4 . “ee Ppi- a . re pe A «te OO ea, APs Ge I he, ws be = h hme Bre: Faceted hae Bae wear 4 FP oer Vee ee ee Gone erent GIT Ce a ae ‘x sf ¥ . ,-. we oS ~~ % "gees . : -—- “=: THE PONTIAC PREGSKE IVERPAGS 112th YEAR * *& & & & PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, FRIDAY, MAY 14, 1954-44 PAGES ae ee mie es U.S. to Warn Reds Surrealist Dali Exhibits D, ....and a Mustache | Farmington Tot Suffocated Cohn Listens csenmmemniaiindimiitaisietiiaeaianasaail Accordion Case Tragedy fared tg [ Ruled Accidental Death to Save Hanoi With a ruling of accidental suffocation, State Police today closed their file on the death of 2-year-old Carole Sue Timte of Farmington Township. A 15-hour search for the blonde child was called off America Considering yesterday morning when her mother, Mrs. Frank Timte, Asian Security Treaty found her daughter’s body locked in an accordion case. | eae i. « +. Police speculate the child Without Britain GENEVA (INS) —An urgent appeal jo the U. 8, to warn the Vi rebels that a full-scale attack on Parents Warned _ | gx18x20-inch container and to Be on Lookout | ‘ts lid snapped shut, trap- Hanoi might bring Ameri- can intervention was reli- | for Death Traps |" aimough the case was handled Accidents like Thursday's ac-| 4nd even used as a chair by ably reported today to have been made by France. At the same time, au- thoritative sources said the U.S. government was now considering the possibility | of creating a Southeast AP Wirephote | ; . ® AT ROME SHOW — Surrealist painter Salvadore Dali, waxed e je . . , the 100 neight a af Ul mustache at a perky angle, is accompanied by champion Great Danes, if | ins 7 sheriff's deputies, and Togo and Bahia, at opening of his biggest show in Rome this week. Thirty oil paintings, 22 pieces of jewelry and 80 water colors were 5 Dali works exhibited. For the technical-minded, the mustache ; ; pee outside the house. government had made a among i exhibi or the tec -min mus scream and we new a to U Of Tax Evasion [is Que cnhiss, Ze, the tecnica minded we mesteche| # Dian Bian Phy ten bd new appeal tothe U8. con Yon the left Fak Be ' nore dag intervention in Indochina. Costello Nearly Cries . re pect Transfer stunned to say France was said to have asked When Foreman of Jury| Third Day on Stand of 450 Wounded Men =. me we ol come what the U. S. intended to do if Tells Verdict = to Take 2 Weeks — , Seven France's military position became Adams Terms Pressure Mrs. Sailivan described Cara erctom to te ed Boer Date NEW YORK #—Gambler Frank ; < ’ HANOI, Indochina @ — The “a very small child. She was or if the Geneva conference failed Costello, convicted of federal in- "1 French began airlifting their seri- old, but she was to an armistice agreement. Conti, convicted of tederal | bY Roy Cohn as ‘Fantastic |r teen srins iteie sere yer es eneiey sepa maximum penalty of 15 years in WASHINGTON (AP) — Army Counselor John G. een today. anne a ae mene ae prison and a $30,000 ~. Adams today described as “nothing short of fantastic” pe ae ae rs an. latch, was barely salts is chant tne Ppatsaa yee vy when the jy | the pressure he said was applied by the McCarthy in- —— hold her. i. Vista foreman intoned “Guilty.” He had | Vestigating committee in behalf of Pvt. G. David Schine. ee xy on) tenn Gam . Frank, 10, = against trying Magness: art been out of jail less than seven While it came chiefly from Roy M. Cohn and Sen. | previous French estimates of the tts ease Wetnndey dake won — and especially the caquest months. McCarthy, Adams said, he regarded Francis P. Carr | number of serious cases. The Com- practicing to watch a Hanci — while thé Geneva The 63-year-old defendant, who as a “co-participant.” Cohn*
Qurgreund ayndionte for eers is chief counsel to Mc-\(Gaqr Wood Saved when Dien Bien Phu fell a week the open case So What? high command in indothiae, fist paled and buried his face in bie | Carthy’s investigations sub- Twi Hull ago the living room after the pro- raised the question of possible hands. ‘Trembling, he lighted @ | committee and Carr is its|@S ] win-Hulled * ‘The French high command an- outside. “I usually} Chief counsel to Sen. Joseph R. Americon Sievention if the Som- cigarette, staff directc : nounced the first contingent of 't that time,” | McCarthy’s i subcom- | ™ offensive threatened to ove
During the wait for the verdict ae ret. amastic” 4«.| Lp Goes Down the most gravely wounded ar- remembered. mittee, Roy Cohn was na atten. | weelm French and native forces he had put.on a show of cheerful-| sin tm relating @ call to his| MIAMI (INS) — Gar jWood, | MVed sbest moon today at the Frank recalled, too, that his |tive listener during yesterday's | “7 Tonkin Delta. ness, bantering with newsmen and _ noted beat builder pegel Laotian cagtial of Luneg often put her dolls in the | testimony by Army Counsel John comrens eiie® Gat tite friends sbout baseball office asking that Schine, wealthy speed boat who | Prabang, 115 miles to the south- — Selita te | Rbenerat Wietan ¢ Weshs question still was being discussed Costellg was released last Oct.| Young New Yorker and former| was rescued with two women | west. Dakota transport planes wover ms @ ng in ngton. | both on the military and diplomatic
29 from the Federal Correctional | McCarthy subcommittee staff con-| employes and six crewmen when | were to rush them from there te ; D. Monroe, Oakland | The camera studies below were /jevel at Saigon. The appeal for B sultant, be excused from kitchen his pleasure yacht sank in the | Mase! and other points with hes- - director, ordere@ | t#ken during the hearing. some definite indication of U. §,
Atlant pital facilities. autopsy, which was performed | action if the delta situation be- antic, blamed thé Ata , . Marra, Pontiac ® ® came grave was said to have been
sedi yan |e na i cen (Flint Hearings} |ssc‘sneea ie hulled ship today on “rotten | ion. “The autopsy report showed suf- discussed the matter with Ameri- Since only helicopters and small was the cause of death Pests C. D. Dillon in
) The craft, the “Venturi,” which |planes can use the warbattered, and it ts quite lkely thet it was Wind U Toda enereandedin i Ww shell-pocked Dien air- : . Monroe l Questioned at a new briefing
} ~“uneinhnhinr” wee unathel any, |strtp, the French expected the alr- State Police Sgt. Oramel O’Far- p y as to U. & policy toward inter- i Thursday by heavy seas in the | lifting of the 450 men to take at said the investigation had been . vention, the authoritative sources —
) 6) miles east | least two weeks. The planes could Justice of the Peace ssid tha. U. 8. could consider
Sot aa ey ee, See oe pee : Refuses to Talk About; ™™ ™* “te miles from Great Isaac Island, | Sengers each. Spring Weather ; Britain was said to be still op- | In the Red River delta, mean- PI Party Membership - posed to an Asian defense pact “{ aboard aban- the French counted ; ,. | the sources , although ship in a sin- “pertous teaece’” afer beating off Family of 71 Celebrate ans to Linger } FLINT (UP) — A House Un-| U's, was still hopeful of a change . Wood, 73, and the | an attack by 2,000 to 3,000 rebels | amily Ce ates in Area Awhil American Activities subcommittee | in British views,
were dramatically | yesterday near Phuty, only 9 Pairs 74th Anniversary e began its final day of testimony! In any case, the sources de- minutes later by a | miles south of Hanoi. More fair weather is the pleasant in current Flint hearings today with clared, the U. S. was striving to - ~ a efewmen AUBURN, N. Y. (INS)—Mr. and . Weld the alliance, even without gh seas in a lifeboat |, It was the biggest attack so far! Mrs. Robert L. Gilmore celebrated | TosPect for Pontiac area resi-| more than a dozen witnesses wait-| Britain k before they | ‘his year in the delta, the major | their 74th wedding anniversary last | dents tonight and Saturday accord-| ing to be heard. | The U. S. was said to be pre- by @ commer- slag ed al ie night at a family gathering. And | ing to the U. S. Weather Bureau.| The committee prodded addition-| pared to go ahed with the co- u. that’s quite q gathering. The cou-| The mercury is expected to rise | 41 witnesses Thursday for infor-| operation of France, Australia, ship, largest ple, both 93, has eight sons and ‘ mation about Communist dealings New Zealand, the Phillippines, vessel ever built |Chick With Four Legs daughters, 24 grandchildren, 37 with automobile workers, but Thailand and the three associated at up to a million Ostracized b great - grandchildren and three there was little cooperation from states of Indochina -- Laos, Cam-
‘just wasn't strong Y TS | great-great grandchildren. those on the stand. | bodia and Vietnam.
tic waves that hit it. like a j3-week-old chick named Would-Be Killer Indicted siaze here, sabrke the Fifth | that Australia, facing general
Peepsie will have to scratch for tonight from a low rc Amendment when asked if he was | elections May 29, was hesitat
i ‘54 H-Tests Completed itself, But it shouldn’t find it hard. Japan (@®—Hosei high of from 70 7 den cts a member of the Communist | ing at this time, Its owner said the other 4,499|Kuzuhara, 2i-year-cld carpenter to 4 degrees Sat-| party, Miwever, he readily a@- | The U.S re edly took the ; WASHINGTON (INS)—The U. S.| chicks he bought with Peepsie|who forced his way into Prime | Uday. swered other questions, ‘Gonkisiaed ant ea 3 COL 6 announced last night that the 1954| drove the odd fowl into isolation | Minister Yoshida's home May 3,| The temperature Thursday . Co . = sae ) weapons tests in the Pa-| by pecking at its legs — all four| was indicted today on charges of Tanged from 43 to 68 Asked about his service with Cific, including at least three blasts | of them intent to murder. Police said Kuzu-| At 8 a.m. today the temperature | the Marine Corps, Dean told the |
of almost unbelievable destructive| Separate quarters have been|hara confessed he intended to as-| stood at 54, but by 1 p.m. in down- , COMmittee that he resigned his co Late News Summary power, have been completed. built for Peepsie. sassinate the Prime Minister, town Pontiac the reading was 69. ™ission in 1946 rather than an- swer “certain interrogations from TOKYO (#—U.S. Defense Secre-
the Navy Department.”’ | tary Charles E. Wilson arrived
Dean, a World War II dive bomb-| here today on what he called a
, Sema T Tells of Fort’s Last, Ga ping Hour 222 ES
‘ Lawyer's Guild and American) Fast.”
h f mocratic Action, Cass City Worker By JAMES D. HORAN Commandant Martinelli gave his|there is no doubt they were pre-| @. What wag your ex- inctudes preliminary action follow | ne pn on - ATHENS (INS) — The Interna-
Kilad at Kent lake _|scacucy ction nie Gers: s Cummessrtod Vinca Geaps| evry cna’ Dents © SSM % | Peto ot Bien Bien Fit | ty tho sant. There i a eutden| Ls Seach eaten ms | tonal Olympic Common wed matic story of 's very end. A. There is no doubt it was the |>urst of mortar and heavy arms) (CH 00 ; today to admit Communist China | ing hours was told for the first/and his veteran's description of/ @ what is your opinion of the |times we were forced to stand by| (5% mm. guns and bazooka) fire| overtwrow of the United States | today [0 admit Communist China A Cass City man was killed in-|time today by one of the last |the brutal. hand-to-hand fighting | esemy treops helplessty while the rebels fired | designed to blind artillery spot. POCO a! delegates immediately quit the ore , stantly yesterday when the bucket |™en to leave the jungle fortress s defense A. The Communists varied from | Planes and ambulances obvi. | ‘ets Then dynamiters arrived at, me. ganization. | of @ crane being used Ce Nf} be that the Rede |™2" ‘© man, They appeared to| ously. evacuating the wounded. | OF Ragga ger Mn parma oa RE A meal rclng Apert tom — string across Kent Lake | oops. you think the : There were numerous cases of ° ; 7 , England aid tin too teak to tho Wein. Commandant Jean Martinelli of| gic any of the wounded when loceet specialties ‘The Reds have this. They were routine isting ma linen ae matter to the proper authiri- Gand mbabils tel ene : Samuel Vyse, 58, was ap bree rancher sor de yr they entered Dien Bien Phu? [no perticular aptitude for hand-|~ @ Aside from air power, what |the openings in our peitions = | England after a six-month world nemmeed, Goad pen arrive hi tae ot| A. No, I do not. That would be| ‘hand fighting. My own battalion) did you lack most at Dien Bien es . tour. ) Postian General Hospital. ‘Vyas | + Miitary Acsuemy, woos ot te feet deed hich is to|™ny times engaged in hand-to-| Pha? Q. Looking back, what has | Pig in a Nail Keg
Baschona Constructide, Co. ot|Dien Bien Phu's, defenders during |show on every occasion that they|)#®d combat with the enemy and) 4 1 can't say what our men cling cheat the wanes | Nails Owner te Tree | WAMMNGTON (P)-0 anate
& Vyse had lived In Cass City since oak geapeeh” i waa Me_ezeo © ese... m |tany "as we codid"ly'resering|erdeatery emrrying ‘the wowndid| . Russell Wallen, 24, of rural his marriage to Miss Zella’ Hall! officer sald, “that the French Birmingham pees cedgcecsecsbcscses J them to battalion first aid stations | Without flinching among the shell- Homer, was driving home with in 1919, going there from Carv.| troops who wete wounded or @. In the Inst days were the | County iiews 2220000000 and ‘then evacuating them to op-| bursts. I must also pay tribute| ® Pig in a nail weg on the sea He is survived by his widow; three | died in that hell never | soldiers at Dien Bien Pha re- oy Sag ~ Ticcpesgmnananed | eration in field to the snipers waiting under the| beside him. The pig jumped out sons, J. C. of Kansas, ‘of | fought for alms. tigned to thelr tuto or did they Mike Rabcostecas tries . eatens ‘ aye le oh ae aliay tee bor on and into Walleri's lap. Cass City and Lloyd @ home;| ~n was only thelr great love| “Peet to get out? Rel Beples neccccee | .&-.We Rave heard here tm | sseutt in order to give it a hot} Wallen lost control of his car three brothers, and two sisters./of liberty which sustained their) A, From the moment the attack Hewe....... 1 3. is, gg | American 0 great deat ef the | reception. I think the most ex-| and hit a tree. He suffered cuts. Service will be Monday at 2 p.m. | acceptance of innumerable sacri-| appeared certain, every man knew| Patterns .....-.s..c.-...... ®% = | _SMmAR Wave” attack method | sordinary brace action at Dien| The pig was uninjured. } Little Funeral CRE aie ett, ee fee Gece Gentes 2? TED cvdvetedocceet se 32, 33, of the Communists in Indochina. SS wi | age thowe lone yours of war.”|the battle: would be very tough rae, ei acted wiped & & | Seccn Geastte em. mien Fa ets pestege So este RS gy Home - Burial replies over transatlantic |Soldiers re generally reticent! TV¥-Redle Preerame/ ......... bravery during thos
. Weneus bases. teens A. The “juman wave” attack| weeks without sleep, Sev. Feats — |
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oo oe |Huge Waterfowl Refuge | Hal Boyle Says (Canine Chow Sales Grow |Ptsder Ca. save his company’s| "eo 2 ‘ Near inaw . ROCHESTER, N. Y. (UP rind ai
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| The big car eases out from the boulevard and comes _ one of the many rewards which come to the owners
| to a soft, silent stop. A man steps out from behind of Cadillac cars.
the wheel and heads for his destination. In fact, it might even be considered an extra divi- The license plate him to be a person from §dend—for it comes in addition to the car’s great and
another state—a “stranger,” so to speak. distinguishing beauty . . . = ion = and py en {
But the golden crest oni the hood of his motor car Performance . . . its magnificent comfort and luxury tells everyone something about him. For it is the ° +» #94 its remarkable economy of operation. famous crest of Cadillac—and no man is wholly a As a matter of fact, it would be a formidable task
stranger, wherever he be, when he drives this dis- _ to recite even a basic portion of Cadillac’s cardinal
tinguished car. virtues for 1954—for the car is su ive in every
Any owner can tell you, out of his own personal respect ‘and has been markedly advanced in every
experience, that a Cadillac is a virtual “letter of phase of appearance and operation.
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THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, MAY 14, 1954
| stn seeps |
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Feg i i! ERRE aay I ti it fs Tete
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Open for Your
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National Homes
|Under $16,000 Per Room
| mitted bids for the following facili- | Superintendent William Shunk
the | ties: two rooms at Jayno Adams; reports that the structural mate- four room additions to Waterford rizis will consist of brick exteviors,
| cinder block imteriors with tile
® | wainscoting in each room and as-
D Flint Youths ster ese Incandescent lighting will be Waterford Board Gets Bids
New School Units to Cost
WATERFORD — Bids received |Center, Williams. Lake and Four
Held in Breakin Police Seek Waivers
From Juvenile Court on
16-Year Olds
pe eee ee Soothes Nerves
entered Johnecn's Sales cartier With Fishing
after smashing open a safe.
Jasper Brouwers of | Ba.aam has © diversion which s-|
nables him to ease musical in- |
strument-shattered nerves: Fish- ii i i fi | i gF, p
af i 2
:
ibe ay f rf | if é ~
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g “Now, I will have to catch
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50 Attend Joint Meeting
of Auxiliary and Post CASS CITY—More than 530 per-
eos Ait
+
:
records.
ub Holds Potluck a
‘| plans to attend business school. Double-Ring R= Re elect Clinic Joins Couple
at Metamora |
METAMORA — In a double ring
ceremony in Hunters Creek Com- |
munity Church May 1, Mary Dun. |
ham became the bride of William |
Bradshaw Jr.
The bride's parents are Mr. and
Mrs. Leo Dunham and the bride-
groom’s parents are Mr. and Mrs.
William Bradshaw. All are of
Lapeer Township.
Maid of honor was Sylvia O’Hal-
loran, while Arthur McKay of
Oakville, Ont. served as best man.
Janet Bradshaw and Sandra
Schultz were bridesmaids and
ushers were Elvyn Matthews and
Glenn Dunham. |
Following a reception for 150
guests at Hunters Creek Hall, the
couple left on a honeymoon trip
to northern Michigan.
Avondale Has
2 Valedictorians
| cash, it was reported at the meet- Flag to Be Nedicoted
Co-orators Are Named |
for Senior Class Second
Year in Row }
AUBURN HEIGHTS — For the!
second consecufive year, co-vale- |
dictorians have been selected for |
the senior class at Avondale High |
class salu- |
tatorian.
Joann, the}
os daughter of Mr. |
[@ and Mrs. Raol J. |
Hermann of 3096 |
» Martell Ave.,|
Pontiac ‘is a|
member of the
40ANN National Honor
Society and has been active as a
cheerleader and in basketball. She
The daughter of
member for two Conrad was re-elected president
and Waldo Proctor secretary of Fund Officials MacKenzie Memorial
Organization Is Headed
by Elmer L. Conrad
WALLED LAKE — Elmer L
the Dr. O. R. MacKenzie Memorial
Clinic at the organization's first
annual meeting this week.
Others named included J. L. Tay-
lor, vice president, and Margarct| Lena Bain of West Highland road.
Dennis, treasurer,
The memorial clinic is a non-
profit corporation set up in the
memory of Dr. 0, BR. MacKen-
sie, prominent Walled Lake phy-
sician, who died in an auto crash
late last summer,
Plans are to have the clinic,
now being constructed in his honor,
completed by fall.
The corporation has $11,300 cash Will Honeymoon in Canada ;
MILFORD — Two young people
j|of Milford were united last Sat-
urday when Helen Bain of West
Highland road became the bride
of Jerome Lee of Canal street.
They were united in a Nuptial
High Mass in St, Mary's Catholic
Chureh attended by guests from
Pontiac, Lansing, Ann Arbor, Bir-
mingham, Trenton, Dearborn,
Clawson, Rochester and Howell.
Forest Bain of Pontiac and Mrs. The bride is the daughter of |
Jerome’s parents are Mr. and |
Mrs, LaVerne B. Iee of 124, |
Canal St,
Helen chose a Dresden figurine
gown of crystal white lace and
tulle. The molded net bodice was
designed with a portrait neckline
which was detailed with pleated
tulle and a band of delicate Chan-
tilly lace winging out over the short
cap sleeves.
Her bouffant tulle skirt wwept
on hand and approximately $11,000
in pledges of materials, labor and
ing.
At 8 p.m. today and tomorrow,
the Walled Lake Schools are pre-
senting a benefit show at the high
school. The participating students,
teachers and parents hope to raise
$2,000 for the clinic fund.
Pufbalis are an edible member
of the mushroom family. Some
in Woman's Memory
METAMORA — A Christian flag
will be dedicated Sunday at 2:30
p. m. at Thornville Community
Church in memory of Mrs. Mable
Petibone
Mrs. Petibone passed away last
December. A program will include
special music, with William Spence,
Robert Gavette and the Rev. Rich-
reach a size of more than ten
ard Degrow present. Milford Couple..Married
in Catholic Rite Recently over taffeta silk to the floor. A
band of tiny net leaves edged with
pearls secured her veil and she
carried a white prayer book mount-
ed with Amazon lilies.
Serving as maid of honor was
Miss Dawn Conklin, Bridesmaids
were Donna Slaughter and Shar-
on Bain, sister of the bride.
David Roberts served as best
man. Ushers were Robert Wathen,
Charlies Scheinbert, Eari Whipple
and Maarice Corrie
Nieces of the bride’ Chariene
held from 2 to 5 p.m.
After a week's wedding trip in
Canada, the new Mr. and Mrs. Lee
will live at 102 Detroit St. Both
are graduates of Milford High
School. Jerormne, eznployed at Gen-
eral Motors Grounds, is a
student at Genera) Motors Tech.
——————
You Will SAVE More When You Shop
treasurer in her
ninth and senior years, a cheer-
leader for four years and was|
named DAR Citizen thisy ear. Mary |
also was active in girls’ softball
and basketball. She is planning to
attend Western Michigan College.
Marie is the
daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Chester |
Beauregard of
3294 Coolidge Rd. | Rochester and)
also belongs to
the National Hon-|
or Society.
She had the!
lead in the junior |
play and was ac-
* tive in the debate
club in her fresh-
MARIE
»|man year. She plans to attend
Michigan State Normal College this
fall on a scholarship.
a
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———
THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, MAY 14, 1954 — a ee
Oe ” ” . —y 7 7 _ 2 R43
N h | d Haverford Course Set prepare oe tae for particip®- Motherly Instinct Moves jeu safe shelter for the tails un- . . . . | | r s w pups. 4
ew Ou ers to Modify Specialization this suburban Philadelphia Quaker Hen to Care for Pups | ee eae s of the = GALLAGHER’S ACCORDION $C P ; . | College. Hahns care feed- | mp) !
HAVERFORD, Pa. (UP)—Presi-| BREMERTON, Wash. &® — When | ing, by bottle, until the pups’ moth- | [& rs
1 ' dent Gilbert F, White of Haverford) © _ a hen with strong mother instinct | er got back from the hospital. Has a Special Offer for the Next f ld .) nl College has announced a new Sen- ‘Vices’ Assist Politicos | adopted four wee puppies, there |
for Seminar, financed by $29,000 INDIANAPOLIS, Ind. (UP)—This {Was just one trouble. - 25 S I U DEN I S
St. Louis Judge Sets |from the Rockefeller Foundation, | item appeared in a weekly news As an old worm-snatcher, Susa- Get a Good
May 21 for Sentencing | to help seniors overcome the ote portal monet Bad “9 belle was ag by ge USED TV
4 . . of specialization. | County Chairman Nelson O. Grills: | tiny tails. Mr. Mrs. Ww
Officer m Perjury By considering a fundamental | ‘The persons in charge of political} Hahn said the resulting cries of | et HAMPTON TV
human problem together, students | activity at the neighborhood level | the quadruplets appealed to Susa- 825 West Huren KANSAS CITY @® — Federal | trom different fields expect to take|are the precinct committeemen|belle's higher maternal ——— $10-$15 Down—$5 per Week
Judge Albert A. Ridge has turned | sio-k and gain perspective and so and their vices.” and it wasn't long before she pro down requests for new trials by a
former St. Louis police lieutenant
and a suspended patrolman con- i
ot the Greenlease Tancom money: d Ge Vv e ransom money.
The folge yeantsdap alee denied an t - ds — Come to 5
Majestic =a M Newlyweds , gg
LY E UIMeTOUuUSETUIL: jst Everything Dollars Saved! MORE Value Received! years in prison and a $2,000 fine. j
res
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™ . With Bookcase Headboard $15 Extra tsid Gal $895
Outside White. . . seeee 3” EXCITING MODERN KITCHEN OUTFIT—SAVE NOW Outside Primer ee eeeee Gal. $595 One of the biggest value kitchen groups we've ever
offered! Handsome chromed, 5-piece dinette set has
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If Purchased Separately $119
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Use a Good Ladder!
6 Ft. Step Ladder....... $495
7 Ft. Step Ladder....... $545
New Spring and Summer Hours:
MON., THURS., FRI. 8 to 8
TUES., WED., SAT. 8 to 6
Free Parking in Our Big
ACME OUAzrry House Bunt Verte can the
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' 1 Keego Hardware Warehouse 20 Osmun St. FE 2.6506
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p.m. For Your Convenience Open Daily & Sun. 10 ¢. m. to 9 ~
BE GIVEN AWAY MAY 15 — 22 — 29
a NS ——- eo ll al — = - on.
THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, MAY 14, 1954
Pitching Horseshoes
Artist Who
Seven Fallen Pillars; the Middle East. 1945-1952. Kimche
A Dragon Apparent: travels in Indo-China, Lewis
These and others may be obtained at the
AL
Hi
His Nose Gets Cockeyed
a :
Mr. T. S. Eliot, 24 Russell Square,| cheaper the price, the greater the
TY Dear Mr. Eliot happens to be filled with heady
PONTIAC Cl LIBRARY The other day, what with spring| verses about garlic :nd sp
47 WILLIAMS 8T. and all, I bought me a 50-cent copy| phires.
Phone: FE 4-1508 ot “The Pocket Book of Modern
Hours: 8 AM.-$ P.M. -— Saturday: 8-6 Vv ese.” When I thumbed through The “shrewd” snobbism which
though SE.Se§ uy
: Raids by Israelis eek
See¢
FE }
for Paraguay’s President
| week’s revolution. Stroesner’s elec- Looks Down
The moral, as I see it, dear
Mr. Eliot is a simple one: The
volume — even if the volume
leads an author to pooh-pooh the
popular-priced pocket book is sel-
don good economics, for the most
intelligent reader isn't always the
richest one.
Another thing . . . the snob ap-
proach can easily backfire. The
artist who looks down his nose at
the crowd stands a good chance
of getting cockeyed.
Yours, etc.,
Billy Rose.
(Copyright 1964)
-| Arabs Condemn
JERUSALEM, Jordan Section ®
— €ondemnations of Israel by the
Jordan-Israeli' armistice commis-
sion mounted today in the wake of
new border incidents and a con-
tinued Israeli boycott of the com-
mission.
The two Jordan members and
the U.N. truce chairman, U‘S.
Navy Cmdr. Elmo Hutchison, held
yesterday that Israelis violated
the armistice line twice last Mon-
day, Two condemnations of Israel
were voted Wednesday and two
others Tuesday.
The incidents Monday involved
shootings by Israeli patrols, ac-
cording to Yousef Haikal, the sen-
jor Jordan delegate to the com-
mission, He said a patrol fired
across the demarcation line at
Khirbet Nasha and wounded two
Arab farmers. Later in the day an
Israeli platoon reportedly shot at
Only 1 Candidate Listed
Paraguay ®—Para-
guay will hold elections to select
a new July 11. He will
week.
The nation’s sole political party,
candidate Gen. Alfredo Stroesner,
who played a major role in last
tion is assured since he will be
the only candidate.
at these unsually low prices.
See BART ON bg
A me
EF Pie a
or al wa ad «
A beautiful companion marker with
decorative design at its best, express-
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36” Long, I" High. Reg. $165.00
Sale Priced at . . . $]2800
42” Long. 16° High. aa $195.00
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The many mirrors of its entirely
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OPEN: FRIDAY NIGHT TIL-9 & Free Parking in Our Lot’ Behind Store ,
THE PONTIAC PRESS (A 1
~ FRIDAY, MAY 14, 1954 PONTIAC, MICHIGAN
Board of Education to Approve Vote
Reds Change Vietminh Into Modern Army. Fe ge [Meeting ls Se
for 7:30 Monday
~ ©
3
it 7 &
oat >)
aS ~*
(Editor's note: On Dec. 19, 1946, | in organs” — 10-barreled rocket , nese Communists from Generalis-
china lntunebed_ tne ‘eal Wer | launchers. simo Chiang Kai-shek, machine|on the bloody night on Dec. 19,
with the an massacre a 7
: - . , guns from Czechoslovakia, medi- |1946 a ons oe
rile ST ak tee mand The French Union forces are |...) supplies trom East Germany, a ill-trained. Three Matters to Be
run war. Seven and a half years | now fighting » well-organized | jeeps and two-ton trucks from So-| In the summer of ne. =~ a Voted in J 14
nese Communists figh On une | viet Russia,
Gen, Henri Navarre, the French
commander in chief, has said that
a Chinese Communist antiaircraft
regiment took part in the Dien
Bien Php fighting, possibly with Weapons at their disposal and with
a well-trained, well-disciplined pred,
they were able to fight the Fren
at better than even terms at Dien
Bien Phu. The following dispatch
tells what happened in the years
between Dee. 19, 1966, and today.)
By JEAN BARRE army that can throw whole di-
visions into battle. French mili-
tary leaders have awakened to
the fact that they have a mod-
ern-style wa? on their hands—
a major war considering the im- ang Kai-shek Nationalists drove
down to the border of Indochina.
A French staff officer cited
three turning points since then.
1—The battle of Cac Bang in School Balloting
Pontiac Board of Education will
meet Monday night to approve the
paper “machinery” for the June
United Press Staff Correspondent
SAIGON, Indochina (UP)—Once,
the Indochina Communist hardened in the flames of jungle! sia and its “satellites.
campfires among their weapons.
Five years ago rifles were their |
principal weapons in their hit-and | pour Chinese Red-made ammuni- |
run attacks on French outposts.
Last week the Reds smashed) | Across ttié “Chinese border into |
Indochina rebel-held northern portance of the issues involved,
How did all this come
rebels | The answer is Communist China.
numbered bamboo spears, with tips | And behind Communist China, Rus- about? radar equipment.
French planes were knocked
out of the sky by surprisingly
accurate fire, In eight weeks at
Dien Bien Phy the rebels claim-
ed to have destroyed 62 planes.
The French haven't argued.
“The rebels are now under the | tion, radios, rifles, burp guns, 12-| complete control of the Red Chi-
| millimeter mortars; old Japanese | nesej government,’ said deputy duly 1950. Cao Bang is 15 miles
below the Chinese frontier, on
a main highway. In their attack
on the town, the rebels fought
for the first time as an organized
army, They took it.
Before then some supplies had
rebels through the thinly-held line
of French outposts. Now the way the defenses of Dien Bien Php with | equipment, American 105-millime- | Commander in Chief Gen. Pierre | ed f m flow of
heavy artillery and dead “Stal-/ter howitzers captured by the Chi- | Bodet. was open or a major Ww
SS.
+. ‘a
mn 4
/ '
Pontiac Press Photes
NEW TESTING LABORATORY—Mrs. James | Thursday during the first day of Pontiac General
Ryan, of 1 Spokane Villa (left), and Mrs. Duncan | Hospital’s open house.
McVean,° of the Pontiac State Hospital grounds, Here they watch Miss Mary
Anne Tauel, laboratory technician. The hospital is |
were among visitors to the testing laboratory | open to visitors again today from 1 p. m. to 8 p. m.
Pontiac General
Open House
Closes Tonight About 100 persons visited Pon-
tiac General Hospital Thursday
during the first day of its. annual
open house, according to Miss Shir-
ley Dovre, administrative assist-
ant.
The event will end tonight at 8.
The program consists of a guided
tour through the hospital followed
by a refreshment and question
During tours guests may inspect
modern hospital equipment and
get a close-up view of the work-
ings of the 198-bed institution.
Groups of six or more persons | supplies.
2—The battle of Vinh Yen was
January 1951, Vinh Yen is only 30
that he asked Paris for tamks and
war planes in a hurry,
3—The battle of Dien Bien Pha
starting on March 13. The rebels
unveiled their heavy artillery and
finally the “Stalin organs.” Gen.
Navarre estimated the Reds fired
200,000 shells. Hundreds of Rus-
sian-made Molotov trucks poured
in supplies.
It is estimated that the rebels’ |
regular army now numbers more
than 100,000. Some put the total
strength, including part-time guer-
rillas, as high as 400,000.
The French Unin forces total
about 450,000 including 220,000 inex-
perienced Viet Nam native troops. |
But the French have a vast ter-
ritory to defend against the reb- |
els, who have freedom to attack
anywhere.
The French have superiority in
armor and fire power. The rebels
have no tanks or planes — so far
But it is reported that rebels
are being trained to fly planes
in China, and that the Peiping
government has shifted some of
its Russian-made MIG 15 jets to
South China.
Gen. Navarre, discussing the
Dien Bien Php defeat, said that the
fighting there opened a new phase
of the war and that, with Red Chi-
nese help, the rebels might. spread
‘% |their operations throughout Indo-
china,
| In that event, Navarre said, the
lonly thing to do, if the Geneva
| conference fails, is to internation-
| alize the war.
‘Elections Committee
LANSING @® — A legislative
committee to recommend further
changes in Michigan election laws
was reactivated today. It is aided been smuggled from China to the |
fo Study Law Change, ,
- ty —_