3 tn in i = Cloudy and Warmer __THE PONTIAC PR Details page two 118th YEAR | - -% %& %& PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 28, 1955—34 PAGES “°c remss_, outa, pmas ruotos Te Gleason Heads for Repairs | c Contour Will Not Sutter, From Surgery on Midritft By EARL WILSON Special to The Pontiac Press ~ NEW YORK—Jackie Gleason enters a hospital soon after New Year’s for surgery on the most ~famous- stomach on television ees The operation—for the removal- of a cyst—will be the fourth he’s undergone in his midsection in a - decade. Doctors have advised him to forego strehu- ous New Year’s éve celebrations in preparation for the surgery. His imminent talization-—— coming at the height of his Sat y night rating battle with — Como—hasn’t shaken his celebrated umor, é * a “I don’t know how long these usually take, but- this one’ll have to be done between a Tuesday and a Friday,” he said last night. He referred to his 7 . dar, = ad shouldn't interfere at all with that routine,” “Army Seeks OK of Plans ~ schedule under which he yws Tuesdays and it Florida Climate Stay at Key West May| _— Ike Takes Off to Enjoy-Warm Affect Decision to Seek Presidency Again — WASHINGTON (?)—Pres- Friends believe his stomach problem stems from an sagpess aeig appendectomy he had in his hotel room about 10 years ago. His well rounded contour —so much a part of ‘the “Honeymooners” comedy—won't be “That's part of his act now,” one friend pointed out. When Jackie played Santa here recently, he remarked he was “the only Santa in America who didn’t have to use a pillow.” Gleason’s planning an extremely heavy schedule for the next few weeks. He will be 40 on Feb. 26, when he’s to be given a '$100-a-plate testimonial. ident Eisenhower flew out! © of Washington's cold today headed for Key West, .Fila., and about two weeks of the sun, rest and outdoor exer-} cise his doctors have pre- scribed. a The presidential plane Columbine III took off at 9:15 a.m. It was due at Boca in something under four hours. ,- to Erect Reserve Armory ‘The possibility of an army reserve training center being built on a 5-acre plot bordering on Orchard Lake avenue, was discussed at last night’s City Commission meeting. _A request from headquarters of the Fifth Army reserve.the plot for future government use. The Michigan National Guard has also put in a bid for a 10-acre plot adjacent to the reservists’ pro- ' ————*nosed area, according to Reserve activities in Chica Airport, Key West,| the West were Gen, . M. Gruenther, North Atlantic Treaty Organiza | for load in about two weeks. Ely Culbertson : Succumbs at 64 ‘Noted Bridge Authority, Staunch Pacifist Dies of Heart Failure + is undetermined. Area Grain Elevator Hit by Morning Fire 7 enn ete es Nan stat — ~ Pentine Press Photo FIGHTING OXFORD BLAZE — Fireméh from three communi- ties fought a stubborn blaze this morning which almost completely destroyed the Oxford. Cooperative grain elevator. Damage was placed at $150,000 by manager Ward Wightman. Cause of the blaze “m | 2 Ps £ 4 a» &, Slate City Vote Artist Ham Fisher Believed Suicide diabetic condition. He said < ‘ Creator of Joe Palooka Found Dead in New York NEW YORK (#—Ham Fisher, creator of the popu- lar comic strip hero Joe Palooka, was found dead last night in a friend’s studio. Nearby were two notes indi- cating suicide, police reported. : Fisher, 54, whose full name was Hammond Edward Fisher, «wrote in the notes of falling eyesight and a on Pay Increase Boast for Commission, ~ Mayor Was Studied by Former Officials “Pontiac voters will vote on a recommended pay hike for the city commissioners and the mayor in a . ls Total Loss Smoke-Hampers Efforts: 4_of Volunteer Fi z Nobody Injured = Fire almost completely --| destroyed the Oxford--Co-—- operative Elevator in’ Ox- ford early this morning, . Ward Wightman, man- ager of the Pleasant street, ~jelevator, estimates damage at $150,000. No one was in- jured. Ralph Van Wagoner, Ox- __|ford Fire Chief, stated that _ cause of the fire was un- known. “It could have been any number of things. fl F 28 Hy } in Some Editions : Syracuse Papers “(Omit Want Ads SYRACUSE, N. Y. @® — The serve newsprint. __|Many episodes in the strip high+ publisher E, ‘A. O'Hara ‘said to- “|day: that “it has helped ease ‘a very serious situation and has. tions, at least temporarily, from their early editions in order to con- ; —— annually by the association and has been the policy of most city Stores for several years. 2 it roy Dane ESS Saturday at Stores A reminder that Jan. 3 is ‘the generally - accepted deadline for Christmas merchandise i tl Fg AG Reliet in Sight! — Revenue Boys - =e The original orders were issued to all regional and district tax of- fices last Oct. 17 at the direction of Harrington's predecessor _T. payer be limited to showing to prepare their returns, all taxpayers. . .” | had become so difficult- for him ‘m. in the to breathé that he had spent the! oe Moe where Fisher - last four nights sitting up. working 1a — The. internationally. famous nad been = tely | bridge authority devoted much of during his friend’s absence his time in his middle years to a}from town. The er | world federation peace plan that/ was made by another friend, : = - : oe ; oni ns began to oo when he was pp —_— of —en week a youthful utionist. N. J., whom Fisher's wife | WO ete ee ee rs areas gts oe eo , [POPULARIZED BRIDG Marilyn had called after | cud Seema her Geesing beat yee ‘The President's annual State of| Culbertson was creditéd with de-| becoming alarmed over not : terday by on unidentified men.ibe necessary to odd a fourth re-| 'T, | tetas, outlining the|VOlOping an effective contract) hearing from her husband. who rushed in before firemen ar-j/serve unit in the Pontiac area. | sninistration’s 1956 legislative|Dridge system. He - promoted it! Police said Fisher's mother had rived. Presently, the 70rd Tank aBt- |program, will be sent to Congress| ith exhibitions, contests, lectures; received a call from him, her only a Mrs. Maude L. Jenner was taken! tation, Headquarters Detach (Jan. 5 — two days after the law-/®"4 ° child, early in the afternoon. He trom the of her home} ment of the 307th Bat. |makers convene In 1923 he married Josephine| spoke at length with sentiment and ~~ aoe ve fire| tallon and the 40ist Postal Unit : - Sa hata ceiae roe ae] ee ene ot dante was set | — make up Pontiac’s reserve 2 at a our hours later around broke oot after burning paper fe ese Cloudy and Warmer 2 + : 2 -"We_will be working under-hard- ie gt » whose strip was syndl- 4 ) ‘Afier emergency treatment tor ships it we have to train the aaai-IPF@GICTiON for Area cated at the time of his death in | minor burns in Pontiac - tional men of this required fourth wig’ some 800 newspapers, was a self | mics gba cre gaamteet ceed unit in this present building, due to| Mostly cloudy and warmer to- Se ee os ae | tat 2 lack of space,” the major said.|night and-tomorrow is the weather tig Goh taetetin ond aftenetig faa panip eo who. —_ oe srste{,; Mt brasett._be_ said. 100_en gy Sa Rot i aa aubsumen edible hems town news for 40 minutes, al are training two nights a week tonight will range i he Bae eee | kn sew oan t egpreel, conrem wal be heb 200 wah cooe Bee Mn oe ee comes ek Cat Wneetkcie tion -of the center ‘for train-|sional rain predicted d possible late| . The Joe Palooka strip —_was: mage tht the post blanket. als tics io ae ” yey oa be aovety snl cole a eee York. Joe began as a not- Teed a fst ax 1 cout pt Willman said the entire area|with decasional snow flurries. ee a ee, rae it out, but th was. jsérved as sanitary fill for lowest temperature in down- er loped into SR eg le eg 7s ve . over . : pre oords ‘iting np alg a = referred oe ca pou = lighted his fight: against bigotry : my was to com- : : : : u i - : and intolerance.~ oe: . seg rps » slated Soviets Approve sso. 7 F The strip brought Fisher wealth 4 ' ; Nationalities of the Soviet Parlia- a sind Chosen as Time S\comet Breaks Record net approve, ony the, Sv torn, te them, Loyce-|Shingin’- in D’shougher ~~*Marvot the Year| corns sine areated nso 20000 bles in revenucs/Saava and Brice Ey. lish Fi-ine- inv Dish Town NEW YORK @ — President Har-|stop across the Atlantic from and 507, 0007000 ,000 rubles in expen-}| oo plats BUSSAC, France @—Sgt. George low Curtice of General Motors is|Montreal to London today in a/ditures. The official Soviet ex.|1838, charging Sraeny: liceEtvay “ef Herrin, 1%, stepped 6 hours, 8 miiutes. The) change rate is four rubles to a dol-| Although divorced, they con- cnet *s 1955 “Man of the ; into the shower in his apart ‘Time magazine's ! plane's builders claimed a record|lar, but the purchasing power ‘of| tinued business yestertiay and merged radiant . Year.” civil airliners. ue ruble is considerably less. “ | (Continued on Page 2, Col. 4) |" When he turned on the tap he got » ‘fime,in its Jan. 2 erage : : white ag log thing was : today, Curtice a et ipening in the kitchen where his “billion dollar bet” in 1954 which : : eo : ; " wife was preparing dinner. “ion dolar be ts aene «| alifornia Flood Victims in Dire Straits; "* wets ae ance “un nine ee Fee eee FRU Hee eee ee 4 County News, «0.0... cs00005 8 Bi ssdeceeravenes SBy M4, 26 a me |e 7 A 2 veeeee | ne (Beene Ss, ee ‘ tas y Math ce cet a ay ’ ebeateeesces vadeee. | The lat made jit possible for us to finish out the year.”: The classified ads have beei tomitted- since last-Thursday. ne _ John J. Haggerty, classified nian- ager, saidk: “We have had no complaints, The advertisers have lowances on their bills will enable us been for back to all editions.” Most U. S. newspapers have been dropped from 37,481 pa- pers each day and from Sunday, s i x Saginaw * hoping by the first te go very 1 } al the the been pinched .by a severe shortage .|of newsprint: Most major newsprint manufacturers have notified their customers that their supplies will be reduced after Jan, 1. The Herald-Journal has a current daily circulation of 136,909 and The 129,210 on week's flood, 600,000 along the Nicolaus area, 17 miles north ~ there. coast and 400,000 in valleys. the world,” said Mrs. Mar Sidney R. Somes, whom she - Larie, Mrs. Lane’s present was a phone call from her father, : hasn't seen for 31 years. “And Mr. Somes, who had hired Pinkerton detectives Dec. 26. He had come from New Jersey to see her. pasties peta lave: Lai e é,’ rs. 32, of 225 W.- Yale va to find his long-lost daughter, I .didn’t remember him at all.” dropped in for a visit - Building, Grain : in${30,000Blaze — a a to Fill Your Form __ not furnish “unlimited service to ) Father, Daughter Reunite. Christmas—After 31 Years. “It was the most wonderful Christmas present in — be THE PONTIAC FRee. WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 28, 1955 Expressway to Be Reay in 195) see Cost Estimated at $11 Million Ziegler Makes Reports’ on Road Building Plans _ in Oakland. County The 21'2-mile Farming- ton-Brighton _ Expressway, which Oakland County is) belping finance, is sched- uled for completion by he ~ summer of e) Highway Ccmmissioner Charles M. Ziegler said £8 his 1955 annual report. Ziegler summed up proj-/ —eets completed in Oakland; - to be carried over into 1956. . The expressway, designed 8 -fun -paraliel-to-and -re-+ lieve badly overloaded U.S. 1957, State) brought immediate death "16, will cost $11 million and tun from U.S. 23 near Brighton east to a junction’ with U.S. 16 (Grand River) at the end of the present divided pavement east of Farmington. | Contracts have been let for seh separations on the ex pressway ~youte at 12-Mile, Novi, 10-Mile and! > Farmington roads. practically all of the section under crossing at New Hudson. s. “necessary at Pleasant Valley and _ Kensington Roads. ~~Ziegier listed two projects com-;' 1955: Intermittent smoothing of rough of blacktop resurfacing on US-10 from north of Tindall Road south to the intersection of Bridge Lake * to the Clinton River in Auburn Heights. ; ‘ Grading and drainage structures and dual, 22-foot-wide concrete| pavement over 6-8 miles. of M24 : Orion. Halt a mile of gredisig and drain- ing. structurés plus aggregate sur- facing on the Pontiac State Hos- pital drive.- __ The 21%-mile Farmington-Brigh-|: - ton Expressway, which Oakland). County is helping finance, is sched- uled for completion by the summer; . theady rain late Thursday. high $6-40, southeast te sowth winds 15-20 miles an hour today diminishing slowly temight. Teday im Pontiac ‘Lowest \omporaters preceding $8 a.m bid o- al Fa am: Wind velocity 10 mpd. Southeast. on sets eaneedey at 5:07 p.m. ‘FAMINE FEAR FOLLOWS FLOODS — Recent _ ~ County this year and those, floods -that-devastatedlarge—areas of the West Punjab province of West Pakistan not only -posed the threat of famine next year. Neariy ~~ 40,000 head of cattle were lost juct as Pakistan “was. beginning to rebuild her fine dairy herds. Worse yet is the fact.that if washed-out irrigation and destruction, but fully tabulatad. were born in floodwaters on canals are not restored within a few weeks, it will be-too late to sow next year's wheat, Nearly two thousand mud-hut villages were completely swept away. Death toll was. staggeririg and is not yet In some communities people wait- ed for days atop the few brick buildings. Babies” treetops. Photo shows subsiding a main road in Faiz Bagh, near Labore, Pakistan’s second largest-city. his 1955 annual report, Ziegler summed up projects.com-' pleted in Oakland County this year a to be carried over into 1956, jot 1957, State Highway Comme! sioner Charles M, Ziegler said in| at the end of the presert Brighton east to a junc- tion with U.S, 15 (Grand River) ed pavement east of Farming- | ton, traffic-death toll of 599 brought a suggestion today from Oakland County Prosecutor. Frederick C. Ziem and his chief assistant, George F. Tayior. Pointing out that high speeds cause the majority of serious ac- cidents, the two proposed that a” study be made of a mechanical device which would automatically divid- == Fatalities Off Main Roa EAST LANSING (#—The ity of Michigan's Christmas on county roads, a State tabulation showed today. * * % Of the 39 persons killed, trunklines. Joseph A. Childs said the mas, 1950 was “tragic.” “But there was one bright Childs _said.— BACK ROADS FATAL heavily reinforced. roads because ways, there are no “high dent areas,” he said. Ld * “We weren't surprised a had. been expected.” : * h_to—Lake; deaths always increase sharply at jChristmas because of the The State Police and four in rural areas. & ca * Nine of the deaths were train collisions. on_ Me : waa 58 persons died. John Bloodhart Dies After Long Illness BIRMINGHAM—John W. hart, 42, account executiv McManus John and Adam and writer of many western _|for fiction magazines died home, 584 S_ Bates, Tuesda 34/4 long illness. Coming to the Detroit Strand ‘Steel Divisions of Lakes Steel Corporation. graduate. State Police Say Traffic Deaths Dropped Since, Guardsmen Loaned Aid end traffic victims lost their lives their lives on county. roads, cities and towns and seven on state State Police Commissioner it looks as if the use of national next summer. The roadway and/eyardsmen end reinforced patrols “pavement probably will be let mie state trunklines was ruccessful, a ~From-¢6" pam: Friday“through | "pleted in Oakland County during|Midnight Monday, seven persons. were killed in six accidents on trunklines highways. Four of these asphalt surface on US-10 from Lone accidents occurred in “high aecei- Pine Road northerly and 48 miles/dent’’ areas where patrols were Childs said it is “extremely difficult”-to cut deaths on county fatalities are spread over such a large geo- | graphical area. Unlike state high- The commissioner said the traf- fie toll in urban areas over the -}weekend was ‘‘a little higher than number of shoppers,” he said. . tabulation showed 11 pedestrains were killed over the weekend, seven in cities Michigan’ 8 worst traffic toll was from Nebraska 10 years ago, he was advertising manager of moved here five years aog. He wag a — of Towa He leaves his wife, Shirley Cris- prevent vehicles from surpassing ‘la set speed. “We are in the process of set- ting up a statewide speed limit,” said Taylor, “but the only sure way of controlling speed is to Gl Released ds by East Germans Reds Charge Sergeant With ‘Drunkenness’ in Auto Accident major- week- Police 19 lost 13 in BERLIN wW—A U. S. Air Force \Counters Reds Prosecutor Urges Adoption of Auto Speed Governors Last weekend's tragic nationwide |. put a governor on auite. engines. “More than 90 per cent of serious |5 accidents which come to our atten- i are caused by excessive “There are few highways today where 80 and 90 mile-an-hour speeds are even relatively safe. | The. best toll roads and express- ways have speed limits. The gov- miles above the statewide speed limit to allow motorists extra pow- er to cope with emergencies.” Ziem cited figures compiled by the National Safety Council which show that 59 per cent of fatalities throughout the country § are caused by speeding. “According to the State Police, there were 1,260 traffic fatalities in Michigan during 1954," Ziem stated, ‘‘570 of these were the re- sult of cars ora} the speed limit.” Mendes-France in Comeback Try PARIS @® — Former Premier, sergeant from Brooklyn, held for 24 hours by the Communists in| East Berlin after an automobile week- today. * . © * cident which the Reds blamed on the sergeant's ‘‘drunkenness” ac- tually was due to poor visibility and slippery roads. Soviet authori- —tties turned him over to American’ officialg last night at Karishorst, East Berlin suburb where the ‘Russians - have headquarters, The Army all on is what hap- pened: Mi -Sgt.-‘Mike- Kliman, 46, sta- ioned at Orly airfield in Paris, paid a Christmas visit to his Ger- man wife and her parents in West Berlin. He drove them to visit friends in East Berlin Monday night. The East Berlin Communists) claimed Kliman ignored a traffic Stop sign and that several persons were injured in an ensuing acci- dent. He took the injured tb a hos- pital where they received first.aid and were Gisraiesed. side— acci- The Red police told Kliman his t that,'car would..be returned if he ac- however. The number of pedestrian'companiéd them to their thead- quarters. He said they kept him great in a barred room. = * tigation after the Reds announced ‘a ‘drunken American” had caused ithe accident, Kliman’s release came several hours after the Amer- icans requested the Soviets to lo- cate the sergeant. Detroit Paper Strike. ‘Enters Its 28th Day DETROIT (INS) — A meeting between one of the three strike- bound Detroit papers and a non- stniking union was the only ne- gotiating’ session scheduled today in the 28-day Detroit newspaper shutdown. a in car- it Blood- e with s, Ine. stories on The meeting was between man- * ~“ragement-of the Detroit Free Press and the Newspaper Drivers’ Local of the Teamsters Union. — Principal bargaining yesterday was’ between the Printers Union, one of the three unions on strike, and the publishers of the Times, News apd Free Press.’ : Great He ‘unsettled, including’ wages, the contract termination date and a accident, was back in West Berlin. U. S.-Army officials said the ac-' The U. S. Ace began its inves-|- "Union spokesmen said after the | y meeting that nine issues were still | ernor might be set at 10 or 15, Seek Settlement in Train Dispute Rail, Union Officials Meeting to Bring End to Wildcat Walkout “Officials of the Grand Trunk _ |Western Railroad and Brotherhood of Railroad Trainmen were sched- uled to meet this morning in De- troit in an attempt to settle a wildeat sick strike of yardmen | pe twhich began in Detroit and Pon- | tiac yesterday. Grand Trunk- General Manager Frank Gaffney said the two groups met until 11:30 last night and that he was ‘very hopeful” going into jtoday's meeting. - According to Gaffney the broth- strike which has forced Detroit to operate with 40 per cent of normal yardmen crews and 50 _per_ cent in Pontiac. .The wave of absenteeism began yesterday wheit Pontiac trainmas- ter Bruce Miller reported that 57 of 135 switchmen failed to report for work. In Detroit, 70 were ab- sent from duty. Gaffney said the men began)” calling in sick and giving no real sons at about 4 p.m. Monday. — Late yesterday, he appealed to the National Labor. Mediation; Beers for mediation in the is-| men, he believed, this morning One such grievance according to Miller is a request on the part of the trainmen to define the terri- of jobs. “This wildcat sick strike isn't affecting our road work any but it is hurting our plant operation,” Miller declared. In Detroit this morning, Gaffney said the company ‘‘was limping but working.” Pontiac Deaths ‘Mrs. David A. Parry Mrs. David A. (Ada) Parry, 76, of 6 Stout St., died yesterday in Pontiac General Hospital. Born in Jeansville, Pa. Nov. 24, 1879, she was the daughter of John and Jane Brown Beveridge. Six months ago, Pontiac from Lake Orion. three daughters, Mrs. \Pierre Mendes-France tangled with \Communist hecklers last night in ‘his first major campaign speech here. He shouted them down to reject their demands for a “popular front” alliance after the Jan. 2 siecuea of a new Nationa! Assem- y Mendes-France, leader of a left- ist ‘Republican Front’’ of Radi- cals and Socialists, had invited all’ political~ leaders 5 roe him . to {debate the iss: Fe Mendes-France, thrown out of the premiership on a vote of confi-| dence last February, is trying to stage a major political comeback’ in the general elections. His bitter’ rival in his own Radical (Moder- ate) party, Premier Edgar Faure, called for the balloting five months ahead of the constitutional , sched- ttle —over~ the - opposition” or JHE! be ex-Premier and several other ‘po- tent political leaders. ‘ Ely Culbertson Dies at Age 64 (Continued From Page One) under the name of the Culbert- sons, Inc, At one time they | grossed an éstimafed half million dollars a year. Culbertson married Dorothy Ren- ata Baehne of New York, in 1947 when he was 55 and she 21. She Their first son, Peter, drowned in a brook outside their home on Feb. 8, 1950, when he was 19 months old. A second son born of that marriage, Alexander, 3, lives with the mother. ~ Mrs. Culbertson lives with her mother and son fn a cottage on the grounds of the Culbertson resi- ence, FORMED PEACE GROUP Culbertson founded the World Federation, Inc., in 1942 to pro- imote a plan for what he termed freedom from war through harnessing the means of waging war rather than attacking the causes of war. He was born in-Romania. His father was a Pennsylvanian who had gone there in search of oll, divorced him in Vermont in June,|- 1954 Although divorced, the second) Berkley; Ada of Pontiac, Mrs. Jean jRackham and Mrs. Margaret Bat- tle, both of Detroit, six grand- lchildren and one great-grandchild. Mrs. Parry is at the Pursley Fu- neral Home where service will be held at 2 p.m. Thursday. Dr: Tom |Malone of the Emmanuel Baptist Church will officiate with burial in Perry Mt. Park Cemetery. ‘John Polka John Polka; 58, died at his home /8542 S. Saginaw st. at 7:30 last night. He was born in Poland May 20, |1897 and had been employed at the Pure Food Restaurant on S. Sag- inaw St. He had formerly worked for the Consumers Power Co. Mr. Polka is at the Pursley Fu- neral Home. ve will Barbara Payton Given Suspended Term for Checks been given a 60-day worthless. checks, She also was fined $100 and placed on’ ‘three years probation by Superior Judge David Coteman yesterday after she pleaded guilty sessed and her furniture and cloth- ing are under attachment. “The actress, ex-wife of actor has all been a ghastly mistake. we Do-It-Yourself Craze Now Attracts Bandit FULTON, Ky. (A do-it-your- self bandit stole about $330 from a. Western Union office yesterday after his request to pst a order cashed was Mrs. Nettie Hicks, the office, said the man “Tl cash dt myself.” - Oh, It’s So epee: , which was offered the-train- : Over Levittown No One Hurt as Jet Parts tory of certain crews in zoning’ she came to! Surviving are a son, Delbert of \peared determined today to live year from unnamed sources but, that her automobile was repos-| - jsent a Christmas card or tele- jcontempt.” He blamed unnamed ,\for County Teenagers - Pefition Names (Studied by City Check 9,900 Signatures on Requests for Vote! on Parking Program_ The city clerk’s staff will today 900 signatures turned in on peti- tions seeking to put the $600,000 jmunicipal parking program to a public vote. would take several days to check the names against voting registra- tions filed in her office. She said she doubted if the findings could be made available by next_week's begin verifying approximately 9,-| City Clerk Ada R, Eyans said:it The Day in Birmingham » BIRMINGHAM — Slow devel- ‘opments of the area's three drain- age systems brought several ‘de- cisions at last night's City Com- mission meeting. The city will share equally with Royal: Oak in gu the engineering costs for the Twelve Town Drain which otherwise would be delayed until next August. The city’s supervisors ‘and within the next - twe weeks will talk together on how to speed up action on that ‘al System, all on planning te hlee Jor i vears Three Drainage Systems Discussed at | Meeting will reveal “sunshine sisters” at City Commission meeting. The 396 petitions bearing the signatures were submitted yes- terday by an attorney and two representatives of a group seek- ‘If 5753 of the signatures are vote on the date of the special election and the form of the bal- ‘|lot. : On Nov. 22 the City Commission unanimously adopted the ordinance which -would provide for 624 addi- tional 5-cent-an-hour parking stalls a —_ city. The city presently has Plane Explodes Pilot Parachutes Safely LEVITTOWN, N. Y. @ — An 'Air Force Sabre Jet fighter plane exploded in the air over this dense- ‘ly populated Long Island com- munity yesterday and crashed to the street without causing death or injury. s * The pilot, Capt. T. Bruce Buech- ler, 30, reported he had been in} office the air about 10 minutes and was flying at 35,000 feet when an ex- plosion jammed the controls and the plane fell off into a slow spiral. He bailed out at 10,000 feet. CAR DEMOLISHED The fuselage, main section of the wreckage, crashed and exploded again on the curb of Blacksmith Road between rows of small, neat homes. A car, which had been left: there only minutes before, was de- |molished. LJ * A few feet from the flaming heap was. a home in which a grand- mother was four children. A tail section of the plane landed about three miles away in Beth- page. This prompted early reports that two planes were involved in the explosion. BUMPED KNEE Buechler, who lives at James- port, N. ¥., was on a routine training flight. A West Point grad- uate, he is a veteran of 100 mis- sions in Korea. He landed im a front yard three blocks from, the crashed fuselage without any in- jury other. than 2 bumped knee. The crash was the fourth this year in this closely settled section) ef Longs Island. Eight crewmen) have died in the crashes but no one on the ground has been has been harmed. Quints Deny Charges of Family Separation MONTREAL (INS) — The four Dionne quintuplets ap- their own lives in their own way. * * * As the four sisters remained in ‘seclusion in Montreal, the rift in Canada’s famous Dionne family seemed headed’ for a solid dead- lock... Oliva” “Papa” Dionne stuck to his story that his daughters were} “drifting away” from their family ties. But a tearful Yvonne, speaking for the four 21-year-old girls, de- clared: “It isn’t so.” edge yesterday when “Papa” Di- onne complained that his daugh- térs had not come home for Christ- mas. Nor; he said, had they even phoned. “Papa” dcelared the girls were treating their family ‘almost with “outside intruders’’ for the alleged coolness of the quints since they your-| .ach inherited — ae $240,- 000 on their 2ist =-—e last true.” Slate Jazz Concert # * +wil-again-comprise the Board of valid, the City Commission would) Fall in Residential Area; jusual. City employes are receiving The rift became public knowl- |i sobs, she said; “Don’t believe it. It's not i THOS TOL Severs FOS te. The county drain camesotener was asked to assign one person to hurrying Twelve Town Drain plans nel needed, Lance Minor and Percy Burnett as well as hire additional person-; Mystery Veils Review along with City Assessor Eimer Haack, -with pay set last night at $25 a day. Authorization was proceeding with plans to im- “prove 14 Mile Road, to seek June, to leave tag day rulings as they are, and to make fin- ancing changes in the newly | voted insurance of city employes. Costs of Eton Ice Rink~ above; the $125,000 bond issue funds were covered with $23,656 from special project fund and $25,969 trom gen-) eral fund surpluses, The rink is to be completed in mid January. rather than Monday because of the holiday, and next week's meeting will also be on the day later than both .holidays except policemen, — ‘and — plant person- Incoming mail this year was up from 2 to 2% per cent, for the Christmas season, estimates | Postmaster Roland Reese, and stamp sales and cancellations in- dicate an 18 per cent increase in employed 300 in addition in a current situation at all times, Reese says. think we're far more efficient and son than we are in regular times. We have special , arrangements, and can put on extra help or switch from one task to another, which is impossible with regular staff." . | Heating ashes will be collected tainers must be ten or ti lon sizes, in metal, and must: carols by the Cecelian Choir in- cluded in the program, Jt follows a 6 p.m.- -buffet in the social hall fot all college students snow party at Cass Benton Park tomorrow at 12:45 p.m. with others of the Detroit Tesby Past Gane of the Pythian Sis- ters, -Templte-No, 94 , Birmingham, Red Cross Sends 115 From Region to Help in Flood A total of 115 trained disaster workers from the Red Cross Mid- western area, which includes Oak- land County, have been assigned to assist in the west—coast—flood . today. The Red Cross fed and sheltered more than 20,000 per a5 -in_ the ing 57 shelters. Early estimates are that between 4,000 and 5,000 families will look to the Red Cross for long-term assistance. County Chapter, Bivd., will be forwarded immedi- ately to the flood areas, she said. Lockwood Analysis Shows No Poison voted for'|- i The commission met last night that ond gpeicen 3 the city. The post | to its regular staff, and kept mail | the } enough,” Reese says, “I flexible during the Christmas’ sea- | Cost to the Red Cross in furnish-| - srothers Deaths romn 3 Bachelors Found Dead _in Old St. Louis Home; - Autopsies Ordered — ST. LOUIS — Police awaited the results of autopsies today for ‘a possible lead in the mysterious jdeaths of three elderly bachelor brothers in their old-fashioned home in = St. Louis, SS Bae cnn leclan was no note and no oie al gas indicating they might have been asphyxiated, mid used a i ison deaths George Hoening, a bookkeeper past 35 years, was the only one Henry, who wes blind. Police were called after Erle R. 6M Public Relations pa Changes Listed Paul Garrett, vice president in Inmate’s Spirited. Plan ‘lfor Yule Freedom Foiled — Chemical analysis of blood and Robert Lockwood 53? Fig i q vile: z Sad OW ANd Uh This Week’s SPECIAL! —~ here’s a |: STRAIGHT © STEER GET OUR _ | FRONT END. | ALIGNMENT SPECIAL! - 1, Adjust Camber 2. Adjust Coster. 3. Adjust Toe-in . 4. Check Brakes ond. ~~ Shock Absorbers 5. Inflate Tires to Proper Pressures *Preper tire inflation at all times fs a mighty important facter in easy steering, easy riding, teng ear and tire- life. ©] Special Price $595 | ey. OWENS | 147 South || trained and cared for by Ralph, | ducing a winner for his first live- + | stock project. lalways been a bit reluctant about | ithe steer to be entered in Ralph's, “* Thad elapsed before the show date, * @# * farmed robbery of a gas station, I Jain in Flood Battle Second Place Honors Posthumously Given Area Youngster at Stock Show This month his dream came true, ~—T_cents-per pound over the 22. show, Oakland County 4H mem: but 20-year-old Ralph. Braid wasn’t; cent top market that day. ibers had 29,-which sold at, an. there to see it. The ardentJ-H club) ‘This had been Ralph's first (Average price of 23.7 cents per memtel, son of Mr: and Mrs.) year in 4-H, although his parents |pound. County entries also included Stewart Braid, 2331 Lake George) Were 4H leaders and bis sister |six of the 210 sheep displayed and Rd., Oakland Township, was killea| Marwaret and brother Edward jiirce of the 120 hogs. The 38 Oak- ; | alse were members. Edward also | |, a). three months ago in a fall from pad twe entries in the livestock |2%4 County animals ‘entered rep- his horse. _| show, and the whole family was |"esented a cash value of $7,385.06, Ralph won posthumous second present te see the steer the (and more. than half of the entries place honors at .. the Michigan youngest 4-H’er hdd raised take |were in the top 20 of their class. | Junior Livestock Show in Detroit) ‘the high award. iThere were nine classes with a: when his black. Aberdeen Angus * * #. ltotal of more than 60 animals en-; was outclassed only by the grand Of the 427 steers sold at the tered in each class in the show. champion, it was announced to-| —--— = : F day. The steer also was the top. oa Oakland County eptry in the show, TODAY'S ASSIGNMENT FOR: held Dec. 6-8. : JUN was fed, | * a. The steer, ‘‘Toby,” who put all his hopes into pre- | _ After the -aeeident . which took | his live in the latter part of Sep-! ay . tember, Ralph's—sisterMargaret,/—-\— 15, carried on. Although she had’ ‘livestock, Margaret put ber whole heart into finishing the project her | young brother had not had ‘time to complete. ° oe When the request came to atlow | name, the fair livestock committee | did some hesitating. Finally it was decided to.allow the entry, because | ‘of the nature of Ralph's death and) the fact that only a short time, To insure fairness, knowledge| in i that the owner had been killed was) not released until after the steer! was judged and sold. The 880-! jpound animal brought a price of |$255.20 from Wayne Packing Co.) - HAPPY.NEW YEAR-3 i Japan _ + New Year's Day is celebrated in Japan.with feasting and fun. It is ,considered everybody's birthday and special festival cakes are made’ ; -- yy. for the occasion. Children-wear—grotesque.masks of lions, dragons} ‘Lester L. Wathen, 30, Jine- | ; : : oe eS vie and wolves to frighten their friends. j|wood Ave., was sentenced to 3%: : . ite 15 years in Jackson State Prison! The Japanese have adopted our calendar so that New Year's Day 'yesterday by Oakland County Cir-/SJan. 1. . ws icuit Judge H. Russel Holland. t This bey is leaving his garden with a lantern and a tion mask. | He pleaded guilty to robbing Ar- Paste the picture on cardboard and color with crayons. His costume -nold’s Gas Station, 4 N. East Blvd.-is @ bright color, with a contrasting band around the neck and sleeves. last October. iThe slippers have red straps; the lantern is yellow with blue! ! an letters on it. The lion head is tawny yellow with red eyes and mouth Cut out the parts carefully. Put a string through the hole at the jJantern’s top. Hang it over the boy's right hand. : , BATTLE CREEK —Five dis-| Cut the slits in the niask and put his hands through, so the can hold. jaster experts were flown to the|the mask over his face. Hold back the tab at the top of the mask so’ |west coast by Federal Civil De- it will rest on the top of his head. Fold back the ends of the base al | fense Tuesday to aid Civil Defense |the dotted lines and the figure will stand. : ; | crews already at work in the flood) JUNIOR EDITORS pays $10 for any reader's idea .that is used. jemergency. The five included four |Write your suggestion to “Junior Editors” in care of this newspaper; JUNE ie a! Tt Jackson Prison Term Given Lester Wathen After admitting Dec, 19 to the Saginaw St. ‘ations specialist. lengineers and an emergency oper-|it cannot be acknowledged or returned and in case of duplication of jideas, the first submission shall be accepted. i THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY. DECEMBER 28. 1955 4. + Buy on ‘CCC’ @ No Money Down © Six Months to Pay * Ys a ¥ Reg. $4.95 9x12 Linoleum Rug . 39% : Reg. $5.95 9x12 —_Linoleum- Rug Reg. $1.95 Reg. 35¢ Sq. Ft. Plastic -} WALL TILE” "COUNTER TOP 45-Inch Material ¥ a] hed 18x26" Plastic Venetian Blinds .... | Venetian Blinds ...... Se 27''«31" Plastic | Venetion Blinds ... eee Leatherette Upholstering Meterial, Reg. $6.95 eo Vinyl Plastic Upholstering Materiel, Reg. $1.48 .. . Woven Nylon Upholstering Meterial, Reg. $8.95 .... All Felt Base Roll Goods, 9 and 12’, Reg. 98c.sq. yd... $47 | - T 39 wy 4 IOR EDITORS ||| World’s most. famous _ 3000. pairs of & first quality hose! regularl Ly brand “woven s into? the hearts of America! Save ‘up to 6le! @ Each Pair Tagged With Original Price Tag .— Your Assurance of a World Famous Brard! @ Actually Save up to 6le! You Can Seve Even More—Stock Up Today With 12 Pair for only 4.60! . > DEFINITELY-NOT CHRISTMAS LEFTOVERS: BUT FRESH NEW STOCKS! pair Selections for You in Over 60 Wanted Patters, and a Stunning Array of 360 Color Combinations! Be Here Early Thursday Morning at 9:30 A. M.—They Won't Price! Imagine over 3.000 pairs of the most famous name in men’s hosiery now on Sale at this ridicu- lous price of 39c a pair. Here's your opportunity to.save as never before and stock up ona fresh _}- "_new supply of hosiery. An exceptionally fine special purchase of sport cottons, nylons, fancy — rayon dress, solid color cables, Jacquard ribs, ombres, plaids, clox lisles and many more! Don't = ‘ \‘ " Weite'’s Men's wait a minute... . you can’t miss this hosiery buy . . . hurry down Thursday morning early! Be here when the doors open and save as-mever,before! — P. 65°, 85¢ ain a Ba Last Long at This DISHWASHER | _ a ‘eee eure $3 49 Ea. Washes dishes in “Scraping” Time! @ eaten the Good Housekeeping, Seal @ serepes, washes, rinses in one 1 AAG fagertip suds control! @ hands hardly teveh ‘water! eee eae 50% off 89« 3.99 25% off so ae Reg. $39.95 30% OFF | ‘While They Last iii | PONTIAC’S ONLY 0 IT YouwselAt ced FEderal 22-1026 se ee eee *. eo eee pane sees semen OO SET Fearon pee ie eerie see NIGHT CREAMS Annual LE Dorothy Gray Special Dry-Skin Mixture See it smooth and soften dry, rough- ened skin. Feel it moisturize thirsty areas around eyes and throat, Anoiv youre treasuring your complexion * with the richest cream care anywhere! 2-or. jar 4-03, jar $gOO S475. (reg. 22.25)" trem. $4.00) 8 Celiogen Hormone Cream —perfect fog_skin that's “maturing” , too fast. Extra-rich emollients, plus 19,000 units of estrogenic hormones help firm tired contours... smooth away tiny lines. 4-04. far ae - ‘$8950. eee (reg. $5.00) Waite's ‘Cosmetics —_Street Floor ae PN > ig Weather Lotion HEALS! Contains Allantoin! _ PROTECTS! Contains Silicones! SOFTENS! Contains Emollients! . FIGHTS vena INFECTION! \ we vest mh Contains Hex- Wai B achlorophene _ al ane 40488 * — ceniinill Reg. 52 Tussy Wind & Weather Hand Cream Also: Wind & Weather “Lotion 4 Sizes 912 to 3! Shop — Steet Fleer — os 4 = _ - Freee... a “F Reg. 1.00 New TUSSY | + - Wind and Waite's Men's Shop ~ Street Floor a i eae Lae t e _ inside and out. - I VE Pre at Bae es «8 te af Mh his Ii looks libe a heel. And ie is — 0 postgraduate school for the shilled mechanics of dealers whe sell Chevrelets, Postion, Oldsmebiles, aan Cadillece * end GMC Trucks. There hove already been more than 100,000 registrations for the specialized training these strategically located, schools provide g being met in a big way tee Youu find on today’s Chevrolets, i Pontiacs, Oldsmobiles, Buicks and Cadillacs a long list of advanced engi- neering developments unknown a few years ago. , The American public demands contin- uous progress — and rewards those who best meet its desires. So every 1956 General Motors car offers new and-smoother automatic transmis- sions this year. They offer even better saféty power ” steering and power brakes. They offer the wide, clear view of pano- ramic windshields, and smart new styling They offer V8 engines: stepped u up in thrift by increased compression ratios. And along with all this, they offer a long list of aids to better and safer driving and traveling comfort. So it is no wonder that millions of people buy these cars each year. 7 And here is where the opportunity comes in, * As every good businessman knows, ise greatest asset is SS ESIGS customers. So during the year now closing, General Motors and the great majority of dealers who sell GM cars and trucks have joined ‘in a nationwide program aimed to. keep customers happy and loyal. You see a visible symbol of this joint pioneering project pictured above. hea -the opportunity it presents. and there are 30 of them conveniently spread from coast to coast. The last was opened three weeks ago, and all of them are staffed by specially trained instructors. Eeraince thie Training Center program was launched, dealers have welcomed They have been sending: their service mechanics by the thousands each month, | General Motors project. on their behalf. They have recognized. that even a skilled ‘mechanic needs education on the ad- vanced engineering features-of modern cars—and how to use the new tools and techniques developed to assure the most expert service. Thus General Motors and most of the They offer air conditioning,.and more efficient year-round temperature control. ’ There is nothing like it in the automotive industry. It is a General Motors Training Center, Body by Fisher + oom 6S 8 ee DF Oe Ee oe ee ot tht ee ee i * a a wie ee 6 we eins & ¥6,957° dealers who sell our cars are — working togeiher to deserve the success which has come to us, and to prepare for the greater future which ,lies ahead. ‘CHEVROLET + PONTIAC - OLDSMOBILE - : United Motors Service > GMC Track & Coach BUICK + CADILLAC * and. his wife im as Yul ‘ + orb phiegm sing man died Monday ‘nas than night. loosened, you breathe deeper. (24 hours after he moved into = as a Chris{mas present. George Stelma, a retited Olds-| Mrs. Helen Gilléngerten. Firestone YEAR-END CLOSE-OUT EVERYTHING MUST GO REGARDLESS OF PRICE WE NEED THE SPACE FOR NEW ‘SHIPMENTS SEE THESE SAVINGS ON OTHER MERCHANDISE } of ectesne mobile foe was stricken ‘i a) art attack, Monday morning. He’ i had moved into the, new Sroom ee = “The house was i: gilt of nial house which his children gave him sons, Alex and Charles, and two idaughters, Mrs>*Mary Baun and By JOHN H, MARTIN INS Fereigp Director | Frenchy politicians are staggering) ‘through the last week of a cam-| paign before parliamentary elec- tions next Monday, And the over-ripe fruit and moon- | shine is flowing. | oF * Depaty entre Mitterrand got a ripe pear full in the kisser; former Premier Pierre Mendes- Normandy moonshiner who @)- jected to bis milk-instead-of- booze campaign. This is one of the toughest elec- tions in French history and many deputies are being roughed up-by the “Poujadistes.”* The latter are the followers of a 35-year-old bookstore operator, Pi- erre Poujade, who has threatened his own followers with hanging if they betrayed the party program. VAGUE DETAILS What is his program? Somewhat. vague in details when he is ques- tioned closely. _But the: Fight ex- Allegan Hotel Ideal “for Mushroom Crop | France got in a fst fight with 4, | weeks. _-THE. PONTL. AC ¢ PRESS, WEDN ESDAY, DEC EMBER 28, 1935 “te tremist for more than a year has preached a gospel of tax evasion. and | General: defiance of public or- | mule-kicking applejack known a | | Im reply to many questions Poujade usually answers that all the French national ilis should be | submitted for cure to a revived estates-general—iast summoned | on the eve of the 1789 revolution, Four main groups have emerged in the campaign—the Poujade *|group called “union for the de- ifense of shopkeepers and artisans,” ithe isolated Communists, the left-, \of-center group under’ Mendes- |France, and the right-of-center' group behind Caretaker Premier Edgar Faure, bitter foe of Mendes- France. HOUNDING HIM Norman peasants in Mendes- France's constituency have hound- | Battles Mark French Election Warmup Such a campaign is dynamite Faure, and also the system of pro- all that—experieneed—political o— | wore oe ———, — Lea ‘portional representation i id dynamite, Iparty. alliance system under which trying to analyze the bewildering ‘calvados, If they did not produce | ithe elections will be held. array-of French parties and the great quantities-of it, they would | The good Red showing is. about! fact that a record vote is expected, lose reat quantities of other. | an_eese= a wisé inedible apple crops. | The French Communists are ex- Since 1911 ipected to get back into the National . ‘Assembly with substantially in- ‘ creased representation, even if they de not increase their vote. » total. * be * | This is because of the bitter split among the French center groups) represented by Mendes-France and ed the former premier from town) to town, because “*Mendes,”’ moonshiners. The beds will yield about |six pounds of mushrooms per crop |after they have been in culture for three months. ; ‘Season Merchandise | Take-Off Tires | ‘Trade-in Bargains Scuffs and scratches, Like New: Save Reconditioned and but good as new _Up to 45% ready to go | Ree, $19.95, eg. $29. . $24. feagee"™ $595 | Bow 8295 gapse | BesaSee. 5159 ._ Reg. $6.95 Hand $ 495 Tubeless .... = : co a . Reg, 53238 $1 73 ace: ee ey $7995 Reg. $59.95 : VOxd5 .... onsole a” tte ee eee a Tis a $1950 Reg. $135.00 $5500 “Permanent ) Reg. $39.45 goq7o | “ore Se $58 | tare eee ae Reem Seater. 8.20x15 .... $2220 | Gas stove .. FE 5-4251 «ALLEGAN (#-—-Charles P, Thomp- son prepared this week to harvest his first crop of mushrooms, culti- vated in the basement of the Alle- gan City Hotel. - * * * | Thompson, 37, recently returned jto Allegan from Chicago Where he \left a Diesel mechanic's job to open the mushroom plant. The current crop has been growing} three months. Thompson plans to dry the mush- rooms and ship them to Seattle to be made into a concentrated mush- room salt for food seasoning. * * * | | He said the hotel’s basement, | j with a constant temperature of 58) ideg rees and a constant humidity,! jwas an ideal spot for the crop. He began using. the material for build-|- | plans to have 10,000 square feet ofjing about 2750 B.C., says the the crop growing within a few National Geographic Society. a” Decorated New Year’s BUTTERCREAM LAYER CAKE DEVILSFOOD BUTTERCREAM LAYER CAKE Sen. Johnson in ‘Hospital for Physical Checkup HOUSTON w — Sen. Lyndon by plane for Rochester, Minn., ahd the Mayo-Clinic to undergo d phy- sical checkup to determine wheth- er he can continue as Senate ma- i jority leader. ‘will make his first speech in the Capito! since suffering a heart at- tack last July. He will address a women's National Press Club ban- quet. « Egyptians were the first archi- itects to work with stone. They Johnson (D-Tex) leaves tomorrow] . | In Washington next Tuesday, he Premier | 2 as they cal] him, hes} ee led a campaign against alcoholism tand ilegal_ home fe orl. and the\servers in Paris will predict in ttn 7 A fine-textured, yellow-batter . Delicious devilsfood topped i} w | : | : ——— t cake, filled and frosted with lus- with buttercream, then ‘ aon —— : : cious buttercream. Beautifully frosted all over with creamy . 4 decorated for New Year's. “ehocolate icing. , ne, : : . $ 25 ss rripay ano saat nies $ p? _ ee . SATURDAY ONLY | SATURDAY ONLY $1.75 : D 0 J B l F H F A D F ’ : ' : ‘ R! 6 es oe + 2 * ; ¢ 2 a L : Individual = = ms + J ; DANISH TWIST NEW YEAR'S, : COFFEE CAKE PASTRIES ’ | ae A bi ff k d j These ready-to-serve desserts will be i gon es ad - "ii. Pp e; d -7 ‘al I n S j 7 eageeg tarry ths New. lee para een mal eet and OO G y over and decorated with a bright — fondant icing. Ideal for New be 1956". ay Leet ®) beveki on: Y GN FRIDAY AND SATURDAY-ONLY- e SPECIAL FRIDAY AND Te te) os ron a we 4, ; ; ye "eee ae sah Y/, Y a | o° EACH 0 egulariy = aes 69 77¢ <_< s : . Vis \ ’ ° NN . a ; | . . - OLD- 7 < "ASSORTED. CREAM WAFERS _ FASHIONED Creamy, daintily colored MINTS ; 7 = ss in_a_variety of _ ee - Ld , flavors: peppermint, winter- The snow-white, creamy mint = ; | green, spearmint, chocolate, centers are richly coated with oo? 4 lemen,-cinnamon. Sanders ane chocolate. Am ie ¢ 4 < ideal after-dinner treat. | a -. WY OZ. a POUND | 1 | ° % : = | . PLEASE ORDER EARLY Sets new track records at both Hollywood and West Palm Beach, Fla. | | | ° FANCY 6, 0 The '5S5 NASCAR* short-track champion is even hotter for : FRUIT STOLLEN ’56! That’s the word from Florida where Chevrolet set new : - COFFEE ‘CAKE | track records in finishing first and second in a 150-lap com- ld-fashioned f z petition at Hollywood—and first, second and third in a 200-lap ~ delicious, =r seme . rit : F ) ° event at West Palm Beach. The things that make Chevrolet sugar icing and selected chopped Y atts SINCE 1875 ‘ _a winner on the track—greater acceleration, cornering and | fruits and nuts. | ° handling qualities—make it a better, safer road car for you! 41 | : = 6 | FRIDAY AND SATURDAY ONLY Cc *National Association for Stock Car Auto sane : : ae yy "Where Quality. Costs You Lets The eoter car wins oo and Chevrolet is the big winner 36 ‘Sanders Stores and 29 National Super Markets Telegraph Road and West Huron _ Visit your nearest. Sanders Store in the Tel-Huron Shopping Center Street, in Pontiac | ey ~ MATTH reba Inc. — 34 Mill St. ond 211 S. Seginew St. Pontiac, Michigon Passport Off ~ WASHINGTON (INS)*< Thejsucceeded Mrs. Ruth I * . | State Department's passport of-}as director of the office last May. situation that arose last summer. ra 1 1 | | . St lj | Pl | eyition of the passport office is the| changes are being installed, from/pondence. Miss Knight has com-| a wide assortment of- mechanized|piled 40 form letters_and various! jequipment and operations to the/notices which she estiniates will development of form letters and/take care of 75 per cent of the’ of-| imotices to handle routine corres-‘fice's correspondence. was completely bogged down. It}——~— . ee ~ More Salk V and one now believed clearly in OK'd for Public Use “escort oun rs ae ; . § NGFIELD, Ohio — Two! | sight—is ameriae a nee | portedly me to travel without ine OK or U Ic Se |restio dise jockeys will broadcast) | within one week after a passport | necessary documents. _ _'from a jail cell for three days to! | syeeeaticn reaches the office. EXPERTS HELP OUT ss WASHINGTON i~—The Public ' dramatize their private war. on! This, is in spite of the fact that Miss Knight, who had only re. |Health St nat Sopp cial bee os. travel is rising like creeping flood cently ‘inherited her job, sent out by feo * anotber isaiek Goees, Mark Hoffman, 28, and Casey, |water. In fact, the passport office emergency calls for help and also of Salk antipalio beeen \Heckman, 29, of station WBLY. lexpects to issue 600,000 passports started the slow, laborious job of} | es oa Here, said beginning teday they! ‘iin 1956 as compared with 900.000. amlining the office. | This made a total.of 3.414.213) win stay in the Clark County jail! ‘in 1955 and only a little over ; . ‘cubie centimeters —or doses—re- for three days—the minimum sen-| 1 300,000 five years ago. i ime “Br rae who-was just ‘leased thus far in December, and tence given drunken drivers in| - ~ . «ay | Winding up two years as eXecU- (raised to 29,961,831 c.c.’s the total : ‘te Miss Knight commented: “I ii. secretary of the Hoover of vaccine released since April Tan ee Pe cal - am looking forward to 1960 when, (omission on Governemnt Re- when six. dr eee arene ie Ge tee local_and| it the present trend contiriues, | cepapiastion ae a hat xX Grug— sown —were —i-- state safety councils, the sheriff! was “loaned” t0 ‘censed to make it we probably will be issuing a | the office, The General Services | _ & fice is meeting the rising travel trend by converting passport issu- ance from the old-fashioned per- sonalized service into a mass pro- duction operation. Miss Francés G. Knight, who is guiding a floor-to-ceiling reor- Demands for passports .rose to ganization of the office. -It-is ex-; such a high level that the office pected to show surprising results| lin the handling of the 1956 travel i volume. She said her immediate goal— | | jtook as long as six weeks to get aj |passport. ‘There were loud and long ‘complaints, and some people re- ina __ [Disc Jockey Jail Show accine 'to Warn Drunk Drivers ¥( “i 95 Both For 912 Wedding Bands, ee Bee tailored bands in 14K yellow gold. Jewelry Depariment and municipal judge are cooperat- passport office to be so organ- ized as to give the maximum |_service to the public.” counting office sent fiseal experts to set up an accounting system. cine released since Aug. $9 remaining 1,088,406 were made Unprecedented national income Eli Lilly & Co., Indianapolis. - JERUSALEM—Isracl's Soa s the A health service spokesman said Sumption increased to 1,107,000 bic travel boom leased this tons In 1954 compared with 952.000 fan other factors. such as these: month after the low totals for tons in 1952, but the money spent ‘The increase in paid vacations, /October and November ar flected a deat aed dropped from faster travel facilities, installment-/& Smoothing out in production pro. $37.38 000 to $33,709,000 during the: ‘plan payments for trips abroad, cedures. ame ions lower rates and special family/ ‘ rates, and the fact that more peo-| ple are retiring earlier. 1 * * s ‘yy Fuel Imports Up NEW PORT'S acknowledged cause of the But there are the increased supply re me | The reason -behind reorganiza- acento aeRO OF i. The health service allocated 355.814 c.c.’s of the new supply s _to the states, territories and the The speed-up in passport issu- armed services for*tise under the ance is being accomplished largely voluntary control program. , Fhe through a detailed physical reor-)other 12,492 were reserved for the ganization of the office sef-tip— free program of the National th- introduction. i> fact, of = belt Feundatien for Infantile Paralysis... production system. . . i ‘aris reports the development But a vast number of otheriof an aato with a sliding door. - “ S = ete = ————— ~- Call FE 2-1021 for Barbecued CHICKEN - RIBS DAVE’S MARKET :¥‘ci...ce< at Glenwood SPECIALS FOR THURS., FRI., SAT. AND TUES. OPEN. FRIDAY NITE ‘TIL 9 P.M. PRE-INVENTORY SALE DAYS WOW Le aE le LE hh @ a e 3 Wrought Iron Tables © 2 Lamps ¢ Complete with Sof-a-N iter * | YOU GET THIS [ ‘SOF-A-NITER You GET 9 WROUGHT IRON 0 JV, _____THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY. DECEMBER 28, 1953” | ployment, Security Act in 1956, Max) cent, or $81, of the first 63,000 | already enrolled in the program. | approved last Spring bythe Michi- The new supply included 279,900; law Venere | passp¢ a we — ? : : ing in the pre-New Year's evé _ sen ee , : sale the Administeatoin” loaned a team of | ¢¢.’s made by Wyeth Laboratories, anes stian st oa Denese a A > ares | experts, and the general a¢- Marietta, Pa —the first Wyeth vac- 2 eee = “A ‘'vequired to pay a payroll tax.on a ot WeCaudtese ° SS =e Mayor's Mother Dies DETROIT (#—Mys, Anna Zak, Employment Security Act Expansion Is Envisioned|%,,ee werna. r under the| nonvan More than four out of every five liable for the entire Michigan workers will be under the|terms of “the act. protection of ‘the, Michigan Em-| The payroll tax is 2.7 per M. Horton, Michigan Employment| earned by each employe during Security Commission Director, has the year. predicted, : This rate is maintained for four An expansion of the act to cover years after which it may bere , enemas : _|justed to as low as one-tenth of employers = ith as few as four Pel’ one per cent or as high as four per sons on their payrolls during any|cent, depending on how much the 20 calendar weeks of the year is;employer has contributed to. the expected to add more than 200,000 fund and how much has been paid additional workers to the 1,850,000 Pde fami to Wis sient oe already covered by the act. see It will also double the number Oil Strike in LA of employers affeeted, adding more than 30,000 to the $2,400 | LOS ANGELES .®—Oil has been struck in: Boyle Heights, a resi- Effective_date of the-expansion,dential area just east of downtown! Logs Angeles. Richfield -Oil Corp. rsaid-itstirst well has been com- pleted there and is flowing at barrels a day. Gas production recorded at a rate of 60,000 cubic) quanteriy basis.- feet a day. Additional wells will The tax payment is due on the/be drilled before the potential of 25th. of the month following the'the structure can be evaluated, close of the quarter in which the Richfield said. a employer's payroll records, make; nr him subject to the act, Horton) Twenty floats paraded in Delhi, said, Any employer who becomes India, 4o publicize a literacy cam- any~time—of-the year is} paign:-——— . Bild WHEE DIAMOND I / VP oe “! / 3 Carat in ae Gi - a 119: Myer 41% ea \ A WEEAR Dow is — Jan. 56> An employer coming into the pro- Eram under the new expansion, is a gm TEL-HURON SHOPPING CENTER at abi a chiprbaret naan nr ea In spite of recent price rises: on carpets All MERCHANDISE is on SALE! All Regular Carpet Cut From the Roll | Discontinued yA j Carpet Samples - up ‘NIN. T Qe E YATT ADDIE ' 5 Stes | REMNANTS and ROLL END CARPETS aameve THe LIGHTWEIGHT ; | i : Size poses Reg. . Sale ee e i SACK AND HAVE A BED! — 7 12’ x 18°6”,, Green Tone on Tone Sculptured........................ $240.00 $145.00 $95.00 |. i - 12’x 126” Round Wire Wilton Gray Scroll.....................-4. 165.00 98.00 67.00. | wneven’ ine ‘A : Oo P| : 12 x 10) 3eige Round Wire Wilton .. aS. 135.00 79.00 56.00 : == TABLE 12x85 Tone on Tone Extra Heavy Green...-...--.--..--- 5. = 119.50 79.50 10.00 , et 6-Pcs. Complete 12x10’ — Heavy Grey Embossed ........00..000 00000 cece ee es 143.50 79.50 54.00 > 12° x 12°6” Heavy Grey Floral : Je eeeee 164.00 82.00 82.00 . : . , $ 95 . 12°x 156" “Extra Heavy All Wool Rose.................0 20020000 309.00 150.00 159.00 — S Convertible Living Room-Bedroom Ensemble _ 12’x 21° _ Rose Beige Leaf ........0r000e-00eeee eee To , 224.00 “139.00 85.00 oa : . ; Ze £ me: 12°x 12" Fairfax Grey -, 175.00 98.50 76.50 : ei . - : : ee es cae aS » . Bliss oe Perec ie een er Cain) ea Fe 2 oowy 12°x 13’ Heavy Beige Floral 7.....0...4..05. Moendemeqstammnses 190.50 103.00 87.50 ieee ob eas tad ond. matchien cocktail table 167x24"x1612"". . . plus Regular $99.95 Value 12’ x 89” Always Popular-Green ........ neg bev eee ee eee 128.00 76.50 51.50 | 2 table lamps. It’s all complete, nothing else to buy! awe 9 x 16.6 Beige Loop Patternys. eo. 4 WAI 93.00 39.50 53.30 _ . — 6x 9 Nutria eee ee eee: 95.70 59.00 36.70 - 00 ‘... . +20 T a d SAVE 520” Many Other Sizes at F By Trading In Your Old Washer Now Brand New f a gf Wow Barton Tcgpeetit tan Sn Family Size | Brisbee a Only Curtains $9Q°° All Dacron . a Curtains — ~ ‘With Trade Lu Os - Full Size uN 15 To Off Big Oven — Big) 4. Broiler — Huge Storage Drawer ? : $9 00 ; os Only ; e DOWN 5 ts a . Ready-Made Drapes 20 to 40% off. : ‘ “4 2 as ~ 89° i 2 : ee se > é * Pet fs f by Se and your old washer in trade All Regular DRAPERY ; i HERE’S THE DEAL FOR YOU! * or — New Washer ....:..... .$109.95 MATERIAL 20 to 40% 2s ss —— — * ‘Trade-In ..... «sees. $ 20,00 & off i : » 9f -Reoutiful gas range with. window-oven-door. Ther- — = ae — You Pay... .$ 89.95 | : mostat heat control, new efficient burners. Deep ‘ Yor Old Bands ZR ES eo : si nt : Smokeless broiler. Fully insulated. Easy pay plan... Pay Only $99.95 WwW N | BED Reg. $1.95 - Pontiac’s Oldest Exclusive Floor Covering Firm! eels : : SPREADS | PILLOWS. N Piney sr Pao one : 7 a ¥ } sen a be 4 ‘ - : ij Be Sure to Ask Yor Wyman’s Blue Trad- | You Can Use One Account for Purchases reas Peper’ 20% off 30% off 11 N. PER * ; NE 253 | ] = Ing Stamps. Good for V. Premiums! | at Both Stores. Delivery When Promised! _ FURNITURE STORES : ok ge ce ee aN | : 18.W. Pike -2-Storés-2_ 17 E. Huron ‘ * 3 od + FREE DELIVERY Free Parking at Both Stores ~ Entertainment JACKIE RAE STUDIO Senior Student Talent-on Review Call in Advance for Booking Dates Jackie Rae Studio © 214 S. Telegraph Rd. FE Sis Gi It was a year in which it be- came possible to win $100,000 on a television quiz contest, and a fellow! who bought a new C adillac met the jeer: ‘What's the matter, stupid, @ouldn't you answer the $64,000 question?” It was a year in which the boom- jing, organ veice. ef Sir Winston Churchill was stilleg in retirement, leaving a world still stirred with mighty petty It v was a year in Anat a new = SMASH-UPS MEAN PAY-UP! INSURANCE: OF ALL KINDS . 716 Pontiac State Bank Bidg. DON’T GET CAUGHT WITH YOUR FINANCES, DOWN! _ Ph, FE 2-8357 and maybe the Republican | tornadoes. author, Harry S* Truman, made| Ihis first real bid for -the Nobel] literary prize. It was a year in which Santa Claus met, a formidable competitor iin philanthropy. Santa. took care lof you and me, and the Ford Foundation took care of the private colleges and hospitals, * Ld cs It was a year in which parents (earend why Johnny can't read, but nobody took the trouble to dis- cover just how many parents them- selves still remember how to read. ' It was the year in which Russian leaders graduated with honors \from the Geneva charm school, iright on back to acting like Rus-) sians again. | | e * * | It was a year when man finally) ‘localized his major wars down to; floods, hurricanes, droughts, and} - It_was_a year in which Notre! Dame lost a football game and, New York Yankees lost fa -World-Series.———__- * * * Here. are a few nominations for) /1955: | Biggest surprise of the year — | The Wuo-Therm looks like a in cordovan mahogany finihs. warm and cory in coldest weather. Dual Chamber for perfect heat Dasa. tool 23" OVEN! * More oven area for _small-size kitchenst.. Duo Therm Oil Heater ron SQ 495 ‘No Down Payment—2 Years to Pay! the French overturned another | fine piece of furniture. | Keeps 4 to 5 rooms . Has the famuos and economy, Thermo- 31438 | | of APPLIANCES! Beautiful New 1956. Admiral 30-INCH Electric Range No Money Down Four 7-Heat. Surface Unit Controls Four Superspeed Micotube Surtace. - Units “Even Oven Heat” ends underbak- -ing in some parts of oven, ' overbsking in Individual Removable ~~ Drip Pans King-Size Rotary Roaster (optional) Full-Width Non-glare Fluorescent Light - Appliance. Outlet. ~~ ‘away spare time.” ] * * * ‘but Mother -Nature ran wild with),. Cabinet (or was it four Cab- inets?). . Most popular industrialist — Heinz Nordhoff, -president of a West German auto firm, who said in upholding a six-day work week: “most people live only to escape! another themselves. For them, weekday without..work would only * liniease the emptiness and - dis- idling consolateness caused. by a . Most publicized wedding — The AFL-CIO marriage. (But which iwas the bride?) Scientific advance least likely to ‘succeed — a British love test imachine which seeks to tell by ‘then forgot their lesséns and went’ measuring the—brain—waves~of—ay boy and girl whether they ought ito marry each other. Most far - reaching ,develop- the decision) ment in.government — \of the British post office, once and iriots, rebellions and revolutions, jfor all, to quit supplying escorts selves home, ‘we have known for a long time. Some Rest-O-Mats? HONOLULU — Lauhala— mats, the woven fiber rugs of Hawaii, 40 mats, one on top of another. Try Riding Horse CHARLESTON,__W. Va. iaceident, Nine weeks later, | ee Se ome be All in all, 1955 has been quite ‘a year, oné With less fear and more prosperity and laughs than served as nattresses before white men introduced beds to the is- lands. An ancient king’s sleeping ground. would-be covered by 30 to Judith Ann Conley'’s luck seems to be all bad. The 13-year-old suf- fered a broken left leg in an) fell off a restaurant - stool and Commission Backs City Pay Increase The City Commission last night adopted a resolution calling for a to drunks who wish. to mail them-|pay hike for both city hourly and salaried employes, It calls for a 10 cents per hour increase for hourly workers and a $208 boost for salaried employes up to and including those with total earnings of $5,200, Those above this. would receive a four per cent hike in their pay, _ The resolution will. now be dis- cussed inthe proposed, 1956. bud- get which is scheduled .for an in- formal meeting Jan. ‘5, The suggested hike doesnot ef- fect city employes appointed by the City Commission, Vacations Cost 8.5 Billion _ WASHINGTON—American fami- lies spent 8% billion dollars on va- cation trips plus some two bil- \lion on weekend jaunts during 1954. she Expenditures for food and lodging survey. indicates. averaged $179 a family, a recent! . it Always Happens - NEW LONDON, Conn. (#—On a day when New London went 12 hours without water, because, a break in the main, a cigar had a lot of its merchandise dam- aged by water. A tenant in anireer apartment above the store torent to close a faucet. Judy Verity, “Miss Sa Jof 1955, has returned to her native London to study for a stage ca- . @ RADIATES MA ° ELMINATES OM HEAT LOSS SAVES | @ PROTECTS AGAINST FLYING: SPARKS, * ') ASHES, DIRT. AND DRAFTS * : @ TWIN DOORS OPEN WIDE FOR EASY yy | e: : AOADING OF FUEL © CONTROL DRAFT WITH TWO SLIDING DOORS FOR FAST OR MAXUAUM HEA’ * stow rae @ SOLID BRASS CONSTRUCTION, BEAUTY UNHEARD OF, THOUSANDS x IN USE WINTER AND. SUMMER @ BURN WOOD, COAL OR GAS WRITE FOR FREE VALUABLE, COLORFUL BOOKLET My Fireplace Is. Wide High Address. . State. 3127 W. Huron INLAND LAKES SALES Your. CEarury. Dealer _ _ FE 47121 | ’ "3 BIG DAYS - -- ~ THURSDAY ---FRIDAY--- SATURDAY"! MON TH-END | Our month-end clean-up of odds and ends, beaker ranges of all new goods bought this season! Your size may be here with savings up to one-half! Come early!. Just 12 Gabardine Trench Coats =9§ > 15.87 Just 18 Gabardine Topcoats Vales OL Just 18 Fine Wool Topcoats Voloee. --. °34.67 Just 23 Finer Tweed Topcoats ne. $38.67 Just 32 Imported Tweed Topcoats = Vine. *43.67 Just 42 Hard Finish Two-Pant Suits So. °39.87. Just 37 Hard Finish Sharkskin Suits ‘i. | *33.67 Just 22 All Wool Sharkskin Suits ‘f.2 | $43.67 Just 39 All Better Grade Suits eon *48.67. — Just 48 Men's All Wool Sharkskin Pants. $1650 Vato °9.87 Just 47 Quilted Lined Gabardine Surcoats Values “Fst 21 Corduroy and Gabardine Vests $2. 1.89, Just 18 Sanforized Flannel Pajamas ‘:.. °2.69 Just 16 Corduroy Sport Coats. ae 6.95 Just 28 Quilted Lined Wool Jackets ‘i... ‘14.87 ‘Just 33 Quilted Lined Gabardine Jackets ‘in... *7.95 $19.50 Just 27 Genuine Leather Suede Ja $25.00 Values. Just 74 Famous Brand Fancy Hose 85c and 65c Values... 5 39° Men, here's your chance to buy your entire outfit at almost half-price. By all means be here early as a can! OPEN FRIDAY NIGHT ‘til 9 P. M.. SATURDAY ‘til 5:30 ‘THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 28, 1955 sete Pees ites es so eats _ Ring In The NEW YEAR With Holiday Treats from , ARMOUR STAR, SWIFT'S Premium or WILSON’S Certified Sugar Cured Hickory Smoked iar py Full Shank Half Cut From 12 to 16 Ib. ) . Average Hams Butt Portion 53¢ Ib. RATH’S Blackhawk, Boneless, Fully Cooked Canned HAMS 2 ‘ — ene! is aoe nm ~« __and Serve Hot or Cold w. 99 ! Leg O' Veal - Boneless 620d Tender, Young Table Trimmed: 3i-lb. Can Leg of Lamb for @ Delicious New Yeor's Dinner tb. 59° Ground. Beef iameetadeteage. BOP i : skinless Franks == “ititan cut" 455 jE ike elle he Ait Boot Franks tami, e_ CaRMed Picnics seri "smy comes 48 2. *2” Shrimp - Fan cy Medion Cae — t. 79: Geese - Oven Ready ere 1 are A ». 63° Liver Sausage MGMT 45¢ Pork Loin Roast wittit'utiniiaw » eas GET FREE GIFTS FASTER BY SAVING GOLD BELL GIFT STAMPS 3 HUNT'S. HOMEMAKER’S ~s Boston Baked me 7 a. we — Tt ANS Dre : Tomato Catsup Gaia = p= SSE foe! 25 oz. : rem 1% ounce . 00 : Hunts Hunt ; bs la Cc - Bottles ems, ~ Pdper Plates Suawee me 43° Make That One For For the Road - - - ) Bondware Cold Cups ast * 25° . Del Crest Coffee sat » TI Grange Bitak or Dividéd Paper Plates sonawatt win 43° - Bondware Hof Cups ama. is" 29: Kleenex Table Napkins 3 cent 49° Whole Mixed Nuts srano © vate. 89" Spanish Peanuts sit) viceu 39° Net Stuffed Olives He 16 = 100 “Whole Cashew Nuts sano — sF KOOL KRISP “e KOSHER | Velvet Peanuts sittite "N53" For Cocktails Dill ‘Pickles Sram’ — = 29 | . ° Satie as. OF SGIGGS = ._—s HEINZ Hemberger or ' ~ : -§ | se Gachaal Olesen ee mangoes © Keowee. 29 | Be ‘ 1 Vv _ Pitted ~~ Jer aed ennai an 2 Colossal Ripe Olives “ra co 39 29° Lemon Juice | ve 37° : eG , ; Cl NABISCO—Fresh, C ; AA French’s Salad Mustard er 165 Sat Veri-Thin Pretzels = 29: ew € 6= 2356 Mambo. Punch ee 6229 Zend . STOKELY’S Finest Tomato iw ICE —=#ai Ho Cheese Crackers (jects 2350 aa” ee oe FREE | iar) FASTER ; BY SAVING GOLD BELL GIFT Michigan Medium Sharp | Pinsonming¢ STORE CHEESE Tasty and ° Toney Stuffing aati te meme Fresh Shallots cle 3. 19° | Pot Pies noha) ‘ene storey 3 vee 1% = Brick or Muenster rice ersices m. 49°. _ Fancy Rindless Red Radishes cirim'tws om 25: Lemon Juice “Sire 3. 49° - Cottage. Cheese "reser. 235 SWISS CHEESE ) “Florida Limes rave = Same 29° ——Flav-O-Rich Beefelies Friese, = 59° Kraft’s Cheese Links (vv, 25° Piece or 6 c too: SN Cee cate 19° pcre Spears ii dren sreon 2 Mage 49° Borden's Biscuits %.%%% 2... 25° Sliced! ~ ae ) ; : “ Prices Effective thru Set., Dec. 31, We Reserve the Right to Limit Quentities- une aes 4 © 398 AUBURN re “2 65 50, TELEGRAPH 'MEL-O-CRUST HEAT ‘N’ EAT Open Thursday, Friday, Saturday ‘tO p.m. . PKGS. 4 DI INER ROLLS oF I Oren Thole and Feidey ‘el 9 pam og ie. 4 rs = & ‘Soybeans Score | THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 28, 1955, cme & ft Seamer my City T ransfers Securities _The City Commission breezed through a relatively short 10-point agenda last hight in less than an hour. - Tt. adopted a oteagrseanege to Federal Reserve Bank Coverament securities owned by) ceagie dacaneea changes pest gar viously for the shipping of the securities, Eckman pointed out. the resignation of Steplien J. Goonan from the Police and Fire He had served on the board for ar ee oS ve reer term due to expire“in 1959. _ His. resignation) .| Trial Board. planted in 20 lakes of Kalkaska, Benzie, Leelanau and Grand Traverse counties. The plantings are part of a program to convert; area lakes to Rainbow, Brook, |Brown and Lake Trout waters. ‘Larceny Warrant Given GRAND RAPIDS ™#™ — Deputy|" [Prosecutor Joseph A. Renihan Tuesday issued a warrant charging dja 40-year-old Grand Rapids man days with larceny of $5,000 in cash and checks which had been left for safekeeping at the home of the man’s parents by tavern owner Benjamin R. McCaul. The money iwas taken from its closet hiding \place while the man’s parents and lsister were away, police were told. 7 Reuthar Enters Hospital: for Checkup and Rest DETROIT (INS) — UAW Presi- dent Walter P. Reuther yesterday, entered Metropolitan Hospital in Detroit for a physical checkup and i a few days of rest. UAW spokesmen emphasized that | thé union leader was not il) and| would be back on the job in a few Detroiter Jailed, Fined Water came up through the floor boards. * * a “We got out in one hell of a hurry,”’ said Young. With him were Cmdr. Herbert Whitney of Arlington, Mass., who MIGHIGAN—In_ the Pro- the County of Oakland, | In the matter of the petition concern. Prano, miner. Ca an 4 : : s E . ‘| ‘MARKE q S Socks P inched (Gurr True Life a nied November High |... Farnings e : ite CHICAGO (INS) — Ilinois Cen- - . . ‘ ang |] : a tral Railroad reported net income Fractional Gains) cr. ...by Profit-Taking) : Sfameaei: : AP - ~ | 30 of $23,495,426, equal to. $7.24 a CHICAGO uM — Soybeans scored| ss vin gholesalepeckere lets'| NEW YORK — Profit-taking], THe SOUTH AFRICAN 0G is EQUIPPED MESC Reports Record |in snare, in the eatee period "last fractional gains but other cereals fancy, §.00 bu; No 1, 2 abea. Ket the stock market depressed WITH A ‘GUCTION CUP ON BACH OF HIS TOES. Peak for Month Seeing year were unable to move higher on/2.$0-3.00 ip seats, ney, 40 Bas Wo ;|today in early dealings. sn ve eens ; No re bu: "Reriners Bor, fancy. Selling wag for cash and next-|— 2,616,000 at Work i the Board of Tradé today. Deal-| «se Pap Gidet. Rol: /day delivery as well as for “‘regu- He dens i Pk Maestrhadey ) — St. Louis- ings were a little more active than| 4 dh tg ‘jlar way” delivery, which takes f ETROIT (#—Michigan’ net income for eleven months in the extremely dull previous ses-|, sy" Wu Cabbage, Went 2 Wea four days and won't record profits} WITH HIS BODY = 2 oe . ww cated Nov, 90 of WSDL excsl.. sion, ; ta § “ie a eae ae bu: ied Re. i sar ar rg UPRIGHT~--ALL pueenen BS oe aeainn ees (3 $3.84 a common share. This * 2 6 : beey . in November, : s Buying in beans was largely it dy wo, 2603 3 ee doa ‘ret Prices meg “within a pasrow FOUR FEET é —- s © * compared with 96:002.006, or $1.83 based ‘on hopes of substantial ex-(femersaan Ne 1, .s0-4.00 ‘uk bat range, usually from around 2 OUTTHRUST The Michigan Employment Sez| Sinn Naru’ im the same Per- - of oils, Gry. fancy, 2.00 tech bee: Mel. Lee ves Points lower to a point higher. fe curity Commission. (MESC) an- ae ~~: arena sovie bas Parsley, curls eB 8 There was little pronounced O CONT, : i [nounced today the figure was 2,- the country was another dos behs. Parsnips, No 1. 135-1.75 Ly movement among groups _ but THE TARGET. ss : H bu. Pota fancy, 1.50 60-lb there were minus signs in motors, 018,000 as compared with the pre- ews in rie twetor, Among other. cereals, 120130 0 tig, Radionen Bint |Sircrafts sind building materials vious peak of 2,608,000 of June 1953. : wheat tended to ease in the ab-|Gor ‘behs Squash, Acorn "No 1 100-| ony ; : © : while plus signs appeared with recerd sence of strong demand ietown Sie t Teekee;: Hubbers ee t.| som frequency in the steels, rub- — oe ae with ‘rook driving o7* 1.00-1.80 bu. toes, hothouse, No| ae, herical : ot November included beth tac. |Saturday before Orion Township _ Wheat near the end of the first) !;, #9240, 8-1 bait.” ‘Turnip, vepped, ang chemicals, tory and. business firm empigy. |JUStice Helmar G. Stanaback, 27- hour wae unchanged a Pere Gtioee ANS Ret, sei se pe. | Electric & Musical Industries ment, It was .a gain of 154,000 Z — ~ erwin i = to % higher, March $1.29; oats|*" ‘bese. No. 1, 100-10 bu bedi test ot 30,000 shares un- from November of last year, the |was fined $75 with $25 costs. 4s lower to % higher, March 65\; EGGS » ; : : | DETR = General Motors, it 3 Leland Riggs. Fiat, - Sp geaned to % higher, March Detroit. ca a Soaheded. deaeial-ctaas most active issue off fa opened Employment gain in 1955 was pode = ba charge baa : p> frame beard ane aiinee A Jumbo 00.68 weighted today on 9,000 shares: off % at largest in the automobile of driving under the influence of cor & 2 cents a hundred pounds Sis, Medium $1-b. wid ave. 33 sama pio sa trading around | The industry showed a gain of|liquor, pleaded guilty and ~ trigher, January—$11.05... __|it.Mwta are saa SCS © ire : : 55,000. Others to gain were metals|sentenced three days in jail and rs rs na san smal a A a4 ie higher rigs = 7. and metal products, 31,000; ma-jfine $100 by Pontiac Municipal Both export business domes- rge Wid. avg. 46. oungstown Sheet manufacturers 19,000, tex-) Judge -Maurice-E. Finnegan. = tic flour business remained dull,| Gommercisily naccs® ** st nanan Greer, Allied and apparels 3,000, and chem- although there was talk in the| sles ™mcines “Hi (Miss SS: jorge [Chemical and Boeing, eel vinaasatacturing| eae St paaied 7 sity. to as ‘ * ‘ . gu o wheat pit that both would expand! ™,, extra large 56-51,|Chrysler, Douglas Aircraft, Ana- ee ea cide int can recites driving Saturday before within the near future. This talk ure So. medium 4844-81, small 41:| “onda Co., Air Reduction, Westing- sey dper lanl unsere ere bas a Orion Township Justice Helmar G alone wasn't sufficient to cause| "hit,,%, ‘Sttsay te firm. Supplies mod- house Electric, International Pa- ae he beeen eee Stanaback. He was fined $75 with any rush to buy the bread grain. |erate and ‘e clearing readily (6 a- cone, ver Surtics 1a 6actrlscceuh as : tinued good 4. per, and U.S. Gypsum. hotels, restaurants, laundries, busi-|525 costs. : en © Copyright 1955 “ Grain Prices cu ftigace BUTTER AND EC Stee New York Stocks Wak Disncy Productions ness vendor aa nee Pleading guilty to driving under CHICAGO G steady: receipts 767.800. Wholesale buy (Late Morning Quotations World Rights Reserved : nd (te, influence of liquor Saturday ~€HICAGO, Dec. 28 (AP) — Opening {36 Hy score AA ST. : transportation and pefore Pontiac Municipal Judge — grata 2 ‘ Bt; 0 B 38; oC 64S, ears Admiral neers 217 Kelsey Hayes. 38:2) : utilties added 7,000 and construe-| Ceci] McCallum, L. Whaley, 47 mr... 2.08" — 65% | Fees firm; recelp' $s 13.374; wholesale Allied na. Kens cont... 1164 tion 8,000. The construction indus- rj Pg he nf May ........ 2.06% May ......2. ‘eat,| BUY if Drices nged to 2 higher:|aiied Strs.... 58 Kresge 88... 291) | " of 319 E. Wilson St., was fined $100. July coccee.. L948 July 2.06555) 63 | OS large whites | 60-699 per cent As Allis Chalmers 684 Kroger ..... 45.2] SoM Ss LEAP & jtry hit its peak in September and . ener t 2 . um eee Pr 16.5 ts g . gs a . 1.20% Jerds S05: Girties 43; checks 44. current | jum — = pope ARS iy ETIMES A with total employment of} Farmington resident John Beck Mar vveconss BBA Mb SIT! Labig) Feeelpts iam’ Aurine.<"" a1 Hage My =. 683 ENDS WITH COMIC 116,000. See ees oe Sok Seale Socsees ths ear PTN HEN " bless claims fe . ng Saturday before Farming- ap sescene Heth pul seeee ise CHI Wee a arr U.S am Gas & Ei a Lorthare naan oT ABRU ESS W AS in 1955. The pore bgraled ton. Township Justice Allen C. Ingle, Arrivals 248: track 28 joa, U8 Am Motors... 88 Merb Sie” ase! — ONE OF THE TOE-CLPG than half that of the previous |“ fined $25 and sentenced to 10 Examination Sought icc eee BERS) Stoo <- STICKS TO THE WRONG TARGET. | year.” ae cee ome r ly 8! be e ’ | — str iu! y Ki cake. Charged kless Q ie vier apy a ageing 390-4 STBiAS fe Tel + iat Mowtany Ch er ems : Ne eve tee | . ee oe eeenreete Oe: Thomas Michio, #1 of Cae ececea: alias 3.60-2.65; Minnesota-|Am T: ont Ward . 94.2) cember reports the MESC said it nS r by Resident of Flint. Nor North Dekote Pontiacs 2.15-2.85 washed a te fe Motor rie! 2, Th 0 tl k f will handle about 3,290,000 claims oe ene agp ws aaa Age =e rmco S41 - for eompensation in 1955, _ That n Lake joseph ' Abner Gupton, the 27-year-old Poultry Au cet Lae.. a2 ke 33] Firm Pressin e Outlook for 1956 compares to 6,877,000 in 1954. Bene.|Leavy and was fined $25 with $10 Flint man whose alleged one-man om pail A ‘Bree lg +H = =i ta 1955 P fit payments for 1955 will be about |©°S*s- crime spree kept Waterford Town-|,DETROFT. Dee. 31. AP) —— Prices Bait & Onic.. 46.5 Ret Lead | at rosperit E xX aise $68,500,000. In 1854 they were $148.-/ yaitferd resident Archie Powell, ship police busy Monday night,| quality lve poultry up to 10 a.m Benguet 17 NY Central .| 45.7 501,000. pleaded reckless demanded examination at his ar-|neers byoltrs or tyert Gut teh [Beemer AT Sie Sen BET Work Break to Create New Boom Yy TAT og isving Satna before sye -3%a : “alp ! West . an assault. today belore “Waterford|Romgaz"2% sepenrties (ee Tent St: |Borg Warner a Nest Airline | ta oO Create NEw boo €ar ‘ Lake Justice Joseph J.-Leavy, was Justice Willis D. Le-|_ sarest_ full steady. week end cler-|Britianes:... Zh SMG 43) New Poli | GIGVAN UMIET sree 8 wit ss costs, Township Justice Wiis D. Leer ware aoethattgt ad cleer-| Bris My... 32 eink 3 w Policy Requesting) NEW YORK — The business, the new year than in the old to Pam ee (ERR Date ieee Bt EEA 2) Employes to Cut Office tm bokeh Amescan sen bey the nw pan sty | acta eee ee Gupton, who failed to furnish|semene 0” viet See Parke’ Da’ 348) Trivia Off Schedule seems little doubt that the massive tiac Lake Road, was fined $75 with bond of $2,000, was remanded to|ana ne receipts nor’ prices ‘rebofted |Gemiae ae 04 pa, meee 382 economic forces set in motion will camey Ser geen oa “ bes Se has ‘bon bchoddded for Jun 3. guICAGO POULTRY Gaiet Trac: eas Fae Ds Bs BOULDER, Colo. (INS) — Lo] intend Rood gar gall orcas ed fi rt potas — ‘ ae pa Eg ae A 8 pone Jha A — = . 34.1/Mountain State Hardware & Im- even » in 1956. for anced oes) at mane Red Guerrilla Emerges ts According to Waterford Police teady te firm on. heey _caponetiea bres ig Raa ge mohd er Poe} lement Assn., of Boulder, is“dis-) The momentum to achieve this Busi caered 5985 on an From Jun le to Discuss Gene W. Miller, 19, of 592 Over. Chalet Frank VanAtta, Guipton ‘Pam. a HID al teh (Col Bra A....” 973 Phill Pet 81.6 \tributing an edict, labeled simply exists in the economy now. Some bani 9 look Lane, pleaded —] Billy a. of 767 Wing | paring prices.i lower to 3 higher: henry |Col Oss -.-:.. 16 Bil uate © Mas “Notice to All Employes,” |few areas of bisiness may na The forward meee recession! ‘Pardon’ for His Troops |iess driving Raiaray eases rene over head with a whisky |.r: or 22-23; old roosters 145-|Con Edis ..°° 47.1 Wee 46.5 which reads: , quite keep up the tremendous pace nded y euseany Lake Justice Joseph J. Lea H bottle Monday night. Tih: capetetieg under he 5-38 ae Consum Pow a Ren Dros’ In a “Due to increased competition re it is expected that the force of Aged Se bane, attained re BALING, Malaya ®—Chin Peng, |¥®* fined $25 and $10 costs. . i= ae ade Pomai’s car, Le Gore, Peas m4 Rey Tod B... $2 and a keen’ he remain = complete Selene the history of the nation. Malayan Communist party secre-| ponaiq S. Lum, 25, of Water- said, weniend & in a Livestock ~- wrtieg Wes. 38. Rock Spq. .-. 31 | a. we necessary to|) ores mettre =| _It is the rhythm of this continu-/{ary who was once valued by the!ford Township, who pleaded guilty Leaving the scene of the acci-| CHICAS pre. it. (AP) =. 8.De-[Du Pont "..."sat Scovile Mtg.’. 3e| ““Etfective immediately, we are| People remain in a mood to (es rard Sen peer in\dead, emerged from the jungle we (,rectiets ériving, was fined $25. dent on foot without Wentitying| BSS asi arte ieenctee least Ret sat Seah LAN lating thee somewhere betwen : echelon = Jungle toand $10 costs Saturday by Sylvan nt on See ec catty ea atcnnre: [Ret Kea 5! G16 Beare Rowb.....283 ee ete 1956. For instance, basic in-day to discuss an amnesty for his Lake Justice Joseph J. Lea legedly held Seas al- (Beh. ape trode cane clap, ‘sore, thirty Be Mus... 44 { 0... B16 dustry, is working at maximum/|Red guerrillas after 7% years of vy. — Sn ke , and. sendy: estimaind 9 rot ee ed oe infringing } mae now and finding it diffi-|fighting the British If your friend’s in jail and needs ives Bare =o shaving, scsvent wieerty clearance: [EE-CU-O .... 68 Sperry Rand... 27.6) eee oeety Serews © lunch al ors CSC cult to meet the demand for its : ° bail. Ph. FE §-9424 or MA 5-4031. oe 6 welghte, under 00 Ib, scares, with No Paird Mor s+ 3 Sig Brand -. 38 |periods, coffee breaks, rest periods, products. Prospects assure the con-| Two police vans brought the 36- : —Adv. oe . No.l to 3s 190-220 I 1125. (Pood Mach ... go Std Oil Ind $9.1/Story telling, ticket selling, vaca-| | tinuation of such a pace at least/ year-old Communist chief and his) pumma Finkle, called to the scene by aifi's" E Sul .. 93.5 Std Oi NJ 1525/tion planning, and the rehashing of aides from ee sale, Youth Center, ; 178 at latter includ. | Preepot_ Sul anes as ng, pak fo) CS a jungle rendezvous to| Lake Orion, eased 5 haggle WAS) reba mixed No. f and’ bs 1200-12 35, end {Gen pee 83 Stevens, JP. 71 3| yesterday's TV programs, wat 1A) | e n alc Ca |this small town in upper Perak tele Sat 3 z.... 16. 7 -___C ee tened with a knife, VanAtta/a 90 head lot Mo. 1 and 2s 230 1p. sorted |Oce Dynam .. $54 Sylv Bi Pa... «5.3)¢@Ch employe endeavor to find im ap! tea odin a meay lat state near the Malaya-Thailand) 4 steel cash box that rings in- . fash itis ann ee ee OP Gen Wee : So... ..118-4/some time that can be set aside border, The Red headquarters is ‘cessantly when 1-0.50; @ load sround 360 Ib. butcliers|Gen Shoe ... 406 Tex G Sul .... 38.2), known as the Four Trapped Seabees * eter bey intstrien They (ng trey? hentia’ , w picked up has been 5 Guard aw aa Sector panei; mast soes|Gen Time "25° Time ® Best. 3-4| * ‘Work Break.’ P | are working at top capacity © ‘the frontier. “Wr Switrertand, Berne-re-— fate Revamps Woalabe cattle 33000: sainbie caives| Goebel Br’... ‘s Trensamer .., 422 “To some this may seem a radi- paved by Helicopter toto thee at aart aang 8 eet, LEADERS ht 8 ave: |Gcotecer “'". Sle Underwood’... 314) cal innovation, but we honestly | From Glacier Pit oe . The Reds came here to meet| ,, NOTICE OP PUBLIC HEARING P cows: steady to 25 higher; steady Gran Poice "2 ¢ Un Carbide...1008 a y a the leaders of Malaya's two British {nearing - emerges er arog | ersont to strong: vealers -sheelels an4/ni wor Ry... «3 Uo Pac ....180.4| believe the idea has great possi- ; - Here are some of the factors|supported governments, Prince Ab- | in, the ‘Commission ~~ : es Z re a at & ... 211 Unit Air Lin... 39 || bilities: It can conceivably be an | ABOARD-USS GLACIER, in Mc- - dul . Chamber. ~y Hall, 35 S. Parke Street | LANSING &—The Michigan Na-|2)36: 6 fle prime locas held up to| nase 148 Dale Saree St dea] ald to steady employment and it y that make 1956 look good now: Rahman, chief minister of the |on january 7, 1956 at 8 o'clock | 24.00 and above: bulk choice and prime |c! OF ---.. 18 ae co at Murdo Sound + Four Seabees| Sustained consumer spending. {mainland Federation of Malaya,|?:™- Easiera. Stande on the tional Guard said today it willl secre” (G.co-iate: some prime ‘Reiters|me™mCOo = 8 Cp + 35:7] might also be a means of assur- . and proposed vacating of a portion of Cres- streamline its organization and] brit abore ee ase “nine worker et "°. je Us Rubber’":, S24] ing regular pay checks. te Ed Ld a) a ene! Cmte atm Io pa pate lerareme| Gom, eortmat Pom rive in hase fat Free personnel policies Jan. 1 to con-| 1850: wt retal cows 10.59. |Tndust Rav... se UP Steel. ... 084) nile the f the Work|2" 2mtarctic ice shelf on which F crown colony December 13. 1088 se Tellows: form with changes in the. US|); scammers ana, cuvere ¥-1050 tet Mary... ed Mest Us Te. 24] prea Plan Papepala ulsory, it €Y had huddled for 26 hours.|ngo enon eiorieas © cree = * + s Seminnas toca the City. rien ¥ wealers 4 mt Nick ..... iia 4 . aver: . « @ ta be th. stock heifers edives Int Paver os oe a se iiis hoped that each employe will| They were found in a fent imi-/at the end of the year and the| Rahman had invited the Reds to|of ction of C i Drive, ean The Guard will convert to new), Ssiabie $.000; moterately active, Is] Crk Coal ..4.2° Woolworth... 41.g)find enough’ time to give the plan/provised from a parachute. —__|indieations-are_it_will_continue to|the meeting so he could explain public notice be given in ance tables of organization and cquif| Seed Suet, aa ct aeaceee (ines Mt hy seme eta aeale fal tll |_Nane of the. men sutfered any fise ___|terms of the amnesty he olfered| zit Sern 3, Chabier xitt othe Gi a theer_Iaceely 7 ee cet “ ‘It is also hoped that -those em-|in effects but one of them re. Business will spend an estimated |last September after he was chosen jon_of Crescerit Drive in Assessor's ment, introduce specialist ratings, |1o° "prime Wooled lambs STOCK AVERAGES |ployes not in favor of adopting the ie 33 billion dollars for new plant and|*© head the Malay Peninsula’s first|Pi*t 13. more particularly described change military occupational spe-|choice and prime, mainly choice 112-120 NEW YORK. Dec. 2 * complet 2 ‘Work B k idea, will have fully #ted. “If it wasn’t for that para- popular elected | A paresi , asa i for Two's lame 17.00-18.00: latter 3 Associated Pres. aad siege Soman ve ¥ chute breaking the wind we w 1q|TPment, @ good gain over 1955. * | gears n* ‘und the reky = et qualification and service records. |}*, Co cae 1o.so-la Sore decks and prev den eee Rete Ul srocks ' The M a thave died.” , dobs remain plentiful. Govern- | The Communists had offered ag aneve partiowarte as be: In a year - end report, the |lambs No. 1 and falt shorn| Week age ..... i301 1371 72.5 1795) a e 6 «© ment figures for October, showed twice during the summer to nego-|£"™!n¢ at a pe mt located 107.64 feet Guard said air and ground units [itunes cuss asoete, '° “ChOle) Month ago ..... 348 i413 18 M8 Me Turn Ou The men were stranded when| C™Ployment at 65,161,000, That |tiate a peace but Lt. Gen. Sy, |fous ner Bee, 31, TIN, BION, eee ee reached a strength of 12.553 of: BGR SS Rt HSE BP iE Mercury to Turn Out. |i oe trend Wecce sn] ota millon more than a |Gettey "Bourne Brith decor noe Sea sigh ka, ficers and men on Nov. 98, 88 | oprnorr. Dec 28 (AP) (OSDA)—Hogs 1984 high <2". 219 123.0 68:3 1552|New Hardtop ‘Phaeton’ the same month in 1964. Unem- jof operations against the guerrillas, |X. 2"43'30" W. 136.97 feet to the begin: Tae rea se of 176 —over—I1954 | salsdie400.__No_ early ing | 1904 low M39 718 584 1080 into a crevasse that had been) ployment was 2,131,000, lowest (turned them down as a Red at.|2!” ot mule $0 tue Teh tale curve strength. aa salable, 200, Presh receipt ROIT STOCKS DEA pS) — Maroney eee Oe Ogee of meee They| point of the year. tempt to obtain some Kind of rec. [sae aer3t'as® ang joni. ghord eat 3 * * * pr an | Preeti aetn Uh iy Spt “ems | ater éeciantt Points are eighths Division of Ford Motor Co. ‘has/Were picked up by a helicopter -~& tax cut ognition. ing N. 26°09'20" W. hol vggas oe state ranked) trade ne high o4 te to prime fed steers pcltean anuers High Low Noon announced a new four-door pillar- role ot the expedition, Glacier, lead of spending comma ego orge te its, point of ending. thence N. grate ninth in the nation in total Army|sl¢: few sales utility and commercial) Gori Aeich eae less hardtop sedan called the| ip expedition ha : “sn bee wit, Shente GS. Oo aes” &. Nat Gas and 16th | rer 024 ,besters 12. 0-18.00; most, util Kingston “Peeguctss 3 33). a noe There may be ripples in the Film on- History Tertherght ald nning of curve in the nation in Air — Guard ne seanty sod coummorcial Calle Le Midwest Abrasives anes = : 86 96 > The new model was said to otter The Sane scitecly drove into} rhythm in the coming year. Home + |faglus of 1.57 feet @ central « of strength, . able 13. 00.15.00. - : el oeree? ae as , 3 “‘more eye-level visibility from the # “whiteout’ " — a trick of light | building may falter some, although of Communism S6-i648-' Seca feet, thence 5. Aug. 27 Gat” gel andes gat | "ake ae it inked rear seat than ny Sour har (Ttroctom that Mota out the bert SSSS eeerocnon outage om by Critic: [esse Site ste ae | 11,768 Guardsmen participated in| 3.90-27-00: (ew : sap anved — pon the Toa “44 bittions, some Praised: 101C pe field training at camps in Michi-| sna commerc *9 di, aber re; weit : Trout Planti nWe slowed down and were just Hh further—Ressived,—that-a_publia - on aan ~ Phe wtiney 10 6. ie a “ae : out Plan ng Record - ce — sige oid ‘feeling our way,” said Chief W. 0.| Farm prices are expected to'con-| NEW YORK «—A vivid d hearing be ‘ere “men on the p Vacating wes almest 96 nar cat on Guard qteet esa te ed chanted aes| TRAVERSE CITY w — The = naset. = a mode | Young, 29, of Wickford, R.1.|tinue to fall mentary film showing the history|™ Bastern “Standard slaughter sheep quota Conservation Department/Series and later will be available y ashed into breaking ‘ice | By order of the City’ : Pontiac City Affairs announced Tuesday that a record/i"_ the custom and Monterery tyoned by @ ‘layer of snow. ne Se Gut - {number of 79,000 trout have been|Seties. BF tle fell four feet and ee Level Set erere cae THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 28, 1955 , Life burke Sales Pass Recordtitnn'in eRe: “NEW YORK m. — Americans the the Mexeet housing year since jeight years ago, Policy holdersjers on their families reached a) 0, wrmie jcc 2 ed Jbought a record amount of life numbered. 103 million, a new high./new high of $5/400,000,000, nine per! - - NEW. YORK (INS)—Ruth Mont-| fo] 7 .\ LITY. 5 4 , 1955, : Holgar J. Johnson, president of The life companies loaned 6%|cent more than a year ago, in the @0mery, one of America's best| ie ; | billion dollars to property owners|face of a record low death rate. known and most widely honored, | Bre tnsuregce away the Institute of Life Insurance, re- ing the year, more than one/Payments to living policy holders’ women -journalists, will join the| G LAS ~y ~SHAPES and COLORS than 29 billion dollars, or one Detroit Business Hits A veteran ‘reporter of the Nh lags, 8 Bias ported that purchases of new life|piliion dollars over the total so|accounted for 58 f ; the fifth|invested the year before. total. wad : = a Washington staff of im = Washington scene since 1944, E SELL Almost five billlion ddMars went Record 1955 Peak Mrs. Montgomery is on a first- % : —— basis of acquaintance with | FO 7 .| bonds accounting for the bulk of DETROIT — Business and in- t of the important personali- | ep total, This nema heme dustrial-activity in the Detroit area ties in ae note, where she has | corporate bonds to 36 billions, | rose to record heights this year by, 1S Tanked among the top eche: or @ per cent of all life com: "| yirtyal) lon of outstanding journalists, common stocks to $3,600,000,000. sald Boar cm vere Mrs ae oe dis-| LESS IT este s. | a C mie eee set - Zh, TOP QUALITY FRAMES and LENSES — ir holdings of — a News Service effective Jan. 1. to ° * * #& “the past year signs point to another peak year in| Patches will appear in the pinaton| ian expansion of several relatively |1956. Press, brings to her Washington a, “ _ * : new -investment channels, which} ¢., ana assignment for INS not only a = @ Your Prescription Accurately Filled « track production complete backgrounding in nation-! = C [ } First in Pontiac with the Newest : have recently been dev by tly eloped topped by 15 per cent 1950's 4) affairs but also a_ first-hand! ~ @ Fast Service Vi = : now have some half billion dollars] Peoger car sales wore up 15 "per |mowiedge of the world at large. (il oy are “GB @ No Appointment Necessory _ in turnpike bonds, and nearly ~ cent over the 1959 high, ese eae ah ~ ecm ont! G eT) - @ Only Ist Quality Materials = West eq ea ea inthe bonds of educational insti- Construction “contracts awarded often throughout western Europe, 3 SO @ For Men, Women and Children Q lit Cc 7 : Ss i a ar a . a ane tutions, [nsdn — 'y topped last year's} the Middle East, Far East, Latin! ; : uality Carpeting in a wide selection of | toward me end ot the year,|moorthY 1 ea carl owe pom pergion food phd DISPENSING textured napes. Expertly installed. life insurance companies under-|the best previous year. RAED =» OPTICIANS . pias aie = Aaygron of} Checks drawn on demand de-| Plans to boost the production of | : : airlines, | posits of Detroit banks showed an/the first all-Australian auto were “@ Cornice | Boards @ Linoleum ‘0 cover the construction of this 18 per cent eacasae ever as nolo sanounaad in pr x ‘ <1 Phone FE 2-2895 @ Bamboo’ Drapes @ Floor Tile cee Set eS fee bah eeereiny oat, _____snmnurand in Siete, . Net rate of investment earn- — - - —@ Shower Curtains | @ Window Shades ings for the year Was estimated [| : e Drapery Hardware ~®@ Venetian Blinds compared with 3.46 per cent last ws CUSTOM Tailored DRAPERIES |, tu, der ai ta wit 11 \determining the cost of insurance itt -Skillfully matched patterns, when you choose from to policy holders. our Designer Fabrics. Drapes for any type room.-~~ “Touk agua i ane ae / PARK AT OUR. DOOR = Detroit Teachers Approve MA ROEBUCK AND CO. ~= Drayton Floor Fashions | Beeis‘riic'scton synem have voted approval of consolidation of 4667 Dixie Highway—Drayton OR 3-2552 [their federal social security. with : : their retirement plan. : ewe BEDDING FLOOR SAMPLE and DISCON- Highest Trade-In Values! - 1954 PONTIAC | 4055 PONTIAC $ ! 1955 POWTUAC | os cos cam 1595 | __ TINUED TICKINGS ON SALE tar Chie ina, Ra- ’ » Hydramatic. +4. Wt ° dio, Hydramatic, Power Now Priced %Y . *9195 1954 DODGE 1195 up to—_ 30 : OFF = ——— beg yi ronetlieewadiimess iat Listed below are just a few of the many specials | yy : -at_terrific aceenhs delay . és . ome 2 - 1954 PONTIACs | ea ene 1954 PORT 1395. {1855 Ponrine] — Heater, Hydramatic. . | 870 4-Door, Radio, and : 1953 Pymoth ‘695 189 5 | SSX ys ; 2-Door. Heater Only. - : Se fs Le Standard Shift ....+. ~~ 4+» 4 P é, ‘ on TONTING ze 1952 OLDS - “2 5 We Tele Stet $3 soe. Reg. 49.95 Full Size 39% Ul - Deluxe 2-Door, Radio, } Hydrameni ne... See ae \% a8. 95 Rubber Combination 55 5 Mattress, just 4 at...... ye! = Heater, os i & ee in Twin Size, set. eee . **** $6 DOWN ON LY 12 , : fs E 995 _ 5 1952 PONTIAC 587 5 | Gj 4} 109.95 Rabher Combination $77 2 On a > — om ftom esse [\AXy'] in Fall Size set: 6 only..... 55 sown Ci f ae — or Twin 21% oa Oe is 39.95 Twin Size Mattress : 338 Wg Me eg! NS 2 , # A. : i oe SORRY—NO PHONE ORDERS OR K 1954 "eet Gort T 09 5 1955 PONTIAC oi. atl 8 at 6.07 savings. .... (33. | C. 0.°D.’s ... ALL SALES. FINAL! i* 210 4-Door, Radio, Heater, pated tre yp aint = : Many Others Not Listed : - : : {fi a - Standard Shift seve eee verse Radio, pensar hg ' : - an TES Ses Os fed A warome4ggs ['2095 |i27 o, AAS Heater, Hydramatic eonee (esr PONTIAC 1953 FORD ‘845 Deluxe 2-Door, Heater, Standard Shift seccecesees i Radio, Standard Shift. \ 545 | wicwolt 595 | Se Heater, Power Glide .... Wet Sher 695 seeeeowes 1951 C Chevrolet ‘3 ) ae | bts teereoereeee i “Yori Denchée’ - Kitehen Stools ‘4.Drawer Chests ‘Assembled Chests " Thrilt-Cratt Ready-to-Paint Douglas | Fir or Spruce Woods Ready-To-Finish Knotty Pine Select Western Cabinet Wood Mx 3.49 “wise .....:. 2.98 Bech «cies. 16.95. ‘wasin .:. 16.95 , economical, Smooth-- Excellent Thrift-Craft quolity “Moder styling with flush-to Handy 4-dtewer chests, smooth- ag led Douglas Fir, Spruce stools priced low. Simple to fin- floor design. : Smooth Mg 4 ly sanded with grooved pulls, or rosa Pine benches. Ap- ish, sanded. aoe - gistant drawer bottom Wax, drawers. Ready for ‘es ply the finish of your choice. - M-inch stool ....,ce000.:.:348 = stain or enamel, , -* paint or lacquer. aw z P ‘ ay ws ae. 2 _ - é : : ‘