VS ——— — , oratory, The Weather Wednesday: Details page two Mostly Fair 112th Y EAR * & & & & PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, TUE SDAY, JULY 20, 1954 —28 PAGES Roy Cohn Quits McCarthy Com ne Organized Gangs Prey on Park - Visitors, Stealing Cars, Valuables, Police Warn Visitors to parks in County were warned today to be on guard ‘against a gang of young | hoodlums that snatches veuaties s | from cars while people are swimming More than $1,500 in watches and | other articles has been stolen in one’ park so far this year, and | others report similar thefts The theft rings were revealed Another ring specializing in car thefts also is believed to beoperat- | ing in crowded recreation area parking lots The theft rings were revealed today by Michigan State Police of thé Pontiac Post and park officials. | Both warned park visitors to take extra precautions, until the gangs are broken up They said the hoodlums have eluded arrest so far due to their method of - posting lookouts who flash a warning to other gang members when plainclothesmen are | sikhted Ford Shifts Jobs ° to Birmingham Tractor and Implement Engineering Center to Be Established Establishment of a major engi neering center for tractors and farm equipment in Birmingham has been announced by the Trac- tor and Implement Division of Ford Motor Company. Irving A Duffy, vice president and general manager, said the center will re- | quire a staff of over 500 The center will have under one | root the facilities and manpower | needed for research, design, engi- | neering and laboratory testing of all types of farm machinery. Duffy said that the division's tractor engineering department now located at the Rouge with central engineering staff, will be transferred to Birmingham. Ap- proximately 100 tractor engineer- ing people are in this department. The harvesting engineering ac- tivity of Wood Bros., Inc., Des- Moines, lowa, will also be trans- ferred to Birmingham. Wood Bros, is a Ford-owned manufac. turing subsidiary, Realignment and expansion of facilities to accommodate the en- | gineering center, as well as for other expanded staff activities, are | now under way, and completion is expected by the end of the year. The building area now occupied by the division's parts warehous- ing activity will be converted into an engineering shop and lab- Duffy said. The parts ac- tivity will be transferred to the newly acquired Tractor and Im- plement Division Parts Depot at Lincoln Park. Expansion of several employe service facilities, including the cafeteria and parking lots are in- cluded in the program. Asks Aid for Missouri JEFFERSON CITY, Mo. A — Gov. Phil M. Donnelly’s drought ! emergency committee urged today that the entire heat-seared state of Missouri be declared a drought dis- aster area, Oakland | The gang breaking into cars ap- | pears most active between 2 p.m. the the most visitors and 5 p.m |parks have | | “We've been plagued with — breakin gangs about four years,’ said Paul Rearick, manager of Cass Dodge Park No. 4 at Cass Lake. ‘‘About $8,000 in valuables ' has been stolen, $1,500 of it this year.” He said anyone leaving valuables in his car, even if the doors are | locked, is just asking for trouble “Besides spotting the police, the gang's outlooks also watch the mo- j torists hide their valuables. When ithe people leave their cars, the hoodiums stmke," Rearick con- tinued The gang was termed a “well | jorganized bunch of professional thieves."’ “It seems to be operating in all = — parks in this area,” lans Expansion ao ' IRVING Expansion of research and en- A. DUFFY gineering facilities of the Ford Tractor and Implement Division in Birmingham have _ been nounced by Irving A. Duffy, vice } president and general manager. Scattered Showers, Cooler Is Forecast Cooler air from Canada again ; will keep Michigan out of the grip caused at least 246 deaths since it spread across the nation last | week, The U. S. Weather Bureau said temperatures would shoot into the 1090's again today in Oklahoma, Kansas, South Dakota. On the fringe of the withering blast,. Michigan is expected to cool down slightly tonight and Wednes- day. Thurndershowers will usher in somewhat cooler weather _ in | Pontiac area today. Forecasters predict a low of 64 j to 68 tonight and a high from 84 to 88 tomorrow in this area. Above | normal temperatures are due over the next five days, with scattered thundershowers. Yesterday's,temperature in downtown Pontiac ranged from 61 to 86 degrees. The mercury rose i frim Si at & a. m. today jw = Recall of Sout Ends Delay of Tax Billing Pontiac's delay in sending weekend as Southfield Township withdrew action that could have changed tax values on all Oakland County property. Southfield Supervisor William O. Roeser said his town- ship “would rather pay a lit of the total county tax than Pontiac City Treasurer M. M. Ashbaugh said the city will start adding up its 32,- 000 tax bills for property| owners right away. Taxes for Pontiac City and Pon- tiac Public Schools ure payable July 1, This year they'll be payable Aug. 16 through Sept. 18—six weeks late. Pontiac Public Schools have already had to borrow $250,000 to tide them over until city residents start paying the de- layed taxes. Southfield Township June 1 asked Michigan State Tax Com. mission to check an equalized valuation of $80,162,007 Oakland county supervisors set for the township. This figure meant Southfield would pay 8.3 per cent of the tax levy to run county government, Roeser said the State Tax Com- mission found the county's valua- tion on his township was almost $2,900,000 too high—under the coun- ty's formula. This reuction would usually htield Appeal summer tax bills ended this tle more than our fair share upset the whole applecart. id | county tax levy to a little less | than 8 per cent “But if we let the appeal stand,” Roeser said, ‘‘the State Tax Com- mission would have set state equal- ized valuations on all Oakland County property. The state for- | mula sets Oakland County's worth at $1,178,425,000—about 21 per cent more than the county supervisors’ valuation, Out of consideration for our neighbors, we're dropping this appeal."’ Marry J. Merritt, county cor- poration counsel, said Roeser was to be commended for his action. “The tax allocation board has already set tax rates for the county and all its townships and schools," Merritt said. “If the state had put that billion-dollar value on the county, the ‘board probably would have had.to meet again and lower all the tax rates. Otherwise, every property owner's tax bill would have been 21 per cent higher—and the county, townships and schools would have collected more money hours when the n- | | swer questions. of a blistering heat wave that has | Nebraska and southeast | the Rearick continued. ‘Se far it has ben impossible to stamp it out." | Thomas Haddon, clerk at the | Pontiac Lake Recreation Area on | Pontiac Lake, reported only two | similar larcenies there, but said he |was afraid the beach parking lot was “ripe for some more rob | beries.” | State troopers admitted they | don't have the manpower to patrol | the crowded parking lots properly jeven though they knew the situa- ion is growing more serious daily. Cpl. Emmett Bradley of the Pon- | tiac State Police Post said they | need full-time guards out there (Cass Dodge Park), but we just haven't the manpower to spare for the job.” | He joined Rearick in a plea for visitors to be more cautious, | “Do not leave Valuables in your car’ signs are displayed promin- cently in the park, Rearick said, | «Continued on Page 2, Col. 2) Lawyers Oppose Building Bonds Bar Vote Is 25 to 20 Against Courthouse Because of Location Oakland County Bar Association the $4,500,000 bond issue at the | Aug. 3 election for a new court- | house-office building because of |the proposed location: on Telegraph road. Forty-five members attended a special meeting, and the. vote to op- pose the bond issue was 25 to 20 The meeting had been called to vote on a proposal to back the bond issue, but the attorneys ap- proved an amendment to oppose it offered by Clarence Smith Several county officials and Dr Louis Friedland of Wayne Uni- versity, who surveyed the county's building needs, attended to an- | Following the vote Monday, dack W. Hutson of Royal Oak urged that a mail poll of all members of the association be taken on the issue, because of the smail representation Mon- day. Because the meeting had already adjourned no decision | was made on his request. In reply to the remark that no bus line serves the area Harry J. Merritt, county corporation coun- |sel, said when the courthouse is | moved to the “center” a bus linc |will run there “even if the county has to subsidize it.” Anthony Renne asked why the county didn't build a new court- house several stories high on its present Huron-Saginaw street site, with an underground garage for parking. Dr. Friedland answered that such a building would cost at least $2,250,000 more than the one planned — not counting the underground garage. H. Lloyd Clawson, of Royal Oak.,- | chairman of the supervisors special eer ounee committee which rec- }ommends the building on Tele- graph road, assured attorneys the county would consult with the bar association in making final plans for the court accommodations. Chief Ousted FRANK VAN ATTA Waterford Township Police Chief Frank Van Atta told the Pontiac Press at noon today that. he was fire as police chief this morning by the Township Board of Trustees. He said the board gave no reason for its action, The former Oakland County Sher- iff's Department captain said he believed he was dismissed because he personnally backed Frank Irons in his candidacy for Oakland Coun- ty sheriff. Usmen's tows @ Usuntry, Tet-Heren Monday afternoon voted to oppose | Late Demand by Red China Imperils Truce Requests U.S. to Sign | Cease-Fire Guarantees With Other Powers GENEVA (UP) — French and British leaders met So- viet Foreign Minister V. M. Molotov today in a desper- ate effort to overcome a last minute hitch which the West feared might endan- ger an Indochina ceasefire agreement. “ The trouble was reported caused by a sudden Red Chinese demand that the United States sign the cease-fire guarantees to- gether with the other con- ference powers. The United States al- ready has stated flatly it will not sign a joint decla- ration with the Commu- nists which would imply approval of conquest of Northern Viet Nam by the Indochinese Reds. | Undersecretary of State Walter | Redell Smith announced last Sun. | day, however, the United States | would agree not to interfere with | the peace by force. One British source described the last-minute Red demand as “rather ominous’ and a French source said “apparently there is some- thing wrong.’ The full delegation of the nine conference nations—the United States, Britain, France, Russia, Red China, Viet Nam, Viet Minh, Lacs and Cambodia—will meet in the former League of Nations Council chamber tonight in a fi- nal full seasion. It was here that the conference held its opening session 12 weeks ago on April %. British Foreign Secretary An- thony Eden conferred with Molo- tov at the Russian's’ villa. Later both Eden and French Premier Pierre Mendes-France met with the dour Communist chief spokes- man. Red China's obstinate demand came as Mendes-France raced against the clock in an effort to win peace before the deadline of 30 days which he set for himself ex pires at midnight. Unless Red Ching delays a cease-fire, the documents are ex- pected ‘to be signed just inside the time limit Mendes-France an- nounced when he took office exactly one month ago. (Before the Red China hitch de- veloped, Pravda, a Communist party organ which establishes the Red line, announced in a dispatch from Geneva that peexe in Indo- china “is at hand.” Even though jae refused to sign any document with the Com- munists that implied approval of Red conquest, his presence un- ter terms than she otherwise would have gained. The United States remained aloof from the last-minute bargaining partly because it is not a_belli- gerent in Indochina but mainly be- eause it refused to be associated with an agreement which it thor- oughly disliked. Mendes-France held a midnight conference with Communist Viet Minh Foreign Minister Pham Van Dong before going to bed. He plans to begin work with his experts to- day. France's Premier scheduled meetings with British Foreign Sec- force or threat of | doubtedly won France much bet-| PONTIAC PRES a . ‘ 7 ang 4 * MAKE OVER j pees ASSOCIATED PRESS” UI IWIARNATIONAL NEWS: GERYCER? Pains A ow . «* aw one with a this long fooling around with a block of Duffy, a giant ant eater at Cran nose To Test Vaccine for ‘Bad Colds’ at Reformatory BALTIMORE uw — Three micro biologists, hard on the trail of a vaccine for bronchitis, grippe and “bad colds,’ begin tests today on j inmates of the Federal Reforma- tory at Chillicothe. Ohio Dr. Thomas G. Ward, associate professor of microbiology at the Johns Hopkins School of Hygiene and Public Health, and two asso ciates have isolated strains of virus which they think may cause acute respiratory diseases However, Dag Ward said this should not be confused with the still-elusive common cold virus During the last 11 months they have carried on tests for acute respiratory diseases among 60 volunteers at the Maryland State Reformatory for Males. By in- oculating 250 inmates of the Chil- licethe institution, they hope ‘te confirm findings at the Maryland | reformatory. two scientists were looking for the common-cold) virus when they j branched off on a search for the | ones that cause the more serious | ailments Dr. Ward predicted such W- vac- cine will be developed within a year if the Chillicothe tests prove | successful. Wyandotte Schools Ban ‘Hobo’ Attire DETROIT uw — On the theory that “if you dress like a hobo you're more apt to act like one,” suburban Wyandotte's Board of Ed- ucation has banned blue jeans as school attire, =~ . “The schools have a duty -to the community. Part of that duty is sending giris in slacks and blue jeans home for ‘‘proper dress’ several years ago. Clarence J. Whitney, high school principal, posed the psychological theory that hobo-dress brings on hobo-action to the board. And he also told it: “The schis have qa duty t the cmmunity. Part of that duty is teaching good taste and social stan- dards, Dress is a good part of this. If these youngsters won't dress the way they should, it is up to the (Continued on Page 2, Col. 7) Dr. Ward said he and the other | HOT WEATHER INVESTIGATION—Chances are could catch cold |Miami, Fla., ice in this heat. dion Park Zoo in |a ‘cool’ wants to risk it, thing it's pretty hot, reward His Nose Knows This Is Pretty N(ice) a? ‘, ‘ AP Wirephete however. For one and the investigation brings Small Sued for $250,000 DETROIT (UP) — tryst with his pretty wife. Schwartz said he acted on | Beaten Infant Is Found Dead | Baby Killed by Blow, Left in Deserted Shack in Avon Township The beaten body of a baby girl wrapped in a pink blanket was | | brick shack on the edge of a |quarry on Hamlin road just east jof John R. road, Avon Township. Apparently killed shortly after birth by a blow on the head, the baby was found by Richard Ponke, 3%, of 1081 Hamlin Rd. as he was out walking his dog. Cpl. Bernard Grace and De- tective Ray MeConnell of the Romeo State Police said they had few clues to work on. Ponke said that he followed his dog to the roofless building about 1/150 yards from his home and found the body of the girl in the corner of the shack. Deputy Oakland County coroner, Dr. Isaac C. Prevette, attributed the death to a blow over the right ear, and said that the baby had been dead approximately 24 hours. Advance Notice! HULL, Eng. (UP) — Shopkeeper George Clark put a sign in his win- dow yesterday advertising ‘‘red hot news’ about some of his goods. school to take the initiative.” .Minutes later his shop caught fire. found last night in an abandoned | on Behalf of Lack’s Sons A $250,000 damage suit was on file _in Circuit Court today against Dr. Kenneth B. Small, handsome society dentist who shot and killed Jules Lack when he found the wealthy New Yoroker keeping a love A Detroit attorney, A. L. Schwartz, filed the suit Mon- day in behalf of Lack’s two sons, John, 10, and Andrew, 7, the request of Mrs. Jean A. Lack, the slain man’s divorced wife, and David C. Lewis, a former business associate of Lack. * The suit charged that the 'slaying of Lack deprived his sons “of his love and affection and income they would have received had he lived.” Small, still held in Allegan County Jail, early Saturday was found innocent of murder by rea- ; son. of temporary insanity in the May 2 shooting. Defense attorney | Leo Hoffman has started legal ac- tion to have the 31-year-old Detroit | dentist deelared sane and released. | Small’s dark-eyed wife, Edith, 380, who had asked him fer a di- verce after falling in love with Lack,. 45, during a Florida va- cation early this year, said she didn't see how anyone could sue an “insane man.” “He (Jules) didn't support his children anyway,” she said. Schwartz said he has been re- (Continued on Page 2, Col. 6) Do You Give Beauty an Honest Chance? There's beauty in you—is it going to waste? Starting Wednesday, the Pon- tiac Press will publish “Anita Colby’s 29-day Charm Course,” which lets you in on the secrets that have transformed many plain girls into screen beauties. Hollywood's first woman exec- utive, Anita Colby, is the guiding light behind many of the lovely faces and figures you see on the screen, Now she is making her beauty secrets available to every woman. tte + Senator Sees Loss of Counsel as Red Victory Aide Resigns Before His Opponents WASHINGTON (AP )— Sen. McCarthy (R-Wis) to- day announced the resigna- tion of Roy M. Cohn, chief counsel of his Senate Inves- tigations subcommittee and No. 1 target of members de- manding a staff shakeup. McCarthy made the an- nouncement in a statement just two hours before a scheduled meeting at which committee members seek- ing the scalps of Cohn and others were set to seek a showdown vote. “The resignation of Roy Cohn must. bring great satisfaction to the Communists and fellow trav- elers,"’ McCarthy said. “The smears and pressures to which he has been subjected make it clear that an effective anti-Communist cannot long sur- vive on the Washington scene.” McCarthy made public a letter in which Cohn said he was re signing because “there apears to be a lack of unanimity among the members of the investigations sub- committee upon the question of continuing my services as chief counsel.’ Actually, the committee was re- ported to be lined up 43 in favor of firing Cohn. Cohn's resignation letter was dated yesterday, McCarthy's pre- pared statement of comment on it bore today's date, and was re- leased in his absence from his of- fice “The jury of the American peo- ple saw and heard him during the (McCarthy-Army) They know first-hand of his ability and his effectiveness. I know that they will resent as deeply as do I the treatment to which he has been subjected." Following is the text of the letter from Cohn to McCarthy: “Dear Mr, Chairman. “As there appears to be a lack of unanimity among the members of the investigations subcommittee upon the question of continuing my services as chief counsel, I hereby tender my resignation. “It hag been a privilege to per- form my duties under your inspir- ing leadership. The enthusiastic support which has come to me from the American people for the small part that I have played in this task of exposing Communist infiltration in key places has been an inspiring force and a great comfort. I extend-to the great American jury my heartfelt thanks for its loyal support. “Needless. to add it is with much reluctance that I leave the chal- lenging work of the committee, but I am certain that the fight against atheistic Communist influence will continue until every vestige of it is driven from our shores. “Respectfully yours, “Roy M. Cohn’ Cohn had been chief counsel of (Continued on Page 2, Col. 2) 3 Pairs Panties Pilfered SANTA MONICA, Calif. w—~< Three pairs of silk panties disap- peared from Mrs. Delores D, Stack's clothesline yesterday, In their place, attached to the line with a clothespin, was a dollar bill, (Editor's note: Following is an un- censored eyewitness dispatch on 8ero hour in Viet Nam, largest Indochinese state, as the self-imposed deadline for ce set by French Premier Mendes- rance approached at Geneva. The cor- respondent, Frank H. Bartholomew, vice ‘esident of the United Press, arrived Tokyo by air from Hanoi via Hong Kong) By FRANK H. BARTHOLOMEW TOKYO (UP)—This is Viet Nam in the last hours approaching her night: The southern state of Cochin China, centering around the na- tion’s biggest city of Saigon, bursts with military activity and is full of fight talk. French transports land additional troops while cargo ships of all free nations fight for berthing ‘space. than they needed.” have cut Southfield's share of the Open every aight ‘ti & p.m, fateful deadline at midnight to-4- Senegalese soldiers so new in mili- despots throughout the city or is loaded in flying bexcars for movement to Hanoi and Haip- hong. Saigon teems with soldiers: French officers, bereted French troops, Arabs of the French colo- nial army, Foreign Legionnaires, soldiers in fezzes and turbans, tary service that the tribal knife marks on their coal black faces are still visible—many of them strolling the boulevards in pairs holding hands, a custom of the African homeland; youthful and rather sloppily uniformed French soldiers. mingling with equally youthful but meticulously neat sail- ors from American warcraft. Sidewalk cafes are crowded, while a theater advertising a movie “in genuine Soviet color’ does capacity business, Frenzied Activity Marks Viet Nam Port Saigon and its companion Chinese city of Cholon lock them. selves in at night against ma- rauding Vietminh (Communist rebels) in the surrounding coun- tryside and Strict curfew is ¢n- forced. Internal peace a the city is the In T oday’ s prone vid Lawrence BOG ok sc eiceesiares eee TY- Rede Pregrams : 7 Wan Ads 7, a, % ‘*. ™ Women's Pages.............18, A.-M 2 Wer Radice Service, . FE s-i1701 Oakiand Cab Company as Zero Hour Approaches responsibility of the Binh Xuen, “a gangster outfit''—I quote the words of responsible American authorities—‘‘which has the mu- nicipal police concession” from the absentee Emperor Bao Dai. The Binh Xuen, strictly commer- cial, in addition to its police duties is said by the same official Ameri- can source to operate gambling establishments and to supervise the ‘‘House of 500 Girls’’ in Cholon. In Saigon the American military advisory group stands by, its pre- liminary surveys and contracts complete but without orders from Washington—which also await the zero hour — to go into action. Here also are the ambassadors from Britain and the United States, and the U. S. Information Service. Next northernmost state, An- nam, is with guer- rilla warfare the Reds nists is the key air base at Tou- rane, In the northernmost and richest state, Tonkin, which borders Red China, the 340,000 residents of the up Piricttiire ie! { ier H ate j i il i Showdown Today With - “Sa pananet ‘pected to be reported on by the Direction: Southwest “ @un Commis EE TAGES for a New Park Adjacent to East Side East Side fire station site is ex- City Planning Board within two weeks The City CofMmission last night assigned the plan board to review the request of residents of the Bowers-Forest-Adams-Elm area to create a park on the land. Several owners of the eight parcels had previously petitoned the Commission to change the zoning classification on the prop- erty from single family residence Fire Station display of art subjects contributed and Canada. Rebert A. Thom, artist and chairman of the festival commit. tee, predicts there will be close to 3,000 works exhibited in the four-day affair, scheduled fer Sept. 8 through 11. The festival will be a non-jury exhibition open to both profession- als and amateurs. Sixteen patrons are offering $2,300 in prizes. * 6¢ * Dr, Douglas Chandler has re- cently opened an office at 391 Ham- iltton. He interned at Receiving Hospital, Detroit, and has been to business. Residents objected at that time, | and have countered with the park proposal. The property is on the north side of Bowers street In other action, City Manager) Donald C. Egbert was instructed | to determine if a property e¢x-| change could be worked out to| straighten out the Willits-Wood- | ward-Oakland street Jog. Rates for the use by local resi- | dents o fthe Southeastern Oak- land County Garbage and Kub- bish Authority dump on East | Maple Road were reduced ap- | proximately 40 per cent. The city had power to reduce | the rates to its individua) residents because the land is citypowned, according to Jack Walker, assistarif | city manager. The Rubbish Authority has al- ready agreed to the price cul Necessity hearings were set for | August 9 on installation of water | service to property at Eton, Mans- | field, and 14-Mile road, and water | and sewer lines on the east side | of Southfield road Edward R, White Co. of Berk. ley was awarded the contract fer laying approximately 35,000 | square feet of replacement side. | walk in the city. Manager Egbert outlined a plan to continue the “4-mill tax which | has been levied locally for Oakland | County drain obligations. The final | payment to the county from the levy was made last winter Egbert told the Commission he | foresaw the need for new drains to! the southeast, costing up to $30.- 000.000, ‘of which Birmingham might have to pay up to $1,500. 000."" Several commissioners raised | the question of the legality of levying a tax fer something not eatealty teeded mi to tone of | the levy. | Egbert also reported on the West | Side interceptor sewer which would carry sewage down to Detroit for | treatment. } . > . | ' Starting tomorrow and con- | tinuing the following three Wednes- days, the swimming pool facilities at Barnum School will be open} from 7 to 9 p.m. for swimmers over 18 years old Strictly recreational, with no in- structors provided, the weekly ses- sions are part of the Recreation Board's summer program. A 25- cem admission fee will be charged. Another summer program pro}- ect will be closed for an indefinite period, it was announced yester- | day. The rifle range setup at the pelice shooting range was closed down yesterday as workmen .be- gan filling in dirt behind the targets, The dirt being used is coming from street-widening operations on Maple. Frank Whitney, director of the city’s recreation program, suggest. | ed that those losing the use of the | rifle range take advantage of the | play program at Birmingham High School. Archery, basketball, bad- minton, baseball; volley ball and a trampoline are available at the | school. | * * * Two circles of the Women's Fel- lowship will meet today. Circle 3 will gather at the home of Mrs. Jack Clark, 4707 Olivia, Royal Oak, and Circle 5 will_meet at the home | of Mrs, William Arlund, 2727 Squa | Lake Rd., at the same al yp at 8 p.m., Ciret meet -at the James residence, 2323 Buckingham LJ Ld] s For the third consecutive year. . the lawns of Kirk in the Hills! Charch will be the setting for an outdoor art festival, featuring a - The Weather Moore | and a@ With cooler = and — aay. Lew tenighs te «a. Wednesday &4 to Fei SBifting wre} oe aad 8 te 12 tonigm ane) Teday in P Pentiac Lowest temperature preceding & am At 8 am.: Wind velocity 12 mph sets Tuesday a 0% pm Tises Wednesday at § 15 a m Moon rises Tuesday at 10:21 p.m Moon sets Wedn yat ll4l am Downtown Tem teres @ B. M..cccvers- 72 llem a] TB M..de0005-.73 53 m..... 82 8B M.... e000. 74 ipm. 82 OB. M.noseeeee DD BW. .soccenes 62 (As Highest temperature a6 Lowest temperature ............. 61 Mean temperature..........,....... 735 Weather—Pair One ¥ in Ponti metwtee peratuse. o 6A cas ck ee sche sce se 6.5 Pair. i Lewest Temperatures This Date in 8t Years 61 in 19007 Chart S2srsssc=222 | Mington | (Wash) PONTIAC AND VICINITY: Mostiy fair | appointed to the staff of St. Joseph Mercy Hospital, Pontiac. Man Charged With Murder Accused of Stabbing Worker in Row Over Suspect’s Wife Antone Bombagi, 48, was charged | with first degree murder today in a warrant approved by Oakland County Prosecutor Frederick C Ziem. He is shceduled to be ar- raigned in Pontiac Municipal Court | later today. The suspect is accused of the fatal stabbing Saturday night of George Spencer, 30, of 1255 Bald- win Rd., Orion Township, following an alleged argument over Bom- bagi's 31-year-old wife, Lulie Mae. Bombagi, of 161 Pingree St., ac- | cording to Ziem, admitted scuff- ling with the unemployed construc- tion Worker after Spencer alleged- ly taunted: “I can take your wife away from you anytime.” Meanwhile Oakland County Sher- iff Clare L. Hubbell said a search around Spencer's boarding house | yesterday failed to turn up a weap- |} on. Doctors who treated the yictim said ‘he died of a stab wound in the heart Cohn Resigns From McCarthy's Staff (Continued From Page One) | the McCarthy subcommittee since |early in 1953. His pay was $11,700 a year but he testified during the McCarthy-Army hearings that he received a larger income from a New York law firm with which he retained S a tahip Cohn hed denied ceed in recent weeks reports that he planned to quit. So had-McCarthy. The 27-year-old Cohn first be- came a familiar national figure | during televised hearings of Mc- Carthy's investigations in which as special subcommittee counsel he did much of the quizzing of wit- nesses His name became a_ household word when he appeared as a prin- cipal in the Army-McCarthy hear- ings, in which he was beth a wit- ness and a questioner. During the 3% days of televised hearings, he was constantly at Mc- Carthy’s side steadily whispering into the senator's ear ° * * Sen. Flanders (R-Vt), who. has been maneuvering in an effort to get a Senate vote on censure against McCarthy, commented on | Cohn's resignation: “Se far so good. “This of course does not reach the heart of the problem repre- sented by the junior senator from Wisconsin.” ‘The group within McCar- | thy’s subcommittee aligned in fa- vor of ousting Cohn was reported to include Sen. Potter (R-Mich), and the three Democratic mem- bers—Sens. McClellan (Ark.), Sy- (Mo) and Jackson , Park Visitors Told to Watch Valuables (Continued From Page One) “but. still People will leave things in their cars.’ Rearick said two Detroit juve- niles, aged 12 and 14, were caught | recently smashing a car's window vent. Although the method of breaking into the car was the same as that used by the organized gang, Rear- ick said he did not think children | were responsible for the majority of the thefts. Park officials and state troop- ers also blame an organized gang for the theft of five cars from the Cass Dodge Park parking tot this year. The most recent case was last friday when a car was taken from the Cass Dodge lot, and another stolen car was abandoned there. The car taken from the lot was | recovered in Royal Oak, and the |one found in the lot was stolen |from Royal Oak | Park visitors were urged by Rearick and Cp. Bradley to re- move valuables from their cars and lock their doors before iors by artists from the United States Bingo Verdicts Cause Conflict Detroit, Millard Differ on Decisions Covering Voluntary Payments Oakland County records indicate that a decision to condone volun- tary-contribution bingo in Detroit conflicts with ansearlier opinion from Atty. Gen Frank G. Millard’s office > Prosecutor Frederick C. Ziem quoted the opinion when asked by the Pontiac Press to comment on the Detroit situation. ln Detroit, Chief Assistant Prosecutor Ralph A. Garber has ruled in at least one case that a charitable bingo game played on a “voluntary, unspecified con- tribution basis” is legal. Ziem said the opinion from Millard’s office seems to oppose the stand. The county prosecutor said he asked for the opinion in a letter sent to Millard last Jan. 18. The reply on Jan. 29 was signed by Harry W. Jackson, head of the attorney general's criminal divi- sion. Ziem said he sought a ruling on the legality of bingo games in which members of an organization are not charged a specific admis- sion price, but can leave volun- tary donations. Jackson's reply said in part: “You ask whether or not we believe this to be illegaj under our present laws, We would be inclined to believe that this is an illegal operation and thar the donations constitute a mere sub- terfuge to by-pass the question of consideration." Ziem said he would abide by the ruling as the attorney general's of- fice ig the top supervisory agency as far as prosecutor's offices are concerned. Millard refused to comment when reached by telephone yesterday in his Lansing office Pontiac Deaths Mrs. Bert Bell Mrs. Bert (Nelhe M) Bell, 46 died at Bell, Calif., at 11 pm Monday. She had been ill two years. Born in Oxford March 31. 1908, she was the daughter of Joseph and Nettie Van Wagoner Spear She marned Mr. Bell in Ohio %6 years ago. Mrs. Bell went to California two years ago. Surviving besides her husband and father are three brothers and | four sisters, Willard Spear and Mrs. Rhoda Emeigh of Lake Orion, Ernest Spear, Mrs. Esther Van- Camp and Mildred Spear of Pon- tiac; Mrs. Thelma Legg of Ros- common and Mrs. Ethel Aderholdt of Drayton Plains. Funeral will be Friday at 3 p.m from the Samson Funeral Home at Bell, Calif. Burial will be there Alfred L. Smith Funeral for Alfred L. Smith, 72, day at 11 a.m. from All Saints | Episcopal Church. The Rev. C George Widdifield. his pastor, will officiate gnd burial will be in Oak Hill Cemetery. The family request that memor- | jals be made to the American Cancer Society or the memorial fund at All Saint's Church, Mr. Smith died Monday morn- ing at his home Dondero Pushing Bil for $890 Million Projects WASHINGTON \“—Rep. Dondero (R-Mich) said he hopes to get House action tomorrow or Thurs- day on a bill to authorized con- struction of floor control and navi- gation projects estimated to cost 890-million dollars. The bill cleared the House Rules Committee yesterday Dondero, chairman of the House Public Works Committee, told the rules committee the bill covers 147 pro}- ects in 41 states. He said it was the first such bill to come before of 31 Chippewa Rd. will be Wednes: | Congress since 1950 WASHINGTON (U P)—Supporters pledged a last-ditch effort to pass President Eisenhower's full public housing program today but they conceded privately the move ap- peared doomed. The compromise housing bill ex- pected to win house approval would stimulate private home- buying by lowering down payments but falls far short of: the four- year, 140,000-unit public housing program requested by the Presi- dent. The compromise bill, worked out in conference with the Senate which approved the President's program, would allow subsidy commitments on an additional 35,- 000 public housing units. But the commitments could be made only if necessary to house persons dis- placed by slum clearance or urban renewal projects. Theoretically, that could per- mit constraction of 68,000 more units over the next two years, including the 33,000 already com- mitted and in the construction pipeline. Other congressional news: Atomic—Senate GOP leader Wil- liam F. Knowland urged the Senate to halt a “filibuster” and start voting on the atomic energy bill today. But opponents of a proposed private power contract provision 2 PONTIAC oe J ere fy $ rar 4 * | af » * v = eat We give _. ee eh 4 =m -"¢ us £ ; eal ee aS ie PRESS, oo r+ we ? j te Se ee hw 4 UO SSDAY, JULY 20, 1954 Se cote Page re BIGGEST AIRPORT VISITOR—This Super DC3, an executive ship operated by United States Steel Corp., holds the distinction of being Adventurers’ Ratt Still Unsighted After Two Days SANTA CATALINA Calif, #—An innter tube raft car- rying five adventurers on a 71- mile voyage here ‘from the Cali- fornia coast is still unsighted two | days after its departure Asst. Harbor Master Bob Tram- me! said the sea was a little rough today, with an offshore wind, and the raft ‘‘may just be drifting around.”’ The raft’, skipper, John W. Strobel Ill, 22, had said he ex- pected to complete the trip yes- terday, The 15 by 31-foot craft, built of 100 inner tubes wired to a wooden frame, left Ventura Sunday. The Coast Guard said it. still was not officially concerned be- cause the raft has not been re- ported overdue and no one has requested a search Loaded aboard the raft were a gas stove, canned food, five gallons of water, a compass and an outboard motor Building Contractor ls Taken by Death John Albert Race, 69, well known building contractor, died at his residence at 6 a.m. today. He had been ill three years. Born in Cass City, Nov. 8, 1884, he was the son of Michael and Margaret Paul Race. He married Eva Mable Rowe at Applegate Sept. 1, 1909 and came to Pontiac in 1910. He lived at 125 Summit St Mr. Race had been a building contractor since that time He was a member of the First Baptist Church, the First Baraca Class and was a life member of Lodge 21 F&AM. Besides his widow he is survived by four daughters, Mrs. Alfred Short of Port Huron, Mrs. Harold Wagg of Pontiac, Mrs. Murray Os- born of Detroit and Mrs. Elvon Powley of Lake Orion. Funeral will be Thursday at 11 a.m. from the Huntoon Funeral Home, The Rev. William E. Hake. assistant paster at First Baptist Church, will officate and burial will be in the Washington Ceme- | tery. ‘Sherwood Mason Dies COLDWATER uw — Darwood M. Leonard, 67, long active in Michi- gan Masonic activities, died Mon- day at his farm near Sherwood in Branch County. Leonard was a member of Masonic lodges and was a Knights Templar Command- er in both Grand Rapids and Battle Creek. He is survived by his widow, Edith. Dodge Strike Continues DETROIT (INS) — A strike of 22,000 Detroit area Chrysler Cor- poration workers went into its sec- ond day today with pickets con- tinuing to march in front of the struck Dodge Main Plant, the Win- field Foundry and the Lynch Road Garage. The walkout began yes- terday as an outgrowth of a dis- pute over dismissal of two. trim employes of the he Dodge } Main Plant. ISLAND. | the largest airplane ever to land at Pontiac soca ipal Viet Nam Repelled by French Failure (Continued From Page One) stunned by the twin catastrophies of the last 90 days. They seem actually dazed by Gen. Henri-Eagéne Nararre at Dien Bien Phu, and the political decision in France to give up the long war even at the cost of all of Tonkin. Although the, the Sky Ja.umade diffi- the big is none of the ‘“‘on- atuitude 900 French still in Hanoi yet they—do cult’ by thunder of guns. there with-the-fight”’ which sparks miles to the south. The believe Saigon Hanoi is lost not leave Although most of the French families have gone, well-dressed French women still may be seen window-shopping the jewelry and gown shops, where the best mer- chandise in the Orient is displayed in tastefully dressed windows The French newspaper T'En tente, continues to appear daily. “We cannot move our plant, so we might as well have the use of it up to the last hour,” the director says. The educated Viet do not share the strange, slow-motion- nightmare inaction of the French They have been leaving steadily some of them in mounting panic The Viet Nam businessmen with whom this reporter talked were openly resentful of the French. Said the preprietor of an office equipment store: ‘‘They repay our loyalty by deserting us. They re- turn to France. We must remain to face the venegeful Commu nists. The evidence at hand today, in a swing from one end of Viet Nam to the other and across the country from Laos to the sea, indicates that the tragic climax stems en- tirely from weakness and_inde- cision in political and military leadership There is none of the hiaapie fervor for communism evident in | North Korea or in Shanghai or | Canton before they fell. The Viet- namese seem to choose the rebel leader, Ho Chi Ninh because they think he is going to win. As else- Namese AR w,. © 4 yt ee 4 St Airport. It was so large had tu land on the sed. The 3 Youths Waive Hearing 'in Theft of 12-Foot Boe t One troit Farmington and two youths waived examination | ah gn el it could not use plane, used the elty sips fac ines) over we | yesterday on charges of boat theft. | ,;and were | | | | bound over County Circuit Court for ment July 23 arraign- | retar ’ SS S to Oakland | retary Anthony Eden and Russia The tno, Patrick Pettey, 19. and Gerald FE. Rousseau, 17, both of, Detroit, and Ernest Kruschlin, 19 of 20837 Whitlock, Farmington were unable to furnish $1,000 bond each set by West Bloomfield Township Justice Elmer C. Diet erle, and are being held in Oak- land Cqunty’Tail According to Dieterie, the were arrested Sunday after allegedly took a 12-foot boat, own- ed by Darrell Lantzy of Detroit at Union Lake, Commerce Town- three ship Detroit Dentist Sued by Lack’s Ex-Wife (Continued From Page One) tained by the New York law firm of Newman and Katz, which is representing Lack’'s estate. He said the innocent verdict did not re move Small’s ‘‘civil lability The dentist was expected to turn defense of the suit over to Hoff man. When. informed of the in his cell at Allegan, Small said it ‘sounds like baloney suit “Where would I get that kind of maney?"’ Small asked. ‘My Wife has it, but that’s her inheri- tance and I don't think they can get into that.” Edith’s brother, Julie Sandler said that if any suit were filed in connection with his sister's ro- mance it should be against Lack for alienation of affection. Sandler also said his sister should have sued Lack to recover $10.000 Testimony in the trial confuymed earlier reports that-.Edith gave Lack the money to invest in the Majestic Air New York City. of which was president. She never stock she was suppesed to have received Lack Hunting Dates Set for Small Game HIGHLAND Ww — Small game where in the Orient, everything is | and upland birds hunting seasons i forgiven in Viet Nam except weak- ness. Pumps 5 Million Gallons | of Water in One Day "BIRMINGHAM -- gallons of water yesterday, and 5,200,000 were pumped on Saturday, the high so far this year,’ according to Park Smith. assistant fire chief. were pumped Statement Corrected A story in Monday's Pontiac Press mistakenly identified Willia S. Broomfield of Royal Oak as an incumbent in the race for the Republican nomination for state senator from Oakland County Broomfield is a state represen- tative and a candidate for state senator. were primed with more lengthy speeches. The controversy centers on President Eisenhower's plan to have the Atomic Energy Cammis- sion contract for private power in the Tennessee Valley. Subversives — The House civil service committee’ was expected to approve an administration bill to deny pensions to government workers “who seek refuge in the fifth amendment. The measyre also would deny pensions to any federal employe, who, like Alger Hiss, is convicted of a felony. Appropriations — House GOP leaders, prodded by President Eisenhower, predicted restoration of some or all of the $93,500,000 cut by the appropriations com- mittee in funds for shipbuilding and federal aid to airports. Social security—The Senate fi- nance committee has just com- pleted work on the administration's security bill. The committee late Monday accepted the administra- tion formula, approved by the House, for increasing the scale of benefits. Tax law writers studied a new compromise plan today to provide some réductions for corporation stockholders in an effort to break the House-Senate deadlock on the huge revenue revision bill. . The compromise understood to Ike's Housing Bill Faces Likely Doom; Power Contract Foes Delay Atom Vote he “in the works’ would exempt the first $50 of dividend income plus three percent of all such income above $50 a year, exemption this year, and $100 in succeeding years. plus an addi- tional five per cent on 1954 divi- dend income and 10 per cent in succeeding years. The Senate knocked out every- thing except the $50 exemption, and presumably the proposed in- crease to $100 in coming years | has been abandoned by the corf| ference committee. | “Five million | approved by the State Conserva- tion Commission today were most ly unchanged from last year A 22-day pheasant hunting season from Oct. 20 through Nov. 10 was approved for the Lower Penin sula In the Upper Peninsula southern part of Menominee Coun tv was opened to pheasant hunt- ing from Oct. 1 to 10. | There was no essential change in | the ruffed grouse seasons, set as from Oct. 1 to Nov. 1 in. the U.PPER Peninsula, Oct. 1 to Nov 10 in the northern Lower Penin- sula and Oct. 20 to Nov. ™% in the southern part of the Lower Pen- insula The prairie chicken grouse season was Sct from Oct 1 to Nov. 1 in the Upper Penin sula. There will be no open sea- son in the Lower Peninsula. Members of. the cemmission, meeting at Haven Hill Lodge, paused to -pay tribute to the late Donald B. McLouth, Detroit in- dustrialist and commission mem- ber, who died recently. Frank E Burch of Detroit, executive sec- retary of the Detroit Sportsmen's Congress, named to succeed Mc- Louth. arene his first meeting The House provided for a $30| Bench Lovers Remain SAFFRON WALDEN,’ England (UP) — The town council has de- cided against moving park benches to more isolated sites after re- ceiving complaints from homeown- ers that chattering young lovers keep them awake. Instead, the town fathers, asked the young folks to tone thetr billing and cooing down to a whisper: BGT saTuRDAY THAT Picture! THAT Dance! ~ you've heard so much about! JANE RUSSELI THE FRENCH LINE STARTS the - sharptail | | with Red Chinese Premier-Foreign they | f 5 ie Cleary Tours Oakland County Begins Final leg of Campaign for GOP + Nomination State northern Owen J Oakland | County yesterday-to start the final Secretary of toured Cleary i two weeks of campaigning for Re | publican nomination for governor | A motorcade visited Pontiac Rochester Lake Orion, Oxford | Clarkston and Holly and = ended lat a luncheon in the Waterford yPes | Township home of his county cam- paign chairman, Bruce Annett the airport's runways and | with a wtngspread of 110 feet weekend, —_ Red China Demand | - Imperils Indo Peace (Continued From Page One) Cleary addressed 125 persons at Holly and told them thag_ the highest degree of cooperation be- tween the governor and legista- ture will be necessary to solve future problems expected with the addition of 3.500.000 new citi- zens in the next 15° yvears, of the pomted out s An example necessary, Cleary cooperation water short- age faced by Oakland County in solution of the acute com foreign Minister Vyacheslav M munities Molotov during the morning and! ‘The problem~ could be quickly afternoon to draw up the final! colved according to Clearv if the texts of the agreements j executive office loaned its prestige He also arranged a lunch date and power to the establishment of fa cooperative planning communities board to Minister Chou En-lai and planned another meeting with Van Dong Mendes-Fiance’s day of decision assist all The Bay City-Toledo turnpike would be much nearer reality to- as far as it could be learned, did ; not call for any meeting with For day if the governor had shown eign Minister Tran Van Do of the More than an academic interest gn Mun: i loval Viet Namese government in aiding the authority which he The main agreements seemed to| ®PPointed, according to Cleary, be “Shechigan agriculture must be as 1. Three separate cease-fire pacts | sisted with more research, partict to be srgned by representatives in| larly ino marketing, according to Geneva of the rival commanders in} Cleary. to meet the challenge of Viet Nam and the two smaller) a 50 per cent increase in popula- states of Indochina. Laos and Cam- | tion bodia When he addressed 150 members 2 A cease-fire line in Viet Nam. | of Oakland County s Republican partitioning Indochina’s largest) Women’s groups in Annett’s home state near the lith parallel, The | at 2799 Sylvan Shores Dr. Cleary final line was expected to run Just! told of an optimistic outlook for north of Colomial Highway No. 9. | the state's welfare linking Laos with the Viet Nam “LT foreses e\ pansion and de coast and leaving in French hands velopment which the St. Law- the ancient Annamite capital of rence Seaway will present to us..—- Hue and the great atom-bomber | hich can conceivably dwart the airfield at Tourane CS AES ARES Early surrender to Hanoi to dustry brought to Michigan in the Reds and the evacuation the firat half) of the of the century. Tonkinese Gulf port of Haiphong , within 230 to 260 days after th This is the time for steed? aNd ceaselire . Vigan mt for retrenchment and 4 Elections throughout Viet Nam, 'C! ti0n } declared in 1955 or no later than 1956 Con In stating his qualif cation s for | munist sources said the month, the Post of governor Cleary told | probably would be June his audience of his record as a 5. An agreement on “regroup. | S/dier for 2S years. an educ chad ment" of forces in Laos. No final | or “0 years: chairman of the Re- publican State Central Committe | | | arrangement on this has been con his Tarst as SOUT E for four years | cluded, wth the French holding ; ‘1 : as | ) late ) h positior out for -an agreement. barring | !@"¥ Of state ; ak = I ' recognition of a Communist puppet | 4@ Member of the Liquor Cont Commission and other agencies | SOry « ommission | Conditioning Co. of | got the | government 6. A three-nation truce superv) almost certainly 3 Identify Suspect in Indiana Murder INDIANAPOLIS. Ind. -®—Pi consisting of Canada. India and Po- land. Decisions probably will be by mapority vote. with the veto applicable only in case of threats to the grave pe act mice 7. The participating powers will) iq today that a former Indtanap . issue a series of declarati ms prom-| gis cab driver has been identified ising to respect the agreements fron) picture as the Jack and not to-try to change them by | Q Shea” in w hotel room. the forece or threat of force The body of 18 Id Dorot Poore United States, France) Viet Nam) was found Sur day. crammed ina and Laos cach will issue declara-| drawers tions. Others nations will sign a They said _ identification was joint declaration made by a taxi driver and two Ee clevator operators oS * Urges Property Return WASHINGTON \® — The Judiciary Committee withheld the name of the ald suspect Police 23-year A Claypool bellhop senate has urged’ Bruno Wid- that Japanese and Germat- prop-) mann, 30. dissented from the pic erties seized by the government! ture identification, saying the sus during World War II be returned! pect’s height of 9 feet 8 “makes to their owners him too tall No room charge for children under 4! This plan is in effect every day of the week, every week of the year at Statler te If one or more children.under 14 occupy the same room with both parents, the regular two-person rate applies for the room. If one or more children under 14 occupy a room with only one parent, the one-person rate applies for the room. . % Ifone or more children under 14 occupy a room without a parent—that is, if more than one room is needed for a family—the one-person rate applics for the second room. Bring the family for weekend of fun at the Detroit Statler! > SPECIAL STATLER FEATURES FOR TRAVELING FAMILIES © Children’s menus ¢ Children's plates and silver © Balloons for the youngsters after meals ¢ Formulas prepared © Reliable baby sitters * High chairs and cribs « A basket of fresh fruit in every room occupied by children ¢ Radio in every toom = * Delicious box lunches prepared e Many guest rooms are air-conditioned © Additional air-conditioning now being installed HOTEL STATLER, Detroit: Facing Grand Circus Park Tel.—WOodward 3-6000 2-Week - SS ee FOUR’ * ACCURATE a) Each tablet 1% greins — easy ST. Joseen lo give exact ASPIRIN dosage “just as § FOR CHILOREN d ‘ orders.” World's Largest Seling Aspria For Cidren (Advertisement) Nagging Backache Sleepless Nights Often Due to Kidney Slow -down When kidney function slows down, many folks complain of nagging backache, head- aches, dizziness and loss of pep and energy, Don't suffer restless nights with these dis. comforts if reduced kidney function is get- ting you dowa—due to such common cautes as stress and strain, over-exertion or ex po. sure to cold. Minor: bladder irritations due to cold or wrong diet may cause getting up nights or frequent passage Don't neglect your kidneys if these ecndi- tions bother you, Try Doan’s Pills—a mild diuretic, Used successfully by millions for wer 50 years. It's amazing how many times Doan's give happy relief from these discom- forts—helpthe 15 miles of kidney tubes and fil- ters flush out waste. Get Doan's Pills today! An All-Expense Vacation to MIAMI Via DELTA C&S AIRLINES PONTIAC’S MOST COMPLETE J SHOPPING CENTER ee —- -— -— — —_ aa GET “TAILOR-MADE” TERMS WHERE YOU BUY YOUR CAR! ao, < 2 Board to Seek Working Funds Huron Valley Official THE PONTIAC PRESS, Asks Bids on Separation at 8-Mile and Woodward LANSING — The State Highway yiraffic wishing to go westerly on department will take bids in Lans- | Eight-Mile road and a@ third will take southbound traffic on Hilton street easterly to eastbound 8-Mile F ing. July 28, } for the construction of a TUESDAY, JULY 20, 1954 County Deaths dames Pettit NORTH-BRANCH — Service for James Pettit, 62, of Sehultz Road, will be held at 1:30 p. m. Thars- day at the Baird Funeral Home, Lapeer, with burial in Smith Hill Swim Climaxes Reunion ARMADA—Swimming and a pot- luck dinner climaxed the annual reunion of the Gilbert family, Sun- day, July 18 at Lakeport State Park. Mrs. Adolph Whal of Bad large grade separation at Woodward avenue and Fight-Mile | Toad The area is at the south | limits of Oakland County. | The intersection handles some | 130.000 vehicles every 24-hour pe- | riod making it the busiest highway | intersection in the state | to Ask for $40,000 in| Operational Costs MILFORD — First project tar-| ing the newly elected Huron Val-| | ley | the prob- | for $40.- pending | school board was lem of asking the state 000 in operational costs state aid for Milford Officers for the coming year are: | Wil- | Under terms of the contract to be made with the low bidder on the project, construction work is to be completed by Dec, 15, 1955. Dr. Ben Bragg, president ° During construction, traffie on ham Aspinall, vice preside nt; | ¢ f Woodward avenue and Eight- Laurence Brandenberry secre- ‘ : =~ Mile road will be routed over tary; and Henry Longfield, treas~| ; temporary roads at the construc: urer. C. W. Lovejoy was elected | tion site. trustee and is the only new mem- | ber on the board, replacing George Hubbell, former president NANCY BOLCUMB The Woodward-EFight-Mile struc- Mr. and Mrs. Otis Holcumb of ture witt be one of the largest | Saunders Road, Oxford, have an | ees grade separations ever nounced the engagement of their | built iy Michigan. It will be a tri- daughter, Nancy Lee, to Byron F | ievet structure with the ground | DeLong of Oxford. He is the son of| je used for turning movements | Mr and Mrs. W. L. Delong of The estimated cost totals around | Melvindale A fall wedding 1s $3,500,000 planned | The overall length of the Wood- ward separation will be 2,650 feet, | extending from Almeda to Chester- field streets. On Eight-Mile the length will approximate 2,800 feet Harold Hansen, superintendent, Was authorized to proceed with supervision of construction of the new quarter-mile track on the athletic field and to have more fence installed around the area. Name Voting Sites | Dirt moving have been | working for the past two months | on the track along with filling and crews | leveling of the ground in the area k ti p | Wario irc a PS for more inside-parking space. for Mar e ing 0 Paetenrind rhe = Lymen Girt & Sons of Pontiac a ; — are contractors for the job MARLETTE — Seven polling} Both Woodward avenue and . places have been established for| Fight-Mile road will have three Bids will be accepted by the | | wheat vote for or! Janes of traffic in each direction farmers to school board for the two school | against marketing quotas for the! at the new grade intersection. buildings and property on M-59 195 ; . ‘TO known as the Porter Granger | CT . On the grout! level, to be used buildings northeast af White Lake.| Balloting will be conducted Fri-| for turning movements, there also No date has been set for the bids | day. Polling places of Bue 1, Lexing- will be three lanes of traffic in as yet ton and Worth townships, are at! each direction. — Croswell Civic Center; Elk che Also included in the project will 7; Maple Valley and Speaker at the | pe three service drives, one imme- CAP Stages Show | Elk town hall; Watertown, Elmer, | diate ly north of Eight-Mile road MARLETTE—The Marlette CAP} Moore and Custer at the Agricul- and immediately south of Bennett took part in a demonstration mis- | tural Stabilization and Conservation | street which will carry northbound sion Sunday at Bad Axe. The|office in Sandusky | Woodward avenue traffic. Another group manned a first aid station Other voting places are Marlette | will be for southbound Hilton street and ambulance and rescue lights.) and Lamotte at the John Deer | = — store in Marlette; Argyle, Austin, | | Evergreen and Greenleaf tow ae Furniture, Clothing \at Herdell’s garage at Argyle; Min- | Fisher’s Hold Reunion ALMONT—The first reunion of| den Delaware. Wheatland and Ma . . . . the Fisher families was held Sun rion at the Palms. elevator « Given Fire Victims day at the home of Mr. and Mrs.| palms and Forester Sanilac Howard Miles, with 40 present County Births ents of a son, Phillip Earl, born Sunday at Lapeer County General Hosipte! DEAF? | | Carsonville AS ashington and Bridghampton at} WHITE LAKE TOWNSHIP—Ot Fire Hall. |fers of furniture and clothing as- | sistance are being received by Mr. i RAS |and Mrs. William Holland, of 9381 Ss 00 e e $ Pontiac Lake Rd., whose home was destroyed by fire recently. Jack V Stone The three room frame dwelling e burned to the ground Saturday, AUBURN HEIGHTS — Joyce but the Hollands and their two Louise Cooke became the bride of | daughters, Ann Marie, 4, and | Jack Vaness Young recently inf a Carolyn Ann 2, were not a goes ceremony at the Stone Baptist| Neighbors have_ eollect J | Free Book ae Tells All church |in addition to donating a stove and >. The new home the | The bride's parents are Mr and furniture ..- Sells Nothing! Mrs. Richard Cooke. of Avalon | Hollands planned to build nearby |Road. The bridegroom's parents |!8 already under construction, I, arrincer |With a bulldozer digging out a | If you hear }are Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Barringer. | ¥! but don't un- The bride's sister Mrs Dorothy | ramen nt ia ans era a \]| derstand, per- Lyle of Lapeer, was matron of tree agi a ——— |} haps youdon't honor, and Rose Mary Morris of | and an electrician ! need a hear- |Pontiac was maid of ‘honor.| The Hollands currently are stay- ing aid — as Bridesmaids were ShirJey Rogers, |ng with Mrs Holland's apichijapon |} you'll learn from this re- J) Caroline Curtiss, Naomi Maloney, | Mr and Mrs. Don Howard, of 2493 and Donna Kirby | Blair Dr | vealing 43-page booklet, Your Hearing and Your James Young was his brother's } man, and ushering were| Church Rectory | Larry Cooke, brother of the bride, | - . land James Hill, Robert Curtiss ‘Fund Drive Announced |Howard Andrews and Tracy Lyle ORTONVILLE—The Rev. George ounty FE. Ging, pastor of St. Anne Mis- a. — tar | S100. has announced a_ building ht ul ‘ ular : meee Wednecdey et Gen Squier Park, | fund campaign for a minimum of | south of Dryden $16.000 Drayten Plains The drive. Health.” | nest Contains such facts as the care of your ears; the ef- fects of vitamins and drugs on hearing; whether deaf- ness is inherited ; the family problems of the deaf, and many other revealing facts. And there's not a word in it about Sonotone or its amaz- ing new transistor hearing aid. under the chairman- 8 Marthas gull of 8t Andrew s 2 Send fer copy of “Your Hearing 0m@ | goiccopal Church will hold tts summer | ship of James Walters, has been Your Wealth” enclosing your same mreeting st noon Thursday at the home undertaken to provide funds for the construction of a church rec- and eddress te: SONOTONE of Mrs. Charies Reid. 250 John RK. Claw son | Trey Township . tory The Troy Township WCTU will hol ~ , a : | its annual picnic. July 22 aa — St rae Is th ae alae 2 2 Park, Rochester. Members and riends | caret or Vv ie 5 hs) Hearing Service oct rb vanilla SS esecieta Wenuens Joseph Church, Lake Orion, but aterford Township 357 N. Saginaw FE 2-1225 The Ladies Guild of Christ Lutheran | growth in the area has indicated P ntia | Church is sponsoring am ice cream social at 6 p. m Wednesday at the church. at | Williams Lake and Airport roads the need for a resident priest, of- ficials said, GENERAL MOTORS ACCEPTANCE CORPORATION TIME PAYMENT PLAN ~ sk Your Dealer. IN CHEVROLET Your General Motors Dealer gives you extra benefits when he uses this : : ‘ 7 . age 3. If financial problems arise, you GMAC : ; J Thrift-Guard Plan! get Sinks 2 to help ownership 1. Your dealer gives you the great- you reach road. 2s \ LORRAINE GOGUEN Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Goguen of Jamaica Plains, Mass., announce the engagement of their daughter, Lorraine, to Jones F. Berry, son | of Mr. and Mrs. John Lock of Keego Harbor. The couple will be married Sept 4, in Plains , Nancy C. Akers Wed in Recent Church Service NORTH BRANCH — Naney € Akers and Thomas Howard Collins pledged their marriage vows at the Methodist Church recently The bride's parents are Mr. and | Mrs. Delbert Akers. Mr. and Mrs Thomas Collins of Lapeer are the parents of the bridegroom The bride's niece, Carolyn | Kandt, of Qarkston, was ber at- tendant, and guests were seated by the bride's brother, and brother in-law, Myron Akers and Fred Mil ler A. reception followed in the American Legion Hall. The newly- weds left for a trip around northern Michigan. Lakeville Church Group Holds Business Meeting LAKEVILLE — Distribution of church plates to be sold in a fund raising drive was the main order | of business at the last meeting of the W.S.C'S. of the Lakeville Metho dist Church. Thursday, July 15 Meeting at the home of Mrs Oscar Schroeder on Kingston road, 20 members attended = including Rev. nd Mrs. Alfred E. Eddy. At the conclusion of the business meet- ing a birthday party was held for Mrs. Roland Mortimer. | Look belew for the number of your nearest dealer who Is selling the hottest numbers of the year— Oldsmobile’s "88" and Ninety-Eight! WANTED ee place you can Oldsmobile and George Broughman and Mrs. Harry | and grandparents Mr. andMrs. Her- | Jamaica | Chapel that wide, sweeping panoramic windshield—when you experience the smooth-surging power flow of the mighty “Rocket” Engine—when Safety Power Steering* helps *Optional of extre cod. Cemetery, Otisville a aa Surviving” béxsides his widow, Mae, are his daughters, Mrs. Ever- ett Kluka, of Columbiaville; Mrs. J E. Hilliker, of Flint; Mrs. Nelson | Johnson, of Lapeer, Mrs. Orlin | a . : Dodge of Mayville. and Mrs | Homade Food Shop's catering service for wed- ding receptions is complete in-every detail — no work or worry for you—whether in your or some other location let our experts help you plan the details—Phone FE 2-6242. Edmonson, both of Hadley. and | two sons, Basil, of Hadley, and Le- | Roy of North Branch David Licyd Hough ROYAL OAK TOWNSHIP —Fu neral service for David Lloyd} Hough, 8 year old son of Mr and | Mrs. Percy Hough, 26668 Wolverine | St., will be held 11 a. m, Wednes day at the Kinsey Funeral oome, | Royal Oak, with burial in White Chapel Memorial Cemetery. He | died at Sister Kenny Polio Cen ter, Farmington, after a three day illness c Surviving besides his parents are two brothers, Thomas and Jerome, | Delicious FRUIT PUNCH. ..~ *I* HOMEADE WEDDING CAKES Designed, Baked and Decor- ated by master bakers to your # 5 to your wedding. Moderately priced. bert H. edwards of Clawson, and Mrs. Curtin Farley of Roseville Wilfred L. Flynn ROYAL OAK — ervice for Wil fred L, Flynn, 50, of 2926 Bem- bridge Ave., will be held at. 1:30) p. m. Wednesday at the Schnaidt | Funeral Home, with burial in White | Memorial Cemetery. He | died Sunday | 144 - 146 NORTH SAGINAW STREET Surviving are his widow, Helen, a son, Martin, USAF, a daughter ~ 2 ad ’ ENJOY A DELICIOUS MEAL IN OUR AIR-COOLED CAFETERIA AND LUNCH COUNTER Marcia, of Detroit, his father, Wil-| 4 liam, of Dearborn, and three broth- | . . ers Insure With Agencies Francis L. Pendy i ; - FERNDALE — Requiem mass | If Pisplavinge This Emblem for Francis L. Pendy, 53, of 1895) p ) £ = € Woodward Heights, was said this | Frank Andersen Crawterd-Dawe H. W. Huttentocher morning at St. Mary Magdelen} Agency Grove Agency Ageney Church, Hazel Park, with burial | Anglemier-Strait ee Piano Daniels Agency in Holy Sepulchre Cemetery. He | aan Ine , Thatcher-Pattersen- | died Sunday } — Norvell W. A. Polleck —_ Surviving are his widow, Alice, | sete Wm. W. Densidsen § Withinsen insurance and three brothers Baker @ Hansen Agency Agency Brammett- Gilbride -Matiah: 3. L. VeaWagener Mrs. Robert Lewis | cane oe oo —— n — BERKLEY — Service for Mrs tobert (Lila M.) Lewis, 46, of This Advertisement Sponsored by 2536 Berkley Rd. was hetd this) Pontiac Association of Insurance Agents morning, with bunal in Crest- | view Cemetery, Roscommon, She died Saturday. r = pera Surviving besides her husband are two sons, William of East Lansing, Terry, at home, her par , pay kno es ents, Mr and Mrs "William Van ® — aXe difference in glasses! Brocklin, and a_ brother, Clar- There's @ ence, of owosso Mrs. George H. Becker ROYAL OAK — Service for Mrs Geotge H. (Alice BE.) Becker, 70, of 919 Hoffman Ave. will be held at 2 pm. Wednesday at the Spiller Funeral Home with burial in Oak- view Cemetery. She died Sunday Surviving besides her husband are a daughter, Mrs. John. B Swan of Royal Oak, and a son George B. of Big Rapids KINDY laccce Where gueranteed-quality glasses CREDIT cast less then 2¢ o day! DR. SPENCER OATES, Optometrist 13 NO. SAGINAW ST. 9:30-5:30 daily 9:30-12:30 Wed. 9:30-8 OOF ri the Gasoline is most valuable for a RIDE in the "ROCKET"! Super “88” 4-Deor Sede, A Genera! Meters Vetoss you take a corner or park with finger-tip ease—when Power Brakes* stop you with a touch of your tee— only then will you know . . . Oldsmobile performance is every bit as outstanding as its breath-taking beauty! So why put off this thrill any longer? Call oar number for your date with the hottest number on the highway! + You at the wheel! That's the only feel the dramatic difference between any other ear! When you look through Laas PONTIAC - OLDSMOBILE eet Sinancing — = ha. 4. Emergency assistance is avail- ; card age he er gga pg, rel laren pat "ROCKET" ENGINE OO LW. Co Ss NMI © B i ie eE : BUICK 6 CADILLAC time, at one place—eaving ae kaa Eescgne canoe Poet credit . . : i : ) v ime. : ; > RING FOR A RIDE IN A "*ROCKET**E —The Plan That Has Helped Milli “On Time” | | | : The Plan That Has Helped Millions Buy Cars “On Time , JEROME MOTOR SALES CO. j 280 S. Saginaw St., Pontiac, Mich. Phone FE 4-3566 Offered only by dealers in CHEVROLET + PONTIAC + OLDSMOBILE + BUICK + CADILLAC new cars, and used cars of all makes; also FRIGIDAIRE + DELCO APPLIANCES - GM DIESELS > GENERAL Motors ACCEPTANCE CORPORATION & : Nocturnal birds and animals and fish living in dark sea depths often have large eyes to better catch the faint light. Optometrist “Better Things in DR. H. A. MILLER 7 North Saginaw Street Phone FE 4-6842 Sight” ae - THE Ohio Youth Sentenced to Prison’ for Breakin Louis D, Vanitvelt, 21, of Cleve- land, Ohio, was sentenced to 1% to 15 years in Southern Michigan prison at Jackson yesterday for breaking into an Ortonville hard- ware store last May 9. Vanitvelt, sentenced “by Circuit Judge George B. Hartrick, also ad- mitted forging 25 checks, breaking into two schools and two homes in this area and three stores in Lex- ington, Mich. Bottling Will Be Halted LAWRENCEBURG, Ind, ® — Schenley Distillers, Inc., announced today it will discontinue bottling operations here in late August but will continue research in antibiot- ics. The plant will be used as the company’s largest whisky aging center FATHER Pesceseu sseeeeseeegcg#ggega: ~ MOTHER — | ACT NOW COMPLETE FAMILY GROUP OR INDIVIDUAL HOSPITALIZATION ~~ be TO $1,350 for Hospital Room and PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, JULY 20, 1954 |Reporter Rates as VIP During Stay at Fort Riley By LAURA Z, HOBSON (International News Service) FORT RILEY, Kan, — For sev- eral days my sons and I were guests of Maj. Gen. P, D. Ginder and the U. S. Army — and never was anybody so coddled! Being lucky enough to know the commanding general of the 10th Infantry Division is, of course, pret- ty good ‘‘channels"’ for some spe- cial privileges, but when he invited us to “visit Fort Riley a while," I never dreamed how special they would be. It wasn't simply being installed in the huge three - room visitor's suite in Carr Hall, with flowers in vases, electric fans all over’ and— surprising touch — a nice big elec-, tric refrigerator right in our liv- ing room, stocked with bottles of Coke, ‘‘pop,”? and canned fruit juices against hot Kansas thirst. Ner was it the tennis courts and the five swimming pools on the post which my boys sampled constantly while I was high and dry at my typewriter, nor our easy access to demonstration rides in jeeps, tanks and planes. Even the big evening party with with a bumper crop of leaders. . I have in mind Maj. Gen. P. D. Ginder , , .” But at Fort Riley, where he's in command of 18,500 military per- sonnel, I found myself addressing him half the time as ‘‘Genefal'’— and surprised each time to hear it come out that way. I'd never seen him in his offi- cial capacity before, and in that 53,000..-acre post, with 101 years of Army history and tradition be- hind it, “Phil” and “P, D."" some- how. got lost on my tongue. PAYS FULL COST OF Operating Room, Hypo- © DETROIT MUTUAL INS. CO, |) ‘he seneral and his staff and their) po ihaps it's because they al dermics, Surgical Dressings and Ambulance 2631 Wooedward-—Room 220 ro regs complete, my i told me of his Freech lagen of in City ‘ Detroit 1, Mich. Reet by “The Sidewalks of New| Honor and Croix-de-Guerre with ALSO PAYS:CASH Toward Laboratory, Oxy- © _—_¢/e Enrollment Dept. : York,” enthusiastically blared at vari - bry caviraplinn-f Motel = , is high awards from jum gon | Routine Medicine. Penicillin, Ances s CLIP & MAIL TODAY a gf gg gt — ia’ Fale nt wien a ALSO TOWARD X-RAYS, Either in Doctor's 8 Particulars Free—Ne Obligation srgroonin ga Tony R. Cees area ee ee rn Mil , Cpl. George C. Rapp i PAYS UP TO $300°00 for Surgicel Qperations § NAME of Pittsburgh, and Pfc. Dennis H. Bet I hopt rememberhig @ oom: _ __ =——Paid at Home, Hospital or Doctor's Office 8 eee ea tciveens of alt was|™er night im 1952 when I was MATERNITY BENEFITS PAID at Home or in ; ADDRESS .........--- 6s sects eeees rece getting to see part of the United with his wife and some friends at the Hospital ' States Army in a kind of close-up, | their brownstone house on East AGES 3 MONTHS to 75 YEARS — Husbend, ' CITY. vo+++ BTATE.......-06 unde the guidance _— a ee reaia dope rlatall ey] mara pata and an Children Under 18 for One be OCCUPATION........-c0s-s whom Gen, Mark W, Clark wrote, | answered. * be “Korea has provided the U. S.| “It's Tokyo.” she said, and we . : « r th ar cmiaaamnaanasiaaaaaeededaniaeesienieeieemeneeaean @ -OU7 YH 1é€/M) * RR A REDRESS ES SEE SLES LEO LL teenie No wonder... every day, in city after city, more thousands of men and women are switching to Drewrys Extra Dry Beer! It’s the wonderful tasting beer that’s Calorie- Controlled . . . the calorie content never varies. Drewrys is brewed with high protein ingredients to be exceptionally light. Yet every drop is brim- ming with full flavor! This is the one big difference in beers . . . you can enjoy as much Drewrys as you like, with no full feeling afterwards. That’s why Drewrys is the . man’s beer women love! Taste the wonderful dif- ference yourself! “ MAKE THE FAMOUS DREWRYS ONE-BOTTLE TEST TODAY! dust one bottle will prove te you that Drewrys is the finest beer you ever tasted —no matter what beers you may have enjeyed—ne matter what you may have paid for other beers. Find out for yourself TODAY! mnres Extra Dry BEER South Bend, Indiana THE MAN’S BEER WOMEN LOVE ! * ‘ * all tried not to liste call came through at last. “A star?” she cried a moment later, and our own babble of excitement all but drowned out the rest of her call, won his second a _ year later, after Korea where he commanded the famous 45th Infantry, the “Thunderbirds,"’ through the hor- rors and blood and deaths of Sand- bag Castle, Christmas Hill and Heartbreak Ridge. That was our host at Fort Riley, my sons’ and mine. ‘Special privi- lege’ is right. Placed on Probation, Fined $200 for Shooting James Orr, 27, McNeil] St, years’ probation and assessed $200 costs yesterday by Circuit Judge George B, Hartrick for wounding of 328 Howard 26. Fisher St. blast through the door, felonious assault, Pontiac Man to Serve 60 Days: for Auto Theft Ave. was sentenced to 60 days in Oakland County Jait, placed on two years’ probation and assessed $200 costs yesterday by Circuit Judge George B, Hartrick for auto theft. Bowman admitted stealing an auto here June 23 and driving it Pontiac Police, That was the brigadier star. He | Denzit Bowman, 24, of 40 N. Cass | to Kentucky, He was returned by | was placed on three | two men with a shotgun last June | ; Orr pleaded guilty July 7 to going to his girl friend's home at 268 |: and firing a shotgun |; injuring |; two visitors. He was charged with | } 3i2eat.26t0s one Graciou F” Donald He. Joheus Unequalied Fac ilities Carl OW. Donelon he New Beauty In Our Selection Room... We frequently invite you to visit our ‘selection room”, This is the part of the Donelson-johns Funeral Home h the caskets, vaults and other items necessary shown in whe to the funeral are We want you to see the things displayed here, to cost of the funeral services we can provide, want you to be able to compare the values we and to know that we constantly provide the t and best know the We otter new € PHILCO 30° Electric Range 13” No Money Down Yes, it's budget priced, but you get big value features, including giant 6624 cu. in. oven, new “'L” Surface Unit arrangement, Table Top Floodlight, Appliance Out- let, Porcelain Broiler Pan, etc. Model 245 nn seman —_ PHILCO “Dream Oven” Electric Range 239° Even in this lowest price full-size model, Philco gives you wide “Dream- Oven,” with nearly 50% more front shelf space than the usual full-size ovens. Storage compartment, Deep Well Cooker, Appliance Outlet. Electric Range “16 No Money Down 2 Years to Pay Solves the space problem in the small kitchen, yet it provides the cooking capacity of a full-size range. Large “ Broil- -Off”’ Banquet Oven. under-glass,"’ Surface Unit “On Light, and Appliance Outlet. ~-WKG, Philo Headquarters! 5435 cu. in 3.7114 108 NORTH SAGINAW sli iE detent 0 I” - = CHARLESTON, R. L (UP)—t+ Prunways. i FIGHT field crew genious seagulls soar over—the| has to use a sweeper daily to keep | Naval Auxiliary Air Station here | the runways clear for planes by dropping them on the A - maintenance i osientiatieadisediaeteetiadied Automobile i i Title adtomobile or trailer, and left no equiring Probate, the Auto- le Division of the Secretary ovides an aftidavite form ow Funeral Home a I I ae estate motive of State through wh red to the: next of kin completed and car title, and a Atified copy death certificate, sMould be taken to the branch office of Khe State 798 OAKLAND ave Title may be transter- This PONTIAC torm with the f the \notarized Secretary of and open oysters. for themselves | pon ONE WEEK ONLY! Your OLD CLEANER Is Worth Dy” in Trade on a = LEW LT 1954 WORLD'S FIRST AND ONLY VACUUM CLEANER WITH ~ automatic 4 -WAY | rug cleaning OFFICIALLY ENDORSED ‘ By Metiona! institute of Bug Cleoning. Inc “i vacuum YOurR #uGS DAK Hove them profesore”) cleared ot leew once @ yeor by @ pre temone! rvg cleorer EREE HOME TRIAL! COME IN TODAY! ROY'S on VACATION Get a Residence G Outside Thett Policy to protect your, property at HOME and the persona! effects you take on your trip. $19.35 for a years protection on $1900.00 Blanket Coverage including unattended automobile just ‘PHONE US BEFORE YOU LEAVE! Call Us on Any Insurance Need! Kenneth G. HEMPSTEAD INSURANCE k ‘Aussies Fitting Jigsaw of Spies But Commission's Pace Is Slow; Petrov, Wife Called to Stand MELBOURNE, Australia w— of Soviet | Australia is being slowly put to the | The jigsaw spying in | gether before royal commis- | sion of three judges sitting here in Melbourne The sion on espionage bas proved pain- pace of this royal commis i fully slow to Australians, who had expected sensation packed on sen- sation onee Viadimir Petrov went into the witness box * Petrov, who fled his post as third secretary at the Russian Embassy says he also was the chief Red spy in Australia. His | request for political asylum start- ed a chain of events that led to | Russia breaking diplomatic rela i tions with Australia | Petrov. 47, short and plump. and ibis small honey-blonde wife Evok jia, 40, both have spent many hours : the witness box. But they have in Canberra given only a small part of their evidence because the inquiry has been split into what William J. V senior counsel assisting called Windeyer the ments | The commission compart- is to fit cleanly into | one the pattern. of Soviet espionage and to give any person named as a Soviet helper an op- portunity to get quickly into the witness box and tell his side of the story. Only two Australians have been named as helpers so far idea piece . * Ld +—Petrov> disclosed Russia had a special directorate in Moscow for technical and atomic espionage and described the system by which Russians serving in official posi tions outside Russia are watched by ‘secret police who report back ito Moscow Petrov said both he and his wife jhad cotne to Augtralia with orders }to recruit agents. He said money was paid to some Australians who supplied information to the Soviet intelligence system. Some Austral- jans, he said, were given code names by Moscow On Petrov's fifth day in the box, the evidence turned to money and Australians pricked up their ears. Petrov told the commission he re- ceived 5,000 peunds ($11,250 from Deputy Director of Australian Se- jcurity Riehards on April 3, the | any he left the Russian service | Newspaper headlines reflected Au- stralian surprise : 7 * The same day Petrov and his wife gave evidence about their pay checks. The size of these was an even bigger surprise to Austral ians_ Petrov said as an officer of the Soviet Internal Affairs Ministry's secret police, his salary at the be- ginning of 1954 was more than 4,000 rubles—$1,000—per month. This was four oar five times the earn- ings of a skilled Australian trades- man Petrov paid 101 pounds >) in Australian money and the rest was deposited for him in Moscow . + ¢ Following her husband into the box, Mrs. Petrov said her salary was the equivalent of 3.240 pounds ($7,290) a year. Australians quick- ly added the husband's and wife's salaries to total over 8,000 pounds said he was ($227.2 a” ($17,000) a year. Only a handful of Australians earn that much money The end of the commission is not | yet in sight and the. sittings pos- | sible will continue into next year Plead Guilty to Aiding Escape of 3 Patients Two men charged with helping three mental patients escape from Pontiac State Hospital last Thurs- day pleaded guilty before Circuit Judge George B. Hartrick and will be sentenced Monday. Clarence J, McLatcher of Royal Oak, an ex-patient, pleaded guilty to the charge today and a com- panion, Aloysius Savoie, an ex- attendant at the hospital, entered a similar plea yesterday Each was returned to Oakland County Jail. The charge, a felony, carries a maximum sentence of four years in prison. Savoie told police he had duplicate keys made while employed at the hospital and returned last week to release a 15 and a 16-year-old girl and a 30-year-old woman The name dollar by congress in 178. for the mone- tary unit of U. S. Currency be- }cause the Spanish dollar was the chief unit of money circulating in the colonies at that time. was adopted ———— WEDNESDAY AT BOTH a =THRIFTY DRUG STORES ‘Moose THE PONTIAC PRESS, PIGTAIL Brand, 10, makes with the cheese- cake after being named ‘Miss Pig- PRINCESS — Carol the Children’s Aid Society in New York City. Her braids were the longest and best- kept among the group of girls who vied for the title Liquor Commission Gets New Chairman LANSING \—New hands in charge at the State Liquor Con- trol Commission today : Frank Blackford; former ad- ministrative assistant to Gov. Wil liams, was chosen chairman by the other two commissioners. Black- fard recently was appointed to the commission by Williams At the same time, chairman, George J. Burke of Ann Arbor, moved over to the job ef business manager which he recently won on a civil service examination. The three applications for new club li censes and granted two others Licenses were denied to the American Legion Post at Whitehall because the local governing body failed to approve, to the Tri-Coun- ty Sportsmen's League of Saline because of an unfavorable survey and to the Michigan Hunters and Anglers Assn. of Clark Lake be- cause it failed te qualify as a club A license was awarded :to the Lodge of Lincoln Park. -=- tails of 1954"" by were the former commission today Montana Voters Put Finish on Quiet Campaign HELENA, Mont. (# An esti- mated 170,000 voters start to the polls today after one of the quietest primary election compaigns in Montana history Campaigning was so quiet that incumbent James Murray of Butte did not bother to return from Wash- ington to contest the two cand)- dates opposing him for the Demo- cratic nomination for United States senator Opponents of the 78-year-old Democrat, seeking his fourth full term, are Sam G. Feezell of Great Falls and Ray Gulick, Joplin farmer On the Republican ballot, Rep Wesley A. D’Ewart is stepping out of his House seat to seek the sen- atorial nomination. He is opposed by Robert Yellowtail, a Crow In- dian jeader from Lodge Grass. Three Democrats and four Re- publicans seek party nominations for the 2nd Congressional District seat = vacated by D'Ewart There Ain't Any Flies on These Orlando Guys ORLANDO, Fla. —The U. S Bureau of Entomology here de- cided there aren't enough house- flies in downtown Orlando. Not enough, that is, to justify an eradication campaign. Survey- ors could find only 41 flies—and some of those might have been repeaters. The bureau now plans to turn to the bottle fly, another pest % denied | 'Heir's Mother to Testify Again Mrs. Thorne to Tell of ‘ Whereabouts on Day | Body Was Found CHICAGO ww — Phe recalled at his inquést to testify about her whereabouts on the day his body was found Walter McCarronn yesterday other articles found room after his mysterious deat June 19 were turned over }team of four pathologists for ex- j}amination and analysis. | Two housemaids, Elizabeth Law- This was announced by Coroner Meanwhile, stained bedding and | in Thorne’s | | 8 determine the cause of to al TUESDAY, JULY 20, 1954 was found in his $75-a-month room about noon and doctors etimated he had died about 5 a.m. Nine days before his death, tune, revised his will leaving three fourths of his estate to his sweetheart, Maureen Ragen, 18, and her mother Aleen. | His mother, who was sole ben- | eficiary under an earlier will, was | given only a one-eight share. The articles the pathologists will mother Of | examine include a bed sheet, mat- Montgomery Ward Thorne will be | tress pad, a handkerchief, a wad | of cotton, part of a cigarette and ' la portion of what appeared to be a pill 7” . ~ One of the pathologists, Dr, Otto Saphir, said the articles very valuable evidence’ in help- | Thorne’s death. The inquest was continued to | July 2%. } |ton arid Sheila de Leon, testified Twice Burned by Law at the inquest that Mrs. Thorne | went to nearby Lake Geneva, Wis to attend a dog shew at noon on the day Thorne's body wa found They said she returned when they | | notified her by telephone of her son's death. The body of 20-year-old Thorne about | s| ;tled motorist, SOUTH HAVEN, Mich | Police said Jerry Fife. angrily stalked off | | and left his car parked on the | | street after patrolmen charged him | |with speeding. Another officer |came along and ticketed his car | | for obstructing traffic THAT THAT -— you've heard so much about! 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' COUPON | Ladies’ si.s9' $1.99 Men's Df | Ne-tron SPORT | SHIRTS iA 99° SLIPS : Ss I 00 | ' No tron tabric } Ladies’ Sanfor plisse linen, 4 ined ideal for white. colors ; summer Sizes checks and 32 to stripes. 8-M-L ' { Ladies’ Panties ye Nylon Shirts 4 for $1 $1.99 sone es e@# es & @& Ge «= ala =— pe *¢* eee @2® @® @ & = Sold Only With This Sold Only With This ‘ i] ‘ mae; OUPON BBCOUPON Regular 3.99 ; z 5.99 Summer Ladies’ |) v4 MEN'S BAGS , |, \{ SLACKS — Crease resistant 2 Whites pouch, % rayon gabar- i box and enve- § s dines, splashes. . lope . styles i Sizes 28 to 4. oe Ladies’ Hose , Swim Trunks a 39% $1.66 Fy ¥ Sold Only With This COUPON SHIRTS | 69°: ' Nationally adv Sald Only With This om OR UR em, | . Reg. $7.00 ; X Boys’ & Girls’ SANDALS $499 a Unconditionally oes guaranteed. S&S. § AN leather, ell . 7 ~xL sizes. Red and =| ' brown ee Undershirt ’ Ladie’s Shoes 4% $1.99 Sc eaone dd eww am eo eo eo ms oF ’ : AIR st CONDITIONED © an i: & :3 ¥% B, Where You Get Your Money's Worth OEE MTD b petite: Lone r . ee aa i ee 5 * ; ON Tehasibical te: PROBE GS Fe il ili i Ej 0 5 Altes ath a XP— 7" — - ee ee m3 e 2) oe ew ee ee” ee ee Pe eee = THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, JULY 20, 1954 for AKE ovr "a Cara anne Horde of Grasshoppers —Pelp_as_ hordes of ‘grasshoppers | Engineering Enrollment devastated a 20.000-acre area in Devastates 20, 1000 Acres Duchesne and Uintah counties of Tops at Illinois Tech ROOSEVELT, Utah —County | eastern Utah CHICAGO (UP) More engi- | commissioners met in emergency Grasshoppers were reported| neering students aré enrotied at | session yesterday to draft an ap-| “two to three inches deep" in some | Illinois Institute of Technology | fields and eating everything in| peal to Gov. J. Bracken Lee for | . . *Y . than at any other educational in- ee aa | Stitution in the country, the insti sight. NEW SWINGS! SLIDES! TEETER TOTTERS! (tute reports Illinois Tech's engineering en COOL AND COMFORTABLE ———4ASsT T, |] DOORS OPEN 10:45-A. M. On Our Giant PANORAMIC 5: ; FEATURES AT: 12:43 - 3:49 - 6:55% | rollment includes 4,743 undergrad s 4,74: £ 'Qates and 591 graduate students for a total of 5,334, according to the Journal of the American Society DRIVE-IN TH EATER for Engineering Education THE FAMILY DRIVE-IN ; aes Cor Williams Lake-Airport Roads — Box Office Open 7:30 P. M. TONIGHT/ TUES. - WED. - THURS. Playing Your Favorites WOT HEADS WHO TERRORIZE AND TAKE OVER A TOWN! \ W at the Ty, CHALLENGING...OUTSPOKEN! = - ~ | \ Sully scrooss Marlon BRANDO that “STREETCAR™ MAN NAcyOLSON” | reom + SATURDAY EVENONG POST STORY o wncnats exrseen > oar eres -oe Plus oo ; : al i : a - on On Our Wide Screen BreVy¥ OF BEAUTIES—Three screen stars meet | Sofia Loren of Italy, Yvonne De Carlo of Hollywood ALEXANDER “RAILS IN TO LARAMIE” c at a film festival in Berlin, Germany. From left are | and Italy's Gina Loflobrigida In Technicolor it UL | pA AIR-CONDITIONEO bs with John Payne & a Dan Duryea tS ALSO SI “TENNESSEE CHAMP” with Shelley Winters & © val } ; ] After reading the book carefully, Ray H Jenkin’s Name ’ ; he made notes on what he con & . Silver Cha Ice sidered the necessary dramatic Will Appear on Ballot a . scenes. Primarily the difference . ; ar > Scripting Was between his job and Costain's was) , KNOXVILLE, Tenn. w—Ray H Jenkins said recently he would not Intricate Job . emphasize some scenes for run for the Senate, but his name | reater dramatic effect & will be en the Republican primary | Keenan Wynn By HUBBARD KEAV) | Then he listed each scene, with ballot Aug, 5 anyway, ieee ae | (For Bob Thomas) a " “ descr iption, on a ger Jenkins neglected to give official HOLLYWOOD (Thomas C€os- | carc e remembers that he hac tificat ded to cancel qual- New Lak heater ‘a : notification needed to cancel qua * rf of ' tain’s 500-odd pages of narrative 100 cards. He pinned these to a ifying petitions filed by friends aft- | 420 Pontiac Trail . ~hatien’ are ' , i } 2 contrac y called “The Silver Chalice’ turn | large board in sequence and stud er he gained the public eye as spe out, in the movie script, to be only | ied them. He finally reduced the cial counsel in the televised Army- Y 134 pages long | number of cards to 76—''The essen- | \icCarthy hearings On Our Wide Miracle Yi Yet none of the drama of Cos- | tial dramatic steps.” : ——— \ tain’s story of the slave who fash-| With the characters and the 7%! About 60 million of the 80 mil \ WALLED LAKE \ “RAILS IN TO LARAMIE ions a receptacle for the wine cup) scenes, Samuels wrote a 140-page lion motor vehicles in the world AIR CONDITIONED h with : in Technicolor used at the Last Supper will. be/ ‘treatment, actually a synopsis. | are )_ passe nger cars with John Payne & 4 missing, scenarist Lesser Samuels | From the synopsis he wrote the | —————- —— Dan Duryea a Ps ne ALSO assures potential viewers. For the | first script, 140 pages of dialogue | G aukl Storage “GIVE A CIRL A BREAK” \ benefit of Costain’s readers, and| and stage directions. This: prelim- a er orage In Tethnicolor with % perhaps also for aspiring scenar-| inary work was used to determine | Debbie Reynolds >* ists, Samuels explains how he did | how many actors would be needed 9 Orchard Lake Ave. | MOOI OO OS his job | and for how long and the number | | and size of the sets. Costs have to on | BLUE SKY DRIVE - IN be estimated first, so the first | Seveen Piay by SEYMOUR ana CONNIE LEE BENNETT ane KENNETH GAMET Proceed oy HARRY JOE BROWN aces y ALFRED. WERKER | THEATER script was little more than a bud get guide | The final shooting script took Samuels 10 weeks to write. Cos tain, who read it, was pleased with the faithful translation although he must have missed.some scenes and characters he liked. The Chinese DORIS DAY IN: _~ MAMMA OOOO OA PPABAA an prince, for example, was an inter- | “CALAMITY ANE $ 2) NOW SHOWING ON FIRST 7 TIME’ esting character, but ho had noth- | TODAY ] “ J ; 2 OUR GIANT SCREEN! IN PONTIAC! | ing to = with furthering the dra ~ Q Also COMBAT SQUAD” 3 $ ; err by sitar eid play ae : ; ; and Be oe ingernails will not be | On Our Giant PANORAMIC Screen 3 bg of A \ A TU R N L R The chalice itself is no tin prop , = ‘ 2| Victor Saville, who is producing AIR - CONDITIONED > $| and directing, declared it must be | ; coot ¢ Starts Tomorrow B $ EVEN MORE of sterling silver and so went to a aia © & meee 6 | ee 1 ‘ iiversmith to have it cast. | } Dixie Hwy. (US-10) 1 Bik. N. of Telegraph FE 5-4500$ me DANGER ———— eee ee wy leg 2 = 4 WILD ADVENTURE...RECKLESS LOVE born in the fury of frontier war! ‘STARTS TONIGHT! | : » at 7 £y avy aur’ Wy SA ON OUR GIANT SCREEN! ~wwrvrvreeweeweereewveeegw+#Ff%tfFfrTfgtf+ft?TtTtTt?" Pe OV TUES. - WED. - THURS. wy a4 ———— RETURN ENGAGEMENT! | FECA” ©] Maureen OHARA ‘wwewrerrevreerevreewe,wTe+#TTTTT TT" "T7777 ‘ . > ‘ > > > > . a a > a % > : | | : | ae , | ACADEMY AWARD WINNER! Jeff CHANDLER | 4 > : , 1 : | | WAVAT | : B% Geer! | eaadlae OTTO $ 2 Men | (ZF SUTAN BALL: ; | WILLIAM ||" 2 4) | 3 R} : HOLDEN, | 1001 outdoor Thrills in aye 4 > M-G-M''s SENSATION FILMED IN. THE Award for his role in > i 4 PLEASURE-HAUNTS OF EUROPE IN Paramount's “Stalag / ee 3 rs | coo’ TECHNICOLOR! aeuser Caer A 2 + from the Broadway hit play! “| SS wos ANSCO 4 : i <= ; CLAME and | 3 $ | $ ; she FLESH © ‘ > Nigh Bring the Family ; PIER ANGELI - CARLOS THOMPSON ania heal ‘ $ St FRIDAY: joan Crawford in—"JOMNNY, GUITAR” , 3 ome — DON LENO ee ie ee hoot boon Ladle ta “PSGHT nt 3| HELEN DEUTSCH "szaacamt” RICHARD BROOKS JOE PASTERNAK |] wittiaw HQLOEN. DON TAYLOR - OTTO PREMINGER ww Produced end Directed by BILLY WILDER - Written for the screen by PLUS THIS FEATURE | Ericson Stes . = ee “ x. ry wrs ” New Shining . . . fhe Thaamlail Original Sin . . . Drawing Them Like « Magnet. . . Te This Place! “ - See the Academy Award Winning Performance that brought AUDREY te HEPBURN FOR IT! i , the Best Actress Award for “ROMAN | HOLIDAY the snap that was Takes you beyond the lar Geo. Montgomery - Ann Rutherford Dh i Mh eh De hh hh A ed he i i i i in lll i ih hi hi hihi hi hi hi Ni hi hi hi i Mi i Mi Mi hi hh hi he hi hh he c/ re MILLER sn one withthe AND on BAND “Best rony tC Ge | bea f 3 Cane ; SADDLE f GREGORY PECK T0 o4 3! oan JOAN LESUE - ELLEN DREW \ AUDREY HEPRURN: , “3 | ALEXANDER KNOL ; . ae one” § ROMAN HOLIDAY [2 Se, ec ruc SRC EERE | ra ’ THE. PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, JULY 20, 1954 _ ley Ave., was fined $25 and $15 costs yesterday for reckless driv- ing by West. Bloomfield Township Justice Elmer C. Dieterie 7 Keancth F. Rosebulh, t0."of 3643 Baldwin Rd., Ortonville, pleaded guilty to reckless driving yester- | day before Oxford Justice Fred F Stevens, who fined Rosebush $35 and $15 costs. it friend’s in bail. Pu PE §-5201. wi Re-elect Clare Hubbell Sheriff. Republican. Vote August 3rd. Adv and needs Mitchell (hp IN, VE =~ ATOMIC SCIENC Atomic Development Mutual Fund, Inc. is designed to provide a man- aged investment in a variety of companies participating in activi- tres resulting from Atomic Science. GET THE FACTS AND FREE PROSPECTUS WATLING, LERCHEN & CO. Members New Vork Steck Exchange 714 Pentiag State Rank Bidg.. Pontiac Phene FE 4-1805 Piease send Prespectas NAME Spnoconecononas ADORESS 52.2. cs: -cs sens see Ae cry PHONE 4 | ] CHICAGO w — Soybeans shot up 10 cents a bushel, all con- tracts going to new seasonal highs, in another weather market on the} board of trade today - The rest of the market could Not come close to duplicating the action of soybeans. Corn, which had gains extending to the daily lomit of 8 cents yesterday, ran into more opposition today. It opened with a good advance but then baxked down from its peak, hold ing. on to small gains. Oats were erratic and there appeared to be some hedging pres- sure in wheat, forcing that cereal under the previous close at times. Trading was active in all pits ex- cept soybeans, where offeres to sell at the 10-cent limit advance were few and far between. Wheat near the end of the first hour was unchaged to 1 cent low- er, July $2.0844, corn was 1'2 to 3% higher, July $1.6454, oats were ? to 1 cent hogher, July 77%, rye was % to 1% higher, Sep- tember $1.1642.soybeans were 10 cents higher, July $4.16%4, and lard was 3 cents lower to 5 cents a hundred pounds higher, July $17.15 Name Legion Delegates AUBURN HEIGHTS—Mrs. Ralph Bogart and Mrs. Kenneth Collins will represent the Hill-Gazette American Legion Auxiliary at the Legion convention to be held July 23-25 at Grand Rapids. Potluck Dinner Held METAMORA—The Hilliker fam- ily reunion was held at the Old Mill at General Squier Park, Sun- day, with 60 members of the clan present. A_ potluck dinner was i { | A dreaded word in the mid- dle of the night or anytime But you con protect your investment with full cover- age fire insurance H. W. HUTTENLOCHER Agency H. W. Huttenlocher 318 Riker Bldg. Max E. Kerns FE 4-1551 | | | 511 Community Nat’! Bank Building Phone FE 4-1568-9 BAKER & Donald E. Hansen HANSEN Richard H. DeWitt Res. FE 54-3793 4 held Addy Gets Auditor Job DETROIT (UP)—David V. Addy, whose appointment as Detroit City Auditor General ended a_ bitter common couftcil wrangle, will take over his new $18,000-a-year post Aug. 1. The 56-year-old budget di- rector was named Monday on the council's fifth ballot. Members la- ter made the choice unanimous County Deaths Mrs. Joseph B. Sauders OXFORD—Service for Mrs. Jo- seph (Cora) B_ Sauders, 7, of 105 Seymour Lake Rd., will be held at 10 a.m. Thursday at the Mabley Chapel in Oxford, with burial at Manton. She died today Surviving beside her husband are a daughter, Mrs. Marie Porter, of Oxford, a brother, Arthur Sams, of Oklahoma, and a sister Maude Wilhips of Colorado Frank J. Hall OXFORD — Prayer service for Frank J. Hall, 68, of 190%W. Drahn- er Rd., will be held at the.Mabley Chapel at 8 p. m. today, with Burial in Portage. Pa. He died Monday, Surviving are his widow, Mar- garet, a daughter, Mrs. Bertha MARKETS | Produce DETROIT PRODUCE DETROIT ‘UPi—Wholesale prices public farmers’ the Bureau of Pruits: Apples, Transparent, N 350-450 bu Cherries, sour, No 1. 1, 6-550 16-pt_case Ras . 600-650 24-pt case; red. 6 00-7.00 24-pt case Vegetables’ Beans green 250-300 bu; beans, 1. 300-350 bu. beans, wax, No 1, 425- 475 bu . No 1, 65-86 dos behs 1.25-1.75 bu raspberries, fiat, Ne i on ofarketse reported by rkets: . 4.00. pberries, black, green, round, No Broccoli, Better Business ‘Expected in Fall Upturn Awaited With Mixture of Confidence and Caution By SAM DAWSON NEW YORK w—Heat waves roll- 1.00-1.50 bu; Cabbege, | . . . A : a a No 1. 200-226 bu. Cabbage. | ing across the nation find industry sprouts No 1. 100-150 we “one : today in the middle of a summer 1 4 ; carrots, c : Sts bez "Calery No 7 2.78-3 50 crate. | lull—but with confidence teamed eelery. No = 100 = sen — with caution to set the foundation 00 cum La eae eo bushel: cucumbers | for what could be a slow and sound hothouse, No } 1.25-1.75 dos. Dill, No buildup when cool weather comes. Kohirabi, No. |, Many factories are closed for 1.00-1.50 bu Leeks. No. 1, 150 doz ee ee ee ne o0-00 ¢oz | Summer vacations. Others are clos- s. a . behs. Parsiey. root No 1. 7-85 dos|ing fer annual inventories. Torrid aie — - ie eee lato barely weather keeps customers away hot. No 1. 180-200 peck basket. Pota-|from stores in many cities. The — aoe, He te he Se summer breather—or the search 7% dos bens. Radishes white, tency for some cool air to breathe—is 1.00 dos behs; No 1, 0-15 dos s : : . strv fhubers. outdoor, Ne 1. 69-18 dos evident in many lines of industry behs Squash. Italian. fancy, 128-159) and trade ve bu; No 1 175-125 pk basket. Bquas! Ps Ps s summer, fancy. 125-150 ‘s bu: No ! 18-100 pk daesket Tomatoes, het But businessmen are taking it house, No1, 450-5 50 14-Ib basket, toma-/_... : < . i Yoes, outdoor, fancy 375 14-lb basket calmly, They expect a pi kup in No 1, 300-380 14-lb basket Turnip,|a month or so And from now on No. 1, .15-1.25 doz behs, Turnip. topped ' ae ‘ . = No 1. 1.80-2.00 bu they'll have the advantage of bet Lettuce and salad greens Endive, No 1, 1.00-1.25 bu; Endive. bleached, No 1 225-300 bu Bacarole, No 1, 1.26-1 50 bu. Escarole, bieached. No. 1! bu Lettuce, butter, No. 1, 200-225 bu; Lettuce, head, No 1, 200-250 3 dos erate: Lettuce, head, No. 1, 1 .00-1.28 bu; Lettuce, leaf, No 1. 15-1.00 bu. Romaine, No 1, 100-1 bu Greens Cabbage No. 1, .75-100 bu ollard, No 1, 100-150 bu Mustard, No 1. 1 28-1.7%§8 bu 150 bu Spinach. No. Swiss Chard No. 1. 1.2$-1 50 bu. No 1, 100-180 bu SS DETROIT £GG8 DETROIT ‘AP)—@ggs. {0.0 Detroit cases included, federal-state grades Whites— fully steady, somewhat more cro} this time active than Monday bulls slow. stock- begaix.to Pp up about s i ers and feeders slow, weak: about two|last year and flowered into fu loads prime 1306 Ib. steers 25.00, most debate before the year's end have business | f é 4 J { “¢ 4 Pontiac Reports Jump Lin Weekly Production Pontia¢ Motor Division output last week jumped to 6,850 units, the highest point since June 12 when 6,951 cars were produced. During the previous week the di- vision counted 4,660 units off the assembly lines. Meanwhile output at GMC Truck and Coach: Divi- sion last week stood at 1,054 as op- posed to 888 during the previous short“ holiday week. Dies at Grand Rapids GRAND RAPIDS «—Gilbert A. Hanke, of Grand Rapids, President of the National Assn. for Mentally Retarded Children, died Monday after a brief illness. He was 65. Hanke, a native of Milwaukee, had lived in Grand Rapids for 16 years He was a sales representative for Picklands, Mather and Co., a coal producer and shipper. Death Notices BELL. JULY 19 4878 E 1954. NELLIE M. Gage Avenue Bell. Cali- fornia. age 46, beloved wife of Bert Bell, beloved daughter of Joseph Spear, dear sister of Wil- lard Spear, Rhoda Emeigh Er- -hest Spear, Esther Van Camp. Mildred Spear Theima Legg and Ethel Aderholdt Funeral will be heid Friday, July 23. at 3 pm from the Samson Funeral Nome, Bell, California with Rev R H Shuff officiating. Interment at Bell, California CORBIN. JULY 19 1954. FRANCHS Marion, 77 Fiddis; Pontiac, age 78. beloved father of Mrs. Bcott Stimer, Iran Corbin, Mrs Ver- nen Davis, Mrs Arthur Cotfee and Mrs) James Bruce dear brother of James Corbin. George Corbin, Chester Corbin and Mrs Edith Mattox Funeral will be held Wednesda). at 130 pm from the Huntoon Funeral Home, with Rev Howard Arts officiat- ing Interment at Perry Mt Park Cemetery FALL JULY 18, 1954. MARTHA 59 E. Burdick. Oxford, Mich. age 84 beloved grandmother of Leon- ard M. Pall. Puneral will be held Wednesday, July 2), at 2 p.m from the PFhumerfelt Puneral Home, Oxford. Mich. with Rev Walter Ballagh officiating § In- terment at Greenwood Cemetery, Birmingham, Michigan RACE. JULY 20. 1954 JOHN AL- bert. 125 Summit. age 6: heloved husband of Mrs. Eva Mable Rece beloved father of Mrs Alfred Short. Mrs. Murray Osborn Harold Wagg and Mrs Powley. Puneral will be Thursday, July 22. at 11 from the Huntoon Funeral Home with Rev. William E Hakes of- fictating Interment at Wasning- ton Cemetery Masonic Grave Service by FAM No. 21 Mr Race may be seen at his home - 125 Summit, this evening SMITH. JULY if 1954 ALPRE Leggett, 31 Chippewa, age ‘12 beloved husband of Mrs Smith; dear father of Austin E. Blanch, and Philip 8 Smith, dear brother of Talbot T Smith and Mrs. Ernest Hild- ner. Funeral will be held Wednes- day. July 21 at 11 from the Al Saints Church with Rev. C. George Widdifield officiating. In- terment at Oak Hill Cemetery The family asks to please omit flowers. Memorials may be made to the All Saints Memorial Pund or the American Cancer Society Mr Smith will hie in state at the Kirkby Funeral Home WHITE JULY 19. 1954. KENNETH Thomas 1868) = Bolton = Street, Walled Lake Mich. beloved in- fant of Mr. and Mrs. Thomas White dear brother of Steven Douglas White. Puneral will be held Wednesday, July 21, at 11 em. from 8t. Willams Church. Walled Lake with Pather Graven offictating Interment at Mt Hope Cemetery. Baby White will lie in state at the Richardson- Bird Puneral Home, Walled Lake. aom _ Michigan _ 1s Momereen 2 IN LOVING MEMORY OF HER- bert and Eugene Saliee who pass- ed away 2 years ago July 18 It is lonesome here without you And sad and weary the way, Help Wanted Male 6 CARPENTERS WANTED UNION job. First class men only, FE 2-7086 after 6 p.m. DisHWASHER AND UTILITY MAN for restaurant, ts. Transpor- ntial . e Zineyards, Franklin R. et Northwestero. union scale. EXPANDING IN LARGE Cities from 80 to 140 e units. Opening ™ ings. will assist you : We meet ample merchandise. Write fur interview newegg 's Whise Dept MCG-69A-W Tee port, ~ ne EXPERIENCED WOOL PRESSER. inquire drive in cleaners. 1208 N cl EXPERIENCED TIRE CHANGER Pension plan, paid insurance, chance to advance. Apply morn- ings only Goodrich Stores. _u1LN_ Perry . ‘Experienced A-1 Truck Mechanic Good wages. and working conditions. Pontiac Farm and Industrial Tractor Co. 625 Woodward Ave FE 40461. FE SL * FURNITURE SALESMAN Steady employment Good oppor- tunity for experienced men Ask for Mr_ Barris . . LEWIS FURNITURE CO 72_8._ Saginee St. Pontiac _ FOUR FOP sUiICH REAL ESTATE saicsmen ceeded right now! This is ap opportunity ius Call PE 42254 ‘or appt. - HAVE OPENINGS FOR REAL ES- of property +5443. 136 East Pike St ; LAWRENCE W. GAYLORD REAL ESTATE AND INSURANCE $325 STARTING SALARY Plus commission and bonus for established resident, 26 to @, to represent iarge corporation, no traveling. Married, ambitious, ca- pable of assQming responsibility Please give brief personal history All replies striclly confidential Write Pontiac Press Box 64 MAINTENANCE MAN. EXPERI- enced tn electrical repairs, plumb- ing heating and general mainten- ance, wife to assist in kitchen Permanent job. room and beard $450 a month combined salary to start. write giving st expert ence to manager. Knollwood Coun- _try Club. Birmingham. Mich _ MAN WITH CAR. APPLY 8 N _ Telegraph near to W. Huron MIDDLEAGED MAN DESIRES steedy work of any kind. Ea- peritnced in farming and jani- _tor work FE 54-0463 __ MAN WANTED Expanding organization. Several! openings available Good pay and future to the right man. Apply 78 oN. Paddock st itiac teh ae PLT oEe a OPPORTUNITY Earnings up to $50 per day Selling complete Firestone line Future advarcement with com- pany. Full or part time selling With or without present line For interview call Mr Simmons Man- ager Firestone Store 146 W Hu- ron 10 to 4pm. Sunday or 7 to 8 pm Mon and Tues PART TIME We have an opening for &@ man now reg- ularly employed to work w carrier ‘ your income apply in erson w& red mpeon, ircula- ent, Help Wanted Female 7 Second qualif- cation: Would be belping =o Marriages, funerals. Third q : it bouse- * . Write Box varticulars reference ee DINNER CGOK WITH SHORT OR- 7 Night weitress. EXPERIENCED WOMAN POR cleaning end ironing 543 DAYS. $30 es week. FE 2-5007 EXPERIENCED WAITRESS FOR ~ restaurant and liquor bar Night shift Closed Sundays. 013 Baldwin Ave ELDERLY LADY WIisHES TO share her home with another elderly lady Share food and furl expenses 64 N ain. Milford. MUtual 4540000000 GIRL FOR GENERAL OFFICE. Apply Wyman Furniture, 17 E. __Huron. _ HOUSEKEEPER. TAKE FULL charge of — i home, nothing children. Must children Stay nights position for right party $25 week, Thurs. and Fri. off Call collect Metamora 3-3F4¢ HAVE OPENINGS FOR REAL Estate Salesiady lots of property to sell. M-nber of rative Real Estate Exchange. Call FE +5443 — LAWRENCE W. GAYLORD REAL ESTATE & INSURANCE IF YOU NEED MONEY BUT cannot work full time we have 4he opportunity you need. Pieas- ant and prifitable. Write Pontiac _Press Box 57 LOCAL EDUCATIONAL SURVEY Mature young lady for dignified steady year around outside posi- tion in and around Pontiac Guaranteed $40 per 5 day week, start. car necessary Substantial bonus, group insurance and other fringe benefits Good opportunity for advancement with- in W days. If you are neat. like to meet people and are looking for a job, not a pastime call Mr Powers for appointment FE 54-9181 be- tween 930 & 11 am. Please. no _details over phone LEARN HOW TO SUPPORT _ YOURSELF? Avon Products has a unique op- portunity for women to earn « steady income Cal! FE 2-7081 be- fore 10 am or after 7 pm HOUSEKEEPER FOR SMALL family with no children Cooking. Write Box_61 _Pontiac Press MAN WITH WELL BEHAVED BOY desires housekeeper. would like home to be more attractive than salary. Write Pontiac Press Box 6. PRACTICAL NURSE OR MIDDLE aged widow rith nursing experi- ence. Must live tin. Phone Mil- ford MUtual 4-8654 REFINED. MIDDLEAGED HOUSF- keeper, more for home than wages FE 72-4829 Call after $ pm SALESEADY Experienced Salary plus comm!s- sion 5 days per week Apply Peo- «'s Credit Clothing. 8 N naw POR LADIES DRESSES LA- DIES COATS AND CHILDRENS WEAR MUST BE EXPERI- ENCED TO QUALIFY BETTER THAN AVERAGE PAY. COM- MISSIONS VACATION WITH AY MERCHANDISE DIs- COUNTS ETC APPLY MR GEORGE. GEORGE'S NEW- PORTS 14 N SAGINAW STENOGRAPHER AND GENERAL office helper Permanent position Excellent opportunity with fast groging concern Good salary FE pie Fs Sportswear Saleswomen Permanent position pays both sal- arv and commission weekly Bet- ter than average working hours. ARTHUR'S 48 N Saginaw St TEACHER With or without car, to work all summer Good See E. ylor __9 N. Telegraph near Huron. WAITE’S NEEDS A LADY EXPE- riene ‘> women's eiterations and fitting @ hr week Pleasant working concitions Apply Per- sonne: Office fifth Moor. | Accident insurance Fire Insurance Burket, of Oxford, and two SONS] sales good to oy choice fed steers = pet aeide now by almost = has not been the same fads eae Press. WOMEN wita 2 OR MORE , . y j a it 00-2400, f sal § s & ince yor n | afternoon: of efenin re t Automobile Insurance Liability Insurance and three daughters living iff Ohio. | end _ yearlings | 2000-2600. tee fom. | everyone Sadiy missed by Mother and. Pe. hold dress and lingerie parties. : Burglary insurance Life insurance Rey, Betty Ann, Larry Onnela | utility and commercial steers and : aH Brother. and little sons PART AND PULL Time saLEs on ayes wot Paid every day, Bonds— All Ty Pla ; Ec (—< eb iy gud ar ce arr A — ree man to sell the fastest movin, —— ee sy pes te Glass Insurance OAK PARK—Service for Roy A..4-utiiity and commercial cows 9 .$0-11 50 STOCK AVERAGES IN LOVING MEMORY OF MRS Rcaie ) enslanss’ Lisl sswall ¥ WAITRESS 41. Betty A 13. and Larry On- later price freely: canners and canners NEW YORK — Compiled by the Asso- Alice C Beamer who passed $5031 = “oe * Z a ’ UF baelad i Ue Cb. ary earty 700-950 no early sales bulls or | ciated Press. away 4 years ago today July 20 > Tay. Pee Dey_shitt. Fm_ +0008 “ONCE POLITICS ENTERS i neta, 6, of 10410 Troy Ave., will be | replacement cattle : » 18 1 6 Sadly missed by husband. daugh- REFINED LADY OVER 20 LIGHT WOMAN FOR LIGHT HOUSE- . THE ENTIRE EDIFICE OF held 1 Wed at] ., Calves Selene 300 Market opening Indust Rails Util Stocks _ters and sons ene children, age 5 and work and care of 3 ebildren AN ENTERPRISE BUILT UPON EXPERT SKILLS d at p.m Inesday a steady. early sales mostly choice vea!- | Net change —.4 +3 — 4 Flo SS aaaERaIRAEaEeeenaaeS ae a) one board. $15 per while perente work In vicin- . A rer White Chapel Memorial P ar k|¢rs 2200-3600; few high choles and | Noon, today. . 1788 ore 27 1m . wers 3 sINGLE MA On -PARM WUT of Union Lake. EM 2-820 BECOMES UNSAFE. a j j A . | prime 77.00 bette ommercial ani| Prev day .... - 176 0 6 ns oo en q J Mer 5 — Cemetery. They drowned July 5 good 18 09 21°00, cull and utility 1400 | Week ago... 167 983 G20 1300) | SCHAFER'S FLOWERS Dn a ee cee WANTED BEAUTY OPERATOR. | : own Month 4; ones 0 1 AUBURN 4 town, Rocheste Call O off Drummond Island, in Lake Bheep—Salable 200 Fresh receipts vaar ove 1383 e68 5624 F FE2UD _wages. 3320 _N. Rochester Rd. $207 ane 6 =. - Huron mostly native spring lambs. no early | 195¢ high . atl = 627 i318 uneral Directors 4 spear ome peeked AVAILABLE WAITRESS AND DISHWASHER. , sales 1954 low ...,, 78 «884 108.0 nee and south- Jack & Ine's Grill 4668 Dixie Mrs. George Alexander a 1983 high 1518 936 888 1163 west Oakland Counties Rawieigh Hw ‘ _ se ; : ; . Good _Hwy. Drayton Plains MARLETTE — Service for Mrs |... CHICAGO LIVESTOCK 1933 low oS - Donelson-Johns continue established service, Write YOUNG WOMAN FOR LIGH f I . . CHICAGO, ‘AP Saiable hogs 10 | | or see Virgil Warr 42 Be housework and care of child? en DE TROIT EDISON COMPANY George Alexander. 96, was held at| 000. moderately active. unevenly steacy DETROMT STOCKS FUNERAL HOME | $f, one Virgil Worrem, @ Barker reg nrg Ae on 24 p.m today, with burial in Mar- — Prearacre eet yi ree Pigures Gter mewn) oe as eighths _—_ DaROEE) FOR FUNERALS” | or write Rawieigh's Dept. Meo: $20, we_var fare. FE 00! -* welg utehers aroun ower an : | a se ee ee ——— ; lette Cemetery. She died Saturday. | butchers and sows largely steady: top| High Low Noon Voorhees-Si ] | —_ @04-203, Preeport, Hiinots.__ bal opie heed No RL fa tae COMMON STOCK YIELDS MORE THAN 5% | Surviving beside her husband are |33 9d°%'s, “ait Motes “inesiy nor | Dia C Navintion® 0 12 44 _! De ETON, OR TTORM, WIR, | tor ten wife Live im. OLS 400% / a daughter, Mrs. Gordon Landon, | weights 190-220 I Ags scans sae jots | Gerity-Michigan 2333 rs FUNERAL HOME Neeggete se Must have car and | W AITE’ : nd a son Roy. of Sandusky, O choice No 1 and 7s 190-210 Ib. 23.85-| Kingston Products* ... 23027 Ambulance Service Plane of Motor ment and eeeeuibgsal ence pea Havi paid dividends i . al ad ted SS Y. QO. | 3400: 240-270 Ib 21 00-23.00: 280-300 Ib. | Masco Screw* ses 26 21 or sax ment and excentions rtunit ng v continuously since 1909, | : 1950-2100. eo few 310-330 Ib 1850- | Midwest Abrasive* 54 60 : 4 a. A ca ST ART ‘ . Mrs. Mary Ann Davies 1634.) cmakes| 330-600) news 10.00. | Rudy Atfe® AM A Cemetery Lots 5 ep , MUtual 40855. between this stock offers an excellent investment in a CLAWSON — Service for Mrs.| 1850: lighter weights 1878-1928: large oie ag nee = ae 1314 —rrere eeeeeee> SALESMAN EXPERIENCED — 3s ; AN, ° a : “No : - EXPERIENCED — YC -o growing Michigan utility. Mary Am Gevies 0 of Te Bele ee OO Ue =“ WHITE CHAPEL ~ CROUCE LO to 35. High School graduate. Good EXECUTIVE CAREER 3, ; stances 16 25 cation 6 graves $280. 3 for $150. | selling record, full tim ition y — man Ave., will be held at 2:30 p.ra.| Semete cattle 10.00: corre ee cies, F . Exch Li 22167 The Hourekeeping 50 IN . . = : = slow steady Ww ¥ s close; c \ a i = Telephone: WOodward 2-2055 Wednesday at Sullivan and Son] heifers fully steady: canner and cutter oreign Exchange ‘ Komori Ali ey els Mae sae eee s RETALLING Finerat Home, Royal Ock, with) cov! [28) scot?, (ener ee arse lrare dellee iGien Bevan me aenann Masonic Garden. EM 3-8214 after os. builders. lumber TODAY! : burial in Roseland Park Ceme-| iower: vealers steady; most prime steers | others in cents) = Gouers. . _— gy. elena sag preferred. America’s % t A First or Micuicaw Corporation tery. She died Monday at home. | 25-3875: few leeds 25.85-26.26; | Canadian dollar in New York open s200 Cooley CE Fe as fb : peargest nation- one . : : mixed choice and prime steers 2425-| market 2% per cent premium, or 102 75 Village big _ — wide stepartment store ‘ . Surviving are two sons, Arthur of 7 = rea good to high choice grades | U Fog cents. up “e of @ cent SALESMEN FOR PART * ‘ t , pats 4. a ’ 50-24 00 tilt ‘aS do®) t o G t Brital d' 2 = TIM organtyzation ¢ - Tnvestm a ore | Clawson, Richard of West Palm 1300. a load a prime uessy bettors 13 16 oft 1 32 of a eont Great ericsio BOX REPLIES for new and used cars. Apply s : nee Ml enl Banker j . , | Beach, Fla., and two daughters, held a aces Ys en snare 30 dey ieteres 8 81 13 is. oat 1 32 of @ At 10 am. t ee ghey Clarkston ture ¢xecutives in ad- | a + eifers - ; oa weights | cen reat ritain t mm, oda : rti< mar : BUHL BUILDING — DETROIT Peer a a ae 23 $0; utility and amerinl ane 696 201 ia/s6 off 13% of 6 cant: Great hers were cantien ws WAN >: BARBER Own vertising, display, man- ’ § nedic oya a tew ifer t to 14.00; - ritain 90 day fut * 281 13/16, off epl eauinm Hote! Ronsevelt ag ~ratt | NEW YORK CHICAGO | wide Mrs Meney aa i ners and bya 7 00:10 00 utility “ond pak go : cent Belgium Piero 2 00's, the Press office in WE BOTH STAND To Lose iF aaah ° i ra rai | i ° i commercial bulls 1350-16 00 ood and | 0! ‘16 of a nt ‘f *hie oppo IOniTG, cr f ac- . — Sy . choles "yealers, 17 00-21.00 aoe ia paar 28%, of a cent unchanged; Germeny the following boxes: nity wants seus eun peal ony . i srean and & OXFORD — Service for Mrs.| mercial grades 1000-1700 (Western) (Deutsche mark) 23.85. un le fo g es: while learnine Full or part time countyng. and personnel Henry (Martha) Fall, 84. of 39 E. Balable sheep- 2,500. spring lambs | changed. Hollend guilder) 2643, up Call Jordor 46204. for appoint- ry, management : x : " opening around 5806 lower: but three | 00's of a cent; Italy ‘lira) 16% of a 6, 12, 14, 22, 42, 54, 57 ment. Keverse charges 6 . Burdick St., will be held at 2 p.m. | toads ‘Wachingtens still unsold: yearlings | cent, unchanged: Portugal ‘escudo) 350 2 ice gat i ape aa sa ae WANTED TO 1 + Wednesday at the Flumertelt Fu-|®ound 50 lower: slaughter sheep weak | unchanged; Sweden (krona) 1934, un- 58, 61, 62, 80, 99, 116, NTED TO LEASE: TRA 1 YEAR TRAINIVG PROGRAM y “ener to around 25 lower: to prime|changed, Switeerland (franc) free) 118 30° to 3 open top Tandem (ON-THE-JOB- AND CONFER- meet aes ee eee Care lambe 30°00 £2.00. wail to eg eck ise lanenany ed. a: Den _— : Snio West Good tone ‘Toa AUTOMATIC SALARY PROGRES- wood Cemetery, Birmingham. = $2.00; © bel rades s — Pre-Fab Transit Co., Pa: City. - nog fs 12.00-19.00; d Latin America: Argentina (f 724 “ 0... rmer City, SsION... Surviving is a grandson Leonard a a B oc- ng Te aint | enchenged: Brasil ifrees 1.75, un- ” Illinois. Ph. 2141 Columbus, Ohio. REQUIRE AT LEAST 2 YEARS M. Fall of Pontiac. . & deck mostly utility en 13.00: a few | changed; Mexico 8.02, unchanged; Vene- Ph. KLondik- 4641 .L.BOR OR EQUIVALENT EX- sinieeronhonnae fall" tg mostiy ood sisughter “ewes |sugin rover’ log) unchenaed 1” | Help Wanted Male 6 | “EISuN ‘Fling iaivtonree Pe | BEAN ASSOTANT DEPARTMENT =| ss . te : changed an < 49106 : MANAGER IN 1 YEAR. , : =} : A BILLION DOLLA ‘ - ee A DEPARTMENT MANAGER IN 3 WALLED LAKE — Service for Recalling Work —_—_—— seen Ga Pcemreing ie ueeta. WID AT ONCE MEN TO SELL YEARS WITH PROVEN ABILI- Kenneth T. White. infant son of} RECaHing VYOr ers ; eat ents on necessities under our factory-to- IF YOU ARE PRESENTLY IN RE- 4 Mr. and Mrs. Thomas White, of ; «| FOrd MOOr Ke S avaliable for men interested "in home plan. Pull or part time in TAILING. YOUR EXPERIENCE 1568 Bolton St.. will be at Iam. | Te wi tre tne. ia the apporwaity of a fone range | 07,0 Feptae .zamme teres | WiLL BE RECOONIZED | Z Somat . co : rs . . ess. career. ve year d = = j Wednesday at St, Williams Church, today said Willys Motors, Inc., is . raining program. Salary arrange- MCG-69A-728. Freeport, Til. APPLY WAITE'S ‘ith burial in Mt. Hope Ni eral hundred taid-ott |TUQNEST FAYTOU VOTAT| Seti ceee Peciee” ccrctsenins | WANTED — TERMINAL HANZOER : : i a oS a in Mt. Hope Cemetery. | Trealling seve ir aid-o' vertisoment Relies confidential: fer large gemmes carries = PERSONNEL, e di onday. , : ; com- 3 . : 0. Nog tion. Please state past experience FIFTH _FLOO Surviving besides his parents are “ee wow veer tun In orm NEW YORK #—Ford Motor Co. Phone PE Fy "ae, se Mee ties ess. ‘Box 61 reply ant a brother, Steven, and grandpar- =< oe ae ceemabemeie? nse Pay one t poral Automotive Salesman YOUNG MAN © TO 30 INTELLT - 5 ftetp Wanted = ents, Mr. and Mrs. Thomas White | ¢d sources add the call- payroll for any six mont for 2 men to sell a, BA MA’ A 1 se ~ , : the most College education Desire to grow of Walled Lake and Mr. and Mrs. | total 400-500 workers, Willys now a in the company’s 5l-year caus meek Go ldaecriens and Oo: with compan” go experience nec. an oe eee ee Michael Miga, of New York. has a work force of about 6,100. pi an poet apace «Ele ay gla mae in Birmingham area, Very pleas tenance. wife to in kitchen | a SS ohn S. Bugas, industrial rela Bereta Fern-Wood Chev... 21346 7 Be $450. a month combined salary cee “* tions vice president, said yester- oodward Ave. Ferndale. YOUNG MAN WITH MEAT MoD arch alpen pat oireses STOCKS NDS day the company’s payroll for the a4 Sour AND PAINT MAN. 22 at experience _ Steady works Leek — to manager onrien, | — first six months of 194 was $334-| guMp AND PAINT MAN WITH em RED RASPBERRY PICKERS. 071,214. ona Jecitities. Cal FE 29101 and Help Wanted Female 7 : Heaters, wee aye, Pridave. | “4 . 5 . : ck them yourself or Consult us for first hand information ff}, Busas said that during the period | “SERVICE, STATION BB chon et nsesroon Bees d me. ,Al-Johaston borinwest oor | - os average wage of 132,739 hourly ~ 2 hbase N COS ner. Sashabaw ymour Lk. in Stocks and Bonds rated Ford employes was $94.21 MANAGER SN ee ae a fs ; With ability to train men wanted neighborhood tive. Call SALES HELP for a 41.6 hour week. by major off company, Stead@ M * FE 27081 lS ) “ ~~ He said ‘the payroll was nearly opportunity | for sd. wore 108. ser 1p. cor appitonce dopartineat, atest be We maintain a direct line to a member of all eight per cent higher than for the an a sharp and have car Bee Mr. reen, personnel office. Monday, principal exchanges with up-to-the-minute first six months of last year. Tuesday end W. . 10 am. | quotations service available at all times. Reunion Att 5) tate A eunion Attracts Fae EEVERTG BOSD ALMONT—The annual Currey Son 66 OW. | family reunion held recently drew | C. J. Nephler Co. 51 members. Mitchell Currey was Instructions 9 named new president ‘of the group ACCORDION {WANED FREE TO 414 Community National Bank Bidg. FE 2-9119 and Currey Millikin, vice presi- emoers. estone ge at your at prices, OR P3466. - dent. factory: