The Weather ~ Details page two THE PONTIAC PRESMAKE OVER 112th YEAR kkkk * PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, TUESDAY, JANUARY 25, 1955—28 PAGES Ike's Plan M . Ss y Get House OK Tod i Chosen ‘Queen of Queens’ on Campus MISS JUDY BRADLEY | kell L. Nichols (R-Jackson) Prompt Action on Road Bond Issue ls Sought | ' Sponsor Méves to Put. Proposal on April 4 State Ballot LANSING \# — Sen. Has- today called for speed in placing a 500 million dollar highway construction bond issue on the April ballot. Nichols, sponsor of one such proposal and chair- man of the Senate High- ways Committee consider- ing the plan, said he hoped | to obtain Senate action this week. Noting suggestions that the measure should be cleared through the Legis- | lature by mid-February, Nichols said “we haven’t got much time and we've got to) get going right away.” He said his committee had given priority to legislation to per- | | mit the Michigan Turnpike Au- jthority to borrow on promissory notes pending the issue of its toll | road bonds, but that he was try- | ing to get the half-billion dollar | | proposal under way promptly. | *-4 | A meeting originally called by | > | yet ready with his figures. ; | Gov. Williams for this afternoon to work out a system of priorities for spending the bond issue money was postponed until a later date | after Highway Commissioner | | Charles M. Ziegler said he was not | a | Election officials have adyised | Pontiac MSC Sophomore Probers Return Entry for Big Ten Crown Michigan State College candidate for the title of “Miss Big Ten” will be Judy Bradley, 19-year-old, sophomore from Pontiac. Miss Bradley, a five-foot, eight-inch brunette, will com-| pete for the honor against seven other conference queens | ‘at the MSC J-Hop at East Lansing Feb. 5. She was chosen from five? finalists.previously crowned in all-college queen contest. Miss Bradley reigned as Harvest Ball queen last fall. | _ This year’s Big Ten contest is | ‘being held on the Michigan State | campus after being held al North- | western University for two years. Both previous winners have been MSC coeds—Dee Means and Jan Somers. — Candidates for the 1955 contest will arrive at MSC Friday, Feb. 4 | The announcement and the | trade minister last night. Foreign imeident appeared when Nicara- “| evidence of a Soviet trend back Russia Presses for Heavy Goods Shift in Policy Seen; Mikoyan Resigns Post as Trade Minister | A. I, Mikoyan, high priest of the | Soviet Union's drive for more con. | Sumer goods, gave up his job as | observers viewed the shift as new | to prime emphasis on heavy in dustry. Mikoyan, 60-year-old ace negoti ator of foreign trade agreements, held on to his other top posts, in- cluding one of the Soviet Union's nine deputy premierships and the deputy premier had been re lieved of the trade ministry at his own request and that Dmitri Pav. agei3 Ht i 5 2 z : if f é z e H f Hl ’ : ‘ bi : i | | From Costa Rica Five-Nation Group Due for Washington Talks on Border Trouble SAN JOSE, Costa Rica (INS)— |. The inter-American fact-finding | commission will fly to Washington | today on urgent business as new | trouble threatened along the Costa Rica-Nicaragua border. The five-nation commission of the Organization of American States (OAS) had “pressing problems” to lay before the OAS council in the U.S. capital, including a ‘‘con- crete request by Costa Rica relat ing to the present situation.’’ Nicaraguan border which was abol- ished by the OAS. The threat of an international guan President Anastasio Somoza announced he was sending 500 soldiers to reinforce border posts en the Nicaraguan side, The buffer zbne, set up by the OAS fact-fifding commission to prevent the spread of the recent Costa Rican rebellion, goes out of existence formally at & a.m. a7 a.m. EST). ° ; President Jose Figueres con- ferred in secret with the commis- sion for two hours last night, pre- (Continued on Page 2, Col. 3) “| fender in Wayne County. ‘| feet, six inches for vehicles with of | School code, more than long, was filed in the lan attempt to overcome the defeat |which a similar measure met year. This one appeared to face | | better success. Sen. Elmer R. Porter (R-Bliss- |field), one of the authors, said it | | would reduce the number of school | districts from seven to five, mak- ting rural school districts and igraded districts the same as fourth class districts. Other bills proposed would: Create a state study and ad-| visory committee on problems of the physically handicapped. Allew the, governor to Monday a legal holiday when a legal holiday falls on a Satur- day. Require compulsory safety in- spection of motor vehicles more than two years old, except for farm and road equipment Créate the office of public | Set a maximum height of 13 loads. Under presefit law, only loaded auto carriers can be over 12 feet in height. Make it a misdemeanor to put | any object on a railroad track that | might threaten derailment. . > . | Efficiency Going Up | SPRINGFIELD, Ill, — Among | four cOmmittees eliminated yester- | day by the [Illincis Senate for “peasons of efficiency and econ-| omy’’ was the Committee on Effi- ciency and Economy. ! Island to Be Abandoned to Reds I93 Tachen Refugees Reach Formosa; Women and Children Lead the Exodus TAIPEH, Formosa # — An old gray landing ship slid into the small, hill-girt harber of Keelung | in northern Formosa today with | the first 193 refugees—many of them children—from the Commu- nist-menaced Tachen Islands 200 miles to the north. The dingy LSM carried widows and orphans of Nationalist guer- rillas who died last week in the defense of Yikiangshan island. One woman, the widow ef a guerrilla chieftain, carried a 12 - day - old} baby. On beard also were 18 sick and wounded Nationalist soldiers and 83 children under 14 years of age from a Tachen orphanage, and 15 women of the orphan- age staff, The grjeving women and solemn past Chinese sajlors on the Han | yang and Loyang, formerly the) U.S. destroyers Hilary F. Jones and Henson. The wounded soldiers were car- ried ashore. Only two men were among the refugees. They were the elderly father of a guerrilla squad leader killed at Yikiangshan and the orphanage cook The evacuation was a Nationa- ist operation, possibly the fore- runner of a complete withdrawal from the two small Tachen Is- lands. e The evacution ship on the final stage of its trip passed through Two-Inch Snow Blankets Area I. Expected | | | Heavy Fall to Diminish to Flurries Tonight The year’s first heavy snowfall came to Pontiac today, dumping more than two inches of the white, slushy stuff on the city and sur rounding areas. Early - morning traffic was slowed to a crawl as city and county roadways were glazed over ' waters protected by the U. §&. 7th Fleet builé around four fast carriers of the Essex class. The fleet is in pesition to assist in the complete withdrawal of 20,- 000 Nationalist troops from the Tachens if it gets orders to do the job, Rear Adm. Frederick N.. Ki- vette, commander of the U.S. Formosa Strait patrol, arrived today at the south Formosa port of Kaohsiung aboard his flagship Salisbury Sound from Hong Kong. He was expected fo visit Taipeh in| a day or so, On and over the Formosa Strait it appeared to be quiet with the Nationalist air force reporting only routine patrol flights. There were no reports of surface action. Unofficial Nationalist quarters made it plain they thought the Tachens would be abandoned to the Reds. U.S. congressional reac- tion to President Eisenhower's message on the Formosa crisis was watched eagerly. Risk of War With China Now Greatest Since Korea WASHINGTON \(# — The United States faces today children walked down a gangway | preater risk of war with Red China than at any time since the Korean War ended 18 months ago. President Eisenhower and Secretary of State Dulles | are convinced that taking this risk, however, affords the | best long-range hope for peace in the Far East. It can | be stated on excellent authority that both believe strong- ‘ly in the probability of peace. War Hero Dies € One of the six Marines who raised the U. S flag on Iwo with a combination of ice and snow. But Pontiac and Oakland County crews managed to keep main roadways salted and ice free. Sheriff's deputies, Pontiac and State Police said aute accidents due to stippery conditions were kept at a minimum. Nene were reported as of 1 p. m. The State Highway Department | warned, however, that slippery spots remained on nearly _ all trunklines. Most secondary roads | were termed hazardous. Although mach of the state was blanketed, the United States Weather : Bureau predicted the snowfall would diminish to flurries (Continued on Page 2, Col. 7) Wires Sen. McNamara to Back ike on Formosa GRAND RAPIDS # — City Man- ager George W. Welsh says he has wireq Sen, Patrick V. McNa- mara (D-Mich) urging McNamara to support President Eisenhower's proposals for defense of Formosa and nearby islands. off.the Chins coast, Welsh said this was his message: “If Ike has enough courage to stand up and be counted, for heaven's sake support him, .Don't straddie. If we fold now, we're Gentleman From Michigan Speaks Yakking, Puffing Congressman Told by Dondero to Keep Feet on Floor 3 fi i 3 5 i z F gF : H i | Z A E i r i ag the floor--not-just to the seating ‘area and the well of the chamber. One cigar smoker, hanging over the rear rail in a time-honored if rule- & ! asleestteres th Oh IE PAGee so. neers +B, ¥ breaking manner, kept right on puffing. Then. there is the matter of ad- Jima's Mt. Suribachi in 1945, Ira Hayes, was found dead Monday on the Sacaton, Ariz., Indian Res- ervation, Guatemala Net Set for Plotters Round Up Suspects in Attempt to Overthrow President Armas GUATEMALA (®—The roundup jot persons accused of plotting the overthrow of President Carlos Cas- tillo Armas continued foday in the wake of the ouster of Col. Miguel Mendoza as head of the nation's civil guard. The wave of arrests began after last week's frustrated attack on the Aurora air base, outside the capi- tal. More than 100 persons were taken into custody immediately after the attack. Many more have been arrested since. removal of Mendoza was dis- last night in a government ahnouncement. It said the colonel, what his new duties would He was succeeded as head of the civil guard—next to the army the most important body of armed mien in the country—by Lt. Col. Antonio Estrada, Sanabria, No. 2 man in the President's liberation army. Mendoza's brother Oscar is army chief of staff. Another brother, led Castilio Armas’ air In his message to Con- gress yesterday, Eisenhower put the issue squarely up to Red China: If the Reds start an attack aimed at conquering Formosa, the!| United States is prepared to fight; if and when the Reds are ready for peace, the United States is pre- pared to make peace. : The decisions which underlay this policy are decisions of a ind that the administration in the past has avoided, apparently in hope that the Reds would not press the issue “ Formosa Policy Faces Debate by Senate Dems: Some Say ’ to Fight’ Vote Will Congress on Spot WASHINGTON @ — Thé House appeared willing to endorse a resolution today giving President Eisenhow- er advance approval to make war if necessary to defend Formosa. The Senate seemed likely to follow suit, perhaps later in the week, although there were signs there may be considerable debate there. of ~the Chinese Nationalist government, and the approaches to it, The President said his aim was to assure peace by seeking to dissuade the Chinese Reds from attacking. The House Foreign Affairs Com- mittee swiftly endofsed the reso- lution last night 28-0 after a secret briefing know the full extent of firm and potential American comimitments in the area. 2. The Communists engaged in a steady buildup of forces. oppo- site Formosa and Peiping kept re- peating her intent to conquer the island. 3. The Reds displayed effective striking power in capturing last week the small Nationalist - held | island of Yikiangshan. j 4. Chiang Kai-shek appealed for U.S. help when the Reds stepped up attacks on the Tachen Islands, near Yikiangshan but more import- ant than it. The Tachens, 200 miles north of Formosa, are close to the Communist mainiand. Joe: Reconciliation? Marilyn: Just a Visit BOSTON ® — Marilyn Monroe and Joe DiMaggio spent the night | ! in Boston, but they won't say if| there'll bea reconciliation. The blonde movie queen and the former New York Yankee star slipped into town quietly yesterday and dined with Joe's brother Dom’ and his wife Emily. A reported asked Joe: “Is this a reconciliation?"’ The suntanned DiMaggio turned | to his gorgeous ex-wife and asked | with a smile: “Is it, Honey?’ A smile crinkled Miss Monroe's eyes. She hesitated and then smil- ingly said, “NO, just call it a authority is very broad.” Richards told newsmen he does not feel the United States is head- ed toward a “big war” over For- mosa. “But I feel there is a pos sibility of shooting.” State Schools Granted $14,900. for CD Program | r; i + ‘i Hy largest public buildings available for use as hospitals, feeding sta ~ | tions or welfare services in time of disaster and the fleet of 4,000 school buses in Michigan is the visit.” largest available for evacuation purposes. $8,100 Under Pillow Police Find Woman's Body \Forty Days After'Death A 61-year-old woman, who had been living alone since her husband's death last summer, was found dead in her home last night, some 40 days after she died. Mrs. Katrina Gashy of 230 Elm St. was found next to her bed when Pontiac Police forced their way into the i ,™ ti 1 ad ie . * 7 ‘ .- * bp ‘School Chet fo Get Diploma William J. , to Receive Doctorate From Wayne William J. Emerson, Oakland County superintendent of schools, is the Wayne University graduates scheduled (to their degrees. at a ceremony in Masonic Temple auditorium, Feb. receive 17 . others Pontiac failed Lake the same time. we: | the birth of her child, he told, first appeared scratched from the The Pontiac City - Democratic EMERSON Those receiving police. He said he did not think | material and then became = swol Club has nominated George D education degrees from Pontiac she knew their father had died. | len and sore. Then. she said. the Hicks to succeed Norman Bolton are: Ruth H. Burman, Harriet A | —_—-— — infection spread to the rest of her as 1955 president. Casler, Ruth S$. Ermel, Agnes N. body. Hicks was the only person ad- Her employer voluntarily per- vanced for the office at a nomin- Kreuzer, Elizabeth G. Oosta Lake, | .| mitted Mrs. Hetfield to stay home . ation, of officers held Sunday, The | Mary: c Morse, Margaret B. | and paid her more than $700 in election is set for Feb, 27 | compensation. The payments were | ‘ . 5 Parks, Doris B. Vosburg and Dora T. White, Others are: Aleck Capsalis, Beattice R. Cheney, Richard A. Gibboney, Richard M. Haddad, John F. Hatchett, and from Walled Lake; Louise M. Couture, Edge Hanson Jr., and Lucille W. Young. Southland Feels Winter's Wrath Sub-Freezing Weather and Snow Extend Down - to ‘Balmy’ Florida By UNITED PRESS Sub-freezing weather gripped the Southland todya in the wake of snowstorms which made parts Of Dixie look like iMnnesota. Meanwhile a surprise snow bogged down Chicago traffic and frost threatened to damage citrus |!'™ going to take you into one of | crops" in the semi-tropical lower Rio Grande Valley. whiter showed little mercy temperatures and blustery winds. Temperatures below the freezing mark were forecast for the area today, along with snow in the am Mountains and Ar- The nippy weather even touched the plush winter playground of Miami, Fla., sending the tempera- ture skidding 15 degrees from 67 to 52 in less than an hour. Snow fell yesterday on Talla-| operating with him in “sentenc- | hassee, Fla., which prides itself on its balmy weather, and Mobile, Ala., another resort spot, had almost 4 inches. In eastern Georgia near the South Carolina line some highways were glazed and closed‘ to traffic. Chicago's snowfall vesterday didn’t. amount te «much more than 2 inches, but it hit just as hordes of city workers were starting the rush hour drive home. Traffic slowed to a pumper-to bumper crawl, cars were aban- doned on the city’s Outer drive. and traffic accidents tripled. A bus ride which normally takes about half an hour was stretched to 3° hours long. ‘fer the degrees to Trucker Hunting Sister to Share $60,000 Estate CHICAGO — A-Manton, Mich. } ‘truck driver asked Chicago police ¢ Emerson today to’ help find his sister to! share in a $60,000 estate left by their parents | The young woman is Mrs. Betty Coon, 20, mother of a 4-year-old |daughter, Kathleen . Her brother, David Wreggels worth. 71. of Route 1, Manton, said his sister last wrote him from Chi ,Caao in December. He said he thinks she may be working as @ waitress or housekeeper Wreggelsworth said the Ietter arrived shortly before their He will receive s his doctorate in mpther, Edith, 55, died of can- édocation, | eer, leaving the son and daugh- | ter the fortune, Their father, Os- Dr. Clarence B. waid, 65, 9 coalyard owser, died Hilberry, presi-| in dung 1954, oat ot br vor | The brother related that his sis ter left hame five years ago and went to Cleveland. She wrote from = there frequently, he said, but never an at) gave a return address, She returned home briefly after Quitting Prison Says Ordeal Too Much; Held Captive 84 Hours by Boston Convicts BOSTON («®—A Massachusetts State Prison guard who endured #4 hours as a hostage during last week's convict revolt. ‘said he is quitting his job because ‘I wouldn't want to go through that again.” ‘Warren L. Harrington, 29, his brow beaded by sweat and his hands shaking, told of his 3'-day ordeal at a news conference yes- terday. | The slight, fair-haired veteran of World War II said he lost eight of his 148 pounds while a hostage. with four other guards and six other convicts, of four desperate | long-term prisoners. | . * . | At one time, Harrington said, cop ' Wayer Fritz O, Swenson, 31, a lifer, told him “A bullet is top good for you | the rooms and beat the living day- | lights out of you.” | The guard, a prison officer for 164 years, said the hostage guards +were not mistreated but the nerv- }ous strain was terrific He said his weekly take-home pay was $59.14 Using Sunday School ‘to Punish Violators LANCASTER, Pa. i® — Police | Calet Elias Ebersole of nearby | Marietta says he has a new plan | to combat motor vehicle viola- |tions by teen-agers. | He explained yesterday that sev- eral justices of the peace are co- ing’ offenders to two or three months attendance at Sunday sschool. Attendance cards must be | punched by church pastors, | Paraguay Breaks Plot ASUNCION, Paraguay » — The Paraguayan government an | nounced today it had discovered | and suppressed a plot against Gen Alfredo Stroessner, president for less than a year. There’s Money to Be Made From Stocks, but Then You Can Lose Your Shirt, Too By RELMAN MORIN | NEW YORK Can you make “| against any border incidenis which | dents in the nation seek help and | To Job Blameless in Poison Case - Woman Loses Fight for $1,900 Compensation | for Skin Condition | DETROIT w — A 10-year-old | : | widow has lost her long fight to| collect more than $1,900 in state workmen's compensation, claiming | she by handling | nylon in wedding gowns James W. Nolan, Visiting deputy commissioner of the State Work- mens Compensation Commission, ‘ruled yesterday against Mrs. Floy M. Hetfield of “Oworso Nolan held that her poisoning Was “in no way" connected with her former work as a seam. Was poisoned GEORGE D, HICKS = "ee "Pontiac Democrats alarmed over er contin | Nominate President February 1953, after her hands at Mee | The 125 persons attending the | stopped in October 1953, after @) neeting voted a $2& contribution | skin specialist advised the em- ito the march of dimes campaign. | ployer that her injury was not)/co. 39 new applicatiens for compensable | membership were received, Brief The woman's long appeal then | alks were given by Arthur J. | began. | Law, Willis M. Brewer and Demo- | Nolan said one of two Sagin- | cratic candidate for Waterford aw specialists who examined her | Township Supervisor, J. R. Hiltz said the condition was caused by a diabetic ailment, and the Michigan State’s THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY. JANUARY 25, 1955 | Scientific Eye Turned on Sam. Devotes His Talents to Sifting Sheppard Case CLEVELAND (INS) — A ‘pipe- smoking professor credited with big contributions to the making of the A-bomb pushed his one-man investigation of the explosive Shep- pard murder case today Dr. Paul L. Kirk, University of California seientist hired by de- fense attorneys, plodded through the weekend in a microscopic ex- amination of the bits and pieces of evidence on which a jury found Dr. Samuel Sheppard guilty of the July 4 bludgeon murder of his wife, Marilyn. Kirk said he had not yet decid- | ed wehther he will talk to the | osteopath, who is being held in | ‘county jail in Cleveland pending outcome of his appeal of a sec- ond degree marder conviction and life sentence. Like the laboratory dweller he | is, Kirk summed up his attitude | |towards Sheppard coldly and dis- | ! | passionately. He said: | this man one way or another. My only conclusions will be based on the physical and factual evidence.” The slight, 52-year-old crimin- Ologist talked to Dr. Sam's two brothers, Drs. Richard and Ste- phen Sheppard, read the trial transcript and went over the mur- der scene in the Sheppard Bay Vil- Erie. | other blamed old age. The state official said ‘nearly New Psychiatrist to Sooth Students. 100 per cent of skin poisoning cases clear up once the worker lis taken off the job, but Mrs |Hetfield's condition never has| EAST LANSING (UP) — Mich. | | improved | igan State College will have a/| full-time psychiatrist next fall to treat mild cases of frustration, worry and emotional upsets among students. Dr. C¥#fford G. Menzies said the aim of psychiatric treatment will (Continued From Page One) he to reduce the number of stu : dents who drop out of college |sumably about the OAS rec. before they graduate’ because of | ommendations regarding the Costa ,:he emotional strain. | Rican opergtions in the zone | Figueres then presided over a cabinet meting Figuéres’ government requested | the abolition of the demilitarized | | area—six miles deep and 18 miles | | long—to enable his loyal troops to mop up rebel units who fled into | j the area in extreme northwest of Costa Rica's Guanacaste Prov-| Menzies said he does aot have ince figures on the number of students The inter-American peace group who have received psychiatric | | called on both the neighboring | treatment at MSC but said about Central American nations to guard |10 per cent of the college stu Probers Return Today From Costa Rica The psychiatrist, Dr. Byron Casey, who has been connected with the college for about a year on a part-time consulting basis, has been given a ftull- time job by the State Board of Agriculture, Michigan State's governing bedy, effective July 1. could ignite an international con-| are treated where organized clin- } flict. ics are available. | The commission asked the two| The main problem is “drop | governments to cooperate with its | outs,’ Menzies said. Only about | military observers along the bor-| 50 per cent of students admitted | der and said those groups would | to college actually graduate. “They often are frustrated and worried be strengthened. and they quit,” he said. ‘This is a waste of money — particular- ly at a state-supported institution.” It’s Simple Arithmetic: | 52 Minus 4 Plus 4 Is 52 | WOODLAND. Calif. UP) — ‘Invisible Man’ Denies Rancher Jacob Dicteker had just Dodging Traffic Fines loaded 52 bags of walnuts on his, 'truck when a boy appeared at} CHICAGO (UP) — Eugene John- his door offering four bags for son, 46, denied in court today that A distinguished contributor to both atomic energy development and cancer research, Dr. Kirk re- fused to say exactly how much he is being paid for his private eye work. But he added that he never works on cases like this for less than $100 a day and ex- penses. Kirk's cold, unemotional ap- proach to the problem of crime detection was dramatically pointed up by the fact that less than two years ago he was instrumental in obtaining a conviction in a murder case with some parallels to the Sheppard killing. That was the San Francisco trial of Cpl. Philip Watson for the slay- ing of his wife. Watson maintained that his 22-year-old bride of eight months must have been killed by an ‘intruder,’ as Sheppard does, although Watsen also claimed an alibi—that he was out of their small apartment at the time of the killing. Watson showed sand in his shoes to back up his claim that he was strolling on the beach at Half Moon Bay at the time of the crime. But Kirk also found small quan- tities of blood on the shoes and socks Watson was wearing. The blood, he reported, was type O, the same as the wife's. While Watson's blood was also type O. and he claimed that he had cut himself, Kirk showed that the sand had been collected after the bioodstains, and after the cence, is serving a term of five years to life at San Quentin Prison. The Sheppard murder is the 579th sale hetried to avoid payment of fines Dieteker paid the youth $4.50) on 29 traffic tickets dating back to | for the walnuts and loaded them 1949. | on his truck. Then he counted “I've been around all the time,” | the load again, It added up to 52. Johnson told the judge. ‘‘The police | bags. just didn't see me.” case in which Kirk has taken part as an expert in a career dating back to 1935. Mother's Polio March to Be Held Thursday 1955 Mothers’ March Thursday from 7 to 8 p.m., ac- Cool-Headed A-Expert | | “I have no stgong feelings about | lage home on the shores of Lake | The city's “Magnificent Mile” on Michigan boulevard was lighted only by store windows and banks money in the stock market? Yes indeed. buying or selling stock accord- | That depends largely on what ingly. ; you went. Some, on the basis of > * * People are seldom, if ever, pre- dig table say in a new company, or what the | ‘the record, have a high degree of | cording to Floyd J. Shotwell, local safety but a low yield. Others— chairman for. the National Foun- of automboile lights for a while when the stiow put the street's new mercury vapor lights out of commission. Light snow continued to f[:1I today from eastern Wiscorisin across eastern Michigan and from easterfh Mlinocis across most of Indiana, western Ohio, and even parts of north central Kentucky. Traces of snow hit the Kenticky Cities of Louisville and Lexington. The Weather PONTIAC AND VICINITY — Mostly Cleedy and colder with snow flurries te night. Low tonight 17-16 high 22-28 Temerrew night mostly cloudy and coid Can you lose your shirt? You certainly can. = Can you make a quick killing? That depends on the size of your money, your judgment, the relia bility of your information, and countless factors, unforeseen, and beyond your’ control. Can fou be wiped out in the mar- ket? Well, you'd have to be unusu- ally deaf, dumb and blind, but it's possible. 2 * * Let's take a look at the ‘‘stock market.” The term covers the New York Stock Exchange, the American Ex- change, and the smaller exchanges that dot the United States and Abd since the stock market is‘the | marketeers call ‘‘unseasoned"’ focus of so many optnions and | stocks—may represent potentially emotions, it also is unpredictable. | bigger profits, but also greater Nobody can tell you exactly what | rigks, it will do, or why. | os ¢ 3S Moreover, it reacts to events, And there are hundreds of issues anywhere in the world. A vote in| in between these two extremes. the French Assembly or a Com-| Since you're no expert, you will munist raid on a tiny island off the | seek out the best advice and coun- China coast quite probably will be | sel you can get. reflected in the rise or fall of some | You may go to a broker. Or stocks. | you can talk to your banker. Or Se the element of risk can never) investment counselors. They may be eliminated. Hence, a_ broker | tell you, for one reason or. another, might very well say, after looking | to stay out of the market. They over your financial position, ‘‘You will certainly advise you how to | | haven't any money that you ‘caii| buy. | afford to risk. Better buy govern. | There are fees for all this ad- | with snow flurries, low 14-16. West te Canada, The market is maf ent bonds.’’ . vice. injections northwest ro 20-25 miles tonight. | things. y { _— * * * . You may buy stocks today on = on Lane ay im Pontiac | First, it is a facility, highly or-| On the other hand, the record— | the “monthly investment plan,” for | lego gh Orest temperature preeecing & @.m | canized for the convenience of the | which is easily available to you! as little as $40 a rmoath It's es- Fined for Il | Beer ott £0. : Wind veloyts 8-10 mph! buyer and seller. from market. publications or in & | sentially the same as buying an| Keith Freeland, 19, of 120 E. Bun seis Tuesday at 537 pm | Second. it is a place where bor-| broker's office—has some surpris-| article on installments. Margret St., Detroit, pleaded Supn Floss Wednesday ot 152 om rower and lender meet, each with ing information about the stability’ Now, sit back and watch the fi-| guilty to illegal possession of beer Moon rises Wendesday a1 8:57 a.m, the idea of using money to create of American corporations, It would nancial page in your newspaper. It | yesterday when he appeared befere . Faison more money. A corporation needs | show: _ | is telling the day-to-day story of | Municipal Judge Cecil McCallum Lee a eee >, | funds — say for expansion — and| 1, Some that have been paying | American business, and you are a|and paid a $15 fine. Pentiac FS Man vvess.. Bm. ‘| it “borrows” them in the market. | cash dividends every year for more part of it, one of the owners. Police arrested the youth Sunday PEN 2 A See 28 _ * .*, ; |than 100 years. * * @ night when he was carrying a bag 10 am, ..at You've got some idle money. You| 2, Nearly 50-that haven't missed| Brokers frequently say, “Don't containing the beverage. ade o Cuatiad want it to earn more than jt will | a dividend payment since the Civil marry your tgs You may buy < at teeeaha éoeeteen) ; earn in a savings account or gov- | War, jand hold some for ma rs. Res ot = ehh ianiaee mars . ee you buy eome 3. Over 300 with an ufbroken| But in order to achieve iver Manager will Speak Mean temperatore............ Sovet.s G8 res of stock in a company, You | record of 20..yearg or.more, fication’ — , a balance Manager Willman Westnen—Guany. (have “loaned” that firm your weer. oO _ | tween risks po ah thewenin Aa Python at Rgeor be of Con- Res Keoe in Pontioe gq | ener. Apart fron? dividends, how about wart to change around, from time gregation B'nai Israel, Oneida and temperature... r.cccccccccl, |, YOU Stand to gain in two ways, | the prices per share? Again, the|to time, Again, hire professional Menominee Rds., Wednesday at | Mean tempersture... |. yorenpenres 74 Seat i Settee se company | record shows many of the best | advice, 8:30 p.m, The ublic ig invited to * weetner may pay you out of its earnings, | stocks are higher now than they; And you might wisely paste this|», iliman Temperatares This and from the increased price of its | were ity 1929 when the market aga paragraph inside me hatband. adhe on Be wh gts ‘tant | Stock if the firm's success causes | whole was ‘at an all-time high, In/-It ig from a issue of the - - other people to want the stock. (other words, even » Ec Ree ¢| And finally, the stock market is ||bought these’ at the 32 | a state of mind. It represents the | them through the ot ass prance beh rap rises, you would have whims and huhthes, the hopes | today than you paid and fears, of millions of people, | more buying power, "2 Why? Because these people are all lars. : fi vt to sea the foture of then. | Support x00 a ' hyetineas eperprinen; and stocks. Which me ee be f Ex Leila Dies in Pontiac David Green Served 3 Terms in State House of Representatives David A. Green, 92, a former member of the State Legislature, died yesterday after an illness of five weeks. | He was born in Bloomfield Hagerman In 1903, he establi a grocery business in Pontiac which he con- ducted for 20 years. He has lived his entire life in Oakland County While in the, Legislature. he in- troduced the Woman Suffrage Bill. In November 1941, Mr. and Mrs. Green observed their 30th wedding anniversary with an open house at their home 181 Washington St. Mr. Green has been an active member of the First Methodist | Church for 30 years. He belongs to Masonic Lodge No. 71. FEAM, Royal Arch Masons, Knights Templar and White Shrine, B.P.O.E No. 819 and the Repub- lican Club Surviving besides his widow, are a son, J. Wendell Green of Watkins Lake; a daughter, Mrs. Witttlam C. (Marian) Kampe of Bloomfield Hills, three grand. children and three great-grand- children. A brother, Oscar L. Green of | Pontiac also survives. j The funeral will be held Thurs- day at 2 p.m. from the Farmer- Snover Funeral Home. The Rev. Thomas J, Mulvey, 4. of 90 Pine Grove Ave. died last night at his home after an iliness of two teri g ig i i ‘ ¢ ij } Ha i n a i hie —— Ss — ee ~_™ ~« = The Day in Birmingham ; municipal parking lots, |the issue from $400,000 | 000. > * * Charies Mercer, 68, school the crosswalk. cross- self the victim of an auto this morning. Police said Mercer, who lives at 259 Daines St., was struck by a car driven by Walter B. Archer, "151, of 1985 W. Lincoln Ave., as he > HE j was Second in a series of three lec- i I TE i To Install Officers Two-Inch Snowfal Hi i i i £ i 3 at Chamber Banquet The 1955 slate of officers will be Blankets City, Area (Continued From Page One) with the coming of colder weathér tonight i agE iL uf uf New Shain Park Assured If Parking Plan Carries i Efe 4, f BF 2 4 i 3 I Legislature to Speed Korean Vets Bonus LANSING (UP) — A drive to speed up distribution of the Korean right of way to a pedestrian in| bonus was scheduled to start in | the Michigan Legislature today. Sen. Elmer R. Porter (R-Biiss- z Ezz? is i ar 53 i Free Lecture Entitled Christian Science: The Way of Health and Security by Ella H. Hay, C. S. of Indianapolis, Indiana Member of the Board of Lecture- ship of The Mother Church, The Pirst Church of Christ,. Scientist, in Boston, Massachusetts. January. 27 Thursday-8 P. M. In the Church Edifice of itt ie — 7d HIND ‘THE PONTIAC PRESS Advertising Manager Nat'l Adv. Mgr. oo = —— — Eutered at Post Office, Pontiac, Mich. as second class matter MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The Associated is entitied exclusively to the use for rtepwi of paper, as as all Tus Powrme Passs is delive by carrier f service not-avallable by carrier in Oakland, Genesee, Li ton, Macomb, Lapeer and 12.00 a Se, an in a year. All ey payable v7 Phone Pontiac 2-8181. 1 ae MEMBER OF AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATIONS TUESDAY, JANUARY 25, 1955 City’s Banks Growing If banks are the excellent business barometers most people, including us, believe they are, Pontiac indeed is en- joying sound financial health. This long apparent condition was emphasized anew by reports submitted to stockholders of the Community National and Pontiac State Banks at their annual meet- ings. * * * Both institutions report increases in total business and dividends. For the first time in Community National's his- tory, a year’s check clearances in its commercial department passed the bil- lion dollar mark. Pontiac State in 1954 enjoyed the best year since it was organ- ized a decade ago. Besides in- creases in total deposits and loans, the bank’s assets and capi- tal grew. * * * The people of Pontiac indeed are for- tunate to have two such well managed institutions through which to transact their day to day financial operations. Congress Should OK It A recommendation by Army Engi- neers of vital import to Michigan has reached Congress. As indicated in mid December, the engineers urge deepening of Great Lakes channels to a depth of 27 feet. This would make available the maximum possible efficiency of the 27 foot St. Lawrence Waterway. The channels dealt with in the engineers’ report are the St. Mary's River, Straits of Macki- nac, the St. Clair River, Lake St. Clair and the Detroit River. * * * Existing Federal navigation projects for these channels provide for an ulti- mate maximum depth of only 25 feet. Great Lakes shipping presently is limit- ed to 22.3 feet. Cost of deepening oper- ations to 27 feet is estimated by the Army Engineers at $109,027,000. While the annual cost of this project is put at $4,250,000, it is estimated that the advantage to lake shipping alone would be worth $7,600,000 a year. In addi- tion there would be the extra advantage of being able to accom- modate the deeper draft ocean freighters. * * x There isn’t any-doubt about what Con- gress should do. As originally planned but never ratified by the lawmakers, our share of the waterway was to include deepening of these channels. To with- hold the funds needed to make connect- ing channels match the waterway in depth wouldn’t make sense. A Good Appointment ' There should be widespread satisfac- tion that former Sen. JoHN SHERMAN Cooper has been chosen to be our next ambassador to India. Because there is so much room for distinguished ambassadorship service at New Delhi, the choice of this Kentucky Republican leader is an _ especially happy one. A man of broad experience and unfailing modesty and tact, Mr. Cooprr should be perfectly at home in his new post. After World-War-Il,in Which * he rose from private to captain, he A news printed in this news- Rews dispatches. e Rescue in the Pacific Nothing in modern life is quite so heartwarming and dramatic as the res- cue of fliers forced down at sea. * Such a rescue is eveh more hearten- ing when some of the men snatched from ocean deaths are near neighbors. This was the case with three of the seven crewmen of the Navy amphibian whose engines conked out in the Cen- tral Pacific. a a ee One of the crewmen is an Oakland County resident, Lieut. James G. MEASEL of Farmington. Another is Jzrome J. Warras,: aviation technician, Detroit, and the third is WrLL1aM C. Pavey, avi- ation’s mate, Iron Mountain. They. and their four com- panions were forced down be- tween Kwajalein and Johnston Island last Wednesday. Many planes and surface ships united in a search of the 45,000 square mile area. But it was not until a few hours before their rescue Friday evening by a Navy trans- port that a search plane sighted them in their rubber raft and — dropped a life boat. * * We rejoice with the loved ones of these seven crewmen not only in their rescue but in the news that they came through their harrowing experience in , excellent physical condition. Men who are wearing pink shirts given to them by their wives at Christ- mas fear their wives more than they do ridicule. The Man About Town Coming Our Way Big City Factories and Its Residents Moving Out Here Life: What you get ‘ont of every- thing that you put in—taxes de- ducted. es During the past three years Oakland County has been grabbing off a lot of De- troit’s factory workers, both in residential and employment standpoints. According to a survey just completed by : Paul M. Reid of that city’s regional planning commissidn, 114 manufacturing plants have moved from that city to locations just outside its limits during that period, mostly coming to Oak- land and Macomb Counties. These plants employ from three to 500 each. In the same length of time employment gain in Detroit has been 17.8 per cent, as compared to 28.9 per cent in its suburban area affected by the change. Their neighbors tell me that Dr. and Mrs. L. G. Rowley of Williams Lake are doing a fine job at bird feeding, with hundreds of feathered friends. Also putting out a good winter menu are Dr. and Mrs. Harvey Campbell at their Orchard Lake home. Their chicka- dee family numbers more than they can count. After spending a couple of weeks at Miami Beach, Franklin Duffy writes that all of the people at its swank hotels are not millionaires, but he adds, “They might have been when they arrived here.” Oakland County's next incorporated vé- lage may be : “Bingham Farms,” as petitions are being circulated to take such action on an area just east of Franklin. Born in Boston on the. same day and at about the same hour that Ulysses 8. Grant was inaugurated for his first term as presi- dent on March 4, 1869, Ulysses S. Grant, now living in Bloomfield Hills, soon cele- brates his eighty-sixth birthday. He claims no relationship to the former president, but his father fought in the Civil War under him. “In spite of all safety devices and precau- tions and provisions that may be made to prevent traffic accidents,” says Chief of Police Herbert W. Straley, “it still requires the driver to show ofdinary sense.” The residents of Thomas, Oakland Coun- ty’s most northerly community, have a local boosting association, with Melvin Mott | as president, that is doing much to keep its home loving and enterprising people content- ed and happy. Once the biggest wheat ship- ping point on its railroad, the auto and trucking age makes it not even a flag stop, but its community enterprise still persists. Verbal Orchids to— Frank R. Kent ‘ "of 48 ‘West-Rutgers St.; eighty-fourth birth Voice of the People Recreation Rooms in Hospital Would Help Patients Enjoy Idle Time, Says Observer Letters will be condensed when neces- afterwards, I was talking with i saris i would give them some place to go to relax and also get them out of write and see what 9365 Dixie Highway Clarkston = Would Forward Junk Mail to Washington This letter is to people in rural Why can’t we have it stopped for us the way it was stopped for people in towns and cities? Aren't we as important as they are? The next time you receive some, why not put a 2c stamp on it and return it to your Postmaster General in Washington, along with a little note enclosed from you, letting him know we don't appre- ciate it either. M. RB. C. City Provides Children With Enough Activities I appreciate what the city tries to do for the youngsters such as ice skating rinks, school recreation in the evenings. etc. There are enough activities to hold’the ones who appreciate them. A Believer Looking Back 15 Wears Ago JAPANESE HOPE for new U. S. trade pact. BRITAINS SEEK to cut Ger- many from world fuel oil sources. 20 Years Ago » THREE DEAD, 4 missing in Jersey shipwreck of the liner Mo- hawk. Case Records of a Psychologist Bible Says Nothing Against Sunday Fun _. . Paul and John Ran Race on Easter Lois raises a question which teenagers and their parents can discuss. Use it at church or Sunday school as the basis for a lively debate. God or the devil talk to the sters who broke up the young — program on Sunday night? ple’s society in my church. “Our clergyman has been trying to get teenagers to stay for church spoke to those old fogies,”’ ex- claimed one man to whom I put rs 4 — this question from the public plat- form. don’t realize that fact. “But athletics and games aren't seemly in a church!’’ somebody else of the older generation may * ~exelaim. Let's examine that attitude more closély in the light of the Bible. Does it cite any instances of physi- cal contests on the Sabbath? Catholics and Protestants alike If simple teenage games, such as ping pong, can help bring 20 high school boys and girls to church on Sunday. night, then that innovation is doing them good. Meanwhile, it isn't causing anybody to get drunk, or develop the narcotic habit, or lose his money via gambling or other- wise cheat and deceive other folks. At the worst, possibly you could argue that it is hurting those two or three older people who said God - told them to stop the young peo- ple's Sunday night party. But those three were offset by 17 additional teenagers who were brought to church on Sunday night. Since God is logical ahd sci- entific, I believe he'd swap the three oldsters for those 17 teenagers and call it a bargain. ‘ (Copyright, Hopkins Syndicate Inc.) David Lawrence Says: Ike Makes Sound Move in Appeal to By DAVID LAWRENCE . WASHINGTON — For the first time since December. 1941, a Pres- ident of the United States has for- mally requested authority from Congress to use the armed forces of the United States in a specific situation involving already existent hostilities. ~ But the step is intended, never- theless, more to prevent a war and indeed to stop the present fighting, than to enlarge the scope of military action. So it may truly be said that the Pregident has acted to prevent a war rather than to bring one on. And, if there is a calming down of the situation in the Far East in a few days, the world may wit- ness a dramatic vindication of the philosophy expressed so often by statesmen of courage that the best way to deter an aggressor govern- ment is to let it know clearly and explicity in advance that you will ' resist. The Congress is réady to sup- port the joint resolution over- whelmingly. This in itself is a demonstration not only of na- tional unity but firmness in a crisis. The Republicans naturally follow their party leader, while the Dem- ocrats are saying that the chief executive already has ample pow- er but they are not unwilling to express their support by voting for the resolution so that world opin- jon may be impressed, It presents a combination of legal and psycho- spoken in person to Congress in- stead of transmitting his written request Ae messenger to both houses, it was stated in his behalf that he didn't want to over- dramatize the occasion and give . the impression that this was like other instances in history when a request for war powers .was. being made. Still it would haye been better if the President had ad- dressed Congress, especially since later in the same day he posed ¢o resist an armed attack, which, “if continued, would gravely en- danger the peace and security of the west Pacific area." It goes on to say that ‘‘the secure possession by friendly governments of the western Pacific island chain, of which Formosa is a part, is es- sential to the vital interests of the United States and all friendly na- tions in or bordering upon the Pacific Ocean.” This makes clear the case for a specific defense of the United States by protecting its outlying areas. For, in an age of airpower, it is vitally important that bases thousands of miles away from one’s own continent shall be in friendly hands lest an attack by air be launched from those bases. President Truman recognized this principle when he ordered the U. S. Seventh Fleet to protect For- mosa in June 1950 when American forces joined with other nations in a United Nations command to re- sist aggression in North Korea. Many observers feel that Mr. Truman should have gone to Congress after that act of inter- vention to secure ratification of what he had done. Already using that precedent as a guide, many persons are saying now that President Eisenhower didn't need to go to Congress to ~ get authority to protect Formosa. The truth is that in an emergency a big war. (Copyright 1955) Baering-Down By ARTHUR “BUGS” BAER (International News. Service) Eg EE i *eeseceeeeeev ee i a i tt th é i E 4 i Hi F g e g. a 2 ap ~ = ! : ii | ce f | i : 7228 HH fi Unidentified Medical Big Shots Disagree “By WILLIAM BRADY, M.D. The last time I was kicked out Doe Brady began to decline from I E : r . | ‘ E LTE ; i fH 3 p vf i ; i i pet | With Dr. Brady on Absorption. by Skin cuse me for a moment while 1! "se eee * ‘err eee ee eeere ~eree ‘ee eeu er s* *ee ee ee ee ae eS ee ee ee oe a < * oe ae ne Arsh, OO el ae” eS catia iil Fe ee Cae arr * re ee ae ns “a Plan Meeting on Incorporation Rochester Council OKs Session on Disputed Annexation Proposal ROCHESTER — Village Council members last night favored call- ing a public meeting to discuss proposed incorporation of the vil- lage as a city, and annexation of portions of neighboring. Avon Township. Village Manager Robert Slone was’ instructed .to set a date for such a meeting. A report suggesting such a move was released by the council Dec. 29. The idea was fostered by prob- lems created by areas on the vil- lage boundaries, and the report followed more than a year of study and survey by the council Te date more than 100 copies of the report have been picked up by interested citizens. An- other 250 are at the village of- fice. Officials .of Avon Township have spoken out against the proposed annexation, which would include | two large indastries and their important tax bases, inside the proposed city of Rochester. As outlined, the annexation would increase Rochester's area from 1.6 square miles to 5.8. County Deaths MARLETTE Service for Ed- , 79, will be heid Wednesday at Church -of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints, with burial in Ever- green Cemetery, Brown City, by the Marsh Funeral Home. He died Sunday. A former Burnside Township pfifes > iff the - Reorganized | in HEADS ASSOCIATION—Miss Sarah Van Hoosen Jones, of Stoney Creek, Rochester has recently been elected president af the Assn. of Governing Boards | Vernon G. Eberwine, and Richard H of State Universities and Allied Institutions. A member of the State Agriculture Board, governing body of Michigan State College, she is flanked by (left) Hollis Rinehart, vice president, F. K. Ketner, | vice president | to the State | election, F armington PTAs toH old A potluck buffet gether is planned for the all-com- munity affair, which will be held Farmington High School in the the style Do-It-Yourself Adult Classes to Start at Holly ge Founders Day Banquet FARMINGTON — PTA chapters | Farmington Consolidated School District wil! join together in celebrating Founders Day on Feb. 7 with a cooperative dinner t-to- | HOLLY — Do-it-yourself enthusi- will asts will find the adult shop class in session again, Thursday. Classes from 7 to 9 p.m. shop at the back of Holly Area Clyde Rebekah Lodge | } Dr. Frank D. Siutz, nationally known author, educator and lec- | turer, will be the speaker. “He | will lecture en the topic, ““Ques- Dr. Slutz has served as teaeher principal, superintendent, director and educational adviser. For the | past 20 years he has been engaged in educational guidance and coun seling in colleges and high schools His books include, “Thinking Things Through,."’ “Methodist Men at Work,” ‘‘Techniques of -Manage ment,” and “Human Factors in Business and Industry,” and he is the co-author of ‘‘Am I Getting an Education." He holds degrees from Harvard | | tions Youth Are Asking.” | | | starting this the University of Denver and Mount resume | Union College of Alliance, Ohio | in the school | Necessary tools for both wood| installs New Officers and’ metal work will be found in the shop, where localities have | been invited to remodel a chair, display in Saidlow’s window. .|repair a toy or build something Sutton as noble grand recently, .| from “scratch.” A display of some of- the hand- work that has been turned out by | ‘ men and women alike, is now on Hines, Evelyn Hoffman, and Mrs CLYDE — The Clyde Rebekah | Lodge 374 installed Mrs. aera | and Mrs. Roy Glynn as vice grand. | Other officers are Mrs. Edward | Ralph Swatz. bh DOUBLE STAMP DAY SAM'S “us 3293 Autiurn Read, Auburn Heights te WEDNESDAY IS {i} RED ; bs: bf libraries in the U.S. NN A really modern kitchen includes an extension telephone Think of all the hours you spend in-your kitchen! How many times a day do you have to make“a 50-yard dash” to go and + —-- ———__-, ee answer the telephone? ’ * Does it make sense when you can have a kitchen extension telephone for only a few cents a day? i . ——__—_— ‘ It will save you time, steps and energy, make you # more efhcient home manager. You'll find its value {ar beyond its price. No home is truly modern without an extension telephone im the kitchen and another beside your bed. Call our Business Office and order yours today! : MICHIGAN BELL TELEPHONE COMPANY a aa » i THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, JANUARY 25, 1955 (right) and standing are other | Association officers, Roy Chamberlain, C. J. Dugas Piock. Miss Jones has announced her candidacy for re-election Board of Agriculture in the Spring Plan Fund Campaign KEEGO HARBOR—The Mother's March on Polio will be held from 7-8 p.m. Thursday. A lighted porch light will step solicitors for a contribution There are more-than 6,000 public Commerce Area | Mothers March | Slated Thursday | COMMERCE TOWNSHIP—This Thyrsday night, all over Com- merce Township, porch lights will | signal their. welcome to mothers who will be out collecting funds | for the polio fund campaign | The Mothers March of Dimes t will take place over a wide area | —at Walled Lake. Wolverine Lake Commerce Village, Bass Lake Lower Straits. Log Cabin Beach and Tripp Subdivision. Wherever a porch light is turned on, the women will call to accept pennies dimes or dollars to aid polio vic tims. Chairmen for the township are Mrs. Ray Eno and Mrs. Arthur | Thompson. Divisional chairmen,| include Mrs. Lloyd Hattis, Walled | Lake; Mrs. Vernon VanDiver, Wolverine: Mrs. Walter Sprenger 'Commerce Village; Mrs. Leonard | Griffin, Bass Lake; Mrs. Herman | Gall Lower Straits: Mrs. Donald |Crawford, Log Cabin Beach, and Mrs. Alfred Carlson. Tripp Sub | division. Volunteers desiring to help with the drive have been urge d to contact their district chairman Reproduction Lecture to Be Given Tonight WATERFORD TOWNSHIP — “The Story of Reproduction” is the lecture to be given at 8 pm tonight in the Waterford High School gym. The free program is open to all youngsters aged 12 and 'above, who are accompanied by their parents | The lecture, sponsored by the Clara Elizabeth Fund of Flint. will be given by Mr. and Mrs. David Treat, who will use plaster models in the demonstration. REFRESHMENT REMINDER: School Tax to Be Topic at South Lyon Meeting SOUTH LYON—School tax struc- ture will be the si for a when Superintendent Frank Bart- lett addresses the parents’ group | pond issue. | munity room, Bartlett will discuss the contem- | ; talk | Plated 1955 legislation on state sionary to India equalization and just how such leg-| years, will be the guest speaker islation would effect the school | at | . ; ca . |of elementary school here at 8 Missionary to Speak |p.m. Friday in the school com- ‘Church at 7:30 p.m. today. MEDICAL JOURNAL REPORTS PROOF YOU CAN SPARE YOUR FAMILY DAYS OF SUFFERING FROM COUGHS OF COLDS « Here’s Relief So Different it Will Change All Your ideas About Cough Syrups Six Leading Cough Syrups Tested in Medical Center. Results Vital to You. Never. before could any leading cough syrup promise you so much. Think of it! A new kind of cough syrup specially made, not only to relieve coughing faster and more com- pletely, but also shorten the duration of the cough! Hefe are Facts: Alter testing six leading cough syrups on patients for two years, doctors reported that: new Vicks Medi-trating Cough Syrup not only quickly relieved coughing spells and irritating throat dryness, but also cut the duration of the cough by as much as two full days. : Cetamium is the Answer One reason for this, the report concluded, is that Vicks contains a new penetrating in- gredient — Cetamium — that carries relief- bringing medicine right to the cough-irri- tated crevices of the throat — medicates as it penetrates. In addition, Vicks Medi-trating Cough Syrup also works through the system to help speed breaking up of the cough. Doctors also learned that Vicks Medi-trat- ing Cough Syrup does not upset stomach or appetite. This teature, plus ifs pleasant flavor, makes it ideal for children. So spare your family days of suffering from coughs of colds. Use new Vicks Medi-trating Cough Syrup. MEDICAL JOURNAL REPORTS:* | | Matched, point for point, against five other leading cough preparations, Vicks Cough Syrup: }. Helped reduce the. duration of the cough by 2 full days. . 2. Started to bring relief 39% faster than the average. 3. Brought more complete relief from coughs. | 4. Was the only preparation tested that : did not upset the stomach of a single patient. em a of Boston Clinic Report evail- able to physicians on request. Sa VICKS mevi-rratinc SS COUGH SYRUP Aaa orp Y hy Medicates as it Penetrates (Se Be sure to put Fire-Brewed Stroh’s on your shopping list! ee ae cr — tl (wi (| wy) @)| lll : ' PH ad ‘it : ' ' ' —om, O08 A Hf . . "2 The Stroh Brewery Co., Detroit 26, Mich, y . . { - ; \ Pe ( : F ts # al i Mies tet eee eee 4 he cube se dx / \ ee |. [> f eS Sse ¥- \ Sart ere FRE er pide eer WE at tes Be RICA S You'll like J *? | es \ é¥ Be a, —_— . © ge 0g +. - ae Ly 5 . 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"| 93 falls SEs GH nT 5 $0 bare | iil 3 oat Be a at a bylie [at ia eed Ba HSE = Alin 4 3 rT ohh ve i if eeegt Wy ft Hil 7 al fat 9 ss : Ww reg ait cS | 3 Hi aaa =] Ue HE ae fle ms ayedi 4 Baits aa = tat it te as (niet & O — 236 jl Hl ex pee nil i | tat aetllia Tae il : i|| O _ . 4 eb . wo 5 =§ —— es & | gS) i ~y. 2 Soke fi ili Ta ih Hut Pris - ! & am ; cio ine S > HPacereali ee Se tag Z call Eee i PS: cr pai GP 3 See : , ; ‘ a = weap ieeapiibii oOo co) i 35 Aanati He ij i Hi ia Hi 5 a eae ie e aa far (i We i | Me ilatid i Use be Pee 3 i ye tt ee z —_ S Se re pal f : HET “Es! ae i ssiisidliatalmainia ~ ee ee ee a THE Air, Irish folk | the oldest air still surviving in; Peanut acreage for 1954 in North « : heard in the county | western Europe, it is said to first —n was estimated at 175,000 Ty. Reputed to be! have been a love song YOU... DRIVING LESS THAN THE AVERAGE oe 4 | ae Tes. ? A GOOD DRIVER 3 OVER 25 YEARS OF AGE ‘4 You can enjoy worthwhile cash savings with our low priced “preferred driver” auto insurance rates, if you can : answer ‘Yes’ to the above questions. i @ Whether or not you can qualify for our lowest rates, it will i pay you to discover why Michigan Mutual Liability has ; earned an unexcelled reputation for prompt, fair payment of ‘ think of us as “the auto insurance com- j peay eid conscience.” Phone for rates on your car today. 5 FAW. Huron St. — Federal 2.0141 i , | ; 4 i ship, Furnes —— — ee PONTIAC PRESS, TI Hal Boyle Says: "ESDAY,. JANUARY Peaple Sometimes Forget By HAL BOYLE SOMEWHERE IN THE CARIB BEAN @®—Leaves from a cruising notebook People who save them money fo: years to take a pleasu cruise abroad somé@times suddenly ind ¢ pence the'ship has sailed. they. don't * know how to en the t p “}verything is so strange and new they feel half-lost said Ra Lewis, who has spent 20 years helping such pé@ople rediscover their sense of fun, Lewi@ is-a cruise director. His job is to get passengers to mix, to*make them ‘teel ‘at home aboard and to tell them about the islands and countries the, are go img to visit Ray, who -has spent three and a halt ‘yeave an the Line's. Ocean Mo hag traveled more than miles, conducted 300 cruises’ a mil | ling two afound ‘the wo Alter helping scores of thousands of Passengers with their probler he has coine up with the following tips for tourists making their first cruise: “Don't forget to bring along your sense of adventure. If you expect everything to be like it is at home, why leave Horne? ‘Make the best ofgany situation. Don't gripe. “Avoid drinking too many icéd drinks in hot climates. * hs ? “Don't phone the captain and) tell him he’s speeding — or going too slow. It will only wound his) Yeelings if you tell him he doesn't | lhe vas better than I was." In the decades since then h ‘Sj ‘a new, . “year y "Get. coudiaint” OT i ot at taco know how jo drive a ship. “Don't get into a cab in a sirange Country tantil you ve made + $$ Pontiac for ’55 offers you an array of values that you simply cannot match in any other car. Famous for years as America’s finest buy ... long outstanding for size and com- fort . . . world-renowned for thrift and reliability, this General Motors masterpiece now takes top honors for advanced styling and performance, too! , Pontiac’s beauty leadership is self-evident! fo # No other car provides the distinction of Vogue Two-Tone styling, twin-streaked hood and rakish sports car lines. And you'll find that same ‘‘new look” inside, along with an : all-new outlook. Pontiac unites. the smartness _onmiac MOTOR DIVISION RETAIL STORE -They’ve all traveling fairly early in life. How to Enjoy Themselves versace cio was te vest “It's hard to beat a a firm deal with the driver on the price . “Don't alwayg @xpect natives in a foreign. country to speak your The chances are they | pavers had the same advantages uu have ‘You'll get a lot more pleasure out of your trip if you'll take the trouble ahead of time to learn something about the countries you are to Visit.» Lewis is rather wryly doubtful, | however. that many tourists will language gon 1955 faroff cities and exotie’ coun- tries of the world... He thinks the two miost interesting places on earth to live are probably Ceylon | and Mexico. the he recalled. setup Where you can have sven seryants for a total of $27 a month —and you wake up with the choice} of taking a swim, golling, going elephant hunting.” - When I asked Ray if there were any fabulous port of- call he shad missed in his veyages but still dreamed of seeing, he replied “Well, I can't say I dréam about it exactly — but I've never been ito Atlantic City." Europe produces more than twe- | world's cheese | | thins of the Pay much attention to that last tip * « “Youd be surprised,’ he said, “how many people come back from a cruise and can't even tell where they've been many reasons wh) people take sea voyages to get a rest Or a suntan, to broadén them duck a subpoena There are selves or to ervet “But all single ire looking for girls under 27 romance said Lewis positively, “So are all the) single gis over 23, but few will admit ‘it, I know of at least a) dozen marriages that resulted from | romances that started on this ship. | been good sports” about..~it-too, Norié blamed me | efterward.” . + us Ray, who looks like Hollywood's idea of a handsome stockbroker, FRANK RS ‘FUNERAL HOME 110 WESSEN ST. PHONE FE 3-7374 Ambulance Seevies Ti |’ at Any Hour | was born ih Brooklyn and began “I left high school rather sud denly,’’ he explained, “‘as a result of playfully hitting Quentin Rey- nolds over the head with a piece of wood. Really it was playful — work has taken him to most MEN! It’s Easy to of modern luxury fabrics in exciting modern colors with regal spaciousness and full-scale panoramic vision. As for performance—well, come in and pilot a Pontiac! Let the wondrously smooth ride, the marvelous handling ease, and the - fabulous response of the Strato-Streak V-8 engine tell their own inconiparable story. In a few minutes and miles, you'll be telling us* you've never known anything like it! The plain fact is that you get everything in a ’55 Pontiac . . . everything that’s new and best . . . everything that makes a motor car a pride and pleasure to own. Be. Ale 09 get it “a KEEGO SALES & SERVICE, Ine, . with $060 Qrehard Lake Ra, Keego Harbor, Michigan or Hallmark Make-Your-Own Valentine Kits... ... . . 29¢ up Fun for youngsters to make—and send. Each fine Hallmark Make-Your-Own Kit includes from 10 to 12 Valentines plus individual meiling envelopes. You'll want several kits for each of the children, so better shop early. SEND YOUR FAVORITE GRADUATE A HALLMARK GRADUATION CARD TCHELL pEMELL yen 7 ma OFFICE nor facilities to cope with the increasing qumb a joint legislative committee reported today. The committee said the school has inadequate facilities for reception, training and rehabilitation of the boys. Rep. Harold W. Hungerford (R-Lansing) asked the Legislature to continue the committee, established last year to study possible relocation of the school, now located in Lansing. In a report on its activities, the committee said it polled 30 of the state's probate judges on their views toward treatment of delinquents. at Boys’ VocaHioni LANSING (#)—The Boys’ Vocational JANUARY 25, 1955 rr? @ . Wa ear ey a ¥ Peas | 4 = | Bm. = ° e a — & ~ Al Pee tities “er2 = 4 noo! om has neither space ‘of juvenile delinquents, Most judges, the poll showed, want better classification and more segregation of trainees. Other results: Thirty-two judges said they would commit more boys under a broader progfam and better conditions at the scha@i. home carevér camps for youthful ‘ Fifteen judges would like to see the schoéll’ continued, but on a larger scale, homes, fester Seventeétfudges asked for longé? periods of, confinement for all ~ “Hes oe trainees. es 7 *, ik q PONTIAC, MICHIGAN . FIFTEEN Drain Project Gets Underway $30 Million — System - Would Relieve Twelve Cost of the project, Main said, | ; would be apportioned among the | meanicipalities benefitting from | the system. He also explained that many administrative and legal details remain to be worked out. Robbers Miss $75,000 ‘to Take $3,000 in Coins DETROIT “The FBI says the and took some $3,000 in day overlooked, $75,000 in Agents estimated the ithieves made off with | pounds. | Carsonville* is in Sanilac ty about eight miles east of dusky. In Thanks for Gift Pontiac Woman Gets Personal Letter From Mrs. Dwigh By BURDETT C. STODDARD “My hobby “I got a letter from Mrs. Eisen- t . Eisenhower 1 ! | Pr > e > # Py ‘ > > “ nn ae . e ae is. Here is another in Bob Considine’s exciting story of Las By BOB CONSIDINE in print as a “Hollywood sports- man” when his eyes first alighted upon the sight of the Flamingo Hotel. He was driving out of Las Vegas after looking over his race-wire interests when he noted that a casino was being built at a point between the town and the airport. The contractor was the Del E. Webb Construction Co. of Phoenix, He had had his dream. This would be no mere casino, a small downtown Fremont glorified motel-and-casino, like. El Rancho Vegas and the Last Front- ier were at that time. This, he determined, would be the finest casino in the world and | one that would keep people hover- ing about it . . . because of fine hotel arrangements, top nightclub acts, a spirited cabaret, good food, drink and service. He flew to New York with word to the elders in the underworld “syndicate” that they must go in with him on this vast venture. He himself pledged every penny he had and hocked his future. EncOuraged by his seal, the . a H ii i ; i] by hi ia FE ; ; ils; eigcy Hi eG 1 rE ait i HW ; i i i | a ? < + i Hi | : f : i i > FF y Pe ey Fae , 3, wow n few eae tao De 4 Vegas, America’s | | boisterous capital of legalised gambling owned by a Janky ex-ballplayer and | PTT “en ; . ok oe sibon ce ee o é, Se r A ‘ 4 i i ‘ |had personally killed 12 men. But then he must have noted_my-face LAS VEGAS (INS)—Bugsy Siegel or something, because hé Jaughed | independently. was @ millionaire and referred to | and said that 1 had nothing to| east. “ "There's no chance that you'll | get killed,’ he said. ‘We only | kill each other’.” | Back in New York, the “syndi- cate’’ began considering whether to do just that. For one thing, Siegel had disturbed the elders by ing so much publicity—which;’f turn, bathed the elders in undesired pub- licity. Also, he had “blown his stack” on the Flamingo. But, No. 1, he had committed ee ae , 2" > paacicen ‘Wie Varviigs: * : * . Cy 4 County Installed: as President at Annual Dinner Held Here Ottis R. Briney Jr., View Dr., Waterford Township. D. Maynard of Birming- in the site for the County YMCA unit's Camp Mahn-go-tah- see at Hale, the history = ll a fegas Hi Phe 4 % a a e mutomobile (note ‘piago keys? while {the pulchritude that serreunds him +> Pape + al ~s ~ continued to maintain it He stopped going His beloved headache, the Flamingo, became his home, een | though Virginia Hill took a dim view of Las Vegas in general. He was comforted, however, by the fact that the place was netting $315,000 a month... and some day he'd get even and straighten out everything and | coast, everybedy. aaiad . | The “syyfiieate’’. wouldn’t wail: As was t m the messy work another reconciled, few days at the Flamingo. “You're no lady!” shouted at her, a remark still treasured by students of gangland understatement. Miss Hill | flounced off to Paris. That was June 16, 1947. But something worse had hap- pened to Bugsy. When he took going to keep Trans-America Wire} Service, and to blazes with their wish to blend it with Coritinental, | h@ was encouraged by the moral support of two pluguglies who served him well in L. A.—Jack Dragna (alias Jack ignatius, Jack L., Jack Rizotto and Jack Dania) | and a lesser and more punk named Mickey Cohen. On either June 7 or 8 of that year, Dragna and possibly Cohen | were braced by what the Cali- | fornia Crime Commission later | called “two visitors from. Chi- | as ~~ a a* ; @ = #: Pe ae > Fu Cities Face Loss of Supervisor Se *E ~—eeeteey | 4 af fe oe 2 a, j on. Bis g ; ce Pat ae ae : Ee Sets «She a | “ ote. Soir -€ ee ; “sy By: ‘ ae * = iy: Incorporations Cause of Cuts 60 Per Cent Reduction Required When Board Membership Hits 75 The number of city representa- tives on the Oakland County Board of Supervisors face about 60 pér cent cut when the total reaches T — expected within the next 1 few months Pontiac's delegation would be decreased from ten to three. An amendment to the supervisors apportionment law passed in 1943 to accomodate Wayne County brings the threat to city strength, according to Oak Park City Man- ager and Supervisor Harold K. Schone. The amendment states that. when the strength of city super- visors reaches 75 an automatic reduction in their number will take place, but it requires no cutback in the number of town- \ taking his eyes momentarily from during a Las Vegas vacation. . ca . “He told me one night, when Try But Siegel, who had the “syn-, cago.” was waiting for my money, that he | dicate's” old Trans-America on the Dragna immediately bowed out of Trans-America. About that same time, Siegel invited Del Webb te visit him at the Beverly Hills home he and Virginia shared. Webb had begged off so many times be- fore—usually on that his mother was feeling bad —that he felt that this time he must accept. “I had an uneasy feeling all during that evening there,’ Webb told me recently. ‘Benny (as Siegel was called by friends—no tall him Bugsy vf i as a South tempt ~ for “4 and that my own seat the! ight of “syndicate” —of which he was to be the only member of the board ever rubbed out. He sat down in the very spot where he had seated Webb not long before. The heavy window curtains were drawn but missed coming together completely by about six inches. Next to him on the divan was his friend Aaron. Smehoff, called Allan Smiley. The Russian-born | Smiley had a small piece of the | Flamingo. Elsewhere in the house | were Virginia Hill's brother, Charles, and-a girl he has since married. It was a quick death for Bugsy Siegel. He never knew what hit him—the shots came so thick and fast. . But be's still very much alive along the ‘‘Strip’’ of Las Vegas today and his ultimatum “no rough stuff in here if I have to kill a couple of you"’ remains the way of life. (Next: A look at the men who foliewed in Bugsy Siegel's wake, andthe fruition of the boom he set In motion.) State Representative Leslie H | Hudson (D-Pontiac) said today he | will introduce a bill to permit or tension of social security benefits |to state and local groups who al- ready have a retirement plan. Hudson was requested to take the action by 286 of the 351 em ployes of the Oakland County road} Commission in a signed peta. | The request stemmed from 1954 | amendments; to the Federal So- ‘ Hudson to Seek Extension of Social Security: Benefits long enough te build up sufficient retirement benefits to sustain them. Secial security could eith- er replace the present pian or | add to it.” If the legislature passes Hud- ‘son's bill, then the county super- visors would be called on to work out a plan for social security cov- erage which would not destroy or impair the existing plan if it was to be retained. be the pretense | e safe, {poe e Save bin Se | y At present there are 64 city and 25 township representatives A committee composed of Southt Oakland County officials plans to advance a stopgap measure to | the county's state legislators at a | Meeting in Lansing tonight. The committee's plan, if made law, would prevent any reduction in city strength until the county reaches 750,000 population County residents now total #lightly over 500,000. “We realize that something should be done to give the town- ships a bigger voice than they now have,” sai@d Schone. “But we feel the present law would | reduce city strength out of all | Proportion to the amount of coun- ty population they represent.” Areas recently incorporated or | Planning to incorporate as cities will soon bring the city total over 75, said Schone. “Madison Heights would add |5; Southfield, 6; Keego Harb or, | 2; and Rochester, 2,” he explained. This would bring the total to 79 | which, under the present setup, | would be cut back to 30, This would y leave a five-person city majority om the board, compared with the want to sit in a t ‘ot the living baba: gt pergeent 22. _ "If we can get the temporary measure passed, We would pro- a joint study by city and Gounty supervisors to formulate an amendment to the law to bring a on equal reduction in size. “There is no doubt in my mind that the ‘board is becoming un- wieldy and should be decreased,” Schone added “But the present cutback re- quirement would lop many per- soms off the board whe are in key positions and have wide ex- perience in county government. “The law as it applies t6 Wayne County does not make Detroit lose its power on the board as Oak- land cities might." If the law is not changed, cuts in city strength would see Royal Oak reduced from seven members to three and Birmingham from five to two The new formula for apportion- ing city supervisors would be:. Population 12,500" or less, one member; 12,500 to 3,000, two |members; 30,000 to 65,000, three | members; and above 65,000, one additional member for each 38,- 000 populatien + Duplicate Names Make Cousins Rivals for $4,000 RIVERHEAD, N.Y. ®—Which William Francis Glendenning did John Glendenning mean when he made out his will? | Two nephews, both named Wil- \liam Francis Glendenning, ap- | peared in Suffolk Surrogate Court yesterday to claim $4,000 of John Glendenning's $12,000 estate. A retired handyman, Gienden- ning died last August in Brent- wood, on Long Island, at the age of 4. His will stipulated one third of his estate should go to “my nephew, William Francis Glen denning One of the nephews is a 30-year old Queens sewer worker. The other is a 47-year-old cook Who lives in Manhattan Although the two formerly were on good terms, the Queens William Francis said that as a result of the dispute they “‘no longer speak fo each other.” A decision on the matter was not rendered immediately. Ypsilanti Man Sentenced - in Illegat Narcotic Case | John C. Laing, 45, of 1220 Col Ypsilanti, yesterday re- MAKE OVER PABES ‘ ats © | | WOODROW W. SNYDER Breeders Planning Commerce Banquet COMMERCE—The -annual ban- quet of the Oakland County Holstein | ‘Breeders Association will be held | at 7:40 p.m. Friday at the Com merce Masonic Hall. Principal speaker will be Wood- row W. Snyder, associate profes- | gor of dairying from Mi higan | State College. Snyder, who recent- ly returned from a trip to South | America, will show movies of his | work with larmers on. that con- tinent. Head of the committee in charge | of the affair is Adolph E ngle r. “Romeo Fire Department Given $1,600 Truck “ROMEO—A check for $1,600 for | the purchase of a new rescue-squad truck was given to the Romeo Vil- lage Fire Department by James | D. Ligon, of Hamil Manufacturing Co. of Washington recently. _ Fire Chief Walter Worth report. | ed that an order for the new truck has been placed, and delivery is expected in two weeks. _ County Calendar 7 Meights A public le party. sponsored by Auburn its Community Club. is scheduled to get under way at & pm Thursday a) the group's clubhouse, 220 8. Squirrel eo Orien Hat remodeling will be the topic when jon Club. meets at 1 a.m. Thursday at the Forest Lake home Mra. Goebel Kelley Keege Marber The Clara Marshall Circle of Trinity Methodist Church will: meet at the home of ,. ~X- Cline, 3024 Portman &t., at i pm ednesday. Mre. William Piteer, 2245 Hester Ct will her home to the Laure Ward Circle of Trinity Methodist Church at 1 pm. Thursday Lakeville Baked ham and meat loaf are on the menu of the penny supper to be spon sored by Lakeville Schoo! PTA at 5 30 pm. this Saturday in the Methodist Proceeds will be used purchase of new school equip- men - A luncheon meeting will be held at Lakeville Hall by the Lake- ville Auxiliary New Hudson The Mattie Renwick Circle of the WSC8 Mew Hudson Methodist Church | meet at 2 pm. Thursday at the of Mra. David O'Leary tre Beechcroft circle will meet at the home of Mrs. Junior Knapp Thyrs- | Gay evening Oxford The Ladies’ Aid of Holy Cross Lutheran Church will hold tte annual sauerkraut supper from 5:30-7 pm. Wednesday in the church dining room. The public has been invited Rochester Mre. Mary Hixon will be the Ont speaker before the leaders of a a ' land County Home Demonstration groups. | im a meeting at 10 am. Wednesday at ee Avon Township Hall MAN and WIFE Mr, and Mrs. W. Kicimola - BOTH PRAISE — Q-JIB-WA BITTERS “Ten days. was all that it took O-JIB-WA BITTERS tc me the results that } t for so long,” says Mr Ww Kleimola, R No. 2? fronwood, Michican. “My wife is the one who first introduced me to O-JIB-WA BIT- | TERS. She began taking it a@ year and a half ago. because her arms were swollen and very pain- | ful. Her blood circulation was ver poor and brown spots began to ® appear on her skin. She had tried many medicines, but nothing helped very much until she’ used | ©0-JIB-WA. The, paigs ieft the spots wen} away, so she ha been recommending it to other: ever since. I read on the folder | packed with the bottle, that it was | @o0d for stomach ailments, end as | D have been suffering for a long | ‘time @ith my stomach, I decided | to give it a» trial About.all I had een able to eaj was like baby food, about and | this and | versity “Milford to Offer |£ U. of M. Course. Classes for Teachers to Open Monday Night at Huron Valley School MILFORD nearby « the direction of the Ur of Michigan, classes will meet Mondays for 12 weeks begit ning Jan. 31, at 645 pm. in the Huron Valley School, Dr. Donald E, P. Smith, chief of the reading hnprovement serv- ices of the University’s Bureau of Psychological Services, will be the instructor. Under The class includes an approach to the teaching of these subjects from the, standpoint of the : phsy chalogical principles involved, It will also endeavor to appraise the diagnosis and remedial techniques af these subjects. It is offered on | either the graduate or undergradu- ate level. oe New Pastor Named IMLAY CITY — The Rey. Ran- dolph Crisp is the new pastor of | Trinity Baptist Church. - me M3 Ba) KATHLEEN SNAREY | Mr. and Mrs. William I! | of Lake Orion have lengagement .of their « Snarey innounced the laughter Kathieen, to William J. Logan. He is thé son of ‘Mr. and Mrs. Leon- ard L. Logan, of Clarkston. No wedding date has been set. Siren Blast to Open Oxford Polio Mgrch OXFORD—A blast from | will indicate the | er's March on Polio at | Thursday, Volunteers will every house with a lighte light. Fr ren a § start of the Moth- 7 p.m stop at d porch Fred Stevens is campaign direc tor, and Mrs. Harold heads the Mother s March. Pickford THE-PONTIAC PRESS, *-Residents Ch in Carver Sc ROY AL, OAK TOWNSHIP _ Some 20 residents of Oakdale Gar dens yesterday sent a telegram to Chief Assistant Oakland County Prosecutor George F Taylor harging they have been “abused” by 0m tigating reported violence 1 school board con tr ersy Mrs. Loretta Baker, 47. secre tar of ( rg Washington | Carver board, Jan. 12 said she beat by three masked men entered home demand ) ing to ser The Harrison recall petitions.”’ Mrs. Baker and another board member, the Rev. Chester Car ter, have been named in recall petitions filed by a third board member, James FE. Harrison. Other board members, with Mrs Baker, filed a counter recall peti- tion against Harrison which Mrs Baker claimed the three were looking for, but did not get The teleg: gram yesterday asserted ithat an Oakdale Gardens police | man, named by Taylor to investi- gate the mixup, was biased be- calise he had signed the recall petition against Mrs. Baker. It alleged that Sgt. Edward A. Wilson “obviously would be far- tial in making such an investiga- , tion.” TUESDAY, JANI arge ‘Abuse’ nool Probe - would look into above all I Taylor said he the charge because want to keep completely impartial } Conservation Group. this investigation 4 to Hear MSC Prof The annual meeting and banquet of the Oakland County Soil Con servation District will be held at 7.30 p.m. Wednesday at the Clark- ston Community Center Main speaker will be John C | Doneth associate professor in Ag fricultaral Economies-at Michigan State College. His subject will be farm management Ken Brown of Lake Orion’ will be toastmaster, and the 4H Club will furnish entertainment. The Soil Conservation District is dedicated to better sotl and water management, with a goal of saving plan on every com mercial farm in the county. County Births Leonard Richard Stokes are the ia soil Mr. and Mra parents of a son Lake Superior is 350 miles long and 160 miles wide. TARY 25, 1955 JACQUELINE PENROD The Rev. and Mrs. L. of Linden, formerly of Auburn Heights, announce the engagement | of their daughter Jacqueline, to Donald Rupert, son of the Rev Mrs. John Rupert of Bradford, Pa They > will be married aes 2 Showers Predicted for Monday Evening LEONARD — “Scattered Show- | ers’ is the title of the play to be presented by the Leonard PTA at 8 p.m. Monday at the school. The community at large has been nvited to the performance, and re freshments will be serVed after the pay 1 say . oe te en yourself why 20 S$. PERRY ST. D. Penrod and | oe oi CE Me ae =} DR. H. A. ‘MILLER Optometrist 7 dNorth Saginaw Street Phone FE “Better Things: in Sight” Open Friday Evenings ALLL PLL 4-6842 ee c losed Wednesday Afternoons . Director Stadler talkes tine to enjoy « glate of Gosbel in the Héeninger Brewery taprecas In the background is a many-centuriee-old poreslain stove good it is. Jenn e | a 8 ‘wh , gs ad “We feel that Goebel world’s trily fine beers.” ebel...first American bee to win acclaim in Germany > Director of Henninger Brewery, Frankfurt, calls Goebel “one of world’s truly fine beers” “We have tried Goebel Beer at our brewery in Frank- furt, Germany. It is a pleasure to verify that it continues the great European tradition which we follow in our . brewing of ‘Henninger Beer. It is both light in body, dry in flavor, and altogether satisfying to the taste. Beer deserves its place among the - Hubert Franz Joseph Stadler it’s unusual when other breweries praise Goebel . . . more unusual when you remember these breweries are in Germany, Holland, Belgium, England, Switseriand , —the traditional centers of fine beers. © If you haven't tried Goebel recently, ask for it next time. You owe it to your own good taste to see just how - ~ qe fa ee s—$15 Dn., $15 Mo. eraee REALTOR er D MARK With modern 5 room living quar- Pe Roker hitls! - SihteS tines Sines close the te Sat sane lease can be ar or art W. of Tele | ‘abaed or real ean be sap and select $8,700. 4 - RIDGEWAY CARL W. BIRD, Realtor | os paiawin PE 46203 803 Comm National Bank Co-operative Real Estate Exchange Bons “sree ict | hecete ome, GOT, Se Deved street pear St. Frederick's | st o. Doing good | we ETTLE FARMS | |e Dees Tee to com ve- cols. Chetee sites for your ranch hicles Iucludes truck, arenes homé. Close to bus : pumps comppeoceer and > in down. & $15 per Fe . oe poate 8 aan eatiOd POR TEARS L. H. BROWN, Realtor | Ss | STATION FOR LEASE, Member Co-op Real Bach, | —2—Teeereee._ LoTs 5 TO 6 72x17 for home — $1,000 down. Liguer ber ib oma fecd pes WALTON BLVD. 175x250, some centage and 8 $60,000 to $70,000 trees, oped 7 Hdl ge cash. . Toca fon es. The ——— vemen and i inent location shown by &p- Sieh. gang * pointment only. s. SCHRAM —. TOP LIQUOR BAR. eS SE oe of eae, Cars wet. © HOT SPOT GRILL Near intersection of 2 —_ ROCHESTER AREA | jreo*sect ern Sooty mee te. S acres — 62250. bles & . Doing $36,000 per tye coves — $4000. yr. $3,500 dn. East TERMS SWEET SHOP, GRILL Maurice Watson; Realtor VARIETY <2 W, Four, Rochester OL 64071 | POSS” ue, all saisiecs steel rom Rn out fulldings. “PE 947,000 Bg busine ar fon _» For Sale Farms 48) re. 0 for stock and WARD E. PARTRIDGE ACRES. WO LS ee on B REALTORS PARMS AND OPPOR < 31 +0003 ‘Parm FOR suBDrIvioN Pop. | & ¥- Huron Open Eve. 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Huron St. Phone FE deral 3-7181 . = Warntig =;| WAITING You May Borrow > 1$25 to $500 creak mo on wae” pret BUCKNER FINANCE or ~ LOW INTEREST funds for single family dwe' nt ould “barvouee WH. G. PETERSON - ye Pogues State Bank 5-8006 or FE _ "Swans 55 CASH POR YOUR VACANT CITY §-3060. oat a or ——| JANUARY BARGAINS Walnut dining wep suite . buffets a Serres Cdd vanit sepereeee Dresser mirror . Warm + cones on Snes om ee 25 We buy sell and exchange every- - for the e. kland Furniture 104 8. Saginaw FE 23-5523 FRIEZE PC. LIVING ROOM tulle, #20. FE 84013. 690 Second TO SELL: 17 TV. Practically new. FE 40386. . $5—$6—$8—$10. on RANGE, $15. TV., 30. WASH- s% os. Electric stove, $19, FE CRUMP ELECTRIC. ALL NEW MERCHANDISE attresses Cotton mattresses ....... me Metal beds, complete . 30.95 fot ori Wocta rugs =. 8 Meta! 2 -: Sas Double door metal . 606 Prices on all new mer- = te sell and exchange every- e e the home. kland Furniture 14 8. 4 rE ——— - WASHERS gat Maytag washers, Guaranteed. +5169. © FRIGIDAIRE $75. MAGIC CHEF range. ; excellent condi- tion. 23-0867. 8 PIECE DINING ROOM SET. 187 Beach FE 2-2652. f HURON |§ PIECE AMERIC. aR WA i Tae after 8:30 weet days or ll _ Gay weekend HOTPOINT “RANGE NEW. ¥ automatic deepw a on. Kew only $179. g. Woodward. Siresinghess. MI FE 43573 |“ JAN UARY BARGAINS | Wesuisehouse “He must be serious, he called Mother and asked her how much I was earning!” Sale Household Goods 57 - PRICES SLASHED Neiis.ec! now 4500.80 (with trace f iw rade) Norge auto, m wosher. floor model, save $50. . on.se Useq _ size Tange... $39.50 . 30 im, range..... $150.96 (with trade) ytag automatic $250 95 (with trade) Hollywood beds, mattress and box End i step , tables. — CLAYTON'S SION. 16 "MA. arone ) JAMES i PORTA- bie. Reg sold for $219.95. Now only $125. MI 6- 0 ay a 9x12 Linoleums .... $2.98 Inlaid, 6 wide. . -. Se | Reg. 60c Wall Lin. : 29e | Reg. $4.95 House Paint $1.49 | Reg. 96.95 Enamel ........... $2.98 | Plastic WME x5 peers «aw 0) inlaid, Ty Tue ... Me $1.60 Haraitic s, "40'S S. Saginaw a 56 LIVING ROOM A > pina ee | furniture. al for $125. FE LiNOLEt MAN D PAINT SALE 2 82 Williams. MAYTAG WASHING MACHINE. . OL, 23-2508. "ARMSTRONG'S 4¥4 1 Fi. Wall Tile. mS Ne SYERS, 141. i141 wv HU URON Easy Terms THOMAS ECONOMY FURNITURE CO. 31 6. 7 st. FURNITURE CLEARANCE ar ened 7 Innerspring inattresses.. t20 68 1 beds compiete...... $16.95 jae blond AF ae. ae acme er ee Unfinished chairs...........-- $2.75 oe $30.50 $228 davenport sleeper with inner- gal Pog ing wo by 12 face rugs $e ‘Auminstor rege... ® by 12 rug ° by € linoleum by 12 linoleum * chrome dinettes boat” and wood pu sono Sale gat get ne. os Pig dng ace -3 ROOMS OF NEW AND USED FURNITURE Studio couch 2 end tables, MANY ITEMS se cep eee * ges range a es USED TV's, 9.50 AND UP_ BB. Munro ric. 1060 W. Huron. USED APT. REF. R. B. MUNRO Electric. 1069 W. Huron. USED GAS RANGES. $29.56 AND - R. B. Munro Electric, 1060 WAYNE GABERT'S APPLIANCE SPECIALS Maytag ee, sugiee tub washer .. $59 Asmirsl Queen cabinet ee troner. floor sample .. $69 Qo. £. erator, 7 cu. ft, like .. oe Agitator type suto. washer $39 Save eg ig? om a new aN. Saginaw 7 “Peds WALNUT DINING. MAPLE % bed st. chrome dinette, table = drapes for i¢0" Se - 1 e. etc. i ALL OUT aft! Famous make saw; 6‘, biad safety power clutch; cuts“ 3x4 on degree , case, $54.59 ac a DRILL L iy advertised ‘, rérill pine = 2 amp motor, famous Jacobs key chuck: full rantee 50 value for only $1 ELECTRIC SANDER SPECIAL tion $34.50 valve for only 624.75. TODAY'S BEST BUYs Bit — high speed ball ig Speco d ratchet, chrome plated; boy rg value for only $6.95 carpenters square 1.90 ratchet vg tong with coune crescent wrenches 6, 8, 10° sizes Ls) 12° machinists temp. scaie se $10.95 set holiow ground Dado blades for only $12. HUNDREDS OF SIMILAR BAR- GAINS IN ALL KINDS OF HAND TOOLS. ELEcC- TRIC APPLIANCES PAINT LUGGAGE, WATCHES, ETC. aT GENERAL WAREHOUSE CO. 2258 ag Hw pone Tel LOTs OF me CREO RENTAD 1251 oes om Artists’ supplies, hobby supplies—check our new classification “Hobbies and Supplies” No. 24A, ALL ELECTRIC ances at wholesale es tw all, GENERAL W a PRS tS Ea be PT tubs. We have made « a chase die a in of 6 ft. iron tubs that were 7 transit, These are fa- mous ie - af 95. Also large — watories, com with $14.95. Fluorescent, 393 or- zi lp r Hf off brands bat” are wal known trick ad, We sim ah clear - - = because Ww. F. - ey = 4 > < juipment, ) | DRIVE For Sale Miscellaneous 60 BOOK OF KNOWLDEGE 20 VOL People 7 vol. Adult Ency., 10 Vol. lence rary 10 Vol. Tota) 47 Volumns and $200. or take over pay- bookcase ments. OR 31536 evenings and weekends. BURMEISTER’S LUMBER TWO YARDS sserssus . M W. Pine M 1x12 W. Pine shelving, per Eg M m ~ ~ cs 3 eerern as TO BU AND BAVE UP TO $500 ON ALL MATERIALS MAKE SURE ITS | BURMEISTER Northern Lumber Co. 8197 Cooley Lake Rd Telegraph & 8 = Bheetrock = — 1"x6"'- s'-12". OW. tility boards, — M. ft. "ean Roofing siding all types. Insulation $e $0 100 sq. ft. Doors and win- dows, fast del. Interior & Exte- Tior ply voods. Insulated & Wood siding, W. P. Cedar, Red wood Panelling. Oak & Softwood floor- ing. Bring your material list now. Paul St. Cyr Lumber Co. APH- | WELL DRILLING MACHINE FOR . Use oon “TOOL DO "YOUR guy ie ote a ter, OL. Saath. on a ue” New 18.95 Isnié lavatories with 16.95 We carry « full line in ber. ‘All priced right! oa . s Soo, 28000 Fs F oan Eh ng TE my v6 North of 13 Mile ese ___ Do It ¥ Yourself 1 Plumbing. wiring, bar oeae soil, sewer crock and 5 mn as ullders’ ute st Montcalm. FE Prida: iy te Sereda, prey every T DOORS, } omnes side “CHURCHES ‘INC. 25 PER . CENT wall Ave, FE 5-6150. 6120 Bogie Lake Ra. C ce =M —— 2 } oA JET PUMPS. al. ‘ton well wath se pumps oa 4 _SAVE 100 8. Saginaw st LIONEL & AMERICAN FLYER TRAINS NEW r TTERY Recreational centers. All tees ft and eauges. yh windows and doors to choose _ jack. PE 58-7885. from. NEW HOTPOINT A Cee Weedon washer Was 95. NOW 6190.96 1661 8 Telegraph Rad. FF FE 42008 Row washer. | i OOR SANDERS, POWER was bed NOW $229.96 tools, chain saws, com pres- wep grzes sors. Open Sun. 62 W. New ®t. Crosley $190.95) calm Jackson's Rental F one gan Ss now on | Ha RA & CE. STORM SASH i ¥_ Boee mat? | Alum. Comb. Windows New & Used Lumber | Aium Comp. —te~ | comp. with frames. SAVE by getting on _ | CHROME DINETTE SETS. COAL FURNACE WITH ees ogee controls Ph BLACKETT'S OFFER ¢. & 8 im, shooting boards. soeend Sots and 2365, 8 cents sq. redwood pane ans le m. redwood Bae ae M. Inside and ¢ paint at whole- sale pen $1.98. 62.98 and $3.96 ‘Dixie yy Clarkston MAS Burke Lumber ~ Company White Pine selects, random widths enw lengths, $275 per M. CALL INSULATE NOW AND S AV E MONEY -M. A. Benson 340 NW. Saginaw St. FEdera! 4252) ~ CASH FOR FURNITURE Pe +m CONGA WALL 28 RUNNING PT. ‘$x9 VINYL TILE lee EACH Smith's. 257 S. Saginaw 4 METAL CABINET SINK. $11. FE 5-0638 ASSEM- ble these yourself and save. Four chairs and table. $69.95 value $39.95. These are brand new 1954 models, famous makes, tops. All __ chard ‘Take Ave _ COMPLETE UP TO DATE SET OF Brittanica Jr. Encyclopedias. $50 —OR_3643.. seg SKE SORT 33% DISCOUNT. Rion eek PS INTERIOR 8A INISH INTERIOR ee — Also mel, AYLOCK paints. YLOCK COAL & glial aver. co 61 Orchard Lake Ave. 3-7101 MUlberry —") BATHROOM FIXTURES, Youngstown kitchen. Furnaces; oll gas, coal, water & steam boilers. automatic water heater, hardware, eiectrical sup- plies, eavestrogh, 1488 Baldwin i. § BY 7 ALUMINUM | TAYLOR yts. old. Will aan _OL 2-6BBN $2 GAL. ELEC. HEATER... 879.50 30 gal. auto. gas heater 040.95 L clippers Like New. #8 INCH TILT SAW AND PLAINER. complete with bench lights, te- bles. Also complete dado s#t with | — _+-0218. __motor, almost new re RECONDITIONED SNOER sEw- S443 tor tree home demon _Ssration REFRIGERATORS, LAST YEAR'S 1953 models. One of America’s best brands. Perfect, new guar- anteed for § years. Buy a new refrigerator for a little more P @ usec machine. Michigan _Tescent. 383 Orchard Lake “ee. REINFO: CONCRETE SEP. __We tanks” Ph. FE 46428. SET wr SIX BOOKS, MODERN | jj o pegecnace pit 2 = pans EELLOo “COMPRESSOR SET OF 6 BOOKS MODERN MU- sic & musicians od edition R_ B. Wileos, 10305 Oak _ burst, Holly. Ph ME +5854 SEF US BEFORSB YOU BUY your gas or oll conversion. We also install all types of ferneces with flat duct. A terms. Stan Garwood. EM }- copper pipe and fittt Lowe Bros. paint HEIG SUP. __PLY, 2685 rry St. FE ¢6431 Birch Doors 2 Ft. $7.20) FACTORY 2NDS McBride Hardware baa ge my gi 1927 Auburn Rd (at Crooks) EVENS WiONDOY FURKACE. 6: 000 B. T. U's. and gallon 2577 Dixie Mwy. at _Barber Shop DEEP WELL WITH jet, GO ft. of 30 gal tank. , “Cheap. Republic t eal FUEL OIL TANKS | 275 Gal. nes. gauge, vented fusca Ben vered. $35.50. FE FURNACES 2° & 3” STEEL __$00d condition 73 8. Parke a. } A ae = d STANDING TOILETS $17 with fittings sii9s 3. piece + lee Vy ~ peungt 100s. ‘oe hd a rE an wat ORMICA STORM SASH Aluminum combination windows and doors. LOW, LOW price!!! ~~ SAY. NEIGH BORT MICH. CHAINSAW DISTRIBUTORS We have used chainsaws selling from $35. New for $109.50. Cal) aoa y \. Rentais. SENECA FALLS LATHE i6x3¢ Atlas lathe 10x36. Power feed drill press. All cheap. FE 32-7145 or 91 Wall St. between 12 & “| __p.m. Ask for Tom. “SELECTED Knotty W_ Pine Fone seen? M- OUTSIDE DOOR F 3-0 x6'-8'' 21%" Radt. BV a 2 -8'' 26-8" x1%4" Rabt. BV $0.50 2-4 36a 7 at "tt BV $0.26 No. 1 and a4 Beiaien Fir Dimen- sion, air dried, all sizes, Call for our low es Fin Y8SCORD x8'—" Fir ........ $6.40 (k favg. WOE Ure $5.92 Bendigt . Be Eee ee ree 4.48 4 x8'-5 /16" ae k Filoo: %"" E26 Select Ri .., 6235 M, s JAMBS PAINT GRADE . 7-6" x6'-8" W. P. . sIDE ko i Sd Lt RE -. $1.50 ‘9 23% pase ae -...200 In. to''x%" Base 3c Lin. Ft. HACGERTY LUMBER CO. i Fe DO IT YOURSELF STARTER homes. 2, 3 4 bedroom homes now being bd for te Boll spring delivery. No mortgag costs, low down payment and oo monthly = goge We will build en your help finance will a build to suit you. Fro’ ROBERT SCUAPEN CONSTRUCTION Licensed Builder & Licensed . cleaner 6.95 G _son, 80 perry. == Delta, Skilteol b! & Decker Cable. P and ge A saws, @ FJ. POOLE CO. 761 Oakiand Ave. FLORIDA ROOMS 1661 8. Te Ra PE 4-2598 ee eae o1A OTHER C. _Classification pumber Al Sale Musical Goods 62 a — woe PACTORY Bs ag om aan. ave i ae demonstrators and rental piano's savings. Gallaghers. 18 E. FE 40666. MAJOR ACCORDIAN 3 MOS. OLD $625 new -otter takes Sen been 2 ond 6 pm rE _ oe. RENT A SPINET PIANO PROM $11.75 $29.80 im, ~ 8 5.00 “ Sen Seeton | re Per castes. uw ' rae | eae 8 - MA_ 56-6206 eee. | APPLE necked Rad. rs Ee Peal en : POTATOES $1.25 , Fe Cra § W. Commerce _ EM 33916. 2488 Aubur . FE Oi a PARAKEESTS CANARI food. since 1927 $84 Ave PARAKEETS OP. _tes. 1304 Mt. Clemens. FE PARAKEETS PET rar Dancey's 35° Oakinad. PE 1 REG. PEKINGESE i AL _so 2 young Studs. Ph. 4 REGISTERED FEMALE 1 gies. 3 $15 each, | Two rch GALLON standafd. Pincumbe, Oxford, @ _ Park 5t OA 58-2976. Dogs 7 Trained, Boarded 70 BOARDING BATHING ASD CLIP _ ping. 194 N Pe: ry ee pg ene Be PRIVATE heat, Burr-sheil, 315 8. Telegrapb. ~ Hay, Grain & Feed 71 POOL PLLA 500 BALES oF CHOICE TIMOTHY hay. MU 4-0793 after ¢ or Satur- day all day. 5165 N. Milford Rd. BALED HAY AND STRAW. FE ————————— sae ) WHEAT STRAW, 35c A bale. Milford MUtual 40624 ALL KINDs HAY. HAY, STRAW. oats, wood tractor work new _shelled corn. MA q GooD tek straw, OA DE RED FE 107 — FE ¢1112 « BROS — % PONTIAC RD. AT OPDYKE HAY SALE ; 3810 ; @ TON ALFALFA AND BROME hay. Compaen 6 miles Joslyn to Silverbdell Ra. mired out ioe BALES GOOD CLEAN MIXED hay. $18 ton. 7 mi. north Ox- ford. % mi, west. 1316 W. Brock- er Rd. Ph. 6-6F 12. WANTED: “QUANTITY OF EAR corn. OL 1-T201 A VERY FINE SADDLE AND HAR- ness horse Daesy and cutter, like new. MI 6- SPECIALIZED LKINDs OF ALSO Nenichens, 20d Farm tools. BH. P. . Al Johnston, Ra near Sashabew. ‘Sale Farm Equipment 76 A 1 Winter i Se oe Cueank POR ONLY 65. PARTS KING I BROS. Hold Everything | !| UNTIL You ALL NEW CASE GUNS: BUY. SELL, TRADE — 73 68 as rE | i mika die. $25 each or both for $40 1 ENGLISH SAD- OR ton ulars. Both for $75. MA GUNS— BUY, SELL. TRADE Maniey weece 10 Bagiey LADIES SKIIS AND BOOTS. SIZE | Both $10, } har 41297. "Sand, Gravel vel & Dirt 66 USHED STONE A AND SAND. Nera and fill dirt. Lyle Conk- lin, FE 2-8§72 or | rE 61112, aravel GooD SLAB woop ed 2 for #10. Delivered. FE 4-6583. HARD SLAB WOOD, OD. 05.80 A CORD. _3 for $10. FE 5-300 pyeee se =" cea, Dalehen, tee. Poet’ te Paint ¢ Lea unt Co. PE $618. 3-4088, 4011 Woodmere Dr.. Dray- | Plains 30-30 WINCHESTER JAP “Ese: | _ 5-380 400 HOUGHTEN’S 528 N. Main, Rochester. OL 1-976) ~ SAY NE IGHBOR! MICH. P CHAINSAW DISTRIBUTORS a Sesh, "Fe Rate a civER | KING DIRECT =. ine run sand. fikinson Sand & gravel. | i992 s. 8. Saginew FE 44214 FE 8 FLL DIRT ORAVEL SAND. FOR | TRAILERS FOR att ie Tac sol FE 0172, GORN CRIBS. roy CRIBBINO. MANURE ALL KINDS. corm pickers New and — PE ¢3371_ fillers. Davis 4s Wood, Coal & Fuel 67) ccrpcicity GARDEN TRACTORS, Earl & Mastick Co., Milford, Ms® $5.30) at Mifors Rd. Ph. Milford MU 4-0042 or M! SPECIAL PRICE ON FREEZERS KING BROS. OUR __PONTIAC RD. _AT SPECIALS 1 D. C. Case tractor with plow and cultivator, 1B, A. C. Case tractor with S.M: mower. ~ 1 1946 Ford Ferguson, tractor. 1 1950 Ford tractor. 1 Farmall C tractor with