ perform ers. of them all! TSMR oe Doubly safe, better trade-in, an Ameri-
can Motors exclusive: Double Strength
Single Unit car construction is an all-
welded structure that gives all-around
protection, Rattleproof; stays new longer;
makes Hudson a better trade-in value, ed high in splayed
See “*Olaneytand,’’ great new
all-family show, ABC-TV network,
Check TV listings for time ond station,
= Nee
JACOBSON’S MOTOR’ SALES 58 W. Pike Street Pontiac, Michigan
\ Je re “ ; apie = aie !
" ! A 7 , ont b ee , Hoag a ind
next 20 years. Caitie Salado 300. Preah ;| poration, was announced today by .
; ASSIGNMENTS CAN DO WITH A __EST Bei. e. | ih < / oh fag le) iad 8 f OE ie ( fi Ade Sol pes) fs | foi pe THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, APRIL 6, 1055 | /FORTY-ONE oa $3 a 3 { ad Z vi : } ’ if / Pa : j j \ 5 ;
a | a, 7 ; , De ¥, 3
~ Losses Small’ | MARKETS |/MarketGains |, NewsinBrief Will U.S. Act Y , * j Ld .
aes: ew ! \ Ray Smaliman, 23, of 31 Stowell ; oO ne!
~ asGrainsEase | me. With Caution «rca S<'55iin Auto Strike? | be ; : ’ ?
CHICAGO @ — Grains eased | Price om public farmers market report) NEW YORK (—The stock mar UAW Wants President cy ed by the Bureau of Markets: A theft of two tires, tubes and . : on The Reed ETrade today after | yrans: apeien Detcons, tunes. oe |Ket, advanced cautiously today in wheels was ed ‘by. Richard to Conti is-Off &é | | 99
to recover from the sharp sellol!| Jonathon, taney, 400 bu: Me 1, 38%] The market started up at the |1)"D,O0 panics, ‘Thieves stole Labor Policy ‘ eo
dpe pon RO PD pe Na pd Begg Pl | | : | ér, Brokers thought the advance | cos” cise bed, Mo 2 350-37 ba. prices tarned back fram their best ee eh wee, ministration’s hands-att policy to-| " was largely technical, represent- Vegatadles: topped. a2. / 4 many cases. labor-management disputes :
Pi ing a little short covering. With- | }."5 eae. Ret, Lats be The rise carried up to around a| Ciande E. Bailey, 4, of 2186/may run into a big test if there se.
in a few minutes the bread cereal we i bu root, | Point. There were few losers, but | Allerton, Pontiac Township, was/is an auto strike this summer.
had given up its gains and was | *s, i_)40-1s0 ées. Pes 524,10 | some went to a polnt. charged with drunk driving last} Secretary of Labor James P. o s
selling under the previous close. | Leeks, Ne I, 138-140 ‘bcha’ Ontons, Kaiser Aluminum, which | ight when he was arrested by| Mitchell has said several times :
Other cereals had a slightly | No'1 186-200 % be. MB gained 5% yesterday, opened to- | Pontiac Police at S. Saginaw St.|he believes the administration ;
easier tone from the start, In no |} 35-420 S¢-'2. beg; Rotators. Bo. 1 30°] day om 2,000 shares up % at |20d E. Wilson Ave. . should stay out of the auto wage cases, however, were losses large 1 sh-a8 S-lb “box; rhubarb, hothouse, 85 %4and thren pushed its gain to negotiations and that the issue of :
‘ No. 1. 90-118 dos. bebe Rutabeges No] aa points, the best of the A pair of eyeglasses was Fe- | the guaranteed annual wage de- “ ” Ser ee ee ot oS teers und well entside the | Ported t0 Pontiac Police today a5 |manded by the CIO United Auto Bonanzagram” is an exciting new puzzle in which the Pontiac
lcs Sabet ate codienena ss ——n coal bag Mra, Robert Kerrigan of 50 loons | Worears should be settled et the Press offers both fun and a $100 cash prize. BUT before you Tie woe DETROIT. April § (AP)—Regs Eat | See Set 2 eles ea eee ae UAW President Walter 2; try your hand at “Bonanzagram” be sure and read the rules at the
~ cent lower, May $1.00 %: soy- | "=e pda - wept tech ond than ; who also heads the CIO, has bottom of this page. Solution will apear in the Press April 15. beans % to 184 lower, May 32.51; |ere af, teres si.s4, wed ave 4h: e-| it slipped back. ' 1 Rabert Metierrisher of 1510 Gro- | sald be waste the gevermment ‘0
a hundred pounds higher, May | q?'SEi-S'itted set "etm | van ceeal's OM aharce up Me at [owner of & grocery store ‘at S7i| the government did Intervene, . $12.99 Commercial qyease 32%, RCA 1,000 up % ar 43%, | Colorado St., reported to Pontiac| he asserted, it would be om the _ No. 5
Seed Sorry sata [teens canes Tao tS [Facet he Dan hs] ste oem Claim Cheek : , Grain Prices M arepecorede @ enare large De tras (616 Youngstown Sheet & Tube | Store by thieves who stole $2.50, eee oe A ciel ch whet
CHICAGO GRAIN — “eo ‘ 1.800 up 1% at 80, US. Steel 3.000} er that low-priced weed eat,| detense items ‘as well as autos. from one of his English grQRICAOO, Ape # (AP) — Open | god! Staana’” and saageins veharing|UP, fat $1. and Amerada Pe ty Koslean Sotere Salen, 9106 2 Defense Department now is Below is a duplicate of the “Bonanza- message So ta. back
May nn eee B08 Mad coos Loy [Sad mined colors in fair demand end! Good showings were made by | P- MA Aer. drying hard to. decide wether the gram” entry you send in to contest one cold morning. It was evidently in- ee — Bed ig mreneera ‘areas have to de-|streels, motors, radio-televisions, your ome = nay ol ee get a Fatt! headquarters, It is ESSENTIAL that you tended to jog his memory in regard to
ggg ectees LOM MAY coe nnee ENG utilities, coopers, chemicals, rail- * | junction to prevent a strike of any fill it in and save it until the correct coming holidays and the pile-up of
F «egress 1.43% Bep 022.2... 238 CHICAGO BUTTER AND EGGS airlines. serious nature ] ' "No. 5 is extra school work. By chance, a prank- o wuy.. 1.45% Nov °°.°... 235%! cmeago, © (aPrBater te . solution to “Bonanzagram Sep tas Jan < Soin | CHIROD. tore 6 (arr Batter, be STOCK AVERAGES Several favorable factors have published Friday, April 15. Unless you ster had come by earlier and erased
Oats : May ....... 12.95 wholesale buying prices unchanged so NEW YORK. Apeil ¢—Compiled by The contributed to the administration's do will be ie o- some of the key letters. However, the
May ..--sece 20% July 258 | OOS. oe Coe: care $0 BR 065, @ C 2° oS hands-off policy. There has been so, You ' unable to collect teacher was able to reproduce the stu-
Bee sats we On Be |e day. 302 1388 07 a leth,"or at least & lessening, of prize if you should send in a winning dent's communication, and got a ¢ Dee ceccgs:: 1% p BEES Mendy: receipts 34.148 rao Week, ago.....:-$181 123 T8 the ~~ s Se ee ee solution. Check the rules below for laugh from it. Can you, too, fill in the
epne whites 10 per cent and over A’s 36: | Year ags....... 1662 833 588 exerted : further details proper letters and so decipher the 60-699 a — = =. age my Fong eoveces oy Loe as postwar recovery years, m , g?
| | n Sir checks 305; gurrent receipts 318 | 106¢ high-..c:.-3110 1230 603 and the Korean War. 194 = low........ “as 6778 Mitchell attributed the rela-
ee aes DETROIT STOCKS tive on the labor front . on eer dae t te Saag Res . —, ——~AB thot year to the hando-oll pulley a on a ee
in rs nv a eS High Low Woon But some other labor experts l ence | (Re ee
weet ww it: peary, bro sor | Gertty Michigans “"222cc2 1 39 4g] Manufacturing Tractor | attributed it more to the rise of sR | Fi ‘ol Ex | fryers (3s-4 bs toe.): Whites 35.98) gray | Kingston Productes .°.°. ° 2 3 unemployment which made || DEAR MUSTER WHILE CHRISTMAS | DEAR MUSTER WHILE CHRISTMAS F
mance aah al SOY8 hens 36-39; Midwest Abrasive! .2.°.: eee ‘ unions less enthusiastic about 11s __POMING AND _ LACK __!MES fl is __SOMING AND _ LACK MES |
America Have neeredes . “eae ; Sunol That Mach —a gg Me One big ditference between the|[ |] ARE AHEAD __AY WHEN WE CAN ||] ARE AHEAD __ AY WHEN WE CAN ||
SAN FRANCISCO (UP DETROIT LIVESTOCK iB ’ Note Seetieas ts to cussnce of ony | RELA NEWS ALL OUR 60 (UP)—A finan- apa :
cial expert says American invest-| ,DETRO'T, Apr ¢ AP) Mege—eei- USINESS NOTES tn 2 |] FRIENDS AND __ARRIED PARENTS | ors will have to supply at least | bulk choice 180-200 Ibs. 1730-18 s mest-| Appointment fo William Knutf as | a a on aa cae aed _
$40,000,000,000 to pay for the Bae to thsice Le ta; few ae0-| director of forward planning of | i" so tie Sion aier Sema la | | ARE WAL_ING FOR THE _ ALMY TIME ‘|
of developing atomic energy in 300 os. 11.90-17 80; 300-200 ine, 16.35: the Dodge Division, Chrysler Cor- were exhausted. OF LESS WORK AT ee OME EXTRA | |
|
Campbell Soup Buys :
This prediction cames yesterday | siow and uneven on a catch bid basis is oe will ;
Fo eee aur atom | ie Suse: igh ‘coun and Prime, se. | be responsible for the development SO DO __EED SINCERE REQUEST THAT | | Stock ‘peifers 14.60-18.00; most utility ana|/of the Dodge Division's Forward
— Harria Upam and Company, He | Son Sees cor wpe asec [Planning Program, tegether with C. A. Swanson & Sons YOU CONFL_E YOUR REMARKS ON THE |
spoke to 600 industrialists and sci- | Str, Bd, cutters mostly, ; coordina Division
! paral attending a two-day atomic jee! some evgd amd choice 10-800 te staff departments relative to for- ae | |
’ ie ck ill Feeble siding unevenly Jowett crening| . * tors Institute? of Technology at | Processing is nnounced | | | ** | gheep—Salable 200. its affiliation with the : '
fmancil reavarces Wil be meded | soa" ay smut ia gee. ee FOPMEL BirMiNGhaM | ¥2. trom 1208 trough 1902. | Sg 1 tor atomic power Govelogument. | ive geod end chaise, chevn couguier i" ___| is &@ member of the Engineering | Gipert Clarke |~ : pa §
_____Winancing of nuclear power facil | #™>* No 1 Eitan! a. Man Sells Firm ; Society of Detroit. Gece. bad dake abl | WE __EARN TO BE IN THE __NOW
| -.sapn warbee enoven. streng to mestly| James H. Luther, formerly of 21200 Semaltwood | at/ terms of an agreement_now being | Ty _ ———— “The great bulk of these funds | 25 higher on butchers, instances 8? | Birmingham and Detroit, recently . Birmingham, | worked out, the Campbell Soup Co. SE Ty | ELE EO |
wail be required by. electric utility | tte ‘te, monty < trade, slow announced the sale of the Luther | aa a Sa N irms, jet the advance; most Mig. Co. of Olean, New York, to stock of C. A. Swanson & in PO ; eee eee eee eee ee ee eeee
opty ae Sather ee Bee o ae "lpi aeng ted |ccaeaomeree || IMPORTANT: | hares ° scarce. or many years, , eee eee e eee eeeeeeees
Another $20,000,000,000 will prob- few, iets up ta 3 Be io around a te Ge as equip- Pending Owners’ Calls to be marketed under the Swanson Save This Claim Check | Cc ‘ |
ably be required for “package” | is.00-16.00, most 480-600 Ib. 13.%5-18.09; | Ment industry.| Pontiac Police said today they/label 0 ge Phone. . ..". «
power reactors, for shipboard mu-| feed clwarance. 8) | During World War II, it engaged in | are holding 20 bicycles, pending| About 4.100 Swanson Until Solution Is Published! | CO Check here if you would like | clear propulsion systems, for loco- | steers svers choice ‘and. better “about we Fearpir i8 repay oo thete_ ennerahip hy | fo 38. plants willbe tronsterved t - Prers delivered to your home! j
— = ee . and below mostly + esident ¢ an ce a i dank, Seis. Ae —_——_—— — —_—_—_—_———_——_— —
—— wcndy “st Monaayss advance, sues [President of the Olean company |" ‘sgt Henry Hoyt, head of the — _— _—— —_-— —
“Beyond that, we have as yet | week: veslers firm: stockers and
ll
]
;
;
E i
; fully steady; two loads ¢ to , found aban- allowed nothing for domestic fi-| prime 1, ms steers 20.80.-8 few tonds-| comes vice president of Aerovex James R. Barnard, 2%, of 205 s
nancing of power reactors and |S s0." most ‘low choice to. avecage Corp. For several years Mr. Lu- éned in mecca ttl po en Raeburn St., yesterday was placed other nuclear facilities for the for-| choice 23.75-25.15; good gredes 19. ther was in the investment busi- city and possibly on thre years probation and as- ow 0
eign market,” Molesworth said. ‘| 72.00, Rey EP ness in Detroit. His wife was the cc ae ute con sessed $100 court costs by Oak-
“The opportunities abroad wilt | };°74 ™, Deifers 38.00; most good trai | former Fani Catheriné Smith. land County Circuit Judge George be huge and I, for one, hope that own to 1¢00:, ulliiy and commercial description of the bikes and serial B. Hartrick. Solve the “Bonanzagram” by filling In all ated. Punctuation as ‘well as words must
‘U. 8. industry's share of that | ‘s55.i/20° silty ana commerca! bulls | Ford Sets New Records | ™°* Barnafd pleaded guilty March 22/ the missing letters, as indicated by the be correct for a winning solution. | —smarket will be preponderant. If | 1450-1650: 0 | few choice and pring - to nonsupport of his wife and underscores, in the message, Insert only.
it is, even more capital will be ‘fotee 20 00.28.80; few lonte Sona, ana | fOr Production, Sales Youth Gets Three Years | chia. one-letter above each underscore. Many When properly filled in, the “Bonanze-
required and some of it quite |51%0's.65. s few choice 680 1. yearling | DETROIT (INS)—Ford Motor Co.| on Probation, $150 Costs clues to the missing letters are hidden in = gram” will spell out a clear message thet soon. stock heifers 20.00. enter lambs (today announced total car and Man Sentenced the story, or anecdote, accompanying the will conform in every way with the clues. le 1,500; ugh : .
Molesworth said if private n-| siow. Feely steady, ts and quality | truck production during the first| Larry Robinson, 17, of 6393 message. Clues may also be found in the —In many cases it will seem that more than
vestors are uriwilling to underwrite | SonaideTes:, SANEDeT eg and enoice {three months of 1955 was 538,523 | Mathis, Waterford Township, yes- Se ee aa message itself, and, in a few cases, the one word would be the correct one. That's
the cost of developing the atomic | vooled lambe 112 i down 90.20.31 8: | units—a new record. "| terday was.placed.on three years/ yesterday, Raymond Snell, contestant’s general knowledge should part of the fun! You should weigh the
industry, then the government will | [Sms 23.00-25.00: cull to low good lambs | First quarter production of
“take the nuclegr ball from private | 14.00-19.5@: shorn lambs absent; cull te alone totaled 438,608, also a
mostly wooled 50; Ss
industry and run with it.” reage = A gg Einay Eh agg = high mark. according to R. S. Mc- Judge George B. Hartrick. probation and assessed
guerel @vilen maneger breaking into a Waterford Town-| rick, Snell to a morsels
: Despite record output at its 16/|S*ip hardware store Feb. 27. charge 28. How to Submit Entries
BONDIFIED MONEY Free Prescription assembly plants, McNamara said
ORDERS SOLD AT ANY TIME Delivery Service ae te en des Court Test Only Answer le dees Sn Winead Gd Oslo % pa ean ta
of last year. @ two-cent postcard with your name and mast
‘ 7 of address side of DARRELL’S } | ictkt.e2cr “| to Public Housing Problem| — =. © Sorel cdrom sae of envelop
. The question of whether Pontiac , of law that initiative proceedings < takin ellie sts Pen Se
K Reports Sal could be he for cannot interfere with a vested con- es received ae chased to enter. Facsimiles made by hand ‘Kresge Repo es be held responsible for pre- | Satu right coat anal Ge Press office, 48 W. Huron St, until 5 p.m. and corresponding as closely as possible
‘Increased Over 1954 liminary expense on @ public hous- | tons of a contract. Tuesday, April 12. Mail entries must be to the original “Bonanzagram” printed in
DRUG STORE |. DETROIT w—The S. S. Kresge |" Project if an initiative ordi-) «t¢ can be argued that the con- postmarked before midnight Tuesday, the Press will be accepted but are limited
| Co. today said its monthly sales for | Rance blocked construction of such | tract between the Public Mousing April 12 ‘for Bonanzagram No, 5. Ad- one to @ family. Mimeograph, duplicator
March were up 391 per cent over | @ Project can only be answered in| Authority and the City of Pontiac dress “Bonanzagram, % Pontiac Press, or other unolficial mechanical reproduc-
Wed., Thurs., Fri., Set. those of March, 1954. The firm | & Court test. covering Michigan 5-2 cannot be Pontiac, Mich. Sass bs fohtdden:
affected by an ordinance initiated April 6, 7, 8,9 said March sales were $23,638,348,| That’s the gist of the legal
a total of $888,691 over sales for opinion City Attorney William-—A.j by the people, r
March of last year. Total first-| Ewart presented to the City Com) 41 1, sscuned fo take the quarter sales were .87 per cent | mission last night, \enen hil Go otutatt. te al How to Collect the Prize over sales during the first three Petitions calling for an ordi-.| some force and effect and can-
months of 1954, the firm said. nance banning further public | not\be suddenly abrogated. by The entrant must work out and keep tion of the solution.
- . housing gevelopment here are of | intiative proceedings, : duplicate solution as a claim check. ;
Sentenced in Breakin file atthe city clerk's office amd | wr. \inty way to find the an- When the solution is published in the _—*i! @ winner cannot call at the Press olfice | James McBride, 20, of 24841 | SF© swalting signature verificay |... i, by» court case where all Press, he should compare his “claim | ' Person, he should mail his solution to | She: Oak Park tion, brought out and a “Bonanzagram Editor.” Postmark on this rman, . yesterday the facts can be check” with the published solution, and, the was placed on two years probation| | “Tt ts impossible for any Stier | final decison on the problems can Ut hie claim check ts identical, he should jyregan enon non later than SP m ine and assessed A swe questions raised obtained.”
Oakland County Circuit Judge in connection with Michigan 52) In eeviening the history of call in person with his claim check at the = Correct answers are void unless the con- George 8. Hartrick, (a contract entered into by the| Michigan 5-2, said the city Press olfice, 48 W. Huron St, before 5 —testant reports his claim by the deadlines VITAMINS. McBride pleaded guilty March| city with the federal government | has incurred a debt of $72,800 with p. m. on the Monday following publicae- _listed here. for the ENTIRE 28 to breaking into the Tow n/| for public housing construction) in| the federal government for archi- ,
Hall Bar, 1604 S. Woodward Ave.,| a legal opinion,” he said. tect's fees, appraisals, engineer- ‘
FAMILY Royal Oak. Ris 2 CANAEOA SEPRIOS) Ng, Severs Gal, See wee, About Eligibility, Information, ee ead the note unter widch :
the $72,800 was given the City 1. Anyone is eligible for the “Bonanza 4. Only one winning entry from a family
§ ‘ Commission contains gram” contest except employes of the will be eligible for the prize, but there
(Immediate
+ —
1s the possibili- ludges’ decision will
Open Daily 8:30-10; Friday, Saturday ‘til 11 oP Sy OS en a ee Oe pp eer satipe peer 5 “A Eye rhe 7 wong ’ - “7 — agreement the government could gram.” 1 more than one winning answer
< DARRELL 'S. DR Inc. - — WITH.... sup the city for damages based ls recetved,.the prize will be divided 7. No lability te accepted for entries thet “iy: on breach of contract and not | oqeaey nme S sans cibaiaseed fall to reach us.
37-39 S. Seginew, Corner of Woter Crawford-Dawe-Grove : 0 gvelinbean sre ar to the next week's prize. Ii the winner is &. The Press reserves the right to olter
In Oakland Theater Bidg. Insurance| of All Kinds ; this case would be the amount of © echotstber Ot taneed & Bo Dass 9 OF rules and/or tho contest ot 19
; FE 5-4521 716 Pontiac State Bonk Oh, 902-0057 fsa street. te /toaies repesinew hs Snaeeltit. grog oe ae
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(* S * bi ats <4 iy df J i ee eee &
ee MBREE & GREGG EM 34303
F.H.A. Suburban
Homes FULL PRICE
3 room modern, full
furnace. Close in.
Design’ Ra Pull price, $5.00.
wnt Marble, Realtor
$44 PER MONTH
x
THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDN ESDAY.
A HOME OF YOUR OWN
Seminole Hills
urand bedroom brick home
with
you =
West Subearoen
2% acres of excellent land with
bedroom bloc
West Side
fm, Se tae Maee flees, “gee beat Gouble pew kitchen, fire-
garage,
Crescent Lake
New 2 bedroom. $6950 with
terms, of will take GI.
Sylvan Village room brick and frame gas
double garage
Sif iee URS Sint
A SLICE OF HAM | Ly
A
/ GARDEN SUPPLIES d
terms.
PONTIAC ROAD
$7,500 easy terms.
Pr J YN
Outstanding modern five room
bungalow oak floors
. with
APRIL 6, 1955
fae rbor.
Seer td'shen eres Business good, # Nutiding
BEAUTY SALON
A shop for making ladies pretty
located right here the ¢
STATEWIDE Rea! Estate Service of —
Pontiac State Bank
John A. Landesser, sree
; 41582 FE 5-0976
RESS SHOP
inaw Ps location Long estab-
Ditmess wenn, Se selling
Priced attractively. ery reaseon-
rent.
Please call at office. No telephone
information.
Dorothy Snyder Lavender 3140 W. Hurou
FE 23-4411 of EM 3-3303
HOUSE & GROCERY
ESTABLISHED BUSINESS. 6
room modern house with grocery
attached basement. new gas fur-
mace and water heater. 3 room
house at rear needs repairs
equipment in grocery included at
$11,500. with $3500 or less down.
Stock at inventory Clark Real Es-
tate. 1362 W Huron &, FE
+6002 Oven Evenings
BEER AND WINE STORE
Ph Rochester r OL 60711 OL 1-9791 Money
es $25 - $500 “WH
You can get it quickly on your
signature furnit
budget. will be glad to help
you with vour money problems.
STATE ’ FINANCE CO.
~ FE 4.1574 __10? Pontiac Stale Bank Bidg.
TEAGUE FINANCE CO.
202 N. MAIN
ROCHESTER, MICH.
LOAN $25 TO $600 AUTOS LIVESTOCK HOUSEHOLD
~ GET CASH QUICKLY
Up to $500 1946 to 1953 cars Bring your title.
Most deals closed in 30 minutes.
Loans also made on furniture
Sigratares and other securities.
OAKLAND LOAN CO.
to Loan 53) |
SUSZY BROOKS D
RESSES SIZE
4 a. teeps. 1 tr. size 11. MA
Wh NET FORMAL WORN
_once Size 9. OL 1-655
Sale Household Goods 57 wr PLLA LL PPP ADA OO
APARTMENT SIZE STOVE. AND
other furniture very reasonable.
Free delivery on *
_ Gladstone Place. 2-9096_
- GAIN. 1N SMALL RADIOS.
_ 96 to $10. FE 54-8735 AB APT RANGE. ELECTRIC. $30. PE 43083
—
—
Comfortable 2 bedrm. home in the} DO IT YOU RSE “ F BOR 20 years in the same location. al- - eT $7 200 00 Crescent Lake area. Nicely dec-| Best terms ge Te Tre rooms —— sereened wav, & money maker. cross a ANTIQUE BED AND DRESSER, ’ ’ ° crated, oi] heat elec. water heat- te choose basement, auto hot we- $37,000 year Must be soid to set- $45 Children’s pedal tractor, 62,
er, lake privileges. $1500 dows.| — r. privilege | on sandy tle estate. All you need a | comriaciatare Bane wos FE 5-0288
. B Z. . mon sense and $5,000 pay u . aw a Down Payment GI “Ua rE BOY SPRacts” down ‘to mak ce battull” nere ED anaes = PRENCH A pose. servic wild rose
Attractive modern 2 bedroom ” es 4396 3-070 N E $500 Sterling $550.00 See these 3 bedrm brick ranch e. 3 years old. large . leo ACRES DAIRY WITh STOCK | “pen until Sun 1to3 pm sent, 5, Kaas: Tee type homes Large 75 x 154 lots, fenced lot. oak floors. lovely kitch- LoTs an Wois $80 income. Ottte Ward | =~ ae a - or less service, 6 place setting, service
Plus mortgage costs in ga excellent tion. | Plas- ee and beth short to lake. | Have 4 lovely building lots in| 3600 Sherwood Ra.. Sashabaw Rd. Building Supply Business . Te pe for 8 Silver Flute pattern, im
Excellent west side Jocation full bem. with pe Cc & HARGER CO. bod clear Will sell og contract. | sp oq eueg tore of ake-| On state highway ‘in one of the WITH CUICK ualed “P.” used very Mttle, 6125. te grade school golf ree bet rm., y down pay: 2 &: u 8: ms WE SELL-WE TRADE rivate owner Call FE 2-1508 : Feingendtvs tctenietogh alt beste a co c : ie suool soures SERVICE? Phone FE 56-0038.
. Low a. W. Huron 8t. . . eS room ¥ wav frontage 5 AND RECORD
WM. A. 2 sie DORRIS & SON For Sale Acreage 47 er Drive-In Theater. All — 4 story masonry buildiny 30x40 Then Home & Auto ts the place * piven comb ap AND Record pisyer,
- , ' ww lake = farm rty. P. With modern living quarters OB/ to come Most ioans made on E CLARKSTON oe e- — ele pres Dienen & Gen Gb WO Waves second floor. ‘This business ry arp $12. PE anes Oo K. Irwin . ¢ 132 W. Huron PE 1557 | 223 ACRES 2 HOUSES. CHICKEN | [~ oe ae x ae oS. rossed over 880.000 last year.| }hohe for cash to $500 on your | APARTMENT SIZE GAS RANGE.
REALTOR REALTOR Nice big living oom. full dining For Sale ‘Lake Prop. 4 44 eect cosas dice ook Game. | louie Welker: oN Bt. late model eauipment” Eatire par- auto, furnitur or signature and | {our burner $120.80 value. geet,
enings ‘til 8 ; 1925 and ope Same er in fat nm Rec Many other things. 187 E. Ham- Rochester OL e931 cel $55,000 reasonable terms e Lsaggs Mapes plan sulted to your| fui) size ranges in electric and
™ Se Tce he Mchttinet Street, basement Wice setting” large | UNION LAKE PRIVILEGES coz lin, Rochester, ACRES 30 WEAR HOLLY MOD-| “TE NBREE & GREGG | awaits yor cae Pieaher Mase | fas st extraordinary values. ‘Miche . . 1804 . rooms. ern furnished o ern room one c me ° gan Fluorese Orchard Li. shade, lot 560x150, $9000, s. BY OWNER 4 ACRES, NEAR 1865 Union Lake Rd EM 3-4303 ager, Berkley Voss President. ( ‘rawtord _ surreteses. $6250. Terms. Cail Crescent Lake. Level and cleared. gd a large basement. Wakes Lake ¥illaes ; — ; arr Ong: stove
BY_OwnER «ROOM wWoDERN.| HOMEY BUNGALOW |7seproom naNCH HOME AND | Small late. ‘sb00' Terms. FE] 40. yo To BUY. TO SELL — REALTOR Ph, FE 5-8121 v6 50 “uag.oueh Mis
VERY HANDY After ¢ Fd. FE $101. $ rooms and beth, plus @xji} garage on lovely wooded and | 20719. eS a oe eg ae Bg hee 4) ACRES breakfast room. A- ed in lot % acre. A stope’s| 14, ACRE LOT WITH GARAGE Crews ME 17-4161. Holly, Mich T Yes, this home is close to stores ak floors, walls, Pull from the lake, $1,800 én.| and well between Clintonville] —“. 6) Banus AND ACREAGE | -- ome uto AL "NIN SURTCRE
with bus to and 7 rooms. modern ¥ basement. e. Fenced back c weer and Sashabaw Rds Genos. | , R ledge OR 31111 PE 40003) Cass Take Boat Harbor Free prarting PE 56-3853 b dl = Be he ==> y. at ¢, basement sarage, wn, large ¢. On —$1500_ FE $0 te oe Cement bieck building 3ea00 L C 1220 Baldwins Next to Adler's Mxt.
Living reom with fire-| stall barn, $12,000, terms Ideal for small tomy “= * | Otter-Sylvan Lakes #8 ACRES 20 ACRES t wells 4 eascline tages 3) OOM COMPONY | asour anvruino You want Place. light and sttrective kitchen C PANGUS . ine aie . Only 5 desirable, high and ¢ry siege f{ on MSe 7 room modern. full bath new Metal building 40x56 both with on Comm Nat'l Sk. Bidg Ca. BE POUND AT L &@ 8B. with L. glassed porch | Pb Ortenville 1 ~ . tles west of Highland Ideal FP A furnace, basement, garage eu) heat lunch room 18x18, 40 Hours . ON space heaters, all sizes; school éuies - Ph 32__ Reverse B \ ft build sites over miles < a to £ Saturda, ® to 1 } facing water. Lots shade WE WILL 8 B 3 EDROO! [Ss —aend a 4 privi- ‘of subdividing or as an invest chicken coop Brooder hoyse, 12 boat wells renting for $50 sea- “GAN = ——_——— desks wits, seats attached; new
trees with 19 ft. frontage op the} ie soxai 3 BUILD on Your zine Lake Shores location leges on - Otler-Byivan Lakes, | ment At price of $24,000. This is] , 0th pare $12,000, terms son, 000 freed frontage. 200 LOANS $25 TO $500 ee ater. $7500 with right. ‘ - tas! on Cass e. ee eep :
terms 7 this ene rea want it Cost you 4100 sii gown. 9451 Mar gare denecetions is 3 ben, tall —— T op prove my _ ame) lon Ortonville 132. \Reverse chgs 2 wells 4 gasoline tanks 3 a ee a Amel Tange. ane & clee, 98 up. beds, : ealty \ se power line Both larger = ° . 5 a IN THE aay . Geonal information contact ri _— ag = CARI 2 BIRD, Realtor igtze James Seta OXFORD AR EY ie ee year around. BENEFICIAL See ee ee pv fi sareanad rg . i] Bedroom od + - é *s ent s rtun- ‘ . si
sf ale desde | RED HORSE | giratutviere, ict tis | too comments Nationa pe mag | MOSM icheres ante wien | FINANCE CO, | ew 8 Eug “2 Mus nedroon Q . ©€ vo ves 187 f oductive land own, 7 Ww. ultes up: -
~p a + yoom., —— sete Coco Se. ait Gl Mt, 200 FT (. ‘| ! Large bese. 3 barns milt hence ; FE 2-9249 saneeeer Pontiac suites ic. aa cee — MD - cong H vars rE 42352 or FE 2-4) . font Bide. ond misc. other bidgs. Ro Annett Inc Bircanentaan _ $i950 up. Many other
on 8 street, $11,000 with HUMPHRIES Wit vas trentage, Priced right . Y went tens ‘| Up ie $500 ‘USE. OUR EASY PAYMENT
>UMMER HOME REALTOR FE 2-0474+ HIOLMES-BARTRAM John ] 2% E Ruron— PEderal 3-7193 | we BUY. SELU TRADE ANY. On 2 lots right on & most attrac- pa igi Ez 4382 Dixie Hway OR 31950 — . . irwins Oven Evenings and Sunday 1-4 | QUICKLY a ge ae er ag o a4 raph Oven et r= F acre
tive lake there is real Co-Operative Real Estate LAKE FRONT Ng ag ol Tagg Bisce” 1038 j » tian ea ae cs oo
+6 posted Ee. $1,000 DOWN ee = per fens — Prone re Sete Rny Steet | SUSTVERS NETTING OVER 67.600 for WED. NUM ‘10's 30, BUN. 18 egen. - , pe room, e shed T 5-044 ve pe. mo. with building 7.500 sq.| p> Ir ‘Apr! TO nishings go with bome See Three bedroom home with auto. ae ee _——— l%e ca: EB. i nt of land. $45,000. bo I I O} | E W HO WW ORK &ss east
this spot where you mer ar elec stove, extra lay 2 tet, plenty nto a m petieeaae, waar ma aot og = _ 14 Pontiac Press. — . Use this specialized service bit rays sash at ieoers yourself. The pric 7 5 emen ear Union e. RESTAURANT OPERATION NOW to get money for past-due eladts on Auburn Rd M58. with @ttrective down payment . an as poe REAL ‘9 al shopping EM 3.3842 eraasina 19a O08 [paeniumsaine A voil, Bilc! | teasairal far cos wrote FE 21-2866 vith “CRAWFORD rT AL PRICE $8 450 7 Baidwin BY OWNER IN STERLING TOWN- able: on lease on percentage spring needs Chence pi ANTIQUE SOLID ~ MAHOGANY
TO j =. — Pa iJ pe acres room use equipment sval ‘ontiac Wav you want to pay ouble sleich bed com a
‘ - Sale tbuiid AL P $7 s c fat i wy w mento ne cise ee ee | Prep. Rochester's room nowse. 9 scree | Geet anp Top | Magcmeners’ | iesMER Gare a ere Hares ment. ve kitchen. garage. CLARKSTON __Phone On 31812 or OR. >1769__] outbuildings 5 room house on 3| “tures below cost. Will lease 2182 FACTORY WORKERS BED AND MATTRESS, SPRINGS everything ip very goed condi- ue owner. 6 bedreame. | 5 3 ACRES 4 MILES EAST OF THE acres out ings. 4 room house 8. . Telegraph . Rear Square Come in or Phone and dresser radio and washing
‘ re senshi] ack Tne oom ant Wewpnce: ) git Malo Fonune Bovey rt | te Totes’ Farm "eis Sun | bane Me oopnine Bemis! | CP NER AT — |—tatie amen Fe ee th and h . ab ing town. Open Sat 96 Sun ~
ul = HREE BEDROOMS - eltchen and pr Nc ‘torpe —ments_ PE 00500 pests = ee a. eee, ee 1 fer inspection. Mi liford, 100 bor TLE GAS
ith one bedroom on first floor itehen and dining room iarce . —— Utual 62230, a PUBLIC LOAN snstaliation com. ——EE te — Poa eee: - >>. + £43 5>. , — a _——_ - =... _ a= - —piete—
Pine feerr- ers are Trecree’ Tounr Mreprece LE CK ~ Fa even ve
lated new nice jot on paved| and bath central heating unit Sale ; Business Property 49 i t $10.000 50 CU PT .COLDSPOT R sigost ri uy Soest os stop at automatic of] steam heat and| Located a short three miles from doen HAROLD Ww. BIGELOW 69 \WV_H °F SRSA uron FF 3-7181 suitable for — family or res- ~~] PORCES SALE — many other ae Pg «sp oo a os want 0 + x 10 330 BUILDING CHEAP. = _ Broker FE _ 5-8845 — tauram: \ n-@a er-
3-bedroom brick Easy ever aaa Can ~ =e 4 to build a home and have end | 1155 Fairfax M ear L - stor, Bendin Dever: Electric Sew-
maintenance assured be- Y | R deal for cash. R this is the piece for you. y Gaoceat MEat BEER, WINE 0 e Loans : cause srerytning ra oe ae GA’ O D :—* Ses os eply Pontiac $225 an acre with terms store = oe tation on 8. Tele- Pp t bd el RR Ann Aine pore ee ee
floor wall rpet- —_—_—— . ere rgain tor inventory, FE 4 “4 : made drapes bed spreads’ class- ine ag Ke ere in FE +0506 196 E Pike st Rochester Real | Estate Fdw. M. Stout, Realtor fays| FE eves. QT Tl ge LOW INTEREST are; china; clothing : % o sh. 6 ° COniimited funds f t iS a poo Pull geen FRANK SHEPARD TT N. Saginaw St Ph PE 53-8165 . ; 10 or single family | BUNK BEDS. MATTRESSES AND
3 = Pe _y Pp . Tienken at Adams OL 1-7511 Open Eve. ‘til 8:30 W ATER FORD AREA 2 a re sre terry ae “a > gg — Ha Practically new $100. FE heat automatic y DESIP Paid Pasting as LOTS. estate : Zdw. , alte full priee this ° ~~ “LQ JT LINOLEUMS
“fos natdwoed foots! las pom cows 2 leree bedrsoms ve. | Ding FHA Mortgage-Cost! ot oo _Sentuscntinn’— secasnsi |op-y-eepimev-ontepa-sener}—maker Terma SELLING OUT ALI { all. * § ROOM HOUSE IN CITY, SWAP 4% FT. WALL lee FT. tered, painted walls. plenty of closets. New eas furnace service @@ your ¢ Open Eve "ti 8 30 ; ‘ Saat : » FT. TILE, . im the full basement. Dbl. ga- TE ‘POSSESSION a ivan R ] . - NORTHERN for vacant land. ond iand con- eum. yd 200, viny! tile. 160,
wg fy gene, This ip o lovely orth side pa sbreed new FHA bunge- yivan oa ty PAUL D. HAMMOND RESTAURANT a ee: OP Renee nner th ae - oe E EARL Ppoimt- ws. Living room Dic- ; CS F ra ; ‘'s r e.
ew ——* ae oe ag the kiteke = OE beus uw. me meee FE 5-741 — — _ — A a san Ramey (5s PONTIAC FOR SALE OR me THOUSE PAINT. GAL $1 at windo Built-in Le y c .
Lakefront — You'll thor- Clarkston en Tile forced air ores Bao pil on PE Satie STARDARD OAL GTAvION pom | Wek censtrested, bullgme witt| cwao for what ace tic? Col |STEM. tee @, WUROD ‘. PE +3066 furnace; sutomatic gas wa- 2 lease. Two stal] Super estab: owner's apartment Plenty of aller 4 FE_5-09s¢6 oughiv the coming 3 Oak fi BUSINESS LOT ANKLIN i) Supe shed . PE_! _ sd ASH FOR ~~ PURNITURE OR
, XH. od Nice bid living room full dining vs anes sewer, water pi x150 oe fans. a ae or eat or bow tenia SE BAnOs YOUR LAXD CON- _wls o_ OB _ 3713, , . » _lake- room kitchen and one bedroom Drive out Baldwin to For tnformation call Mrs. . CITY OF PONTLAC call Lincoin 17-3248 t7-P.M-/ site Buy real estate and all for| ‘fact (Where vou have sold: prop- | COLDSPOT REFRIGERATOR. EX-
“yy » Presvties dows. 2 large bedrooms up. Puil ennyson, turn left to #0 W. 20xse LOT IN| only $18.00. Will trade. Come in| {, ‘OL .l#te model car & cash. | cellent condition, PE $1 : pa A te p-- a. basement. Nice . large Tennyson Make your choice RUSSELL A. NOTT ‘ acres located on Pontiac's} rear) in busy Center| to our office—we have pictures. M. J_Ven Welt. OR 3-1336._ iss =CUSTOM DELUXE HOT sesvaniion ely shade, lot 560x150. $9. terms. today. $7 Total price. 170 W. Pike +5005 nerth side R-1. Water ‘cor. Auburn & rley) Call c EQUITY IN 6 ROOMS To & SELL * rance Sells for $299.95 with cessastag poem snd ovis: = | 3—SUILDING_LOTS _In wonTH| fa* ond, clectricny a Ripe FE 30414 days FE 2-5219 eves A-] SUPER GARAGE | Sf ite, for car Gladstone: | $90 allowance for any old range.
— TE R00 TON +5655 TORE CORNER aor : a - | __Of Perry. 6. Munro Eleétric, 1060 W. A i eeaekee nance pe BAY bi edge Realtor end, FE Ee 24776 ake road. Calj for details. AND case LAKE RD 0 Fr. BY Completely ie “4 — & re-| 1947 77 POOT STEWART COACH _“turon ° i . . STOR ir service ‘op se as 1 lent ) storm, and paseo one Pine Wort, site tecedien — tees perv: ray ve 3710 or FE 44178 . 32 tote. 40. 4 —— FLOYD KENT. Realtor eS) FOR ANY vacaintss Product Excelent a. nS ser trade’ for furniture. FE DOUGLAS DRYER = a ee meny a > fine ; brick Co-ope Real chang Pontiac . Phone TIO. = . B. Call our for . further pat ge a | ROOMS. rom trot, WO 29700 uw. Lawrence FE 5-008 open eves . tecoted ta) tapidiy grou. Kk asa nT = = _W._ Huron.
—- attached 2 sar sarpse. 6 FT FRONTAGE ON JOSLYN- Lane te) a) ing area. A rare offering at just | “Yossie enitteen Meo Te | DUNCAN PHYFE § PIECE DIN- . RAY O’NEIL. Realtor peted living room has = commercial FE 48225 . Fer er Bact ge 50 $14,000 dn. plus stock. aan aa oe — Bs eS — i ing suite. a aes —
. aia » Ick = ¥ ae . thing useful on farm. Holly. ME} seepage Lo) pei SN 4 7% W. Huron Open 90 vasaien sane ge =e. 9) hemtvasess aca: Riehen. leak BUILDING SITES For Sale Farms a\-~r-"’es-— +. WARD F. PARTRIDGE rose 3712 a y “| bargin. $175 EM 330360
Cooperative Reel Eutate Exchange | bed Kitchen Master bedroom is | Moors. . gas heat “ac = - ~ GROCERY AND 3 APTS. IN BLOO. | wiCHIGAN BUSINESS REALTORS | GOOD CLEAN $i CHEVROLET | PEF FREEZE UPRIGHT ONE : 14x14. 3% baths. Automatic wash-| *¢Teeps and storms. wall CASH OR TERMS Attractive east side neighborhood. SPECIALMTS ° Ag el te Bg doggy 3-4 of Amefica's best makes, freerer
er and drver included im uty | ¥ aL NORTE Ht. cae aes fixtures te. | me BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES | treve for 4 ton vickue. FE- “Stes for 871 Slightly scratched. in room. RIG) . . WEST City or Suburban, we be- “RES com, rt ae M ICHIO —_ +e — 7 ransit h ,
=. Deve het we cam find your fetere} |, a, _ isl ¢ mues] 3: ° mast lemoie “or 7 oe El @ W. ume Oyen Bre. FE 3008 INCOME "HOUSE FOR TRADE Orchard Late Ate 2 apartments 2 s separate | bom us a call. ¥5, eves. jor restaurant or store wah bv-| 17 tw 5) R- paces asl +6482. north of Ciartston Most of, the 1 PHILCO. BLONDE ROUGH 4 teman HUMPHRIES Lasaire of) Clark Real Estate : = _ VU aM z Te) mece, bet S530 lie car ex : frontage on 3 sides “suo &rm.| Business Opportunities 51 Money to Loan 53 ee ae oP aa ~ QUAR- dinkan' €cae\ ean 9 pear laid OL
d Realtor FE 2-0474] nice neighborhood price $8.- SRP A CR oe — — Bats _Sicenoeh 2eemere 7 _lamber.- : PE Tar R37 « 7 ° Zs : a per acre. ef . eee a er sell FE 1t-4273 OR 3.7665 New Br ck—1%5 Baths 2 N. Teles: Open Evenings ; Kent)worth. Taub MENE iwi MOTEL APT. Up to SALE on TRADE a Buice | Easy SPINDRIER FINE MA- This Gitferent Rea! Estate 1 EARLMORE y aN Big ealtor] Located near Pontiac close —.dest_offer_ takes Norton & chine. needs some repair. >
vee mapert te Gus Dome, Drive by, call us, we will be giad "get PR Sieh-or FE 2ST 26 W. Lawrence FE 56165 open eves | late just off main hichwey. Th: Tals SELL Bourke =e, Soot Bocas | _cnabie “MI 4Ste0 -
) bee b — and one-half - to this nicely decorated | LOTS AVAILABLE. LOW DOWN Next to Consumers Power imal anal — i ie guste oe $500 C ASH car ¢ < ELec STOVE PIANO LAUNDR
‘and full ys “ "ase. ‘ceramic tile peas, __ struction. PE 40447, FE 5-3479. - —x to beat in coins ona ree enty a and few = sore FE er) \ deen
: Uitra kitchen with formice, { fash deere, eak fies plastered F_OWNER WATKINS-PONTIAC =" ARM—4/ AC SS pf orgy AE. for You Today war YOUR OLD LAWN: = ie: LUX GOOD CONDI- : fan. builtin range » Ae ipum Estates. rm er small outbu Frigidaire electric stove, tadle,| 30.00¢ FAMILIES IN PONTIAC nes @ oew ome. We dare | Son Chea» FE 30642. All aluminum sages win- DOWN On VACANT ene gg, Manel Timken gas _Terms, FE 5-0765 imas. me house. 2 bedrooms,| chairs. bed with . pring mat: County have ber- Ber and Erinve retary (wm IN DOUBLE DRAn DRAIN SuanD dows, storms screens LOTS heat. Terms. 7 ving room kitchen, bathroom, tress, e other up rowed ‘rom Buckner's in the last ower Lees movers marcroerd smk and fittings. Singer sewing too. Deico off heat, and sit- 4 rooms 3 ve. bath large living B TTENTION full bot air furnace ment. This is very nice and there 37 years. ¢ rent laws mowers, seecers mactine. Combenaiien radio and uated on a perfect jot in room Toom. kitchen, 1 Be te cal ee electric water tank and spring| is room on rem < rt : sweepers, rllers ard samiitr! po moeraph. Barton Washer. Bed
—_—— Leeaon seshp al toma ier IRWIN & Deastitas lehe ‘te Wichery Betis. | Wenecel wecd tata ind et] ante Se ore units. Brice 000 18 THE OLD Re-|> = Barnes Maréware "| comacte. and emtre maitress. < . 2g leom ; . J own ¥ ri ee — +
G.I _ ake Drivileses. 96.050] REAL ESTATE CO-OP Ten cen be ocd e@ bunters!| f00™ rough property | CHILDS. MY 2-471 COMPANY “Wate. too “OAs | ia Gavin VERT Onda CON | aemuttonz ae WERE SEER
xcellent 2 bedroom bunga- FE Soll FE 2850 FE 2 nares | ‘rms smell estate home. Is located STATEM IDE. Ine. ALwATS WEEt TED. cae _reme beowr We res] an vale: We have bread new Ee vent ta tesa Plostesed N. CITY OF PONTIAC. {trim Se mile of other new es- 21940 Woodward, Ferndale . . = wee SE exun | TS modern and traditions! de- walls, gleaming oak floors é rooms & 7 bane: OFFICE OPEN 66 te ranch homes. Land selling eee - — When iliness comes: Wheo Ee : gms in bedrecms ead living room
full ‘basement Delco oii ment. stoker 2 pe. bath. 1', _ . all around for $200 more an acre ars layoti, of short time em- | TRADE YOUR Laxnm COwTe@act j -ames embie these vourself
heat, aluminum storms and car garage. $6.750 full price. 4 JOHNSON, Realtor Price $20,000 with $7.000 down ey] ia eC OY } poyment you wih be glad fere@ure. apgtacces oc sau Pe me m and look compare screens and metal awnings oe ee Better burry for this one. Won't ere 4 ith Bucknef's where | mee er use! gauut dowrcaiers | vod all other suites offered eis: all for only $9,750 with le re. Lake ovrivilezes on 1704 S. Telegraph Rd. os Ge market for very 7 lone. ; a you are always suTe of TRAILER EXCEANOS ware You can buy for
. ; per cent down to qualified es. 4 roome, nice and clean . . FE 4-2533 WIDE Inc. GROCERY erasiderate treatment eee ES. S| seiscan price of use used furniture, ) ; -taaide mut 3 pe. bath. front | OFFERS 2 ee “st, ATEWIDE Inc } On tine paved an BETTER SAFE THAN SORRY |. - pard Lake
| price $7.950 or $6.000 cash. . , ___21940 Woodward, Ferndale | * es with seperate living ROURE negroirge YF => —" } 2 for 1 c . quarters. A family business You can obtain up to $860 today chee te dewey, Ge a OR SALE GUARANTEED RE-
« Excellent income DOWN Immediate Possession 125 ACRE FARM Toss about $90,000 in ‘34. Good| or anv da at Buckners for = wes Vii wear for | trtgerators creeses $30.98 ef 6 rooms, and Son a oe 4, rome. 3 vedroome, eee ceili. tiles cone ai try | fixtures and clean stock. D. Mi time or take up to. 2%] Sweat bore mov ices oc) Wrmcer washers . } ; ca . bath base . - i Nem late ne e . Owner retiring. Inventory months to repay or low. menth! aettagt = f om pony WS oe porch. ot furnace. 1 car ga- iiving —_ ao home. Hying room, with lerse |! ‘at cost. Buildings on lease ob- yments The chafge is less | qrnrwem sleemete « and 3 car garage make this ae avemnee. venstias = ~* cae oe stone. | _ tion, Call for appointment you thing TRADE ~Pareax Sow OVEN | Sot: 8 Oa o BEst “BUY ‘at only side close to in rick he leton, Realto R exeeiiees comfiiwe tor PRENCH STYLE $1.000 DOWN. 5 room Bungalow ; tng foom with 2, . LL, Lempleton, altor j
$13,950. 2 enclosed vorches. pe. bath. and bus $8 900, gronmined kitehen. 1 room | 2339 Orchard Lake Rd. FE 44563 BORROW THE CASH ne tedia, ehretes miaye ec se costs $400: Chippend:
2 bedrooms, separate > feomn. down payment. floor, 2 up, extra large | YOU NEED AT Yr om any sec excellent condition. $85.
Lake Front Special basement, auto. water ga utility toom. also basement. -4| BARBER 6HOP FOR SALE OR 9 pe walnut dinine room suite, pecia CS ee . t Hostel A rooms and bath with private en-| _ Tent. 730 Glenwood Ave. SFLI OR TRADE _890_ MI 46342 of MI ¢1271_ Ta you'll say it's extra .. elses _— General Hosital Area trance for hired help. Lake and BEAUTY SALON _ : 4. UN ERAL | MAGIC CHEP AUTO. GAS ‘when you tnapest District. price. Only $1,500 4 live stream, farm now ~ uC ner 5 DOWN Lore w raach range. 1 yr old. 1-6 ft. General fine new home with > CLARK REAL ESTATE p bedroom home, 2 under ¢ vice. 2 beet "oF Shop is equinped. for a laree type Dangales wat acre of Electric refrig. Can be seen at ; ft. arte. soem, p basement, 2 car silo. Well adapted for or} elientete Benes « of —— for 5 - land. Exterior ali comuyleted Pull 487 Gotmse St or call FE 38-0823
ette custom cabi- }1362 W. Huror Evenings aoe Pull’ price a0 138 Norms. are of the best ‘The orice is FINANCE COMPANY. matic = wane. denbie aseben Gr WASKER AND SECRETARY . nets. heat. its car N St. Michael’ $7000. floor main street.| Above Walgreen's FE¢001| stot and al wterior studding | —‘°e*—11)_N. Johnson. wm oe ear St. i eis RID EWAY good lease. Inform: iden-| Corner Nortn Saginaw abd Huron | -We will tet roe work bet pent of} G00” STURDY | MAPLE Di DIN- $3, 2 family me see condition, one on: tial, so call Mrs. Russell FE fireet, Fontior. = al a7 payment. “Ask for Mr ped PES. table and chairs
cash. rooms bath down, Bald 4-6203 30 yton Plains —$_Fi
fooms and bath up. private Co-operative Real Estate Exchange DRIV J 4393 Dixie Highway GOOD DARK DURAN fall ‘basement vn lec Acroun irom Post otice = | TH. BROWN, Realtor] savenper, 645° high even eas amMpsen _ |? zewerzzes roker "hea combing 20 ACRES ont em egre pte Tob x, HL BROWN; Resttor| eet th } pse ‘ ve section of Pioneer High- ctacme ond caress. 1 . gee im fain hiehway. Includes aii | ——_—Peane_¢ 1362_W.__ Huron FE 24810 | HOOVER VACUUM LIKE NEW | down ; a4 $14.96 Belts brushes all
CANO! W. For Sale Clothing 56] makes. 6 Myrt Tile. Muron Gar-
AYLORD PO ed
$500
Comat NITY Loan
pene y oun
LOANS Extra Fast "co,
a Ra
=| HOUSEHOLD
FINANCE ANOTHEP NEW SHIPMENT OF
airl's dresses sizes 1 to 12
nicest yet. $2.98 and $3.96.
Newman's Variet' Gift Shop.
_Orchard Lk, near Teleeravh,
BOY'S SIZE & TOP COAT. $5. 2
suits (navy & brown), $5 ea
jenn jackets & trensers. |
ee Dew.
BOYS JACKET
coat. Size 6 or
_flothing. PE 2-3534 ve “GIRTS |
Also, | _ Mise
BABY BLUE NYLON SHORTIE
coat, size 14. Good condition. $8.
Call OR 3-7686.
$, CLOTHING eat ae
10-12. GIRL'S
Corporation of Pontiac —
w St. pat Bate:
FEderai ~therd Lake Ave KELVINATOR ‘REFRION
eu, ft. fully «
eu. ft. model only $229.95 as lit-
tle as $10 down and 82.75 k- Michigan
nti
CREATE NEW CUS-
TOMERS through Classi-
fied ads. To reach buyers
for anything and every-
thing, dial FE 28:04 od
an ad-writer, — -
°
sare