pieMaihaliel THE PON TIAC PRE PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, MONDAY, MAY 16, 1955-—38 PAGES PRESS UNITED PRESS INTERNATIONAL NEWS SERVICE AN OVER LATED Te Vaccin e Oakland County Clinics Slated Tuesday Halted Lack of Salk Supply Postpone Also Will Booster Shots Because of a Salk vaccine shortage, 7,000 first and second grade youngsters in 14 Oakland County areas, will not get their second polio-preventing shots to- morrow and Wednesday, as originally scheduled. Dr. John D. Monroe, coun- ty health director, today said the vaccine shortage also would temporarily de- lay the giving of booster inoculations to 2,500 young- sters in the same areas who received the vaccine in last Sh ortage Hits Area tria Celebrates Freedom Treaty She's Queen of Reine Auto Accidents Kill Two Here Over Weekend Ohio, and Flint pitalized four others as motorists jammed Oakland County highways over the sunny weekend. Two Pontiac residents were killed near Flint and Georgetown, Ohio. The dead are: Harold Ray, 28, whose address icecas Red Bloc Nations United 2.225 ste == jin New Military Command jim mer oss Shots were to be administered tomorrow and Wednesday at the Huron Valley-Dublin, Walled Lake, Madison, Orion-Oxford, Ortonvijle, _ South Lyon-Novi and Troy. “There probably will be a week's delay on these shots, depending FIRST SHOTS GIVEN The health director reported that between 8,500 and 9,000 youngsters got their first Salk shots Saturday at clinics in Pontiac, Birmingham, Waterford Township, Southfield Township and Ferndale. More than 25,000 shots have been given in the county in the last 26 days, he said, In Washington, meantime, Sec- setary of Welfare Oveta Culp Hob- ‘yy prepared to deliver to Presi- jent Eisenhower a full report on ‘he inoculation program, with pos- ible recommendations for federal otion, : ANUFACTURERS OKAYED Two polio vaccine manufacturers s weekend got the stamp of ap- oval from Public Health Service spectors, with a third to be safety uble-checked this week. Given governmental approval ore Parke, Davis & Co., of De- ‘it, and Eli Lilly & Co., of In- anapolis, 25 Card Players jailed on Tips From Irate Wife BALTIMORE #® — Sgt, Vincent Serio of the Baltimore vice squad got a call from a woman who told WARSAW, Poland — The Soviet Union and seven East European Communist states set up a unified mili- tary command today to counter the North Atlantic Two Pontiac Residents. Die Near Georgetown, Auto accidents took the lives of two persons and hos- | Treaty Organization. Soviet Marshal Ivan Konev was made supreme commander, with headquarters in Mos- cow. The eight allies signed a 20-year mutual security and military forces under a sin- gle command. Kénev, the deputy Soviet defense min- ister, has been a Communist party member for 37 years. PREMIERS SIGN The treaty ceremonies took place in a white and marble hall of Po- land's Parliament building. Pre- miers of the eight nations — Soviet Union, Poland, Czechoslo- vakia, Hungary, Bulgaria, Ro mania, Albania and East Germany —signed the documents. Later, nearly 100,000 cheering residents of Warsaw jammed into Tzlerdzinsky Square and heard top Communist leaders hail the new treaty as “a move for world peace,” Premier Nikolai Bulganin of the Soviet Union declared the Paris accords rearming West Germany sponsored ‘“‘a new and dangerous *militarism.” “We want peace,” he cried, ‘‘but we will defend our countries by all means.” The loudest cheers and applause came when Bulganin told the ed the crowd that it was Knoev who led the armies which liberated much of Poland from the Nazis. Western diplomats believe the Russians have been in over-all command of their satellites’ armed forces for some time and that to- day's Warsaw action does not change the existing situation. When Girl Says ‘Yes’ All Traffic Pauses LONG BEACH, Calif. —Jess Blowers’ girl said “Yes"’ when he friendship treaty and a+ protocol grouping their) It’s Michigan Week! DETROIT #—This ‘is Michigan Week and the slogan is: “I'm glad I live in Michigan." Today all the cities exchanged MILFORD WOMAN INJURED Tomorrow will be hospitality day. Four Michigan beauties "| asc gels omcasion (and touring the East to spread the good| cuts suffered in a collision Satur- word about Michigan. (Continued on Page 2, Col. 4) ‘Mrs. America Is Lovely Says Defeated Runner-up ORMOND BEACH, Fla. (#—Mrs. Ramona Dietemeyer of Lincoln, Neb., as Mrs. America 1956 should be a popu- lar choice. Her strongest backers are among the 48 con- testants she defeated for the crown of the nation’s No. 1 homemaker at Ormond Beach, Saturday. Said runner-up Mrs. Billie Dorris, 27, of Nashville, Tenn.: “She could not help winning; she has everything —poise, graciousness and beauty. And she looks and acts the part of a homemaker. I know her five children have the loviest mother in the world.” Blonde Mrs. Deitemeyer,+ 35, is a Sunday school teacher, choir singer and PTA president back home. Her husband Car, 41, editor of the magazine Nebraska Farmer, is chairman of the Congregation of Christ Lutheran Church. They have five children. Mrs, Deitemeyer set aside yes- terday and today for rest after a All City Welcomes Fife Lake Man as Mayor Today Robert B. Kimball, president of Fife Lake, a small Northern Mich- igan resort community, today visited Pontiac as part of the state- wide exchange of mayors, a fea- ture of Michigan Week. Meanwhile, Pontiac Mayor William W. Donaldson was scheduled to enjoy a day of visit- ing and fishing at Fife Lake, lo- cated between Cadillac and Traverse City. Accompanying Kimball! here |were Councilman George Cox and the two officials’ wives. The visitors’ agenda called for a tour of the new City Hall, lunch at a downtown hotel, a through the Pontiac Motor Di- vision plant and a motor tour of the city, including visits to new home construction projects, parks and the sewage treatment plant. Approximately 368 Michigan communities are switching may- ors and village presidents this year. Included are 24 Oakland | County cities. Mayors traveling the furthest to exchange will be the heads of Oak- land County’s Wolverine Lake and Ironwood, 575 miles apart. 5 he Mamie Just Folks’ in Town Gettysburg Discovers President, Wife Take Part in Community WASHINGTON « — President and Mrs, Eisenhower are taking part in community life at Gettys- co nS 9 ter eet ee the townsfolk The role they have played since recent completion of their new country home there is a restricted sort of thing, of course. In Gettys- burg, though, they are getting around and becoming acquainted with many people whom. they probably will learn to know much better when the President and his wife retire to their farm. : The President has given no in- dication whether he will seck a second term. Bat it’s easy te see that he and Mrs. Eisenhower are taking more and more interest in their new home and in the com- munity. Yesterday the Eisenhowers, reg- ular churchgoers in Washington, attended services for the first time in Gettysburg. They worshiped at a vine-cov- # ered Presbyterian church where Abraham Lincoln attended a pa- triotic service a few hours after delivering his Gettysburg Address Nov. 19, 1863. It was Mrs. Eisenhower's second appearance in downtown Gettys- burg in four days, Last Thursday, there were surprised cries of “There's Mamie’ when she — at a grocery ‘store and 5 _ Oy President and Mrs. Eisen- hower returned to the White House last evening. Cooler and Cloudy Weather Outlook trip | Eisenhower. he is a lifetime member. Will Be 100 Years Old Jubilant Nation _ Marks Signing of Big-FourPact Night - Long Festivities Marred by Uneasiness Over Economic Future VIENNA, Austria (?) — Jubilant Austria celebrated ‘into the dawn today the Big Four signing of the his- ‘toric treaty. pledging her freedom after 17 years of hot and cold war. Church bells pealed across the land as millions re- joiced. The pact makes Austria a sovereign state for the first-time since. Hit- ler annexed her to Nazi Germany in March 1938. b.. \ i ’ ui, : Within 90 days after the treaty . |is ratified by the Big Four and NX Austria, some 70,000 troops of the ‘ | U nited States, Russia, Britain and France will pull out and Austria's freedom will become a_ final reality Amid all the revelry, there was an undercurrent of uneasiness | over the little country’s economic | future. Ht was feared particu- | lariy that heavy payments to | Russia might upset the economic : | stability attained with U. S. help during the 10 years of the Big Four occupation, There was also the realization that a series of economic crises | might drive this central European icountry, pledged to neutrality, into hRussian hands. | WALTZ IN RAIN | Such disturbing thoughts and a | drizzling rain did little te dampen the long-awalted celebration. The bells and waltzes were set ar Wirephoto GREETINGS FROM IKE — Ellery J. Potter of Homer (Mich.); off yesterday when Russia's V. M. holds his favorite birthday card, which he received from President ygojotoy, British Foreign Secretary Potter, who'll have his 100th birthday Tuesday, honored at a party sponsored by the Homer Masonic Lodge of which ' State will be} Harold Macmiljan; Secretary of Dulles, France’s Antoine | Pinay and Austrian Foreign Min- ister Leopold Figl signed the thick, | leather-bound treaty promised Aus- tria as far back ag 1943. City Industry, Education A few minutes after the sign- | ing, cheers of 18,000 Austrians | welled up from the streets ont- Mark BIE Day Tuesday Pontiac schoo! will close tomorrow while teachers and administrators join with business and industry to view this community's free enterprise system in action. This is the annual occasion of BIE Day, (Business-Industry- Education). Sponsored by the Chamber of Commerce, each year this event serves to create an exchange of understanding between the different areas of endeavor in Pontiac. — Teachers will be all day Arthur Godfrey |guests of nearly 60 local: ‘businesses and industry in- Speaks His Mind | etuaing: in Press Series American Forging & Socket Co., | Baldwin Rubber Co., Buckner Fi- | Arthur Godfrey enters American’ nance Co., Community National | living rooms via TV and radio, Bank, Consumers Power Co., Cy | but few people know the real man Owens, Inc., Detroit Edison Co., behind the wide grin or the friend-| ly, personal voice. Now Godfrey has talked fully, | freely and frankly to reporter | S. S. Kresge Co., Lewis Furni- | Charles P. Arnot . . . about the ture Corp., Lion Store, Maple Leaf. “firing” of Julius La Rosa , . , Dairy, Mathews-Hargreaves, Inc., about the bitter personal price he pays for being in the public Son eye . about his family and friends. You'll meet the real Godfrey, a man thinking out loud about his life in a brilliant, fascinating new Supply Exchange. series starting on page 21 of to pyp ST day’s Pontiac Press, | = | Pontiac Motor Division, Pontiac Also in the field of entertain. Motor Retail Store, Pontiac State | ment is a three-part series on Bank, Pontiac Varnish Co., male songbirds, written by NEA’s | Sears, Roebuck & Co., Standard | | & Coach Division, General Print- ling & Office Supply, Jig Bushing | Co. : son Manufacturing Co., Nye Dairy, * * Association, The Pontiac Press, | amusement . Dick Klein (Continued .on. Page 2, Col. 1) er. First one Is found on page = Paulette to Wed Another in the series of Bonan- aes zagrams appears today on 24.| LONDON (INS) — This one may beworth $1,100 if-no| Maria Remarque was reported in | pot for Bonanzagram No. 10 (pub- | have announced that he will marry mend ae the past week) by actress Paulette Goddard within ' the next few day. ‘Atomic Tests at Yucca Flats En i ’ ate. Ch tenn believed to be in ‘at for County NeWS....0060-04- 4 s. Editorials eeneqneteesces: see 6 ‘ all seeeatenennees cM, My sn” ; sbseserederes ween 2 oe ee ; eee ee and roll, The control point, 14 miles back of the 50-foot blast Fisher Body Division, GMC Truck | Michigan Bell Telephone Co., Nel. Pontiac Association of Insurance | | Agents, Pontiac Life Underwriters | Oakland County will receive $1,- (235,485 from the state in returned Pontiac Lumber, Fuel & Builders : | gas and weight taxes collected dur. |ty roads and 19 per cent to cities side Vienna’s historic Belvedere Palace, where the coremony | took place. The great bell of 700-year-old St. Stephen's Cathedral pealed the joyous news. Churches throughout the Alpine country took up-the call. Later thousands went to the square in front of St. Stephen's for a mass conducted by Theodor Cardinal Innitzer. Otherg waltzed /in Vienna's rain-drenched Ring- strasse to the music of street- corner ‘bands. Similar celebrations were held in Linz, Salzburg, Innsbruck and j other Austrian cities and villages, iC hancellor Julius Raab went to the (Continued on wil et anal ol 2, Col. 8) State Returns County Taxes Oakland Slated to Get $1,235,485; City Share Ils $259,396 | ing the first quarter of 1955, Mich- ‘igan Highway Commissioner 'Charles M. Ziegler announced to- day. Pontiac’s return will be $259,396, said Ziegler, Total state colections for the past four months were $60,933, Author Erich | %%4 an increase of $3,371, 912 over | first-quarter 1954. one collects the $1,000 in the jack-|® dispatch from Rome today to | All the gas and weight money ‘is humped in the State Motor Ve- ‘hicle Highway Fund created in 1951, After deductions for non- highway uses and collections costs, the remaining cash will be dis- | tributed as: follows: Some 44 per cent to the State Highway Department for expendi- ture on state trunklines in both | rural and urban areas; 37 pér cent to the counties for improving coun- r, se MONDAY, MAY 16, 1955 Presidential Box Score Better Than It Looks In examining President ErsenxowEr’s box score in Congress at this midsession point, it should be emphasized that it is ~~~ far Detter ‘than it looks. “So far,” says Congressional Quarter- ly, “Congress has approved 13.7 per cent of the President’s program.” Another 44.3 per cent, however, has progressed part way through the legislative mill, _ ~ As of May 8, Congress had ap- proved 25 of 183, EisennowEnr re- quests with only one rejected. Twenty-four were on their way . toward passage—12 passed by one House and 12 awaiting floor action after committee clearance. Another 52 had gone through the . committee hearing stage. ° * x * Eight items on the President’s pro- gram had suffered setbacks but are still alive. Seventy-three legislative requests haven't started the long climb up Capi- tol Hill although bills to implement most of them have been introduced. In evaluating the President’s batting average of 13.7 per cent at this stage, it should be re- membered that Congress does most of its work in the last weeks before adjournment. An- other facter to be kept in mind is that some of the requests will not be taken up by the lawmakers | until the second session in 1956. * * * Actually the President has been much more successful in winning Congres- sional approval of his program than was his predecessor, Harry 8S. Truman. In his first two years Mr. ErszENHOWER won approval for 65.9 per cent of his pro- gram. In six years Mr. Truman batted only 42.9 per cent. His poorest show- ing was in 1952 with 34.9 per cent. Credit Helps Swell Tide of U.S. Travel Abroad With the vacation season barely start- ed it already seems certain that Ameri- can travel abroad this year will set new high records. Prospects are even brighter than last year when for the first time the num- ber of overseas air passengers exceeded those carried by steamships. Already Europe is jammed with Americans and all steamiship reservations are booked through August. x * * Air lines are preparing to cash in on the travel boom and new planes are being added. Tourist class service which makes room for more passengers at lower rates, is being expanded. This ever before. * * * A major factor in the travel boom, says U.S. News & World Report, is the sale of tickets on installment credit. People are doing their traveling first arid paying the bill afterward. One air- line reports it expects. to sell $7,000,000 worth of transportation on installment tide is a a* ~ West’s Position Strong -for Big Four Conference "This newspaper doesn’t share misgiv- . ings felt in some quarters over the U.S.- - Anglo-French invitation to Soviet Premier Buicantn to attend a Big Four conference of top leaders. The invitation, since accepted by Rus- sia, followed a change of attitude by President Exsennower and Prime Min-. ister Epzn. Both had felt that a confer- ence of foreign ministers should precede discussions by the chiefs of state. ~*~ * * The President, obviously look- ing ahead with reservations, favors a short conference with no agenda. Cautioning against any expectations of miracles he wisely has reiterated his willingness to go anywhere and meet anyone if by so doing he could further the cause of peace. One of the West’s goals has been to achieve a position in which it could ne- gotiate from strength. That this goal has been reached in large measure by the admission of Germany into NATO is indicated by Ryssian concessions in the Austrian treaty. Agreement on this ‘ treaty previously had been demanded by President E1sennower as proof of Rus- sian sincerity. x * * . We believe the President’s de- termination to keep open the door to negotiation accurately reflects the feeling of an overwhelming majority of the American people. Failure to take advantage of a situa- tion holding out the possibility of lessened East-West tensions would be to ignore the peoples’ desire for peace. The Man About Town Honors Our County Detroit Historical Museum Historical Figure of Month Favorite old tune: What you can hear these days—if you can endure the way they play it. In a very conspicuous manner at the Detroit Historical Museum Oakland County is being honored. There each.month the portrait of an outstanding historical citizen is prominently displayed, and a sketch of them appears in its monthly bulletin. Usually the person selected is one who had a major part in Wayne County his- tory. But the one selected for the month of May is Mrs. Eliza Seaman Leggett, born in 1815, and who had much to do with the early development of the Pontiac area. She was the wife of the late Augustus Leggett, and they settled just north of Pontiac over a century ago. Most of her married life was spent here. She died in 1900. Over a half million dollars has been dis- tributed in prizes to employes of Pontiac Motor Division since its prize plan for ideas was started 13 years ago, according to William Malinowski, chairman of its Suggestion Award Com- mittee. The item about turtles in this column has brought a flood of inquires about how to prepare and cook turtle meat and soup. The largest catch is reported by Mrs. Charles Pyiman of Davisburg, who has a 20-pounder in her - freezer, awaiting instructions. It was killed by. - her neighbor, Orville _DeVaney, in his back yard. Mrs. Pylman and all others interested are requested to watch the food pages in the Pontiac Press, where the de- sired information will soon appear. Friday, the thirteenth, was not a hard luck day for Richard MacAlpine, although it was his thirteenth birthday. The son of Mr. and Mrs. Earl MacAlpine of 4231 Roseberry Road, he received a sub- stantial gift from his fellow seventh graders, each of whom contributed—13 cents. The thousands of Clinton Valley Boy Scouters of all hges feel very kindly toward Elmer BR. Pettengill, through whosé efforts the facilities of the dining room and auditorium at the new Pon- tiac Motors Engineering Building was made Les. Churchill, | who was chosen council president at the meeting. Many multiple tulips are reported by ‘Peter Jacobs = of Holly, who also writes that the Pontiac Press “is a wonderful paper, with more up- to-date news than any other paper.” : U. 8. plan called “Vacations, not Dona- ‘Verbal Orchids to— of Huron Gardens; eighty-third birthday. of Lum; golden wedding. ’ | f 1 fi it t 7 FE re > THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, MAY 16, 1955 _ pee“ Teche Sous old‘car were scarred from gravel- , sure mo- nanan Geet torists would report the same I believe every driver should I realise the is brakes Pontiac - are area’ % Slee "Tale & Gland cureine nn eee ete that protects the public, the driver as well as othegs on the road. - Let's cooperate in this program, and get a free checkup. If your- brakes are not o.k, it is better to caged ses con Premiers 2 an accident. Remember, it might . By MERRYLE 8. RUKEYSER be your life, or mine. 3 INS E A fitting time to retire is at a Mrs. W.R. M. Praises “mx of Personal triumph. . Great actors and singers fre- Expanded Social Pages gusndy eaptve $0 do fie, ba ae Just @ ttle note to tell you. tax structure, this takes quite « how fine yout women's pages have pit of financial planning and long- + mee . , been these last. few weeks. SO term self-discipline. nics . oe tee parm Having Fine Time, Wish You Were Here, Bao Dai e Sewell L. Avery, always dra- S these pages require. matic, voluntarily stepped down in » ” Mrs. W. ROM. the flush of victory over Louis E. David Lawrence Says: } 5 a P= —____ but it’s changed a * There are a number of reasons behind the cur- rent trend to “do-it-yourself.” Among them — @ there’s been a big movement to the suburbs in recent years @ more than half of America’s families now own their homes @ more of us have more free time these days @ many jobs have been made easier for the amateur Here are a few of the results: over half our fami- lies have taken up “do-it-yourself.” homes now have workshops. Sales of portable power tools have soared twentyfold in eight years. 35 million women make their own clothes. “Do-it-yourself” gives the opportunity to im- prove one’s living —and to feel the solid satisfac- tion of creating something useful or beautiful with one’s own hands. lot In recent years! an American custom The GOOD HOUSEKEEPING SHOP of PONTIAC By the originators of the famous Whirlpool SUDS SAVER! A big full - size, big - load SAY FULLY AUTOMATIC WHIRLPOOL WASHER =, 87499 Washer can be yours | Capacity Automatic | with eee Reg. $299.95 228 | with trade Pay Only $2.50 a Week! Take Months to Pay Immediate Delivery 90 Days Same as KEEP YOU Here's the Heater That Will .»+ 6 Year Warranty... Agiflow Action FREE INSTALLATION Cash! LOW COST EASY TERMS! 1 ae ‘one. o- odes IN HOT WATER! 11 million - - build an adequate retirement program. In fact, Institute of Life Insurance Vinideal Seeanes of indertmaiton sheet Eis Vaienniins : 488 MADISON AVENUE, NEW YORK 22, N. ¥. ° Here is another significant example of the extent to which we are doing things for ourselves. 93 million Americans are using life insurance today to provide for their own on their own. They are doing this, of course, with the help and advice of their life insurance agents. One of the main purposes for which they use life insurance is to guarantee money for the family in case of the father’s death. And they are also using life insurance for many other things —to cover the mortgage . . . to assure money for the children’s education . . . to help more than half of all life insurance benefits are now paid to the policyholders themselves. Today, life insurance is America’s most popular form of thrift. S2-GALLON AUTOMATIC You. ALWAYS. have. hot water — recovers quickly during low-cost electric hours .. . fully automatic. FREE WIRING ON EDISON LINES FREE DELIVERY 51 W. Huron Street DUO-THERM ELECTRIC WATER HEATER | Reg. $124.95 Low Cost Easy Terms Open Friday end Modday Nights ‘til 9 Ze (000 HOUSENERNGG 7 at A sgh 8 Now Only FULLY GUARANTEED , Phone FE 4-1585 “ br ania — semanas _” } are classified 1 as technically non-| are parasites ] E About 31 per cent of U.S. farms| In most cases, | Traditional Mahogany Living Room ' TABLES and Small BOOKCASES LARGE DRUM ‘~. TABLE with Leather Top $ 59” Reg. $74.50 $34.95 Corner table ................. t.. $29.95 19.95 Cocktail table. Glass top with shelf.... 13.95 29.00 Cocktail table. Glass top and drawer.. 21.50 26.00 Cocktail table. Leather top.......... 19.50 29.95 Cocktail table. 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It will which transformed this gentle little | carriage-building town into an in- Sheriff's Killer Finally Captured Ex-Mental Patient Shot After Holding Off 100 Officers for Hours GROESBECK, Tex., —A sharp- shooting former mental patient killed the Limestone County sheriff with one shot through the head at 40 yards yesterday. Then, with a .22 rifle, he held off an army of 100 officers and an armored half- track several hours before being flushed by a mass charge of law- men. | The sheriff, J. Harry Dunlap, 47, | had gone to question N. J. Tynes about the shooting of a neighbor. Tynes, 44, was due to be recom- mitted to a mental hospital. * * * After he was shot, Dunlap lay in the crossfire two hours until officers created a disturbance at the front of the story-and-a half farm home to draw Tynes’ atten- tion. Other officers then pulled back the sheriff but found he ap- parently had died instantly. The halftrack, obtained from the National Guard, lobbed 10 to 15 rounds of tear gas into the house. When this failed to flush Tynes, of- |ficers charged the rear of the resi- dence, Tynes rushed out of the house to meet them, screaming and fir- ing wildly. Officers had to use force to subdue him. * s * His, condition wag considered critical but improved today. He was shot in the right shoulder left leg, left hip and left forearm, || and was also burned and cut. | Dr. Stanley Cox said he signed |documents Saturday to return | Tynes to the Terrell] State Mental | hospital and was waiting for the | signature of another doctor before | having officers commit him. | A neighbor of Tynes, Johnny Ray | Bentley, 17, was shot and seriously | wounded Saturday night while | plowing. Sheriff Dunlap went to Tynes’ to investigate but was driven off by three shots. * * * He returned yesterday morning | with a dozen officers. The numbers | mounted as the siege began. After )an hour the sheriff stepped from | cover into the back yard to talk = Tynes. A shot felled him im- mediately. FLINT (INS)—Another miracle | take its place with an earlier event | THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, MAY 16, 1955 | dustrial colossus that punches out Buicks, Chevvies, spark plugs and |a host of other products in fan- teatie amowmts. * * The new miracle is being, wrought by a man of great vision | named Michael A, Gorman, editor of the Flint Journal, His helpers General Motors, to Merliss Brown, a retired hourly rated worker who was born in Minsk under the Czar. of Flint are building, here now, a $13,000,000 “college cultural development.” k will elevate Flint Juntor College into a four-year course that has ties with the University of Michigan. It will drop a lovely campus into the heart of Flint and provide the community with a new library, little theater, historical museum, another museum designed to tell | the incredible story of transporta- | tion, an auditorium and a plane- tarium. DIGS INTO OWN POCKET In a day when it is accepted | practice to turn to Washington or | to the state capital for alms, Flint | is digging into its own pocket and coming up with the necesary cash. | * * * It is showing the same daring, in the field of education and public | enlightenment that it showed in forging the great plants and pro- viding jobs that make it perhaps the most remarkable ‘‘take-home- | pay” town on earth, The biggest and most dramatic contributions teward the “college and cultural deyelopment” have come from Charles Stewart Mott, hale, hearty leader whose influ- ence on Flint has been greater than that of any other individual. He’ll be 80 om June 2. On his 75th birthday, Mott, larg- est individual holder of GM stock, gave the local junior college $1,- 000,000 toward the day when it would grow into a full-fledged | Since then Mott has given 32 |prime acres to the project and | another $557,000. The Charles Stew- art Mott Building for the Sciences | is about completed. GM GIVES $3 MILLION Curtice provided a GM gift of | $3,000,000, which Mike Gorman ac- | cepted without blinking an eye. |Gorman is a very strong’ man, ; and he's driving himself night and | day in his all-out effort. ' * * * | The late William S. Ballenger provided $200,000 for a field house. |Pledge of a minimum of $25,000 | constitutes qualifications as a spon- | sor. The Kudner Advertising Agen- cy of New York came in for $25,- YOU CAN BUY WITH CONFIDENCE AT WAYNE GABERT'S AUTOMATIC. WASHER ~ REGULAR PRICE $229.95 With SUDS SAVER at NO EXTRA COST! a @ Famous Norge Agitator Geis Clothes Cleaner . Much Faster @ Push Button Automatic @ Deep Overflow Rinsing @ Rinses With Cold or Warm Water NO MONEY DOWN FIRST PAYMENT JULY Save At This “Real Gone” Low Price of y 000. And so did the aforementioned, By 1970 there will be 5,000,000. man from Minsk, Where are we going to put them? Well, Flint is getting ready. It's Gorman is driven by such sta- »» “Sy tistics as: ‘There are now 2,000, | “Bowing the way. 000 students in our universities. There is no question about Flint’s interest in going to school. Years ago, Mott came to the con- clusion that it was dumb waste of HY ® good facilities to close down the in Bell P hone Strike schools of the city when the chil- dren left in the afternoon, Through ATLANTA ia- : tors planned pepsi canny Essar [Se Matt Foundation he bas stace the Federa] Mediation and Concili- provided teachers, instructors and ation Service today in a renewed a host of services for the adults of effort to settle the 63-day-old South. the city .. . the men and women ern Bell Telephone Co. strike. | who build cars by day and hanker Negotiating t spent the |‘ improve tei minds at night. weekend studying proposals and’ ¢chool gyms swarm with ac- counterproposals in an atmosphere tivity There are courses in moth- described as the most optimistic erhood, cooking; cram courses for since the nine-state walkout began adults who, years after leaving March 14. school for financial reasons, have As far as damage went, the ; " weekend was one of the quietest eases to earn high school di on record. Only sporadic cable cut- tings were reported in Georgia,; MOTT PAYS THE BILL Mott picks up the tab. The chil- Louisiana and Kentucky. _ dren of these adult scholars are Germany's Ambassador certain to get a better education than their parents could afford. Arrives in England They'll be going on to college, But ‘by the time they're ready for it, LONDON @® — Germany's first | the college will have come to them. ambasador to Britain since the The college and much more. outbreak of World War IT arrived | “ * * today in London with a promise’ Gorman’s fund-raising campaign from the Bonn republic to be loyal is one of those rare gestures of to its new friends. | selflessness the world sees too lit- “I believe a new era of rela-'tle of in Anno Domini 1955. Not tionship between Great Britain and;a penny is being spent for ad- Talks Resume Today i LOA ry | Modern Miracle Gets Under Way vl * in Flint money will have generated that much interest.” Sparks-Griffin FUNERAL HOME | Germany is about to begin,”’ said | ministration of the fund raising. Ambassador Hans von Herwarth, “We'll wind up with a quarter as he stepped off a train at Liver- | of a million dollars more than we pool Station. | raised,” Gorman grinned. “The Be _ For example this $61.95 Only— Color Television Tonight AYNE GABERT = YOUR ELECTRICAL APPLIANCE SPECIALIST 121 N. Saginaw St. Open Monday, Friday Evenings ‘til 9 Same as Cash! Phone FE 5-6189 DETROIT JEWEL Gas Range | oY S12 Q5 Among the features packed into this economical 36” range ore smokeless under oven broiler, spa- cows storage compartment and ovtomatic top “Thoughtful Service” 46 Williams St. Phone FE 2-5641 i 24-Hour Ambulance Service — To please you is our accepted responsibility. Me pista: R-TH i i od RA B ) == » @ Or this ROPER Gas Range ONLY $% 79 52-10 THERE ARE MANY OTHER MO LOW, LOW PRICES LESS OUR BIG TRADE-IN OFFER MAKE THESE PUN) SMR OLUR ET E-UN ISIN CMR, NEULS DELS AND STYLES TO CHOOSE FROM Including Fally Automatic Clock Controlled Models Come in... Get your FREE 32 PAGE OVEN MEALS COOK BOOK 0-4996-1-40 raf CONSUMERS POWER COMPAN} % i! AQ NN fan a THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, MAY 16, 1955 METHOD om > Wide — and tuden | Seite aT eek a Wesk Michigan Driver Trai FE 4-5668 15% ©. Lawrence, Pontiac 7 Your Watch $A 50 ° Aajeed e Regulated “Expansion Watch Bands Ladies’—Men's specu 995 Kids Won’t Want to Go Home [Your Eyes Will Bu: Ann Arbor's Ultra- ANN ARBOR (#—-Man—this is a high school to end all high schools.| Well, here in the: three-story Unit From the minute you enter the | “C” are classrooms to make partially completed buildings to! your eyes bug out. Some of the time you leave, you're sure| them are as large as a five-room that engineer Leland (Skip) | house. Each provides the teach- Roberts is right when he says, “We! er with a wardrebe-sized closet. oe Now into the school propper. didn’t leave anything out. Science, social studies, lan- It's the mew Ann Arbor High guages, mathematics and the rest iare housed in this, the academic /section of the building. But this ‘also houses some features -of the high school of the future. At one end is a The original a dome on the planetarium. That the first of four units must wait for additional money in Here, rising in a gigantic steel = — frame, is the gymnasium area. &™S"™° e. - « * Careful where you step. That’ s| School to be completed Jan. 2, 1956, at a cost of nearly six mil- lion dollars.. It will house 1,600 students, and can take nearly 1,200 mere. It is nearly a mile around the outside walls. For instance—start in Unit “A”, | the swimming pool. It starts at . All the f 3 feet and ends at 10 feet. It is’ including the vault and the mai ; ing room, are in ene wing of this | unit PLAN INCLUDES 2? CAFETERIAS, KITCHE NS There is a large lobby for each separate section. Now most schosls have a cafeteria | kitchen 7 feet feet long and 46 feet wide * * * That large room to be, parallel- ing the gym. is a girl's dressing room. There's another large one for boys. Then there's another for varsity teams, almost as big as the other two. Each has its own lockers and showers Under the gymnasium itself is an activities room. Here on a dirt floor, the students will build their own indoor track, boxing ring and rifle range. Now, step this entire wing off. Big isn’t it? ,By the way, the swimming pool is illuminated with underwater lights. This is unit “B". This is a rather plush unit. Here is the larg 2,400-seat auditorium. That's | the balcony, above is the projee- | teria which won't be used until | tien booth. Of course it has its | enrollments grow. own lobby and ticket office and |; = folding wall. The recreation room is about 90 feet by 60 feet. wall is completely mirrored up to the top of the door level. The walls are wood-paneled and the floors are of laid wood tile. The adjoining east cafeteria has its own soda bar. This whole area can be used for school dances. There is another student cafe- When You See Itra High School planetarium. | building will not have | There will also be a 100 FEET LONG | administrative offices, | for, guess what? To park bicycles | tion. | dividual | outfitted. | equally large room for the art of | laundry room. and a) This one has two of each. | And this room should make most | ACTIVITIES ROOM, TOOo— teenagers glow with envy. The) WITH DIRT FLOOR girl's recreation room is separat- ed from the east cafeteria by a) One | | usable fireplace. ‘industrial arts department. There is also a! | change into overalls. Here also are a woodworking | shop, an arts shop and a painting and decorating shop. MODERN AUTO SHOP FOR YOUNG MECHANICS | Here’s something few schools have: An automotive shop with wood-paneled teacher's dining overhead monorail cranes and room of considerable size and a tracks. An engine can be yanked “conference” dining room for ‘here and carried into the live en- visiting dignitaries. Off the five-story clock ‘tower in ks testing room: by jovemend Unit “B” i e Pune, s a roof-level promenade | The heating plant is almost sep | — ; . ‘arate. It has two oil furnaces | Finally, the pie resistance: | °"= Unit “Dp” e piece de resistance: /and a gas furnace. Two subter- Under this unit are storage. rooms and receiving. There is also a large library, which can be used as a public library, and an equally large study hall. The li- brary itself would make most com- munities proud. BICYCLE PARKING AREA Underneath the library is also a ranean oi] tanks nae 38,000 gal- lons apiece. And supposing ya don't like to get your feet wet on rainy days? Every unit is connected by tunnel. The campus covers 125 acres. There is a school-wide telephone system and a two-way radio that can be used as a public address system, * * *« When the tour is over “Skip” | Roberts, field representative for the architects, Fulton, Krinsky & Don't Let IT Slip Through Your Fingers! SAVE NOW on SUMMER DISCOUNTS! covered area about 100 feet long Se Here is the home economics sec- In one large room are -int* kitchens, all completely Aross the hall is an the kitchen outfitted Adjoining is a completely sewing. room e coal you wish. . Follow this way. Here is a e comes. eomplete apartment. This is the kitchen, completely outfitted, naturally. It opens into a spa- eclous dining area. I-shaped off the dining area is a large living room. Then the bedroom and tiled bathroom with shower. It is bigger than many homes. The living room has a good-sized, Pull yourself away. It’s not for rent. Down the hall in a building fashioned after industrial con- struction with skylight roofs is the Here is a large dressing room with lockers so male students can LAKE ST REASONS WHY IT PAYS TO FILL YOUR COAL BIN NOW! You make substantial fuel cost savings because prices | e are lower in Spring and Summer months. You're assured of getting just exactly the kind of . no need to take substitutes. You're assured of a comfortable home when winter owas eh eae eS pee = = = Stee COAL and OIL co. FE Peas 30 Years of Dependable Service in Pontiac! its ently entrance. Now, what could that be on the side? Well, that's the 266-seat Little Theater. Notice the two stages connect so that you have access to both. It depends upon how large an audience or how large a pro- duction as to which theater you use. One thing you'll notice is that the entire project is built on rolling land, which allows many levels, all with ground floor access. MUSICAL HEADQUARTERS WILL BE SOUNDPROOF No. You're still in Unit “B”.’! Down there are the choral and band rooms and the radio studio, All of them will be completely soundproofed from each other and the rest of the school. The radio studio will be fully equipped and will govern mest of the communications in the school. ° The band room has an interesting feature, Those are all separate soundproof cubicles on one side. They have glass doors, so that the teacher can look down “the entire line from his office. - currently 2% per ann WE HAVE NEVER MISSED A DIVIDEND! * ¢ STACK THEM UP! Build up a pile of savings where saving is safe, convenient and profitable. day go by without starting 9 Savings Program ot PONTIAC FEDERAL where dividends are For your extra convenience, we're open on Fri- day evenings until 8 P.M. . ., and on Satur- days from 9 A. M. until Noon. savings are insured up to $10,000. Don’t let another um, Of course, all Chair converts to bed D% CURRENT RATE Reduced: DISCONTINUED COVER SALE OF SC SEES Big Savings! TWO-PIECE TD aay, Lounge neteh ° two comfortab ly Yes, you get the luxurious Simmons lounge and the handsome matching chair at one low price during our clearance sale. Many conservative and fancy fabrics to choose from. While hey lost a ws « Sleeps Three . . _ Ample Free Parking—Easy Credit A CONVERTIBLE SOFA AND A CHAIR BED “119 . Seats Four _ —— Delamotte of Cleveland, Ohio, | finest high school I've ever seen.” says" And unless you have some sug- “yes sir, I- think this is the gestions, you just nod your head. a] Competition “! Nerves Consumers Best In the production of Natural Gas or any other product Millions of homes like yours have natural gas because more than 8,000 producers compete at great financial risk to find it and get it from the ground, The producers also compete to sell it to the pipelines who bring it to your local gas company. Now, over the opposition of responsible groups and authorities, Federal price-fixing threatens your long-term gas supply and the very principle of free competitive production. Read what these representative groups and in- dividuals say: : FEDERAL POWER COMMISSION — _ JEROME K. KUYKENDALL, CHAIRMAN “We believe that no sound fuel policy can be erected upon such discrimination as presently exists against natural gas and in favor of other competitive fyels . . Congress should not single out natural gas as the only one among those fuels over which an artificial ceiling should be placed.” March 22, 1955, THE PRESIDENT’S ADVISORY COMMITTEE ON ENERGY SUPPLIES AND RESOURCES POLICY “In the interest of a sound fuel policy and the protection of the national defense and consumer interests . . . we believe the Federal Government should not control the production, gathering, processing or sale of natural gas prior to its entry into an interstate transmission line.” February 26, 1955. DETROIT BOARD OF COMMERCE “*The price structure (of the gathering and production of natural gas) has always been and will continue to be controlled by the acute competition prevailing in this phase of supplying eatural gas ad consumer use.” April 5, 1955. AMERICAN NATIONAL CATTLEMEN'S | ASSOCIATION “Gas is an important product of ranch and farm land. This decision ... may well be the beginning of laws to regulate all industries in this country, including the livestock industry.” January 12, 1955. AMERICAN FARM BUREAU FEDERATION “Since the field price of natural gas is adequately regu- lated by competition we favor legislation providing that field prices of natural gas shall not be regulated by the Federal Power Commiission.” December 16, 1954. LEAGUE OF KANSAS MUNICIPALITIES “The regulation by the Federal Government of the price of gas sold by independent producers and gatherers is contrary to the public interest including the interests of consumers in the municipalities who are members of this League.” December 16, 1954, o oeee eer rre sts ts ee COCKS TT oo NATURAL GAS MICHIGAN NATURAL GAS AND OIL RESOURCES COMMITTEE D. W. Ferguson, Chairmen P. O. Box 1918, Detroit 31, Michigan Made up of individuals and companies concerned with / ry eect ry ri pees i i + eee Peo ne eer ein i Touring Yugoslavia BONN, Germany @) — A West the piesident German - parliamentary delegation | (Lower House), left today for a week's _Bood will maier, and 10 deputies. (Advertisement) Rennel User Lost 42 Lbs. Battle Creek Lady Pleased Overweight is in season at all times. Trust Rennel vt quality and benefit from its use. Gaod health, an attractive figure to model smart clothes and proper weight to meet an operation te reasons enou, ———— eorrect it. 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The Oshkosh fisheries supervi- | sor, Richard Harris, said the count | was accurate because all anglers were obliged to register their 42 Ibs.| catches this season. The fish averaged 52 inches in| length and 38 pounds in weight. The minimum legal limit was 40 inches. An estimate for 1953, made by biologist Jim Probst, was 100,000 pounds .of sturgeon, or 2,828 fish. The ws 4 catch was 2, 218 fish. =_—_ \ | NU-VISION Guarantee ! Your money will | be refunded up| jt 60 days it You | are not complete [ly satistied tor | any reason, 1 | 1 See Usi | j See Better! —— — we oe oe et NORMALLY PRICED MUCH HIGHER se WITH FRAMES AND BIFOCAL | LENSES You Can’t Pay More end save more with NU-VISION giasses. No Appointment Necessary Fast Service No Switching! No Extras! NU-VISION OPTICAL DISPENSING OPTICIANS CO. Open 9-5:30 Fri. ‘til 9 Room 2-3, 15 W. LAWRENCE Phone FE 2-2895 OPEN MONDAY & FRIDAY TILL Styled for Young Moderns! 6-Pc. Sectional Outfit 139" Save on the outstandingly low price of this handsome living room ensemble! The elegantly styled, wide arm, sofa sectional, stunning, lime oak-finished, occasional tables, and modren lamp have been individually chosen to assure luxury at “Honeymoon” savings! MON > A LOT OF HAMBURGERS—Some 25,000 pounds of canned ham- S. Navy’s controversial supply of 880,000 pounds, is checked at the U. S. Naval Supply base in Bayonne, N. J. There are 720 cases of the meat, 48 cans in a case and five hamburgers in -each can. Base officials said this constitutes a two-weeks’ supply at | burgers, part of the U. the present rate of issue. Attentio’ burger situation by a Hoover Commission report which said the Navy had ie = to aa 60 years. DAY, MAY 16, 1955 n was focused on the Navy’s ham- (Advertisement) Work, ‘Sleep, Play In Comfort . Without Nagging Backache Nagging backache, loss of pep and energy, | headaches and dizziness may be due to slow- | down of kidney function. Doctors say good | kidney function is very important to good | | health, When some everyday condition, such a4 stress and strain, causes this important | funetion toslow down, many foiks suffer nag- | ging backache—feel miserabie. Minor blad- der irritations due to cold or wrong diet may cause getting up ni ghtsor frequent passages, Jon't neglect your kid» neys if these cond! Prepare Guide to Pennsylvania Dutch Speech MADISON, Wis, (UP)—Two pro- 'fessors have prepared a pronun- greatest election victory in- two | years last night bolstered Chan- Be cellor Konrad Adenauer's plans for | 7 Adenaver Wins } | TONIGHT | in Local Voting Bonn Chancellor Gets Overwhelming Support for Armament Program MAINZ, Germany ® — His speedy action on his program to lantic Alliance. of the State Parliament and a stunning vote of Adenauer’s policy of with the free world. It was Adenauer’s biggest vic- tory since his party won a one- vote majority in the lower house of the Federal Parliament in the 1933 national election. The result yesterday clinched the Chancellor's vital two-thirds con- friendship proval of the coming legislation to put rearmament into effect. Aden- auer still controls 26 of the 38 Bundesrat members, who named by the state government. * * * land-Palatinate legislature, the So- cialists 36 and the right-wing Free Voters’ Assn, Just over a million and a of the state’s two million eligible voters cast ballots. The Christian ciation guide for “Pennsylvania Dutch.” The book, entitled Atlas of Pennsylvania German,” was written by Lester W. Seifert | “A Linguistic | | Democrats won 46.8 per cent — | 741,568, tions bother you. Try Doan's Pills—a mild |of the University of Wisconsin | diuretic. Used successfully by millions for over 50 years. 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C, ®—Take it from Essie Stephens, foxes are really). aggressive in these parts. Stephens spotted the fox stalking| © a fat hen. He picked up a stick to chase it away but the determined | animal dashed for him, sank his teeth in his trouser leg and held on snarlingly while Stephens ran, | | fox attached, to the house for a| | heavier weapon. arm 500,000 Germans for the At- : The state of Rhineland-Palati- | © nate in elections yesterday gave | | the Chancellor's Christian Demo-| = cratic party unchallenged control | © confidence in| | trol of the federal upper house | 3 (Bundesrat), needed to ensure ap-| © are | The Christian Democrats won 51 | | seats in ‘the 100-member Rhine- | | Democrats 13. Neither the Com-|% munists nor the Nazi-style Free | @ won a single seat.| | half | | _It finally to took an axe to kill it. ——+ TONIGHT -- TUES. OEE EEA 50 GO ON SALE! 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LADIES’ POLO SHIRTS . . 88c Drapes .. 5.99 Value PRINTED DRAPES $399 LOOP RUGS $199 BATH TOWELS 49: Wash Cloths 10¢ LADIES’ BLOUSES 20° LADIES’ SHORTS 88* a NYLON HOSE air $ Pai ] sles manufacture. Slight ir- regulars, All sizes. PRINT = eee L 88 GIRLS’ SUN DRESSES 1 Sizes » 3 to 6x at $1.99, Girls’ Swim Suits ee ee seeds Nylon reinforced po- los in patterns. Den- im, seersucker shorts, Sizes 4 to 16. Double Knee Jeans... 1.39 MEN’S ee WHITE PURSES $988 Poplin Jackets $299 TRAINING PANTS 10° WRAP BLANKETS 39% DIAPER SETS $199 pt THE PONTIAC PR ESS, MONDAY, MAY 16, 1955 What Would You ‘Have Done? ‘Cutter Acted Post-Haste in Polio Vaccine Crisis! like rain, but will obey a royal Ry RENNIS TAYLOR AP Science Reporter BERKELEY, Calif. @—If you were a manufacturer of polio vac- cine and some of the 500,000 chil- dren inoculated with your product started coming down with infantile prevent any further use of the material. First, Gir aoled Ge aren , then the radio and tele- nothing conclusive even yet, that the Cutter vaccine was at fault, aoe ag a Public Health Service official. at Hamilton,. Mont., Dr. : a The final verdict’ on the Cutter vaccine awaits reports from the National Institutes of Health, an arm of the Public Health Service, which quickly put investigators in- to the Cutter plant here and started tests of its own elsewhere. sign of panic. Company employes 465 of their children soon after the Senate Plans Probe of Defense Contracts WASHINGTON (—A new Senate investigation reminiscent of the “S per center’ probes conducted during the Truman administration is in the making. Starting Wednesday, the Senate Investigations subcommittee will hold public hearings in an inquiry described by Chairman McClellan (D-Ark) over the weekend as in- volving “corruption’? in clothing contracts for the armed forces. = * He said the gift of at least one home freezer had been disclosed in testimony already taken behind closed doors, but he added, “It goes beyond that to actual cash payments.” Gifts of home freezers figured in a 1949 investigation the sub- committee tnade of influence diers and persons dealing with t " government for private interests for a fee, often 5 per cent. Contracts totaling several mil- lion dollars for white sailor hats, raincoats, garrison caps and other clothing items are involved in the investigation, McClellan said. Break Floods Plant CHICAGO @—A 48-inch water main burst and spilled a smail flood which forced the overnight shutdown of U. S. Steel’s giant South Side plant. Battalion Fire Chief Edward Johnson estimated the flood, which covered the grounds of the south Chicago work and several blocks of nearby residential areas, caused $250,000 damage. Quirino Plans Rest MANILA @®—Former Philippine President Elpidio Quirino will fly to Tokyo May 22 for an extended rest cure in Japan. He has been under care since last ily | started. While the main batch of. inacti-| vated virus is frozen to prevent any further change, samples of| it are put into test fale along | with more monkey kidney tissue and placed in an_ incubator, If there are any live viruses present, ' they should resume their growth. | If there is no growth under this. favorable condition, the batch then is tested on live monkeys for safe- | ty. and ability to produce anti- | dies. It takes 30 monkeys and 24 days. to test each batch. Into the brain tissues of 18 of the monkeys a i sample of the batch is injected. . | After a wait of several days these | Carolina Makes Plans monkeys are killed and their spinal | for Celebration—in 1985 rds sre examined for any signs” , of damage by polio virus, RALEIGH, N.C. u—Southerners | * * * may stand accused of moving at/ ‘The other 12 monkeys are given an unhurried pace, but nobody is’ injections into their muscles. From going to accuse the North Carolina | the muscles the vaccine finds its Senate of wasting time getting | way into the blood stream, which ‘either produced antibodies or car- A resolution was introduced yes- | ries the vaccine to the place where terday to create a commission to | antibodies are made, After many plan the celebration of the 400th | days the blood is checked for anti- Anniversary of Sir Walter Ral- bodies, the trade-mark of its ef-/ eigh's ill-fated lost colony at fectiveness. Manteo. If any of these 12 monkeys shows The anniversary of the landing a sign of reaction, polio or other- is 30 years away, iwise, it is sacrificed, 350 other products, some of which | it has been producing for nearly | half a century. There has been no letdown in demand for other Cut- ter products, Fred Cutter said. Company officials rely on the. care taken in production of the vaccine, Here is the way the lab- oratory describes the final! tests for safety and effectiveness: After the virus is grown in a solution containing monkey kidney tissue as the main nutrient, it is filtered off and dosed with form- aldehyde. This is supposed to kill or inactivate the live viruses. Only when the whole tests the material is finally stored under refrigeration. | A sample of it, together with a| photostatic produc- series of | are okay, record of the tion and testing, is sent to the National Institutes of Health for| +epproval, It is released when that | | agency approves it Records such as this, along with ia 50-year history of préducing vac- cines and other biological mater- ials, give the firm its basis for | standing pat. In all that time it has had only one other incident. | In 1949, some of its solutions for mnyec tion into the veins became G M Electrical Contracting Company Commercial CUSTOM HOMES Cal! Us Anytime Phone FEderal 2-3080 1472 Baldwin Avenue Harry W. MacDonald Res. Phone FE 5-4545 | stopper joperate the Cutter firm, Besides contaminated with bacteria. The material was banned by ‘the gov-|- ernment as dangerous to health. The company paid a $600 fine and developed a new type of bottle which it said prevented any recurrence of the trouble. * = * Three sons of the founder now Dr, Robert Cutter and Fred Cutter, i there is Edward A. Cutter, execu- tive vice president. Their mother Mrs. Margaret K. Cutter is chair- man of the board, Last year the It has about 1,100 employes. and Industrial Pontiac, Michigon Edwin E. Grangeod Res. Phone OR 3-4427 company’s net| © sales were about 15 million dollars.- Dog Ignores His Master, Obeys Queen’s Orders WINDSOR, England —Rex is an English sheepdog who doesn't command. e Rex wag taking part in the dog parade at the royal horse show here yesterday. It began to pour enclosure where Queen Riisibets| II was seated, His master ,called him back. Kennel boys ed at him, But Rex remained at the Queen's feet. “Rex,” said the Queen, “go back to the pack.” Rex went back, TO QUICKLY REACH good prospects for your proposition, place Classified ads. Dial FE 2-8181. More than 308 million pounds of popcorn are harvested in the U.S. an average year, and Rex scuttled into the royal Expert Repairing for Your Watch and Precious Jewelry You want prompt, expert repair service for your watch or precious jewelry. Service that will be entirely satisfactory when the item is returned to you. . . ° when promised, THIS IS THE SERVICE WE STRIVE TO GIVE Bring Your Work to Us. MR. PHIL ORENCIA ... Manager Repair Department MERE TEL-HURON SHOPPING Open Thurs.-Fri.-Sat. to § P. M. by SIX WAYS BETTER—BUY WITH WARRANTED CONFIDENCE Here’s why There’s a good reason why the fed OK Tag is influencing more and more used car shoppers. That’s be- cause it identifies a car or truck they can buy with confidence—it’s backed with a warranty in writing their Chevrolet dealer. Everyone wants forthright assur- ance of value when he invests in a used car. That’s why Chevrolet dealers offer used cars backed by a written warranty —the used cars with the OK Tag. That’s why OK Used Cars are thoroughly inspected used car you can believe in and nel. ormance by confidence. ou’ll find they're scribed, too. That’s why you can drive an OK Used Car with extra the OK Tag is winning confidence and influencing used car buyers! and reconditioned for = safety, expert person- estly de- You'll like the dollar-savings on make room for more Look for the red OK Tag and get a OK values! Your Chevrolet dealer ~ keeps them competitively priced to new trade-ins. He’s built his reputation in your community by bringing car per dollar, at fewer car. Try shopping his lot and see! u more llars per -MATTH EWS. HARGREAVES, INC. | B4«Mill St. and 211 Ss. Saginaw St. Oe * Peatiac ion : r THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY, MAY 16, 1955 __ HAW Resuming | M ARKETS | Wut Disneys True Life Adventures ‘Heinrich von Brentano Is Rising ‘Star Talks With GM | sess [in West Germany's Administration | | q | eres er, Poa ns M ah EK LI TTLE nalO) hy Sj 1s [2 failed - Jin line to become foreign seiudatar | Rurepene Sadaretan, The eomaeies machine, bso re of West Germany is a handsome,|of Europe must realize that they! tained the title of national chair. 12-Day Recess Ends; ePreite:, Hgrtnern oor, 323-2.8 THe SPINY HORNEY TOAD if TOAD /n wy BELIES ITS chain-smoking bachelor who may|can only guard their interests to-| man. 4 bu; Steele’ ome day be chancellor, gether. Singly, they will go down.”| Up to- now he has not held Strike Votes Indicate va Deets, i. A ya head FEKOCIOUS Ld v AGON ~ LIKE Heinrich von Brentano is often| He hammered away ‘at that! cabinet office. Showdown Fight 16, doe . s intedtan, bye E APPEARANCE. T DOESN'T . gel Germany's a _ theme in Strasbourg, — p= He comes of a family of Italian .° HF Onions, di a = - e sses impeccably. More than; was a prominent representative descent, linked for DETROIT # — CIO United Auto| iat eutal: Son 4aES% St N6, BITE OR SCRATCH. that, he has been to’ Chancellor West Germany in the European with German intellectual and poll Workers resume new contract ne- toe ron” ine eet Poy NLY SMALL INSECTS NEE ee Konrad Adenauer what Eden was | Assembly. Other European partia-| tical life. He entered polities in - gotiations today with General Mo- | ioo-i» nak . fed, 73-90 dos FEAR IT. ations to Sir Winston Churchill—a loyal|mentarians showed their respect | 1945 and helped found the Christian tors Corp. jo By — We a” aa cme nn deputy, confidant and friend. for him by making him vice presi-| Democrats. Later he represented The talks, covering union de- | rhubert, outdoor, dos. behs. Rute. ~. ‘dent of the assembly. Hesse in the council that drew up bagas, 1.28-1.50 bu. topped, 1.50- Ad mands for a guaranteed annual | 3.00 bu. denauer has aed serving as, s 2 * the national constitution, foreign minister as well as chan. | In West Germany Brentano is * * cellor, but for five years he has peg known as parliamentary! He was elected to the Bunde- —— trelning Brentano to take/jeader of Adenauer’s Christian: stag (Parliament) in 1949 and im over the ministry, Democratic party. Trained as a, mediately became leader of the And some political observers! lawyer, he has won admiration in | Christian Democratic faction, predict the Churchill-Eden paral- | the young Parliament for his’ Brentano describes the West Ex- lel will be carried further when! mastery of strategy and fine ropean Union as “the greatest one day Von Brentano succeeds | oratory. guarantee for world peace." Adenauer as chancellor, Adenauer — rE Sean | is 79, Brentand 50 wage, pay boosts, pension im-| , 2'fth*i, ag eat Sa} _toenaee. provements and health benefits, et Ls 00-1.39 ain rays 8 lil = =—s ° diem, Mister cael ate dee came ; me ral) be Similar talks with Ford re- : sume tomorrow when Ford bocal DETROIT £GG8 600 is scheduled to begin taking | p2ETPOT,, Mey ae ght ges. tab its strike vote. rr iteo—Grade A srs “41, The 48,000-member local, largest medium © 38-34 be F wid avg Ali, - in the UAW, will take eight days ’ . 4 42-48, ; | to ballot. ave am 34 ae he “%. ve es Like Adenauer, Brentano advo- | IT S THE medi : cates European federation., He | ope STRIKE VOTES ey via eve 28%. Says: iti en y,| an Strike votes at Ford and GM ‘ooraaay ml ype 39-41. “The only solution of the Vuro- | locals ne tao * country were large 38-40, rea Asante ings 38 ste _N a BU pean question is the cogrdfnation | 31, medium erade B lar vy, “ee vied eee x > a — Strengthen its position sf the tar ee Pe os” SS z | FOR INSURANCE ae gaining table. cae ar ee : a 7 iY Al abe “hee rs Club , 2 s 6 © steady; wholesale o%: ; ‘ ey eeting ate ange Hard to Pronounce— ; First returns from across the | 93° 4 86.18: zeae Me aoc ent: at i country have shown overwhelming oo B 8s: ] c Weekly meting date of the Pon- Easy to Settle With! steady; receipts 38,905; perme : _ support for a walkout if union de- purine ces une large | trac Chess and Checkers Club has mands aren't met by the time cur- =e 0 per coat gndvorer, As s. 1: @- i been changed to 7 p.m. Tuesdays | FE 4-0588 g rent five-year contracts expire—| ums 325: U.6. standards 325: dirties 31: |at the Hotel Waldron. Ye checks 28; current receipts 32. +r ; ‘ ‘ June 1 at Ford and June 7 at GM. ; The club, sponsored by the City Paes a Parks. and Recreation Dept., for- N e B e f per pound fo .. Rae nar oad merly met Wednesday evenings. : BRUMMETT-LINCICOME, Inc. val | All chess and checkers enthusiast ews in Brie Mamie eigen ea Jare invited to attend the sessions. | set Sam Bs Stront heavy broilers or fryers (3-3'% Ibs): . = Ernest Smith, 35, of Dryden, was Se tt A seat — Regn = — _ : _ — F WUEN T THREATENED WITH 4 Charged with driving under the cme eeae® Pour Tar ~ i co Y DANGER, IT JUST LIES STILL 1 pd (AP) ve poultry th ‘ gin Ts influence of liquor, Glenn Gren-| wees.’ receipts ‘te in pet pgp Walt Dimey Productionr , * AND CLOSES ; eyvee- Syndicat “Sy field, 41, of Waterford Township, | "% | soops. ofnest Bi: ted. peying | 5-!6] World sai Reserved Distributed by King Featuses Syndicate Siar pleaded innocent when he appeared ~ — oe dae brotlers. or fryers 28-, —— ——— - Li before Waterford Township Justice |37.4,°° "mers 1? —eoe | me Willis D. Lefurgy, Saturday, He | County Deaths OP 5 was being in Oakland County Jail Li a eve Ops l [ mM arged ivestock under a $100 bond pending trial. orm > beTmorr us ves Tock - William J. Smith If your friend’s in jail and needs | apie 125. tot enough offered ee "7 DRAYTON PLAINS—Service for ; bail, "Ph. FE 5-0424 or MA 5-4031. | mates martet: ‘cating strong to higher ra ower ren William: J. Smith, 71, of 4936 Wood | in rice Cd S —Adv. steady ay today Compared ‘as Thursday” oar will be held at 7:30 p.m. to-| slaw eers ¥: . 2 Se etna ne Chen | Sat fle Be ee Re tower! ee yom ities sack | ee ere | = ower ; . , , \ Drayton Plains or Clarkston area | lower grades and heifers 80-100 lowe aR. ne tock "Home, Pontiac, with burial in! Clark Equipment Co. at see White Bros. Real Estate. OR po he = —— petersage A gong ;market was mixed today with a Brant Cemetery, Brant. He died. . 3-7118. —AdvV. | tairiy chearanes: 6 choice and | lower tendency developing in early Saturday at his home. Buchanan Denies FTC p D choice st a ere, 3425-2615: dealings & trom bet 1, Surviving are one son, Leo; one} Accusation . . uw good and choice fed steers rices range om ween daughter, Mrs. Hazel Ragsdale of . 20.00-34.00: to ; ontiac Diver steers 18.60.50 00; email Mote sheteg to and 2 (nen yee to “— “Portland, Ore.; and a sister, Mrs.| WASHINGTON (—The Federal ° rime 796-8) e ~ fo I Ai ds Search for tral “i seaa se: . lic prime T4404 “ie sie way ax a OES ee Fogelburge of Fiint. Trade Commission (FTC) says the J ulk utility to i . : ° * ge 13.00-18.00; bulk utility and com-| Among higher stocks were Mrs. Cora E. Benaway Clark Equipment Co., of Buchan. Dr owning Victim sereial cove to. eannere ane ‘eat Chrysler, Zenith Radio, American) LAKE ORION—Service tor Mrs.| an, Mich. has been giving large CAVERN ] A team of Navy diving experts | sommercial baile 1340:16-00; loed theres | Telephone, Kennecott Copper, Al-| Cora Eliza Benaway, 91, a former | buyers illegal price vantages in Albany, Ga., Sunday located the | 348 I> stock steer calves 24.00: buix fo | lied Chemical, Union Carbide, | resident, will be held at 2 p.m.| over small competitors. Pi & St ms body of a Navy lieutenant ‘right 32.0. med — food stockers ‘and feed: oe Pargpie tnterna: Sages pays Funeral cont The company has denied the | 1eces e HAM — 10 to 16 Lb. Average next” to a guide rope he had used | “Galvec- salsble Tots tioinal Paper, wes, Shar aad sii reese . in exploring an underwater cave am Compared fast Thursday, mare| Lower were United Air Lines,|tery. She died Saturday. charge. | M MS with an electronics technician of | $100 lower; “Snaa Gemand for iignt,|ceneral Electric, Consolidated} Surviving are a grandson, Don-| Clark Euipment was one of two | Pontiac. te geo ay SS, S, most geet Edison, Philco, Douglas Aircraft, | ald Depuy of Detroit, and several| companies charged by the FTC | The diving team searched all | prime 27.00-30.00, not many cbove 26.00 Boeing, Montgomery per ge eras nieces and nephews. yesterday with price discrimina- | 2 Ox. ¢€ night before they located the body — oe 13.00-18.00; | rich, Republic Steel ie. Mrs. William Lemp tion among customers. The other | Cc an of Lt. Murray Anderson, 28, of A cee nothing. Today's mar- | ham Steel. WATERFORD TOWNSHIP —| “#8 Lewis-Shepard Co., and its | Fort Valley, Ga., a veteran skin day receipts mainly rod ggg New York Stocks Service for Mrs. William (Eliza. | S@€8 Organization, Lewis-Shepard Hee ri = ‘hy = 7. rv A ’ * diver. A coroner's jury, according pans — pee Bey aod ; hig = toc beth) Lemp, 88, of 942 Navajo Rd. Products, Inc., both of Watertown, to authorities there, was expected | uncertain; no buying; elear-| Admire! ...... 26.1 Jacobs ....... 71] Chetolah Sh 4H be hel Mass. CURTIS to invecligaie Audareun'y deat ance incomplete; wastes shorn slaughter | Air Reduc... 36.7 Johns Man... 85 ah Shores, wi _held at ‘© investigate Tson s . lambe unevenly $1.00-2.00 lower; ex-/| Alleg Em.. 4 aes Jones & L ... = 1 p.m. Tuesday from Spaulding The Trade Commission said in ) “They found him right next to | retiesie ‘outlet’ shorn her cheep Allied Stra... ga6 wee?. ue? °"19¢3| and Son Funeral Home, Ferndale,| ft. complaint that the Clark Tender Brand the rope,” said Anderson's mate steady: sales good and choice 89-103 ib Abs ~~ Abe a Kimb Clk .... = with burial in Mt. Avon Ceme-| Equipment Co., used a system of - ; ; = Donald R. Gerue, 24, of Pontiac, | 19.00-20. o parasol samme sdf age mg Alem Am Peart hoses SS +++ 334| tery, Rochester. She died Satur-| discounts that allowed buyers to MARSHMALLOWS eas with the Macon, Ga., naval re- mostly good shorn, ger gg no I Miamed [rs oe eS oS a. r ‘- 13.2| 0ay at her home. receive price advantages of up , serve unit. to 12.00; few cull to choice shorn slaugh- ren To cs a 3 Lib Meret +. 194) Surviving are one son, Lee, at| t 5 per cent, or even more, . a icc Am M & Pdy 30 “ire 0) sra| home; one daughter, Mrs. Gladys| While other purchasers got 10 Ox. € Lb. ¢ Leck Gerue said be dived repeatedty CHICAGO LAVESTOCK am ems ae Lewes 20.7| Dinter of Detroit: a sister, Mrs.| S™aller discounts or none, B see became exhausted, Both men had | ncGI™ZAQO: gua, 12 AP) — sesane Am seating... 308 Keng, 8 om 4) Mine Johnson of Detroit; six) The FTC said that Lewis-Shep- a8 Lb. ¢ been exploring the famed Radium |se*reiy 4 higher on ail weights beter: | A= Smelt. 41.6 Mert, Pield’., 334 | Standchildren and nine great-| ard used another, different dis. Tr Socings aad pull ers ss aed sven. Sestenees “ — as be an ee ka kn Martin Gl .... 26.8 grandchildren, count system, which also resulted . they discovered eapreviioraageny choice 190-200. Tb. butchers. 17.6-16.38 Am Tob ...... 70 Ses‘ea pas. 9s Steven N. Roberts in giving large buyers illegal price Special Deal Pack largely 18.00 and above on choice No. i Anac Cop... 69.6 Monsan Ch . 135 Ic advantages over small competi- - L&S P surface. and 3s 190-310 Ib. 18-38-18. 50; eholce | Anac W & C.. 35.3 Mont Wart .. 773) AVON TOWNSHIP—Service for tors. The FTC gave Clark Equip- PILLSBURY np “I was coming out of the cave 340-770 Te. 16.73-17.30; moet 280- a0 “We. peace f e in Motor whedi : 308 meven Nese) Hroberts. | two: year ment 20 dave in which to fie an | ER Cre ead Une in.” ald | meet sows eneer Gem, Wiseioe: s | Auten O--- > Mreverolse +. 326 old son of Mr. and Mrs. Nelson) iswer and scheduled a hearing BROWNIE MIX APPLE BUTT Gerue. “I had gone down to re-/tew choice 300-328 Ib. 15 35-18-80; bulk | Atlas Par .... $66 Nat Bise ...., 404 %- Hoberts Jr., eee July 7 at Buchanan, Mich., before lease the guide line and was get- | $50-@00 Ib. sows 12.25-13.50; good clear- Avec its ooes A od ies R ae be held at 10:30 a.m. Tuesday at examiner Frank Slier . le TMB seus . vane a . ting ready to go home.” “Nasiable cattle 1,000; salable calves 300; | Balt.& Oh -... 48.7 Nat lead 1... 65.) the Dudley H. Moore Funeral Pk ¢ ¢€ Jar slaughter steers and heifers very scarce, pooch But eae =) was ed wees ie Home, with burial in White Chapel . se gs. ON LY Animals which reporduce by di- | say ‘strens: high choice and prime saat wt Se ea a] Memorial Cemetery. He died Collective Bargaining . Only * 28 Ox. vision of the body are, in effect, | Suits ‘sna commercia! bulls 1680-1600; | Boeing Air... S84 Nia M Pw. 333, Saturday. Election Ordered Here immortal. 0 few good heavy fat bulls 12.00; good mn No Am Av... a3 Surviving besides. his parents | some high commercial and good stee 8" ag : ndparents Mr. and Mrs.| Operations and maintenance em- I F Borden ...... 68.2 Nor Pac ..... 72 | are grandp: s pe IAI ; iega.aL fs: 8 fe gstlcce tinge geal netfery seid wen Nor sta Pe -- 164 Nelson J. Roberts, and Mr. and ployes at the Phillips Petroleum | — TREASURE CAKE SP EC ; rt 1 2.00 oenee G we 2 Tt 7 A ian a, s f sy . bee? wiv graghe Vly? sted ioeae [Brit Wg" By Sue oH... He (Mra. Knute Nelson of Auburn’ Co, bulk plant here will be given | a choice 1,025-1,140 Ib. steers 23.00-23.80; | Budd Co ..... 21.4 Otis Eley °”) g3.4 Heights, and two sisters, Karen an opportunity to decide whether ¢ z e/slic pone ae — broity a Burroughs... =? Owens Ii] G! 124 | and Sandra, at home. they wish to be represented by | P+] © $ = above: utility and Gomeat cows a1, i roe oe 6 Seon aw . oa i AFL Teamsters Local 28 \- t ‘dn Pac ...... : i . aoe ’ — | 2 2D | ‘ezrin sontere so.ge-se.ce: wtinty ana | oe es (314 Param Pict -. 42 Calumet-Hecla Bids The National Labor Relations TOWARD YOUR = | Carrier Cp.... 59 ty JC 12. 80 . Board in Washington today or- NEXT PURCHASE > 3 iz 7 . paonedieddy ae ae 4 wo eeene 26.8 to Buy Lumber Firm dered a collective bargaining wer OF SPRY bd 4 Grain Prices Con TH Pe... gt Foot Cue --. B tion at the plant. = -*- > Cert-teed .... 33.6 D «+. $23! CHICAGO ‘#—Calumet & Hecla, ; | 8IQ CHICAGO GRAIN Ches & Oh... 51.7 Philco mac __ Tie aenounced today it bes of Employes of the gas bulk plant, | = 3 LB CAN | e ne Se Ser nthe 143 Phil "Pet : “724 fered to uire the common stock | located at 2625, Orchard Lake Rd., | : | ° eet a, Se ee eras: Cee ie cocks Lower Oo arte me ne SEE EXCITING sees Fe eeaicwees rk Equip... 66 SZ MSENOE aesce j ay ° % creraces 1.00 Pure Ou... 37 union, a ing to a company | aay co ag Be Seer Lat | cima Mer 2t, Rette °Cs..: ta1| Goodman, Wis., in exchange for union, aco | T BALDWIN Dee iii: 208th Mepbeane | | Coen Cola... 1318 Rem Rand... 404 / 114.000 shares of stock in the Calu- REASURE CAKE | ORDINANCE NO. 1271 Cora im es Gel Gan oe i meet & Hecie Socupeny: RECIPE ON LABEL! | =e ee at comme wen one. aly ena: bars ber eee 2.30% Conum Po it, Rey Tod B..- 45.1) Calumet & Hecke. wei ged j Oy Known as the “Building Zone Ordi-| Dec “"..11.. 138% Jan |... 238) | CoM Pa pt 28) Rock pg... 268 | 200,000 acres of im sing ms | nanee. a wont “ss new Contracts Cont Can .... 76.8 Satewss ut: =. Keweenaw Peninsula ef Northern _ | Effective May 26, 1085 July 0) em dere 1s Gont On 11. 162 St Reg Pap... “1 Michigan, said completion of the | ae : aeat See a edna Ny oes ue | Bee SGN UT an ES [Sapper ns 38 Seoul MEE 3¢2 | Goodman Co. deal hinges upon an | LAWRENCE NEW PACK FRESH DAILY! as the “Building Zone Ordinance. Rye reat Bt! ..... 304 Sears Roeb... 83.2/ acceptance of the terms by indivi- epply here | The City of Pontiac Ordains: Curtiss Wr .. 204 Shell Otl.... $04) qual shareholders. | ) the Bi dng Zone “Ordinsnce is heresy bbw ap aera Dis cee _ 733 Sou Pac ve Bas The Goodman Co. operates a ewe aang aiey I ES MI LK | ag... 37.3 Sou Pac...... : ‘o. s i : emangdl to provide that the land in | 4 tociated Proce) Conmed OY TM Doug Aire <.. 063 Sou R w..2. “$2 sawmill, a veneer mill and a wood belles I the a ee vd forth, 20 18 60 | Dew Chem ... 81.4 ooerts ae , tlsewhere— be classified as a end chen Indust Rails Util Stocks Du Pont. ....183.7 ~ opt 391| conversion plant at Goodman and : tioa ‘of ‘Late 128 vo 130 bots nel iFing | PrOT, GAY ----- 382 HS 0 12S Base Ale Ls $4 Be Oana. 84 owns 70,000 acres of timberland in Quick, friendly | —=— = Fane gine pened | Month ago .... 333.8 136.1 72.7 166.0/ RI Auto L''. 406 Su 'Nd.aiLe| Northern Wisconsin. service always. Tall 20 foot alley the westerl Year ago ...... 1692 91.0 69.9 1242/KI & Mus In 3.7 o + AM, as being peralie! to and. 933 248 137.6 12.8 166.8! Emer 14 (Ste Of Oh... 66.7 Highest lean feet west of the westerly 7 188 low. sc M94 1149 O12 1988| Bnd Jon cl) ap Stevens JP... 24.7 . No. 300 of Baldwin avenue in Civie Improve-| i954 high .|:... 311.8 133.0 68.3 185.3| Erie Llane Stew War... 211 Hospital Treats Man velwes. . . Pey- | . ge nay gg, Se mtg a neng ce og sees 1039 TTB 4 108.0 Ex-Coll-o .... 44 Studer Ruck -. 218 ments te fir! Can catiew ing sone map in the above arve to Com: Peon? 1 HF suther Pap... 474| Struck by Hit-Run Car an mereial No, 1 is mede pursuant to the ten oO tee Pirestone |... $1.1 1... B12 your budget) recommendation of the Pian Com- | pigures after decimal points are eigntns Frock Tre 12. 42.6 dela fad 3) Edwin E. Lloyd, 2, of 820% end pey days. Come eppointed to make a final report upos Baldwin wee TPG Goh Bee “IIE dea Tex @ Gul... 40 | Baldwin Ave., struck by a hit-run | In or phone new! vious ta the pubite hearing to. be | Cry uiMeae +++: 320 26) Gen Pas -°.. 43 Time R Beat $4! auto Saturday night. according to Van Camp TREESWEET a. Gite Seen ag ae: GE BE Re Bi) Rone Pate wae coed AM yp GRAPEFRUIT t take ane ct ee “g og ee ee Ry it $28 Twent Cc Pox 29 | Pontiac General Hospital for 500 That net lose than fitters Wayne ge rew*....,.... 13. 18] Gen Tel noc. sha UBderwd -. 344! bruises and released. TO ~~“ of the publle hearing op. the. fine! sale bid ‘snd ahve, Gillette "ccc, ona OB, Pac-s- 1684) Patrolman Robert Emery quoted . ON Your | ane Me o . Unit Air Lin. . 431 ; . ; fry m dik. | be | ‘ 1 Br ene. 82 Airc.... 68.2 the victim as saying he was hit a ‘ LARGE . {ation ‘in’ this city shat such pubic sic | Eliminates Stooping Goodyear 1....888 gated,CR-- gt | by one of two racing cars at W. SIGNATURE : C GIANT a Ce, ordinance shall take to Pick Strawberries Grah Paige ... 2.1 08 Lines... 22.1) Kennett Rd. and Hollywood Dr. No 24 ettect ten (10) days from and the St Fe Pos: $85 US Rub... 47 He described the auto as a 1941, AUTOMOBILE ° € date of its ge by the City Com-| OMAHA Eliandon Rose- or pone oath |: i Se two-door black Ford which sped CAN Pontiac, — ** boue ! = “an Sass Siz, Sg, | bard thea strawheri but did't | in Gh’ 3 HB Gia. MG south on Holywood after striking FURNITURE || "| : CAN enjoy bending over to pick them. | Helland F .... Van Raai.... 37 , according to Police w Fe on er dW. Domaungon, | He dug trenches in his patch. By| Hocker mi "<.. 33 WR, BP: 1, | said the other auto racing with the | Mayor. eve 14 101.6. r Chevrolet. ADA R. BV. walking in the trenches he could tn **° Were. Fie Ford was a STATE FINANCE - a @ a q we q « may Te, "fans | Dick the berries without stooping. Ray «. $4 West El... 904 ae This was one of the facts on the ors U0 White Mot. 773, Tusks of a large African bull COMPA PUBLIC. GALE Ife of Rosebard which came to PB recs.” $4 | conan often will weigh 98 4 WR Fentine Stat * Bide. Iii . . & m= 4! A Gale to be held 1:90 p.m. light, when the 74-year-old hermit |i Sy <<: 4 sie & Tow... 37.6) pounds tach. One tusk is known & J ii Mh gk de 'W. Woverd Stee Pes” | wag found critically ill in the cave Int ap 188 ouns 6 &/W 284 to weigh 235 pounds and is eight t | Tei 36.9 sh @ T 737 nae May 14, 14, 1005 | Where he id Gem ‘Coal ah death Rea...us8 \inches thick, 11 feet long, s ; . ‘ * f Xi / i 4 # ,. m . 4 eee: