. day, 
  ° the Weather <7" 
Partly Cloudy-With Rain’ Details page two ae THE PONTIAC PR K ) | : 
  
wekewekre PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 26, 1955 —84 PAGES   113th YEAR °* 
| 
Ike ls Comfortable’ After He   
Sir Wiriston in Dutch 
  ' United Press Phote 
PORTRAIT FOR DUTCH PARLIAMENT — This portrait of Sir 
Winston Churchill, by Dutch artist Max Nauta, will be hung in the 
Parliament of the Netherlands. The painting of the former British 
Prime Minister will be the first portrait of a foreign statesman to be 
hung in the Dutch Parliament. The portrait was painted at Sir Winston's 
country home at Chartwell, England. 
  
Pee Wee Reese Predicts: 
Brooklyn in Six Games! ‘Editor's note: This is the first in an exclusive series Of stories covering the 
World Series by PeeWee Reese, Brooklyn Dodgers captain. The stories will run 
each day in the Pontiac Press until the completion of the series. 
By PEEWEE REESE 
NEW YORK—This is the first writing chore I've 
done, so I'll go cut on a limb right away. I’m picking 
my team to beat the Yankees in six games—maybe five. 
Some of the boys were sort of hoping it would be 
Cleveland—bigger ball park, bigger check—can’t say I 
blame them but I was rooting for the Yankees. 
I prayed that some year I'd hit over three hun- 
dred and last year I did. I also prayed we would 
get another crack at the Yankees before I hung up 
my spikes. Now we're going to get even for those 
five lickings. 
I think we've got them beat in pitching. They 
haven’t got Allie Reynolds, Vic Raschi, and Ed Lopat 
any more. They beat us ten to one. Only two of the 
present Yankee pitchers, Whitey Ford and Tommy 
Byrne, ever faced us in a series. We beat Whitey in '53 
and chased Tommy in '49 even if we didn’, win that 
game. Maybe Casey Stengel will start them in the first 
two games at the stadium, and maybe they are both a. 
little better now. But Don Newcombe, Johnny Podres, 
Billy Loes, Clem Labine and Carl Erskine aren't too} 
bad either. 
Don’t forget we had the best pitching staff in 
a tough hitters’ league—and while you are looking, 
the record shows we did fairly well in the other 
departments, too. Man for man, I think we can match 
anything they’ve got. : | delphia, and his white Russian 
* | suffering from asthma, bronchitis | 
| nists frequently invaded her con- | Five Americans 
Among 8 Freed 
by Red Chinese British Ships Transport 
Group From Shanghai 
to Hong Kong 
HONG. KONG (INS) — 
Five Americans, including 
a sickly Carmelite nun and 
a young girl who speaks 
better Chinese than Eng- 
lish, reached Hong Kong 
teday from Red China. 
The five U. S. citizens ar- 
rived on two British boats 
along with three relatives 
who were not Americans. 
The eight were: 
Dilmus T. Kanady, 3%6, of Hous- 
ton, Tex., a Shanghai businessman 
who was the last of ten Americans 
the Reds promised to release two 
weeks ago. 
Eva Stella du Gay (Sister The- 
resa), 61, of New York City, a 
nun at the Roman Cathoiic Car- 
melite Convent in Shanghai. 
Emma Angelina Barry, 13, and 
her white Russian mother, Mrs, 
Tamara K. Barry, The girl's fa- 
ther is American and is believed 
to be living somewhere in the 
US. 
Robert H. Parker, 83, of Phila- 
wife, Natalie, 
- Mrs. Marcella Huizer, 39, and 
her Dutch husband, Peter, 49. Mrs. 
Huizer’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. 
  John Mansternan, live in Walcott, 
Ind. 
The Huizers and Sister Theresa | 
entered Hong Kong aboard the! 
British ship Surat. The Parkers, | 
Barrys and Kanady arrived on the 
Hunan. 
Kanady looked pale and thin 
and was ordered by a doctor to 
rest for tliree days. He appeared 
to have lost considerable weight 
but he was able to say that he 
was “very happy te be here.” . 
Sister Theresa looked very weak 
and pale. She had been seasick 
throughout the voyage ‘and was 
and arthritis. 
She told newsmen that Commu- 
vent and tried to get the sisters 
to “confess.” She said the nuns 
were under a great strain and had 
only poor food. 
Little. Emma Barry said shé was 
“very excited" to be free. She 
added: 
“By looking at Hong Kong from 
the porthole I think it is a much | 
better place. It is no fun at all 
in Shanghai." 
Fisher, Debbie | 
to Wed Tonight, | 
Friends Report |     
    
  Here in the Forbes Field dressing room this was a 
good game for us. We're fit and ready and really up. 
for this series with no complexes. Are you listenin’ | 
Joe DiMaggio? ‘(Copyright Hardale Syndicate) 
  
‘Michigan 4th in Income 
WASHINGTON wh — Michigan | 
| ranked ninth in the nation with a Janet Swirling — 
Toward Yucatan ims: oesrest io closed yesterday. The figure com- 
‘pared with $793 for 1929. 
Nicaragua, Honduras = = ————— 
May Escape Direct Hit Wise Li’l Ole Bird 
if Hurricane Turns | NEW YORK (INS) — A pigeon flew from Washington to New York 
. yesterday without flapping a wing. | MIAMI, Fa. * — Hurricane The bird stowed away in the | 
Janet whipped the mid-Caribbean | jaggage compartment of an East. | 
sea with 110-mile winds today as ern Air Lines plane.   | tor NEW YORK (INS)—Friends of | 
Debbie Reynolds today reported | 
| the couple will be. married tonight poman 
at Grossinger's Country Club near | 
Liberty, N. Y. 
The ceremony, is. they said, 
' scheduled for early evening at the | 
close of Yom Kipfiur, the solemn | 
holy day of the Jewish faith which | 
ends at sundown. ; 
The Catskill resort has a senti- | 
mental interest for Eddie, who | 
rose to stardom after he was | 
we se : |of government during his illness. discovered there by Eddie Can- | ooat | 
tor at a 1949 Labor Day show. | 
Guests planning to attend the | 
wedding were said to include Can- | 
and heavyweight champion 
Rocky Marciano, a friend of Ed-| 
dies’ who trains at Grossinger's. 
Both Eddie and Debbie are at. 
the resort, but neither is talking. | - 
a        
WHEN VISITING HERE — President and Mrs. 
Eisenhower are shown here as they were caught by 
the camera during the campaign stages of the 1953 Fisenhowers Visiting Pontiac in 
A: 
tent in Fitzsimons 
  election, The chief executive is now in an oxygen 
from a heart attack suffered Saturday. ‘92 Ae ered     
Pontiac Press Phete 
Army Hospital, Denver, recovering 
  
Local Churches 
Praying for Ike Congregations Offer) 
Fervent Petitions for 
President's Recovery 
Churches of all faiths 
denominations in Pontiac and 
surrounding communities offered 
solemn prayers Sunday for the 
health and recovery of President 
Eisenhower, following his heart 
attack in Denver Saturday. 
All differences were forgotten, as 
ministers, priests and rabbis joined 
their congregations in asking 
Divine help for the ailing leader. 
A look of personal sorrow coald 
be seen on the faces of many, as 
heads were bowed in_ fervent 
petition, Remarks from Demo- 
crats and Republicans alike indi- 
cated deep-felt respect for the - 
President, and concern for his 
well-being. 
First Congregational, 
Methodist, Bethany Baptist, Central 
All 
| Saints Episcopal, Salvation Army | 
and First Presbyterian were 
'singer Eddie Fisher and actress | 4mong Protestant churches offer: ) ing special devotions. 
Michael Church and other 
and Greek Catholic 
churches offered separate pleas, 
in addition to the regular Sunday 
prayers for the heads of our 
government. 
Jewish congregations are offer- 
ing daily prayers for the President. 
Included in the special observ- 
ances were prayers for the family 
of Eisenhower and for those who 
must carry on the responsibilities St. 
Bad Axe—22 Degrees 
BAD AXE (®—The temperature getting court orders allowing them | air Force Base at Detroit, have 
plunged to 22 degrees in Bad Axe to take amounts directly out of a) not been released. early today, the lowest reading in 
the state. Frost covered the ground 
but no extensive crop damage was 
reported, and | | Royal Oak on operations of 
Michigan. 
Broomfield and his com- 
mittee members have been 
gathering information for) 
the past several months 
'“on these firms who offer | to keep a person's creditors | 
happy for a few dollars a 
week,” the lawmaker ex- 
plained. 
“On a national scale, there are 
some 200 companies in the field, 
many of them with numerous 
| branch offices. Only a few of them 
run legitimate operations,” he 
stated. ‘The rest are out to get 
|all they can from already hard-) 
pressed debtors who turn to them 
in desperation.” ° | 
      Only thre states in the na- 
tion have laws regulating debt- 
management firms at all, he ex- 
| plained. The rest, including 
| Michigan, presently have no con- 
| tret whatsoever. 
| The cémmittee intends to gather 
‘data which will allow it to recom- 
mend legislation strictly regulat- | 
ing such firms, Broomfield add- 
ed. 
Persons already in dire financial 
straits most often fall victim, the 
senator asserted. 
“These firms make glowing ver- 
bal promises to keep creditors off | 
'a debtor's neck by working deals | 
for smaller weekly payments. They | 
say they will keep creditors from   | debtor's paycheck. 
“They claim to charge only | 
| a slight service fee, but many | 
(Continued on Page 2, Col. 4) Debt- Management Firms 
Slated for Probe by State 
The State Senate’s Banking and Corporations Com- 
mittee will begin hearings about Oct. 15 in Pontiac or 
Such firms have sprung up ail over the country in 
the past few years and their operations border on a 
“national scandal,” said Sen. William S. Broomfield, 
(R-Royal Oak), the committee's chairman. 
' partly cloudy with occasional rain 
| ending. A high of between 58 and 
| before 8 a.m, was 44 degrees, reg: | 
Air Force Investigates debt-management firms in 
  
Skies to Be Cloudy, 
With Rain Predicted 
Today's weather is due to be 
beginning this afternoon and con- 
tinuing tonight, according to late 
forecasts of the U.S. Weather 
Bureau, 
The high today in Pontiac is ex. | 
pected to be from 58 to 62 de- 
grees. Tonight the temperature 
may go as low as 48, Tomorrow 
it will be partly cloudy with rain 
62 is predicted, 
The low in downtown Pontiac | 
istered at 6 a.m. ‘this morning. The 
temperature at 1 p.m. was 60, 
  
Saturday's C47 Crash 
BURNS, Wyo, (®—Investigation 
of the fiery crash of a CAT Air 
Force plane which claimed the 
lives of seven men Saturday night 
continued near here today. 
Identities of the victims, who 
were flying from Steadt Air Force | 
Base near Reno, Nev., to Selfridge ' 
The crash occurred while a light 
snow was falling, but Air Force art Attac ‘Condition of President 
| Prensa.” The Peron government 
  Stable, Doctors Claim Specialist Slated to Examine 
Denver Hospital- Today 
DENVER (AP)—President Eisenhower's crack team 
of physicians reported today he had “a comfortable 
night” and that his condition “remains stable.” 
The 7 a. m. bulletin also announced that the Presl- 
dent would be examined again later in the morning - 
by one of the world’s foremost heart specialists, Dr, 
Paul Dudley White of Boston. om 
_. The latest word on Eisenhower's condition came 
after his doctors had described his Saturday heart attack | 
as “moderate”—neither mild nor serious. 
tary James C. Hagerty. It said: —~ 
“The President had a comfortable night. 
“His condition remains stable, 
“Dr. White will see him — this morning.” 
na   
Peron Awaiting 
Safe Conduct OK New Regime Promises 
Papers to Ex-Dictator; 
Exile Route Planned 
  
  i # le 1 
} i   : 
fe OF li i 3 
3 5's Delivery of the papers 
pected at any time, There 
indication that Provisional Presi- 
B 
: fe fags Hh | | é 
| E 
k i was still the six-million-member 
Géneral Confederation of Labor 
(CGT), the foundation of Peron’s 
popular support. Press and radio 
repeated constantly an announce- 
ment that the government would 
respect all of labor’s gains, 
Hector Hugo di Pietro, CGT 
secretary general, said in a broad- 
cast Lonardi had assured him that 
the government “will not modify 
the situation of the newspaper La’ 
H i ! itt ij H fa 36 
E es 
: ¥ 
: 
i 
i i seized the famous independent 
daily in 1951 and gave it to the 
CGT. 
} = 
attack as “moderate” in the after- 
noon bulletin. It had been first 
(Continued on Page 2, Col. 1) 
A Story of Love: 
Sick Boy to Gain 
From Long Vigil 
  Hitler’s Admiral Freed 
BERLIN ( -—Erich Raeder, 
grand admiral of Hitler's navy, 
was released from Spandau war 
crimes prison today. Serving a 
life sentence fer war ‘crimes, the 
79-year-old former fleet command- 
er..was freed because of his age 
        officials said no radio messages 
indicating trouble were received. and: feeble health, Allied sources 
said,   
it clung persistently to a course | 
that would eventually bring it to Key to Survival: Enough Water, When and Where Needed   
Central America. 
* * * 
The coastlines of Nicarauga and 
Honduras were some 600 miles 
ahead of the storm. But a slight 
northward turn would cause it to 
miss and then it would have ah 
additional 350 miles -of water to 
cross before it could reach the 
Yucatan Peninsula. (EDITOR'S NOTE: — America's 
water resources are dwindling #0 
rapidly our agricultural end indus- 
trial advancement is threatened 
with disaster—in some cases within 
a decade. Here. in the first of five 
articles on the shortage of water, is 
the story behind an approaching 
national crisis.) . 
By ROGER D. GREENE — 
AP Newsfeatures Writer Weathermen at the Miami | 
storm forecasting center predict- | 
< danet would hold to its west- 
northwesterly course for the next | 
12 hours. It was moving about 10 
miles an hour. | 
The storm bypassed Jamaica 
some 240 miles to the south early 
today. Weathermen said no dan- 
gerous winds were expected to | 
reach the island. 24 
Janet, the year's 10th tropical | 
storm, caused an estimated 50 or 
more deaths in the Windward 
Islands when it hit @here ‘Thurs-   ‘thirsty cities, factories and farms 
today are scooping water from the | 
dipper. There's trouble ahead. 
for dack efit, and..experts warn 
disaster could strike again unless 
U.S. communities awaken to the 
danger. 
_ President Eisenhower un- 
« 4 WASHINGTON WW — America's: 
nation’s rain barrel with a giant | 
| shortage problems. More and 
Men have fought and died for| more, they are reaching out— 
iwatér, Civilizations have pershed) derscored the urgency of the prob- | 
lem last year when he set up a 
Cabinet committee on water re-) 
sources and declared: 
“If we are to advance agricul- 
lturally and industrially we must | 
make the best use of every drop. 
lof-water which falls on our soil | isome regions — with the drop or which can be extracted from 
the Oceans...” | 
than 1,000 American 
and -towns have water More 
cities 
| sometimes hundreds of miles— 
| for additional water supplies to 
keep pace with the 20th cen- 
tury’s “explosion” of population 
and the vast expansion of indus- 
  , try since World War Il. 
& Denver, fastest growing city in 
the mountain west, reports, for ex- 
ample, that without more water its 
‘industrial growth will be stopped, 
dead by 1963. 
_ Underground water tables are. 
| reported lowering in most of the | 
United States — alarmingly in 
averaging 40-feet from Texas to 
In Today's Press 
eeeeee 
Theaters ....,.....+:.. 
TV & Radio Programs . 
Wilson, Earl.........° 
“Women’s Pages..,...15, 16, 17 California -in recent years. This 
summer ground-wateg tables | 
dropped to all-time record low 
‘levels in many states, Even the 
humid East is feeling the pinch. 
Wells in Atlantic City, N.J., used 
_to flow at 20 to 25 feet above sea 
level, Now the ground-water level 
has dropped to 8 feet below the 
sea. 
| In Salina, Kan., the level has | 
, fallen 26 feet in the past three 
iyears, It's dropping five feet a 
| year in parts of Arizona. New wells 
| in Mississippi have to be drilled 
jas much as 500 feet deeper than 
a few years ago to get flowing 
water. i 
| Over-pumping of wells ‘to supply | 
?mushrooming. populationg and in- 
: %   (plies alofig coastal areas—notably 
| waste * 
Thirsty Cities, Factories, Farms Face New Crisis. dustry has led to the seepage of! 
salt water into fresh water sup- 
in California, New Jersey, Long 
Island, N.Y., Louisiana and Flor- 
ida—and in Los Angeles it has 
caused the land to sink eight feet 
in some spots. 
But what gives nightmares to 
Federal and State authorities is 
the possible long-range effect on 
human health arising from the 
flushing of millions of tons of 
noxious chemicals, olls, acids, 
grease and other industrial 
into the nation’s water- 
ways, 
Amid growing countrywide short- 
ages, one out of every seven cities 
¥     with a 10,000-plus population has 
to restrict the use of water at 
times. Hundreds of cities have had 
to ration or ban lawn sprinkling} ®S¢ from three to 18, 
and car washing in the dry sum-| They are for a polio-crippled boy, 
mer months. Some residents} 10, and his father and mother. — 
“police” each other to guard) The unidentified boy doesn’t 
against violations. New Haven, | know about it yet, Barr said, be- 
Conn., has had trucks | cause it would “spoil the surprise 
prowling the city to warn against! for him:" - ; : 
daytime A mover yey en ne ata 
“The on water | the summer at Coney base- 
are taken,” says 
Carl G. Paulsen, chief of the U.S. 
‘water re- 
  cliff dwellings in the American 
(Continued on Page 27,’ Col. 1) 
    
Stricken Chief Executive at | 
  ; 
  
     
   
        
         ‘Affer Heart Attack    
    wT * «4 é Va fine Oe ee vay ne 
a i ( a 
A # : ee a ; } 
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K: 
  
  1s 'Comfortable’. | 
described as a “mild coronary 
thrombosis,” a clotting of blood 
in a branch of the arteries. which 
supply blood to the heart muscles. light tonights City Commission Altrusa Club, with Mrs. Opal Cun- | Buy 
The designation “mild” was meeting. In addition, bids will be | ningham of Detroit as guest Now 
onee—in the Saturday awarded foy the mechanical por- | speaker. for 
— mo a a : tion of the work to be done, 1 Christmas 
a announcement that the 
ist who flew. here from the East. 
Eisenhower's illness, first an- 
nounced as a “digestive upset” by 
    
          THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 26.1955 
] The Day in Birmingham ‘ 
  
\for. Commissi 
A delay in the opening of Munici- 
  contract specified a Sept. 23. com- 
pletion date. 
          
  
    
    \Eton Rink Heads Agenda 
BIRMINGHAM—A review of fhe, Opening its fall activities with a 
Eton Park ice skating rink with| dinner meeting at the Community 
fan eye to paring costs, will high- House at 7 tonight will be the. on Meeting   seeeeeececoeeeeoos Saudi Arabia is being air-condi- 
tioned. . 
Governor of the fourth district ¢ 
Teachers at Baldwin School will @ . 
had been stricken, The al Parking Lot No. 1. credited | of Altrusa International, Mrs. Pe 
git ch to “moderate” came after pe oa te rae a i be Cunningham will speak on “A @ 
h been examined by White to a cement shortage, will be Governor's Eyeview of Altrusa.” | § 
oe, Seg bee cane aired, with a possible time exten- | <6) te 4 
. and another leading heart apecial- sion granted the contractor. The e 
open their classrooms for discus- ¢ 
sions with parents at 7:30 tonight, §$ 
with the PTA meeting to follow at | ¢@ 
  ee i aoe neion | 
rer 
OVER 
   
      
     FEET 
TALL 5 
rrrevrerrrrrr el elhUL   
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  ~ SPECIAL 
PURCHASE ‘To Bring You Our 
‘Lowest-Ever Price! 
      
  
     e a e . e e e ra 
e ° e . 3 3 
a | 
e rt i 
° ° e e ° ° 
. s 
. e e 
“his son John, Lawmakers may also change M wg 
= ~ eagle Wommcten | the type of stone to be used.in | 8. President Eliot Reynolds will . 3 | 
yesterday The chief executive's construction of a wall around the | discuss functions of the PTA. 2 °| 
wife moved Saturday night from | parking lot, Other agenda items He .will then introduce Paul 6 e Seve $5.97 on 6-Piece’ 
the Denver home of her mother include the extension of Hamil- | Carter, assistant superintendent of § . STAINLESS STEEL 
Mrs. John S, Doud to Fitzsimons | = ton across Hunter boulevard, | schools, and Roland W. Reese, @ e 
Hospital, where she took a room! § application for a bowling alley | Recreation Board» member, as ¢ » 3} ° 
across the hall from the Presi-  ~ license, and explanation of the | guest speakers. e 4 itc en 4 
dent's, She has stayed on there | United Foundation payroll plan. ; od deen : _@ 4 
since. John remained at the hos- 7 p ~ - * me dk sbainsiocag School pod will 3 e 4 
tal last ht too. ; irs, Are . ORhonda ice)| honor its teachers Ww a recep 4 e t 4 
Mthe First | Lady visited with her | = Gillie, 71, of 65 Lincoin St. died| tion at 8 tonight at the school. le e oo e 4 
husband twice yesterday. John had Saturday in Pontiac General Hos-| The school board and other offi- | § 4 A 4 
y. r ed : i a riginal $10.95 Value 
éne brief chat with bis father, who | pital after an illness of two years.| cials will stand in the receiving. © + ‘ 4 
has beeh in an oxygen tent since | Born in Washtenaw County, Oc-| line, re = : - 4 
he was hospitalized. Physicians | tober 13, 1883, she was the daugh- + * + I$ E xactly as Pictured e| 4 
said the tent is tandard procedure | ter of Elam and Alice Knicker- Ernest Charles Thompson is ¢) 4 
ivi coronary cases because it en | bocker Fuller, She married Arch| Service for Ernest Charles $ own ° z » 
Silay. patieid to get complete B. Gillie in Angola, Indiana, June} Thompson, 63, of 427 Southlawn, e al o? aS 4 
20, 1935, will be at 1 p. m. Wednesday at $ «Original $3 Value ©? srork etane 804 
Each medical bulletin on Eisen- | Coming here from Safém. | the Manley Bailey Funeral Home. 8 $ ©? % SPOON * MASHER 4 
hower’s condition was being tele- | Oregon, 33 years ago, she ioe? 4|with burial in White Chapel $  $ P «TURNER = * RACK 4 
phoned to Vice President Nixon in | member of Central Methodist | Memorial Cemetery. He died Sun- | ¢ e $I & Lifetime stainless steel, black § 
Washington before being made Church and was formerly em- | day after a long illness. ,@ rai ebonite handles, double riv- 4 
ss ployed at Pontiac Genefal Hos-| Mr, Thompson leaves his widow, | Cute... colorful... cuddly 9 | > ‘ 4 
public. And a White House aide pital Zula; three deughers, Mrs AL|@ gown to bring hours and @ } eted. LIMITED = ; 
: : : hula; ghters, Mrs.» Al-| tonit ; 
peg ners tour Frothoan Besides ~her husband she is) bert J. Landino of Birmingham; 3 spend 3 sheds dl rome agg : > ee 4 
Until yesterday noon the. Presi- survived by one daughter, Mrs.| Mrs. Ross L. Reilly of Allen Park; | $ . Sip Te 
. roy Ruth Corbett Janczarek of Detroit) Mrs. Chester Mildrowski of Mt. © {{@ e?> S | MAS ' 4 
dent's only nourishment had been brother, Gerald Fuller of ¢ ie @ e) BROTHERS 
fruit juices. Then he asked for ~~ her, Geyald Fuller | Clemens; his mother, Mrs. Jennie | ¢ seorne as ; ° 4 
3 aa ae. - | Thompson of Hazel Park; three | ©@ © ~ $3 N. Saginaw —2nd Floor 
— cupeechedioag 1m oe ‘Funeral will be at 10:30 a.m.) sisters, Mrs. Beulah Crocker, Mrs. 4 $8 N. Saginaw —Main Floor =| Ne ae ; 
—~ House Pre: Secret Wednesday from the Pursley Fu-| Mildred Jankowski, Mrs. Ora 209000 0000900000000000 : SaaS 
J Hagerty ag i papenn of neral Home with the Rev. Harold | Priest; three brothers, Roy L.,! @ ee e 
ti short and flew to Denver whe Nessel officiating. Burial will be} Arthur, Fred, and seven grand- | oo fe ne 
“os ~ in York Cemetery, York Twp.,| children. f > Just @ touch of your 
Pisenhower was stricken, reported Michigan SNe ge . mR y' 
President slept a good 2s j age ager ond you ore 
pp he an . oars © dine Richard| Marlene Anne Wertman FTREWEARS MOST DRILCIANT eae ee ined: 
ce* are ing ichar« i a: ; f : %, 
response to questions, Hage _| Service for Marjorie Anne Wert-| i " 4 2 in @ cloud of your fa- 
ond there was no ohadion’ és ee ee es ae man, three-and-half. month  old| ‘ * fe vorite Dena fragrance 
yet how long Eisenhower would he -_ the ‘slaht og A aiar daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Robert; ¢. : fi - 
have to remain in the hospital. He Ease ona tne Oem d safe in the D- Wertman, 31650 Westlady. | ' ie’ 
also said no cousideration was be-| PRAY FOR THE PRESIDENT—Two worshippers United Press Photo nay . he \ an nd e tine him | Suthfield Township was’ held at . eee | 
ing given to moving the President offered prayers for President Eisenhower at a side| Prayers were offered up by Protestant, Roman Cath- pee aby veal erp Sse ol ( today at Bell Chapel of) 2 ; 
back to Washington. altar in St. Patrick Cathedral, New York, yesterday. | olic and Jewish congregations throughout the nation, 419 8. Woodward Ave * the William R. Hamilton Co. In- | : 
The day before he was stricken, | —————-—-—-—————————- P trol ae Marble and tombment followed in White Chapel | 
Eisenhower played 27 holes of golf agg is , Memorial Cemetery. | ’ tq 
aang from 6 ey it P li T k 3 d P] Stat Plans Probe eee Vee ee The infant, who was born June . 
holiday at a Rocky Mountain fish- Ci y Oo 1ce a e I ace e arr Prem ane ee a ~. 13 at William Beaumont Hospital, | by NMA 
ott health and ‘was, in excellent | j S Pi t ] Sh ti f D bt C i morning and then found the safe died there Friday. 
of health and was in excellent In tate 1S O OO Ing 0 e ompanies | in a car parked with its motor | Pccd grad po nie) = and | 
opirite, ‘ idling, behind the building. ; SR, a as 
The attack hit the President) pontiac Police pistol team mem-| and each team member was pre- (Continued From Page One) Re ; ie | two brothers, Williany and Fred, | 
about 2 a.m, Saturday. He ap- | canted am tnnteteel chearetic box They summoned help which | all at home. | 
parently wakened Mrs. Eisenhow- bers took third place honors. iast , 5¢? . Og “| end up by taking is much as brought police assistances from | _—— 
er, who called Dr, Snyder to the week at the annual Michigan po: | Nye who led fellow team mem- | 25 per cent of the total debt fer | Bloomficld Hills and Township, Offi cers P ] e d 
Doud residence. | lice shoot at Jackson. | Nye whe ed fellow team ment | their services while making little | Troy Township, and Royal Oak, |  § a 
About 4 minutes later, the “. * 6 | bers with a 381 score. Next were | er no effort to do what they | Police said Bryce was on his way for M B b | 
White House said, Snyder detected | The local team scored 1424 points) Officer Robert Verkine, 358 Ot. | ctaim they will.” back inte the building to lock | arcuS Daby, | 
first symptons of a heart at- leer Gaines, 348; and OF Atich } the door he carried the safe | / ‘ | 
He lat led in Fitzsimor to place them behind shooters from) noo. gohan Justice, 345. — on whic Dirge nesta in ix » eas and cadaced Grong | Won t Prosecute 
specialists who made a| Kalamazoo (first) and Jackson a one se om. | the roof after tearing out a | | 
dhowin (@cond) ;_ Last year, the local men placed ties will be called before the com-| ™“ — we SAN FRANCISCO w — If the) 
Son ie rher Lacoll le lel 6 Tth in the shoot which pits city, | mitte, said Broomfield. vio ' woman who kidnaped baby Robert | 
heart. con- 2 * 4 * >, ee i ee es Mer yf. ¢ | 
that the President had! ‘They were awarded a plaque to| pees ee a ce Pima It has sent letters to persons be- hi Marion ernest ie Koch of-| Marcus @ week ago today wants | 
- ‘ ‘ ' tate Against | ing sued by their creditors offering | ice manager, wand (he (COMPSNY | 5 tetera hin to his ctib in Mt.| 
decided to hospitalize the bd aifiaged et headquarters heme each other for ‘the Governor's | tg keep them free of bill collectors | ledgers and between $400 and $500 2 ied el els 
      that Eisenhower walked 
unaided to his car for the seven Pontiac Deaths ~ | Trophy.         in checks were in the safe, and 
added that about $2,000 in cash and 
checks had been overlooked. | 
Further police investigation re-| 
vealed that Pearl's Gardens, |hy distributing each week what- 
Pontiac competed in the Class | ever the debtors could afford to 
B category for departments with pay their creditors, he asserted. 
M1 to 101 men. | “They : a 2 Sree | ey say they will charge only 
The Oakland County Sheriff's! . <mall service fee plus a few       Zion Hospital, police say, there's 
no trap waiting for her, 
* * * 
That the | announcement was 
drive to the hospital. next door restaurant at 469 S. ‘Mrs. Mary James Holman Dept, 3-man team placed 20th in| conts a week for appéasing indi- 
said later, however. that ge ae | competition with 40 class D teams. | vidual creditors and for bookkeep- fruitless searching and frustrating Woodward, had also been broken) 4 osq end leads. 
    
4 latest development in a week of | 
Pres: “ “ i . 
be ident, was “'supported ont) Mrs, Mary James Holman, 5%. | Team, members included Deputies 
      
  ” id the | ib 2 | ing,’’ the senator stated. into and $5.90 taken from a cash, : . . 
ed aaaee talk glares of 48 Elizabeth St. was dead OM Charles Rahn, Raymond Bills and | 4 e senator statec register! (Brvcell ls to (be | ques: Re Sight agaiel to flowkin from | 
. him i litter or | arrival at Pontiac General Hospital Ferris Holcomb. | “However, the debtor signs @ | tioned on both issues. ea, seldesy wast rem faa op 
. putting him in a@ Hitter OF Friday after an ilness of 18) ‘This was the first time that the| Contract containing a blank note + 8 @ | woman meeting the description of | 
cher” oi 
. nad having to carry him months. | Sheriff's Dept. has entered a team | j the buxom blond who presumably | 
an incline As first vi side aia aa ae a ee se |took the Marcus baby, then only | 
Calels. of Police, Police Chtet |° 8s old, from the Mt. Zion | 
Ralph W. Moxiey is one of nine | "SCY. 
law officials throughout Michi- | , IN 
FAMOUS later filled in by the company 
Born in Athens, Alabama, Sep-| in the shoot. to include a $50 service fee. 
tember 9, 1905, she was the daugh- The shoot, inaugurated 18 years| «The note is then\ turned over 
fer of Issom and Sallie Leslie | ago, is under the sponsorship of t another firm allied with the 
Fletcher. She married Dan Hol-| the Michigan State Police, Police | gebt-management company /which 
  .A heavy demand for facial fm- | 
by means of plastic The father, Dr. Sanford Marcus. | 
[wo Jima Airbase 
Ripped by Typhoon 
- warehouses and inflicted major is reported in London. man in Pontiac in 1948. 
  resident of the city for 12 years. 
Surviving. besides her husband 
are four children; John James Jr.. 
Willie Sue, Otho:-Lee and William 
Dell James, all at home. | 
Also surviving are three sis-| 
ters, Mrs. Emma Rainey of Pon: | 
tiac, Mrs. Willie Lue Townsend | 
of Detroit and Mrs. Ora Wallace | 
of New Market, Alabama. 
Service will be held’ at 1 p.m.) 
damage on all buildings. 'Tuesday from New Bethel Bap-— 
The storm lashed the World War | tig Church with the Rev. William | 
It island battleground with winds |}; pel! officiating. Burial will be 
up to 172 miles an hour yesterday. | in Qak Hill Cemetery. | 
Communications were out for!) The body is at’ the Frank Car- | 
more than 12 hours. ‘Later, mes- | ruthers Funeral Hotae. | 
sages called for food, tents and | = 
medical supplies. A relief plane | 
was sent by the Air Force. ‘George J. Robor 
Kingham said base quarters Service will be held at 9 a.m. 
were damaged but liveable and | Tyesday from St. Benedict's Cath- 
that the water supply was good. | jie Church fer George J. Robar. 
Lt. Col, Arthur R. Kingham of ¢ <1 2586 Lincolnshire Dr. Burial 
Cleveland, Ohio, messaged from | \ij) be in Mount Hope Cemetery. | TOKYO, @—A_ typhoo, roared 
toward Japan tonight after ripping 
up the American airbase on tiny, 
unprotected Iwo Jima. 
ported but the storm tore up all 
      
PONTIAC AND VICINITY — Mostly Coning here from Memphis, Ten- | Sheriff's Assn. 
nessee, Mrs. Holman had been a 
Crews Resume Hunt — | Chief's Assn. and the Michigan! sues the debtor for the $50. 
| “Instead of getting help, the 
|   
debtor finds himself being sued by 
one more creditor. 
‘The firm continually puts off a 
!court hearing on the suit until a 
itime when the debtor does not 
| appear. then gets a default judg- 
ment against him while he is ab- 
sent." for 3 Missing Pilots LANGLEY AIR FORCE BASE, 
Va. W—Air and surfate craft re- 
sumed their search today for three 
Langley-based Air Force jet pilots 
whose planes disappeared Satur- 
day on routine training missions. |- 
One was believed to have come 
down somewhere south of At- 
lantie City. Search for the other 
two was being centered in the 
Chesapeake Bay area. 
Two deflated life rafts of the 
type used in the missing FSF 
Thunderstreaks had been found— 
one near Plum Tree Island in the 
Chesapeake and the other in Mob- 
jack Bay, near Deltaville, Va. 
They provided the only clue. One man ended up by paying 
$142 to cover a $65 debt, said 
Broomfield. 
Legitimate debt - management 
firms support controlling legisla- 
‘tion which will chase dishonest 
operators from the field, the sena- 
tor stated. : 
No complaints have been lodged 
against firms in the Pontiac area, 
said’ Broomfield. One of them has 
appeared before the committee to 
urge proper legislative restrictions, 
he added:     Rayburn Says He Won't aan invited to mw with Gov. |?" 
7 o meet with Gov. | home from Mt. G. Mennen Williams in Lansing | today. | young mother was so grief stricken 
she refused food for several days 
Discussion will center around and had to be fed intravenously 
highway safety problems, and par- But she rallied Saturday after her 
ticularly on reducing fatal acci-| other two children, 3 and 2 years 
dents. old, were taken to her bedside. 
    
GM Powerama Closes 
26 -Day Exhibit in Chicago 
CHICAGO — The General Motors) executive vice-president; 
tion of Diesel and gas turbine | 
powér, Clased a 26-day run Sunday | 
night after being seen by well over { 
two million visitors. 
The big “World's Fair of lutionary lightweight train de- 
Power,"' which occupied 1,000,000 | signed and built by General Motors GM executives. 
or? fod Among the 
drew international attention. It was | 
the first time that developments in 
the important Diesel and gas tur- | Cotton” gin, 
bine engine fields had been dram- | ™4N) forms of land, sea. and air operating oil rigs, a saw 
tractions. may take his wife Hanna, 29, | 
Zion today. The. 
| 
jeorge | 
Powerama, a spectacular exhibi-| Russell, treasurer, and other top 
Powerama exhib- 
its were the GM aerotrain, revo-' 
mill; | 
and rock crusher; | square feet on Chicago's lake front. | at the request of railroad officials: | FRAGRANCES 
Realistically priced 
ef oS for 
three full ounces! 
igtes toal 
Beovtifully styled 
presentations in rich 
colors of blue, gold, 
red, gray, and black. 
  f TABU Peal 
        
     
     
       | c . - _ = =s = = 3 =i 
= Iwo that no casualties were re-. tosary Service will be held at Post Office Celebrates . . atized on so large a scale. | transportation and industrial oe tonk = {{@> cosmetics 
| The W eather | 8 p.m. today from the Pursley Fu- h i h T d Seek President's Chair Visitors came from throughout | Siac an eon seh Saginaw R f —Maina 
| neral Home. | 166t Birt day fe] ay | BONHAM, Tex. u—Speaker Sam| the nation and many foreign dancing tractors’ and other at- | Street BROTHERS Fiocs 
            
            
    
                    
   
    
      
      
   
           
              
        
       
     
        
     
  cloudy today and might ee aeeaeee Mr. Robar died Saturday after, wasHINGTON INS) — The Rayburn today denied published | countries. More than 100,000 _. fo ee ope el 
Oe te ett. femerroe parity | £0 illness of seven years. , Post Office celebrates its 166th Teports he will seek the Demo-| Chicago school children saw the | ore ete " 
a ee an ew gov | — birthday anniversary today. cratic presidential nomination in | admission-free show. 2) 
fo ee Sees OO ene Mrs. Rienza Smith It_now handles more than 175 18M h th Veteran Chicago police officials | : 
: ia) mp... = eee . a | “ 4 &é y sue ‘ ue ts | 
q coming east te veutheast 8-12 tonight. Anna Elizabeth Smith, 78, of 134 uhon seal a ° naan canals aah he meee MA eel ts eid described the Powerama_ crowds | Why Pay at Least 25 My 0 More? 
4 an re rest o ye world post- e § > NG p 
: th | Bush Ave., Gre 3lanc, died this ; - ve aa va as the largest here. since “‘A . 
‘ ao Gewobale’ srovettns 8 om | sorte oo nes Aa offices combined. : jo n eres slice Century of Progress’—Chicago’s | ...and SAVINGS Is Only Half the Story ! 
be . on ’ . Postmaster General Arthur E./ the party’s national convention be- | y. ave ; ” i : ie 
‘emt Wind velocity 4 mph | ic y 877 » marriec World's Fair—in 1933-34. 
Digection’ Rortheas, te ae aed Ee Summerfield pointed out that dur-| Cause of a campaign on his own ; . z BEST POSSIBLE 
sun oe Tents ot Her om., | jae 15 eae a, , Smith is a ne the past 166 years of federal | behalf for the nomination, CURTICE COMMENTS SUPER 
! rises Monday at 3.32 p.m ;sune 10, A. NEES. s Ss 8 te me ‘ a8. ; ann el 
5 BERR etter vente of Pama a eer eae | Yom Ki er ery eer ene sz PRINTS Downtown Temperatures ! Besides her husband she is sur- _ _ | om = Pees Ends Tonight an reception given the Power- £ ‘ 
4 SB. M...00 44-- TE &. Mec eee ee 55, vived by, two daughters, Mrs NEW YORK 5 ee = mee, ; | @ ‘Flectric Eye 
: T& Mevsversee Sh 12m : 3. \ Grace Newman of Pontiac, Mrs ‘Cit School Entered es < U—Yom.Kippur,/ama ‘‘reinforces my conviction) Timer Assures 
se Ma cssnee os Mf 1p mM....... 60 ec : a = Crane Race and y ‘ : 'the final and most sacred of the | that the Powerama made a sub- | OPING € 
AS -ppetegnagt las rr anc @ by Breaking Window | high holy days which ushered in! stantial contribution to public! ) gett Prat 
Sunday tn Pontiac The 1 paisa Vat the! itionelsc Officials jlawthor School | the Jewish New Year, ends at/ynderstanding of the technological 
Pighest temperature. .........6..5: “ 2 ae - y a s ne ne 2 icials at _— norne = joo, sunset tonight. Yom Kippur, the | progress being made by industry— r) ald = canine 
vweet setgmperevure sevarevec treet 47 | Johns unera lome with funera - Telegraph Rd., told Pontiac day of atonement, began at sun-/ jn this case, in the comparatively | Rs ece awe 
Weather—Very cool. arrangements pending ale pe mie ny, cits | — brpidvedd for Jews around! little known but most important) is 0 csemtas® 
= = : ' ay and the principal's €€\ the world with 24 hours of pr . . tine | : Decked Edges. 
One Year Age in Pontine 25 a | the 24 hours of prayer | areas of Diesel and gas turbine ifference ks Our 
Highest pueennere a> «jo <aryaens 2 Waterford Woman, 22, rifled. Nothing was reperted and abstinence from food and power.” . Month & ~Year 
perature,.....,.... “A missing | drink : : DATED PRINTS. 
senperetete. :-.: rainy “1 a | mitssi drink, oe 8 LOWER PRICES ‘eather—Cooi. ‘Hurt in Car Collision Officers said entry was made = On Sunday, approximately 4.300 | Prompt Service. 
i ee .. by breakin window ° = i i ; Sg | 
Highest ond Lowest Temperatures This Miss Norma Brown, 22, of Wa) og nen, na, —— ore Vending Machines | members of the American Bankers | 3 © Savings of 10% to 40% Money-Back GUARANTEE 
    | 
  
  
  30 in 1883 terford Township, was treated for | building's south side, 
  
Looted by Thieves         
           
   Assn. and their guests attended a| $ © Freshest. Pure Drugs 
special morning preview of the | 
                        
      
It's Simms for . if you e 
   
     
    find better prints. '       
   
      
     
      
    minor cuts. and bruises Sunday | > : © Experienced Pharmacists” nthuce in ie ~ 
erature Chart ’ ; : East: Kodacolor |20ywhere in Pontiac at Sc to 7¢ 
" 80 Ang ies 16 62 | after her car collided with: another Land Bought for School - | Three vending machines. were | Powerama. The bankers were | F Sring us your ane 
TE an $2 38 / on Elizabeth Lake road near Plum-| PETOSKEY «— The Petoskey | broken open and an undetermined | ®™ong many business, civic, mili- | for - 
$e oF Miweskes te 8 | stead road, Waterford Township Board of Education has purchased | amount of money taken by thieves ‘tary, and fraternal groups who) @ (@ RR TEM Gr Cuma Color Prints S | M A S @ 
50 60 si | Police said land for a new Sheridan School | who entered the Matthews - Har- | Were special _Powerama guests | ent sorvite aeoTMERS 
i ty i S 3 Officers said her car struck one and is planning a special bond is-| greaves used. car and truck sales. | Since the GM show opened to the) Tt Minimum charges [CAMERA DEPT . —Main Floor 
n° s Preneince 7 $0 «Lane, 40, of 110 Crescent Rd., who sue vote for eonstruction funds. room Sunday, Pontiac Police said. Public on Aug. 1. M 5 BROTHERS & 
g % Wethngtes’ i: 7 i pulled inte Miss Brown's path from Also proposed is a new addition | Entry was made by breakingya|  On- hand to greet the bankers 8 N. S Main Fl 
’ . “ry a a driveway. : to Petoskey High School. window at the rear of the building.) were Curtice; Albert Bradley, Me ehews oboe 
oe : % , = 4 » a : : f 
: 2 +} ‘ : : , dl | ; ‘ hd “4 i. : ( \ 4 
ery en g ; aa eae : 1 H ; : ‘ . ' | es | y ‘ 4 ‘ - o on 
I = ae sf i | hey, Lees bs : & é f | \ “3 \e . { \ i 4 
Lk      
    ; SEPTEMBER 26, 1955      
    + _‘THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY L! 5 1 
    Es 
  
SELECTOR DIAL 
Clearly marked; provi- 
des to 120 minutes of 
uninterrupted drying.    
    SUPER CAPACITY 
Full-size dryer allows 
free movement:of cloth- 
es while drying.    
“KNEE-ACTION” 
DOOR LATCH 
Push-button latch ~ 
opens door with light 
pressure cf your knee.     
        
    
            
       
    
    
  
  
      
  
       
            
  FEDERAL stores It’s here. A full’size dryer at a terrific low price! And 
what's more it’s a '56 model. Fully automatic with sel- 
ector dial providing up to 120 minutes of uninterrupted 
operation. Super capacity dryer cyclinder allows free 
movement of clothes while drying. “Knee-Action” door 
latch simplifies opening while carrying clothes. No extra 
installation cost . . . just plug into any 110 circuit.     
Price includes Delivery, Installation and Service 
  
  .s S 
FRIGIDAIRE 
“Thrifty Thirty” electric 
RANGE 
179% trade 
Designed with the small kitchen in mind. 
Big oven will hold 6 pies. New Imperial 
cook-master cooks dinner while you're 
away. All controls are conveniently grouped 
on easy-to-reach panel. Full-width storage 
drawer is wide and deep. Ideal for utensils. 
Price Includes Delivery and Service FULL-SIZE, LARGE CAPACITY ... 
  
Family size 9.1 cu. ft. 
Refrigerator 
199” trade   
Has many conveniences found in higher- 
priced models. Big freezer has 38-lb. capa- 
city. Full-width Hydrator, roomy food 
compartment, convenient egg server and 
butter keeper are wanted features. See it 
on display at Federal’s. You'll SAVE 
many dollars if you buy yours now! 
Delivered, Installed and Serviced 
  OPEN MON. FRI.      
         
   
               
         
       * 
AT A NEVER-BEFORE LOW PRICE 
  —' NO MONEY DOWN 
     
    Stepped up performance for’56l 
21" CONSOLE 
(2398 Eye-conditioning starts with new 4-star power panel, 
New electronic improvements include accurashade, for 
widest ranges of blacks-to-whites. Right-up-front tun- 
ing eliminates stooping and bending while tuning. Alu- 
minar picture tube increases contrast while new eye 
shade Finer reduces glare to increase picture value, 
Smart styling harmonizes beautifully in any decor! 
t 
Motorola’s lowest priced 
21° TABLE TV - 
1692 Here’s a set with all the features found in new 'S6 
Motorolas, Smart cabinet styling blends itself perfectly 
with all surroundings. Can be moved easily from room 
to room. 4-star pqwer panel gives superb performance, 
Accurashade for a picture with a wider range of blacks, 
grays and whites. See the entire line of new "56 Moto- 
rola sets at Federal’s. You'll want one for your own. 
‘SHOP DURING FEDERAL'S BIG JUBILEE SALE SACINAW AT WARREN. PONTIAC 
SAT. NIGHTS TO 9   
  
      THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 26,°1955 aie is r ; Wong 4 a 
  
     
               
  on a motorcycle met; look at two young women, a 
in a highway accident | Vereeniging, South Africa, court 
around Yo! was told. 
  
~**TeDAy in 29. 
o” 24 monthly nstalments— 
See table 
| Borrow from HFC to consolidate bills, for repairs, 
‘7 shopping expenses—any worthwhile reason. No en- 
dorsers. Easy-to-meet requirements. Fast, friendly 
_ gervice. Select your own repayment—on sensible 
terms that fit your paycheck. For quick, one-day 
service—borrow with 
confidence from HFC!   
MONTHLY PAYMENT PLANS 
24 20 “ §2 6 
davets paymis 
$ 50 6.08 [8 9.24 $20 te *500 | 00/5 5835s 6.65]. 9.98 ee | 11.46 | 13.11 | 19.77 Up to 24 months = 19.55 | 29.55 
fo repay |   
  
          
Need Money? Bills to pay? Give HFC a call today! 
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Loons made to residents of nearby towns 
REDUCTION 
FUEL OIL PRICES Ask About Our 10 Payment Budget Plan 
CHURCH'S, INC. Phone FE 2-0235   
  
       
           
      By JOHN H. MARTIN 
INS Foreign Director 
contemporary. Latin American his- 
tory. * * * 
This was no ordinary ‘‘palace 
dead and wounded. The full cas- 
ualty list may never be made 
public. 
Before the Loyalist troops ac- 
cepted the rebel Army and Navy 
surrender demands, the main fig- 
Deaths Last Night SPOKANE (AP)—The Most Rev Charles 
| the Spokane diocese since 1 
PABADENA, Calif.—Max. Wieczorek, 92, 
retired German-born artist whose peint- 
jo hang in meny of the world's gal- 
ries, 
LATROBE, Pa~Ceorge T, Kearns, 84, 
secretary-tressurer ond a ‘director of 
Kennametal Co, 
  * 
BUENOS AIRES—Dr. Jose P. Tambo- 
ini, 70, physician and unsuccessful co- 
alition presidential didate in Argen- 
tina's 1946 election won by Juan Peron, 
KALAMAZOO—Arthur Chester : Mills- peugh, 1%, one-time economic adviser 
with the State Department. 
. W.Y.—Mre. Ruth B. Pin- 
Seripps-Howard newspapers and 
manegins editer of the. Washington 
Herald. , 
N.C.—William HH. @math- 
ers, 64, former U8. senator of New 
lereey from 1637 to 1943. A Democrat, 
was an uncle of Ben. George Smath- 
ers, Florida Democrat. 
WASHINOTON—Wendell Berge, 62, for- 
asstetant attorney = 
he Roosevelt administrat: and former 
head - ine antitrust diviison of Justice 
ment. : 
ROCHEL'F, N. Y¥. o- Frederick 
rd Pales, 82. former president of 
tandard Ol] Co. of New York, Inc., and 
‘ormer vice president of Socony-Vacuum 
NEW YORK—Jakob Goldschmidt, 19, 
economic adviser to German Weimer 
— vernments im 1930s and later 
vy Witler as the Nagis’ 
“public enemy No, 1." 
LOS ANGELES—Edith Wynne Matthi- 
gon, 83, English-born actress prominent 
on the American stage from 1 to 1016. 
—Walter Dill Scott, 86, 
ey since 1 
TOKYO—Ghigeo Odahi, 6), 
mayor of Singapore and a member of wartime 
    Chaotic Anti - 
Bare Violent Class Hatred | 
The fight that ousted Argentine 
President Juan D. Peron is one | ; 
of the most dramatic struggles in| peron’s fate was an ignomini- } 
| 
coup,” but an action of such bit-| 
terness, power, and class hatred| fact that the two most obvi 
that it cost untold thousands of | eee mi en 
  D. White, 16, Roman Catholic bishop of | 
  { | The Church countered’ by forming 
P eron Battles | Catholic Student Union, Church 
ure became a broken man. who 
took refuge aboard a Paraguayan | 
gunboat moored near Buenos Aires 
dock. 
ous exit from the sprawling cap- 
ital elty where aides once 
trembled in his presence. 
What has been called the ‘‘Enig- 
ma of Peron” was based on the 
groups supporting him in his dec- | 
ade of office were the Army and 
the labor unions. These two groups 
by tradition Shave been violent 
enemies. 
WORKERS AROUSED 
Peron aroused great enthusiasm 
|among the working people by in- 
creased wages, even though he 
| was accused of taking it baek in 
increased social security taxes 
On the military side, he ruled 
in the name of ultra-nationalism | 
and unity, the classic symbols of 
the rightists. Yet he was hated 
by the rich with a violence usually | 
directed toward left-wing dictators. * * 
Peron was a resourceful, astute 
politician. Despite the memory of 
what happened to Mussolini — 
lynched by a partisan mob and 
strung up in a Milan public square | 
—he thought he could avoid all 
the mistakes Mussolini made. 
He studied the Mussolini era 
thoroughly, along with the Italian 
dictator's experiments with his 
celebrated fascist 
ments, 
Peron’s furious attacks on the 
Roman Catholic Church and his 
arrogance with army leaders, 
whom he thought he had brow- 
beaten completely, were credited 
with part of his downfall, How- 
ever, it was in the field of youth 
that the scales began to be 
weighted against.the 59-year-old 
Peron. 
Reports from Argentina say that 
Peron and the church leaders 
knew that control of the nation's 
.| youth was a vital key in the fu- 
f edi-| ture of the country. 
En- * * * 
In trying to win over strong 
youth groups, Peron formed the 
“Union of Secondary Students.” youth move-! | leaders soon began openly voicing 
| disapproval of the regime and Pe- 
ron reaeted with ferocity. 
| ATTACKED CHURCH ~ 
| Peron is believed to have sought 
to arouse anti-clerical feelings in 
Argentina with his attacks on the 
church. He posed in the garb of 
traditional liberalism in justify- 
ing his moves to disestablish the 
Church. 
It didn't work out. In attacking 
‘the Church he stripped a barrier 
that had divided Catholics and 
| anti-clerics in the upper and mid- 
die classes. 
| Anti-clerics no longer could re- 
| sent state support for the Church 
since Peron had begun removing 
it. Opponents ganged up on Pe- 
ron, aided by the “goon squads”   
_| of stret bullies he created. 
The Victorian parlor plants 
known as aspidistras are making 
a comeback in London, 
      
69 Book Sale 10,000 BOOKS Including 
Fiction-Non Fiction 
Juvenile 
| Values to $500       | 
| 
| 
| 
lOld Prof | Book Store 
            
‘Coal Executive Dies 
HOLLAND @-—James. T, Klom- i 
| parents, coal firm owner and heat- 
ing company executive, died Sat- 
urday night at his home following 
a heart attack. He was 5%. + 
& 2. GMITH 
    More than 400 horesmen - par- 
ticipated in a recent jackal hunt | 
in the Hertzogville area of South || Ambulance Service 
    Bae Suith Fineual ‘Moinis 
138 West Lawrence Street 
Pontiac, Michigan 
  Cc. BRACE 
Phone FE $-0738: 
    Africa's Western Free State. i   
Gilet | tl. 
Coep 
      9 W. Lawrence St. 
    
  
  
  
  
            4 : ’ a “Epes house of the Japanese Diet 
_ | LEWIS — fine furniture = 
: 2 
[; KY 
2 . g _ : 
7 _ , 
yt rn | 
44 — 
a oll 
} . 
DRUM TABLES REGULAR | SALE PRICE 
$ 39.95 Leather Top ............$29.95 
69.95 Leather Top ............ 59.95 
99.50 Leather Top ............ 69.95 
_ 109.75 Leather Top ........... . 89.95 
tm 119.50 Leather Top ........ .... 99.50 
139.95 Leather Top .......... .. 99.95 § 
END TABLES 
: 11 $32.95 Mahogany Top ........ .. $24.95 
: : 39.95 Leather Top ............. 29.95 
39.95 Leather Top ............. 34.95 
| 49.94 Leather Top ...... tenes. 29.95 
: STEP TABLES 
t $32.50 Plain Top ............... $24.95 
b 39.95 Leather Top ............. 29.95 
+ — fil 82.50 Leather Top ............. 69.50 
A SMALL DEPOSIT HOLDS 
ANY TABLE UNTIL DEC. 20th 
      
    Sale . $4,120 Worth of | 
Going for *2.660! 
SPECIAL SELLING OF GRAND RAPIDS’ MOST FAMOUS TABLES! A once-in-a-lifetime opportunity to make a great saving on these genuine mahogany, authentically styled pieces 
made by this nationally recognized manufacture r of quality tables. Some are one-of-a-kind num- 
bers and some are floor samples but this sale includes every Imperial table in Lewis’ large stock. 
Nothing withheld but come early for best selection. , 
Includes All 
Imperial Modern Tables - 
FINE FURNITURE 
       ath + 
    
  “a 
$29.95 Mahogany Top 
39.95 Leather Top 
59.95 Fruitwood Top 
69.95 Mahogany Top 
$32.95 Mahogany Top 
39.95 Leather Top 
) 47.50 Commode ...         
  32.95 Mahogany Top .. oe ee © wo we 
eo to wo we 
COCKTAIL TABLES 
49.95 Leather Top .... 
OCCASIONAL TABLES 
$44.50 Two-Tier Mahogany Top... .$34.95 
49.95 Nest of 3, Leather Top..... 
59.95 Piecrust, Mahogany Top.... 39.95 
59.95 Three-Tier Plain Top ...... 
  LAMP TABLES SALE PRICE 
Se. 23.00 
34.95 
34.95 
  
HARD TO PARK? Not at 
LEWIS’. Customers park 
FREE right behind store. 
  
         
  
  -famed = chairman 
Lois Ellis.   
  
  Getting rel to discuss their college devs were | road (left to vale): They were photographed at the annual 
Mrs. Cecil McCallum of Dwight avenue, Mrs. Jay Wagner | fall tea held Friday at the Ottawa drive home of Mrs, Max 
The fall lasisbeiskip. tea somal by ae University | Beverly avenue and Cecille Paskpiges (center) of South of West Iroquois road and Mrs. C. Earl Currah of Oneida | well Shadley. 
of Michigan Alumnae Club was held Friday at the home | Paddock street was Mrs. Don S. Brownlee, of East Square . 
of Mrs. Maxwell L. Shadley on Ottawa drive. Pouring tea | Lake road. 
for two prospective members, Marie Meyer (left) of+East 
Zonta Club 
Hears. Talk 
on Reading Speaker Points Out 
3 Reasons for’ Book 
Enjoyment   
“Reading for Enjoyment’ was 
outlined by Mrs. Helen Williams 
when she spoke to members of the 
Zonta Club of Pontiac at a meet- 
ing held at Hotel Waldron, 
* 
The wonder of words, the fun of 
words and the philosophy of words 
were pointed out as reasons for 
reading for enjoyment. 
Parents must, the speaker stat- 
ed, enjoy reading a book to their 
children, if they want the child 
to learn to enjoy books. Nothing 
can be gained if a parent reads 
fo the child simply because it 
is considered the proper thing 
to do or because he feels it bts 
duty. 
The family reading circle Is one 
of the things a child never for- 
gets, Mrs. Williams explained, and 
she said reading. is not taught, it is 
caught. 
Mrs. Williams showed how des- } 
picable animals can be turned into 
loving creatures through the use 
of words set down for children. 
JOURNAL WRITER 
Introducing Mrs. Williams, bar- 
bara Amundson explained that the 
speaker is a member of the Bir- 
mingham Zonta’ Club and has a 
column in the Michigan Education road, Mrs. Barney Roepcke of Green Lake | (left to right) were on hand far the annual) 
  
Association, Journal. 
» 
During the 
members voted Adah Shelly as 
Zonta queen for the High Fever 
Follies. Mrs. Chad Mellinger was | 
of -the card 
party to be held Oct. 18. 
Attending the District Five con-. 
ference in Dayton, Ohio, Friday 
through Sunday will be Mrs. Fo- 
tis Takis, president of the club, 
Lauretta Paul, Mrs. Dorothy 
Brooks, Mrs. Adrian Ish and Mrs. Circles of the WSCS of the First 
tember meetings. this past week 
Julia 
Mrs. 
street was hostess to the 
group at a dessert luncheon. 
devotional topic, “I Believe," 
presented by Mrs. 
‘Mrs. Stuart Conway, 
' chairman, directed the 
| session on Korea. 
| Mrs. Paul Havens and Mrs. Cleo 
Brown were guests of the circle. 
Mrs. Ethel Cherrington was wel- Julia 
The 
was   program 
discussion 
Figure Club Holds 
Fashion Showing 
Approximately 100 guests and) 
members of the Fashion Your Fig- 
ure Club attended their Fashion| Mrs. Parsons told of interesting 
Show held Thursday evening at events on’her first plane trip to 
Adah Shelly Library. | England this summer. 
A demonstration of the proper ap- | The next meeting will be at the 
plication of cosmeties will be giv- | j}home-‘of Mrs. Clarence Wright of 
en by Mrs, Robert Wethington at Cottage street. 
their meeting Thursday evening at | 
Adah Shelly Library. Sarah 
Mrs 
aa \liam Farrell presented a program 
PTA. Activities ititled “Korean Interviews" when 
ithe Sarah Circle met at the 
Executive Board members| of bear | Reynolds court home of Mrs. 
day at p.m. So tsbarce jo at James Jac kson = — evening. 
Sorority Names Officers 
Officers and committees of the | 
Pj Omicron National Sorority were | 
announced when the three chapters 
of the Pontiac Council met, Thurs- 
day evening at the Norman 
O'Brien home on Otsego road. 
* * *   
men, Noreen Van Cleave, ways 
and means; Mrs, Haddix, tele- 
phone and Mrs. E. Verne McCall, 
publicity chairman. 
Mrs. Joseph Fox will handle ar. 
rangements for the Christmas. 
| party. Other plans in the year's 
Mrs. Buhl Burt is | schedule include a May breakfast Mrs. O'Brien, vice-president; 
Maxwell Haddix, \recording secre- 
— a agg ging ¢hairmanship of Mrs. TBs. 
Robert Gaylord, treasurer. "| etore the serving of  retresh. Mrs, Burt, in armouncing her | ments, Mrs. McCall gave a report | 
committees for the coming sea- | of the Central District Convention | 
son hamed Mrs. Richard Fox | which was held in Detrpit, Sept. | 
and Mrs. Londick program chair- ‘17 and 18. president, 
Mrs. | 
  | Methodist Church held their Sep- | 
Alonzo Deevey of Seward 
Pere Parsons. | 
comed as a new member of WSCS. | 
J. H. Rawley and Mrs. Wil- ; 
‘Lester Pitts were guests of 
| with Mrs. Robert Gaylord as chair. {‘ 
man and a June banquet under the | Mrs. Paul.Havens were guests 
Ms. Paul Havens were eguests 
of the group. 
| led the devotional period. 
Mrs. Lester Mehlberg will 
the next circle meeting at her 
home on North East boulevard 
Elizabeth 
was also. the 
the - Elizabeth 
when they met Tuesday 
Mrs. Earby Austin of 
avenue was hostess and the | “Korea” 
ichosen by group 
evening. 
Oakland 
pro- 
'gram was under the direction of 
Mrs. Benjamin Shelton. 
The devotional theme of ‘‘Work- 
ing Together’’ was presented by 
Mrs. Chester Arnold. 
Leah 
Mrs, John Adams was chairms an 
of the Leah Circle program Wed- 
nesday. The group met at the home 
of Mrs, P. R. Carr on Green 
street for their monthly meeting 
and a dessert luncheon. Mrs. George Jones |   Margaret Steward of Washington fall tea sponsored by the University of 
street and Mrs. John Ashby y of Westacres. Michigan: Alumnae Club Friday. _ 
recent _incetine| WISCS Circles Hold Monthly Meetings the David Livingston home on: 
| Oneida road Tuesday evening. 
hold | 
topic | 
Mrs. Floyd Calvert was the | 
group's guest for the afternoon. 
Mrs. Charles Legge presented 
the devotional topic around the 
Parable of the Sower, The next 
| meeting will be at the home of 
Mrs. Ernest Everett of Osceola 
drive, 
Mary 
Lawrence Bergo and Mrs. 
the 
Mary Circle Monday evening at the 
home of Mrs. Morton Jorgenson of 
Mead lane. 
Mrs. Mary Mrs. 
Mitchell, program j 
ichairman, and Mrs. Howard Dow, | 
presented the devotional topic on 
the Power of Prayer by Mme, 
Chaing Kai Chek. 
Mrs; A. A. Dodd of Denby drive 
will hold the October meeting. 
Rhoda 
“The Price \ot Discipleship” 
was the program topic chosen 
by Mrs. Robert Murphy of: the 
i mnete Circle, when they met at | dent at the meeting. Other officers 
| are { 
\diady Baker, corresponding secre- | 
| tary; 
| retary; 
4 + 
F Lat f 
Ly ae ia 
cupaeedidliecmaae. ss 
  
Womens   Mrs. Maxwell Doerr (left) of Ottawa| gan Club are ‘ideal for bringing out’ old 
‘drive and Mrs. Norman Roth of Orchard acquaintances- —and a time for remember- 
"Lake avenue agree that fall membership | ing, too. 
teas sponsored by the University of Michi-   
Section   
“MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 26, 1955 * PAGES 15-17   
The devotions were presefited by | 
Mrs. Thomas Humphreys, The 
group will meet with Mrs. James 
Sorenson of Waterly sireet in Oc- 
tober, A.2.C. and Mrs. James T. Seddon | 
of San Antonio; Texas are guests | 
at the home of his parents, Mr. | 
and Mrs. John W. Seddon of Mich- 
| igan avenue.     Joanne 
A school girl luncheon was held} “is , 
by the Joanne Circle in the church | Gerald Prederiheen, son of Mr. | 
Wednesday, The first epistle to the |4nd Mrs. Walter Frederiksen of 
Corinthians was the, devotional Baldwin avenue, returned today 
topic. Mrs. William Eustice gave | from Chicago where he has been 
devotions, Mrs, Claude Johnson of | a8Sociated with General Motors 
Cooley Lake road will open her) Powerama for the past rhonth. 
home fov the October meeting. 
Anna . 
The Anna Circle met for a co- 
operative luncheon at the church | 
Thursday. Mrs, Harry Going di-| General Motors Institute of 
rected the discussion on Congo! Technology in Flint, on Oct, 4 to 
natives. Mrs. Glen Williams led| enter their sophomore year. 
the devotional portion of the meet- bebe 
ing with a short talk on prayer. _ Mr. and Mrs. Henry Smith and 
Lois |family of Kircher court left Satur- 
The Lois Circle took part in the | 4ay for St. Petersburg, Fla., where 
angual fall cleaning of the church | they will visit his parents, Mr. and 
kitchen when they met Wednesday | Mrs. Frank Smith, for several 
at the church. Members carried a | weeks. 
school girl luncheon. 
2 | 
Retiring President | 
| bert Capistrant, son of Mr. and 
Mrs. Abel Capistrant of West 
Rundeli street, will return t¢ 
* *¢ * 
Marshall Smith and son, Dustan, 
jweekend in Chicago where they 
Is Stabafa Hostess |attended General Motors Power- 
;ama., Sharon Holland. retiring presi- ne 
dent of the Stabafa Club, was Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Mac- 
hostess to the group at her East | 
ee road home Wednesday | 
evening 
Lynne Benter was elected presi- Gregor of Palmer street have 
vacationing in upper Michigan, 
While at Mackinaw City they en- 
joyed—a boat trip around the 
construction area of the new 
Straits of Mackinac Bridge, 
They also spent a week visiting 
Mr: and Mrs. George Hayes of 
urer South Johnson avenue, at -their 
Plans were made, for. a Mem- summer home in Rondo Provincial 
bership Tea ito be held Oct. 22 at | Park, Canada. 
the home of Gail Blamy on’ West | nad 
Iroquois road, Gail Blamy, vice-president; 
Sharon Gale, recording sec- 
and Janet Thomas,. treas- | Gerald and hig roommate, Nor- | 
i\Convention 
| of Elizabeth Lake road, spent the | 
returned to their home after | | land-Lakeland area of Sylvan Lake | 
‘and their friends gathered at the | 
| home of Mr. and Mrs. Jack Martin 
jon Woodland avenue Saturday eve: | 
| ning; 
| They enjoyed the 100-pound pig | 
roasted during the day by Mr. | 
and Mrs. T. D, Sawyer of Wood. | 
| land avenue. 
; * #6 & 
| Mr. and Mrs. Merritt D, Hill 
| of Bloomfield Hills and Mr. and 
International 
Data Offered 
Mrs, Laurf Porssenon gave a 
report of the International Toast- 
| mistress Chib Convention held dur- 
‘ing July in San Francisco, when 
| members met for Council Four, | 
‘Northeast Regional International | 
meeting, held at Grosse Pointe 
War Memorial Saturday. 
Toastmistress for the education. | 
al program Was Mrs. Keith E. 
Brooks of Port Huron Toast- 
mistress Club 399, 
A question and answer pro- 
| gram, following the format of a 
prominent radio and television 
program, was presehted by 
Mrs. Milton Freet of Pontiac. 
From other areas in the district 
were Mrs, Hilda Mitchell, Mrs. 
Pauline Kline, Mrs, Paul Jack- 
son and Mrs, Helen Scales, 
Mrs. Martha Cortledge told how 
various club problems were solved. 
Attending from the Pontiac club | 
; Were Mrs. Freet, Mrs. Orben) 
| Wilkins, Mrs. Evelyn Cole, Mrs. |     
    Several tani of the Wood- | J. Wendell Green and Helen Turek, be. laundered after each meal. | Hite, sophomore; 
}man; ‘Personal News of Interest in Pontiac Mrs. John E. Windiate of Union 
Lake road have returned to their 
homes after vacationing in New 
Orleans, 
* * * 
Seven Pontiac people who are 
continuing their studies at Hills 
dale College, Hillsdale are Donald 
John Moffat, 
| junior; Earl O'Shaughnessy, fresh- 
Nelson O'Shaughnessy, 
|junior; Wayne O'Shaughnessy, 
| sophomore; Henry Paulson, junior 
and Warren Temple, junior, 
* Ld LJ 
Among the alumnae attending 
the University of Michigan-Uni- 
versity of Missouri game in Ann | 
| Arbor Saturday.was Turry Welden 
(of Illinois avenue. 
* * * 
Honore Duross, daughter of Mr. 
and Mrs. Dennis Duross of Mar- 
quette street; Mary Ann McIntosh, 
jdaughter of Mr. and Mrs. Pat 
McIntosh of Willow street, and 
| Elizabeth Powe, daughter of Mr. 
| and Mrs. T. M. Powe of Mariva 
street, are enrolled as freshmen | 
at Marygrove College. 
Today’s Tablecloths 
  ‘Follow Few Rules 
These days there are no firm 
rules as to what constitutes a 
tablecloth: you can make your 
own. from a variety of cotton 
fabrics, 
Whenever you spot some yard- 
age that looks different, buy a 
length and spread it on your 
dining table. Or you can tint 
cotton cheesecloth ta,match the 
|pattern of your china. 
“Whatever the material, it should 
é 
hy Pontiac Bites Photos 
  Ann Arbor 
Memories 
Recalled 50 Women Attend 
Group's Ist Major 
Event of Season — ; 
: iz & 
| rari 
Ke 
: ih ae Margaret Steward, Kather- 
‘ine Baker, Mrs. Norman Roth, 
Mrs. Barnéy Roepcke, Mrs. Cyril 
Miller and Mrs. John Windiate. 
Mrs. Carroll Braid will open her 
home to the group for a co-opera- 
tive dinner Oct. 24. 
Sorority Unit 
Initiates Pair 
at Ceremony 
Two new members, Mrs. Harold 
Laudenslager and Mildred Gingell, 
were initiated into the Xi Chapter 
of Delta Kappa Gamma. Sorority 
Friday evening. Vera Mae Adams, 
president of the chapter, presided 
at the ceremony conducted by 
Florence Gullstrand, Mrs. Oscar 
C. Forslund and Mrs. Roy N. Long, 
Plans for the 1955-1956 season 
were discussed at the meeting held 
in the Civies room of Pontiac Fed- 
eral Savings and Loan 
The program emphasizes selective 
    ment of leadership together with 
& | long range study and action on 
| teacher welfare and educational 
legislature. 
Mrs. Everett Peterson, Mrs. How- 
ard Wooley, Joyce Sweet and 
Gertrude Overton of the social 
committee. 
Delores | Hylla F Feted 
With Bridal Shower. 
Delores Hylla was honored at a 
miscellaneous bridal shower given 
by Grace Campbell and Mar- 
garite Windiate at the latter's 
home on Preston avenue. : 
Dolores, daughter of Mr. 
Mrs. L. F. Hylla of Florence ot 
nue, is the bride-elect of William 
O. Thomas Jr., son of Mr. and 
Mrs. William 0. Thomas of Centes- 
line, 
    teacher recruitment and develop. . 
ae. ag 
  Fy ‘ tiie iil. 
  
Refreshments were served. by ae 
et pb caanuny < ie 
     
   
         
THE PONTIAC PRESS: MOND 
  
  ~ 
I'm just as proud as.a peacock | 
of my Peggy for the efficient way 
she manages our home. For in- 
stance, many of her friends are still 
knocking themselves out scrubbing | 
floors, But not my Peggy! | 
cleans and waxes them in one 
easy operation with Bruce Cleaning 
Wax. And I'll be hanged if Peggy's 
floors aren't the talk of our block. 
1 sure have to hand it to my Peggy | 
and her Bruce Cleaning Wax for 
making easy work of a tough job. 
And | love ‘em 
both for it! 
  
     
  
Custom Uphoistering 
21 Years of Practical Experience 
378 Orchard Lk. Ave. FE 4.2857 
  
  
  
  Short Curl 
Permanents 
From 
$6 ‘LA 
No Riipctetscat Necessary 
* IMPERIAL 
Beauty Salon 
29 E. Pike St. FE 4-2878 By ANNE HEY wooD 
We often hear women comment: | 
ing_on an absent friend's success | 
and ‘sighing, enviously, “Some 
yet my have all the luck. 
experience has been that 
the * seeky”™ friend they're talk- | 
ling about has worked hard and 
“buck.” 
* * ¢ 
For example, Mrs. Ellie Sim- 
i}mons has a setup most young 
'mothers would envy. 
A talented artist, 
mons does illustrations of all 
kinds, Her work appears in big 
magazines, in leaflets, on book 
dust jackets, on maps and on 
    china, 
She does this without leaving 
home, without being away from 
ber young children. But when I 
wrote and asked her story, I could , 
see in a minute that it wasn't 
“huck,”* ‘ 
. ° 
letter 
penmanship, Here is the 
from her. Her 
identally, is so lovely, 
tically a work of art in itself: 
ASSIGNMENTS VARY 
“T accept anything in the line 
of artwork that is suggested to me, 
iand hffve done everything from 
| charts and. maps to iifuntrating | 
children's magazines and illumi- 
nating a poem for a golden wed- | 
| ding — = te 
‘Club Hears Talk 
'on Tuberculosis 
_ _A. R.*° Musson, éxecutive secre- 
tary of the Oakland County Tuber- 
‘culosis Assn., 
  to arrest the spread of tubercu- 
+ Saturday, 
Mrs. 
ed. 
liam Quayle, Ruth Poppy, 
Schroeder and Maxine Wittler, 
‘Group Sees Films 
on Latin America 
Mrs. Melvin Boersma -enter- 
tained 20 members and guests of | 
the Plymouth Group of Congre- |   Locke street Wednesday evening, 
Devotions were given by Ora 
Hallenbeck and Margaret Stewart 
showed pictures of her recent trip 
to South America. _, 
Mrs. Lawrnece Ferman has in-   | visted the group to meet at her 
home on Opdyke road for their 
  October meeting.       
    
              
  here's the fall 
Annaliese Beauty Shop 
80's N. Saginaw 
Next to Batley Market (Over Tasty Bakery) 
Open Evening FE 2-5600 
  by Appoint r) earned every bit of her so-called 
Mrs. Sim- | 
1 received | 
inei- | 
it is prac | 
1 < of ve also had wondertul juck in 
reported on the work | 
done by the association in helping | 
losis, when he spoke before mem- 
bers of the TBI Women's club on 
Guests attending were Mrs, Lil- 
Pat 
gational Church at her home on’ | selling do-it-yourself projects, with, learning to use the new materials | 4. | 
maga-| and media they involve, is a (at-home career was three years | 
t a magazine job before my little illustrations, to national 
| zines. 
| _“Since I haven't had any_for-_ 
| mal training in commercial pated 
1 find trying. new pam, st 
  
“MR and MRS. HAROLD J. PERRY 
‘\Marian O. Behnke Wears , 
Imported Silk Bridal Veil, crystallette | Wearing a white 
lace bodice and long sieves that 
| ended in points over the. wrists, 
|Marian O. Behnke became the 
bride of Harold J. Perry Saturday | 
| evening.       B, J. Chapin opened her | Her finger-tip veil of imported | 
home in Lake Orion for the meet- 
ing and Mrs. Sol Lomerson assist- silk tulle was secured by a tiny 
‘lace cap and she carried a modern- 
istic arrangement of white feath- 
ered carnations. 
The & o'clock ceremony was 
performed at Oakland Park 
Methodist Church by the Rev. 
ef 150 guests, 
The bride is the 
Josiyn road, and the bridegroom 
is the son of Mrs. 
of Romeo. 
MATRON NAMED 
Mrs, William E. Bullock was 
the matron of honor and Ella Jo 
Robinson was the bride's other at- 
tendant. Both wore gowns of hunt- 
er’green cyrstallette fashioned with | 
an empire waist. They carried 
bouquets of pompon chrysanthe- 
mums and croton leaves. 
* *- 
John Thorman served as best 
| man and seating the guests were 
William Perry, nephew of the 
bridegroom, and J. L. Newton. 
A reception was held immedi- 
ately following the ceremony in 
| the church parlors. 
Mrs. Behnke chose a gren 
siik shantung print dress with 
| matching accessories and a cor- 
sage of chrysanthemums and 
yellow roses for her daughter's 
wedding. 
Mrs. Perry wore a blue print 
crepe dress with matching accesso- 
ries. Her corsage also was of chrys-                 
    
ea ae ‘anthemums and yellow roses. 
  
Sizes for 6 mo, ay 
to a mo. - a 
and I to 6x . 
¥ Sheer j 
a oes et      
                  
   
  Be 
-emMmartly 
etyled for 
‘ sister White-Collar 
aglour $7.00 
JUVENILE Gil 
smart and look it! 
Wear the lovely 
nylon made to 
flatter day and 
night. New Fall 
shades. Self or 
dark seams. — 
Neumode a oe oe 
WEAR, 
From Our 
DEPARTMENT 
Gay cottons in plaid or plain 
One and two piece. Whiie 
touches en pastels or bright 
colors. 
*1.95 ., 
— Neumode Hosiery Shops 82 N. SAGINAW ees 
2 | bees will meet tonight at 7 
| Witt, 
| Whittemore 8t., ‘| 
James C. Deeg, in the presence | 
| will meet 
daughter off 
| Mr. and Mrs. Elton D. Behnke of | quxinar 
        
‘Auburn Ave 
Vera Perry | | Sebure avenue. 
  DAY, SEPTEMBER 26, 1955 | | og dita ae i i Nk BCR id i ad od 
ns ey pou i oe | 
  
sort of schooling, |@ 
“It is also a way of discovering | boy was born, 
what I can do best and what I’) MADE CONTACTS 
‘like to specialize in later on,   
| 
Marian O. 
Harold J. 
Perry were 
married 
Saturday 
evening at 
Oakland Park | 
Methodist 
Church. The 
bride is the 
daughter of 
Mr. and Mrs. 
Elton D. 
Behnke of 
Joslyn road, 
and he is the 
son of Mrs. 
Vera Perry of | 
Romeo. The i 
couple will = 
|   
reside in 
Flint, 
| She wore the corsage from her 
— bouquet. 
The couple will reside in Flint. | \§ 
  ‘Coming Events The Reliable Twelve will meet Tuesday 
at 12:30 pm. for a cooperative luncheon | 
, @t the home of Mrs. ©. D. 
Interlake Home Demonstration Orns 
| will meet leher, with Mrs. 
| Crescent Rd., Wednesday at 10 am. 
Weloome Rebekah 246 Priendship Circle 
with Mrs. Eimer Maiden, 248 
Cottage St. for a scoperestve luncheon 
Wednesday noon. 
Sewing 
23 will meet Wednesday for a 
nese school girl luncheon and afternoon | 
neeting at American Legion Home on 
The Dora D. Card Club of the Macca- 
10 o'clock 
at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Arthur 
200 Marion Ave 
The Mother Allen Prayer Band meets 
at the home of Mrs. Carl Measell, 344 
Tuesday at 1 pm. 
Omega Mu Sigma sorority will meet | 
Tuesday evening at the home of Mrs. 
Harlan Oakes on Denby drive at 8 p.m. | 
Blue Star Mothers Chapter 4 will meet | 
at the YMCA & o'clock Tuesday evening. | 
VFW 1008 will meet tonight at 8 
o'clock in the American Legion Home, | 
Auburn avenue, for a social evening. | 
  Scalloped sheets are becoming || 
popular in many homes. | books, 
The bride changed to a light | | 
gown fashioned with an Alencon blue uit with navy blue accesso- | © 
ries when the couple left for a! — 
honeymoon in western Michigan. | 2 
  Hail, 160 | 
, bee | = 
Circle of David L. Kimball | ~ s * ® 
. “Time to work, of auras! is MY) David Varran, 
biggest problem, 
“With two small children 
asleep." 
. * ee a 
No wonder Mrs, Simmons 
successful! Most of 
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| “It was a writing job, but I met 
~ |many people who were writing 
which needed illustrations | 
'and dust jackets, saw art directors Husted, 
Behnke and | and got many ideas for art proj-| Berkley, Mrs. 
ects. We live in a small town now, | Gladwin, 
but the contacts I made then have’ Mrs. Roy B. Wright, 
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my business by mail, 
(a 
boy, 4, and a, 2-year-old girl) 
time is definitely at a prem- 
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five to seven hours a day at the 
drawing table—a couple in the. 
morning while the children are 
at nursery school, and four or 
more at night while they are 
is so. 
the women | 
  Linen, Kitchen 
Shower Honors 
Mrs. Ramsey 
| Sharie Husted, was honored at\a 
linen. and kitchen shower at the 
home of Mrs, Richard Ervin. Eve- 
shower Saturday afternoon. 
Guests included Mrs. Glenn 
Mrs. John Falahee 
Frank Flynn of 
Alfons’ Bochnig, 
Mrs. 
Clergue   Mrs. 
Web- 
| ster. 
| Others invited 
Mrs, Herman 
Stier, Mrs, Ernest Hall, Mrs. 
Chester Hall, Mrs, Reginald Cox, 
Morrow, Mrs. Harold James, 
Mrs. Ronald Geiger and Mrs. 
Kenneth Black. 
' Completing tbe guest list were 
Mrs. John Irwin Jr., Dorothy Ca- 
dieux, Madah Mack, Nancy Gray, 
Barbara Hunt, Jo Voss, June Voss, 
| Mrs. 
| McLaughlin.   
  
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379 E. Pike St. 430 Orchard Lake Ave. 
376 Auburn Ave. 
3-DAY SERVICE—— 
go°s (LENS Office and Plant, 379 E. Pike Strect 
% Phone FE 4.9593 
  Mrs. Gerald Ramsey, the former | ’ 
lyn Bochnig was co-hostess at the | 
  of | @ 
were Mrs. | 
Mrs. George Ervin, Mrs, George | 
  
have made| 
‘who envy her “luck” would never | |great progress in recent seasons. 
in a million years be willing to, They hold their shape, they travel | 
work as hard as she does! 
ij COATS 
     
    
      
          
     
   
   
   
           
       
   
        
         
   
   
   
                    
   A. J.18 
Paul Bochnig and Grace fp 
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SAD and $19.95 
Fall °55’s 
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        THE PONT IAC. PRESS, MONDAY, SEPTEMBER, 26, 1955"   
  
-BRAKES—TIRES LUBRICATION 
TUNE-UP 
‘REPAIRS.   
    WE ARE YOUR PIRESTONE DEALER     
LET'S GET ACQUAI NTED_—TRY US!   
874 W: Huron St. 
  LaBelle’s Texaco Service UNDER NEW MANAGEMENT 
Bill—Your Car's Best Friend 
Mon.-Set. 7 to 12 Midnight—Sun. 8 to 10 P. M. FE 4.5400 
      
      |} Sot off to a fast start in the sea- 
    
INSTALLED 
FREE WHILE YOU WAIT 
Motor Mart 121-123 E. Montcalm 
  « 
GENERAL 
f Auto Parts 
  
  TOP PRICE for 
anyone else in town! And that 
means you can now own andride 
on brand new, safer General 
Tires for less than you ever 
dreamed! Drive in today and 
see how much .we'll pay! came 
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While you shop SPECIAL 
4-WAY SAFETY 
TIRE CHECK! 
~” 98° YOUR 
TIRE DEALER ¢ 
ED WILLIAMS a 
“ tires when you change to 
GENERALS We won’t be Outbid! 
We'll give you more for the unused 
mileage in your present tires than your present 
      Seeuslienetiametimnitiedi tii * 
pene OG RR 
  
Demands Peak 
DURING OUR H 
19 \ 
I 
      BETTER BE SURE Fall Driving on Wet Pavement 
Performance 
Get a Firestone BRAKE SPECIAL 
2 
3 Inspect brake drums. 
4 
5 
ANY CAR 6 “oretelly t221 broker.   Mechanical 
ARVEST SALE 
Here’s what we do: 
] Remove front wheels 
and inspect lining. 
Clean, inspect and re- 
pack front wheel bear- 
ings. 
Check and add brake 
fluid if needed. 
Adjust the brake shoes 
to secure full contact 
with drums. 
    
Firestone STORES 
  | 46 West Huron FE 2-9251 ED WILLIAMS TIRE co. 451 SOUTH SAGINAW 
JUST NORTH OF WILSON AVE. \ 
By H. GUY MOATS 
, Michigan's two big .universities 
son's opening contests Saturday; 
with the Wolverine eleven thump- 
“ing a surprised Missouri club, 42-7 
j;at Ann Arbor and MSU coming 
strong Indiana club, 20-13, 
Bloomington, Ind, 
Over in the huge Wolverine sta- 
dium it was largely a “Ron Kra- 
mer Day,” at least that's the way 
the big audience looked at it. 
Kramer, U. of M's big candidate 
for All-America honors this year, 
' certainly performed all the neces- 
#5 | New Confidence 
Marks Spartans at from behind to defeat a reputedly |. 
  After 20-13 Win “Sophs Take Over After 
Hoosiers’ Early TD — 
Wulff Is Spark 
“EAST LANSING w — There's 
a new spirit of confidence in the 
Michigan State football family 
since the Spartans won their open- 
er from Indiana, 20-13. 
It isn't that any miracles are 
expected from this young team— 
not with Michigan coming up next. 
But ‘after the way the sepho- 
mores sparkled Saturday, there’s 
a feeling that Michigan State can 
climb at least part way up the 
comeback trail this year, 
They were crying ‘‘wulff’ down 
in Indiana after the game. ‘Hoosier 
coach Bernie Crimming said it was 
the 65-yard punt runback for a 
touchdown by sophomore Jim 
Wulff “that really broke our 
backs.”* 
        Wulff, a stocky 18-year-old half- 
back from Chicago, already is 
| being compared to Billy Wells, the 
| elusive little breakaway runner of 
1a few years ago. 
| The sophomores had to take over 
| after Indiana struck early, driving 
77 yards for the 1st touchdown. 
| Bob Jewett, lanky end from Mason, 
provided the spark for the match- 
ing MSU score. Jewett took one 
pass from Earl. Morrall for 32 
yards and caught a 2nd thrown 
into the end zone for a 6-yard 
touc 
Wulff, aided by key blocks by 
Pat Wilson and Joe Carruthers, 
put MSU ahead 14-7 with punt 
return, Fullback Jerry Planutis 
butted over from in front of the   | | Trabert of Cincinnati and Vic 
final, a replay of the challenge- 
‘featured the finals yesterday in the 
  | goal line for the final Spartan | 
| score. 
End Joel Jones on defense, | 
tackle Pat Burke in the line and | 
halfback Walt Kowalezyk were 
the other sophs looking good in | 
| their first college game. | 
Clarence Peaks, Flint junior, was 
the workhorse with 95 yards in 
seven carries. 
« Statistics were convincing with | 
MSU collecting 235 yards rushing | 
‘to 42 for Indiana and 109. yards 
    | passing to 107 for the Hoosiers. | 
Michigan State only had to punt | 
‘twice. 
Coaches were pleased afterwards , 
because the game was won despite | 
| the lack of any breaks. 
Football Scores RIG TEN 
Michigan 42, — 7 
MSU 20. India 13 
litinois 2 California 13 
Iowa 28, Kansas St. 
Miami ‘0.) 258: cr 14 
OSU 28. Nehraska 
Turdue 14, Col. of Pacitic ? 
Washington W. Minnesota 0. 
Wisconsin 28, Marquette 14 
  TATE 
E ml st. 15 Kalamazoo e. 
Wabash 13, Albion 7 
OTHER R RESU LTs 
Army 81, Furman 0. 
Boston C. 27. Brandeis 6 
Bucknell 25, Albright 14 
Colgate 21. Dartmouth 20 
Columbia 14, Brown 12 
Cornell 14, Lehigh 
Geo. Washington 25. VMI 6. 
Holy Cross 42, Temple 7 
Maryland 7, UCLA 0 
Navy 7. William and Mary 0 
Penn St. 35, Boston U. 0     Pittsburgh 22, Syractise 12 
Yale 14. Connecticut 0 
Notre Dame 17. SMU 0 
Auburn 15, Chattanooga 6 
Clemson 20. Virginia 7 
Mississippt State 13, Tennessee. 7, 
Oklahoma 13. North Carolina 6 
Georgia 14. Vanderbtit 13 
George Tech 14. Florida 7 
Colorado 14, Arizona 0 
Kansas 13 weetineion State 0 
  TCU 32. ti) 
Idaho State 27, Color.do 6 
Wyoming 35. Montana 6 
PROFESSIONAL 
SATURDAY'S RESULTS 
Phi Ply le 27. New York 17 
DAY'S RESULTS 
Green Pg 20, Detroit 17. 
Baitimore 23, Chicago Bears 17 
Washington 27. Cleveland 17. 
| Los Angeles 23. San Francisco 14 
Metzger Collects Ace 
The 180-yard No. 3 hole at Oak- | 
land Hills Country Club finally 
|yielded an ace yesterday when | 
| Hoyt Metzger colected using a 3-| 
iron. He went on to score an 89. 
Puts A New ' 
: 
| 
| i 
1 
} 
Firestone 
TIRE 
ola mm £elel am Oris 
    
  i 
Firestone Store 146 W. Heron FE 2-9251 
140 N. Saginaw FE 'S-2630 
      
    sary duties of a full-fledged candi- 
date. 
n° He accounted for three of the 
Wolverines’ tallies, turned in a 
scintillating job on defense, con- 
verted ali his tries fot points 
after touchdowns, and in gen- 
eral, simply stele the shew. 
That number on ron’s back, No. 
87, figured in about every play of 
the afternoon until Coach Benny 
Oosterbaan removed his regulars 
in the third and fourth periods to 
give the second and third stringers 
a chance to romp about on the cool 
turf of the big stadium. score, down the sidelines. That fin- Michigan had a tough time get: | 
ting under way in the opening | 
period, And it wasn't until after 
Missouri had smashed over a tally | 
that the Ann Arbor outfit started | 
to really move, The Missouri TD 
followed a Michigan fumble on the 
23. 
After that it was all Michigan— 
and Kramer, until the regulars re- 
tired in favor of the anxious re- 
serves, The scoring, 35-7 at that 
time, didn't. stop. Jsust before the 
end of the game Mike Totunno, in 
for Kramer, intercepted a Missouri 
pass and dashed from the 14 to 
  
Australians Top 
American Stars 
in Net Contest 
LOS ANGELES «®—Australia's 
| Rex Hartwig and Lew Hoad have 
again beaten the United States 
Davis Cup standard bearers, Tony 
Seixas of Philadelphia. 
* * * 
The bristling five-set doubles 
round doubles of the Davis Cup, 
29th annual Pacific Southwest Ten- 
nis Championships. 
The scores ie time were 3-6, 
6-3, 36, 64, 6-3. The Davis Cup 
was on display on the center court 
at the Los Angeles Tennis Club, 
Earlier in the day, Trabert, U.S. 
National and Wimbledon champion, 
added to his laurels by trouncing 
Herbie Flam of Beverly Hills, 
Calif., in straight sets to win the 
men's singles title.   Rivers, Dawson Tangle 
on Tonight's TV Card 
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS 
Neal Rivers, an ambitious, 21- 
year-old middleweight who is will- 
ing to take on anyone in his divi- 
sion, faces Bobby Dawson, a skill- 
ful veteran who had to go to Eu- 
rope to keep busy, in an interesting 
10-rounder at New York's St. Nich- 
olas Arena tonight. 
The 9 p.m. EST bout will be 
telecast (DuMont-TV). 
Whiting Leads Way 
Dick Whiting was the only play- 
er to break par yesterday, finish- 
ing with a 71, as Detroit District 
amateurs defeated a group of pub- 
lic links amateurs at Indianwood 
Country Club for- the second time 
in five years, 
    
Michigan State has been repre- 
sented on every U. S. Olympic 
team roster since 1928, the official 
records show, 
  
       
  Ist LINE QUICK — DEPENDABLE — GUARANTEED * 
COLLISION WORK    
  . at 
OLIVER MOTOR 
Collision Shop 36 W. Pike St. PE 2-910) 
See Robert Rectar, Mgr. 
tor Free Estimates on All 
_ Makes of Cars 
Ne Distance Teo Great (withia fomsen)        
          
     
    
     
       
DAYTON THOROBRED 
BLACK WALL TIRES |Van Pelt, a young speedster ,in 
   Spartans. Get Off to Fas ished the scoring and the game. 
Last conversion was kicked by 
Michigan's sub-backfield, 
Kramer counted three times, 
hit five conversions for a 23 
point total, to take the lead ‘on 
the early Big 10 scoriig race. He 
caught three scoring passes of 14- 
22 and 12 yards, He took seven 
of eight aerials for 109 yards,     pened three times tor be yards 
HAD TO | 
      
  and carried the balj on two end- 
around play sfor nine yards. 
Quite a busy guy for one after- 
noon! 
Lou Baldaé& counted two of the | 
Wolverine tallies on line, plays. 
Missour’s “coach, Don Faurot, 
called Kramer, after the game, 
“The best I've ever seen." 
More than 55,000 saw the game 
under perfect weathr condiions. meee ame   arm ets 
Tr | \ v, SF . 
  in 1923. jo4 
TW ENTY-FIVE 
    OKLAHOMA CITY @—A little 
Texan, who has refused to turn 
professional because of fear of los- 
ing her love for the game, today 
reigned as a three-time champion 
of the Women’s Trans-Mississippi — 
Golf Tournament, 
No other player than Polly Riley, 
the short-statureg but sure-hitting 
Fort Worth competitor, could fit 
| that description, 
  Middleweight Harry Greb won 
the light-heavyweight boxing crown 
  We Invite You to HELP YOURSELF TO A SLICE of Our 
ANNIVERSARY 
  Ist LINE DAYTON THOROBRED 
‘WHITE WALL TIRES   
      
    REG. PRICE SALE PRICE | YOU SAVE   
    
         
  
             
              SIZE REG. PRICE SALE PRICE YOU SAVE . SIZE 
6.00x16 | $21.95 | $14.69 | $7.26 6.70x15_| $24.50 | $16.39 | $8.11 LS elle 
7.10x15_ | $27.15 | $18.39 | $8.76 7. 7.10x15 
7.60x15_| $29.65 |» $20.39 | $9.26 7.60x15 
  _$30.1 1 5 
$32.85. $20.45. 
$22.45, $ 9.70 imeem an 
$10.40   
$36.45     $24.45 $12.00       
  All Prices 
Special 
TUNE 
All 6- cyl. CHEVROLETS, 
thru 1955. All work done 
on our brand NEW 1955 
SUN ANALYZER. LABOR 
and MATERIAL GCUARAN- 
TEED! 
  -UP Get your car all set for the cold weather 
driving ahead. 
Other Cars Proportionately Low 
We Use Champion, A. C. 
Spark Plugs Plus Fed. Tax and Exchange 
Fall 
* 
and Auto Lite 
  
  
DAYTON’S BIG 3 
GUARANTEE 
2. 30,000 Mile Guarantee. 
road hazards. 
  1. Lifetime Factory Guarantee. 
3. Two-year written road hazard 
Quarantee against all possible 
    
    GUARANTEED 
* OPEN 9 to 9 
“Pontiac’s Motorist Headquarters” 
77 W. Huron St., Corner of Cass         
  
MUFFLERS 
INSTALLED FREE! Good quality mufflers, 
stalled, 
bakers. 
FULLY expertly in- 
for most Fords and Stude- 
| atime 5B 
MARKET TIRE TIRE CO. * FREE PARKING All Prices Plus Fed, Tax and Exchange 
  Fall 
Includes: 
® Adjust brakes 
® Bleed brakes. 
® Inspect linings 
cylinder 
kits 
* Inspect emergency 
brakes 
  tinspect grease seals 
® Carefully test brakes Brake 
SPECIAL! REG. $8.25 
OUR 
SPECIAL 
PRICE 
°369 & Inspect and fill master 
® Inspect wheel cylinder 
  
  
V 
FE 8-0424   EASY BUDGET TERMS 
1 FULL YEAR TO PAY * 
* 
    : NO MONEY eae 
ae 
   
      
   
   
       a TT at 
      Hy J sR 
‘J 
THE PONTIAC PRE 
  Pt Ses Oe. ee we 
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[ MARKETS Produce 
: OETROIT rROpUCE 
nce, Suvi. 22 tAP)—U8. De- 
aoe | ern meahy 
aeial 
8-308: C 
hn ¢ Calif. Jumdo erts, 230 4.76. 
     
   
       
                            
  thi | cil 
sEsies 
ina ri al 
tee f 29 
  
    bois Plagues Papers 
  | Market Reacts 
to Ike's IlIness 
  NEW. YORK «®—The stock mar- 
ket broke sharply today because 
of uncertainties aroused by Presi- 
dent Eisenhower's ilines, but the 
fall was halted by a ‘rally that 
erased as much as one-third to 
ite: one-halt of the extreme losses. 
Selling began at a slow pace, 
,| quickened and extended itself, and 
finally hit an extreme low of 
the beginning of the* second hour 
was swift enough to swamp the 
tape with buying orders. That con- 
| gestion lasted round 30 minutes. 
Among opening blocks were Gen- 
eral Motors 55,000 shares off 3% 
at 140 (and then it lost around 
7 points), Chrysler 70,000 off 5% 
at 94, U. S. Steel, 75,000 off 7% 
at 55, Phillips Petroleum 0,000 off 
7 Yat 712, and Standard Oil (NJ) 
15,600 off 10% at 129. 
New York Stocks oS Ls 
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lack Tr’ 
lay D jerck ~- 
Lino... 44.5 
SoEsusess-scaxsusescye. 
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Ssseesressss 
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B23 s3s8SE 174.4 
181.5 | 8 | 
196.2 | 
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7) 
seazezezal eee Se Suvuae ‘neighborhood Owen-Hawthorne Wever Community Club admired his 
    at 
3 = i} 
} : 
hepedias a car crash, picked a good 
self a condemned house last spring 
}   
WORK BEE AIDS CRIPPLE — Alonza O. Henderson, crippled in 
neighborhood when he bought him- 
and set out.to make it livable. The 
| courage, as did friends and fellow members of Parkdale Church of the 
  
  | But ‘Folksy’ Trend Keeps Growing 
By SAM DAWSON 
NEW YORK # — The nation's 
rospering bankers—in Chicago to- 
y for the meeting of the Ameri- 
Bankers Assn.—are compar- 
notes on two trends in banking 
t at first glance seem to be 
ling them in opposite directions: 
1, The widespread move to make 
nking folksy, to bring it to the 
iomers and to house it in gold 
bowls.’ ‘ 
. Push-button banking which is 
ing on electronics, television, 
mechanical brains and pneumatic 
Searchers Find — 
Women Unhurt Discovered After Seven 
Days in Oregon Wilds 
Without Provisions = 
Fes wk gE 
  
PORTLAND, Ore. (®—Two wom- 
en, weak from exhaustion, hunger 
and thirst, were found by searchers . 
NEW TORK sept Sencompiied by the Yesterday in the Columbia River! Pajn Jnnundates gorge wilderness where they dis- 
appeared aeygn a eae 
Mrs. Avera Ferguson, 53, and 
her companion Mrs. Bernice 
Sharkey, 75, both of Portland, 
maintained they never had been ; growth and automation. 
Texas Territory tubes—and maybe in time on de- 
livery trucks—to cut contact with 
the cugtomers to {he minimum. 
But both trends actually trace 
back to the same things: .The 
changing living habits of Ameri- 
j}cans in an age of speed-up, rapid 
Because of the rush to the sub: 
urbs and the crowded traffic of 
central business districts, banks 
are merging to gain more branches 
and trained personnel, and are be- 
coming neighborhood institutions. 
|New branches pop up in shopping 
centers. Drive-in windows and 
even -mailbox-like “windows” at 
the curb line cater to the hurried | 
motorist and eliminate his search | 
for parking apace. 
. 
The Bank of America {s install-. 
ing a-25-ton automatic bookkeeper 
| using the equivaent of 17,000 radio 
| tubes to do the paper work for a 
| whole group of its branches in Cali- 
fornia—cutting by about 80 per 
cent the time required to take care 
of checking accounts. 
Television has been used by a 
number of banks to enable a teller 
to check signatures and bank bal-     
North and West 
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS 
North and west sections of Tex- 
as, lashed by torrential rains of 
    lost. up to 11 inches, girded today for ances without turning away from 
his window, . * * 
At the bankers’ convention, there 
is being introduced a gadget which 
combines closed circuit television 
with a thief-proof currency tray, 
two-way loudspeaker and a” robot- 
like system of bandit alarm, all 
in one unit, to be used at the tell- 
er’s window, 
Made by thé Mosler Safe Co, of 
Hamilton, Ohio, it's called Monitrol 
Teller-Vue. 
LJ * * 
It gives the teller direct contact 
through an RCA TV unit with sig- 
nature control and bookkeeping de- 
2 Night Courses 
Get Big Turnout Many Other Classes 
Drawing Stedents for 
Adult Education   
Highest enrollment e@er in adult 
night business courses and tailor- 
ing and dressmaking courses at 
Pontiac High School was reported 
today by Ray J. Graff, supervisor | 
of adult education, : 
' * * ° 
With 103 registered for business 
classes, the bookkeeping. and ac- 
counting and the shorthand courses 
had to be run two nights, from Push-Button Banking Comes of Age 
Hl g3f 
7 oeends   
She was sure-footed 
Before the fight, Juanita had 
said: ; 
“Bullfighting is a question of 
feeling, of character, of race — 
and we Mexicans carry it in our 
  
That's a Lot of Peanuts” 
WASHINGTON (INS)—The Agri- 
  
NOTICE OF REGISTRATION 
VILLAGE OF ORCHARD LAKE, 
MICHIGAN 
    
  
DETROIT STOCKS |7 to 10 p.m. Mondays and Thurs- | 
| ae ler Co. “I knew where we were,’ Mrs.| More rain and showers. 
| Pigures og P adbes «9 Potts” are eights | Ferguson told rescurers, “I just | * ¢ prestige. Kore: —— 
said. today | paidwin Ruvders ....... 2” ig” “Tf" | couldn't get us out of there. But| Yesterday's downpour flooded ng * z | Gerity- Michigans it Lodae Calendar Membership meeting of N. A. A. | purpose 
C. P. will be held Monday, Sept. | of lector of sa 
26, basement auditorium Trinity | Tuesday, Wo 
Baptist Church, 7:30 p.m. Ady. | {rstion Ne 4 dpe a3 78 : j ay 
16 | 7 to 10 p.m. each night of the eecee voce 3.1 ” | . hed | 
Kingston Products* i)... we certainly were not lost. cone bars fon bridges and week, to take care of the 55 en- 
Masco Sere reves 28 | They were reported missing by |) °° ed Mighways north of a lise) ied 
: | their families after they failed to|!fom Texarkana to Waco, Abilene, - ‘34 ; : Wink and northward to New Mexi- « Screw Annem r Are 
© sale: bid end asked. return from a drive to the | Aco. No casualties were reported. 
iT { . 
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6 
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for all courses. Village Cler 
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| Speaking at the convention of the 
Statler, Williams said: | “To stay in business a newspaper | 
must turn back a part of the 
money it makes into better news| 
coverage, finer features and all the | 
things which go into the making of 
a superior daily product. 
“Newspaper publishers today 
  Police Hold Dummy 
as Theft Accessory 
CHICAGO (INS) — A trumped 
up dummy turned out to be real— 
and that made him a really dum- 
my in the eyes of the police. 
? oe * 
Chicago police, who had arrested 
Dondino for armed rob- 
man in his auto to give victims 
a -eapehiaagsaal scare,” | 
Under a lie detector test, Don- | 
    
dreamed 
Palmer, 15, had accompanied him. 
When Palmer was arrested, Police 
Lt. Patrick Coughlin told him: * * 
“You're a real dummy, all 
right. You let this man (Don- 
dino) hire you as his ‘phychologi 
cal assistant’ and now you'll end 
up facing robbery charges." 
| Three Slightly Injured 
in Two Car Collision   
Treated and released for cuts 
Lett fi 2 Crash Survivors 
En Route to Honolulu. HONOLULU (INS) — The 
and co-pilot of a cargo plane 
forced to ditch in mid-Pacific Fri- 
day were énroute to Honolulu to-| 
after a harrowing 44-hour | water. They said they had not had | 
drink for six days and had been Grande and its fributaries threat- | day 
ordeal in which thtee o {their 
companions perished. , 
The Coast Guard said the two 
men—Chief Pilot Anthony Mac- 
hado of Hollywood, Calif., and 
Robert C. Hightower, 
Calif.—were suffering from shark 
bites and broken bones. . 
A spokesman said, however, 
their general condition was ‘not 
considered too serious." 
a plucky message: 
“1 told you they could hurt me, 
but they couldn't kill me... . 
None of the victims’ bodies was 
recovered from hte crash scene 
1,000 miles west: of Honolulu. 
Williams Wires \ke; 
Hopes for Recovery 
LANSING  — Gov. G. Men- 
nen Williams of telegraphed the 
“hope and prayers” of himself 
and Michigan people for President 
Eisenhower's speedy recovery. 
The Governor sent a telegram to 
the President Saturday Night say- 
ing: 
“On behalf of the people of 
Michigan and on my own per- 
sonal behalf, pray for your 
speedy recovery.” 
Williams told newsmen “there 
isn't a citizen of the United States, 
I'm sure, who does not hope and 
pray for the speedy recovery of 
the President. In conjunction with 
al lother Americans, I feel a deep 
anxiety because of his illness and 
a sincere hope for his well being.” 
Bake Sale Sponsored 
WATERFORD—Blue Star Moth- 
ers, chapter 10, will hold a bake 
sale at 12:30 p.m. Tuesday at the 
Dixie Recreation Bowling Center, 
4433 Dixie Highway. Proceeds will 
      § 
& 
    be used for the organization's serv- 
ice projects. Hightower radioed his relatives = 
  Mountain area 20 miles east 0} 
here. : 
| Last Wednesday their automo- | >y a flash flood yesterday, checkéd 
bile, bogged down in the mud, was 
found on a side road in the heavily 
timbered country. 
When two sheriff's deputies yes- 
pilot | terday came upon the, two women, | Sections of the city were inundated. | 
be neatly dressed in the warm 
| clothing they had donned far the 
ride, their first request was for 
ia 
| without food for a full week. 
Occasionally sobbing with relief, | 
they told how they spent the first 
| night in an abandoned cabin in the 
Vallejo, | area. They said they started down 
|a@ trial the following morning and 
| then became lost, | * e 
| Mrs. Ferguson said they reached 
| the bottom of a cliff. “There was 
| ; couldn't get around and couldn't 
get over, We could see cars driv- | 
ing along the highway. We could 
-|hear the horns.and see people. 
But we couldn't attract their at- 
tention,"’ she said. 
Report 2 Rifles Stolen 
From Hardware Store 
reported taken from Foster's Hard- 
ware store at 380 S. Saginaw St., 
over the weekend by owner Roy 
Corwin. 
Corwin told Pontiac Police that 
and a .22-caliber automatic Moss- 
berg. 
First Aid Classes Start 
NORTH BRANCH — Red Cross 
First Aid Class will begin instruc- 
tions Tuesday in the study hall 
at the high school main building. 
p.m., under the direction of Dr. 
Robert Belanger. Those intorest- 
Ruth Knack. 
Lapeer Girl Engaged 
LAPEER—Mr. and Mrs. G. C. 
Magbuson announce the engage- 
ment of their daughter, Carmen 
Olivia, to Cosmo Anthony Pedicini 
of Sarasota, Fla., son of Mr, and 
a James Pedicini of Summit, 
The wedding will be Nov. 23 at 
the First Presbyterian Church in 
Sarasota.   15-foot sheer face of rock we | 
the guns were a 30-06 Remington 
Class hours will be from 7 to 10 
ed may call Dr. Belanger of Mrs. Albuquerque, N. M., damaged 
| losses today. No deaths were re- 
| ported in the city’s ninth and worst 
f of the year. Some 100 fami- 
‘lies were evacuated as several 
| The waters, which poured down on | 
| the city from the mountains, re- | 
|) ceded yesterday. 
In Texas, the rain-swollen Rio.   ened several cities in the southern | 
portion of the state. 
| Grande was expected to crest at! 
22 feet at Eagle Pass and at 19 
to 21 feet at Laredo. 
The swollen Nueces River raced 
toward a crest at Cotula and 
Asherton 
* « * 
; Cloudy skies covered the whole 
state early today with drizzle and 
; fog reported at Amarillo and Lub- 
bock. ~ 
Police Quell Rioting 
‘Marquette Prisoners MARQUETTE, Mich. (® — Five 
| federal prisoners, apparently try- 
Two rifles valued at $125 were jing to escape, rioted in the Mar- | i 
| quette County Jail yesterday, 
| They tore out light fixtures be- 
fore State Police officers rounded 
| them up. : 
Marquette County Sheriff Albert 
| Jacobson said the men got out of 
; their imdividual cells when he and 
'a trusty attempted to feed them. 
He said the trusty threw a lever 
which apparently had been tam- 
pered with. It threw open all the 
celldoors at once. 
When the sheriff could not herd 
the men back to their cells, he 
icalled State Police. Six heavily 
| armed officers marched the shout- 
| ing men back.     
|Keego Women Plan 
Breakfast for Public 
KEEGO HARBOR—The Business 
and Professional Women’s Club 
will have a breakfast from 6 a.m. 
"til noon W , open to the 
public. It will be held at the Pine 
Lake home of Clara Cronk and 
Margaret Crew, 3747 Orchard Lake   | Tickets may be obtained at the | chav or from a member, of the 
club. , 
t 
  The Rio | enough are interested to form Unless others enrol] this week. 
courses in automotive diagnosis, 
machine shop and electrical main- 
tenance will be canceled because 
of insufficient registrations, Graff 
said. A minimum of 12 persons is | 
needed to keep a class going. 
The possibility of including Span- 
ish, French, business English and 
reading improvement in the night 
school curriculum is being con- 
sidered.. Some requests for these 
subjects have been listed, and if 
classes of 12, the instruction will 
be given, it was announced. 
| Classes started last week, but 
| there is still time to enroll for the 
fall semester. 
Courses are being given from 
| 7 te 10 p.m, Thursdays in comp- 
| tometer, office machines, type- 
writing, and modern photog- 
raphy. Registration fee is $38. 
| Lip reading classes start tonight. 
The 7-10 p.m. class runs for 10 
weeks, at a cost of $5. 
Driver education for adults will 
{be from 4 to 6 p.m. Mondays, 
{ Tuesdays, Wednesdays and Thurs- 
days. Fee is $22 for a total of | 
124 hours driving instruction. | 
Free classes in citizenship are | 
jheld at 7:30 p.m. Mondays and 
| Wednesdays, and Americanization 
‘classes at 7:30 p.m. Thursdays. | 
| In addition to the three courses | 
| which may be canceled, vocational | 
| industrial classes age nar held | 
‘from 6 to 10 p.m. Thursdays in 
| shop mathematics, blueprint read. | 
ing, tool and die design, drafting 
| and sheetmetal layout, at $16 for 
| a 12-week session; and welding at 
| a fee of $20. These classes are open | 
to persons employed in trade ~| 
cations. 
| Motor Products Strike 
‘Ends; Workmen Return 
DETROIT (INS) — A_ wildcat 
strike that idled 3,400 workers at 
Motor Products Corp. in Detroit 
last Thursday, ended today when   
  employes including 
officials of lecal 203, UAW-CIO. 
The dismissals followed as a re- 
sult of a dispute involving pro-   . * 
News in Brief _ Elmer Judkins, 32%, of Miltord, 
was sentenced to 30 days in Oak- 
land County Jail Saturday after he 
pleaded guilty to driving under 
the influence of liquor before 
Orion Township Justice Helmar G. 
Stanaback. Judkins failed to pay 
a $75 fine and $25 costs. 
Charged with drunk driving, 
Charles Morris, 55, of 559 S. San- 
ford St., pleaded innocent when 
he was arraigned Saturday before 
Pontiac Municipal Judge Cecil 
McCallum. Morris was released 
on $100 pond pending trial Oct. 5. 
Te buy or sell in Waterford, 
Drayton Plains or Clarkston area 
see White Bros. Real Estate. OR 
3-7118. —Adv. 
if your friend's in jail and needs 
bail, Ph FE 5-9424 or MA 5-4031 | 
Driving Lessons. Safe-Way Driv- | 
2253. Ad ing School. FE. 2- 
Hayride Parties. Food furnish- 
ed. FE 2-3231. —Adv.     
       
  \ fa 
| Saturday af 
Village rd Lake Orchard Cake, Michigan Sept. 23, 26, 1955 
INSURANCE 
is Our Business 
@ 
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Bank Bidg. FE 2-9224   
  
     
  
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Se | REE SE ea nance     
  
  
FOR 
SERVICE 
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| Maynard J G. See or Call 
ohnson 
  
807 Community National Bank 
Phone FE 4-4523 
  
  
  
    duction standards, HARRY W. MacDONALD and COMPANY 
Electrical Contractors 
Commercial and Industrial - 
CUSTOM HOMES 
Cell Us Anytime 
Phone FEderal 2-3080 
1472 Baldwin Avenue, Pontiac, Michigan 
HARRY W. MacDONALD 
Res. Phone FE 5-4545