‘The Weather = ‘114th YEAR Britain Seeks to S % *& & & & PONTIAC, MICHIGAN WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 5, 1956—48 PAGES ‘“™ | Find No Buyer for $37 Million Highway Bonds County Officials Told Northwestern — Project. Will Still Go Ahead 7 “ | Oakland County super-' visors, meeting yesterday to approve bids on bonds for the proposed extension of Northwestern Highway, instead heard a representa- tive of the State Highway Department explain why no bids were received at’ the scheduled sale in Lan- sing yesterday morning. Edward A. Bellenbaum, chief assistant deputy com-| missioner, told the board the market yesterday seemed “shut righ: off” for the first time since 1952. The Northwestern bontis. and bonds for two other projects all! with a fixed ceiling of 343 per) cent interest—went begging yester-' day, he said, because the interest rate wasn't high enough to attract bonding companies, | “We had had no indication that) 3% per cent wouldn't be high enough,” Bellenbaum said. ‘As, late as September, bonds were moving at 3.04 per cent.” He linked the bond’s unpop- ularity with the Federal Heusing | Commission's hike of interest rates last week, and signs of rises in bank interest rates Mon- day. “Now we'll have to wait and see) what happens after the. first of the year,"’ Bellenbaun’ said. “We may have to come to you again and ask you to approve a higher berg, 19-year-old Pasadena City ROSE QUEEN FOR 1967 — Pretty Ann Moss- man, was selected yesterday to reign as Queen of the New Year's Day Tournament of Roses. Queen Ann is 5 feet, 7 inches tall, weighs 127, * Crgwned Queen of Rose es aA College fresh- princesses, all and plans to be 6 téacher. tition, will rule over the 68th rade and occupy the Royal Box at the | Tournament Port Said Closes Up Troops Pull Out of Egypt Rapidly PORT SAID, Egypt (?—With few backward gl. more than 2,000 British and French soldiers filed ‘aboard ship for home today just a month after the first paratroopers leaped into Egypt. The leave-taking was cool. Emboldened Egyptians closed down all shops in Port Said. Even the noisy ces, * ar She and finalists in the Queen “Schools to Give All-City Concert Thursday Night Festival in Pontiac High Gym distaste tor the exodus. to Feature 900 Students pur the troops themselves were Students in the Instrumental) home before Christmas. Music Department of the Pontiac) Public Schools will present their | annual all-city Christmas concert Thursday night in the Boys’ Gym- nasium of Pontiac High School. Heading the program will be the Pontiac High School band under 1 joyd the direction of Dale C. Harris,' the Inxtrumental The band will play “Scenes from) the Sierras," by Bennett; a march, ‘little peddlers who hawked souvenir trinkets to the ‘troops while 4here \ was ighting on the Suez Canal banks were nowhere to \be seen. The withdrawal] ordered by Lon- ‘don and Paris was dubbed Opera- tion Harridan—a worn-out strum- ipet or hag—signifying the military |jubilant with hope they would be It was apparent the pace of the withdrawal was going to be ex- tremely fast. Some 3,200 French ‘and British er been di Tails With Wag, Wags With Tale, Animal Crackers ment, MacArthur, 47, has been in [01 the British request, the diplomatic service for 21 | Doubt was expressed that the ex-— Wencelas’’; PLANS TO CONTINUE “But in the meantime, we'll continue with our plans and engineering and the purchase of right of .way for the road. This delay in selling the bonds will mean no delay in the completion of construction. “T want to assure you this not a dead issue." Under the proposed plan, Northwestern Highway would be extended to a junction with U. 8. 23 in Livingston County. The county would pay the state — $90,000 a year for 20 years as its whare of the $37 million project. Federal and state governments would pay equal shares of the, Ynitial cost, with the county's share—5 per cent of total cost—re- turning to the state. Oak Park Supervisor Charles E. Cardon asked Bellenbaum if he had any assurance that ‘we won't) have a $40 million obligation with only $20 million worth of bonds." Cardon said he feared construction costs would rise with the soaring money market. , Bellenbaum said he doubted con- struction costs would rise, but ‘added the highway department has allowed for “normal” cost} | increases in its estimate of total cost. Nominate 10 for 5 Chamber Positions Ten nominations for five po- sitions on the Board of Directors of the Pontiac, Area.-Chamber of Commerce were announced foday. Nominated for terms which will expire December 31, 1959 are: The Rev. Edward C. Auchard, Edward P, Barrett, Howard L. Canfield, Dr. Leonard F. Klausmeyer, Curtis E, Matthews, James F. Nye, Fred J. Poole, Richard C. Scribner, Stuart Whitfield, and Dana P. Whit- mer. ‘ Ballots probably will be mailed Monday, with the election closing on December 24. is The nominating committee in-| _ ddudes A. Fitzgerald, chair- man; Milo J. Ralph T. Norvell, Dr. George N. Kelley to Name Committee : Safety Council Picks Steering Unit Leader Royat Oak Mayor Howard Kelley was named last night to appoint a five-member committee to plan an Oakland County Safety Council. At a meeting of the group's steering committee, Kelley announced he would? select a representative group which has the time, He said the main duties of his} committee would be to draw UP; a constitution and bylaws for the operation of the council. All| members were to make a com- plete report of their work at the in late. January, Plans call for each mounici- pality in the county. to be in- | formed of the project, and asked | to designate a candidate for the Board of Control to be selected in the future, Police, civic, and business lead- ers from throughout. the county attended the council’s second or- ganizational meeting, held in Pon- tiac, Guest speakers were Gerald) Shipman, executive director of the Michigan Safety Commission, and xecutive Jet Plane Crashes and interest to do the job.|, | in Upper Michigan SAULT STE. MARIE u—A pilot and radar-observer were listed as missing today “after fheir FS9D Scorpion jet crashed in a snow- next steering committee meeting covered swamp 20 miles south-| ‘be reached by the end of a 30-day; west of here last night. A rescue squad from Kinross Air Force Base here probed the wreckage throughout the night but found no trace Of, the missing flyers. They were hampered by darkness and a foot of snow. Both occupants of the all- weather interceptor were members of the 438th Fighter Interceptor Squadron at Kinross. Each has one child and their wives reside at Sault Ste, Marie. They were identified by the Air Force as First Lt. John Edward Cunningham, the pilot, of. Tulsa, Okla.; and First Lt. Hobart Walter | solicitation, Nearer to Goal Industrial Division Gifts Bring Total Collections to 97 Per Cent stands $17,000 short of its $612,202) goal after two weeks of extended ‘ campaign chairman Walter K. Willman announced to- day, The drive has collected $595,188, or 97 per cent of goal, he said, The Pontiac Area. United Fund and Robert Jochmans. C. Schultz, Fred N. Wiest, Ray-| mond A. Young, Philip Mason, George Eckroth, Robert Peterson 7 -lcaptured Gaza Strip. ial g5 However, the Israeli government hinted today it will not obey a United Nations resolution and with- draw all forees promptly from the Street Lights Forced On Large gains in the Industrial Division, Willman sai have brought pledges from ra- tions and their employes up te $393,414, or 94 per cent of goal. Division chairman Earl Maxwell was optimistic his quota would extension called by Willman when the drive officially ended Nov. 16. The Commercial Division, head- $159,175, Willman said, or 101 per cent of quota, and the women’s ‘door-to-door Geographic Division has turned in $20,698 or 108 per cent, The women's chairman is Mrs. Ralph G. Bump. Funds collected this year will support 54 health, youth, recrea- ed by James F, Nye, has reached) freezing mark. degrees. high of 40 degrees. Storm Blackens Pontiac Black skies this morning caused motorists to switch on headlights and windshield wipers as the clouds unleashed an _Unseasonable thunder and electrical storm over the Pontiac area. The darkness forced on city street lights twice for periods of some 15 minutes by means of a photo-electrical cell atop Consumer Power Co.'s substation which activates when light is absent from the fhechanism, With the thunderstorms, the temperature today was expected to climb to a spring-like 55 degrees. The Weather Bureau said the rain will change to snow flurries tonight, with the mercury expected to dip to around the The snow should continue tomorrow, weatherman said, with temperatures ranging from 32 to 35 the Yesterday's temperature in» downtown Pontiac reached a OSCODA @ — New supersonic F102 jet interceptors are being add- ed to the aerial defenses at Wurt- smith Air Force Base here, one of the first in the nation to be equipped with the Delta-wing planes. Some 25 planes, which can carry guided missiles, will be as- signed to the 3lst Fighter Inter- ceptor Squadron by the end of January. Big Chief—Big Trouble RENO, Nev, ®—Paiute Indian Chief Avery Winnemucca report- ed he is in Dutch with his tribe \because he lost a red leather bag containing $400 in tribal funds, “I sure hope the finder returns it,” iibay 7 veil » director Garvin Jr., of Mount Hope nearjtion, child welfare and family The lowest temperature in Pontiac preceding 8 a. m. was 33. |saiq Chief Winnemucca, “They'll ae pate at ee og Favette, W. Va. i counsel agencies in 1957, The mercury had climbed to 51 at 1 p. m. scalp me.” Seeetear ei ay |: | my cals troughout micngan, #1 ‘Spirit of Christmas Hovers Over Pontiac Shopping Areas since every area has its own traf- FS ’ wet ok. a | ol : 4 fice problems. : . 4 : 3 a ie . The state expert advised the a “What did we give Alice last year?” “What size socks would he’s = growing boy.” (See story on Page 2.) — eit z i i va we he le me Eb : ; : as Adlai Quits This gift snooping assignment . . ties including a new women’s lock- Plane af City Airport secretaries and coordinator is proving to be expensive for «. Street Widenin Deeds er room and lounge; a new mixed James Juhl. Presi-'We BUY things. But it's a fun g grille and enlargement of the men’s by about 10 mil-|way of deing our Christmas shop- . s . grille aré major items, The club’s| While three Waterford Township! Across the hall on second floor, said in a ping. Accepted by Commission™ entrance will be new, with aifire trucks, police cars,. and anjthe billing section of the water “I will not! One store has beautifully mon- \covered access, new approach and|@mbulance stood by, a Drayton) department, and the city’s finance presidency." He) ogrammed white handkerchicts | - vestibule, and revision of the club-|Plains pilot belly-landed a twin-|department is being settled. law) tor q dollar, Many women like | A brief and routine nine-point! widening and extension of Bay house area south of the lobby. Alengine plane yesterday at Pontiac} Below stairs, the city health in January. | one such hanky te use for best. - street through to the Herrington 2€W Manager's office is included. | Municipal Airport. department has occupied the a Ter.0 sane pos cen get sume of (COD WES Orktm into the min) Subdivision were accepted! Gordon Trevethan, pilot for Allen| former manager’s office area. Democratic the handkerchiefs mono- utes in less than an hour last) Anderson & Co., Inc. of Birming- The tion de has | y commissioners. recrea! partment interest in the grammed along one edge; they Night by the Pontiac City Com- Parents Face Jail ham, walked away from the $70,000 undimin-| are the newest style, you know. | mission: * ¢ ¢@ plane without a scratch. The plane It child happens to be in al Deeds needed for the 60-foot A one-year lease extension was e suffered $500 in damages accord- . : presidential Pe Rape Serves tet bite chonen granted to the Michigan Animal {QF Snubbing School ing to Homer C. Hoskins, manager Young Girl Treated running mate, Sen. Estes Ke- jone of the metal banks for his| Rescue Mages ie. “Ren the of the airport. After Being Struck ; tauver of Teunessee, was asked |present. Metal banks of the past, . Fecommencanon ty Managet) VERSAILLES. Mo. ® — Unless; _ Hoskins explained that Treve- | } Mt be toe might be im a mood jare now collector's items. wool Pontiac Deaths Walter K. Willman. ithey change their minds or win| @a" radioed the field asking | A: 16-year-old Detroit girl ts un- 4 ae ate ee knows but what the present day) Deeds for two parcels of land jan appeal. Mr. and Mrs. William| ST™md observers to inspect the der treatment at St. Joseph Mercy eration for the presidential {ones will be the same, We saw al were accepted front the State \Cheney face 10 days in jail for| Plame's front tricycle landing (Hospital today for a possible head’ a nomination. He replied: Dayy Crockett, a pirate and *'Mrs. James L. Cronan Dept. of Conservation, One was |refusing to send their T-year-old| 8°*f- A second plane went aloft jinjury suffered yesterday when) © “T am only in the mood to be|“!owm. any one of which would ter tore tote te tho Dixieinnd |doughter to eiifol Txesstuntion proved it upperant. ae eee | - delight a youngster. Mrs. James L. (Rose) Cronan,| Subdivision in vicinity . ee \ a ——— that I know One men’s store with a small 64, of 315 Dick St. died yesterday| Osmun Lake, The Cheneys contend an open ly had jammed, . Phyllis Mathews was sted ie "go ump acant gift section has some charming!in’ Pontiac General Hospital. She} ay. oinor was for part of a Jot/storm cellar makes the school] Alter calling for the emergency’ good” condition at the hospital) SN tice eest kim{eil bart designs are hand painted iad been in ill health two years.|,, "Duverds Subdivision near Bag. STOUnds dangerous and say there|Vehicles, Trevethan brought the|‘his morning. the, way, Mmucs 1 expect | | te bid again for the top noming-|be used in the freezer, in the oven|, Born in Templeton, Iowa ot|iey street. Both will be used for)! no playground supervision. [craft down on @ grassed section of) Viner, 50, of 840 Trombley St., 3 tion in 1960. or on the table, We were enchanted|APril 5, 1892, she —— daughter public purposes. Circuit Judge Claude E. Curtis . Troy, a e ¢ e with a little covered jar (we|% John and Teresa Witte. A resolution of public necessity imposed the jail term Monday, | . Miner told Troy police he was. g Stevenson's statement be “will/ought it) and with the small) A member of St. Benedict's |was offered and adopted to call\Plus ® $10 fine, but delayed exe-'Straight Razor Test driving slowly through a green| ' pot rum again” generally was ac-| Skillet. Catholic Church, she had lived im | for the blacktopping of all streets ne te Ge penalty YF ity Makes Man Wince light at Rochester and 15 Mile| cepted as removing him almost] The smallest apothecary jars | the Pontiac area 19 years. on the 1956 capital improvement) i" 2) ys an opportunity roads when Miss Mathews dashed | entirely from consideration four) cost less than a dollar. Fill Mrs. Cronan leaves her husband; | program which were not offered “ 3@ * DETROIT # — John Kimmel,|t in front of his car. He said years from now. He did not, how-| With powder puffs, bath salts or ang two sisters, Mrs. O. C. Scott|by reason of public necessity Of} Cheney is a high school English 22, balked at shaving with a/'t was impossible for him to stop ever, close the door tightly Pomp d for an interesting gift at (4¢ Coon Rapids, lowa and Mrs.|by commission resolution, teacher at nearby Eldon, Mo., his| straight razor he carried with him '™ time. egninat ‘e draft movement, in the Gostreg peten, |George Hoagland of Ottumwa,| A long 18-point agenda will face|wife is a former schoolteacher.|and police wondered why. wilikely event one should develop.| For the woman who collects ear~|jowa, commissioners when they gather|They said they had set up an ex-| Kimmel was held for investiga- Wants Bad-Driver Tags Wiliam Jennings Bryan set a rings you have a wide oui Friends may call at the Donel-|Friday night for their monthly|acting second-grade program at/tion yesterday in connection with| Ae tn TE com Me en ot ee rue son-Johns Funeral Home after 7| informal session. home for their little girl Steph-|a bréak-in at a barber college. HARTFORD, Conn, — State sineteniiinn, ‘ent mat tn-chection one WPe this evening. She will be taken to anie. To prove ownership of the razor,/Rep, Henry Ferne has proposed Stevenson's withdrawal makes Carroll, Iowa for service and)y ,, « . Sudge Curtis said this was not|detective Jack Shoemaker sug-that motorists convicted of ser- muah Pemsenatle qeverncts ond burial Thursday morning. Britain Asks fo Skip enough to comply with Missouri’s|gested that Kimmel shave with it.|jous traffic violations be com- senators potential candidates for UF Headquarters school attendance law since it did|Kimmel winced and said, “Whyjpelled to ‘carry tags reading - the 1960 : Mrs. Fred Ebner epee not provide the social contacts a/I'd cut my throat if I shaved with|‘‘Dangerous Driver” on front and eh ome reac (if 2 Million Payment jrvpa’nas ‘0° schoo. that rear bumpers for three Years. : Announces Gifts Graveside service was held here Office Breakin Yields : Tuesday afternoon in Oak Hill] (Continued From Page One) ‘ The Pontiac area United Fund Cemetery rs, ner,| ra ; < a ovtendl a my hr amour two ed Nov, 0s th hme of arene nut ee Only a Store Like Simms Would Price containing $15 were taken from an|more: |Richwood, Ohio. The funeral was| ines Fe gage ‘0 nal 53.95 Deluxe Sport Shirts at *1.99 car! gales office at 40 W. entice State Mesotial emploves #2.738.20' held Monday in Richwood. settlement of Britain's World War a ; te ; St. Monday night, Pontiaci|iiss Laurette Poul... | b0.00| Mrs. Ebner, the former Mary|{I lend-lease account with the §™ Maybe it isn’t good business to price these shirts so police said. are, Fer m. Srevar feo0| Chapman, had been a resident of| United States, | low, especially at Christmastime when most shoppers ‘Thieves broke in through a side Boers oT sinc re 958/Pontiae many years. Also due Dec. 31 are payments) ive little thought to bargain prices’. , ¢ but we don’t window and stole the money, po- ys Mitalle, Battalion... .i-sse 216.17 She leaves her daughter, Mrs.|o¢ 57 million dollars in the prin- igure it that way. lice said, from an office cabinet.|"* imioyes .-..-.,-,-.42,-.« 216.20|Peet; a grandson, Cowell Taylor’ cipajYpn these two accounts. This We believe our customers are plenty smart and DO Michigan Children’s Aid Society |, 4g/and five great-grandchildren, all'sum is not affected by the British | appreciate bargains now more than at any time of the Th W h Miss Oriel Endeiman oeereees eoee #8 $i of Richwood. Living here is her request, | r. - ne eather City of Pontiac employes. --:..:: «goe.z8| Cousin, Janet Castell. “It the British can’t pay, bed Here's another “BEST-EVER” bargain . , . come and Pull U.S, Weather Bureas Report [AXP employes. W. Huron St... 118.00) can't pay,” Chairman Ha i get ‘em! AO, AND VICINITY — Mostly ‘Qakiang’ County. employes. 230338 Mrs. Ida Hoyt oun ot the Rage Appre- Tas eee Safer Sit Lait BS) service tor ar. ta Ht tof porters i THURSDAY FRIDAY and SATURDAY! turning csléer tonight. |Omer LOWis ... acnceveenes cove 66.00 148 Auburn Ave. will be at 11 a.m. | | f - © Sotey Beas 65. Low, toniget Meer Chom McAn Sine Store, "$6-08/ Thursday from the Pursley Funer-| Hayden said he would go along se — aban East to south tine Osteopathic Hospital | ad y Theodore _{with an emergency “‘waiver” of - M 4s ee : te 16-96 miles an employ: er eeTe Terre eTy TTT ise 3510 Home, The Rev. Mos the interest ment—the term. en . . te ne ae jeatcht.” remersos Revert § Cir Credit Corp.7. tao} Of Leach Road, Community used by Mactaihan in describing | night cloedy colder, low 20-24, "| J. Muldowney, Riker Bldg.” \Church will officiate with burial the » lest | Todey in Pontine Pontiac Cut Stone 'Go."""1"1.,°1 $0.09 following in Oak Hill Cemetery. eee ee | i. temperature preceding 2 a.m.iRev Jona Tee ee vlaeeee $0.00) yan or ae pages ne “We have to support our allies! 8 a.m: Wind velocity § mp.n Roy Richard W. Thomas aris $0.00) ork on July 4 1868, ©V. even though they don’t always act wets at bpm, [Soaiks-Griffin Mineral Home” 09/28 after an illness of six years. {4 we think they should,” Hayden| Tises 9 ee. Davidson's Industrial Caterers "° ipae said, “We have taken the same) rises 7 at 10:43 km. employes, Pont. Mtr. Div. ... 6840 Michael John Money kind of action in the past in emer-| Downtown Temperatares . . es.” ’ S Revvees Mt te m.........8/ Juror Pleads Guilty ra ane red Teas hanes ; so one Agre'l ; eae 1p msssss-s-51/ After Hearing Verdict |Home for Michael John Money,|Relations Committee, said, “I an-| Pm B-oneeeee te infant son of Andy and Mary Lou'ticipate sympathetic consideration a OKLAHOMA CITY « — Traffic|Wern Money of 22 School St. Ed-\of a ‘* tion (As recorded downtown) Judge James Demopolos often hadjward Thornton of Jehovah's Wit-| ment” of the temperature peetcacevtes 38s 018 wondered if other people agreed nesses will conduct the service, nie * 7 3 erature ectellcecstecccc3e|" th his verdicts. So he sum-/purial will follow in White Chapel! Sen. Wiley (R-Wis), the ber— Patt moned an impromptu six-man| Memorial Cemetery. Committee's “One Year Ago in Pontiac jury” to hear evidence against) wichael was born here on Sept member, said Seimperature: .o+sn+++.++-+v+...43/% Man charged with drunken driv-/39, 1956 and died yesterday after- failure to grant the request BRUT acnctnssostoscosss:30) ! set off “‘a harmful ie Fl iredl morrow’s and Friday's flood of teners and Christmas shoppers, these women of St. Elizabeth's Guild of St. James Episcopal Church have just inverted a jello mold. Shown is one of the dozens of food varieties that will Fs é ~ ee 8 A 5 o star at their smorgasbord luncheons, to be avail- able at the church undercroft from 12:30 p.m. on tomorrow and Friday. From left to right are Mrs. A. Williston Welch, Mrs. James St. Croix and Mrs. George A. Weinhold. Town Hall lis- {$121 apiece THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 5, 1956 # iPontiae Men’ Jailed, ion Entering Charge ‘Two Pontiac men were given jail - Ieentences totaling 30 days each Tuesday after they were found guilty of a charge of entering with- J James Southfart. David L. Fairbotham, 39, of 107 Mt, Clemens St., and Francis P. Mazurek, 34, of 55] Franklin Rd., were lodged in the county jail when they failed e ¢ & The charge involved the alleged theft of hunting clothes valued at $45.20 from the glassed-in porch of a Keego home early in November. OLCC Expands Its Facilities OKs - $185,000 Job to Start Jan. 1, Selects Shurley as President An expansion and improvement program to cost approximately $185,000 has been approved by the Orchard Lake Country club mem- bership, and Burt R. Shurley Jr., Detroit banker, has been selected as president for 1957. Plans for the building were pre- pared by the Birmingham arcbi- tects, O'Dell, Hewlett & Lucken- back, and Tom Hewlett said to- day that bids would be taken Dec. 15. Work will begin first of the new year, Hewlett said. Here Are By JANET ODELL, we hear this suggestion, Some one) at the presi-|always objects that you can’t find! anything “decent” for a dollar, We Pontiac City Affairs Dollar Gift Idea will also appreciate this. gift. Any handymen-around-the-house; Other officers are: Robert C. Le- land of Birmingham, vice-presi- ident; John C. Moons of Detroit, isecretary (re-elected) and Edward iH. Lerchen of Birmingham, re- lelected treasurer. All are mem- { ‘bers of the board of governors jand purchase the more conserva-|aluminum, a new product that along with new members Morgan “Let's draw and xchange|“¥® pair. She'll wear the latter mends countless items. 8 y names e more often. 7 dollar gifts.” “Over and over in) en clubs, offices and social groups Sportsmen Collins, John K. Bagby and John |W. Shenfield and holdovers William There are lots of gifts for a! ion your list? Buy a tube of plastic! dollar, J. Bird and C. B. Harman. HOLLYWOOD _@#-~Seven- old twin girls have been adopted) by actor Fred MacMurray and his i. Revision of the entire second floor of the south portion, a new cocktail lounge, other new facili- permission by Keego Harbor | to pay fine and costs of City Considers Two Ordinances | Public Nuisance Law, Proposals Under Study Two proposed city ordinances | were introduced to the Pontiac City ‘Commission last night. Both will be up for possible adoption ne xt Tuesday. | Fire Marshal Charles Metz asked ‘consideration of an ordinance reg- julating and licensing the use of \liquid petroleum gases in the city. | The second ordinance is proposed to. be the city’s first public nui- sance law which would repeal the one paragraph 1874 law now on the books. City Attorney William A. Ewart drafted the new law prohibiting the keeping of cortain animals (mot including dogs, cats and nrost household pets) in Pontiac, requiring the keeping of sanitary areas where allowable pets are kept, making it unlawful to occu- the ordinance. Would require per- mits, The suggested bottled gas ordi- of liquid petroleum No. 1 fire limits or central downtown area except a one-year period or until nat- gas is secured. * > s Other provisions include safety measures mandatory béfore a per- mit for installation would be grant- A Area Man Belly Lands Bottled Gas Restriction | The Day in Birmingham. iprepare for the once-it-ten-year| storm, or the worst one in 100 years?” members of the North Evergreen authority’ are asking themselves, They mulled the question over by themselves yesterday morning, and have called in their engineers of the Ann Arbor firm of Ayres, Lewis, Norris and May for a con- ference on the question tomorrow! morning. The authority members, meet- ing in Birmingham munic of- ‘tices, yesterday studied a new suggestion. by the engineers to BIRMINGHAM — “What do we! Drain Authority Plans to Avert Storm Disaster. moved intp the main building, having been in two locations in the old fire-hali wing since was created last winter. Robert Girardin, director, and his sec- retary are in the office vacated by the machine accounting sec- tion of the water billing depart- meat. City Commission Room is being rejuvenated, while the main floor room of the fire-hall wing houses the commission and court mean while. crmugre gee cea 4 HCC Se CNS step up treatment of storm , | Water from storms might sur- pass the abilities of the Birming-| ham Sewage Treatment Plant if ‘expanded for the North Ever-| green use in rare, heavy storms, especially if. 4omplete treatment is| required, the theory goes. “It isn’t economically possible to! be ready for the one worst storm | - jevery ten years,” points out James, Birmingham Juhl, coordinator, A plan of the engineers for | | tion, of storm waters was sug- | gested two weeks ago by the | engineers, but was rejected by Don Pierce of the Michigan State Health Department. what treatment he .does require,| ment of storm waters as well as, sewer waters, | Desk contents are still being sorted at the city offices following “moving day” on Monday, in which several departments changed their headquarters. | Moved into offices on the | second floor at the east end of | ning in offices off a central room, occupied by their two- Pierce has not specified just! but has said he will require treat- § ; { Dresses | ca" JUST ARRIVED For the Christmas Holidays ee LADIES’. 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"Sen: Johnson Eyed Dems Look ft By JAMES MARLOW Associated Press News- Analyst WASHINGTON —There never was any doubt — after Adlai Stev- engson’s second defeat by President Eisenhower — that he was washed up.as a "presidential candidate. So hig announcement yesterday saying so only emphasized that for the next four years the Demo- crats will have no one man to point to as their leader. The only n — after Stev- enson's mel cee Wag writ- might party leader, he would have been disillusioned in a hurry. * NEED NEW LEADER There was no reason for the Democrats to take guidance from a man who suffered two over- whelming disasters,’ particularly or Pr ¥ 3 iar nowhere, Although he had a heart attack a year and » half ago, he can be eupadiod-te' have peosiden- tial ambitions :6till gers two unsuccessful tries for the .|Democratic presidential. nomina- tion and settled for the vice-presi- spot this year, certainly no signs of not wanting an- other try. He'll be 57 in 1960. There are others, some out in the open as men of high ambition and others who may emerge in the esidéntial Timber t this year when the Democrats as a whole came out ahead of the Republicans. On a practical day-by-day basis from now on the party leadership will be shared by two Texans: Sen. Lyndon Johnson, the Demo- crats’ Senate leader, and Speaker of the House Sam Rayburn. They'll have the job of guiding the Democrats in Congress toward establishment of a record on which the party can appeal to the congressi A GIFT The. Entire Family Will Enjoy voters in the 1958 ional elections and in the 1960 presiden- tial race. * 6 * I ‘The Johnson-Rayburn leadership will have. to be shared to some extent with the Democratic Na- tional Committee and the Demo- cratic state governors, who will have, or try to have, some say _., ~f/ about the road the Democrats are to follow in Congress, Before the 1958 congressional ‘elections the party may suffer ifrom disagreements between’ Johnson and Rayburn on one side) ‘and other Democrats in and out! = ae PITTSBURGH — | :I'omeren en ti suer. "Honor Businegcman Full-Length | acne” te pitta will be With a Banquef Business agent and for 3) years a member of Pontiac Local No. 620, Earl E. Ross was presented with a gold life membership card | watched, especially by those other Democratg anxious to build them- \selves up as likely 1960 presiden- tial candidates.. Rayburn, who will ‘be. 78 in 1960, is out of considera- jtion as a candidate. Johnson . will. be only 52 four Door Mirrors Wide Selection like a candidate this year but got wajdron Hotel last night. (Advertisement) SINUS DISCOVERY Suffer from wracking headaches, or of Venetian Mirrors John Shuff, eighth vice president [of the International Alliance of iStage Employes and Moving Pic- I iture Operators Local No. 620, LAYAWAY PLAN A Small Deposit Will” Hold eqsribte , Sactal oar due © I presented the award. Any Mirror Until Christmas lief with Framac Tebow, Wet * * «@ believe we could get 20,000 9 . boo letters prai Trumac f} Ross was vice president of Mich- which has now been on the market igan State Alliance for 20 years and for many terms served as president of Pontiac & Oakland County AFL. He has been employed ‘for 27 years by Butterfield Theaters Inc. and is now projectionist at the Oakland Theatre. Pontiac Glass Go. 23 W. Lawrence St. FE 5-6441 7 —WE DELIVER— Laboratories, Inc. 19050 Greenfield, Detroit 27, Mich. i years from now. He made motions'at a banquet in his honor at the, Explain to Pole Indians in U.S.. Have Freedom PHOENIX,’ Ariz. () — Mayor Jack Williams hag sent a letter ‘they are locked up in prisons and camps like our papers and books and films show. , .” Mayor Williams said he will send Jach -a year’s subscription to Arizona Highways magazine and also have a 14-year-old Indian ‘boy write to Jach and “tell him the truth about American In- dians.” |Horseshoers Flunk Out | SPRINGFIELD, Il. @—Sixteen of 20 applicants for licenses as. professional horseshoers failed to pass the state exam. It seems horseshoers aren't getting enough ice these days, the Mlinois Horseshoers Examining Commit- \tee soberly declares. of this bourbon > im tue waenmicanr wy case: ESTOS Pe Dewy yy by SERS BE sate = » esky adh; 2 COU Wels PO PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 5, '1956 : z ¢ , Aa bee ; ae \@ : ‘TS THE NTS... IS YOUR CRAZE COSTING YOU MONEY??? Today's Teenagers craze over Elvis Presley is quite a controversial subject, but GOOD or BAD . . . it doesn't hurt the family budget to any gredt extent. But STAMPS .. .. a craze that has swept vs WISE adults off our feet DOES hurt the family ‘pedo Stamps ore not free . . . they have to be paid for by someone eee and that someone is you. Don’t be a teen-ager with a craze that can cost you so much . . . shop at Tom's and see for thet Tom's NO STAMP POLICY puts dollars in your . es 2 ie Shin FeO yourself pocket where they belong . . . YOU SAVE $5.57 AT TOM’S THIS WEEK. : PRICES EFFECTIVE UNTIL SAT., DEC. 8 MAXWELL HOUSE COFFEE WITH COUPON BELOW {-LB. CAN ONE BLOCK EAST OF TELEGRAPH Open Daily Till 9 P.M. Open Sunday Till 5 P.M. We Reserve The Ri To Limit Quantities NONE SOLD TO RS OR MINORS RD. = * oF | GEISHA, SOLID PACK, SAVE 10c : t White Meat TUNA 3 cv. SWIFT'S FAMOUS | TH BEARER OF THIS COUPON IS “ENTITLED TO ONE 1-LB. CAN OF Maxwell House Coffee COUPON ExPi AT TOM'S 8 9: DEC. 8, me SPECIAL : & LOW PRICE NONE SOLD TO MINORS OR DEALERS c PKG. a KRAFT SAVE 7c : Macaroni Dinne BANQUET SAVE 40c 342,99° Whole Chicken WHOLE KERNEL CORN The Best For Every Use U.S..NO. 1 © | _ MAINE POTATOES | 10-LB. BAG U.S. GRADE “AA” WHOLE FRYING | CHICKENS = SHADYNOOK panes LARGE EGGS 2 49s. | WHOLE _ BEEF TENDERLOIN Fs “ag FRESH CREAMERY ' 3-4 LB, Je save if] TILDEN BUTTER| ORANGE JUIC at 69. | 6238 PERSONAL SIZE LARGE as REGULAR SIZE IVORY SOAP 2. = 31° CAMAY SOAP 3-28" IVORY SOAP 4 = 25° "SNOW CROP FROZEN H_ FRIES 25: MINUTE MAID FROZEN £ LARGE SIZE IVORY FLAKES eee UGE. 31° BOX : LARGE SIZE ‘IVORY SNOW ~3t 0 _ MEDIUM SIZE IVORY -SOAP | “3 = 28: 2 een eg Mie aE icy aS a ee eee ee Sw GS eh ee = i ss. WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER ‘ . THE PONTIAC PRE Husband and Wife Stoul See Situations ‘Through Each Other's =a 4 | “(Tats te ihe third of seren_article : Rbcks™ oy +. > Holiday Thrills te Kr DUSTERS 4 >a FREE 4.98 » 10.98, oS * oo your parking ticket validated F while making » ‘th. idl J ax Git? Si i Take the case of Jack and Sally Smith, an actual couple with a fic-/ ble |titious name but a very real prob- The manager suggested she’ have te feel right about Jove a might need some trained person to here (she pointed to her head). “ieee or three times a week; he says “| because of ‘extra work at the of- When the facts, all of them, in- cluding the most intimate ones were out on the interviewer's ta- , they formed a textbook case of sexual maladjustment in early| marriage. Sally told the counselor: | “Whenever I was doing the dishes or fixing dinner or even combing my hair, Jack would come up to me and begin to fondle me. His kisses told me he was eager to make love. “It made me feel uncom. fortable. It seemed so wrong, all this practically public leve-mak- ing. I knew we’re married but I Holidays Mean More Guests Be Ready for Jiffy Meals NEW YORK (INS)—Sometimes le “I guess I'm just frigid—that’s the word for wives who don't like ‘sex, isn't it? Cy e ¢ “In any event, after I rebuffed i> i} Ere i 4 7 it ifice’ or to have ‘a beer with some of the boys.’ Well, I thought I'd ‘get a job.” [ izi rf E or use them as toppings for ice cream, Coming Events amen Tears i era ls te ae = Dr. Hw. EH. Savage PR se ae Dutrerieetd Toms 8 oe. If you follow this tine of least War 6S ee Sf ee resistance even ar impromptu din-|'™* ee venetian ner can be easy. To avoid fuss ,, Ss % Malta the temple, 63 Perkins — Santa please go fo STAPP’ 2 [for my - Such wonderful new styles . . . ‘n such beeeutiful new color... ‘n such warm comfortable materials . you will find JUST the slippers you want here. We probably have the child’s correct size, too, in our shoe-record file! “Royal Stewart” Handsome Scotch plaid of warm, comfy fabric. Easy-zipper closing, Soft padded sole. Small 5’s-8, $2.45 Sizes 844-12 eoseseceee $a4§ “Saddle Loafer” Glove - soft leather in new Ginger — Shade. A ‘Penney-Loafer’ they all love from 1 to 21, Sizes 8'4-3. “Boys’ or Girls’ -Romeo” Fascinating new pattern corduroy with a cozy inner-lining. Choice of colors. Bouncy squeegee-rubber sole, Sizes 512-8. $2.45 Sizes 82-12 Perey TT TT Tity ae "Wide Wide Walker” Especially for those children with wide, chubby feet. Carefully styled corduroy with cushioned leather sole. Sizes 842-3. $2.95 $3.75 eT . Cures Authentic or Cowlgirl Boots i Acme made these like the re tm boots. “Handeomely ime Rey Character nee Creations ta patterns Tots’ flat heels or fi-stirrap heel $4.95 wa $5.95 3.50. et Ff JUVENILE BOOTERY —28 E. Lawrence St. Open Monday and Friday Eve's to 9 FAMILY SHOE STORE — 928 W. Huron St. Open Friday and Seturday Eve's to 9 * , = TAPP’: eS $3.98 sa resent the claim. * * .* If there was going to be a seri- ous incident in these Olympics it was calculated to rise out of the final game of the basketball tour- nament, the long-awaited playoff _THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY: DECEMBER % 1950_ These same. affectionate scenes took place also in the hot wake of the 4 x 100 meters relays, in which our side was forced to break i ; ' if g §3 Ss a igs gesture it something better is engendered by the human emotion mechanism. The Russian relay team knelt down smiling S ‘i word of English. “Okay,” he said. * * 8 5 International Harmony Reigrié at Oly sony aera eed meron am fr 8 Bu Hee comets sh r 11-year-old Frank McKinney Jr. of the American swimming team, stuck out his paw, pumped Mc- Kinney’s hand and said his only He repeated it several times and * * e “Heaven preserve us from Te clety in which there are no ex- & 80 behind the seated might still be doing it if a Russian guard had not taken him away. This pocket of good fellowship in a world of hair-bristling | mute True Life Adventures P ane SkIR WAY FROM THE HER BURROW, 5 . MOTHER KANGAROO RAT snierFs DANGER / CAN MAKE Ir BACK TO HE OFFSPRING | SAFETY, HOW ABOUT HER j, WHAT'S TO BE DONE ie not the victory, but But no claim is made here to aithe essential thing is monopoly on the amenities of in- ternational relations. Baron de|To spread these precepts is to de- ’ Coubertin, who organized the mod-|velop a more valiant, more strong,| | ern Olympics in 19896, never be-'more ovwdicn humani ie : Official Attitude: Wait and See a Egypt Remains Skeptical] @ ~ CAIRO (INS)—The “Anglo-French! France and Israel be forced to pay) announcement of withdrawal fromiall damages resulting from the Egypt ‘‘without delay” was greeted | invasion. P Arrive ¢ pelaxed. retroahanl see) dors edie oa asl _ comfort! venient gets to Chicage may make tig met ory mi oe Pw Est Geiaeas * ire iaeeee seeeee Lo dadieiadiaded: na DAM Rn veeeeee ee President Gamal Abdel Nasser $3 Billion in October: | lever since he turned over responsi- ,WASHINGTON (INS) — bility for- ousting the invaders to| Commerce . ‘ i United Nations. fa Me Sicily ponent excel the( rand oe Eanes laceene Bd ete attitude was “wait and *PERSONAL SERVICE .- THATCHER PATTERSON & WERNET 609 Community National Bank Building FE 2-9224 NATIONAL BANK. FOR NEXT: CHRISTMAS : by opening ‘ \ _ Christmas Club TODAY It’s the smart way to save... the easy way to save tor oe gift giving in 1957. — mers | ri The Spirit of Friends| 1ip There are some things you can never bu | i os No matter what you spend. ee _ Avwinter snow, a patch of sky, | A Aight: of birds...a friend) 7 q ‘ There’s a Club for for” Everyone | DEPOSIT RECELY $ 1.00 Every Two Weeks ..... Receive $ 2 $ 2.00 Every Two Weeks ..... Receive $ 50.00: $ 4.00 Every Two Weeks ..... Receive peg $10.00 Every Two Weeks ....: Receive | - 00 ar * Two Weeks . ne ay nl i Es hed ar Es been shot 10] Tne, sharp sound came from the opyping all over fr 304!" Linwsonand being slowly forced up, bent back-| “Why?” Steve asked. “What's T had had the\wards. The triangle of cleared |happened?” The: grill work |space increased... andawoman'’s; “A burglar! In your apart- answer af- hand pushed a gun down into the ment! I caught him! He’s in jail!” fe rope to pick it up. the angle by which ell EEs Tiand I saw it open. = Ph is ne , : : £ & pas ar VEER IK Pes ee a ees ee een a BER. 5, 195 there was Leone, in a hospital, with q shattered wrist and with cops in attendance. Steve helped me out of the car, and I enjoyed the way he held my arm... so tightly that it hurt. Mr, Golden, our janitor, came running up out of the vestibule. I had never see Mr. Golden so ex- cited before; he was hopping. “Mr. Barton, Mr. Barton, I been vators, the smart, statuesque re-, ceptionist escorting a newcomer to. an interview and then, a min- ute later, Steve swinging up the i from Studio K. 1 knew now why the telephone — went unanswered. Leone Webb. wasn't at her desk. She was huddled above me, watching me, walting for me te move. ” room and turned it toward me. “A burglar... THE PONTIAG PRESS. WEDNE SDAY, DECEM Deported Jews ‘Arrive in Israel Egypt Denies Terror; Expect Large Groups to Cross Border HAIFA, Israel (?—Twenty-nine \deported Jews arrived Tuesday Israel thinks. they from Egypt. ‘may be the vanguard of thousands anxious to flee the Nile country. Egypt denies reports abroad that it has launched a reign of jterror on its 50,000 Jews. It says ‘gome are leaving of their own ac- cord. A correspondent inside ‘Egypt reported 250 to 500 Jews deported since the Israel invasion “Yeah!” Mr, Golden guffawed) “He got: I plunged headlong for the door, Steve was'a fine, scornful laugh. hind him. There was the crack of a shot, but it was Boiling who fired it from the doorway. I heard a scream and I turned in Steve's arms im time to see the gun clat- ter onte the studie floor from the small black. triangle in the ceil- | fing. coming into the room, Bolling be- himself locked in your bedroom! I shouted, ‘No, Steve, closet, a fine burglar! stay back . . .” I heard) him pounding and yelling! And} jthe story he told me, hat What) la crazy story!” | “Just a minute,” I said, and I never realized how small my voice could sound. ‘Just a min- jute...” | Mr. Golden went on shouting. “He says Mrs. Barton locked him Oct. 29, but that a rumored mass ‘exodus has not ‘far, materialized so} * * * j The 29 told of sudden arrest in Cairo, imprisonment and seizure! of their property, and finally ex-| | pulsion. | | One said he was beaten up in a Cairo jail where 500 Jews were held. He said he did not see his! \ . . a _ family after his arrest. | POOCH SUIT—Well-prepared for Israel Premier Devid Ben-Gur-' foul weather are four-year-old ion h eS s o'clock, the classes were changing now. Leone would be assigning new students to) studios, calling teachers, scrib- | bling appointments in her book. She was always at her desk when the classes changed. she never left it then... ; But there was once when she a “| remember that one time, 2 and my hand, clutching the phone, | : fell limply to my side. I remem-| ' bered sitting -in the reception = room that evening as the classes ‘a changed. 1 remembered the pu- s pils moving to and from the ele- NAT MORRISON, Mer. Hl, FRIENDS! Here's One for the Ladies than just a bran We'll be specific. cubic-inch V8 eng smooth action. “IT’S HIGHLY STYLED _ JEWELED MOVEMENT | Reg. Priced at $27.50 | TODAY'S SPECIAL | 135 EASY CREDIT Terms sion in every °57 down-in-front dip stops. | When you take a It's a Whiz at Everything a car should do I; turns out that the 1957 Buick is far more d-new automobile. It turns out that this new 57 Buick is winning the raves with a new kind of gomg and a new kind of stopping—a new kind of handling and © a new kind of road sureness—a new kind of safety and a new kind of comfort. When you press the pedal of a new ‘57 Buick, the response is literally instant... Because the high-torque power of a lew 364- ine is delivered in the split of a second through a new full-range Variable Pitch Dynaflow* that's immediate in its oil- When you brake to a stop, you and the car stay on a level plane... * Because an ingenious new ball-joint suspen- Buick virtually ends the that cars have on sudden turn or swing into an “S” curve, you still hug the road like a streamliner on rails— Newest Buick Yet _ - OLIVE “210 Orchard Loke Ave. | R MOTOR SALES, INC. Pontiac, Michigon ay the wanted it... on I heard Bolling’s voice line parallel to the floor: ‘Barton...’ . . aren Maat made it sccm that the |, “Comie’s all right.” Steve said. ere se eee doe hae Pare baste ta go wn 2St feels flit “She's fine.”’ pw - as a pair of boots to go wi ® murderer Pty _— me had She's Sine. es -¢ @ jthing, he said you were a blonde his. “pooch suit” but he’s saving A sispaten from “caine pieced room Ww r, her | ; . | " . . ne > . A dispi ; on ~ the Waltzer | Steve, Lieutenant Detective Bol-|: - - Mr. Golden choked off and them for really rough weather. together this picture from govern-. : "papi, , ‘ling and I suspended all talk of saped at me. He said, ‘Mrs. Bar- - ~~ ment, diplomatic, Jewish and in-: The killer was above me n0W, | wurder while Bolling concentrated |' YoU are a blonde . . .” | oe ; ternational agency sources: waiting for me to bend over the lon executing a miracle of modern| “Just a minute,” I said again. ‘!eePy. but tired. It had been @ Eevptian officials say 250 Egyp- silhouette, to move into the posi-|,arking. He gentled the police car| “This is all very simple. Mr. busy day. tian Jews have been interned for tion he wanted. 1 forced my eYeS into an impossibly smal] space in| Bolling, that was no burglar, that = “Steve,"" | said, ‘‘what was in €Mgaging in subversive activity. to look into that black checkered front of the Bartons’ Lexington) was Ralph Tolley. 1. . Thad the recording that tipped you off J¢Wish sources say closer to 500 square of the ceiling. cae ee residence and looked t9) just planned to borrow him for Leone?” ° jare under arrest, . : Fa could see seTpad ~ oe jus er approval ° is or t an hour of two... _ | The Egyptians say 250 alien or darkness, And y er smiled at him fondly; I smiled at) .., ” e| ; . ; stateless Jews suspected of gub- was up there watching me, wait-/Steve fondly. I was fond of-those ant en tte nouns said. He Martinis for Steve and Com versive activities have been de- , | e going to 4 ‘ ing for me to touch the trap he two boys. lsay quite a lot more, of rather nie tomorrow, as Steve explains (ported. Jewish sources say this : ps hg waiting to shoot. it.. By Steve had found the answer to’, serious nature. But he only ll in the final chapter of “The group also mambers nearer 300. wouldn't . the murder in the tape record-|shook his head and said, “Mrs., Blonde Died Dancing.” i now, I suddenly realized, he must/ings He had figured out that Barton, Mrs. Barton.” (Copyright 1956, by Kelley Roos) Egypt is encouraging more than, ~ know -that I had stumbled on Ikeone Webb was Anita’s killer. “ry ‘write him a nice note’ 1! —$_$______—— 4,000 Jews with French passports’ truth, that now I wouldn't touch it. rushed informati ’ . ‘to leave—not bec th And Se Ty he hada’the’ pint ~ that|*2id. “He was very sweet and co }y ians to Holland |Jews but because they are Shite , . cmaniad to Bolling and Proved to him that operative.” Mungarians to motian M ‘s rt cause they ore pady. sent a bul was right. Together they had!*., ‘ tn . ‘rench and thus enemy ' aliens down, nae to a Crescent Sebel Mrs. Barton,” Bolling said a) THE HAGUE, Netherlands « since the British-French invasion * * *¢ wii ood de. Open a sod '— The Netherlands government of Egypt. He was waiting for me to move,| When they found /pstairs ing us our today announced it will take 1,-- The property of 105 Jewish firms from the wall. Fiat-| one at her desk in the reception phone to liberate Mr. Tolley. Steve 009 more Hungarian refugees —a and 529 Jewish individuals has. was,..1 was| reom, they had immediately set used our gin and vermouth and total of 3,000. In addition the gov- been seized as enemy alien prop-. range. The size of the out for me and Studio K . . . and ‘added a batch of Martinis. T uséed‘ernment wilt accept 2,000 Hun-'erty, But there appears to be no! me out of his line of “re I was, obte. to seaite — jour love or all five and @ halt garian refugees on a temporary attempt in Cairo to whip up public! could probably see no these two ys, and feet of it. I was rather tired, not basis, feeling against Jews. ‘than my feet. toward the door. To Eom tera} . ‘easy target for room, is, the that Because under you is a massive wide-frame new chassis that “nests” the whole car inches closer to the road with the lowest center of gravity in Buick history~yet with no change in road clearance. And when you sit in the deep comfort of those soft wide seats, you can drive with the pleasant ease of a clear conscience, without _ | watching the speedometer . ... Because only in. Buick today can you have an : ingenious new Safety-Minder* that acts as a warning sentinel for the miles-per-hour you preset for yourself. . There are many other new things that make this gorgeous Buick a car of limitless wonders —from the bigger and more rakish windshield that makes seeing more relieving, to the extra roominess that’s so surprising in this beauty with the sports-car lowness. But there's nothing like a firsthand sampling to know how modern the newest thing on wheels really is. Come in today for your meeting with the newest Buick yet. *New Advanced Variable Pitch Dynaflow is the only Dyna- flow Buick builds today. It is standard on Roadmaster, Super and Century ~— optional at modest extra cost on the i Special. Safety-Minder standard on Roadmaster, optional other Series. . | have been arrested and 250 to 500) py | We \Déctor Collapses *" ‘ Colleagues’ Fast. Action Saves Life COLORADO SPRINGS, Colo, uF —When Dr. Frederick C, Hoebel collapsed at a friend’s house Sat- urday. night, two other doctors quickly cut open his chest with a penknife and started massaging jhis heart, The Colorado Springs ‘Medical Center reported today he ‘has impraved rapidly and prob- ably will recover with few if any after effects. | ® * | A spokesman at the center said) |its records show only three other) jcases where doctors were able to get a heart to work again after ja lapse of as much as four min- 1957, al fees. Bik Simei. 3. Sr Brmrrye FPS ‘ en Oy 8 Og] = ; € o CITY of PO The 1956 County Taxes in the City of Pontiac willbe due and petyable at the office of the Pontiac City Treasurer December 10, 1956 through January 21, 1957 without fees. On January 22, 1957 a collection fee of 4% will be added to all County taxes paid through February 28, Arg Citak ¥ whe 4 On March 1, 1957 all unpaid County and 1956 City and School taxes will be returned to the Oakland County Treasurer's office and must be paid there with addition- | . Payments made‘ by mail must be postmarked not later than January 21, 1957 to avoid penalties. WALTER A. GIDDINGS. City Treasurer 35 S. Parke Street Pontiac, Michigan utes, * = * Hoebel’s collapse was at- itributed to a heart attack. He is How to Reduce Painful The two doctors maintained his Swelling of Piles © ~—with home medication yte, not cluding wonderful Triol pile preperation, ‘This amasing on, amazin pre = & respiration by maquth « to - mouth breathing. They continued to mas- sage his heart while he was taken to the hospital in an ambulance. at home. It was two hours before his heart ode called se ~~ yane’. and - anes< started beati ‘mall in. ug ‘ant ré doctor's tic action that stops and starte ating normay again.| tests: internal and relief! itching instently...while the No other such medication goes to work poducing About 50,000 towns and villages a how 3 = me ae t tnd Dealing: in the U, S, have no rail outlets and depend entirely on motor — aon Bane Mi if Budget Meet Christmas Suggestions: FOR THE FESTIVE DAYS TO COME vo $199 Wool and jersey sheaths, 1 and 2 pc. rayons, satins, crepes, taffetas, velvets, and crystal or \ lame fabrics in all \urpose sleeve lengths and neck lines. Robes ™ ALWAYS—ALL WAYS The Practical and Luxurious Gift * BRUNCH COATS 29 Quilted cottons, rayon crepes, chenilles and nylons. From three-quarter to full length. “SPORTSWEAR SUGGESTIONS SWEATERS /o” 2.99 Slipovers 6r ¢ardigans in (Orion, Nylon) and twin sets in all the desired colors. BLOUSES from 1.99 Nylons, rayon ‘and cotton. Dressy or tai- lored in regular and half sizes. 2.99 SKIRTS | from Flannels, gabs, rayons, cords, velvets. straight lined and circular styles. - HOSE SPECIAL Guaranteed first qual- Pus. ‘) P Sizes 10 to 38 *& NEGLIGEES * DUSTERS COATS | TOPPERS - SPECIAL @ Tweeds, Velvets 1 8 . @ Wool Fleeces . @ Wool Blends - @ Quilt Linings ity nylons. 15 denier, 51 gauge in a varied selection of shades to Values to $24.98 suit Her. BOX PRICE | CHARGE L N ACCOUNTS CHILDREN’S ave HOLIDAY _DRESSES 99 @ | and 2-Pc. Nylons UP - Open Every Night ‘tho PL Me * @ Linens Sizes 1 t0 6x 7 to 14 Phone FE 2-9101- for Your Convenience i ALL KROGER STORES IN PONTIAC JOIN IN” is Grand Gala Celebration “THRIFTY” FRESH LEAN 65 TELEGRAPH | MONDAY - SATURDAY 9. oF OPEN SUNDAY 10.6 TEs M ce | 750 N. PE Thrifty meat comes from cattle which has been feed RRY ST. on lush range grass. It's wonderful on your budget. c + MONDAY- SATURDAY 9. 9 | So-stock up your freezer and save. » BOs 178 N. SAGINAW 3 _ MONDAY-SATURDAY 9:30.9 Polish Sausage us 49* Sliced Bacon = uw 39 , ‘ | OPEN SUNDAY 9:6 Hygrade pure ground.....sccessecescreeeneseres Sterling brand, sugar cured............0esseeeee i a PRICES EFFECTIVE a ‘ ALL KROGER | Cottage Butts Lb. 59s Pork Sausage Lb. 3 3° _ + IN PONTIAC STORES Hygrade lean sugar cured ...scsessseseeseeereen Hygrade, pure ground.,..++.++---+-+++++ conegees ee ee ee ae GRAND. OPENING SPECIAL .. . SLICED .- Your pa Choice ¢ bee Bologna or Hot Do $s | g Lb, Free! A Jar of Mr. Mustard with Every 1-Lb. Package of Hygrade’s All Beef Ring Bologna uw 39 Oysters ie rw 89° Wieners eee eee eee er ee Liver Sausage wn 39° Beef Steaks ? . 89° Free Sion jer ot master’ Both for 69° apasceussiae with every one-pound pack- Hygrade fresh or smoked...........++0+ Patti Pak fresh frozen coe of All Bea? Feonks Only , LEAN SUGAR-CURET EXTRA LEAN AND TENDER. 4-6 LB. AVG. SAVE AT THIS GRAND OPENING LOW PRICE GRAND. OPENING SPECIAL ,.. TENDER Lamb Shoulder lop Valdg ‘Stamps | Redeem them now while stocks’ are still full ZER AT THIS SPI AL GRAND Cigarettes coin $499 Pineapple Juice = 10°, Kroger everyday low price «.+...+++« Pe Poe easestes Cheez-its 2 3 Be: Hills Bros. Coffee '+ 0 Senin, Ber ay Tow pee = s a ee eat a PRICED LOW EVERY DAY! Beet Sugar 105 99" Vet's Dog Food = ss J — 9 Swiftning = ss §ss Everyday low price. Red Kidney Beans Avondale eee eee) Whole Potatoes Merritt. Everyday low PTICE, «5s ereesecerseeccenseevereeeeeae Green Giant Peas 2 2} £8 fF Kroger everyday low, low ore ec aan pas ee pO delicious... 7 ns Tangerines. ie Ad: Jonathan Apples 4c 49: Florida zipper skins «...cvccsccsceseeevces Solid, sweet, CUUMD Sok kescdecccsens , nio Sunkist Or | iors Onions mS ve = “oid ee me cs: Bagi ot lt lara a s 25 we : ily , Has cae 2 | AE : ve Oh patel au pected ct anette sian aH ane i pape ii Bai v heieteay TS MO 7 sti is Hl He if speagaey gris Fi i? & mani ied ai Fa Ba if thy me Fig 117 tHe Hs slap ai fads Peleleniss a eh gi 2*3 ai 2 if: 45d] fli ag er if: = i ELE = eT ; jz blistlt He (Alt ality Ll ee Sg 8) Hale iar > S$ fates i HiT at The Biel a agi, bps ddl Se eit fate a ‘ny if ae] Hp ee teen hey el =e |i TATE if i if Ha is jrlis Pip ei Tare fe | | @ a> Hite ae ii tide ite ih | . Si: aud ey] paler allel pag I jualin a nly i i 1-3 Se it Af [vst areal es it; =~ : oa *55 oF Air Halll a ea i Ha ite i = Z a he i HT ea Tog elity? ‘| § | = et: Hee Hea ag abe | ctl Ny alaettia| 4 > vu li fully ii AEH. 5. 3 > 323 af TEN hes “s‘ plate ae fa RAT wai {= 3 il; esznagl Hs ali [orate HS te ae ebalta sahil ge 433 liga: stl gear i| = ie AuLSRE ital? Haaean |S 7’ rs Beet av | 3 is 73 dan iF “ledbss ‘- He. ifs it ie 4 := = pity se id sept eae ; = ——_ ; door, Power Glide, radio end neater. This ls a company owner ca. with g new car gee. Only $193 or your old car NORTH CHEVROLET 1000 S. WOODWARD BIRMINGHAM TAKE OVER PAYMENTS ON 44 Ford Wagon. FE 5-006. | a | || aa 1°55 Pontiac 4-Dr., The following cars can be bought with No Down Payment "$2 Plymouth 2-Dr., Radio and Heater ‘$3 Ford 2-Dr., Radio and Heater, Fordomatic $1 Chevrolet 2-Dr., Radio and Heater 52 Chevrolet 4-Dr., Radio and Heater *$2 Chevrolet 4-Dr., Radio, Heater, Powerglide *51 Ford Convert., Radio, Heater, Fordomatic We believe the following are Birmingham's Finest 56 Lincoln Premier 4-Dr. Hardtop, Full Power °56 Ford Victoria, Radio, Heater, W/Wall Tires Radio, Heater, Hydramatic, W/Wall Tires 53 Mercury 4-Dr., Chauf- feur driven, Radio and Heater, Hydramatic ’$4 Lincoln Capri Hardtop, Full Power 56 Ford 2-Dr. Heater 54 Buick 4-Dr, Radio, Heater, Dyna- flow ’°S4 Pontiac Catalina Star-, chief, Radio, Heater, Hydramatic Custom 8, And many, many more to choose from Bob Frost, Inc. LINCOLN MERCURY CONTINENT AL OEALen” Woodward, Birmingham Midwest ae RoR en till ® ine FORD, 2 & H, RUNS foot ete. OB nent tires. MAy- | r 6-685) Clarkston Motor Sales CHRYSLER PLYMOUTH IMPERIAL Cigaronse onic of af new case ent | monstrators. 1065 Chrysler, 4 er New Yorker, seat detuxe, full pow RaeH, beita, nice. 1964 Chrysler 4 dr. Windsor een. Powerflite, tinted glass, R&H, white wall tires. 1951 Chrysler, Hardtop, NW. Y. V-8. Pully equipped 32 8. MAIN 8T, CLARKSTON n Evenings—Please hone MAple:5-5141 1981 bags VICTORIA, RADIO & Ford-O-Matie, W-W tires. : none Seomne pay- men ™ Credit Mer Mr. Parks Midwest Turner RED & WHITE Irs A HONEY! Ford, ‘55, Conv. A-l condition, Fordomatic R & H. Beat offer. MI 4-2558. DON’T NEED CASH Birmingham Nash Good Credit—Poor Credit No Money Down IMMEDIATE DELIVERY "32 Ambassador, Ber aeel “radio "i Heater. $8.00 wee! Hardtop. io money down, “1 Piymouta. Full price $278, $7.00 ash Ma Raravep. 3% Miles per Gal- $10.00 down. 83° Nash ie Meiete doce $00.00 ae tN Rw $10.00" per ‘s4 Ford V-8. Full price, $799, $75.00 ‘1 Ferd Ranch Wage, Full price vagen. 100,00 down. °§ Staen mobil ry down. 0 down. * Gpevrolet 100.05 gw ‘4 Nash Rambler. $65.09 down, People with poor credit, let us sell you a car, See Stan or John Birmingham Nash r|'54 Olds 2-Dr. 88 _|'$1 Ford Convertible “Bright Spot" AUTO. SUPER MKT. 56 Olds Super 88 Convert. ’56 Olds 88 Holiday Coupe *56 Olds 98 Holiday Sedan 55 Mercury Monterey "55 Olds Super 88 2-Dr, ’55 Olds Super 88 Holiday ’55 Olds 98 Holiday Sedan ’54 Cadillac Coupe DeVille ’54 Ford Custom 2-Dr. 54 Ford Victoria ’54 Pontiac Catalina ’54 Chevrolet 2-Dr. ’54 Olds Super 88 Convert. ’53 Pontiac 2-Dr. 53 Olds 98 4-Dr. ’53 Chevrolet Club Coupe *53 Packard Sedan "53 Pree the Convertible '$2 Ford 2- "52 Cadillac Coupe *52 Pontiac Sta, Wagon ’52 Lincoln 4Dr. °51 Ford 2-Dr. ’51 Buick Riviera 2-Dr. JEROME Olds-Cadillae Open u's ol SF Eerpwens Orchard Lake at Cass FE 80488 “ PoRD. “pnouiea ZEPHYR, ¢, | 1860 FORD @ RADIO & 4 door, radie & heater. tires. heater No money assume Bo rust. leather upho . Very mente of $11.04 rf month. clean, 9400. PE 44001. & Creane Mgr. Mr. 8, Mid- ‘3 FORD VICTORIA. 3 TONE re brown, FE 6-649) , t iss FORD, « DOOR VALUES line R & MM, overdrive Ww.| ‘5! mouth, 4 dr. exe. cond. Will take og car as equily. FE po = ond cman monthly ina pon eee : NKIE & JOMNNTE MTR. Heater. on pr week. 22 Ww ountcatm ; . ; DR BARGAIN. Very sha. M 30081. very arp_E! LOOK LOOK LOOK W—'S1 CHEVROLETS, EX-ARMY . . AL AIR FORD Se 250OR fmt FOL CaLty recr s Baeep FORD FARCANE 4 BOOK: LARRY Lu down t required | & Ho WW Pord wer UCKY AUTO SALES 4 FORD CUSTOMLINE HARD: | ROCHESTER FORD DEALER _SBien ahee S70 PAmente a JACK ine yop convents maz! (Guaranteed FE 3.0630. 1-OWNER CARS momar | mae | HAUPT Serre VS Wie ratte end heoter. ‘Me PONTIAC, 970 CATALINA NORTH _ |3.28"6 ttomtzenus eee PONTIAC, CHEVROLET 3 CHEVIES & NICE. 1000 S. Woodward, B’ham| _ WE WILL SWAP yg pct hte Bd S ALES Smnotor and body 800 PE eet, 46729. 49 POMTIAG CATALINA, ALL ¢ RADIO & WHEAT. “ry bie coation, te, Gallaher | 0 FORDS, 3 QR Tame. fgeeie, a) Clarkston demonstrator, ECONGHY URED CARS | wi CERES PA poe nen 32 Auburn off w FE 42191 1988 Para custom 3 a7, Like new. “FORD, BODY PERPacT. vain | 3 4 dr, Redan, aS Pius 8 selection sof low priced *52 FORD _Customline 2-Door 8 N. MAIN ST, CLARKSTON RADIO & HEATER Se a on MA lees $675 ; sy . , "C ais », |. sure Starters HEVY For These HARGREAVES : 6 ’ FORD FAIRLANE. STANDARD. , |'56 DeSoto F. Dome +Dr. ee 1. PE 326m after 3:00," |'56 DeSoto F. Flite 4-Dr. 900 miles—Demo. . new car antes, eave 1000: | 'S6 Ford Fairlane 8 4-Dr. "56 Plym. B. 8 4-Dr. H’ Sim, B 84s. Hop *55 Chev. Bel Air r Spt. Cpe. Power brak "55 '5 Dodge ‘Coronet 6 4Dr. 53 F Piymouth Bel. Cl. Sed. 8 werflite 134 Chrysler 8 N.Y. 4-Dr. steering, ow mileage ‘34 De DeSoto V8 4+Dr ‘st Dodge Coronet 6 4-Dr. . aH ‘Nash, Amb’r 4Dr. 3 Chevrolet 150 2-Dr. Completely reconditioned 53 DeSoto 6 4-Dr. Two—one owner cars ‘35 Pt th Suburban ‘SS. Plymouth Club Coupe 8 Olds Super 88 2-Dr, sai 2 DeSoto V8 4Dr. ‘SB Pl ymouth 4Dr. 32 ‘Pontiac 8 +r. $1 1 Chev. Station Wagon ae ? OF THE FOLLOWING CARS AT OLIVER BUICK Includes Sales Tax '57 License 5 Good Tires Super,' A battery that will start every time, plus each car is completely winterized. Get To Know Where To Go TO GET A BETTER BUY ‘96 BUICK This 2 tone beauty is a Riviere with »” ome for wees | | 9 WAGON ot suburbanite’s dream. Sierra 96 passenger, ¢ Here's dr. w on at witiey "th RIEMENSCHNEIDER Dodge while | f-owner, $100 down or your old redit manager only. $1743 ORE TO CHOOSE FROM - OWENS Your FORD Dealer, 147 8. Saginaw 1955 PLYMOU TH per cent for 1 year. NORTH CHEVROLET super | 1000 S. Woodward, B’ham wer steering. pow- walls, radio. & o4 CORVETTE i986 POWER HAWK, TAKE OVER payments, Fully praetor’. Ae 1954 PONTIAC Chieftain § sedan, Hydra, Reh car Call ¢ Mi 6-2756, 1989 FONTIAC, RADIO & EAT. er, Hydram $5 Down per __week. Field “iciots. FE 1. a wa Pat a DR. a aoop PrYsie ero a3 PONTIAC, LIKE new, First $850 take, FE! 40370, FE 38-3823, | 1952 PONTIAC, 1 OWNER, window washers, sharp and Clean inside and out, 20 Ogemaew. *53 PONTIAC 2-DR. 8 ’53 Plymouth 2-Door Ww e have 80 cars to choose 45 8. Bivd. E "S Beakard | Patrician, paint, tires, "82 Packard “loaded, elean, $696. AZUREK MOTORS ‘from, bargains galore.| Immediate financing. Lot} 1951 PLYMOUTH _ STATION WAGON PE 40587 Chieftain Deluxe, R&H, Hydra, 53 Nash 2-Door Plymouth ww ane paint. 1 owner, Low ’53 Dodge 4-Door 232 8. Saginaw FE 2-913: HU "RON MTR. SAL ES ’53 Ford 4+-Door ‘SS PACKARD "400." 5,600 MILES, | 952 W. _Huron_ ie. FE 2641 52 Buick Super 4-Door new, te. mal 3 hoon Forming. wees Rr Sse. 1950 PONTIAC, RADIO & ) & HEATER, Hydrematic, No money down, ome payments Z re a r i Poe Slaw est eee. ‘Turner Ford, RG&H, ltke new, down, {985 PONTIAC STARCHIEY, ¢DR. open till 9 p.m. Be sure menthiy. Ca, Ieredit monager. “ cane with Fower ‘Senet We to get our deal before youlaR FAYMERTS 100 53168, buy. We can save you, some? Let us help v rou adiust te | Ting PONTIAC 3 2 z DR a DECUES. | money. Lake Orion Motor Sales _Hise0 He" Ploneet, PE scat. FORD — MERCURY MT 33001 “PONTIAC, GOOD CONDITION, OLIVER BUICK 1962 PLY MOUTH VEDERE wr mare signele. white Mand wall , green and bi _ fal rage: 0S down. Phone it North. be 4 ved CONVERTIBLE. wer brakes, wer ° Tyke over payments bare: 5 After ¢ p.m. "WILL ACCEPT Outboard motors, boats. Phar v4 aT) baymeat of a wood bed ear, i051 PONTIAC. DELUXE 4 DOOR. Very clean. Bargain, FE 93-7542. Marry Riggqns. PONTIAC | hag a A: cat. Excellen, diti tae aan LE 210 Orchard Lake Aves BILL SPENCE tom 4,000 miles. For sale by owner. $1,695. OR 3-864]. FE 29101 Open till 9(2_Oeriand Ave 5 PE tsoer | 1951 PONTIAC 4 DR. HYDRA. Wb 1952 FORD Foca condition _ * | PONTIAC 2 DR. GOOD RUN- Custom mane RDS . | Saag bits FORD ‘tes OA 8.3011 | ning condition, $85. OR 3-2960 sharp. Assume $38.45 monthiy PLYMOUTH ~ Private SEE OUR Eayments Call e: manager,| owner. MI 17-0333. . "Safe Buy” PL PAIR CONDI- aire Bofo Hates, ee catia Om 24c33, 1 Ovod Battery, $68. USED CARS Fr Ta. transmission. $75. 21 Help WHITE "hi past FrATigR Wis. Misra es thea beet, ‘ a pene cual ig oa West Side Used Cars “ihe “Gitfcrecce: ‘Many 1952 NASH $983 Olds [Ww ne” saree SoS ae oee| HE Read Stee MLE ag ee Assume $29 monthly ments. pileage. 1 ir, — Vest SIGE VSG Lars _ Call credit M . 6-2756,; 1963 v plitton wagon Power. | PONTIAC WITH “W@ MOTOR, i68 |NASH RAMBLER. foea' stade, Gommender, va, very| aut | 1965 ILE 88. foot Plymouth Station wagon (the cat. R_& H, $1700, FE 42125 utlity vehicle) priced right gine. Fever ws & 1954 8, oO & Beea ‘Buick 2 teor. thnelty eae PES orcep- heater, Hydramatic; W-W tires.§ HOUGHTEN & SON mm. none 323.86 per month Cail $28 North Main 6 STeDEEL Gueat Mgt Mr Midwest | _OLive 1-781 _ 868. EM +2606 47501 Turner_Ford. een _— ae COMPARE AND SAVE. Serre ecb. Smt BE 1 CHIMNEY Does Your Bankroll Go UP IN SMOKE? MAKE MOST OF = SEASON. CAR E n OF YEAR & DON’T HAVE TO MAKE THE FIRST PAYMENT UNTIL NEXT, PONTIAC j 55 Two-Door 870 .. $1695; R Heater. yaramatic. ae odual miles. er steer-| PONTIAC *S5 Four-Door 870 ..$1595 Radio & Heater. Hyaramatic. PONTIAC 'S6 Convert. S’chf, ..$2695 Pull Power FORD 52 Customline V8 ..$ 545 +Door, Radio & Herter. PONTIAC *55 Catalina S'chf. ,.$1895 Loaded. 'S6 Station W $2295 2 Deor Tette eBecee Pal ‘35 Dix. 2Dr.V V8 . $1395 "54 Starchief .-- ee eeee $1495 stom . ; atic. & Transportation] Specials FOR? ’S5 “Ton P/U eeae$ 995 ’51 Two-Door Dix, »-$ 395 6 Cylinder, PONTIAC | RETAIL STO “GOODWILL . USED CARS” HERE T stand broken hearted, The car I own hasn’t started, I’m wet, I’m cold, I’m late for work, If something isn’t done, I'll soon go beserk. Along came. Jack with his shining smile, Tell you a secret, it’ll be worth your while, Go to SCHUTZ MOTORS today . Their “Start Every Timers” will fill you ‘vith, joy. '54 MGA Sportster, 4,000 Miles Never Raced. See this one '53 Ford. Convertible . Radio & Heater, Ford-O-Matic, W/Waill Tires ‘55 Plymouth Convert. mete Rotenay Pore '53 Nash Hardtop . Custom, Radio & Heater, '55 Buick 4 Dr. Super Sed: Radio five. Power’ Steering & ‘59 Mercury 2 Dr. . Gestem Setan, Retio & ‘56 Ford Victoria . Radio & Heater, Full Power. 5000 Miles '55 Pontiac 2 Dr. Sedan .. Radio & Heater, Hydramatic, W/Wall Tires ‘59 Chevrolet Convert... $1595 Radio & Heater, W/Wall '53 DeSoto F iredome V8 3S 895 & Heater, W/ Wall ting & Brakes, 2 Drs. Ison ‘53 Buick Special 4 4 Dr. . _ $ 895 Sedan. Radio & Heater, ‘55 Plym. Belvedere. a fica suitag Shows boo '56 Chevrolet Del Ray .\. - $1695 Cpe., Radio & Heater ‘55 Chevrolet Bel Air. . Bagtigo, Radio & Mester, Power Glide, W/Wall Tree F '55 Chrysler Convertible $1595 } Radio & Heater, Power Steering & Brakes, A few 1956 DeSoto’s & Plymouths left so heey tere SCHUTZ Motors DeSoto-Plymouth Dealer | 9128. Woodward, ‘Birmingham | a Midwest 6-5302 PLETE Wie be si & Heater, W/Wall Tires, ‘Powsmite, “tl .. my boy, . $895 . $1595 Steering & Brakes, W/Wall . $695 Overdrive, W/Wall Tires oe... $17954 Heater, Dynafiow, W/Wall . $1595; _. . $2195 $1595 Tires, V-8 Autom: your ” $1695 $1695 se bes 9PM. ; ‘ nn emai