The Weather Friday: Warmer ,, Details page twe THE PONTIAC PRE ¥ tnt —_ OVER PAG 112th YEAR keener PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, THURSDAY, JANUARY 20, 1955 —56 PAGES ASSOCIATED PRESS UNITE) PRESS INTERNATIONAL NEWS SERVICE 7 lke Sees O * * x Curtain Rises on Giant GM Moforama . : ' ' <= eA a ' — Not cantent with @édazziing array of fabulous cars, Gen- | five hydraulically-operatéd cantilever-arms, cars swing dramatically into“View 13 feet wonder to its Motorama, opening in New York today. It is | in the air above the stage, and then into position just over a 900-foot artificial lale, a flying turntable stage, of which a Pontiac is ghown above. On turntables at the tip-of | which is part of the stage. (Other pictures on page 15) Britain Considers Asking|\(old Weather [Boston Con U.N. to Intervene in China LONDON (#—Britain disclosed today that she has con- sulted with the United States and New Zealand on a pos- | sible move in the United Nations to obtain a cease-fire in the China fighting. . A Foreign Office spokesman, replying to a reporter's | question, said the proposal “was one of a number of pos- sible changes of action which we have discussed with the United States and New Zealand in the course of | the country today but moderately ‘exchanges over recent months. “But no decision to carry it out was taken,” the spokesman added. President Eisenhower said at his news conference yesterday that he would like to see the United Nations use‘ its good offices to Halt the shooting war between Red China and Chiang Kai-shek’s Nationalist Chinese forces on For- In Singapore, Britain's naval headquarters for the Far East renewed its warning to all British ships trading with Red China to | ee clearsof Chinese coastal wa- At Tapieh, Formosa, Nationalist China today asserted its guerrillas were still clinging desperately to Q ] i hit the’ Tachens today —" a STATUTE mney 90 INVASION ‘TARGET?—Map lo- cates Chinese Nationalists’ Tachen Islands (A) and Pishan (B), likely invasion targets of Chinese Reds. More than 200 Communist planes j | Invades Florida | Freezing Tem eratures | Across U.S. Follow Mid-South Snowstorm By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Snow tapered off over most of cold weather continued in nearly all sections. | Freezing weather again today |extended southward to Atlanta while in northern Florida, Cross City reported an early morning |low to 36. Temperatures wer< mostly in the high 40s in southern Florida and southern Texas. Coldest readings, tero and 5 below, wete in Wisconsin and Michigan. Temperatures moder- ated a little across the plains. It was: generally below freezing in most of the west except in the far Southwest and near the Pa- cific. The Weather Bureau reported to- day that the major storm track ac the country for the last two weeks has been consistently far- ther south than normal. This. has brought. an extensive snow belt across the middle sections of the country from the Rockies to the At- lantie coast while there are con- siderable bare spots farther north. Snow measured 1 to 5 inches deep across Kansas and Missouri. From Tennessee and Kentucky Eastward to near the Atlantic snow was on the ground with depths ranging up to about a foot in the mountain areas, as Prison Gets Explosives BOSTON (INS) —A large - ee victs Defiant > quantity of high explosives was delivered to embattled, ancient Charlestown State! radio and utput Rising 40 Pct. by 196 | GM Unveils Fantastic Stage for .Motorama Car Exhibits New Yorkers | | Flock to View Dream Vehicles Pontioc Draw ‘Ohs’| and ‘Ahs’ as Throngs See Waldorf Spectacle By HAROLD A. FITZGERALD Publisher Pontiac Press NEW YORK — Well, this is it. There will be automobile shows in many cities, of course. In fact, GM’s Motorama hits a glorified| P% sawdust trail itself, but the current offering here at the Waldorf Astoria, right in this vast citadel, stands un- challenged as the real piece de resistance. This is the show-down. General Motors take the rubber band off the most a ghar of all corporate ank rolls and experts pour it on. They have a field day. Wednesday after- noon’s affair was a preview and they unfurl the flaps on the main tent today. This means the guys and gals from Gotham, the most worldly populace in the world according to its own Self-appraisal, will form queues four blocks long to see this GM extravaganza. Wednesday's audience consisted | field (R-Royal Oak) told the Pon-|™*)°F of a medium sized army that came through invitation. It would prob- ably. fill Wisner Stadium but it’s there. But it's business, too. There are leading executives from New York and other cities. Also, it's a quasi-public huddle of the interested, the curious and these whe come te see and be sern. There are lots of suppliers. The press is always present. So are television. There are Prison today, but was taken to a nearby armory on orders | Photographers, and flash bulbs pop |of prison officials. An ordnance officer, who accompanied the explosives, | | brought to the prison in an Army staff car, said crypti-| dancers and if you mounted the cally: ‘City Shoppers Will Be Jolted ‘by Siren Howls If you happen to be shoppag in Saturday don’t be surprised if -you get jarred—physically and men- tally—when the new civil defense air raid siren goes off, Should you be on a street within several blocks of the Pontiac State Bank Bidg., on which the big device is located, chances are you will feel as well as hear the |mighty blasts from the 180-horse- | powered siren. One Pontiac office worker hap- pened to be in downtown De- He reports his chest started vi- brating when the siren reached the ‘peak of its shrieks. Besides, being near the source of the big sound can be mighty ir- ritating to the ears. It probably will be the biggest manmade noise yet heard in Pontiac. “There’s enough here to blow out a downtown Pontiac about 1 p.m. | troit recently when the siren | atop the Sheraton-Cadillac Hotel sounded. | all over the place. There are mod- ' | els and show people whole wall at *Cherry Hill.” Hope of a possible end to the two-day holdcut of the four prisoners, holed up in| | the Cherry Hill solitary con- | finement wing, was shat- tered as they pledged they | will die rather than surren-| der The note of defiance was struck by Fritz Swenson, convicted Boston | cop-killer, as the seige entered its third day. Swenson, an equal part- ner in the rebellion with Theodore Green, bank robber and escape artist, gunman Walter Balben, and Joseph A. Flaherty, rapist, told his brother “We're going to stick it out. | They'll kil) us anyway, We have | enough ammuntion to hold them | off.” e | Rus- prison to Col. 5) Swenson told his brother, sell, who came to the | (Continued on Page 2, ‘Stars & Bars Forever ATLANTA, Ga. (UP) — State | |Senator Jeff Davis presided over | | the Georgia Senate yesterday on | |Robert E. Lee's birthday. | taled $86,881.82. | hit a new high, averaging $221,- | W. Huron St. by mid-year. There are assorted singers and (Continued on Page 2, Col. 2) Best Year Reported by Federal Savings Biggest year in its history was Bank Director DR. FRANK A. MERCER Shareholders of the Pontiac State |Bank at their annual meeting | elected Dr. Frank A. Mercer as a member of the board of dir- ectors. Slaughter Hill Leveling OK'd ‘Broomfield Says Work on M24 North of Orion Will Begin Early in ‘56 | | Widening of M24 north from Lake Orion to the Oakland-Lapeer | County line will begin early in| 1956, State Sen. William S. Broom- tiac Press today. Message Paints U.S. Economy in Glowing Light President Gives “Strong , Promise of Tax Relief Next Year WASHINGTON (#)—Pres- ident Eisenhower, in his economic message today— 1. Reported recovery “well under way,” foresaw 500-billion-dollar output by 1965. 2. Gave strong promise of tax relief next year. None this. 3. Cautioned that stock speculation or labor strife could damage prosperity. 4. Called for a 90-cent minimum wage, higher job- less pay. In a glowingly optimistic economic message, Eisen- howes gaye yirtual assur- ance of a “general, though modest, reduction in taxes” in 1956, made possible by a broad business recovery now in process = He wagged a warning finger at the soaring stock market, declar- ing that ‘‘continued economic re- covery must not be jeopardized by over emphasis of speculative ac- tivity.”’ . The government, he said, will meet its “great responsibility” te prevent a financial beem-and- Picturing the present as a time of industrial @xpansion, he said la- bor strife oft@n increases fh such periods with “serious economic re- percussions.” The report, third and last of the presidential messages, the states to increase the amount, duration and coverage of Broomfield said he received the | unemployment compensation and a social event. Park Avenue’s|Co™mitment from State Highway called again on Congress to raise . Commissioner Charles M. Ziegler | the minimum wage from 7 to 9 during a conference this morning. The senator approached Ziegler on request of citizens of the Lake Orion-Oxford area. The work is ex- | pected to include leveling of | “Slaughter Hill,” the dangerous hollow a mile north of Oxford. Completion of the project will see M24 widened from two to four lanes all the way from Mt. Clemens street in Pontiac to the nerth county line. The stretch from Opdyke road to. Lake Orion is scheduled for widening starting this spring, with the widening from Opdyke on into Pontiac to follow in 1956. | Cost of the whole project has not | been determined as yet. “Ziegler assured me his de- | partment will let contracts for | the work from Lake Orion north cents He discouraged the proposals of | labor leaders and some Democrats for a wage floor of $1 or $1.25 an hour. The 15-cent increase, he said, |is all that can be “economically | justified . . . A higher minimum | might eause lower production and | substantia} unemployment in sev- eral industries." These were among 33 recommen. - dations in the 207-page report. But Eisenhower stressed that govern- ment's role—in helping to achieve the 40 per cent production rise needed to reach a 500-billion-dollar annual output of goods and serv- ices in 1965—wil] be primarily that reported bythe Pontiac Federal | this year and start construction of encouraging private initiative, Savings & Loan Assn. at its an- nual meeting Wednesday. Total assets increased @6':\ per cent to $6,054,277.23, a gain 4f almost a million and a half dollars President R. C. Cummings re- ported total savings deposits of $5,246,296.48, a gain of 21 per cent, with 5,245 individual savings ac- counts Interest paid shareholders te- New leans also 000 a month, Total loans closed topped 1953 by $1,453,822.54, Shareholders were informed the association hopes to occupy its new main office building at 761 It will continue to operate two branch offices, one in Rochester and the present main office on E. Law- rence street, which will then be- come a downtown branch. Present officers and directors as early in 1956 as possible,"’ said Pontiac Chilled by 10-Degree | Temperature The coldest weather of the year hit Pontiac and vicinity today when the mercury plunged to 10 degrees above zero at 6 a. m. By 10 a. m. the temperature reached 18 and by 1 p. m. it had climbed to 30. Yesterday tempera- tures in downtown Pontiac ranged from a low of 14 to a high of 25 degrees, with snow flurries most of the day totaling .01 of an inch. The U. S. Weather Bureau says it will be warmer tomorrow. The | forecast is for rain probably mixed | with snow as temperatures rise to | a high of 32 to 36. Tonight is ex- | pected to be cloudy with a low of | were reelected. 18 to 22 degrees. $900 Million Expenditure Urged in Next Six Years Williams Submits Sweeping 24-Point School Aid Program to Joint Legislature ratio between teachers and pupils —possibly 35 pupils per teacher the first year, 34 the second year and an ultimate 30. : li—A special state school aid allowance of $1,000 to scheols for eAch fully certified teacher hired at the required minimum salary. 12—Recodification of school law: From Our Wire Sérvices This was the program submiltted| the governor today at a joint ses- | gress for federal school aid. pensions to a maximurn $2,400 an- | five damaged. Most of the ships) LANSING — Gov. G. Mennen personallly to the Legislature by | sion of House and Senate: | 5—Legislation requiring each | nually. . . Williams called today for a history- 1—A_ constitutional amendment | school district to certify, through| 9—Extension of federal social making, multi-million dollar ex- P pledging the state’s full faith and| the proper agency, that its build-| security benefits to teachers in Husbands’ pansion of Michigan's public Seeks Federal Aid credit to a bond issue of unspeci-|ings and — conform to| addition to their present — schools, colleges and unior colleges; ; APH fied amount for local school con-| reasonable standards of health and| 10—Limiting state aid to Theme Set for Week to absorb a “tidal wave of stu- in School Building "| struction. safety. After a reasonable period| which maintain a “reasonable” E )—The man | dents’ during the next five or six WASHINGTON ®—Five billion | This, he said, would allow schools | of time, —— in’ school - —— come into his | years. dollars im federal money for | io obtain low interest rates should be assessed against any dis- PF ‘be kind to| In a message prepared for de-| schoolconstruction over the mext | 41 pcistation state | 'Tict which continues to use struc- In Today s Press _, | livery in_persgon to the legislature | five years would be provided un- | , » tants ane Cay tiakits ee tyres failing to meet sanitation : i eS Gecmes eotinenaen ab der legislation proposed today by | 8 te fecal echoes! bewd and safety standards. { with & —- seth od Fo mina Rep. Bennett (R-Mich). Where other means of financing | 6—Minimum salaries of $4,000 Wriday night. The lady of Schools te the teat fee! wonnles and local communities | are unavailable. Interest rates | a year for fully certified schoot pe nee age — ; eee a en Sg verte idan anne teachers and $3,000 for teachers open : z funds make 2 total ’ without degrees, plas a penalty Napene state expen ald those /schools unable to get sae dns Cae. Plo pommrne Ape the next me ee other financing. prep see old ter seicels afforded women. {| Si& years for new construction | Bennett, in a statement, sald | 3-—State help ‘in obtaining the ling to meet these rates: the husbands. must ob-| at state colleges and unior col- the nation is short 350,000 class. | best advice on school plans.| 17—Coordination of the pension ek wl APY rooms and the problem “ts | especially standardization af build | plans for state employes, out-state| Thar a. the taxes will be needed, Wil-/ ‘far too big for the states to jings. | : eachers and Detroit teachers an OE ay liams indicated. 5 -- é tape it alone.” ; 4—A legislative request Con- 8-gncreasing school employe! Women's Pore, foo ‘ s 4 4 i. bs j , » \ ~ ; ‘ } Pe ee Ser Bet co eae oe . ae aha i werent t ter a : a eS cae Se ae ere a ee @ me . ok 18 ay ae ot ee 4 Ro RTE a ae Che Py oe: gt Aye ae a Bese re 7 je ~ -#£ : ee ie - Se Te ig a a= Fy - PTs —S as (Continued on Page 2, Col. 3) Russians Free Missing Soldier Pvt. Verdine Released After 5 Years in Soviet Prison Camp BERLIN w—Pvt. William A. Verdine of Starks, La., was fre- leased by the Russians in Berlin today after five years of Soviet captivity, including a long stretch in Vorkuta prison camp. Verdine is the third American to come from Vorkuta this mouth. The Soviets, acceding to repeated requests, turned loose John H, Noble of Detroit, and Pvt. Wiliam Marchuk of Norristown, Pa, on Army as missing since 1949, He had been stationed with the 14th Armored Cavalry at Coburg in West Germany, not far from th Americaf-Soviet zonal frontier. The soldier was reported at various times in Russian prison ‘" ok Ne se es . _ x, .y hobs tie’ he atthe a i OO a EL —_ ee, ee a ae a er Sopervisors Will Hear Details of $270,000 Building Project Oakland County Board of Super- visors tomorrow expect to hear a report on proposed construction of a $270,000 health center at the county service center on North Telegraph road. A joint report on the project is scheduled from the Building and Health committees during the spe- cial meeting. beginning at 9:30 a.m. in the County Office Building 1 Lafayette St The planned health center would provide enlarged and modern quar ters for the County Health Dept., according to Highland Township Supervisor Louis F. Oldenburg who heads the Health Committee The Ways and Mean, Com- mittee hag adopted a resolution | te be presented to the supervisors recommending that funds be ap- propriated for the building, Ol- denburg said. As planned now. the structure would provide about 10,000 square | feet of floor area. It would be con- structed so wings could be added on each side in the future The Health Department is now housed in 4,000 square feet of space | building behind the courthouse at Saginaw and Huron streets in Pon- tiac. Of the total cost, would come from federal aid and the rest from the county general fund, Oldenburg explained. An ap- proving vote by the supervisors is needed to get the project under way. In other action, a report ts as was tabled at the meeting. A report is also scheduled on a peti the village of Orton xX more territory. Committee is slated to report on progress toward th« $300,000 in bonds to finance the county's share of the planned Farmington-Brighton Expressway. A committee report is expected on awarding a contract for ap- praisal of county buildings and equipment. The move is designed to obtain am accurate valuation of county property and determine if insur- ance coverage is sufficient. A recommendation is expected from the Ways and Means Com-| mittee that the few county offices | still] remaining open on Friday} nights be allowed to close. Discussion is expected on a pro | posal that an acting county direc tor of civil defense be employed Sisters Hospitalized 2 | circles, “about $90,000 | known in Pontiac as his associate, —— GM Opens Curtain. on Giant Motorama. Report Expected (Continued From Page One) dias and asked for a rajah, two |authenti¢é numbers «irom India | probably would step one pace for- | ward, complete with turbans. And | furthermore, if you called for a \strip-tease artist, somewhere in that heterogeneous crowd an ex- pert would start peeling without further inducement ce coast “stu- It's It's am accurate cast | stand-in for Hollywood's pendous” and ‘‘colossal.” super-duper and at through sheer inadvertence, it's a pushy, bumpy madhouse. As curtain time approached, ‘all hands. were in a final frenzy Wednesday, which is a conco- mitant part of every New York ishow. But somehow, everything | slides into place at the last breath- | less minute and the last-gasp_pol- ishers are hustled out rear rs | with their wiping cloths showing, fast as the first guests greet Har- | low Curtice j the top of the stairs. Mr. Curtice, | smiling, debonair and, with an eas)’ | Savoir faire that becomes him | mightily, stands first | hands with everyone and calls an |astounding number by name Truly, Mr. Big is a capable and splendid representative of Big Bus- iness's Big Business Next to him are the two ,execu- tive vice presidents, Albert Brad- ley is GM's financial wizard and | while Mr. Bradley is one of the largest powers in the innermost he isn't quite as well | Oakland County's own Louis Clif- ford Goad. | Mr. Gead bears the distinction of being the only left handed | executive vice president in GM history and former Big Ten pitchers still recall what a nuisance he was at the plate for Illinois. | However left handed proclivities | didn't put him where he is. Ability | jid that and you can capitalize | _|all seven letters. Of course Mr. | | Bradley hit the corresponding high | | spot through more of the same. | | He was born in England but he | attended Dartmouth and Michigan. times | A short reception line forms at | He shakes | ee en mira. ia enue A a! Vid Wd H3A0 YYW Boy Leads Cops on-Wild Chase | Police Officer Injured | in 9-Mile Race Behind in | Fleeing Teenager |4 A 11-year-old Birmingham boy | who authorities said took the fam ily car without permission, led police on a wild nine-mile chase |} through southern Oakland County |and Detroit early this. morning The chase ended when Birming- |ham Police Sgt. Richard Brown one of the pursuing officers. hit |another auto at Lahser road and | Grand River avenue | The boy and a 13-year-old cdim | panion stopped the time after the accident at the Cran- | brook and Maple road intersection. Sgt. Brown gave chase when he spotted the two boys driving from a parking lot behind the Birmingham High School. Borwn raced down Lahser road in pursuit but was cut off by the | youthful driver each tme he at- |tempted to pull the car over to lthe side of “the road, police said The two youths were releated to their parents and will make statements to the police today Brown will be x-rayed today at | St. Joseph Mercy Hospital, Pon tiac. for chest injuries he received in the accident. Everett P. Sewell driver of the auto struck by Brown, was not hurt Ike Sees Growth of U.S. Economy (Continued From Page One) car a_oshort curbing monopoly and avoiding encroachment on industry Most of the specific recommen- dations underscored requests made in the earlier State of the Union and budget messages. Eisenhower | asked Congress to Promote foreign conimerce by | extending for three years the Reciprocal Trade Agreements Act, with presidential power to reduce tariffs by as much as 15 per cent, Postpone the cuts in corporatior —“—~*-. we THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, JANUARY 20, 1955 ‘Criminal Cases © ‘Set for February Being Reviewed A review was begun today of 150 criminal cases now slated for tral in the February term of Oakland County Circuit Court Judge George B, Hartrick and Chief Assistant Prosecutor George F_ Taylor will hold pre-trial con- ferences with each of the accused their attorneys. “Many persons who first plead innocent, immediately change their plea to guilty when they ap- pear in court for a jury trial,” Taylor explained. “In the pre-trial conference, the __ Case is reviewed and each indivi- dual given opportunity to change his plea then, instead of waiting for a jury to be assembled and a trial date arranged Many persons change their | pleas, said Taylor, lightening the | Jury trial docket and preventing | unnecessary assembling of juries. Pontiac Deaths Mrs. Harry Esralian Mrs. Harry (Mary) Esralian, 58 of 650 E. Beverly St. died Tuesday at Pontiac General Hospital after an illness of three weeks. | Born in Turkey Jan. 5, 1897, she was the daughter of Arthur City, she came to Pontiac and has lived here for 32 years. Besides her husband and mother, she is survived by two children, | Richard D. of Walled Lake, Charles ot Pontiac and three grand- children. Also surviving are two sisters and a brother, Mrs. Leen Appison of Miami, Fla., Mrs. T. Nourijanian and Harry Diran both of New York City. The funeral will be held Friday | at 2 p.m. from the Donelson-Johns Funeral Home. The Rev. Edmond I. Watkins of the Joslyn Ave. United Presbyterian Church will officiate. with burial in Ottawa Park Memorial Cemetery. Mrs. George H. Rupert The Rosary will be recited at 8 p.m. Friday at the Melvin A — | Once past the receiving line. | and excise taxes scheduled for Schutt Funeral Home for Mrs. | you're strictly on your own. Yous, faithful and factual aggre hes “ said, rising revenues and further | 242 Auburn Ave. The funeral will quick message for the home town /.4erai economies “should make | be held Saturday at 10 a.m. from boys on the line that built these cars tremendous play. All of these heavily. There were constant crowds around them Wednesday. Pontiacs are scoring and scoring | school construction.” April 1, By next year, Eisenhower possible another step in the reduc- ‘tion of taxes.” Your handiwork Is getting a | Take action ‘‘this year to help meet our nationwide needs for The Presi- dent again did not specify the kind |or amount,of federal aid he has | They command just as many | in mind A special message will “Oh's” and “Ah’s"” as they did | be sent Feb. 15, he said, dealing at home. | with “appropriate” plans. | + > a | GMC Truck and Coach Division | Give the President power to | is more of a hot shot this year | tighten credit terms and increase | jIn the past, the corporation has down payments on federally under. | restricted the big South Boulevard written mortgages when inflation | institution somewhat as this is Pti-| threatens, and relax the terms | marily a passenger car show. when real estate activity slacks | But our own Philip Monaghan | o¢¢ y George H. (Ursula) Rupert, 41, of St. Michael's Catholic Church. | Buridl will follow in Mount. Hope Cemetery. Mrs. Rupert died at her home | yesterday. She had been ill since ‘last February. Sees Few Foes of $500,000,000 Road Bond Issue “Few, if any, of the Michigan state legislators seem outwardly opposed to a $500,000,000 bond is- { | | ' Williams Presents Big School Program | (Continued From Page One) schools by paying two-thirds of th« actual Cost. 16— More money for the state ta» commission to help local assessors | in obtaining more local tax funds for schools Le 1i—Increased state aid to junier colleges from $130 per pupil to $225. 18—State funds to pay communi- | ties half the cost of expanding junior colleges, possibly combined A | with a central state authority over | | junior colleges. | 19—Legislation permittting ad- joining counties to combine in sup- porting one junior college 20—A_ six-year $150,000,000 « struction program “on for state col- leges and universities, starting wit! | 25 million dollars this year, at least 20 million dollars a year for the | next five years and five million | dollars for junior colleges anc Wayne University. 21—Six million dollars more this ‘year to operate the state colleges and universities. 22—A million and a half dollars from state school aid money for driver education in the schools 23—A request te Congress to expand the school lunch program, now worth twe million dollars a year to Michigan. 24—A request to Congress to con- and Elizabeth Tatigian. After her) tinue Michigan's $1,100,000 annual marriage Oct. 4, 1922 in New York | snare of the vocational educational program. In addition, Williams said he had set up a committee to consider th« role of Wayne University, a De- troit-financed institution receiving some state help, in state education. Michigan, Williams said, rank; second among the states in median income per family and is 12th ir per capita income. But, he said, it is 33rd among the states in prr centage of income spent on public schools. “To realize this program,” Wil- liams * the state will need to find sources of additional reve- nue, a topic which I shall treat fully in a later message.” Convicts Are Defiant as Explosives: Arrive (Continued From Page One) plead with him to surrender, that if state troopers try to shoot | their way into Cherry Hill they will find the five hostage-guards shackled to windows and doors. The brother quoted Swenson as saying: “If they get us they'll get them, too. We aren't going to kill the guards. We'll shackle them to the windows and doors. The troopers will shoot them if anyone shoots them.” The felons, who are keeping four | prison guards and six other in- mates as hostages, showed late sue to finance a large-scale road | jast night the first signs of weaken- by wheedling and wheeling a truck into the south lobby of the Waldorf After Auto Smaship BLOOMFIELD TOWNSHIP — In satisfactory condition at St. Joseph Mercy Hospital, Pontiac, following a rear-end auto collision on Maple | west of Telegraph Road this morn- ing, are Ellen and Susan Flint, 17 | and 15-year-old Kingswood School students They are the daughters of Mr and Mrs. Robert H. Flint, 6000 Middlebelt Rd.. W. Bloomfield Elien suffered severe head cuts and Susan received head briises. Police said a car driven by Mary C. Kurdell, 5680 Euclid, Birming- ham, had stopped to let out a passenger when the car driven by Ellen Flint crashed into it from behind. Takes Two to: Vacuum HELENA, Mont. (P Mayor J. O. Ashjornson of Winifred says | he hag a vacuum cleaner that was made in 1907. He says it takes two persons to operate the cleaner. One pumps the bellows and the other walks around with the hose. Crosby Recuperating HOLLYWOOD — Bing Crosby spent a restful night recuperating from surgery for removal of a kid- ney stone, Paramount studio re- ported today. The Weather AND VWICINTITY—Increasing cleadiness tonight. Occasional snow lke. a oy 4 iat and row. Tomerrew cleat; with sace becoming snow ~ somewha Leow tonight 18-22, ‘high. ‘0. dive 9-04, low temersow @ 24. =. V @inds three miles tonight Right there under the cold scrutiny of the-lorgnettes of Park Avenue's celebrated dowagers and under the surveillance of top business men from all over America, stands this Pontiac product. It's this new which is ten inches lower and ten inches shorter than current panel delivery trucks. Further- more, with only a minimum of black magic, it becomes a bus, a taxi or a station wagon and they've made it big enough to hold Phil Monaghan's whole family. No truck in all automotive his- tory has ever been rubbed by so much costly mink or ever been appraised by so great a horde of top flight executives. Score another victory for the Truck | Division In the same section of the lobby lis one of the new LaSaHes. Even lthe visionary dreamers struggled | to come up with this one. It's only | 99 inches long and still more as- tounding, it's only 33 inches high. Place your hand on top of a yard- stick standing straight up from the floor and you're above the top | of the body of the LaSalle. Another LaSalle occupies a place of honor in the main ball room and Coach Strato-Star, a Cadillac Et Dorado, and Olds Delta, ai Chevrolet Biscayne and Buick Wildcat. These are the cars of tomorrow and I don't dare mention the colors by name. They defy an- alysis. Color is rampant It's running wild contrived to work a minor miracle “L’Universelle” | The ball room holds a Pontiac | Authorize 35,000 public housing | building program.” Oakland Coun | ing in their demands for a “‘safe- } units in each of the next two years, | and increase the mortgage-insur- | ing authority of the Federal Hous- | ing Administration. | ° ’ ° Sharpen the teeth of the Sherman antitrust law by raising ‘‘substan- tially’ the maximum fines. Extend the program of small | business loans which expires June |30. and increase the lending au- | thority. | Let the government put 25 bil- lion dollars, largely raised by bond issues of a proposed independent | authority, into a 10-year, 100-bil- lion-dollar highway construction program in partnership with the states. ° e * Increase the ceiling on the na- tional debt, The limit now is tem- porarily at 281 billion dollers and | is being crowded; on June 30 it re- | verts to 275 billion. | Provide additional funds to fi- | nance city and state planning of | public works, and for operating a | new “office of coordinator of pub | lie works” in the White House. Exnand the Commerce Depart- | ment’s program for helping de- pressed areas and ailing industries. Navy Solves Problem | JACKSONVILLE, Fla. (UP) — | i (jz) Robert G. White and Lt. (jz) Robert J. White are both bachelors, live in the same bach- elor officers quarters at the Naval Air Station here and fly for the same squadron, To cut down some on the confusion, Robert G. is known as “Dirty” White and Rob ert J. is called “Lily” White. ty’s State Senator William S&S. Broomfield said today. “However, we want all the facts | before asking the people to vote on | the bond issue,” he added. “I'm vitally interested in knowing what | Oakland County can expect to gain from it.” | A group authorized to make a | study of state road needs by the | Legislature is expected to report in mid-February, the senator stated, “and we expect te get more details soon on the pro- posed mutti-billion-dollar federal highway program.” After the two reports are in, a quick decision will probably be | reached on submitting the bond is- | sue for a statewide vote April 4, | he added. e i | } Troy Township Girl Hurt in Car Crash A 16-year-old Troy Township giri suffered a broken leg yesterday when the car she was riding in went out of control on 16 Mile Road. and hit a tree. Patricia Ann Dula of 1730 Beech | Lane Rd..was taken to St. Joseph Mercy Hospital. Driver James Green, 17, of 1950 Boulan St., Troy, received a cut chin. . St.. Troy, received a cut chin. He told police something went wrong with the steering. Green was ticketed for failure to have an operator's license. He said he borrowed the car from Viola As pinwall of 61 Cutting St., Troy Township. conduct” pass to freedom. The indication was given to the Roman Catholic chaplain at the prison, after they had rejected sue statements that they would re- lease the hostages only after the State provided a getaway car and guaranteed their flight to freedom. Fr. Hartigan expressed optimism over the possible end to the minor rebellion after the rebels talked with him and Dr. Samuel Merlin, the prison physician, for an hour and a half. callous refusal to listen to rela- tives and officials who appealed to the four to surrender. ANNOUNCING ‘NEW SERVICE Rev. Edward Y. Hartigan, the | tearful pleas from relatives. to | give in. The hardened convicts them. | selves, however. continued to is- | |The Day in Birmingham Dale Stafford a | From Our Birmingham Bureau BIRMINGHAM — Having last} week released its first major rec- | | commendations on facilities need- | ed to avoid a serious area juvenile | problem, a nine-memper youth | committee last night held a meet-.| ing of minds with the Birming ham-Bloomfield Hills-Franklit Council of Community Services, | to interpret the report | The main suggestion, that a per- manent youth committee be formed by the council to deal with problems of all : | youth organiza- | ' tions. won unanimous approval. Kass, council chair man, appointed a group under | the chairmanship of Mrs. Harvey | Chartes B. Greene to name the new com- Honay from Bell Chapel of the Wil- | sports editor of the Pontiac Press mittee, probably at a meeting — next Tuesday. } The citizens group making the | study of area-wide needs were ap- | pointed by the council a year ago after other residents expressed growing concern ] * * Birmingham news is new be- ing handled direct through thé Birmingham desk at the Pontiac Press, FE 2-818). * A 2 “Mental Health in Our Schools” | will be described by Mrs. Rheba Cope. visiting teacher for Pierce and Barnum Schools and speaker at tonight's Pierce PTA meeting at 8 at the school = * . A policeman making his rounds ot New York's theater area, will | eet the pace for 8 pm. per. | formances tomorrow and Satur- day of “Broadway Beat,” title ef the annual First Methodist Church youth variety show. | Tickets will be available at the door of Fellowship Hall. | = The YMCA has announced the | Lybia reopening of its. Friday and Satur- | Sept. 13, 1922. FRIDAY G SATURDAY SUPER SPECIAL rea Group Set to Name Permanent Youth Council | Phillip L | sisters, Agnes of Ecorse, Edna of Post on MSC Board LANSING #—Dale Stafford, pub- lisher of the Greenville Daily News day night activities in the Com- today entered the Re- munity House Youth Room. Pro- grams from 8 p. m. to midnight Bas a Pagans for all high school students include - : a“ , both card and table games on Fri- Board Agricul- day and a dance on. Saturday. ture ore A roller skating party in Pontiac body of Michigan has been scheduled for tomorrow , State College by the Y's TNT Club, with all in- Stafford is a » graduate of MSC Band was the cob lege's first athletic publicity director : while he was still STAFFORD a student there in 1926. He is a native of St. Louis, Mich. ° Before buying the Greenville daily in 1951, Stafford was manag ing editor of the Detroit Free Press | and earlier had been its sports editor. He previously had beep terested teenagers invited to meet at the Y at 7:30 p. m ~ * * Following a dinner meeting at 6:30 tonight at the Community House, Business Women's Club members will hear Mrs. W. F. Tighe give a book review . 5 * * Oral T. Petissier BIRMINGHAM—Rosary service for Oral T. Pelissier, 54, of 1207 Villa Rd., will be recited at 9 p. m. liam R. Hamilton Co. The body} and of the Associated Press at will be taken to the Tonella Fu- Detroit. neral Home at Marquette tomorrow & for funeral Mass and burial there PRICES SLASHED! Monday. He died Wednesday night. | Entire Stock of He is survived by fis wife, Anna; “MEYERCORD” two brothers, Rev. Msgr. Albert A. | C. Pelissier of Iron Mountain, of Ames, lowa; three | Iron Mountain and Mrs. Frank Vivian of Ames, Iowa. - Se and Genuine Last-minute scurrying to buy | enut ~ewreoeoeoeoererererererererererererererererevrervervevvrw@we«ew“°wwew#«;wwwveerervevteT* v~eweveveeerererererererererrrerrervrvervrevrevreYreYTeYeYeYeYeerrrrrVY “Trimz”” BORDERS those 1955 car license plates before | the Feb. 28 deadline, may be fur- ther heightened until local auto} owners become aware of changes reade this week. The Secretary of State's office has moved from Chamber of Commerce headquar- ters at 350 E. Maple Ave., to 820 S. Woodward Ave. Accountant Edwin P. Dowd, of 588 Larchlea Dr., will take charge of the office. Assisting him will| @ BiG seLEecTION! Decals for weed be Mrs. J. H. Loud, 1547 Washing- plage - EF, . — ee ton Blvd. Numbers tor or wood... Ready- pasted tor any room. The themometer at Azizia in 2% GOP maber's registered 136.4 degrees SIMAS {a PAINT DEPT. —ené Piece ege Silicone kee uP . Fits All Standard Boards—Scorch Resistant Ironing Board Cover Fameus ‘Tex-Knit' silicene treated irening beard cover fits standard weed & metal beards. R fleets he remetns ary. Lint ¢ 98 N. Saginaw St. —2nd Floor eee eee nee ben, ICE FISHING 1955 Fishing Licepse and FREE Fishermen Celendors $1.49 Valve IT’ e- at, per ous- - 4 Foot High 11 Inch Wide horne.. For sewing and altering, Mirrors for Walls and Doors New \ Back in Stock at Same LOW PRICES ANOTHER SHIPMENT ARRIVED! Unframed -Clear Glass 4 | Door Mirrors Full length door mirror has many uses in the etc. High polish for perfect reflection. $989 | CEADER MATERIAL ies vatwus pound wt SOE Double Strength—Unframed Peto te | DOC * Wall Mirrors |? -——= 28x20-Inch $ 3 99 Unframed Well Mirror. . Comptote With tine, evivet 36x24-Inch Unframed Well Mirror... . Never Fail—Non-F reeze Tip-Ups “ OT Oll treated hardwood. ail metal poles cadmium plated 4o resist rust rge reel, for appearance, sw |) S297 s we es coe . oa It takes a robin egg blue, ¥ Lowest temperature prec splotched with the radiant red of | d ae. ® op wens velocity § mp.) a summer sunset to command 4 , ‘ at MOTOR BAR and GRILL— Fits All Size Shoes ‘ Sun vets Thareday at 6:30 pm second look. These cars are bril- ne Ice Cree tj Moon m. , pers Moon rises Priday "et 6:12 em ee resplendent. They're LUNCHEON BUFFET A O.ALg Grr eoceergewee $] 95 & ‘alia pore Gites : ry pictured, wa|_ I required more than a decade | FINE FOODS, ALL YOU CAN EAT ai erepers Han sere. J] Q)E ares fit any size shoe. scekwinases #8| for the manufacturers to pry the | D E UFFET ‘ oF, Bes <-- 3) public loose from somber, funeral || INNER B e Orhers from ......y....44e jet blacks. And it took another FINE APPETIZERS . i : decade to edge buyers away from FRIED CHICKEN $9 50 » strictly conventiorial, reds, blues SEA FOODS ° Bsrercesssevsses 1 | and greens. But the transition is PRIME RIB ROAST REEF > 1#5/ nearing completion. CHOICE OF BEVERAGE : This year GM will build enough ALL YOU CAN EAT , “ rest Deere: ----; fal ere oo SS ORDER YOUR FAVORITE DRINK FROM THE MOTOR BAR a =r ee WS SESS ORE CRORE e+ e <3 Fe HOURS— rf . ba BREAKFAST 6A.M.teo9P.M. _ GRILL OPEN ILA.M.teSP.M. ~~ <i vie ary rary 9 4 4 * 7 re § é) 5 P.M. too P. M. SOOOSOOSFFOOO50800 05008000058 FOS SEE SSSSESS SEES SESESESOS SSS SSESSSSSSOSS OSS SSSTSUS OS OOOOH OSSOOO OS OSSOSSOSSSOSOSSSOSOGSOHOSOSSOSOSOS SESS SOSOOSSOE SOOO O® i ed li eel ell oo lel al Ale lalla icenioies Sunt | y | . ¢ v = . - / . i —_ ~4 > ; ? i “ ed y we er ' , — m THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, JANUARY 20, 1955 = ee «e | ‘Save up to $40 a Set! © “Vo Down Payment! 7 : Open ‘til 9 Friday Nite! eee gee rae * x Luxury Features! Budget Priced! ® Chrome Y-Legs! Full-Sized! Red & Yellow! ® Conventional and Modern Patterns! ® Burn, Chip, and Stain Proof! ® Sturdy, solid, long lasting construction! ® Softly padded Duran Plastic Covered Chairs? ® All First Quality! Brand New Shipment! Waite's Dinette's—Filth Floor ar ~*~ a m5 = Sg eu wr United. Press Phote STAR OUT OF WATER—Though seemingly out of her natural element, swimming star Esther Williams presents a pretty enough picture in her furs as icy winds rush to greet her at Idlewild Airport, New York. The actress flew there from Los Angeles for TV show appearances. African Witchdoctor Kills ‘Evil Spirit’ in Otter Form wt 8 EOP BG Layaway Today! Save to $20! “Save to 3.99! Special Purchase! JOHANNESBURG (UP) — When word got around among the inhabi- | tants of Johannesburg's’ Western Native Township that a “tokolo- she” had been killed in their midst excitement and hasty offering of prayers. For, as is well known among all Africans, the tokoloshe (call it lep- rechaun, goblin, evil spirit or what by a witch-doctor there was much you will), can assume the shape — ——|of a fiercesome anima] and can “ easily strangle any man, woman London Dairy or child it catches. . ° —wag found hiding With Lottsa Zip | tee an at a. Western Native LONDON w—A big London dairy | Township home, has begun production of an alco- No ordinary human dare tackle holic milkshake—a potent.brew of | it, so the witch-doctor was called | three parts milk and honey to one | and killed it with a ‘‘medicine | part whisky—to sell for thé equiva- | stick.” lent of 35 cents a four-ounce slug Excited groups of natives gath- The lacteal liquor was thought | ered to discuss the killing as the | up by Brian Laidlaw, a director | body was taken to the police sta- | of a suburban dairy chain, after | tion. Superstitious Africans ca- his firm's fruit-flavored milk!|ressed their throats as they | scored a big hit with the local | thought of the strangulation they small fry. had escaped. ” 7 * | “We decided that if the kids} Bre official of a ae oe e liked it, their fathers might go for prensuneed something similar with. a kick in| ayes ba a ae ceed ee it,”’ he said. roms - After tests, the government gave | "4 habitat. But the Africans of Di ae the Western Native Township the dairy a license yesterday. thet ™ The mixture, called Noggo, will | =" to be nonsense. be sold in taverns and liquor stores. | ‘Whoever heard of a tokoloshe It will also corne with gin, rum or | assuming the shape of so harmless brandy in place of the whisky. a creature as an ofter,’’ one said. U.S. dairies have been selling | eggnog mixtures for several years| A single female house fly can but their customers have to add/|lay 600 to 1,000 eggs in her life- their own liquor. No honey, either. | time. 7. he yy , eg nt Te! te ~{ = es. Sea § a t, ! } , ew “ Oe Regularly 49.95 Value! Large...Safe... 12-Play Skyrider Gym Keep your children safely at play in their bock aw @?> slide! Hurry in today and save on this Layaway Sale! $1 Down Pleces In Layaway! Waite's Piay Gyms—Fifth Floor Wood and Brass Table Lamps G@°” Regularly to 10.98! A Michael Wolfe Creation! Save almost $4! Smart... new . distinctive lamps that add new life to any decor! Combina- tions of black and brass also blond and brass. 3-way switch. 27-in. high! Attractive match- ing shades! Come in early! Waitet's Lamps—Fifth Floor yord next summer! Special Layaway price includes New Low Price! Save up to 42.18! basketball board, shower ond new safety formed Deluxe Easy Spindrier Save up to $31! Your Choice! Grand Ranges! inch or Apt. Size Regularly 119.95! = 77 re veer : 7] a § 04 CANT SEE...» REDMOND’S -. 08 the footures which make and Your Old Washer — ae Orange Blossom rings so popular 2 gee & RY Vo M , Fine with those who know quality. Dyed Biden f Down! . You'll find no finer workmanship Call FE 4-2511 for : - Selection nigpeape nor better quality in rings FREE Home Trial of === much higher in price. \ Diamonds == . @ 2 tubs work at once... ©) Lom save time and work! © Fiberglas insulation! Acid Resistant Life- Time MWltife » Porcelain! i: RING STYUNGS @ Automatic overload ° Host Seal Oven Door! Oversized Oven in 36” . : ze! ed dg Ate e py Sram Panel! Broiler Compartment ; enamel finish! © Exclusive Catchal-ator and 2-piece Broiler 7 metrists—Jewelers = : Pan in 36" Size! ° es f s “ @ Trode your old ‘scaled in lige aea id —_ tor mt ° — Size—4 Burners in“ saace saving today... . ?* none ». + Wor inches! : REDMOND’S take.advantage of these big savings! saving spin drier in the — ° Siete Range with 4 burners and divided 81 N, Saginaw St. FE 2-3612 _ Weaite’s Washers—Downsiairs Store, ’ Waite's Ranges—Downstairs Floor « : m oe, i r= : f t i dof -2; ee % rn \ 4 et y ed i ; OAS Proposes | No Man's Land Costa Rica - Nicaragua Border Zone Suggested | to Prevent Clash SAN JOSE, Costa Rica @—The inter-American investigating com- mission today proposed a demili- tarized zone be set up along the western sector of the Nicaragua- Costa Rica border in an effort to prevent a clash between the two countries over the rebel outbreak against President Jose Figueres, The five - nation commission made its proposal in the wake of a protest from Nicaraguan Presi- dent Anastasio Somoza that two Costa Rican F531 fighters, on their first mission since the planes ar- rived Monday from the United States, had veered over Ni- caraguan territory yesterday dur ing’ an attack on the rebel-held town of La Cruz, seven miles from the border. Sormboza, a long-time foe of the Costa Rican president, announced four of his own fighters would patrol the border to meet any further trespassers. He told a news conference last night in . Managua, the Nicaraguan capi- tal, that the situation could be- come “an international conflict-” Somoza's protest said he was also reinforcing his border garri Sons to meet the “very tense”’ sit uation created by the air trespass The Commission, sent here by the Organization of American States, proposed a security zone 18 miles long and six miles wide between Lake Nicaragua and the Pacific. The zone would straddle the border three miles on either Under the plan, planes of both nations would be forbidden to fly over this strip. The southern limits of the zone would be just over 8 mile north of La Cruz, rebel head- quarters in the northwest corner of Costa Rica, - . J The purpose of the zone would be to limit the area of military action. One person attached to the Commission explained it thus: The Costa Rican government forces could chase the rebels as far as the zone limits on their side of their side of the border, The rebels could escape into Nicaragua, but OAS observers would -patrol the zone itself while only OAS obser- vation planes could fly over it. The Commission has charged that the rebels were aided from Nicaragua of training, arming and supplying the rsbel forces, a charge Nicaragua denies. * aa = TOM, DICK AND HARRY THRIVE—Tom, Dick | Bidwell, was rushing the triplets’ mother to the | and Harry, left to right, pose to show progress they | hospital. have made since that hectic day last Sept. 22. Tom oa . 3 — —a sa he K was born in the family auto as his father, Velmar than 10 pounds Local Training Given Dp, i to 9 Practical Nurses Road Commission Nine women among a group of ‘to Present Study 30 practical nurses being gradu-| | , . ated today from Ann Arbor Prac- | The Oakland County Road Cor - nission has been 1c quested to make tical Nurse Education Center, at | : Josies School auditorium, received | detailed highway-needs study fo presentation to the Michigan Auto- their training, or a part of it, at : a ; motive Safety Foundation by Feo Pontiac General Hospital and with 15, according to Road Commission the Pontiac Visiting Nurse Asso- Engineer-Mahager Leon V, Belk- ciation. nap They etal Mrs. Edith — The report wil! tell the founda Mrs. Grace Fuller, Mrs tuth | tion what work is needed in Oak Gracey, Mrs. Helma Hoyt, -Miss Mildred Itsell, Mrs, Helen McVoy,| quate to handle present lyn Roberts and Wolofski. Miss Rita explained. | ‘The foundation is making a state- ane * S (] stores a } ; ; 4 < Commission chairman Luis Quin- tanilia of Mexico sent Jorge Maciel, technica] adviser of the | Brazilian delegation to Managua by air to deliver a copy of the pro posal to Nicaraguan Foreign Min- | ister Oscar Sevilla Sacasa Another copy was to be handed Costa Rican Foreign Minister Ma rio Esquivel here in San Jose. | The commission has charged | supplying the reel forces, a} Figueres, meanwhile, predicted today would see the decisive stage in his government's fight against the rebels in northwest Costa Rica Chicago Police Hunt Missing Woman CHICAGO «®—Police said today they have asked the FBI to aid in a search for Mrs. Lee Tatham, 31- year-old office manager, who has been missing for a week and may have been kidnaped. Her husband Harry, a layout artist for the Roeder Studios, said his wife last was seen Jan. 12 when she left work at the Mlinois Shade Cloth Co. to obtain license plates for a new automobile. Police said her car later was found in a park- ing lot near her office. Police said Tatham reported he | had received a telephone call Jan. 13 from a woman whose Voice sounded like that of his wife. He quoted the caller as saying: ‘“Har- ry, I'm being held. They kidnaped | me. Don't call police or they'll hurt | me,” Nips Suitor’s Advances MANILA #®—Amorous. Norberto Escuadro eyed Tarcila Santos tripping gaily from school, then tried to steal a kiss. A doctor) patched his punctured lip. Tarcila | bit. ae ¥ é Exciting new designs for utmost figure flattery! LOVABLE BRA , 100 Artfully constructed with completely stitched 4-section cups so that the firm support can’t wash out! Lined undersections, lastex insert. 32-36, A; 32-38, B; 34-38, C. White only. SHOP WITH PURCHASE COUPONS FEDERAL ‘: stores SAGINAW AT WARREN, PONTIAC Harry in the delivery room | Legislature in { | | itravel restrictions on Soviet citi-| tainside Dick was born in hospital elevator and | Each now weighs more | ~ | te turn back because of snow side roads study for the Michigan | preparation for a possible public vote April 4 on a $500.000,000 bond issue for | nway construction That's What They Say MOSCOW ww — The ne Pravda today denounced new U.S zens aS an.:‘iron curtain It said |‘*Those American citizens who can OUR PRICES ARE LOWEST! EVERY SET 1S GUARANTEED FIRST QUALITY! TABLE 30°x40"x48"—SEATS 8 PEOPLE COMFORTABLY! 5 Pieces Extra Large Deluxe Tri e Plated ; 7 : e- | tear their way o a count i land County to make toads ade-| tear their way out cay count on @) iG that if the animal is beyond movement in our country.”’ FEDE 20, 1955 Death Stops Speeder Police Couldn't Slow BISHOP, Calif. @—Death finally accomplished what traffic officers to do -stop Leo Try to Rescue . Trapped Horse Group of Ranchers Now Scaling Icy Peak to Lead Hungry Animal Down FAIRPLAY. Colo. (UP) — A group of ranchers set out yester- (day for the high slopes of Mount Silverheels to tethered horse trapped timberline |for a month had attempted Reisig from speeding Reisig, a Porterville shoe sales- man, lost control of his car on an icy highway about 12 miles south of here last night. His auto side- swiped another, overturned in a field and killed him. About noon yesterday he got a ticket near Ridgecrest for doing 70 m.p.h. And six hours later he re- ceived another citation for travel- ing 75 m.p.h. near Lone Pine. rescue a above No one knows how the horse got caught on the mountainside. Binox ulars show that he has grubbed | beneath the snow for grass ag [ar » las his harness rope will allow . . . "the horas may 4 OKs Counsel Nomination i | The horse may have been ti i and abandoned, or may have WASHINGTON (UP)—Tie Sen- fouled the rope while grazing and) ate Finance Committee today ap- 1 3 ‘ Tee N Navel PFortidntic duet Y on Key With Husband Her decision cli maxed days of NEW YO RK (INS) — The on-| conflicting reports on whether she again off-again marriage of singer | would reconcile with Brown, who | Dortohy McGuire went back on/| recently returned. from Army dity key today when she reconciled| in Korea: The reconciliation fol- with her estranged Gl-husband, | lowed an effort by TV star Arthur Set. John H. Browh. | Gédfrey, acting as cupid in the Dorothy was reported to have | aifiar, to bring the couple back } told crooner Julius La Rosa by | together. over. | } | A Winning’ | Combination .-- IS YOUR DOCTOR, OUR PHARMACY, and the WON- DERS of MEDICAL SCIENCE. | been unable ‘to work it free. The little flat stretch ofwhi ch the horse is traped is three miles away from a usable road, and one rescue party was forced |proved the nomination of David | |W. Kendal! of Michigan to be gen- | | eral counse] for the Treasury De-| partment. The appointment now | goes to the Senate for approval. ’ Our pharmacists devote all their wspaper | ~Cadvertioment) and ice conditions. . whether a party could each the’ Nagging Backache horse today depended on whether | wind aod temperature turns suf- | S Ni ficiently moderate in the frigid | ess i high country | Often Due to Kidney Slow-down Without food, and now aparent- When kidney function slows down, many folks complain of nagging backache, head- aches, dizziness and loss ef pep and energy. | ying outside its tethered | Don't suffer restless nights with these dis- reach, the animal must die unless premepeiny log 5 a —_ _—_ it is freed and led down the moun?- | a stress and strain, over-exertion or expo- | sure to cofl. Miner bladder irritations due ; | to cold or wrong diet may cause getting ap Clayton Hill, a prominent rancher | —_ frequent passages. - ; : _ mt neglect your kidn if these - who first spotted the trapped horse | tions bother you. Try Dean's Pilea mild and ‘is leading the rescue plans, diuretic. Used successfully by millions for yver 60 years. It's amazing how many times Dean's give happy relief from these d lly unable to reach the ring of snow just and | welcome reception and freedom of | help it will be. shot to save it fur- Sestak hpthetlindanel sdenptoenantilt Mrs. Marion Powers, Mrs. Made- | exvected traffic volume, Belknap | - rer ten ther suffering ters flush out waste. Get Doan's Pills experience, their highly trained skill to compounding your Doc- tor’s prescription with a_con- scientious adherence. | CLOONAN’S “Where Quality Counts” 72 North Saginaw St. FE 2-0161 t dept. stores RAL APPLIANCES and Famous-make appliances and TV at fantastic odd-lots, some ‘as-is’ specials... one and two of a kind, many brand new items. All in first-class condition, limited quantities! All merchandise subject reductions! D TV emonstrators. DOWN ON ALL APPLIANCES to prior sale! Prices include installation, delivery, full warranty! Hurry, save: Reg. 287.30! Automatic defrost Kelvinator Refrigerator al Reg. 79.95! Brand-new Federal ELEC. SEWING MACHINE @32-Ib. fri @ Butter-K Reg. 232.50! Cooks automat KELVINATOR RAN Reg. 219.95! Big screen console 21-INCH MOTOROLA TV oa Reg. 97.95 Automatic 30-gallon HOT WATER HEATER Reg, 440.50! Giant 12 cu. ft. Westinghouse FREEZER ically GE THESE BIG VALUES ON SALE AT PONTIAC ONLY! 169.95 Westinghouse Range (1) ....:.......$94 179.95 Westinghouse Range (1) voces. 812 _., Rebigarotor i) 200 * fd — 2 *. | Refrigerator. {3)...$217 Re 507.50 Kelvinator ator (2)....8348 299.95 Kelvinater = ere (1)...$199 344.95 316.50 oe 190.95 F 219.95 May : Hy gar + ome Shr ddan TO 268.95 | 248.95 Frigidaire Refrigerator (1)....8208 Range (1) er yy | 229.95 Kelvinater me Dryer (8) seeetenes-n, $166 Reg. 229.95 Speed Queen Oryer ( 6 a - — r Vd ia nterc Worries Experts DETROIT (#—Traffic experts to- day cast anxious looks at Detroit's spectacular new ‘Ford-Lodge ex- pressway interchange, built at «a cost of 50 million dollars to speed up traffic in and out of the city. * Opened partially to traffic Tues- day, the multi-level interchange got its first rush hour tests yester- day morning and evening. It failed miserably as motorists found them- selves ensnaried in one of the city’s worst traffic jams in recent years. Alerted to the advantages. of the expressway system and the interchange, motorists roared by the thousands onto the east-west Ford expressway and the north- south Lodge expressway, antici- pating a swift, non-stop ride to the heart of iM city. Glen-C. Richards, commissioner of the Department of Public Works, said the jam Was--the_rsult of publicity and curiosity on the part of the motorists, “The tieup was caused mostly be- cause a lot of people wanted to try out the interchange,” he said. Seek Shopping Center GRAND RAPIDS # -— Mayor | George Veldman and city commis- sioners met with property owners | on lower Monroe avenue yester-| day and heard a request for city | help in developing a multi- million | | dollar shopping center to restore | that section of the city’s. downtown | | district. Monroe avenue is the | city’s main street but the lower | end has deteriorated as a center ol | retail trade, At Stop Sot-Bed Backache! And Save in This National SALE/ Repeated by Popular Demand FOR ONLY Full or Twin Sige + Matching Box Spring Seme Low Price SAL START> TODAY! And Continves for a Limited Time Only! Now Serta again offers you the country’s outstanding mattress value! and built with the healthful firmness doctors recommend, but at a terrific ba we dare not continue once this sa Come in now! Comparé these hixurious fea- tures with other ne cui tufted mattresses, yes, even with much higher price tags. Sale “eegr tyn fc ends March 1, 1955. So buy now the savings of a lifetime! YOURS! All These Health and Guallty Features: innerspring with hundreds your beck tevel support from heed to }, @s doctors approve. Thick insuleter peds reinforced with wire ee Seneoene mad design. Lets colle mesh prolong mattress life. ern woven-stripe | comortolenings people in Tokyo. | Believe Bar Owner | Myers, 21, FIRM, HEALTHFUL, BUTTON-TUFTED—AT A PRICE YOU'D MEVER BELIEVE POSSIBLE FOR THIS HIGH QUALITY! Made By SERTA—Makers of the smooth-top “PERFECT cy SLEEPER” ® MATTRESS SUY NOW AND SAVE...AT ” ee ee eS ee —-S— lCUrorO _THE ROM SIAL PRESS, THURSDAY, JANUARY 20, 1955 eit Business TOKYO TRUMPETER—Night-club entertainer Akiko Suehiro does la backbend to show how easily she ripples off some ‘‘cool’’ notes on to pay a dime for it. Not bad for a Eddie Cantor Ran for President--- Received 6 Votes in: 1932 Election By EDDIE CANTOR “In 1932 a group of people insisted that I run for president.” It was a large and distinguished | Sroup consisting of da, Marjorie, Natalie, Edna, Marilyn and Janet. Every member of the family voted, and that’s| to pick it? what I finished with—six votes. guy who never ‘finished grammar school. However in 1956 it’s going te be different. I already have the backing of many’ busi- mess groups. Take the druggists, for in- stance. They insist that I run. _ they're overloaded with aspirin and feel that with Canter as president they have a very good chance of getting rid of it. Industrialists are for me. They applaud my theory of what causes inflation. So simple, too Here’s the reason: You go into a store and you | busy want to buy a nickel candy bar, but you've got Why do they charge you a dime? for it. It seems _|in Egypt. Because the man who makes it has to pay more for sugar Why does he have to pay more for sugar? Because it costs more to grow the sugar. does it cost more to grow the sugar? it costs more to pick it. learning a new glanguage wouldn't haye time to fight! (Copyright 1955) Why Because Why does it cost more Because the man who picks it is}, getting higher wages. Why does he have to get higher wages? Because when he goes inte the store to buy a nickel candy bar, he has to pay a dime The first thing I'll do when I'm. president, will be to change around the map of the world for the purposes of peace. Germany is—I’ll put Germany where England is—I'll put England in Holland—I’ll put Russia Y’see, all these people would be so I'l] put France where they just Rappy's January Riot! EASIEST TERMS IN TOWN! Men’s All Wool, Light and Dark Charcoal SUITS $2995 All Wool Gabardines TOPCOATS Entire Stock MEN'S JACKETS $1992 V3 orr RAPPY’S NATIONAL CLOTHING 9 SOUTH SAGINAW the trumpet, In addition she does some dancing and acrobatics while a se ——_— | | at a hotel in downtown Detroit. Detectives said they had ane | Shot Girl Friend, Self dead for about 12 hours, Officers said Fera evidently nad | DETROIT #® — Distraught over | shot Miss Myers in the chest, | his broken romance, a Detroit bar | siashed his wrists in an adjoining owner apparently murdered his at- | pathroom and returned to the room tractive blonde girl friend yester-| where he fired another shot from day, then committed suicide, po-| i, 45 caliber pistol into his own lice said today chest. Fera’s wallet contained $531. A maid found the bodies of Jack Frank Fera, 47, and Sue Marie| In New Zealand, sheep outnum- yesterday in a room'ber people 17% to 1. 48 S. Saginaw St. i It is designed ain price is over. upholstered with meny-leyer &, Suey cxttte ttf ter come eaten. 6S seams; 4 hendies end Bex Spring built with same number 6, creates merrens given sentient corer PENNEY’S DOUBLE WOVEN GAUZE DIAPERS 2.98 Double weave means extra strength, extra absorb- ency ... soft gauze is extra quick-drying! Large 21 x 40” size folds in many ways to fit small or large babies. Package of one dozen. ’ PENNEY’S DRAWSTRING COTTON KNIT COTTON COTTON KNIT LAP SHOULDER game “cows ves c 49° 2.29 . . ‘he . Help protect baby’s feet No pins or buttons to fuss “et —— al and hands from drafts. with — clever expansion yaby! Mom aa sls eT GA esmbed Gatton la kind - "ti xpans them again and again. 4, tender skin, absorbent. shoulder gets them on am they're extra sturdy and quick to dry. Snap closing, Off ina jiffy! Short sleeve oot ee ie a raglan sleeves. White, style in combed cotton, 21” x oT" cut size Peck. maize, mint, pink or blue single breasted. White, ~ - _—— Infants’ sizes. sizes 1 to 6. age of one dozen. DOUBLE THICK TRAINING PANTS 39 double reinforced triple reinforced crotch, they're extra ab- sorbent, extra strong! Soft ribbed knit combed cotton; elastic in leg band, at waist. White, pink, blue, maize. 1-4. With body, LOOK AT PENNEY’S MONEY-SAVING PRICES! FINE COTTON RECEIVING BLANKETS © 63° Ideal all-purpose blankets —just see how they stand up under daily use! Soft, absorbent, washable... with sturdy stitched ends, pretty striped borders. Maize, white, pink, blue, green, lilac. 30” x 40”. JACQUARD JOHNSON’S ATTRACTIVE COTTON CRIB BABY GIFT PLASTIC . BLANKETS BOX SET FORMULA BAG 3 49 l bad 50 2.98 Adorable nursery pat- Beatifully gift boxed — Completely insulated with terns! Fine quality heavy- anoertant little nthities Fibreglas® for food, for- weight cotton is soft and warm, easy to wash. 6” binding of rich acetate satin: Maize, green, white, pink, blue, lilac. 36'°x60.” that. get baby—and, Mom eff to a good start! Baby powder, oil, lotion, cream, soap and cotton tips. mula! 2 separate com- ‘partments, 2 top zippers. Heavy gauge pique plastic wipes clean easily. Ad- justable shoulder strap. COTTON FLANNEL WRAPPERS 69: They're Sanforized’, wash them again and again! Soft and cuddly for baby; pretty, too — with rib- bons, fancy stitching. Maize, mint, pink or blue . or white with pastel trim. + Maximum shrinkage 1% GENUINE BATHINETTE 3 @ Rubber Coated Tub } ®@ White Enamel! ® Hardwood Frame A FULL SIZE BASSINETTE my. ® Folding Legs @ Roller Casters BASSINETTE PAD and LINER e Plastic Covered Pad @ Matching Liner ammock With Head Rest “Ofainy Soa * . Waterproof. Table Top @ Full Size 33”x19"x11” ‘@ Flat Weave Design @ Sturdy Wood Frame © Deep Shirt 9 Sore ae @ Pink, Yellow, Blue. @ Sanitary Cello W i THE PONTIAC PRESS “PONTIAC, MICHIGAN - MHURSDAY, JANUARY 20, 1955 US. Tax Return Error Revealed - Se ated Se ee GLITTERING ENTERTAINMENT — Lovely dancers whirl on | piece orchestra plays music especially written for the show. The artificial lily pads on a 900-square-foot pool of water, part of the unique | Motorama is open to the public in the Waldorf Astoria Hotel through stage upon which a Broadway musical review is presented as a fea- | next Tuesday. ture of the General Motors 1955 Motorama. Above the dancers, a 26 ’ ALR Mystery Veils. Bomb Slaying Police Refuse Comment on Booby Trap Death of Texas Woman SAN ANGELO, Tex. #—Deepen- ing mystery today veiled the booby trap bomb death of attractive Mrs. Harry E. Weaver, wealthy wife of a@ prominent architect and geolo- oe. Weaver, 52, was killed yes- terday about 8:30 a.m. as she set out for a local hospital to visit her ailing mother. A Houston businessman, ques- tioned following officers’ long con- | i a aihy Men taGEe Ht i bite Ye | 7 | | t J i : 4 $a if I I DREAM TRUCK — Phillip J. Monaghan, | Motors, the interior of the new GMC “dream truck.” of GMC and Coach Division, | L’Universelle, at the opening of the Motorama in H. Curtice, president of General |New York City. ferences with Weaver, was accom- panied to the Harris County Court , ® ® . ba House by Texas Rangers and sher- he rd to Join Famil |Dem Convention | Us deputies and his two smal Dpd y Choice Between | oe Ringoes po PUBLISHER VISITS PREVIEW — Visiting R. M. Fitgerald and his wife. Besides the dream cars, | jome in a well-to-do section of * . : ‘ Chicago, Philly Critchfield, GM vice president and general Saanger | regular production miodels of each of GM's auto! Houston. Neither he nor officers qa ' lif ld 0 a al a WASHINGTON Choice ef a | of Pontiac Motor Division at the special preview last | divisions are on display. | would discuss what took place in e dite for the 1956 Democratic presi- night were Pontiac Press Publisher Harold A. ithe long session behind locked CLEVELAND @® — Dr. Samuel time of the services be kept confi-| dential nominating convention ap- ' Officers would not answer ques- peared today to tie between cri-| Neyy Policy Will Shorten Patients’ Stay, | sa iter show the man's iden- *| cago and Philadelphia. tity or any other development in ANGELES, Calif. Chairman Paul M. Butler told newsmen after a Democratic Na- Thanks td a policy of trimming “unnecessary’’ days from a pa- pected te continue until construc- tion of a $3,000,000 addition ap- ber is completed. Initial paper work is under way on the proj- | their hunt for the person or per | sons who planted the nitroglycer- ; tient’s stay, Pontiac General Hos-| Proved by taxpayers in Novem- tional Committee meeting here! . feateageesipartattinineteenenemenneideeimnton : yesterday he will ite | pital last year reduced the aver-| ; a small group of close relatives) wit mame a4 Sil€| age number of patient-days while | i committee within the next 10 days. ' increasing the number of patients ‘Newest Gadget attend. He said a suggested Aug. 27 start- | treated. 'Would Increase in the 2 ths. 2.969 | ‘© Comment about possible suspects ee ing date seemed to have general In releasing a compilation of’ ° adie ——— & but did say he was working with approval. 1954 statistics yesterday, Lauretta | Woes of Drivers j bares ot recorded. November | information furnished by Weaver Paul, hospital director, explained was the high month with 259 | and other members of the family. Butler made it clear the Demo- the policy stemmed from acutely | CHICKASHA, Okia (INS) ~ The | councing newcomers. | Weaver, 60, said he was in the crowded conditions at the hospital. yt wean peas like this: | The number of outpatients treat- | big, old . fashioned home of Mrs. , | Lee Fitzpatric Chickasha said|ed in the emergency section to- | Weaver's mother, Mrs, Ralph Har- - § << em 08 today he has applied for a patent | taled 21,200, an increase of nearly | ris, when the blast occurred out- patients spent a total of 89,193 | his wif patient-days im. the institutt lon a device which would “erase” | 1,800 over 1953. | side, The architect and e (A patient-day ts & day a patient | the time left on a) parking meter be rman ae hed ars spends in the hospital. One pa- | when a driver pulls away. It would lee. Thala = » cd the average patient, the number tient spending Six days would | force the next motorist parking in be atx pe ; par of meals served dipped to 374,100 | the space to use his own money | from 392,517 the year before, These totals-compare with 14,791 | and do away with the furtive game é . ' The hospital's total operating admissions in 1953 for a total of | of driving around looking for an income for 1954 totaled $2,570,237 89,826 patient-days. | unexpired meter. “Efforts continue to be made to | ect, which is expected to add 150 |ine bomb in one of the Weaver beds | automobiles. ) Tom Green County Dist. Afty, A bumper crop of babies broke | Aubrey Stokes said no arrest war- | the hospital's all-time yearly birth rants had been issued. He refused ile iil < ge i 2F i 3 } : ’ Hi it i fs £ ; 4 oF le i } EE i | have beds available for emergency eases and what appears to be un- necessary stay in thé hospital is carefully. checked,” Miss , Paul sqid. ; in the 198-bed city -| Occupancy medical institution’ averaged 207.4 patients per day in 1653, Percent- age of daily occupancy. dropped to 104.7 from 106.9 the year before. th fat | : ye : age i ee ae ge a 4 i ‘ a ——— " ; ‘ i —— . bo, A . : | "y #) N ‘ THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, JANUARY 20, 1955 er « Poa Ce eT pe ‘ iano Story oy se . . 4 } Now Get. TWICE. as Much for Only Ie More! rising from humble beginnings. i e ORUG ; wy vans're tnsoeainnd % satan etree Sear ae tere Ouse STORES eee Will Speak at Tea | | Mr. and Mrs- George Webster | .| will speak.at the silver tea spon- sored by Progressive Spiritualist Church, 16 Chase St.,- Friday at | 7:30 p.m. z 3 f g WE GIVE HOLDEN STAMPS! AY RT ee I a SRR SS RR pi amma + WORLD'S STRONGEST?—Norbert Schemansky, 30, right, éalled the world’s strongest man by the Russians of the International Weight Lifting Championships at Vienna, is a new member of the Detroit police force. His amazing physical development brought a nod of approval from Dr. Wilford C. Wood, department physician. ea @ Free $20 Worth of Mer- | George Crabtree Wins Ik R d 0 Cuetec ‘Y* Toastmasters Oscar - | e oun S ut @ Plus $12 Trade-in on ; Your 4 Tires! ‘Y’ Toastmasters Tuesday eve-| | ning awarded the Oscar of the day | Regular pressure SUPER SAFETY |) to George Crabtree for his com- | § a 0 erm or low pressure LUXURY RIDE... | ments on the question, “Should 2-year road hazard and service Pontiac High. School include ice . guarantee. | hockey in its sports schedule?” Backers Believe He'll four 600 x 16 reg. $77.60 Four 676 & 15, reg. $85.40, ]| It was announced that on Tues- Seek 4 More Years to with trade-in new enly $65.50 with Trade-in now only $73.40 1) day, Jan. 25, the toastmasters wilh, . Pius $20 worth of merchandise. Pius $20 worth of merchandise. have a joint meeting at the YMCA Complete Program All these prices plus tax and your olg tires. | with members of Pontiac Toast- | WASHINGTON (INS)— President Big sovings on 1, 2 ond 8 tires, tee. | masters Club, | Eisenhower passes the halfway Tuesday's toastmaster of the | mark of his four-year term in of- PEERLESS ASPIRIN W TERN A TO jevening was Tony Renne. fice today well on the way to mak- $1 Lady Feir ES - U ing good on his campaign prom.- Reg 50c bottles of 100 9 Bots 5 I< Baby Bunting m8 \ . Buy One Item at Full List Price Segina Russia did not adopt the Gre- l\ises, and there were mounting CLEANSING tabléts each: 5 - grain. BABY vanes iw alendar until after World| he will seek s second t Lab tested f | gorian calendar w alter Wo signs will seek s erm test Or purity. : ! Store Hours Monday thru Seturdey 9 2. m. te 6 p. m. |War I was ended, despite its use to complete the task CREAM POWDER | 2 for 1.01 ) 2 for 36¢ on Aca e beeh Fab ‘by most of the civilized world, | As the soldier-President began - —— | his third year in the White House, : - | ry | most Republican leaders confident. It's homogenized; RELIEF FOR BOLDS Improved formula; } P S L A § | ily believed he was ready to fe- cleans the pores. “big 412-02. cans. , as a lenlist for another four years to Iso-nal Nose Drops... 2/6le ! | re orl ng ay way a e boi Plenintgenr tr =a = = Huskeley Cough Drops. .2/1l¢ } — Histop Cough Syrup... ... 2/86¢ ° j these | KEEP YOUR CHILDREN SAFELY AT PLAY | Pn retgs? pon Dg | IN THEIR BACK YARD NEXT SUMMER! the balance sheet of administra. | Os 9.7 — ECS Riel | Keep them happy ond safe with this wonderful play gym! Special layowoy f rn gon nie pai neatmntaer i NOSE ‘Cheste Vapor Rub ...... COUCH price includes everything necessary for a summer of enjoyment and health- hower's inauguration as the na- 3-lb. Bags Anti-histemine 50's ... .2/1.26 Unbreakable. —~ | ful ploy. on | thon’s 34th President BATH DROPS LETS SYRUP PLASTIC Ks It was a record which showed CRYSTALS 2 for 5le PILLS AND TAB 2 for 76¢ NURSERS , di impressive accomplishments by the 1 - oz. bottle with : ; ; Kidney Pills 40's ....... 2/6le Mentholated pine first Republican President in 2 2 for 76c dropper. Speedy Hinkle Pills 100’s 2/36¢ ter formule ter 2 for 4lc years—but left the nation stil] wait. reliet for stuffy lod Tobs. 1100's... 2/7 soothing coughs ing for large-scale tax cuts, a bal- Softens the water. nose head colds. ine Tabs. s ...-2/76¢ due to colds. 8-oz. graduated; | anced budget and the security 3 fragrances Magnesia Tabs. 100’s. eee 2/6l¢ can be boiled. | that: could come only with an Quinine 2 gr. 12's...... 2/36¢ won-muT |easing of cold war tensions Sede Mints 100’s ...... 2/36¢ — , Yi a Still unfinished, too, was the Brewer Yeost 250's..... 2/1.0¥ ———— | President's self . imposed task of 000’ geil | molding the Republican Party into Seccheria 1, Talal 2/16 ee h, \@ “progressive /moderate” force S ) which could win the support of a — é | majority of Americans without the |B S?Ul//i;//7 606 SCBottle of 100——(<ésé«é@Bvrie: Acid, 4 cz... ... . . .. | magic of the Eisenhower name. |H $100 Kent APC’ = —=§ Senna Leeves, loz....... $1 Packages on ee | Such debits wére enough to bea DIAPER 3 t | make exponents of the ui Te ener oif8 =. ,.. e«. £4Gtycerin, 4 om.......... LINERS pul —_ = task” rege pea Eisen- oe Vy) wou second ) HT PPrTrrresties —, however scandal urge : ee 2 for 1.01 ne to retire te his Gettysburg farm. pains, neuralgia, rente Ol Ceol 25's. . 2/4le f 100 waren bs “*e. liners per Republicans eager to have Eisen- hower head their ticket again had another, simpler factor in their favor: The President gave increas- ing evidence, after two years in office, of thoroughly enjoying his job. The 64-year-old executive is In excellent physical condition, thanks in part to frequent rounds of golf and other enforced relaxation from the man-killing pressures of the White House. LAY-AWAY NOW FOR SUMMER USE Crazy, Mined Up Cat Orig. $25.95 8 PLAY GYM ¢ = eee * a | oe JUST $2.00 WILL HOLD IN LAYAWAY! Reg. $37.95 10 PLAY GYM $95” @ 6 tt. Galvantesd Safety-Pormed Slide @ Sterdy Ledéer fer Slide @ Chinning Ber @ 2 Seat Glide Ride @ 2 Swings © Trapere Bar 2 Band Rings Shares Tree With Bird rere nee Reg. $45.95, 11 PLAY GYM $ 95 HAGERSTOWN, Md. #—Almost @ 0 Mt. Gaiventinn 2° eae 7 ones eae ayy Ny > every day, a wild pheasant flies @ Trapese Bar e? Rings into Mrs. Donald Currence’s back yard and roosts on a tree. Then the family-cat climbs the tree—but not to chase the bird. Il seems the two have become fast friends ever since the pheasant dropped in for a visit during last week's snowstorm. They share a ‘limb together. HINES HOBBY HOUSE 7 $. SAGINAW, PONTIAC 7 EACH CAPSULE CONTAINS: Vitamin B-12 seer «1.0 meg. VITAMIN 2 tou. $2.61 Od $2.28 Reg. $2.50 bottles 2 | 2 Bots. $f 6: with 109 capsules in HM Folic Acid ....... Reg. $2.25 bottles of Res. $1.25 bottles each. bed ae capsules - , . ? : as gers. Calcium Glu eficial in building up ; Pere conate W.0 grs.. an your resistence to colds, Join the Men Women Whe K NOT *10, NOT ‘20 ’ For Your Old Watch in Trade Condition of eke 3’ oe E : ‘s .: Bots. : ‘ : ‘S a ig A + 4.42,500 units in a4 els a 8.6 *eeeeee mg. : ovenues ee eeee me. 3 eee eter 2 +e Bat es 5 Gen oot aife Abpea még. ; Ag Oe i : Re weber eeH eee eeereorerenoas é . mE 3 : p Bitartrate ..ccscccsevsrervecsed ae te Inositol tee eeeeeeeeeeenenes scevcnseeals ates + agegeepederes sepme 'T: asaee? > oe% <petts' _ THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, JANUARY 20, 1955, sense | AU AV the assistants to go into policy Plane coral Pcie ater Tatohe [Fleet of Shi Run Afoyl | muda, another out Says U.S. Changing Attorney General Pledges| tim tv’ ww’ snr |Na¥y Plone Reported en ee ean Site Ros Aled soe ; : Policy on Red China |Legal, Efficient Service |rinn te sprmms” it | WovOUL athe tomainat mmm me Mnzrtce| NORFOLK, Ye. @ ~ cate mee it troubles? ASHINGTON @—Sen one, LANSING (UP) — Thomas M.| public is the county prosecutor The attorney general said he |Sea Frontier reported last night) 1 ony on the missing craft. others running 3 to 30 4 an Ge. t) said today i Kavanagh, new Michigan attor-| who is eligible to seek opinions. | Wants the assistants to steer clear |a Navy PBY was presumed down| pianes were being readied to| Consider the plight of one Nor- Bn rule only|at sea somewhere between John-|sweep the area and two vessels | folk shipping company operator,| There were 388,000 questions. ston and Kwajalein islands in the | were diverted to search. who has one ship ashore at Ber- the Us in 1953. | lit ih ihe : i : Bild Hs é | | : il i: : said he is not ready to say a shift | {@vors to government officials or i making. YOU ALWAYS SAVE AT Cunninaian’s STORES : If i | | iit | - i | i + ies | ise Hy ess | ) “We seem to be shifting in part “I pleture my department as the responsibility over the For-| ® large law office giving service a public service to have a ! mosa situation to the United Na- 9 an eae definitely established.” DRUG tious. Up to now we have been said. the sole arbiters.” “As | Ee Both Mansfield and Knowland| *Mictent, legal basis.” assistants working under him. serve on the Foreign Relations} From now on, all legal opinions | come of these assistants are as , adal a Ke ates Committee. Knowland, the GOP! will be a matter of record and kept signed to various departments to seeeenahetereh® = + aTaP tee ees sf _* . “ates .) . @% leader, has disagreed with some/ on file, he said. advise on legal questions involved aspects of administration policy in} Kavanagh, a 4#year-old attor-| i, departmental operations. the Far East, ney from Carson City who has Ambassador T. F. Tsiang, Na- — vag a also tionalist China's chief delegate to| said int to eliminate re- the UN. said in a New York| quests for opinions from unofficial | *! of these assistants Soused speech last night the Chiang Kai-| agencies or private corporations. - shek government on Formosa “will| Requests for attorney general’s| semeral’s department. never bind its hands by U.N. reso-} opinions must come from govern- jution or any other method.” ment officials or agencies. Prob-| 4epartments to which they are ably the closest link between the —- New Guinea is 1,500 miles long. Cer eee ~~~ ~ *-°9,9,9.4.9 @ ——— llt—( CO ee ee FRUIT DISH AND PLATE Letieg design Glam, large chen, 78e valve LIQUID 21° Lint fsa UNBEATABLE VALUES! EASY CREDIT TERMS! Q0/D iT 6) SIX CUP PERCOLATOR pases ‘3° Men ting. good service. EPSOM SA REGULAR 24¢ 1 POUND § SO More cavt tees OF ela KO he) ee alealtiaattiaiaaa BLUE RIBBON AMMONIA WATER , 2 oF mas BEAUTY Buys a: POND'S ANGEL | em SKIN LOTION . ae 89 For hands thet rival the angels’ etry this wonderful cream, Makes rough, red hands smooth ogein. Don't be 1. of your 1 ily an lg lh. beg le Ate 6, a fl INR CN 0 RR So) ae ) ee, ~ 1 HUNDREDS of Clearance BARGAINS.. Box of 16 Feenamint — ad OO is ET Oe a a Ke ees ! perenne’ Y fe + | NS 5 ne a Pe Ke : I ee oc cooky atid’, 5, \ a? | CHECKERED ICECAP $42? 44 Folding style, @ inch, requier $! 59 ab oes MOLDED THROAT BAG 34°? 12 inches long .....; | WWEAREVER ScuamaTion ft Be 45-| HOT WATER BOTTLE fff NORTH SAGIN AW a & yer | : PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, JANUARY 20, 1955 TWENTY-EIGHT a 7 ; THE P PRESS sD 5 Millionaire Helps Actor Tree Wire Court Fight a oe ee eal) Batt, raed (Cites Growth “He cold: Cn Nee | enya te teens tae to tome, |Uoot Resting Place «ieee a s 4 Oe PP Fs . ranches, nc sonous or no! Michigan town ; When Waterman & Shed Physical Liabilities BUFFALO, N. Y. (UP)—A tree | i, nature, ore a nuisance per Governments ales Gul appointed offi- More than 7,500 citizens serve a quiet ~~ on his 100-acre , won a state supreme.court battle | s¢.. |" 4 yy pegs pce i ano tallor will look at the hia & here and saved itself from destruc: | —_—_ LANSING (®—Joseph A. Parisi ee _| “I wonder if the critics who have | family’s pets, he didn’t realize-it oe % hig suit, or a shoemaker will look at a | tion. TV in 1880—Almost. Jr. of Kalamazoo, president of the | ularly organized volunteer gownship every took trouble to get some would “Seek — very apeical ‘aetics ae which i cag agony a ae | SCHENECTADY, N. Y. (UP) —| Michigan Township Association, | fire departments with 20,250 fire-| of Parisi enc property of Mrs.| = aN pees . pieces ipment : out Be 2 ab tel them beck Srari Wintel. Newghtors contended Three men named Ayrton, Perry, | told his delegates yesterday just oe of oquigenant. omni deceased pets in the plot on the She “Couple that with the fact that| that the tree had become a nui-| and Carey invented a sort of tele-| how big township government in| , ae einige A — ce! it is estimated that it requires|bank of a brook hear a stand aad in my youth I was a ham Shake-|sance, its branches damaging a | vision set in 1880, according to | Michigan is. —-. on 2 age an officer | °t Mast twice who never got very | garage roof and its roots causing | General Electric researchers. Their| He said a survey made by the te with 15 patrol cars and crank a gasoline far. because I didn't have much cracks in the garage wall and | camera had a lens and a bank of | three-year-old association showed 60 those pa grees tempera at talent—and you see why I’m en-| floor, | selenium cells. It almost worked, | that almos' t 80,000 persons partici- officers. summer temperatures of 80 de-|industry is the largest in the th ic.” The neighbors brought suit to! too pated in township government, There are more than 14,500 ‘grees or more. world, = The HUB’S Annual Store -Wide : ‘the millionaire must be ex- a touched him, ; 7 : 4 business is tough enough == into, having the 2 added problem of a physical handi- % cap,” explained Dr. John Myers . , ae . ba in a brusque, don't-call-me-a-Santa- . : : Claus kindof voice. “I am a the- OO ’ ater lover and a TV fan, and | .- have mipne~ to spare. What is more logical than my helping peo- | _ ple with talent and troubles?” _ So simple give-away offer x is this: Anyone with ‘ , . = nn agg pager 3 lighility—be a crooked . , detect, ° : . , 8 7 Ev it my ih yu to : hd nt i i af ! if i i l FE te i : int Ht; i i b { Ht he ij Ht it i sae tse ree America’s Finest National Brands of Clothing | _ “Rgaetvortemen ss]: EAGLE... CLIPPERCRAFT ... WORSTED-TEX . .. PHOENIX ... BELMONT . . . ROCK-KNIT . . . GLENWOOD . . . | Anyone applying for the free ' | contac Crees Derwent ro Odds ana Ends Sale! "ae 2-Pant Suit Special! | Derecho de <5 aalay pclae $65 Quality, 100% Wool, 2-Pants Suits 1 7 ae i 100% Imported ae , A Sensational Buy ... ee Se ee ome ot } or OF a Here are three large groups that repre- Now $ AX | dollars surreptitiously, like they tatu eo sr apy me Pw Now $ 5 4 > sent tremendous values and outstanding Fine Worsted and Sharkskin fabries in nat Smee gp ode ae quality. Whatever price you choose, Nine Dollars the price inches the With a wile and two daughters Fine imported ‘Tweeds: and ‘Shetlands, . extra pants. of them ig-the rising red-haired 100% wool. Raglan and Set-in-Sleeve . b J . ” . me pom ye Y models, Newest patterns and colors— there’s a fine selection of fabrics, colors the- supply is limited . . . so you'll have ; " print eal surgeon i Lon to hurry. and models available. Slacks mein opr, ot ra . $ 8.85 Value ....... .-NOW °$ 7.16 and became vice president of the $10.95 Value ........- NOW $ 8.76 American Flange and Manufactur- .. ER Sport Coats $55 and $59.50 $12.95 Value ....... .-.NOW $10.36 vestments on the side, he was—in Now $14.95 Val NOW $11.96 shunt tencesiom| $19.95 Value .......-- Now $15.96 | SUITS and COATS eV _ Foundation to distribute Wie excess $16.95 Value ....... ..NOW $13.56 wo oe ey the foundation gets $29.50 Value ......... NOW ~ $23.60 $18.95 Value\......... NOW $15.16 . ‘ soe" annually to young $32.50 Value ......... NOW $26.00 $19.95 Value .\......-NOW $15.96 | tna ie tare, and ren $34.50 Value ......... NOW $27.60 \ : Ie en ot: seg te $36.50 Value ......... NOW $29.20 $65 and $69.50 N % , Gloves | | beceman respected meuaabers $39.50 Value.......... Noe $31.60 SUITS and COATS ow } ah of — Gloves, ere i most encted about the den : , | Pigskin . . . Imported Cape, Ete. «call om, ania " he ex ‘ . ; =its Wool Flannel | Now 2O% off al: £ is : / Group Chairman Shirts ae - Safety e LANSING Um) —The ey . $75 to $85 s Pajamas Now Williams administration’ has ) : squeezed the state school chief out Botany and McGregor All Wool Flannel . Now i ‘as chairman of the state Safety Shirts—Plaids, Checks and Plain Colors. SUITS and COATS : Dr. Clair L. Taylor, state super- : : , | Coat and Middy : : ere Now E O% off "4 ) a Argyle Hose 2 $1.00 Value NOW 69c » , . i No Charge for Alterations! t A Pairs for $50 7 ior port Shir atte | 3 se bons A fine selection of sports shirts, $4.95 : eG ES . a: oS Cooper Sport Hose or Ley ae ‘++ | | Be, 65e, 55e Value > : _ ess BW Mae--F Ls! |S ae Now BO amie A special group of fine sport shirts. ond ee “i y oat é ince ol et de Fe iS Weg BO <a oa ¢ : > % 1) Ped > |) oS Sees : oe . $588 i, oe a : a a ”_ . : . ’ = ‘ . Gee ie... dor , me Ans oath ‘ a ” -eitg - ‘ y (BK : ; af : i i. - ye Ps gO ie ? Miser \S:1 te fn hap eee reeks aa e ‘ es * 7 ; ; - t *) ~~ ; } : ci ‘ 4 P <4 f: 4 a cP: h < ed ej : . Bn, i eS ia x4 ; : ‘ *) os *e , ew ta ae 4 ws ¢ * ? " | ’ mie rete el e het Ms Eee aes L ‘ ms ! f : 6 ‘oe: ‘ OT i) ene Rae 6 SRS RS SAM Re gece eek ey eh 4 ay SE Me ames THE PON TIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, JANUARY 20, 1955 | Your DOLLAR Will t Buay Mach More. at Ore Sensational Michigan ELBERTA 12 Oz. CANS ONLY 1: Heinz Strained BABY Foon | 1151 or 10¢ Each CYPRESS GARDENS Grapefruit Juice Armour's Columbia Sliced Reteve she Pretnite on ber Podbatbosh serve WART + SWEET PEAS B ACON * WHOLE KERNEL CORN * KIDNEY BEANS _ *LIMA BEANS a4 Fa ie Le: . Bee ‘ : =e ae a ‘ a ee oa ‘ 2; ae ee Ls 3 bP + aa é. ee : sai “an : | ig ae ne . 4 , S 4 ww a, ..- 2 —E . ra ¥ oe ai) > 4 Pe Ores an + “ a aps wd SSC aia eas i a ae 8 F . fe ae x oa TUS es ee oS we | ‘ F Be é ¥e ‘ = * J > 9 foe is es : : * q Tee 5 wt 2 dj 4 . é 4 ss = 3 A * x ae ' < 4 ; A < ; ; ’ 4 | / x ov % c * . 4 ; es —_ - $ ce ‘ , bs ; - A? ‘ ‘ iy e . ‘ bn \ ° ‘ ’ # : 1 P ‘ ; - a a . : ‘ & \ ' * > ; 4 ¥ j ( a x E ipl a ; gee } i ¥ \ t a » ; ee en ee sles). SNOWBALL PEAKS—Here is a fresh, new dessert idea to brighten ments of the winter season. Made with marshmallow frosted cup- cakes from the grocery stote, this is a quick and easy dessert to prepare. You'll like serving it to both family and guests. Snowball Peaks Brighten Menu Snowball Peaks are a quick des- sert to make to brighten winter menus, This delectable dessert begins 8 8 iizf : § to Cottage Pudding ‘Sweet and Sour \Flavors Mingle in Tangy Dish Here's a timesaving dish with an unusual] flavor combination. Try it tonight if you want a tangy, dif- ferent main course that will be— not just eaten—but literally de- -| voured Refreshing pineapple tart ness blends with piquant sausage, onions and peppers, into a feast for a famished family. It's certainly an _ inexpensive meal, and it doesn't take long to prepare. Here is a menu that will assure a well-balanced meal: Sweet -Gour Sausage with Rice Tossed Green Salad Sesame Rolla Coconut Cream Pie Sweet-Sour Sausage With Rice One H-ounce can pineapple tidbits 1 pound sausage Ks 1 medium *« , thinly sliced r 1 cup beef broth ior beef bouillon cubes dissolved in hot water) 3 tablespoons cornstarch “% teaspoon sal ‘= teaspoon pepper % teaspoon dry mustard % cup sugar “% cup vinegar 3 cups het cooked rice $$ —> Broiled salmon steaks take on new interest and deliciousness when served with a remarkable plum sauce The sweet and sour sauce com- bines canned purple plums with | vinegar, sweet pickle relish and | celery, Salmon Steaks With Plum Sauce | 2 pounds salmon steak cut %-inch | thick Salt and pepper Butter or margarine, melted 1 No. 2% can purple plums 1 tablespoon brown sugar 2 teaspoons cornstarch ‘4 cup vinegar \% cup sweet pickle relish 1 stalk celery, cut in l-inch pieces | Sprinkle salmon with salt and pepper; brush with butter or mar garine. Broil 3 inches from source of heat 7 to 10 minutes on each side, or until fish flakes easily with fork. Meanwhile, drain plums and reserve one-half cup syrup; pit plums. Combine sugar and corn- starch, Add vinegar, relish, cel- ery and syrup. Cook over medium heat until | thickened and clear, stirring con- stantly Add plums and heat to serving |} temperature. Serve with salmon. Makes four servings. Swordfish With Purple Plums 1 Bo. 2% can purple plums 3 tablespoons lemon juice b, teaspoon grated lemon rind \e tesspoon salt | 2 tablespoons sherry, if desired | Je pounds swordfish, skimned and | in serving pleces | | | j | cut Balt and pepper 2 tablespoons butter or melted margerine, Drain plums and reserve 1% cups syrup. Pit plums Combine plums, syrup, lemon juice, rind and one-fourth tea- spoon salt. Heat to boiling point. | Remove from heat and add sherry if desired. Meanwhile, sprinkle fish with salt and pepper; brush with butter or margarine. Broil 3 to 4 inches from source of heat 8 to 12 min- utes, or until browned and flakes easily with a fork ] ‘*. | X e s; ; | | This light fluffy cottage pud- ding is intriguingly flavored with mace Mace Cottage Pudding 1% cups sifted cake flour 2 teaspoons double-acting baking 4, teaspoon salt % teaspoon mace % cup butter or margarine % cup sugar 1 ees % cup milk Sift together the baking Cream in egg flour, salt and mace. beat powder, butter and sugar; thoroughly. Stir in sifted dry ingredients in three additions, alternately with milk; have dry ingredients mois- tened each time but do not stir until smooth, Turn inte buttered loaf (about 8 by 4 by 2% inches); even 2% to 30 minutes or until out clean, Turn out on board. Cut into thick slices and serve warm with lemon sauce. Makes six to eight servings. Guard your HIDDEN * Caused by @ lack of essential food elements necessary to normal growth and health. +s. Contains up te 3 . feed, yet costs less than half as much to feed. ; Aimer tiling Co) Div. of CARMATION COMPANY, Lo: Angeies 26, Californie a pH SE ~ dog against ., HUNGER fimes more appetizing “ ~ er r 4 pan bake in moderate (375 degrees) | tester inserted in center comes | ICE ft HOWARD Wi VELVET. BRAND MEDIUM Ni ae CREAM \ STREE APPLES SAVE 20¢ WITH THIS COUPON SAVE SAVE SAVE SAVE 6 delicious flavors APPLE SAUCE ..1 BORDEN’S = - | __ THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, JANUARY 20, 1955 to Broiled Salmon Steaks Prepare Ham With Plum Sauce Adds Interest Rich Brown Glaze | Fine color and flavor mark this ham glaze. Rich Brown Glazed Ham | 1123 te M-pound } eating ham excess fat) 1 cup firmly-packed dark brown sugar %e cup flour 2 tablespoons tarragon vinegar Parsley Bake ham, fat side up, accord- | ing ito wrapper directions. Stir | brown sugar, flour and ~ vinegar | together well. One-half hour before ham has | finished baking, remove from |oven; lift ham to another pan or | platter and pour off drippings. Do not score ham. Spread top and sides of ham with sugar mixture, leaving most of mixture on top. Return to oven to finish baking and glaze. specia) cook -before- (without shank, skin and “ ~— U.S. No. 1 Michigan POTATOES ': Cello Pecked CARROT 10 RED STEEL 4 ROBIN ALL POPULAR BRANDS wy CIGARETTES | Will Bring Kids’ --- HIGHWAY FOR $2 21 Oe THIRTY-SEVEN rg Lemon Eggn 3g Home in Hurry When” hungry youngsters come home from ‘séhool, you want to fix them something good, quick “and nutritiqus. They'll love this at home after-school snack as much as stop- ping at the soda fountain if you fix them lemonade eggnog and serve it with cookies and a sandwich. A lemonade eggnog is refreshing, healthful with vitamin C, and so easy to make when you use frozen concentrate for lemonade. With the lemonade eggnog serve a peanut butter sandwich. Make the eggnog in an electric blender, Lemonade Eggnog Beech-Nut Coffee really has it~richer, heartier flavor to 1 dden your taste 4 tablenpeons frozen concentrate for gla ‘ buds and lemonade brighten your day! And for a i cup m Beat egg thoroughly first, add taste-tempting quick start, try |concentrate for lemonade, beat New Instant Beech-Nut— |again, add milk. If you make the 100% pure coffee! elS Ib. ag CORN.... —* 39° CREAM STYLE 303 Size c @ RED KIDNEY 4 CANS FOR BEANS... peas..... AQ" s TOMATOES 49° 29° . Hand Pecked, 21 Con E TOMATO JUICE... PEANUT DERBY’ e BUTTER "an 39 Ib. 49° HOOD CAN orrwrrrrrrereeeeeeeeerereeree - $499 - Carton Plus Tax STEWING CHICKENS . ry F ND 3 3 BEEF "$5 PORK SAUSAGE}; 33° 0 ARMOUR’S A as @ @© ‘TRAY PACKED ‘ 29: cement — Planning lee Rink on Old Athletic Field! ‘of Court Service ROMEO — The old athletic field off S$; Bailey street is being readied | for ice skating this week. Foltz Bros, Co. has agreed to bank the edge of the rink, and the Romeo Volunteer Fire Department will s to surfacing th ara. Louis Berelles, with Philip A, Berthiaume of the Detroit Edison Co. is installing lights for night sakting. The local police department will supervise the activities. Plans ffidicate the expected use | of the rink this weekend. Fast-Working Thief NEWARK, N. J. &—While pho | tographer Melvin Weiss, 32, was under the black hood of his cam- era focusing it for a picture of @ | ‘| Theresa Butts ‘end Feb, 1 for Miss Theresa Butts ,court stenographer for the Tuscola in cooperation | | position. dinner in Lapeer. She was presént- led with a double string of pearis to End 50 Years of her work. County Deaths Elton Gy Stover LAPEER — Service for Elton G. | Stover, 28, of 2700 Five Lake Rd., wilt be held at 1:30 p.m. Saturday se , at the Baird Funeral Home, with plan etd the eee | burial in Mt. Hope Cemetery. He , died Wednesday. Miss Butts, who before 1916 | Surviving are his widow, Bonnie worked in the Lapeer - Oakland | Jean, a son, Gerald, his parents, County Circuit, has no specific Mr. and Mrs. Arthur J. Stover of | LAPEER — Fifty years of serv: | |ice to the courts of the state will Lapeer 4oth Judicial Circuit since le its inception in 1916. On that day the woman, so long |plans for the future. ,She will.' | apeer a brother Keith, and a however, contifue to do stenogra- phic sork for the Justice and Pro ‘bate Courts,’ a county apoiative ere" | sister, Joyce Ann, both of Lapeer Lawrence D, Shockey During her many years as court stenographer, Miss Butts | ers Funeral Home, with burial in| has served under the jurisdic- | Mt Hope Cemetery. He“died Tues- tion of eight circuit judges. | Surviving are his widow, Lulu, bar associations of Tuscola and La. | | ute to. Miss Butts at a testionenial and a travel clock in recognition saat Given 59 Planes LAPEER—Service for Lawrence | [Room lgapediion Planned by Club ‘in Romeo Today ~ ROMEO — I’ nspection of the new | | rooms now being used in the addi- | Disabled Child's Future Brighter tion to the South school will be} Wayne Educator Tells | part of the Elementary Schools | Club program tonight at 8. Work done by students in these | rooms will be on display. The pro | gram will feature a film on social | development, from Michigan State | College. a | An informa) discussion will fol- | teachers, nurses, Pontiac Group of Need for Special Education “Teamwork — with parents, physicians and vocational rehabilitation workers | cooperating — is the answer for low the film. Refreshments wil! | fhe child who needs special edu- be served. ation.’ "Thus spoke Dr. Wayne John J. Lee of University Wednesday | night before a pyblic meeting on TACHIKAWA, Japan «® — The | special education. | D, Shockey, 59, will be held at 10/U Ss Air Force today turned over | sored by the Pontiac Area Chapter a.m. Saturday at the Muir Broth | 59 planes, including eight jets, to | lof the Internationa! Council for It was spon- | the fledgling Japanese air force | | Exceptional Children. at this U.N. west of | Tokyo, air base Pagans used holly for decoration + And Who's on First? Speaking in the Lincoin Junior High Schoo! Auditorium, Dr. Lee forecast a brighter picture for EASIEST TERMS IN TOWN! SUITS 99% V3 off Buckskein Joe's Wool Shirts - Jackels DR. JOHN J. LEE Last week, 62 members of the | and an aunt, Mrs, Anna Laing of = | PASS CHRISTIAN, Miss. @—-A handicapped child by the year | Chancery Court decree yesterday, Fi of 1965. changed the city’s northern bound- | | “There is immediate hope for a ary from the north side of North | store front, someone caMe along | and stole another camera he had | peer Counties, with their wives anc Hans * Lipershey, Dutch opti-| at midwinter festivals long before @ already set up. | several honored guests, paid trib-' cian invented the ie telescope in 1608. | the birth of Costet. —— NATIONAL CLOTHING the physically and mentally RAPPY’ . , La e Bex child in this county who is excep- Street to the south side of North | 9 SOUTH SAGINAW Kingan + Tra-Packed b rs | tional and cannot function as do Street. North Street runs east and! normal boys and girls,” he said. west acon Pointing to the recent action i x 6500 Hetchery Rd., neor Williems Loke OR 3-1552 Seen Oy Celene Coty whence xe a millage increase will establish | : % OPEN SUNDAY THRU THURSDAY 9 to & P. M. FRIDAY and SATURDAY 9 to 9 P. M. WINE - BEER TO TAKE OUT 89 aE Only in America's First-Choice Truck~ wonderful buys in All These First-Choice Features For You! SALLAN DIAMO NDS '55 CHEVROLET TRUCKS wim" ** | and operate special education pro- grams and facilities for handi- capped children, Dr. Lee said this | county set a precedent for the en- | tire nation “It is notewerthy that the pi- onecring in this program began here,”” he said. He stated that this was a definite sign of the awakening | of public interest which is a | vital force in the operation of a special education program. An encouraging sign, too, he said was the new recognition of the role vocational rehabilitation | plays in educating the exceptional | | boy or girl. | Dr. Lee serves as advisor for | Wayne's special education depart- ment and also is on the advisory | committee for elementary and | | secondary education in the U. S. | Office of Education. Lb. 2-49 Defiance—303 Size Peaches *: om | 5-99 Birds Eye Frozen PEAS GROUND BEEF Hills Bros. COFFEE U. S. Choice Beef — 3° 99' Defiance OLEO Disease Strikes Mexico | MEXICO CITY w—A health of- ficial says yellow fever has broken |out in the south Mexican states of | | Tabasco, Yucatan and Chiapas and has taken several lives Matching Band $100 Direct from Amster- ~ dam, Holland to you | ... the world’s finest — _.- «diamonds at simply ~ ~~“ wonderful savings — - Compare! $44 to $2000 _ Fed. Tax included ! , J No other trucks offer you all these hour-saving, dollar-saving | features. And Chevrolet's the ‘ | Pisin lowest-priced line. So, naturally, it's the best selier! DOLLAR-SAVING WORK-SAVING _ ENGINE FEATURES CONTROL FEATURES You get exactly the right power effort needed with exclu- Sturdy single-unit tubular steel sive: Recirculating Ball Steer- ing Gear; Torque-Action and Twin-Action brake design helps you stop more surely and easily every time! MATTHEWS- HARGREAVES, fa Mill St. and ra S. Scginew St rear axle housings! Strong and rigid frames! Durable, Dia- phragm-Spring Clutches with high torque capacitics and - long-life Construction. for your job. All three engines have aluminum alloy pistons, all-weather ignition system, , full-pressure fubrication for - long low-cost life! Pontiac, Michigon 7 — tort a a ait ns Re * rs - ‘ - —| i : jolfers: Start Shoot in . be, ‘The prep basketball spotlight in i : i a it Fke i mont ek Clg, & om tote first-place battle next Tuesday at > —., as, Ean itn Sexes 3 t 8 Sei. siteny 135 TSE fate Si es 183 wares gg ue wa bw 1 ti i ii i i fi tA i tl rr # Rze7E irae - Hes § i Ht 5 fs Southfield each have 2-2 marks. Only Waterford (0-4) is out of bump into a team that has won its last three games after losing 3 out of four. The other I-L encounter sends Farmington to Southfield. Getting most of their scoring punch from Bob Evans and Ken Moser, a pair of small-sized guards, the Bluejays have won five games out of nine. Farmington has hit its stride with four victories and a one- point loss to Van Dyke to show for its last five outings. The Falcons’ big center, Jerry Rice, Gal Gridders BC Sorori in Powder VANCOUVER, B.C. » — The blondes and brunettes, with per- ; E i tf rt dad ° oF s 4 FRE ij HUilip rp | i i z i 4 Sports Pages in ) Today's Pontiac Press Sta > ee BER | Tae - ANE i ~ 5 # te Acting Speedily place Grid Coach i z if Ns i HI eRe bot tty 2 TPEzES ? - ii 4 RES ith | i wi fii [ : i iy Hi i F : : i 3 i E f iP Hur Te ties Meet Bowl Tilt from the game go to rebuild Brock Hall, student meeting place swept by fire last fall. . ° . Both teams will run from split-T formations, with cute quarter- backs calling any one of 25 plays they have been studying. . . * Calling for Alphas will be Pauline Kelly, 5-foot-2 and 117 pounds. Jackie Trafford of Gam- mas is 5-foot-7, 130. About 16 girls are expected to dress for each team, using regu- potlight Shifts tolnter-Lakes found the range fof 19 points in Tuesday's win over Bentley, but Ron Donaghue, a good rebounder, wil] be lost for the Southfield game with a sprained ankle. Livonia Birmingham's title hopes in the Eastern Michigan circuit will rise or fall Friday night at Port Huron. Port Huron and Mt. Clemens share the lead with 3-0 records and Bir- mingham is 2-1. While the Maples and Big Reds tangle, Mt. Clemens will entertain Ferndale. Imlay City can gain a full 2 game lead in the South Central by beating Mayville, and “the tmiay five has the home floor advantage. Thé Spartans are one of the area's highest-Seoring combines. with, an average of 64 points per start. (6-0) and Utiea (50), rate the favorite’s role to stay that way as the Knights from Royal Oak go to Holy Redeemer and Utica plays at home against Lakeview. Almont (#1) should have little trouble gaining its 10th straight win at The visitors in each case carry 5-2 records and Oxford totes a 4 -|game winning streak to Milford. Chiefs’ Relay Chiefs swept 7 of 9 Ist places and posted one new pool record. Broken record came in the 180- Heyliger Defends Canadians in Prep Schedule in County Area sill ane Team Breaks Mark in Swimming Victory yard mediey relay, with Tem Cress, Bob Keavy and Beb Lam- fon teaming te register an ¢x- cellent 1 minute 41.9 second clocking. Saginaw Arthur Hill set the previous mark of 1:43 less than twe weeks ago. The three mediey men also won Chiefs, currently holding down 2nd place in the Sagihaw Valley Conference with a 2-1 mark, re turn to league competition here #@-yard free style—McKeown (HP) ist; Lynch (HP) nd; Bergstrom (PF) Ira. Time Mcintyre (HP) 3nd; Simonson (P) Time 2 minutes 18.8 d 100-yard back stroke—Cross (P) Ist; O'Rourke (HP) 2nd; Cole (HP) Ird. Time 100-yard free style—lameon (P) Ist; McKeown (HP) 2nd; -Saigeon (P) Ird. Time 56.5 seconds. 120- indiv. tg re (BP) ist; Bogard (P) 2nd; Simonsen (P) 3rd. Time 1 minute 20.2 ving—Gaigeon (P) ist; Purary, (HPy Qnd: Courtney (HP) 3rd. 10-yard mediey relay—Pontiac (Cross Keavy-Lamson) ist; Pa: (Cole-Jackson-Lynch) 2nd. Time 1 min ute 41.9 seconds. (New pool record. For The only unbeaten fives, Shrine . tournament. . | Honolulu who won last week's-Sea . |Island Open. Par is 75. ord. | daily, with the showdown round THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, JANUARY 20, 1955 ng in San Dieg ‘American Links Team |s Winner in Hopkins Test Herbert and Middlecoff Pace 17-10 Win Over Canadian Pros Te ’ ‘ . _ i PRIMA weet ek 6 le. a rea! aif bed Pentise Press Phete FACE LEADERS—Currently involved in a 3-way | the loop. Facing a stern test will be Viking regulars deadlock for 3rd place in the jumbled Inter-Lakes | (left to right) Myrel Taulbee, John Reid, Bob Hess - Conference basketball race, Walled Lake will travel and Dedo Aughenbaugh. Coach Niles Freeland’s to Berkley Friday night to meet the co-leaders of- Lakers have a 43 season record. The United States scored 11) points in winning three, losing two | and splitting one singles match, and winning two and losing one of the doubles attractions. Briefly, the’ results: Singles — Chick Harbert, North- ville, Mich., defeated Pat Fletcher, Saskatchewan 4up, 3 points to zero; Ed Furgol, St. Louis, de- feated Al Balding, Toronto, 1-up, 2% points to \ point: Henry Mar-- tell, Edimonton, defeated Marty Furgol, Lemont, Ill, Sup 2's points to %. — = o . - Cary Middlecoff, Kiamesha Lake N.Y., defeated Bill Kerr, Montreal, 5S-up 3 pdints to zero, and Jack Burke, ‘Kiamesha Lake and Stan Leonard, Vancouver, B.C., ended even, each 1‘, points. Doubles — Burke-Ed Furgol de- feated Fietcher-Leonard 24p 2% points to %; Balding-Gordon Bryd- son, Toronto, defeated Middlecoff- Lloyd Mangrum, Niles, Ill., 3p 2% points to %%; Barber-Marty Furgol defeated Martell-Kerr, 3-up 3 points to zero. In addition to the two interna- tional teams, the San Diego field has a representative entry list. Springs, Calif., who won the event as an amateur a year ago and turned pro a week later. j | Weather Cold for Golf Test TAMPA, Fla, @ — Most of the nation’s top-pros and amateurs fought both par and cold weather today in the opening round of the $5,000 Tampa Women's Open Golf Temperatures in the mid-thirties Were expected for the early start- ers in the annual 72-hole event. S.C., winner of last year’s tourna- ment, is back again. Every other titlist since the tournament began nm 197 except one is back and she is Polly Riley, the star amateur from Dallas, Tex. Favored with Miss Rawls to win this year on the 6,207-yard Palma Ceia course are Babe Zaharias of Tampa, Louise Suggs of Sea Is- land, Ga., and Jackie Pung of The field of 149 will play 18 holes Sunday afternoon. Top amateurs in the field in- clude Mary Lena Faelk, former National Amateur champion from | Thomasville, Ga., and Pat Lesser, the Seattle star. : Former Stars Plan to Fight Delinquency Kansas City Group Is Formed in Teams for New Campaign KANSAS CITY W — Some out- | Standing athletes of the past and Grill Quintet Wins Overtime Thriller 62-60 Downs Machinists Class B Tilt; Beats Boys’ Club < Forced MSC to Discard Polo FELL esiil i | z ; ' : Hi i i i Bee Eig rf z5 + Z 2 2 a | | rel iit fit pili tie ftrl! : lt fi ! : HF = Even With Five C hampionshi ps Behind |Her, Miss Ladewig Is Jittery Bowler | Q fz f i. gee i “f af Fy HA z i oF ii i re i i | ! i ; 7 if i t 38% : ea F Z i Hi 5 Fs i] ; E | ui - 2 | PHS Five Hopes to Bounce Back Against Wolves Pontiac High Travels to Bay City Central Friday Night Pontiac High's basketball team, hoping to partially atone for its miserable performance against Ar- thur Hil] Tuesday, returns to Sagi- naw Valley Conference play to- morrow night at Bay City Central. Coach Art Van Ryzin plans to nate with both King at forward and Bilacklaw at center, wil] be playing his final game for Pontiac Friday. A 2nd-term senior, he will graduate at the end of this Henry to Get Back Against Red Wings BOSTON # — Veteran Boston i ; i : i 3 ? 1, i { it ty : i i r i | s z s : H sES af H lr i el i if 4 i 1 amet EM amt te SH) ~ porty-2xGHT — Townshi Supreme Court | Decision Scored ~ Restoration of Power to Local Units Sought by Resolution LANSING (UP)—The Michigan 7 local property valuations instead of county equali- zation. The Association’s convention adopted a resolution calling for a constitutional amendment to “re- store to local taxing authorities the power to determine valuations’ and the function of equalizing valuations.” The resolution did not The State Board would function only as an appeal body to act on disputes between counties. The 600 delegates elected State Rep. Roy H. Brigham (R-Battle Creek) as president after Leonard Broquet, Redford Township, with- drew from the race. Other officers elected were: Ju- ciation said townships serious study to such proposals ahead as a $500,000,000 highway bond issue, more money for public schools and a revision of the state constitution, Chairman Reveals Fund Drive Planning WATERFORD TOWNSHIP—Ed- Mrs. Russell Hetzer is woman's chairman; Mrs. Eari Floyd, Moth- er’s March chairman, and Stanley Colby and Earl Floyd are supply co-chairmen. The Mother’s March will be held from 7-8 p.m. Jan. 27, in the ll school areas of the township. Almont Baptist Church Names New Officers ALMONT—Officers elected at an annual meeting of the First Baptist Church were: Mrs. Curtis Bufkin, clerk; Earj Greenman, treasurer, SAM'S WALGREEN DRUGS 3293 Auburn Road __THE PONTIAS PRESS, THURSDAY, JANUARY 20, 1955 Pp Association Blasts Equalization Ruling secretary; Caroline Simpson, president; _recording secretary. ble is presented to the bs Left to right| the most weight between meetings, the trophy to the woman who loses the most poundage, NEW OFFICERS—The newly elected officers| Rose,. recording secretary, and Delores Mahan, of the Waterford Township Fashion-Your-Figure club are shown here with club reward books and | on the trophies which they award weekly. are Eleanor Hung, vice president; Gladys Alexander, Elaine bevel agg who gains Frances Jarvis, Lyle A. Koyle Wed at Lapeer for the candlelight, double-ring ceremony Saturday when Frances D. Jarvis and Lyle O. Koyl spoke Wilder Rd., and Lyle is the son Wayburn Koyl served as his brother’s best man. Ross Cor. | nell of Dewitt, the bridegroom's brother-in-law, was the attendant, and ushers were Jack Hutton and Auburn Heights Acrows from Pontiac State Bank ly houses, RANCH Conventional and “Pont (OL 19711 WAGONS Low Mileage, Excellent Condition Automatic Shifts LARRY, JERON ~ Your Recenter Ford Doser “MAIN ST. AT | Walled Lake Supervisors | Assume Posts Tomorrow Two new Oakland County super- visors from the recently incorpor- ated City of Walled Lake are ex- pected to make their initial ap- pearacne at tomorrow's supervi- sor’s meeting here. They are Harry W. Thomas, the city’s mayor, and Marshall E. Tay- lor, a councilman. Walled Lake Farmers Offer |Eggs for Free Irate Poultrymen Picket Agriculture Department, Hand Out 240 Dozen WASHINGTON (INS)—Disgrun- tled poultry farmers dished out free eggs in front of the Agricul- ture Department today in protest About 25 members of the Eastern Farmers Union from New Jersey, Their mood apparently was re- : “We are Ready a for Rochester Drive yee eS 28 Hee 3 , William R. Potere FUNERAL HOME ¥ ¥ ’ ¥ i y + { - Ai > PS: Pegg ee See “ss *" is z LANSING # — Gov. Williams’ proposal for a ‘“‘seal of quality’ Resolution Asks Public Meeting PTA Council Seeking School Building Talks for Growth Program MILFORD—At a meeting at the Brooks Elementary School last night the Huron Valley Council of PTAs passed a resolution urging the board of education to call a special public meeting within the next few weeks. Reason for the action is to pre- Enrollment is now 515 and pected to pass the "700 mark by 1957, Harold Hansen, superintend- ent of schools pointed out that there is a two-year time lag be- tween voting of revenues and ac- tual construction. The Huron Valley Council is made up of representatives from all the PTA organizations in the ex- mentary and Milford High schools. Hold 4 Week ‘Course in Flower Arranging Proposed Seal of Quality Getting Lukewarm Start been’ killed in committee. Gillespie said he would introduce the bill as a ‘“‘feeler’ to get re- action on the proposal. Stanley Powell, legislative counsel for the Michigan Farm Bureau, said his organization is “not antagonistic” to the seal of quality idea. “But we've discovered very lit- tle interest in it,” he said. “I've certainly received no mandate to get busy and promote it.” William Brake, master of the State Grange, said the proposal “has merit, but the difficulty lies | in policing it.” 1 more power,” he sald ly back that.” Miles Nelson, chief of the de- partment's Marketing and En- forcement division, said the bill would allow voluntary subscrip- tion to the program by producers. of the seal of quality.” Church to Ordain Elders Sunday at Drayton Plains DRAYTON PLAINS. — Newly elected elders of the Community United Presbyterian Church will be ordained and installed during the morning worship service at 11 a.m. Sunday. Ordained will be Ceci] Bell and Keith Johnson. Dr. L. G. Rowley and John Hazlett who previously were ordained will be installed, The annual winter Communion will also be held at this service and there will be a reception of mem- bers and the sacrament of Bap- tism. . The youth groups, under the di- rection of Harvey Beach, assistant the evening service at 7:30 p.m. in the church parlors. The program will consist of pictures presenting the national youth project of the denomination, assistance to the youth work in Egypt. County Ce Calendar i MOMs oy a hold its reg- ular meeting tonight ‘The local Macabees will sponsor a card party Seturday night at their hall, with the public invited te attend. A muskrat can travel 50 yards under water before coming up for air, perie Mr, and Mrs, Armand F, Codere Marriage Vows Spoken in Saturday Church Rites lar. The long sleeves came to points over her hands. Sister of the bride Mrs. Robert Codere was the matron of honor, and her husband served the bride- groom as best man. Louis Merlo, brother of the bride, seated the guests. A wedding breakfast followed the | 10 a.m, ceremony, After a trip in| Northern Michigan, the couple will live in Rochester. ms pear els is We fill your. prescriptions with the utmost care. preserv the health: of you and your_family as we “follow doctor’s orders.” ~ Round-the-clock delivery gaol OL 1-561! is IN OUR HANDS in an emergency, your pharmacist is your family's best friend Conference Planned and Growth Conference, scheduled “This bill has got teeth in,” he | for Tuesday night at St. Andrew said. “Another good feature is Episcopal Church, will feature Don- that it won't cost the public any | 4ld E. Bodley, assistant director of money. Producers will pay for in- | the Episcopal diocesan department spection in return for the prestige | Of Christian education, as principal to the pastor, will be in charge of | DONALD E, BODLEY med cert a Andrew Church DRAYTON PLAINS—A Planning speaker. Bodley will explain three new study courses for Sunday School classes, to be introduced this fall after eight years of study and experimentation. Parents, adult relatives and friends of church school pupils, as well as both public and church school teachers, have been called adult edQcation program for the fn Waterford Township Schools, *‘an- : nounced thig year’s course offer- ings today as follows: Beginning typing, advanced “typ. ing, tailoring, a do -it- yourself class, blueprint reading and dreft- ing, art and beginning sewing are scheduled for Tuesday nights frem 7 to 9:30 in the high school, The only Thursday night course is advanced sewing. classes will continue for 10 weeks Almont Farm Bureau . Set for Turkey Dinner: i Special ~- Selling — Quadriga PERCALE together for the event by the Rev. W. R. Hunt. At 7:30 p.m. dessert social hour will precede the 8:30 p.m, meeting. Carver School Row Witness Goes Free year old man detained as a ma- Police in the beating of Carver School board of education secre- tary Mrs. Loretta Baker was re- leased yesterday. James Paul Howard, of 21707 Gibson Court, was freed after ex- tensive questioning, according to police, Mrs. Baker told police Jan. 11 home when she failed to give them recall petitions being for the recall of board member James E. Harrison. Holiday Slated Friday for Clawson Students CLAWSON — Grade school chil- dren will get a holiday Friday when the Clawson elementary teachers hold their -ali-day workshop to dis- cuss current reading methods and procedures, tire group will be conducted by Joanne Bigelow, reading consultant for Scott Foresman Co. The after- noon session wil] be divided into two groups, Helen Miller, Birm- ingham Public Schools reading con- sultant, will address teachers of grades 46 will visit the Dearborn the lower grades; while teachers of Remedial Reading Clinic. County Births Mr. and Mrs. parents of a son. Eugene Eastman, born Jan. 13 at Almont the birth of a som. Bryan Ralph. born Jan. 7 . New Hedsen Mr. and Mrs Don Ellis are the par- @mts of @ son, dorm Jan. IT and coffee will be served and a | ROYAL OAK TOWNSHIP—A 338. | terial witness by Oakland Gardens that three men beat her in her | | circulated | ~ The morning meeting for the en- | | ; Prank Atcheson are | Mr and Mrs. Ralph Kerth announce | Cc yd. | 80 Sq. | 36 In. Wide | Needleize, Finish Open Fri. & Sot. ‘til 9 enn, 320 Moin St. Rochester | | fa Member F. T. D. 210 E. Third, OL ive 2- Insurance “For Every Need™ [ DALE and NINA MARTIN OL 2-9761 412 Main St. BUNK With Springs S$ Innerspring Mattress Store N 336-338 Main, ROCHESTER Complete Rochester Furniture & Appliance” BEDS oeaene ba) Store No. 2 j 3341 Auburn, AUBURN HGTS. . 1951 Chevrolet 1954 Chevrolet Radio and Hecate OK USED CARS and TRUCKS 1948 Willys Jeep 4 Wheel Drive 1953 Chevrolet Sport Coupe © -_ Y2 Ton Pickup Belaire 2 Door r. Power Glide. ; RSDAY, JANUARY 20, 1955 NTIAC PRESS THU THE PO "| AS] NE ged | (dM (8 1 peopel ae afte Bel i ER Ateereerety enna | stig tes dll at iy ahi (ants gs idl ae ; rane. ioe Teg NE aaa a my SS flag So “}Eapeeey jet ett iad: QF Ss | j P Ed iu bt TELS | 2 Sitdim° SRSSEUNTS lif i pein iii ay ET “22 of 213 iat PST ee ‘ TL Peri ap i ii | quel “ls Ht T af ital a er a a Hat i ee A i ie ie i ee | i lt ie F Pi if ie gue? hic il i ihe i tape ie lt Fi eyeseehias it Y a sat he {ne ih Ha ie peal Saat Ul ae i ia eee fa in ne vet it ian 4 ae eEEs Els, rusia ia; fj Be 883 ava is ae FG lee eft ee <f; : i 3 HH Hil mal ink aly went Sen aah ii 1 am ae ie lhl mae pT a, iio al ; ; aun TELL: y feihe TF nihil go > 278i 433 ¥4 2. 7 F= aT Ht tt i ie byes! Halt Bt sai Ht Hl: ait ls gil i] af an H iu chs = é} g Ba val ail ler till HH Sanat Hl i HHT ef Hii | >. oe Sy Fite-getegas keri aed » 555° — £6 : j ; $ Bg hata tintin tel rie gaia ai RGA TS ae SSshivalile HE Tr eM H rete TBE nn = 8 pale abdbeele eis TTTRITTE Tt grT | ceety| _ geges | FQ2p892 GePaEES guste antes Gee dg Teg att g i ge get ME GL BRET bg UE 1 ee es sen! lia ill tel [eee Hie gt ch 2p | ap) Site S tae ee ebeseg . <8 hz HUT epeiaulys x0, datti fe BS! gags , Fuad) S a858y Se Flo 5258 BS pees s SUG 8 sedge < | it Site Liiitis eat Wun ILE LE EBrs stvieludin ll Wein d Aalae ei ge BLSAG RUA Eg 8 STFA Pein ait site ih Sb Leaner ae i Ura ea a tei ! AEG] EER ascent persis aegte ee feb ze Be ih ie iyial uh 43548] 8 suit | ils cial BS ote UHR ete! shyly Hath Hig sie De ipegliieta’ Te Ht S 2 fis Bliaa fi He el! eon Ee hall dibs nt wat ai eal PSR WL | Serene Ra A ee le sia RE oS tid Ag yahoo ga- pee au tubs aabpes nae 2 risa pers sett eet aman Tals |e oH |e aad i] Sat le i ii bt at ge tenet aaa it Hee a fon | ae = hi y Upp eed beg iti ig Wes We ft bere ink Besser Fee acetaereera ee er eee aerr Tee VSM Awaba to as edie put | + inf = pats: = 3 > a3 E ites ° j 5 5 a 23 alec 6e . Fi 5 Le car ee a [ee tx $823 pidid * satel, a. i*ziy! § noe ba si ET Bins asliee et age a Hat “i Eli 4 BY ls i a 2 a nay a 3 iat ead Le ec i ett een ail st St 321 i i i itl ea ita | oe fulds pe ipttt aa! Fie F af : i fit ‘ipl ie iy tet se thy. Bitty j sQ 2°53 § af ] ‘ : <A aE eel, EEG a fhty zl 1 bss dl nl id| ili Engi vat ih asi iil] i. ee oe Ee HE li 483 Eekage| 5 - |= hei me nian tl i en a tsidiet i His tial SE S i tri at a us Le a 5 g BREE TAT Fria: ait jit f Fi it Hiei uf Pil gs. gh tiparual Bal 2 ie te ie Hit a J =: os ge eee py ‘ biHAE: Ss Eres : : : 25a) OS 5 eke 2 apa 2,35 8 S° : & a HF ryualtiietl Hla! 2.5 auth tii: i i HE fag (tlt fii 8 ioe ately th iS ga te a il Ubaivleinal OU: eg E384 tint Ah Hell teat Beale (eo Fg all SS lantilts Winn SB #Rs NENG i ena et BES EAD Ht BS tity . THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY; JANUARY 20, 1955 poy. SS | the incident from an i) Holland Wants Channel Predicts 70 Pct. Boost may have increased by per | going to college, compared to the will send her hat to Mrs. | Council Wednesday right adopted lege Enrol - Leonard, speaking before the col- 2,250,000, pe ™ Eisenhower but when the Presi | a resolution asking Congress to SAN FRANCISCO (UP)—Dr. J. | leges . — ee E) Goops))!| eh . . > a Harmony House White ~ pa , si sa muslin sheets . ee. : < ° ’ ” pet —— 81x99-in., 72x108-In. 1” a to Mormon Leader or Twin Fitted Bullet Type Wall Lamp now... take your choice of 3 sizes at this low price during the final week of this giant sale! Sears can take care of all of your sheet needs and still keep Black finish shade is 8in. deep, S-in. wide and finished inside ith white paint. Swivel sockéifurns lamp any desired will restore it as a histroical land- sole: : . well within your budget! So, take advantage of this a ie builing housed Michigan's White Goods Sale now — save on first quality white For Reading or TV Use ‘ first daily ey north r | . muslin sheets, 134 threads per sq. in. Priced regen Popeye ny | AT" combed percale sheets | 3 ts iF percales that are 190 threads per sq. in. after washing. 72x108-in. flat; twin bed size fitted. Save now on luxurious white Harmony House ] 97 Harmony House Full Fitted Sheets...... .. 2.17 fe Ti 7 ; i z direction. Use singly or in state, he hopes to develop . : decoration a museum on Mormon history and stel muslin sheets — a Alve Ae Xing Strax Jos agar rmony House exclusive pastels for colorful etal 935 and all of his followers were long wear. 134 threads per sq. in. after wash- 07 Double Pin-Up ones Mormens. Hotels, motels, heepitdils, ing. 5 colors. 72x108-in. flat; twin bed size Hoffmann purcahsed the buildin rooming-houses, institutions of fitted. Shop during this final sale week now! built in 1850, form Francis E. all kinds will find these values 81x108-inch or Full Fitted Sheets.............. 2.27 Left for $2,500. Left has been and savings typical of Sears! Plan ahead, buy now, e 4 ° + lst eee tele: te alk aia, best quality muslin sheets WHY Durable, long-wearing white muslin! Hos 148 PaY meas? threads per sq. in. after washing. Flat 72x 1” coeak Caneien wane a one dail on 108-inch or twin bed size bottom fitted or és chase of the building by oon. SEARS, ROEBUCK AMD CO. . 81x99-inch size. Get yours now—save more i Home Furnishings Dept. Seors! 4 Se te eee Sasso Maia Pees at rs: | . years.” . . , . , ioe a : So aa Beeson said the commission ECONOMY QUALITY ioe ioe . name a special committee to wot if | economy auaury I = ay Plate Glass Mirrors 13% HD ang ae Pome Mattress Covers VA 7/4 - Classic Home Decorator j See Se een as Regularly 3.38! Suve S2c Harmony House Fitted Plastic r— ty Fh Fashionable os well as functional — use mirrors for permanent vesiients of the ieee, Reduced! Reg. 1.98 Nez Sat : to raise funds to repay Hoffmann ° we . <> balance and accent in every room. Two-way bevel ¥2- — ~ o ar ner and to Day oy ir it vee oo Waterproel, odertese — ~ in. wide, gleaming chrome ploted buttons. Masonite Hoffmann said he visited Beaver added protection. 54x76-in. Fits ede clean. aioe ocr ra Presdwood back, 24x30-in. size. Isind for the first time last Oc- full size mattress. Easy to Full or twin size. Shop now tober when he bought some prop- wash. —save more! Lamp and Mirror Dept—Sears Second Ficor erty for a summer home and that " while on the island "he heard the , printing shop was going to be torn * down, He said he immediately ob- tained an option to buy the buidling. The newly formed Beaver Island Beat Co, announced re- cently that it will build a $76,- a @00 luxury carferry to operate between the island and Charie- volx, @ distance of 30 miles. The = ’ “¥ te Automatic Roaster DOWN 40°, taster, 20°, bigger! Cooks cooler. Holds full uarts— not just 18. Cooks as fast as an electric range ?- ¥ cist Regular Price is 3.29, Now Save 52c on Galvanized Garbage Cans ©@ Hand-dipped in xine _ 277 Be Ready When Sprains, Pains, Aches, Cold Strike Large Heat Pads | @ Regularly Priced ot 4.98 3° @ For Wet or Dry Applicetions ar dite ees. : @ Low, Medium end High Heats Portable Washers Ready for instont use, just plug it in! Wetproof, heating ’ Go ? 1 ' : . a By Se ca ce mere crt pre! Al dored in | aren Ate Aeten clears, ercowed in wanectight aborted abn Orlon Priscillas Sides ore for strength. . Tight fitting covers. UL Listed 32.95 Thermostatically controlled, won't overheat. Soft blue | te, Poo pean ears Seaire,’ save sxe pown cotton flannel cover, Snap fasteners. , Housewares Dept—Sears Basement Kenmore _— vith auto- Electrical Dept—Sears Basement 50x81-Inch Size, 79 7 i sy @ dozen aiapers! Scheele © aie te ae _ * Ps ringer Attachment ..... 8.95 Amazing fabric that requires no delicote care . . . ex- . | tremely resistant to insects, mildew, smoke and sunlight. ae 2 SHOWS DAILY Washes like a dream, will not shrink over 1%; dries (3. P.M, ahd 8:30PM. |] in minutes with NO IRONING. Save! | S77 § Curtain Rods See > ag 1 = " ¥ a : — : aii ’ \eees Saat : Thigl pas mer st i wig opal Automatic Heater 5un Lamp Bulbs Ceiling Fixtures. geome eg To . : | Thermostat Controlled Heat Popular Westinghouse Brand —_Eficiency for Kitchens, Bathe este Rede, pend .....€0e: Reg. 1.79 99¢ : Reg. 1.29 99¢ Kemore “97.95 mwe $9.95 ney ist 4,66 | SSNS bees eres | secs ee oe eet SVS Gaus. ' ee cs am takes lots of heavy wear. cord. [UL listed | and stend- Neat-looking : aluminum wae led ‘ i a SF Maes: Bet . : a wor oe taf: OH. SPER TS. 5 22: a? id + i a aad ? ee ae .