_ nor.a member of the family of an employe of this newspaper. stoned 9-year-old Kathleen Mc- Laughlin to death Feb. 17 was WASHINGTON (INS)—The Army and the selective service system |C°™mitted to the Lapeer State were disclosed today to be study-| Home and Training School yester- ing the possibility that the draft|day by Probate Judge Arthur E. might drop as low as 3,000 men | Moore. a month. * | The move does not rule out the Sitectine’ carvine oftetele han) | tee ee Dat advised the Army that draft ma- will be tried for murder chinery could be kept operating | Under adult statutes, Judge Moore on calls as low as 3,000, but that| ¢xplained. wide system involving 4,000 boards /Wednesday on a petition from and 50,000 unpaid workers. Prosecutor Frederick C. Ziem to The selective service officials ex.|av@ Diamond, of 52545 Notting- ‘pressed. apprehension Monday, ed te chat eneenae, when the Army issued a call for | wuiyes io adult : for than are scheduled to be drafted who near in March and 15,000 less than were | Diamond at 29430 was The officials said a situation has In a email pond near arisen In which boards are likely, ber home where she often went to disintegrate for lack of any-| © tee skate. ae Judge Moore said he Yook the “* ‘THE PON s 4 { t. oo i j ’ eee a \ “ioe TIAC PRAMASSVep paces Tah YEAR kkkke PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, TUESDAY, MARCH 1, 1955—26 PAGES TR cea? wate ae Bonanzagram Word Game to Start Monday in Press Here is a way to have fun with a word puzzle and have a chance ‘If the winner is a subscriber of record the Press will pay a $20 benus, making the award $120 for the correct answer. If there is more than one correct solution submitted the prize | be equally among the persons sending in the correct | ‘Hf there is neo correct solution in any week, the amount will be added to the next week's award. Bonanzagram offers readers of the Pontiac Press a chance to show their skill as solvers of crossword puzzzles and their knowledge of word definitions and the various subjects covered in each puzzle. The winner can be anyone who is not employed by this newspaper Bonanzagram starts with a story or anecdote which will give clues to the correct solution of a special message. The message will be given. with many of the key letters left blank. All that has to be done to solve the puzzle is to fill in the blanks. Easy? Well, perhaps not. But it is an intriguing, exciting way te compete for cash prizes. The prize money is waiting for anyone who can solve the clues and fill in the missing letters to complete the words. And don't forget, Bonanzagram will start in the Pontiac Press Monday and there will be a new one every week. To acquaint you with the way Bonanzagrams work, a sample puzzle will be published tomorrow, with rules and the story in which clues are found. Answer to this Bonanzagram and how the answer was worked out will be in Thursday’s paper. There is no prize for tomorrow's puzzle, as it is only a sample for your instruction. The first real Bonanzagram, with from $100 to $120 waiting for the correct answer appears Monday. And there will be a new puzzle every week. Don’t miss tomorrow's instruction Bonanzagram. March Makes Its Entrance Like Lamb in Pontiac Area March came like a lamb to Pontiac and most of Michigan today. And a long-range forecast by the_U.S. Weather Bureau predicts at least five more days of the same, with tem- peratures ‘ranging about five degrees above normal. The only lion-like action was reported in Detroit where a thunderstorm struck about 9 o’clock last night, dump- taal | I B | Hf L iit fl +e f i i HH i 3 s 3 TF if? i t ; i rE ; oe F i I i i | F i? F if i if | Ti : in it i Ll i rf re iz i i i é ry ! it i f i if bi £ onsumers Union Strikes, Ignores Fact Finding Move. Senate Ponders House-Passed School Aid Plan OK by Upper Chamber Would Put Bond Issue on April Ballot LANSING (#—The state’s 100-million-dollar loan pro- gram for local school con- struction, passed by the then sent it to the Senate for approval of minor amendments. z ji L : i \ i = t é Home Set Afire by Jet Bomber Crash in Louisiana |Normal Service Stratojet Crash Kills 5 Persons Crew of 3, 2 Others Die as Plane Burns in Trailer Park LAKE CHARLES, La. (INS)—A Albert Mofgan, %, were identified as Capt. California, Pa., mar-' and the father of four ~chil- | Burma, Laos, Cambodia and Viet dren; Copilot Capt. Mark Beck, | Nam after the Manila Pact confer- ilson, 24, and his burned to 7 / AP Wirephote FIVE REPORTED DEAD — This photo, taken minutes after a B 47} jet bomber crashed last night at Lae Charles, La., shows the home in which two persons were burned to death, The plane hit this home, three others and a trailer park, killing five persons. The crash scene was four miles northeast of the Lake Charies business district. on |sraeli Egypt Blames 38 Deaths Border Attack ~ charged Israel today with unleash- the most violent attack along the Israeli-Egyptiari border since the 1949 Palestine armistice. The Cairo government accused Israeli forces of killing 38 Egyptians and wounding 31 others in a “sneak” attack last night on an army headquarters two miles inside Egypt's coastal Gaza Strip. ‘Tired Dulles Lands in Manila for Talks MANILA @®—Secretary of State Dulles, visibly tired, arrived from Saigon today for important confer- ences with U.S. diplomatic chiefs in Asia, | Dulles made a whirlwind trip to 35. Donnieville, Caflt ied | Once in Bangkok last week. He is scheduled to speak to the and tke father of two children, and | diplomats tomorrow and depart for Capt. Elwyn Worth, Tex., married and the will attend the exchange of ratifica- McBee, 33, Fort | Formosa Thursday. In Taipei, he | tions of the U.S.-Nationalist China server, | In his conferenceg here, Dulles + Wall brief the U.S, diplomats on made contact with the obserVation latest developments affecting U.S. tower at the base after a night foreign policy in Asia. training mission and radioed for | down power and communications epee fay Confessed Youth Slayer Floyd Diamond Committed to Lapeeer Training School Truth Gives New. Light on Reports About Fluoride * Five hours after the first | Egyptian announcement, an | Israeli spokesman in Jeru- salem countercharged that | the ptians had crossed from Gaza into Israel to attack an Israeli unit. The Jewish spokesman said the battle had “continued into the | Gaza Strip” and the Israelis “sut- fered a number of casualties’ be- ‘fore repulsing the Egyptians. A spokesman said observers in the Gaza area had reported that an Israeli army unit had penetrated into the Egyptian territory and about 30 wounded but that Israeli casualties were not known. In the first report of the action, fairs, Lt, Col. Salah Gohar, said the Israeli forces surrounded the Egyptian unit and blasted it with a truckload of Egyptian reinforce- ments on their way to the attacked “The Israelis even threw. Molo- tov cocktails of blazing gasoline into the wrecked truck,” the Egyp- tian spokesman reported, ‘“Twenty- two were killed and 14 were wounded. None escaped being ei- ther killed. or wounded." It was expected Egypt would act quickly to bring the incident be- 10 CALLS! SOLD ALL! DRUM TABLE, COPTER TABLE, chair, This little Want Ad brought cash buyers for all the above articles the very first eve- ning. What have you to sell, rent or trade? Or is there some “hard to find” item you~’ fF want? If so, put a Want Ad on the trail, they work like magic! , To Place Your Want Ad DIAL FE 2-8181 Just ask for the WANT AD DEPT. Egypt's director of Palestine af- | heed 7 Vote Unlikely lon to six cents and increase per cent. April Highway {2 The Peltz plan would raise the , gasoline tax from 4% cents a gal- It would authorize local units and the state to pledge their shares for highway construction ls Maintained by Supervisors . Serious Storm Damage Would Endanger Lines, Company Warns Consumers Power Co, ; i : 1 | fel F eat Tefitbe if aT ! per cent to the cities. | sions and the money to be split 75 | per cent to the state and 25 per | cent to the local units. ‘Voters Tee Off |} FREEPORT, Ill. (UP) — Five | bond issue as voted in the city primary three weeks ago. . Splitting the new | revenue 44 per cent to the state, | 87 per cent to the counties and 19 | * The Senate committee has indi- cated it may convert the Peltz pian | . to its-owntheory=the same—tax} Sith. Smith's. increase but without the referen- | dum, without the bonding provi- Arbor tomorrow. Farrell said he ike, McNamara Lunch WASHINGTON () — President | Eisenhower invited Sen. Me- | Namara (D-Mich) and 12 other senators elected last fall to a mortats, demolition charges and | times as many voters turned out | luncheon at the White House today. automatic weapons, then ambushed yesterday to approve a golf course | Besides McNamara, six other | Democrats and six Republicans were included on the guest list. | Senate Forecasts Doom | | for $20 Income Tax Cut WASHINGTON (#—The scales of the Senate Finance fore the U.N. Security Council. | Committee appeared tipped today against a House- passed tax cut of $20 a person to take effect next Jan. 1. “The show's over,” said one committee Republican, jasking anonymity, when he heard that Sen. George event, the issue likely to be car- to the ate floor later in the week. Republicas said their seven | (D-Ga) had stated he would vote to knock out the cut. ’™ > employes went on strike in a ae Breakin of Union Lake _ Village Building U. S. Postal authorities from De- A ‘ _ anne sean troit today |were investigating the weekend breakin of the Huron) Lake Village Postoffice after Oak- | three other breakins on Union Lake | Road over the weekend. | The thieves, who entered the | pestoffice’s 800-pound safe by | combination | clock The office of Dr. A. J Lowery, | 3538 Union Lake Rd, was ran- sacked by thieves, but apparently | nothing was taken. Entry was gained to the doctor's olfice from the adjoining Huron Cleaners. 1536 Union Lake Rd., which also was ransacked. Police said the thieves stole a boy's suit and a.man's suit and about $10 from the Town Oak Cleaners at 2603 Union Lake Rd. An unsuc- | tessful attempt was made to en- police added. The postoffice branch is located in Mac's Racio and TV store at/| 1519 Union Lake Rd, Davis ~ Senate ~ | Passes ra Meeting Set Tonight Expect House Approval for 50 Per Cent Boost in Compromise Bill WASHINGTON um — Only House approval, expected today, was the route as | needed to send to President Eisen- disrupt j-, hower a compromise bill to give dential areas in the county and | ™embers of Congress a SO per that a more effective job could be | Cem pay raise done by constructing a freeway | The Senate passed the measure ‘system. | by voice vote yesterday after con ——— ‘ferees, meeting for the secon | time, had set the salary figure at | $22,500. Congress members now Red-Hunters Renew $2.00. ce Quizzing of Unionist | WASHINGTON & — House un- + he . The measure also carries pa) raises of $7,300 to $10,000 for ap ' proximately 400 federal judges a of the Troy Sunshade Co., which was in the path of a | community. American activities subcommittee members braced for more volleys of hot words ‘today when they re- ' $5,000 boost for the vice president and House speaker, and increases ‘for U.S. attorneys, their assistants and several jop Justice Depart- ment officials. These were not al- tered in yesterday's conference 4 * . - the 38-year-old Gojack accused the The House passed a compromise pay bill last week, but this meas ure was rejected by the Senate because of a tax-exempt $1,250 es pense allowance before 149. But in a hearing that turned into a- shouting match, Red-bunters of “‘union - busting” The new version is shorn of tw and using “paid liars” such as the benefits carried in the first turnabout witness Harvey Matu- COMpromise last) week . . The conferees yesterday not only The three subcommittee mem. struck out the tar-iree allowance bers kept trying — without much but also eliminated a provision for success — bag mall him with five expense paid round trips to questions. Finally, Chairman a member's home state each yeat Moulder (D-Me) accused Gejack = This was estimated to be worth of dodging like “a soap box Communist orator.” on the West Coast. Under the -Miss Julia Jacobs, 34-year-old; "aise bill, members of Congress office secretary for a District 9 get to keep a $3,000-a-year income local at St. Joseph, pleaded the) t4X deduction for extra living ex Fifth Amendment time after time | Penses in Washington in testimony preceding that of Go- - been a Communist Party mem- ber 4 Per tat reetitiey he neers ese en en,..charged with . Wag Nor will be a Communist and loitering alter two weekend vice - __ they pleaded guilty before Munici . . - J McCallum Given Prison Term $2.500 a year to lawmakers living pay fines when jack. She did so when she wa: asked whether she is oo a er has Forty-Seven Men . . . . Taeience Cover stvear ata ove FINED in Vice Raids retary of a District 9 UE local that he knows of no Communist ‘48 >» Pontiac Police, paid total in his unit of $1.175) vesterday pal Judge Ceci Also ‘arrested, Ida Mae Herstor Reuben McCray. 35. of 69 % Charged with maintaining and Clovese St yesterday received | OPeTauing an legal liquor place: at from 1 to 15 years in Jackson 8 Bloomfield Ave and Daniel . ; . - e 2 ) ri ? \ state prison when he appeared be- Perry. 62, of 4874 Rossiter, Dray fore Cirewt Judge George B ton Plains, charged with -aiding bs - ’ ~ . and abetting a gambling « Hartrick after pleading guitty last and abe gc a gambhng place at . - 6'y No Saginaw St. wer leased week to entering a home at 67 $100 bond on > Miic fact ‘lovese last Dec. 18 ‘ Charged with soleiting l A. LaCount) 200 of S738 Lorrain The Weather Detroit, was ordered held in the PONTIAC AND VICINITY—Clowds ang CUUNtY Jal. A March 10 trial wa older tenight. lew 6-30 Mostly cloudy set by McCallum for the trio and slightly celéer temerrew. hirh ©) «Winds southwesterty tonight Cleedy ~ with Ntth change in temperatare tomer row might, lew near 36. Rochester Men Plead Guilty in Store Breakin Rochester Teday in Pentiac Lewest temperature prece . ihre charged Wind velocity 20-25 PN with} Direttion North to nofthve . } Sun sets Tuesday at 6 22 ket Bun rises Wednesday at 7 06 a , Moon sets Tuesday et 11.04 an 1 4 Moon rises Wednesday at 2 52 an B nen reaking ito a@ grocery store bm pleaded guiltv vesterday reuit Court and Judge Hartrick set sentencing for Downtown Tempersteres March 7 socces-- 30 a © ‘ In Ceorge m Oakland ¢ int lea che $.000 bond are Jack Baker Mo oof 1007 W Third ~ Lio8 Courtland. and Menday tn Pentiar HI 7 ‘As recorded downtown : Highest temperature a adm Lowest tempersture ‘) Mean tempereture iy Weather—Clioudy. mist, sain j ; ‘One Year ‘Age tn Pentiac lip m a itted entermye D at 1012 N. Ma Roe Pontiac Boys Become ii5 Scouts in Ceremony Four boys became tenderloot Mighest and Lowest Temperatures This geouts at investiture cere temperature iwsss«t ‘Weather—@now, 4 inches : Date in 83 Years monies Sam 1683 6 in 1912 Conducted last night by Boy Scout’ Monday's Temperatere Chart Troop 2 in Central Methodist @ 4 Minneapolis 20 7 Church 3 | a a HS b4 Scoutmaster Edwin: Amidon pre- $ 4 Suche %3 18 sented tenderfoot pins to Cark “6 ba, ae) me ae vee Lefurgy, Henry Murray, Bob Stal- % “ 8 Ponncico 83 ¥ orow, and Dennis Tripp. About 50 63 &. Srattic 4 4 ‘Parents and scouts attendéd the F 4 4 —e ons " “ court” of honor, affer whch re “96 @ Wilingion 8 i3, freshments were served. y Beet BS ge gt ey ys = ee Oe Sy a ees: eS a >| oo PE, fi se i fi 2 4 { ‘ ‘ is. \ . Fe he ontiac Dems Install Hicks as President | The Pontiac City Democratic Club Sunday 'ystalled George D. Hicks as presidem for the coming year, succeeding Nerman Bolton who had served since the group was formed four years» ago Other officers installed inciuded dohn Shearer, first vice presi- dent; Marvin Kuschinsky, secoftd vice president; Allen Pilkinton, treasurer; Albert Mallett, record- ing secretary; and Mrs. Marvin Kuschinsky, corresponding sec- retary. Others were sergeant-at-arms, guide; Mrs licity director Cecil Warden trustees About 350 persons attended the meeting at &2] Baldwin Ave. Some Conrad Beaubian, Lloyd Lewis, George Hicks, pub- plus Lorne McCray, and Joe Hiltz, 3 neg members were Introduced Clarkston Youth Held. ‘in Series of Crimes PLEASANT (UP) — intelligent’ Central students sat in MOUNT Four ‘“‘very Michigan College jall “today while police five counties. went through their lists of unsolved crimes to see if any in of them have been admitted by the youths State Pollce Lt. Ed Johengen of the Mount Pleasant State Police Post said the four 19-year-olds ad- mitted a year-long senes of breakins. theft and forgeries in which the loot runs into “thou sands of dollars Johengen identified the youths : s Lawrence C. Tillotson and Leonard “ Moore, both ol Plymouth, Donald Bo Northcote. Clarkston and John C. Spencer, Midland The State Police heutenant said all four. who were sophomores nt CMC. “are very intetligent with IQs of 130." ~ The youths eonfessed the crimes following their arrest for investi- gation ef forgery and then led potice to htaing” Piaces where a large amount of stolen goods and ash Was” recovered Johengen said Oratorical Contest Won by PHS Pupils ghteenth Congressional district winners in oan oratonmecal contest sponsored nationally by the Amer- in’ Legion. were three Pontiac High School vouths First second and third 4 mee it the contest held last night at Farmington. went respectively t Garth Johnson, sophomore, Walle Edwards. senior: and James Jolly senior Their debate coach was Walter Smith A zone contest. ‘matching win ners from five districts. is sched uled for March 11 at the Frank Wentlan legion post in Royal Oak Five Face Jail Terms, Fines in Auto Frauds DETROILE &#—Five Detront are f ! Vv face 4 POSSIDIC Vear in y and a $1,000 fine on charges g payment of state sales tuves on oat illeged automobile i] €) ive kugene Ayotte, 30 Charles R 't. 31, and Thomas LeTourneau, all of Detroit, dolph, 30. of suburban Hamtramck. The Real McCoy ELY, Nev. W—Workers dug for hours to free a big truck snow- bound by a blizzard on’ Murray Summit south of here. The truck was loaded with 6.200 pounds of artificial snow en route to a movie set at Sun Valley, Idaho, | ( Opposes Cutting Bogert, 30. Thomas -M. J and Billy Ru-| ‘THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, MARCH 1, 1955 Detroit Firm Plans to Build Plant in Troy The Vickers Corporation of De- troit has announced plans to build @ $2,000,000 plant on a 76 acre site in Troy Township, and is seeking to have the land annexed to Royal Vickers of a 12-inch water main and a 12-inch sanitary sewer which ay 4 | would be leased by the company to Royal Oak if the annexation goes j through Predicts Dixie Won t Back Ike Tennessee Senator Says Eisenhower Will Lose South in 1956 WASHINGTON uw — Sen. Gore AP Wirephete TORNADO DAMAGE — This picture from Troy, | tornado which swept through the Troy area early this ter a neighboring grocery store, | Ohid, shows a caved-in section of a second floor wall morning. Damage was estimated at $100,000 in the have ‘‘an outside chance to carry a single Southern state in 1956."’ Gore said he disagrees with Gov. Robert F. Kennon of Louisiana, who said yesterday in Va., that if Adlai E. the Democratic candidate again he will run into party opposition as he did in 1952. Stevenson lost four Dixie states to Eisenhower: Texas, Florida, Virginia and Tennessee. 7 * . s Services of VA Legion Executive Raps) eee ere backed Stevenson _"Hoover Plan to Trim noted this in an interview and . + | asked: ‘‘Who is he to tell the Dem- Vet Medical Benefits \erats whom. they should’ nomi. , DETROIT uw — Robert M. Mc-| nate?” Curdy, head of the American Le- -_ 7 ¢ gion’s rehabilitation commission,| Kennon, suggesting alternates to | says the Legion strongly opposes a | Stevenson, said he wasn’t pre- recommendation of the Hoover! dicting that any Democratic can- Commission to cut the federal | didate could beat Eisenhower. The | dispute. The panel makes recom- | medical program for ex-service- ; President has given no public word men . as to whether he will run in 'S. McCurdy told a Detroit Econom-| Kennon and Republican Gov jic Club audience yesterday that | Walter J. Kohler of Wisconsin had the majority of veterans who have |& White House appointment with | received medical treatments at the Exoentower inte Samy . James C. taxpayers expense are entitled to | 8serly. > press secre- And id the L is tary, said he understood the two them. he sald tion wanted to discuss the adminis- tration’s highway aid program. _ |The Louisiana governor is chair- tion of the Executive Branch of |™#" of the Governors’ Conference. the Government, headed by form- | Gore said he believes the tra- ditional Democratic hold on the President Hoover, recommend: | - od Sunday among other economy | South has been solidified by Eisen- moves, the closing of 19 VA | ower administration policies. opposed to closing any Veterans Administration hospital, The Commission eon ty Circuit Judge George B. Hart- rick. | Bombagi, of 161 Pingree St. was convicted in the fatal stabbing of George Spencer, 30, of 125 | Baldwin, Orion Township, last Iron Mountain. McCurdy said of a commission in Fatal Stabbi service disabilities who had private In q q q Ing resources that the “‘average in- | Antone Bombagi, 48. found guil- “iow can a man with a $4.000 19 t) 25 years in Jackson state income and family responsibilities an income?’ MeCurdy asked. McCurdy defended allotments hospitals, including the one at . report that a check turned up cases of veterans being treated for non- come in 71 per cent of the cases ty of second degree murder Feb. was $4,000 to $6,000 18 by a jury, was sentenced to from meet the terrific cost of fighting off the ravages of cancer on such for veterans whe suffered ser- vice disabilities even though they have recetered sufficiently te July 17 after an argument over hold their own in competitive | Bombagi's wife. labor. : He said that most veteran pa- Meat Company, District tients th non-service disabilities : . we cent te Head Named in Warrant are sent to VA hospitals for treat- ment by private doctors when it| james McCollum, food inspector is found the ex Gls cannot Pay &S for the state Department of Agri- yrivate patients second ‘A lot more ex-servicemen have culture, has obtained a see war been denied benefits they earned rant here against the G ge A. thian—thosewhe.have beat the,'orme! Co. of Austin, Minn.. and ama McCurdy’ said its Michigan district” manager. EK . The warrant against district manager Jack Conway of Detroit, charges that the legal limit of fat percentage in sausage was exceed- ;e¢d in a sample of the company’s product School Plan Awaits State Senate Vote Conway paid a $20 fine on Feb. . *, Pz , y ) a i ‘ (Continued From Page One 23 on an identical charge. The sample was obtained from a Pon- tiac store bipartisan beard of canvassers. A constitutional amendment requir- ing voter approval, it, too, was sent back to the Senate with minor amendments Return to Seou! Base The House also passed a bill SEOUL us—South Korean army requiring payment of enginecr- headquarters officially returned to _ing fees for drain construction Seoul today after five years in from the current year's taxes. Taegu, about 230 miles south of here fications for Supreme Court and Fatins tor Supreme court amt Pontiac Deaths on the April ballot. Judges would - have to be attorneys and not more Randall Francis Rabideau than 70 years of. age The Senate defeated another, Prayer service was held this constitutional amendment plan to morning at 10:30 a.m. from Donel- permit counties to combine in| son-Johns Funeral Home for Ran- ) Probate Court districts and to let dall Francis Rabideau, day old Clearing both chambers, a con stitutional amendment to fix quali- the Legislature fix qualifications son of Harlan F. and Phyllis Bar-| denied that earlier. Crouch and | It fell five come Rabideau of 230 Nelson St. | Cvetic were not reached for com for prohate judges votes short of passage The Rev. Michael J. O'Reilly ‘of Rene St. Michael Catholhe Church of- Sentence Is Imposed ficiated with burial in Mount Hope Cemetery. In Circuit Court vesterday, Will The baby was born Saturday at Nalle, 34, of 4586 Bangor, Detroit. s: Joseph’ Mercy Hospital and was sentenced to 1 to 15 years ‘in| gieg Sunday. He is survived by Jackson state prison by Judge his parents. George B. Hartrick. 3rd Atom Blast Shot Off Today | Huge Flash Lights Up | Pre-Dawn Darkness in Largest 1955 Test LAS VEGAS, Nev. @®—The third shot of the 1955 atomic tests con- The Day in Birmingham Union Controversy Snags Fire Station Construction BIRMINGHAM — Congressman| the @nions has the right to in- George A. Dondero (R-Royal Oak) | stall precast concrete panels of has intervened in a union squabble | the type Geing used in the buiid- Suation an unwlting ‘guoee, Pe | ne ye: Station an unwitting ‘guinea pig. . The City Commissi was in-| _He explained that ae formed last night that Dondero | verted the predawn darkness into has arranged for a hearing be- daylight for a brilliant moment at | fore @ Washington D. €. jurisdic- | 5:30 a.m. today. Observers here said it was the yellow... at E my E Shortly after the flash, the famil- iar mushroom cloud appeared, ris- |ing straight into the still sky, In | darkness, the cloud was a deep | blueish purple shadow, Gradually | the top turned pink from reflected | light of the sun, which had not | yet risen, The shot went off about 70 miles northwest of Las Vegas. Low hills lay between the 300-foot detonation tower at Yucca Fiat and this re- sort city. No appreciable jolt was felt here. | The lack of wind allowed the cloud to maintain a perfect mush- room shape as it rose and ex- panded, | Earlier reports from the Southern | California city said many house- | to see the flash. A group of newsmen wil] track the atomic cloud for the first time. Services Maintained in Consumers Strike (Continued From Page One) had been able to contact union executives. The governor's office requested Chairman John H. McCarthy of the State Public Service Com- mission to “keep in touch with the situation and see that essen- | Workers are forbidden ., the ‘law from striking for a 30-day pe- |riod given the panel to study a | mendations tor settlement. The recommendations are not binding on either party but in the past | they sometimes have provided a | basis for agreement. ; | An additional 10-day ‘‘cooling | off’ period after expiration of the 30 days also is provided by law. Top state officials of the Utili- tional board on Thursday or Fri- day. of this week to settle a labor question involving AFL carpen- ters-and bricklayers unions. City Manager Donald C. Eg- bert sald Birmingham's east side station is being used as a test case to determine which of Soviet Shakeup Elevates Seven Four New Men Enter Top Circle of Russian Government, MOSCOW w&—Four new men en- | tered the top circle of the Soviet government today and three others already well known moved up the ladder. | In the first major government | shakeup since Marshal Nikolai Bul- (D-Tenn) said today he doesn’t be- |holders there had set their alarm | ganin became premier three weeks lieve President Eisenhower will | clocks so they could rise in time | ago, the Presidium of the Supreme | Soviet raised three deputy prem- and named four other men to be deputy premiers. s ° * These were the new appoint- ments, announced early today: To be first deputy premiers— former Trade Minister A. I. Mi- koyan, M. G. Pervukhin and M. Z. Saburov, chairman of the State planning Commission. They join Foreign Minister V. M. Molotov and L. M. Kaganovich, who have been first deputies since Stalin died nearly two years ago. s we s To be deputy premiers—A. P. Zavenyagin, onetime vice commis- sar for heavy industry who was also named minister of medium machine building: M. V. Khruni- chev, once minister for the air- craft industry; V. A. Kucherenko, formerly deputy minister for con- | struction and machine-building en- \terprises, and P. T. Lobanov, deputy premier of the Russian So- 'cialist Soviet Republic since 1953 |and before that a deputy minister ‘of agriculture. . * s The Soviet Union's four other iers to the rank of first deputies | ty Workers of America were not deputy premiers are former Prem- available for comment as to why = ier Georgi Malenkov, I. S. Tevos- the walkout was not delayed. jyan. A, N. Kosygin and V_ A. | There also was no immediate Malyshev. Of these, today’s an leomment from the state labor nouncement mentioned only Maly- board, although Governor Wil- | Shev. It said he was giving up liams reportedly was watching the the post of minister of medium situation. The union is demanding 15-cent an hour wage increase in a j new contract. The old contract ex- pired at midnight. The union also is seeking numerous other con- tract changes, including modifica- tion of the pension plan. | Consumers, which reportedly of- ifered a seven-cent hourly raise, prison yesterday by Oakland Coun- |... the union demands would cost | 155 cents an hour per employe. | The current average wage of the workers was not available. | Negotiations became deadlocked |}at Saturday when the union said the company ‘‘just stuck to the | sever-cent package offer and re- | fused fo budge.” | Governar Williams named Rus- | sell A. Smith, secretary of the University of Michigan Law School, to head the fact-finding panel. Other members are Paul T. Sorensen, Muskegon, and Robert G. Howlett, Grand Rapids, both attorneys. , | One company and one union of- }ficial will sit. inom panel ses- | |sions, but cannot vote on recommendations. any ‘Matusow Says ‘Four Ex-Reds Lied for Profit | WASHINGTON w—Harvey Matu-| north to M20 were announced by | | |machine building to Zavenyagin of machine building industries. ‘Women Stand Mute on Theft Charge Two women stood mute in Cir- cuit Court yesterday on charges of taking part in the theft of $1,100 | from 33, of 716 | Fourth St., on Feb. 11. | Mabel Sheck, 4, of 122 Lafay- ette St.. is charged with robbery | unarmed and Eva Springsteen, 39. |of 21% N. Saginaw St., is accused of receiving stolen property. Judge George B. Hartrick entered an in- nocent plea for them. Charged in the same crime is | Arville Anderson, 24, of 1425 How- |ard St., Detroit, who police said |forced Sturgis to hand over the money in the lavatory of a local | tavern. Anderson pleaded innocent | Feb. 21 and is waiting trial with The tes y ' of acting in partnership with him. Weight Restrictions Placed on Trunklines Weight restrictions for trucks | traveling all types of state trunk- lines from the south state line job Feb. 2, after the centractor, unaware of the conflict, started the carpenters unien an the instal- ‘lation. Little work has been done isince then, he said. Problems of the city’s second new station were also, discussed. con- z the purchase of two flagpoles for the’ stations, at a total cost of not more than $750. at oe » “Speech and Mental Health” will be the topic of Mrs, Har- riett Kopp when she addressés _ the Child Study Group meeting | a¢ 8:15 tonight at the home of | Mrs, Scott Purvis, on Henrietta. | Mrs. Kopp heads the corrective spech department of Birming- ham public schools, s . ‘ Congressionalists will continue their usual Wednegday Lenten Pot- lluck dinners and programs at 6:30 |temorrow. The Rev. Robert D. | Dewey will also conduct 4 Bible \study class at 10:30 a.m, each | Wednesday, when a nursefy will | be provided. | Men's breakfasts and rship i will be at 6:45 a.m., W ays and young people will lead brief meditations at 7:30 a.m. Thurs- days. * * * Pythian Temple No. 94 will have |its regular business meeting at 8 tonight at the Community House. s . s Members of Ladies Auxiliary No, 9 of the Metropolitan Club, will meet as usual with Mrs. Walter Leipold, Cranbrook road, Bloomfield Hills, at 8 p.m. to- morrow, Mra, Patrick Tobin is chairman of the refreshment committee. . . . A pantry shower for Goodwill Industries in Detroit will be held |after a talk is given by a Good- | will representative to the Women’s | Fellowship of the Congregational | Church at 8 tonight. The meeting is in observance of Founder's Day. . . « | | Police lost no tim in letting | the public know they meant busi- jness about last night’s midnight | deadline for sporting 1954 car li- /cense plates. Records showed sev- jen such violation tickets issued in | the early morning ho@rs. Royal Oak Woman Admits Burgjary : | a\and now would supervise a =| An 18-year-old Royal Oak house- | wife will be sentenced on a bur- | lary charge Monday after plead- | ing guilty before Oakland County | Circuit Judge George B. Hartrick yesterday. | Two male companions of Mrs. | mary Andersdn, arrested on | the same charge, stood mute at | the arraignment and a plea of | innocent was ehfered for them. | Trial date will be set. The youths are Robert Isaacs 'and David LaMaster, both 18 and ‘also from Royal Oak. The three |are accused of breaking into a | Waterford hardware, an Indepen- dence Township iumber company }and a Berkley grocery That'll Teach Her! . | WHITE ROCK, B.C. &—John R. | Macrea, 50, a cripple, was arrested | yesterday and charged with mur- der in the strangling of his 80- year-old mother Mrs. Minnie Cope-_ | land Macrea. He told police: “I | didn’t like the way she fixed my | breakfast." ° ‘Of Thee | Sing, Baby | TOKYO (UP)—Several Japanese | voters in Sunday's national elec- | tion apparently wanted to throw curves af the government. They | sow told. senators probing into his | the State Highway Department ef-| wrote in the name of Marilyn | turnabout testimony yesterday that at least four self-styled former Communists have made caree?s of lying for profit, as he says he did. ‘only gravel and blacktop trunk- | | fective at noon today. The whole Thumb area is _ in- ‘etaded. Restrictions» had been on Monroe on ballots for the house of representatives. . President William Henry Har- Matusow was told to return today | lines north to US 12. Concrete | rison had 10 children, six soris and for more questioning by the Senate Internal Security subcommittee. The group is seeking to pin down | whether he told the truth several | years ago in accusing various -al- | leged Reds or whether he is telling ‘it now, as he insists. | At a stormy session yesterday, | Matusow attributed previous false | testimony to Elizabeth Bentley, | Paul Creuch, Louis Buenz and | | Matt Cvetic. | Miss Bentley and Budenz had | ment, Meanwhile (D-Miss) said he is lining up wit- nesses through whom he hopes the subcommittee will develop the full story behind Matusow's turnabout | testimony — ‘‘Matusow'’s motives | who’s using him, and why.”’: Nalle admitted Feb. 21 entering | a building at 3150 Hilton Rd., Fern- | dale, Feb. 16. Gl Hurt in Blaze | SEOUL @®—Fire destroyed four ' buildings and injured an American soldier at the U.S. 3rd Transporta- tion Railway headquarters here to- | day. The soldier's name was with- held. You St. Paul Lutheran Church The Church of the Lutheran Hour Joslyn eat Fourth Mid-Week LENTEN SERVICE, Wed., 7:30 P. M. Are Cordially Invited to Attend FE 5-0404 Chairman Eastland \four daughters, by one wife. | roads are now included. 4| The Happiest | | 1|Are Financed the Low-Cost “Capitol Way!” & Homes a ae OD ET Se rs EE OO SS Ta BSR TE A x SON HAN ‘hy y IVE > s + | , * - ¢ | ; , THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, MARCH 1, 1955 SS Rei RRR PET SAT Eg AME eR i eR et at TN eo een ete pie yet * =e. ~ 2 sey ey = e gt ee at ee eae f\ See See ee Te Amochied Pre i nsliel Gninnn Se Pn Se _—— cae acer Tus is carrier pia te eee Ma eae see ee MEMBER OF AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATIONS , TUESDAY, MARCH 1, 1955 | Roth and Black Head | Dems Spring Ticket Michigan Democrats’ Spring conven- tion at Grand Rapids came off much as planned. Only the accidental deflation of a Presidential boom for Gov. WILLIAMS marred the proceed- ings. As expected, major interest centered in the fight for the two State Supreme Court nominations. * * * -Also, as expected, they went to two former State attorneys general, now circuit judges. They are StepHen J. Rortu of Flint and Euceng F. Back, a former Republican, of Port Huron. Roru directed the State’s legal business dur- ing the first WrLL1AMs administration. Buiack held the office under the late Republican Gov. Kim SIGLER. * * * The Port Huron jurist, who is remembered as a one time stormy petrel of the GOP, had to win the nomination over the opposition of two rivals — Thomas Giles Kav- anagh of Oakland County and Leon A. Cousens of Detroit. Other convention nominees are: For and Paut L. ApaMs; For State Board of WILLIAM E. Baker; For member of the Agriculture — Connor D. SmitTH and WituiaM E. Baker; for member of the State Board of Education — Jonn M. VEALE and for Superintendent of Public Instruction, Lynn M. BartTLett. * * * Collapse of the WILLIAMs boom came during the showing of slides picturing the Governor's educational proposals. As Secretary of State Hare spoke with the lights dimmed, promoters and sup- porters of the boom took advantage of the darkness to slip out for coffee. When they returned the convention had adopted the resolution as it came from the committee. This pledged support of the Governor no matter what office he may seek. Chief architect of the boom, JoHN Boescustein, Muskegon attorney, promises to revive it in the State Central Committee. Record New Car Sales Good News for Pontiac Latest news from the automotive production front continues to show that so far-the industry is enjoying an unusually good year, For example, General Motors reports that sales for the first 20 days of February totaled 193,217, a new record for that period. Between January 1 and February 20. the corporation delivered 454,471 units. This is a new high for the period. x * * GM figures also show that business in the used car department is rushing. In the year’s first 51 days its dealers sold 555,523 units. The former high - record of 474,274 was set for the same period of 1941. Additional evidence of booming busi- ness in the industry comes from the Automobile Manufacturers Association. } It reports that factory sales in January ) included 636,242 cars and 89,866 trucks ) and coaches. This was an all time | high record for that. month. ) x * * Unofficial surveys indicate that the industry already has sold a millian new cars in 1955. It was . mid March before that total was reached last year. . ee ’ . RE RA AA SEITE 7 All this is news of great importance here. It means;more production and more jobs at Pontiac Motor, GMC Truck and Coach and Fisher Body divisions. Resulting high employment will benefit every man, woman and child in the greater Pontiac area. t Turk-Iraq Pact Signed An event of world importance has increased NATO's defensive potential in the Middle East. At the same time signing of the Turkish-Iraqi ‘mutual assistance pact has dealt Arab League neutralism a body blow. The signatures of Turkey's Premier Menperes and Iraq's Premier Nur Sari went on the documents at Baghdad despite Egypt's violent opposition. , * * * Egypt, leading member of that eight state group, now demands a meeting of the Arab League to expel the Baghdad government. If this demand isn’t met, Cairo threatens to withdraw from the league, which is largely a pronouncement that . the Arabs will fight only in defense of Arabs and has no collective arms or command. There would be a simul- taneous renunciation of Egypt's com- mitments to defend Iraq. * * * For the free world the im- portance of this agreement is that it strengthens anti-Com- munist defenses in the Middle East because Turkey is a member of the NATO alliance. It is im- portant further because Iraq is the first Arab state te break away from the neutralism of the league. Tue person who puts his head into a lion’s mouth as a circus act makes an easy living, and his job involves only the problem of making sure that he takes his head out of the lion’s mouth as many times as he puts it in it. ft TicHTWaps can’t take it with them either, but longevity records show they can stay with it here longer than other people. . So rar this year people who like to grumble about the weather have been enjoying themselves immensely. The Man About Town Signs of Spring First Day of March Brings Advance Indications of It Income tax: A game of hide and seek: the government seeks your hide. First to report outdoor spring flowers in bloom is Mrs. Carol Sprye of Drayton Plains, who has crocus in several colors near the base of a fireplace chimriey. Tulips, similarly located, are budding at the home of Mrs. Jackson Stockford in Huron Gardens. Over two months after that holiday, Mrs. Frank Featherston of Rochester has a Christmas cactus with 50 blossoms and 35 buds. With deep blue flowers as large as a quarter, the African violet plant of Mrs. James A. Ross of Big Beaver has been blooming continu- ously for over three years, and Mrs. Harriett Backus of Pontiac Lake found a dandelion in bloo in her yard Monday. , A post card comes winging in from Pasa- dena, signed by my old friend, Glenn C. Gillespie, currently enjoying the warm weather in Southern California. Glenn is a great Pasadena booster, and has been for some time. “We spent a month there, and wholly agress with everything you've published about it,” phones Mrs. Randall Ardmore | of Bloomfield Hills, in speaking about Hawaii. Again disowning any relation to the oth- er one, Joe McCarthy. of Birmingham, now adds that he would rather admit one with Charley. True to his promise to this column several weeks ago, our Clark J. Adams refused to be a candidate at the recent Dem- ocrat state convention. Home from a two months’ trip that took him through the eight southernmost states of the Union, “ -Leonard Lightfoot of Auburn Heights pliones that he was obliged to use his car heater in all of them. ; Verbat-Orchids to— “Mr. ‘and Mrs. Fred G. Beardsley of Oxford; golden wedding. . Mr. and Mrs. Samuel Wolf ’ = sixty-first wedding anniver- lit om Almost 40 Years and They’re Still Stalled David Lawrence Says: Russian Rulers Aware of Apprehension in U. S. WASHINGTON — When William Randolph Hearst Jr., editor of the Hearst group of newspapers, spoke before a big audience of news writ- ers at the National Press Club about his recent visit to Soviet Russia, the most important single question asked him could not be answered. It was why the Communists chose to permit the head of a newspaper group—known for its perennial antagonism to every- thing communistic—to come to Moscow and interview the highest officials of the Soviet government on current problems. For several years many Ameri- can publications have had on file requests to allow correspondents te go to Moscow but less than a half-dozen press representatives are on duty there regularly. Hearst and his editorial associates who accompanied him hazarded guesses as to what the Soviets had in mind, but none could be sure. hours and in which almost every phase of the present world situa- tion was discussed. Fortunately, Kingsbury Smith, Hearst ~hazarded~ the guess that the Soviet leaders i t fi EE. He j | | 7 fit ; bf it. The presence of Zhukev in the high councils of the Soviet ‘Hearst came away convinced that American policy is right and that, in the absence of a clear-cut manifestation of peaceful purpoges on which the world can rely, there is no other course but to build up the necessary armament to deter a Soviet attack. But it is interesting to note that the Soviet rulers are aware of the apprehensions voiced in America. Still they do not seem to realize, on the other hand, that’ it is’ their unrelenting quest for world dom- ination by Communist imperialism which constitutes a threat the Western world cannot ignore. (Copyright 1965) THOUGHT FOR TODAY BRETT IF Wut 32. Ld LJ . In all God's providences, it is trate each other.—Matthew Henry. Voice of the People ommended for 300 units of multiple family dwellings because of a All Federal housing is inter- racial. How can people with a Christian background and Biblic beliefs object to Federal housing because of a racial minority? Our scientists in a few short years have advanced us from the machine era to that of the Atomic Age Our churches, schools, news- papers and educators have been much slower in contributing to our advancement in our way of thinking and offer little toward bringing it beyond the point of prejudices. Families in our community are now living in potential firetraps due to faulty construction or un- safe heating systems which, in turn, endanger the lives of many small children. Federal housing gives the fam- ily of low incomes a chance for decent housing. It gives children the use of playground equipment, baseball diamonds, basketball courts, a community building where classes in woodshop, art and better citizenship can be taught. ._This can aid in combat- ing juvenile delinquency by taking children off the streets and chan- neling their energies for useful purposes. Interested Believes Salt Better for Teeth Than Fluorine =Fkb! i FF i | by law. Perhaps we can evade more laws by other methods of control. The letter was signed: “Truth Will Win.” Now, if it’s true that “Truth Wins,” then this anti- fluoridation disciple is in for the worst licking of the decade. Honest Is the Best - « - LL Fiske ! j : 7 Case Records of a Psychologist Popular Girl Praises Her Boy Friends, Really Appreciates Smallest. Favors timate occasion, and even steer conversation around so town seem to be jealous of that fact. “I've heard their gossip that American boys should marry American giris. European women are far more “For example, my _ sweetheart would cherish just a 10 cent greet- ing card, and show more apprecia- tion over it than the average American girl will show over a nays F 0 i ftp ed iL & & indifference. look sophisticated and desirable. i points, The secret for winning (and sweethearts are just Al: ing that everybody ig born with this invisible motto indelibly in- scribed across his chest “I WANT.TO FEEL ANT!" Thousands of girls who read this column daily will remember that I IMPORT- Always te Dr, WwW. Crane tn care of The Pontios “Press, Ponting —- A cover and printing costs when you one ef his psychological charts, (Copyright, 1955) 4 re %* a J es * ¢ ae d. tex #2 competitive edge. : £2 £4 filed i i 2° 2°38 ereial i, iEE 28 : F be Py E cal : i3é gE ah f g cup, wha nf z i f i Lowering of Resistance to Colds Is Pure Hokum By WILLIAM BRADY, M.D. In the spring the daily mail sel- from the people who are worried about the damp basement or about harmful effects of living, working or playing on concrete, tile or as- phalt floors. Lest incorrigible fuss budgets complain of my constant harping. I had better say nothing about the belief of physicians and laymen a miasma in the air, especially in night air near a swamp, and pneu- monia was due to change of weath- er, dfafts, wet feet, insufficient Pneumococcus the germ) not until 1830. ™ ait i HHE i | iF i H 1 As long as the medical profes- sion clings to nineteenth century theories about the cri (common infections), malaria than ppper floor rooms and if oc- cupants get a reasonable amount of sunshine or daylight elsewhere, basement apartments are as sirable as upper floor apartments for children and adults. : mc sli i ifeat q Sig Hii! lin ‘i i : i ih all - | 813 tee til she i 24 | eS hs pee Witte late |e ath tit ddead “ . ' ds tube M shite Pe , ah 2 ' * ty P tals oh ores i moe hig “= Drab ah pageytae rete! 9d perme poqrepnimpegenienyiy { ~ DR. H. A. MILLER Optometrist 7 North Saginaw Street Phone FE 4-6842 “Beuer Things in Sight” Open Friday Evenings Closed Wednesday Afternoons Exciting, Fragrant Indoor TRAILING GARDENIA (G. BRADICANS) — Special by mid I (2 fer $1.58) out — a 4 © Grove a tony 3F You'll want to put this graceful TRAILING GARDENIA im a con- spicuous place for everyone to ad- mire, ebout to bud and burst inte fra- grant bloom.. Then you'll have exotic white flowers, prized for their peari-like Juster and their exquisite perfume! Can be trans- ted outdoors in Spring where hey thrive in shady spots. You get hegithy 6-12 inch plants. Or- der 2 for greatest savings. SEND NO MONEY! On delivery, pay cost plus C.O.D. postage. We pay postage on prepaid orders. Unconditional satisfaction guaran- teed or your money back fe eee ee ee we ee ee ee WESLEY'S, B.8. Ne. 1, Bleoming- ten, Mi. OCR ee ee: See eTeeeeeeerte When or how someor.e cldssified as “public” may be injired within or around your premises; but if it happens you can be reasonably certain you will face a claim for damagés. You may win: cost, legal ex- penses. You may lose; cost, five, ten thousand dollars or more. That's guessing. Comprehensive personal liability insurance coots only $8 per year for the average home. é. _ Call Us om Any Insurance Need! Kenneth G. HEMPSTEAD INSURANCE | Bob Considine Says: Have Gone & NEW YORK (INS)—If my eyes don’t deceive me, Max Baer has undergone the greastest change of éharacter since Dr. Jekyll brewed himself that triple mickey and turned into Mr, Hyde. But. in Max's case it's vice versa. At hand is a folder from the Jerry Davis travel service of San Frencioto advertising 6 tour of for his conviviality and love of a good time as for the | punching ability that made him heavyweight champion of the world! Thirty-three days— for men only! $2,050 what Max is up to. | You must be thinking of the old |Max . . . and what a pleasant | thought that is. The ring never | had anybody like him and may | never have again, The purpose of this piece, however, is to direct attention to the new Max. Old cronies will find him a bit hard | to believe, if not take. | What's in prospect for the first | day overseas (June 27) for in- | stance. The folder says: | “London! City of urbane diplo- |mats and charming women. (Ed. | Note: How the new Max ever let | that one get fy is more than I can understand.) Size up the city | see len route to the Hotel Grosvenor As if that weren't enough to fill | the following month with excited | chit-chat, Max comes back with a |dinger of a day—June 28. Mr. | Davis’ folder tells it better: “Had a good night’s rest? (Ed, Note: No.) Today's the day you'll hit all the high spots, from London. Tower (where an impetuous girl name Mary lost her head) to Piccadilly Circus Max;' Old Boy, I Fear You Cracked Up : , : E g sf Li i bs ty Ht a ! i Hey aie fi Hell if i HH Liste flitane’+t el BE. If I can raise the $2,050 I’m | going. This new Baer I've got to To be continued, I'm afraid.) ‘to Head Signal Corps WASHINGTON ( — President es erg ee eae. be ex ; : “ «2S eo o> ee 4 ‘ 4 & Le % NO MONEY DOWN 3 ty WEEKLY Fully Automatic Phonograph - Radic. fiays 45, 78 and 331s ¢.p.m. records. ADECCA - c 120% to 10% off! CORODS DECCA 10 TOP TUNES 108 NORTH SAGINAW 2. Dim, Dim the Lights—by Bill Heley Comets - 3. Happy Otte 4. The Elephont’s Tango—The Commanders 5. Peper Velentine—Mills Bros. 6. In the Jeithouse Now—by Webb Pierce 7. Pie sgt tet aS Webb Pierce Moke Ike Picks Gen. O'Connell cs . Zz: 4 ' « ape het he & ot oe ae me Se ee brown paper . tomers. holdup man Hard Time in Holdup —_| pushed about $200 at him and told|a $5 bill and a few ; He woman teller in a collection office . of the Niagara Mohawk Power “I thought I'd done enough just| tricity was consumed for produc- Corp. met an obliging holdup man.|>y letting him have the money,” tion of aluminum in one day than When the man poked a revolver | She said. would normally be used by a city at Miss Margaret A. Bock, 49, yes-' Then she asked for some money | of 60,000 homes in an entire year. OF OUR WEST HURON ST. BRANCH Our Youngest Branch Now Takes The Lead in Size *. THANKS TO YOU A million thanks to the thousands who’ve saved millions -Your support of our West Huron Branch has created truly a great record. A record that calls for expansion to continue offering the most in modern banking facilities. Plans are progressing for our new branch. Watch for Further Announcements Soon! WITH BRANCHES at PERRY at GLENWOOD W. HURON at TILDEN 2 ? OUT OF TOWN BRANCHES at | WALLED LAKE KEEGO HARBOR Member Federal Deposit Insurente Corporation > «': — , 7 1 At the first meeting of the | year, he joined his fellow com- ' | missioners in unanimously en- dorsing construction of a 300- home public housing develop- ment under a contract the city | has with the federal govern- | ment, which would pay the en- | thre cost. United Press Photo | In other business, the Commis- DESERT SONG?—These two prima donnas appear to be harmoniz- | sion is slated to consider a reso- ing in a duet in the above picture snapped at a London 200. For the Birds if yo were plauning to keep an Se pee ae Sn et oe spring, don’t bother, There is mo such animal, Dr. Walter P. Nickell of brook Institute of Science, because not all robins leave in winter. Easily the nation’s most popu- lar bird, the robin has been Michigan's official state bird since 1934, when Legislature amination March 7. terday ~ Municipal Judge John W. Baker on gambling conspiracy charges. three were Harold A. Wir- The sing, 46, Henry R. Pickett, 51. and jto return from their southern va- | cations police identified as ring members| and start north too soon. arraigned on the same charge.| permanent resident, an were released on bond pending €x- | state bird. and apparently likes it ; The men were arrested last Fri- | day in raids by Flint and State Police on alleged handbooks cen- ters in four state-chartered Flint as Home Burns Down clubs. The four clubs were closed | immediately after the raids. imperial general Bf To. Review UK Troops SEOUL @® — Field Marshal Sir | John Harding, chief of the British | ashes the Bowman dog—wet, be- staff, due | Graggied, but Marth 8 on a two-day inspection | of Commonwealth troops. _ First Robin Fad Spoofed | by Expert at Cranbrook Dr. Nickell explained that avail- ibility of food during the winter months keep some robins here. While they feed mainly on worms and insects during the summer, the red-breasted members of the thrush family find Oakland Coun- ty’s wild grapes satisfying through the cold. months Years when wild fruit has been particularly abundant, more of the birds stay north. Dr. Nickell re- ports that some winters entire flocks of robins can be seen, ap- parently none the worse for brav- ing the freezing temperature spring to places as far north as Labrador and the Hudson Bay area. _ These year-round residents, the Cranbrook ornithologist said, don't start nesting any earlier, but just | wait around for the other robins So if you happen to see a robin Nor did he get his signals mixed He's a official here Fireproof Dog Survives EUREKA, Calif. (UP) — The | Gregory Bowman home burned to the ground last night while the | family attended the movies. As firemen cooled down the unhurt — crawled from beneath the bathtub where it sat out the fire. STATE HOSPITAL TRIP—Dr. James M. McHugh | group of young Pontiac State Hospital | routine, officials into a waiting station wagon for a trip to {rom 9 to 16, have regular duties to perform at the | Civie Center Monday. Such journeys, taken | hospital daily. Cost of the trips is underwritten by | er , . ° | Airways Stratocruisef Canopus t & rotation basis by the mental institu- | funds raised in a ines + | leash or under control of a han- | ————---—-- | dier at all times of the year. ae ae > ae a. eon | Debate on 300- Home Plan | Sc Has City Okay Commission Will Study | Fluoridation Ballot at! Meeting Tonight What may be the warmest meet- |ing since the fluoridation hearings in January faces the City Com- | mission tonight. | Observers expect a large group |of spectators to be on hand when |\Commissgioner John E. Carry's | motion to ban further public | housing in Pontiac is debated. Carry proposed the motion at last week's meeting. | ‘of city water. | A peport is to be heard from the city engineer, recommending that eight-inch reinforced con- crete instead of blacktop be used to pave East Wilson avenue from Te to East boulevard. ! } The Commission will also ¢on- sider: A request from Ben Dakesian for transfer of an SDM license formerty held by George Polasek. Re-appointment of two members | of the City Plan Commission; | Airport land lease with William 'A. VanDell for construction of a new hangar at Pontiac Municipal | Airport; Assignment of,a lease held by | Kenneth 8S. Barber to Barber's | Flying Service, Inc.; Approval of a contract with L. | Kevorkian. for construction of water mains in Eastview Subdi- | vision; | A maintenance bond with Monte | Construction Co. for sidewalk con- struction on Motor and Douglas | streets. | Alse slated ts second reading of a newly revised dog ordinance canines te be on a ; 2 . Say Wing street from Montcalm to Ken- in the air from four white hot nett craters rising higher by the hour. j Young street from Montcalm to Ken- ° e ° | nett | ! The state of emergency will per- mit officials to order people out of their homes. Some have refused. Sightseers are stopped at Pahoa. and no home has fallen béfdre the boiling streams, Through the night, officials at Red Cross headquarters in Pahoa High School cast worried glances westward, fumes were re ported breaking out of a new rift of dormant craters five miles from here where . . + “Tf that erupts, Pahoa will be in danger,’’ said Robert Spence, Red | Cross disaster chairman. Early today the main. lava stream had traveled about 2% miles, and was still about 4%: | miles from the ocean e . * Police said it was amazing no one was hurt among the estimated 20,000 sightseers whose cars choked five miles of access roads from | the eruptions to Pahoa The eruptions started at 8:10 a.m, yesterday when a cane field five miles southeast of Pahoa_ in | Margaret Winds Up Tour of West Indies | NASSAU, Bahamas —Princess Margaret gave 1,700 guests a fare- well look last night at -her dia- monds,_evening finery and sun- tanned bare shoulders. With her month-long tour of | Britain's American territories end- ling tomorrow, the Princess attend- jed a final state banuet and a reception at government house. to the by island of Eleuthera, site of a’ U.S. Air Force. base for guided missile experiments. She boards the British Overseas ? Pentiac Press Phete ranging in age | say. The youths, recent appeal carried in the Portidc | morrow. morning for the flight to . e TTHaS” Have” BCH ho Casualties - | to protest against the use of atom-| pontecorvo's’ statement said the| Margdret retired early in pre- [hig disappearance, in | Committee paration for a roundtip flight today | Pravda and Izvestia, the Soviet} given,the yer Fuchs and Pontecorvo advehced the Russian | 4 the Puna district blew up in a! shower of molten lava. Since then three other fissures have opened, | crossed the Kapoho road yesterday filling a blazing triangle bounded | afternoon while onlookers and civil by the villages of Kapoho, Opihikao defense workers milled around a and Pahoa. few feet away. , It moved slowly, a few yards an hour, and thousands of spectators flocked to the edge of the road to watch the nightmarish fireworks. Sixty families were evacuated). A boiling white hot crater barrel from Kapoho, two miles-ahead of ‘90 yards off the road shot lava the largest lava flow. Police re- 90 feet into the air, felling blazing ported a few families refused to| trees and setting roadside under- leave their homes until all hope brush ablaze. was lost. . Main spectacle for thousands of sightseers was a second flow which It was the first sign of life from Puulena crater in more than 50 years. . * * = o » The main flow had picked up speed and shortly before midnight had moved 500 feet in two hours. Two families stood by with their! A tourist from Oregon, dazzled belongings piled atop two trucks—/|by the ringside spectacle said, waiting until the last minute. | ‘Judging from that, it will be a Kapoho was cut off from com-|long time before hell freezes gnunications. The. few people left) over.” en | there, however, have an escape! Throughout the night sightseeing route up the coast. Smoke, sulphur fumes and muf- fled roars filled the air. The ground shook underfoot but the crowds kept pouring in. ——— eq British Scientist’s Disappearance Solved | greetings for Pope Pius XII began | planes circted low over the blazing | the church. One in Youngstown YOUNGSTOWN, Ohio —A tor- nado hit the city’s East Side early this morning, killing a 43-year-old housewife, injuring six other per- sons and sweeping five basement- less homes off their slab founda- tidns Three other homes were badly damaged and scores of sleping residents escaped snjury. Damage is axpected to exceed $100,000. The dead woman, Mrs, Mary Greetings for Po Pius | Fallot, was found.in the driveway 9 pe of ber wrecked home. Her hus- Pour In; 79 Tomorrow |band, Andrew, was - hospitalized PATI CRE — Bay Sc a to arrive here today from v and ms wife wit aoe an parts of the world. The head of the | Te™” she! » the ee Roman Catholic church will be 79 PC'S Talim in She yard. tomorrow. } __ Togeorvow_ja_sleo the 16th anni See DSR Serving _ versary of his election as oT Ty, Three-County Region inferno. Two Hawaiian airline , planes flew 30 extra excursion | flights over the volcano. By midnight the flow, some 200 feet wide, piled fuming lava 10 feet. high across the road. It cooled rapidly but a few feet away it was still like a furnace. Most of the refugees from Kopo- ha were taken in by friends and relatives outside the danger area. The school gym provided emergen- cy quarters for about 75. | DETROIT INS)—DSR Commiis- ‘sioner Rodney Baxter today pre- dicted that eventually Wayne, Oak- land and Macomb counties will be Accuses England, U.S. of Using A-Arms. #**t' on mai pic ran portation system. The move to the suburbs, Baxter as Means of Gaining World Domination | pointed out, will create an increas- MOSCOW (—Bruno Pontecorvo, | him “ashamed of my profession,” | the Italian-born British scientist | the letters said: disa Vest | . whe disappeared from the West the world forces me as a scientist in 1950, said in a letter to Soviet haying relations with atomic prob- newspapers. today he has been | jems to make the present state- working on ‘peaceful’ atomic | ment. projects in the Soviet Union since | that time. a *. * ‘| | The imperialists of such , countries as the United States and | The letters accused Britain and Britain are subjugating the discov- | the United States of “using atomic | aries of atomic energy in prepara- | and nuclear weapons as a MEANS tion of a new war, using atomic | of achieving world domination land nuclear weapons as a means | and appealed to Western scientists for achieving world domination.” | ic energy for military purposes. | onditions under which he works 7. 6 ® in Russia are “wonderful’’ and (Pontecorve took part in British-| that ‘research is being conducted | American work on the first atomic | on the widest scale and on a very | bomb. The U.S. Joint Congression- | high technical level.” al Atomic Energy Committee in * ¢ * 1951 rated bim as a “first . class} Official Washington has labeled | ‘scientific brain” and “a store-|Pontecorvo the second deadliest | ‘house of knowledge about Anglo-| spy in history. The top ranking American - Canadian atomic proj-| was given to Klaus Fuchs, a Ger- ects.” It sala he Riso had knowl-| man-born British scientist impris- edge of latek, hydrogen bomb de-| oned “by Brifain since 1950 . for velopments.) * . | handing Western atomic secrets to | > ¢ * ‘the Russians. j Pontecorvo’s identical letters,| The 1951 report of the U.S. Joint | the first definite word of him since | Congressional” At omic ‘Energy appeared Cothmunist party and government | tspapers, Without .saying so) ‘specifically, they indicated he is | beyond where it otherwise would working in Moscow, | have. been. ‘ i |” Asserting he quit the West be:| In Washington, the U.S. Atomic | atomic program at least 18 months ing need for a tri-county hookup corvo letters. But Rep. Carl T.| to meet the transportation require- Durham (D-NC), vice chairman of| ments of hundreds of thousands “The atomic threat hanging over |the Joint Congressional _Commit- | of persons living outside of Detroit. tee, said: ‘‘His statement sounds Baxter said a three-county sys- pretty much like the old Commu- | tem, serving such communities as nist propaganda line. . . . I would | Pontiac and Mount Clemens, prob- guess that he did not make it of | ablly would be centered around his own free will and accord.” | the DSR. cause preparations there for mili- | Energy Commission refused last tary. use of atomic energy made ‘night tq comment on the Pumte- if lated to my} ] 1 WESRCS JT) work ..... > pia few as possi. | | 3 ROTSEIM D ble to guess; f- 4 SAPH my line. 5 SELICH | ‘ke , 6 NALKP enna | ™ 4 © 8 REBLUM i Basketball 9 avene ry. 7 Suna tmake a ee 7 smart ea ye ae - “ . oy - ~ - = ~ a Aes hese Sg as es Ss ; ee ae i - . ‘ ‘ 4 ee ‘ < | : < 4 ’ " 1 iat - ’ ‘ de et ee ee ae ke ' ‘ \ f t e 2 . THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, MARCH 1, 1055 _ Charlie Chaplin Sells | Jan Sterling . ‘ i : : head.”’. i r . Texas’ Dorothy Malone ||; | HgTe nate ha Me tat C | z i i Sheds Glamor, |}, sed. i testes at n Ss Of, she 1 aad Liked by All Yankees - : Oscak, |= ae n , , of 23 new books to the ‘ y HOLLYWOOD @—Charies Chap- Vies for Oscar, phe shelves of the Pontiac City Library By EARL WILSON lin hag sold his interest in United By BOB THOMAS -| | Wife’s Nagging Offsets ” was announced today by Librarian! NEW YORK — You owe it to you to get’acquainted with a real | Artists Corp. probably his last! HOLLYWOOD #.— Four / tp Adah Shelly. "| nice TV and Hollywood star who's different—she says she hasn't | !mportant business connection in actresses ee ae oe Time Saved by Bear Included are 13 works of adult | even been married once. this gountry. P down a role that won Jan Sterling | "=" SMYRNA nomfiction and 10 of adult fiction.| Friendly-like, this nicely-stacked blonde often says at parties,| Hej was one of movieland’s | a Oscar , "| @® — Members of The complete listing follows: | “I'm Dorothy Malone from Dallas.” aan Picked cot a tore | “tant abt saye:Mian| Lassmtoal pageant tot ene ar IT hy “You're very frank,” one Hollywood party guest complimented a the late Douglas Fair. Sterling. “The part , probably] after a few weeks. The Autumn's Daisy New-| her. “But don't apologize.” : x. ond W. wasn't big enough for them.” * Explained club wig Best of Crunch and Des, Pht! isten,” she fired back, “Dallas is That didn't bother her. Nor did | Freeman: “Ene Curiew’s Cry, Mideeg Weer | the New York of the west. I've been up . she mind when she wag told that). “1 got to sleep 10 Love Can Be Dangerous, 0. R she would have to deglamorize her-| in the morning but the The Mouse That wis-| and down, and Texans are nicer even self in an almost brutal manfer Often Dus berley ‘re down.” . my wife made more than When Once i Aleppo, D. R. Barton when you ‘When she tried out for the roje in| that luxury. tohe comeleie’ Prisoner in’ Paradise, Garet, Rogers, | “How come you don’t live there?” asked The High and the v “sine aches. diatinens and. peeud. the heckler Robert | director William Wellman Whmned | Bian Securi | gator reduced bide ee naaa, hen-ttoe af ae six months of the year!” she and | her about the scene. Shé Was. to ray poy Lh pre AD the Way by Woler, 6. W. Deas - remove her false eyelashes, pan-| WASHINGTON @—A Senate sub- — i . . i sn 0 te d. , owns . Elisha Kent. Kane and the Seatarine | by | cake makeup, lipstick and all other committee on government reorgan- wc Sf pens Gas Socusiec, Spenaete eae x * *& that | beauty trappings right before the | jzation has scheduled public hear- ‘t neglect Pacts of Life for Children, Child Study camera. | eos te’ on e bate ry 1 eGuide Book of United States Coins,| Right now Dorothy Malone's not only cent e 8 8 start Thureds diuretic. Used onccenstully' by The ; proposing to create a special com- 60 years. wo emacs te "innocence Under the kims, r. p.} loyal to her home town—a quality I admire “You might be too good lo0k~) mission to study the government's | Dost’s gnanee SLIPPERY DRIVING a EN for Atomic Energy, R. D | —but she’s hotter’n a 300-pound man doing te ing,’’ Wellman said. “We may. not aqcuty prepay. ters out waste. Get / The Missing Macleans, Goeffrey | the noe mgt ai made on year. joare -. In rr ry”—one of na 's 2 ] the Bus | ei? Houdim! Tricks You Cam Do, 3 oe teen dx te hot- Kimble “eran Weether, O. H T-| with Tab Hunter which the censors couldn't Poyehiatry and Common Sense, C, 6. Juemel am € "9 ae 7 OUR Bitte field Theaty, “1 EE eer EN ee Ee, cool down. ¢ na Famous Operas, Ernest On TV, she'll be seen opposite Henry Pontiac City Lines | * & %e sss. Dwignt Coote Fonda in Emmett Kelly's life story, “The P Clown.” She plays Mrs. Clown. 20 High School Students | ier mother was here with her. They D a A r Plan Tour of Europe spoke softly of @ Dallas tragedy. Her “little > vactresy | OS : » . brother” was Killed by lightning while golf- College, will visit Wisconsin,..Min- . oe + KALAMAZOO \#—Twenty stu- S sow her et . > ; Free Book... Tells All |" {7m State High Schoo! in| !n& Iast summer. DOROTHY — [nesota_and the Northwest this | Tite glamor on and’ lodkeg |f.-. THOMAS B. COSTAIN'S RECORD-SETTING BEST-SELLER! _ see Kalamazoo and five Western Michi- By a fantastic coincidence, this was while Dorothy was which will be published by good, She is an attractive, well-|] . gan College students will make a in “The Y ” wi Sinatra—who, «Sells Nothing! on eee thie summen Se a. eee beer, th Pret Caivenity of Michigan Pres Ray ‘Deur, sponsor of the high = NOW If you hear school travel club, says he believes |, “Afterward .. .@when I came back from Dallas,” Dorothy said,|Lumber Camps” and “Songs of! |," the shower This mg ~ her but don’t un- this is the first intercontinental | (FFAS Save mee sad little clown doll with tenes on tts face, | Michigan Lumberjacks." next role in “The Deadly Peace- derstand, per tour ever planned by undergradu- | Tt was just a very sweet thought.” aoe maker” with Robert Mitchum, _ hapayou don't ates of a Michigan high school. eet oe oe Cobo Faces Tough Job “I play a madam,” she 3 ing aid — as - Pog ‘wv leuter Sow Seen But I didn’t mean to be creating sympathy for Dorothy, who's of Cutting Huge Budget | "’s* went en to e you'll learn frome thle ve. am 1. The f includes | h&d lots of acting experience—including the old Ken Murray! DETROIT (INS)—Mayog Cobo | she relishes such roles: “Let's face Tyaling A3-page booklet. | Great Briiain, France, Switarland,|TV show, “Studio One,” “Pirealde Thester” snd “Pour-Btar | ods) faced one ot the Gnghest |it — I'm not the ghimor (pe. 1 Health.” Germany, Luxembourg. Belgium | Theater.” agree pen te Se Sve Sees Se Se ene pins ten ee wean tae euch facta ao tee be by boat early in September. Se you'd like her and could picture her being from Ohio, The’ mayor vetaras to his deck ing to last in this business js to care of your ears; the ef- ™. Indiana, Besten, Maine, Wisconsin, Minnesota—even Brook - today from Washington where he | Play roles with character.” fects of vitamins and drugs . lyn. She quotes Bob Hope about why Texans drink. “Every | spoke in support of President 2. 2. 2 ‘ on hearing; whether deaf- | To Give Scholarships time they drill for oil, they get water. So they have to drink | Eisenhower's highway bill yester-| _! pooh-poohed her claim that she See Pe 5b CME | 6 wr problems of the deaf, and |. DETRO'T (Michigan Hospital| Whisk) . She said she knows what she das “IN 1492” (TRAVEL) @ NEWS @ CARTOON many other revealing facts. ave ne. ommend Monday) “I hear Tab Hunter gets squeals from the girls?” I asked her. holden reek y days, Cobo will | sad makes the most (§i\Now Communist Hotbed ‘ F DAMASCUS, Syria @ — A year, large, the Communists have Htelion end Americen Foods . te ; ago Syria was ridding itself of 8) gained disproportionate influence | SCReEnt =f ‘.. PHONE FE. a 2 5-8331 -_ 3 “ “¥ Tt ; Po @ ~ . 4 — 0 TERE ¢ rren c womaan ia: ; ; Joe's Famous ; See YY 1038 West Huron FE 83-7396 6 P. M. te 3 A. M.; Sun. 3 to 12 P. M.; Closed Men, SS RE ET le: I PR pay a i i fi. : Immediote Delivery 0. MONTH 7 eee Aellecks. 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