The Weather ' Tuesday: Cloudy, Cool Details page two 112th YEAR : * * * & & PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, MONDAY, MAY 3, 195482 PAGES. = if Clardy Hearings Start in Detroit; 89 Summoned Committee Attempting, to Find Reds in Labor, | Education DETROIT (AP) —A World War II defense project scientist refused to tell a House un-Ameri- ean activities subcommit- tee today whether he is or ever was a Communist. The witness was Dr. Ger- | ald Harrison, 37, now an assistant mathematics professor al Wayne Uni- versity in Detroit. DETROIT (AP) — Rep. Kit Clardy (R-Mich) opened hearings today into reported Communist infiltration into education and labor in Michigan. | oe 8 ited : Sg i 4“ ene AP Wirepheote ATLANTIC CITY BOUND — Donna Lee Johnsen | resent Oregon in the national contest at Atlantic to the Wisconsin Senator's Clardy, chairman of the (center) 19-year-old college freshman squeals with |City in June. Also! among the ten finalists were McCarthy Plans | to Take 3 Days to Quiz Stevens Senator Rejects idea to Speed Up Hearings | by Narrowing Issues |Sen. Joseph R. McCarthy ‘said today it “will take at) least three days” for him ‘to complete his cross-examina- | tion of Army Secretary Robert T. Stevens and in- \dicated disagreement with | attempts to speed up hear- | ings on.his dispute with the Pentagon. McCarthy's announce- ment came at the outset of the eighth day of the in- tquiry, after Armsy speci ‘counsel Joseph N. Welc ‘again proposed that the issue be narrowed, in effect, testimony pitted against House Un-American Activi- delight at’Portland, Ore., as she wins title of Miss | Eunice Peckenpaugh (left) and Marilyn Craghead | that of Stevens. ties subcommittee, said he Oregon Press Photographer of 1954. She will rep- | (right). | Lad Worth Watching expected to call between 8 :) Children Die as House Burns day. Clardy said more — = Pg Sixth Youth Escapes’ the first witnesses wou cators. , He said, however, one ‘pretty important’’ witness baad be called eld 'His Driving Was Perfec Until He Met That Tree BY WILMA GREENWAY | Welch, asked by Chairman Karl E. Mundt (R-SD), to tell how many | witnesses he planned to call. re- peated his suggestion that McCar- | thy take the stand when Stevens completes his testimony The army counsel declared that | “minor characters’ in the dispute | could be disposed of very quickly | 'if that were done. McCarthy, asked to enumerate WASHINGTON (INS) —) eee Es Sed ie od iF ! THREE FROM MICHIGAN—Rep. Alvin Bentley poses in Wash- ington with a trio of queens from his home state of Michigan. The giris, are AP Wirephete ‘Indo ac. Peale Talk Set Up | SEEN Photogs Pick College Girl Queens Capitol Visitors Soviet to Invite Rebel Vietminh to Attend Parley Nine Parties to Take Part in Conference to End Bloody War GENEVA (AP) — East and West reached virtual agreement today on the | setting up of a peace con- pba is to end the bloody tighfin ~ > Indochina. viet Union agreed, French sources said, to a Western proposal that rep- resentatives of the Commu- nist-led Vietminh be invited to the conference by the | Soviet Union instead of Communist China. The Western Big Three foreign ministers and Foreign Minister Nguyen Quoe Dinh of Viet Nam formally agreed to admit Vietminh representatives with the under- | standing that this would not imply | recognition of the Vietminh regime as a state. | The Russians and the West al- ready had agreed that nine parties would attend the confer- ence—the Big Four, the Chinese | Reds, the Vietminh and the three | Associated States of Indochina, | The Revioe ast oe won The Russians and the West al- ready had agreed that nine parties |would attend the conference—the Big Four, the Chinese Reds, the Vietminh and the three Associated t Congressman, commenting on Barry Joe Morey, 2-year-old son of a Bloomfield Town-| %* Wimesses to be called in his 144 1 right, are Everit Meloche, Cherry Queen; Marcelline Bender thre oa ‘nited . a behalf and that of his chief coun- ; ‘States of Indochina,” V : Sockars, oo awe | Fram Flaming Building ship fireman, is losing no time following in his father’s set, Ro} M. Cohn, ane be stat - Bean oo — Virginia Hamilton, Dairy Queen. — —_—— “pio and Laos. Nam trouble ts stirred up before «| With Minor Injuries wheeltreads. director, Francis Smoothing out of the issue of hearing.” He said he thought the | WILLIAMSPORT, Pa. w—Five The youngster took off on a solo run in the family car | eee depreded o = many | ‘Viti status came >> ——Sai_some of whese members | seeping children died in a fire ——__—-_——--iate Saturday. , | break ee . have been subpeenard, would be Chief of these, he said, is what some of the Western one of the chief benefactors of | ‘P#t hit their home early today His feet planted on the develope from Stevens’ testimen |foreign ministers began heading the investigation. ins dere — of pride “i wo Babies Die. |driver’s seat and both under McCarthy's pa pewienres-4 oe aie avin a fieke The first two witnesses, Clardy burns of the back, right arm |hands clutching the wheel, ton. The seater a ae a Oma nes Ip | oma Walter Bedelf Smith took over np Young Barry stered Une CA! sana prae, crest serait eA Si elementary shoot, and Dr. Gerald| . N@! SR bers discovered te as ome ums beck Mr. Stevens, and I estimate that it | tin uaaen 2 ary of State Harrison, a faculty member and| mes. Firemen, apon their ar- — re his home at 1155 win take me at least three days OKLAHOMA CITY (AP)—Damage estimates range = ee Watoaiee by physicist’ at. Waywe University. rival, removed the dead children | umphrey St., down the to complete my questioning of up to a million dollars today in the wake of tornadoes ine? i. men cen deena Gardy said the subcommittee He ipmneettengaa pap oon Mother, Others Unable aes aa ee " and floods which hit Oklahoma over the weekend, taking Mario Scelba for a talk on the would conduct hearings in Detroit, them to Rescue Payne Tots 3: : The exchange was touched off four lives and injuring at least 64. stalemated army treaty Lansing and Bjint, But, he pointed | Previdence Hospital failed. | ditch, over a culvert, ACrOSS yy sen. Everett M. Dirksen and Raly’s wrangle with Yugo- out, sessions will be The hospital said the child vic.| Due to Dense Smoke a neighbor's lawn, and (Rm), who, apparently reflect. | Latest reports showed twisters were seen at or struck, | sovia ever Trem, Thursday while the committee tims, ages 2 to 11, suffered burns Twe babies came to a stop when @ tree, ing the views of the administra- 29 communities. A fifth death was indirectly caused by australian Foreign Minister members go back to Washington | but probably suffocated. The of- © babies were burned to death refused to give ground. tion leaders, noted that mem- . i weather. Richard G. Casey also left for to vote'on the St. Lawrence Sea- | ficial cause of death was not im- Saturday night wnen fames raced, Mrs. Albert Frericks. of 1580) bers of the investigating subéom- Bill Sh , 30, d home today, and other foreign way Bill. mediately determined. through their garage home here. | Rockwell St., found the tot standing | mittee are forced to neglect y earier, QNG | ninisters were expected to turn The committer hac issued 89 + Dead were Mary Ann, 11; Eliza-| Dead are Sherry Payne, 1, and “Chind the wheel of the car, look-| “many other important duties.” len en U na 84-year-old g rqnd- | their conference duties over to subpoenas, but has not publicly beth Jean, 10; Bernard James Jr.. her brother. Zachary, 2. ‘ ing “sober, but determined,” when with stevens on the stand. Me- other. Mrs. Annie Rubot- | deputies in the next week or two. disclosed names of the recipients. Ege ——” 6. and Dennis Pontiac firemen found their she ig out at the a the Carthy and Cohn were expected . ~~ y, | Maj. Gen. Kirke B. Lawton, — | mandant at Fort Monmouth, N Cohn, taking over the rede tion, asked Stevens to produce a Adams for McCarthy to issue, in| | which the senator would have an- nounced he was calling off the siesde | | Monmouth probe Stevens replied he knew nothing of any such statement, Cohn then asked: “Did you ever say that you were only awaiting Senator McCarthy's ap- | proval before dismissing General - Lawton from his command at Fert Monmouth?” | “No,"' said Stevens, ‘‘I don't re- call that I did.” The McCarthy-Cohn side charges ; (Continued on eee aes Fare & 2, Col. 3) Report ort Cabbie Hit by Picket ister | Proclaim Clean- Up Week | Man Pleads Innocent | to Assault Charge in Labor Dispute Attempts to organize Pontiac Cab Co. by Teamsters Local 614, AFL, exploded into violence Sat- urday night with the reported slugging of one of the company's drivers. Robert Walton, of 30 Hovey St., who was charged with assault and battery, pleaded iinocent this morning before Municipal Judge Maurice E. Finnegan. Walton, whe was released on $100 bend, is scheduled to appear for-trial May 6. The complainant, Willie E. Mills, 4, of 298 S. East Blvd, said Wal- ton, a picket, knocked off his glasses and struck him in the face while h@ was parked at the cab stand at Saginaw and Pike Sts. Daniel J. Keating, business agent for the local, demanded Walton's | immediate release on bond, after | his arrest Saturday night, but, Finnegan refused on grounds that more violence could result in riot- ing at the cab stand. the picketing, said the situation was tense, and he decided Walton's a Judge Finnegan, who narodieall| Sermon release might cause rioting. lw Rebels Halt 3rd Heavy In Tons of Supplies HANOT, Indochina ®—The Com- ~~ led Vietminh halted their | third massive infantry assault on Dien Bien Phu last night. The | breather for the weary and bat- tered French Union defenders ex- ‘tended into today. A terse French high command ‘communique early today said the night at the besieged northwest Indochina fortress was ‘calm,"’ with only ‘‘light harassments'’ of key French positions by rebel ar- tillery and mortars. The French took immediate | ee of the slack in the fighting te parachute tons of ammunition and supplies into the beleaguered fortress. The command said that the Viet- minh, after suffering ‘extremely heavy losses"’ in smashing through three strongpoints of the fortress, apparently had taken time out to regroup. In fierce hand-to-hand fighting. | the French had turned back the j rebels who had overrun and oc- cupied a part of the southern strongpoint ‘‘Isabelle."’ But in the main defense com- plex# the position of the French remained critical. Their north- by massive Vietminh infantry charges. The narrow dropping zone for | the fortress, its lifeline with planes | southwest Oklahoma. The twister caught up with the) copy of a statement prepared by| Attack and French Fly | truck. demolished it and Frankie La Fallier, 21, of Miami, Okla., Pocasset, drowned in flash floods. | A Tulsa woman died of a heart attack as she raced to a neigh- bor’s storm cellar sirens began to blew, warning a | both occupants. | tornade was overhead. She was | | Mrs. Ethel Olive Bowman, 57. | The state headquarters of the | Salvation Army, which sent rescue crews into the storm areas, esti- mated property damage at over a million dollars. The Washita River, which flood- | /ed Friday after a 10';-inch down- | | pour in Roger Mills County, flood- ‘ed again yesterday. The muddy) river poured into the lowlands for 10 miles northeast of Cordell in | Washita County. Fog Disrupts Air Traffic | uw — Heavy fog) NEW YORK blanketed the city early today and disrupted air traffic at LaGuardiz | ond _Idewild Airports. and Shirley Jester, 13, of | when the | | tried to outrun a tornado in here two more weeks, a truck near Grandfield in | A French announcement said | that agreement on the participa- tion of the Vietminh representa- killed tives in the Indochina pariey was reached this morning at a meet- | ing of Dinh with Smith, Brit- ish Foreign Secretary Eden and French Minnister Bidauit. The Viet Nam foreign minister | formally stated his government's | readiness to meet with representa- tives of the Vietminh regime, now | waging bitter war against French | Union troops in Viet Nam. The Soviet agreement to invite the Vietmihh representatives was given after Ambassador Jean | Chauvel of France had handed, So- | viet Deputy Foreign Minister | Andrei Gromyko a note proposing | this procedure. Earlier, the Soviet | Union had suggested that Red China invite the Vietminh rep- resentatives. What Do Purses Cost? DETROIT # — A gunman held up a group of four women and took their purses shortly before last midnight, but they had the last laugh. Their purses con- tained a grand total of 99 cents, Essential to Peace Control of A and H-Bomb Is a ‘Must, Says Baruch NEW YORK (INS)—Bernard M, Baruch has declared ‘that if there is to be peace the United Statés and Russia | must come to some disarmament agreement on the ‘atomic and hydrogen bomb. Merely to “outlaw” atomic weapons is not enough, the dropping ammunition and war ma- famous “elder statesman” asserted in an address before teriel, w continuing pressure. In Today's Press » 2 eaee WaMB. 000 ccc -cccccccessacess ] * % “ “ . @ = tt, Tt Ld Want Ads eeereere still functioning despite “the enemy's general attacks and| the School of Business of Public Administration of City | College of New York. No nation, Baruch said, | can have effective insur-| ance against atomic de-| struction unless there is “a |sure system” of ne ag ainst the “oo la ic energy to ailing | uses. | The former chief American rep- | resentative in the United Nations | Atomic Energy Commission con- | tended that neither the U, S. nor | other nations dare accept less than | “g truly effective, enforceable sys- htem on international inspection and | control.” — eS a . 2 x ) gn... ; aa resent 1954-55 Budget Tonight, Discuss It Later BIRMINGHAM — The 1954-55 | | eel is expected to be decided i road, with the question separating island A hearing will be held on the proposed off-street parking classi- fication for commercial parking adjacent to residential districts. 330 Youngsters Get Shots Today Total of 1,985 Pontiac Children Signed Up for Polio Tests Field testing of the new Salk polio vaccine moved into Pontiac on a larger scale today with some 330 children in five city schools arrangements behind | on Woodward trom Oakland | recreational director; Edwin F. Kirbert, YMCA secretary; and Frank J. DeSantis, of Children’s Summer Day Direct Experience Tours. * . = Father and Sen night is on the agenda for tomorrow's Kiwanis Club meeting, to start with din- mer at 6:30 p. m. at the Com- munity House. This will be an interclub meeting with Ferndale’ Kiwanians. 7 7 ~ Annual meeting for the Woman's Club to be held at the First Bap- tist Church tomorrow, will begin with a business meeting at 11 a. m. This will be followed by a 1 p. m. luncheon, which will include a onl | fashion show presented by a local store. Mrs. William W. Merrill is | chairman. . . . | Abigail Ross Circle of the Wom |en’s Assn. at Kirk in the Hills | Church will meet for a 12:30 p. m. Exchange Club members will see sound films of the Stanley Cup hockey play-offs at tomorrow's noon luncheon meeting at the Com- munity House. Captain Ted Lind- say of the champion Red Wings and Fred Huber, publicity director, will show the films, . . Girls World Friendship at First Methodist Church will combine election of officers with a white elephant sale in a meeting at 7:30 tonight at the home of Mary Ellen Groves, Westchester Way. . 7 * Another new Boy Scout Troop has arrived in the Birmingham area. B29, |Our Lady Queen of 5 a RT Creme: s %. Pentiane Press Phete of 1155 Humphrey DAREDEVIL DRIVER—Barry Joe Morey, 2, ° pst. demonstrates just how he handied the wheel when he took the family car for a solo run Saturday. The tot started the motor himself and steered safely around a curve, But came to an abrupt stop when | he hit a tree at a neighboring house. He is the son of Maurice Morey, |"4@W, @ printer, lost his life early 8. Bloomfield Township fireman. Pontiac Deaths Mrs. Annie V. Lloyd Mrs. Annie V. Lioyd, 88, of 430 S$ Saginaw St. died at St. Joseph | Driving lot Does OK ‘Until He Meets Tree (Continued From Page One) Mercy Hospital Friday after a/| three-day illness She was born in Matthewstown., Md. on Oct, 30, 1865, and came here 11 months ago from Baiti- more, Surviving are a son, Richard Piney of Pontiac, and a brother, Harry Hughes: Funeral will be Tuesday at 2 any notice. leased pent-up indignation: | Church, with burial in Oak Hill | Cemetery. The Rev. Richard Dixon Church has received its charter, | | and will be guided by Scoutmaster | | William Brooks. His assistant is Charles Hartner. . a . Mrs. Simeon FE. Andrews Service tor Mrs. Simeon E. (Flora H.) Andrews, 64, of 648 Vinewood was today at the Marley Bailey Funeral Heme, with entomb- ment in Woodlawn Mausoleum, Detroit. She died Saturday after a. long illness. Survivors besides her husband (include a son, Edward A. of Bir- week only 1,851 youngsters had signed up. lif i i tie] : F i second shots today. schools which sent chil- 2 mingham; a sister, Mrs. George ville. He died Saturday after a long illness. He is survived by three daugh- ters, Mrs. Jessie Oetjens, Mrs: Har- old Oliver and Mrs. Ernestine dren to clinics today were Central. Crofoot, Bailey, Emerson and) and Webster | School youngsters will get their | first shots : Ww will find children of ‘Emmanuel Christian, Whittier, Willis, Wilson, St. Fred- erick and St. Michael Schools in clinics. Bagiey, Longfellow and Wis- Children of McConnell, St. Trin- ity Lutheran, Baldwin and Seventh Day Adventist Schools had their first injections last week. Woman Given Probation on Grand Larceny Count A 32-year-old Pontiac domestic was placed on two years proba- tion today by Circuit Judge Frank L. Doty for stealing a $450 peari necklace from the home of her em-| ployer at 1029 Lake Park, Birm- ingham, April 13. Mrs. LaVell Mow of 575 Meadow St., pleaded guilty to grand lar- ceny April 26 but claimed she put the necklace in her pocket while »cleaning and forgot to return it. The Weather PONTIAC AND VICINITY—Cleedy and eee! tonight. Lew 4 te # Twesday eset cleudy and cool. High 50 te M4 Nerthwest te west winds I! te 18 miles ae heer. Teday in Pontise Lowest temperature preceding 8 am At 8 am: Direction: Wes Sun sets Monday at 7.34 pm Sun rises Tuesday at 5 4 am Moon sets Monday at 8 12 pm Moon rises ay ot 632 am Wind velocity 15 mph t Downtown Tempersteres Se Sener seecces 42 Sunday in “Pentiae (As recorded downtown) Highest temperature. : ones temperature .... . -. saeiess 50 sacs OO8 4 an inch of rain - . temperature................ 42 Mean temperatrue........ 60.5 Weather—Cioudy, 1-of an mech of réin | Smith, all of Birmingham; a broth- Lo | tiness. »| Besides her husband. she is sur- er, eight grandchildren and five great-grandchildren. . . . Mrs. Frank C. Hofer Service for Mrs. Frank C (An- | will be at 11 a. m. tomorrow at | Bell Chapel of the William R. Ham- | fiton Co.,. with burial in White| | day evening. \aed Memorial Cemetery. She | died Saturday after a prolonged | A registered nurse, Mrs. Hofer |had been floor supervisor at. St. | Joseph Mercy Hospital, Pontiac, | for five years prior to her illness. | Besides her husband, she is sur- |vived by a daughter, Mrs. John | Kling of New York City; a son, | Edward J. of Detroit; one sister, | one brother and two grandchildren. | * . * Mrs. Fenton R. Mathews Service for Mrs. Fenton R. | (Mary Jayne) Mathews, wife of a local realtor and antique dealer. | will be at 2:30 p.m. Tuesday at | Bell Chapel of the William R. Ham- ‘ilton Co., with burial in White | Chapel Memorial Cemetery. | Mrs. Mathews died Saturday at her residence, 5900 N. Adams. | A member of the First Church |of Christ Scientist here and the | Mother Church in Boston, Mrs. | Mathews had attended De Pauw | University and the University of | Illinois. | vived by a son, John F. | . s Ld ' Mrs. Kresten Thomsen | Service for Mrs, Kresten (Ellen 'C.) Thomsen, 65, of 28821 Tele- | graph Rd. will be at 3:30 p. m. | Wednesday at the Manley Bailey Funeral Home, with burial in White | Chapel Memorial Cemetery. She died Saturday. Her husband is her sole sur- vivor. Man Sent to Prison ‘Huron Street Store p.m. from the Trinity Baptist “The child has me stumped,” of the Trinity Baptist Church will officiate. —_—— Shari, Zachary L. Payne. Shari Chavella Payne. 1. and| been able to keep track of him Zachary Leroy Payne, 2, children! since. Arthur Josephi ant; ... Hid of a Cains S. ce| “Now, at two years he's driving killed in a fire Saturday. | the family car. What next?” Shari was born here on April 17, | But Maurice Morey, 1953; Zachary was born here on Jan, 7, 1952 hg afer Pare The parents the only survi- | e just hoisted Barry Joe higher vors “re = ;on his shoulder and looked proud Funeral will be Wednesday at 2) @% punch. p-m, from the Trinity Baptist | 7 Church. Burial will be in Oak Hill M C b Bo b Cemetery with the Rev. Richard | ust ur m S, Dixon of the Trinity Baptist Church | ; cine of zachary's toty | MSISES Statesman viewed after 8:30 this evening, | (Continued From Page One) : Ss ev - *r las atomic weapons does not alter the ° ° fundamenta] problem. Mrs. Violet Williams “Ne. dees tan. baits dative Funeral service was held today | surance against atomic destruc- from the Sacred Heart Church for | tion unless there is a sure system Mrs. Violet Williams, of 2415 Wood- | &f control against the diversion ale St. Burial was in Mt. Hope | of atomic energy to military uses. Cemetery with the Rev. Father | ‘The H-bomb and the possible F.7T. Stack of the Sacred Heart | development of the cobalt bomb Church, Auburn Heights, officiat- oes shriek this truth all the loud- ing. Rosary service was held Sun- B bh said he hes met given up hope that a way can be Mrs. Williams died Saturday aft- . y found to meet the problem of er an illness of four years. May Need Three Days fo Question Stevens (Continued From Page One) earthquake that Stevens, angered by Lawton's| the effects of man’s own stupidi- “cooperation” with the Senate group, wanted to fire Lawton but feared to do so lest McCarthy make a ‘‘public issue” of it. Cohn persisted: “Did not Mr. | Adams, at your direction, press Senator McCarthy for six weeks -.-to give his approval of Law- ton’s dismissal?” Stevens replied: ‘‘I don't know | atomic control. Baruch told his audience some persons would disregard the nature of atomic energy in the hopes of getting so-called ‘‘agreement”’ with the Soviets. But, Baruch pointed out, no agreement which ignores the na- ture of nuclear energy can prove anything but “‘a catastrophic de- whether that is a fact or not.” | lusion.” He added that if the need- McCarthy later opened a series | ed controls are unacceptable to of questions about Pvt. G. David | @¥ nation that does not mean Schine by asking Stevens about a|¢ Should accept less than what newspaper story which said that | 'S needed. Schine was “eating filet mignon “Either we bring nuclear ener- and drinking champagne at the | gy under control or we cannot,” Stork Club in New York when he| Baruch declared. “If we cannot, should have been peeling potatoes! why deceive ourselves by ‘agree- at Fort Dix.” ments’ which have no meaning?” e . Eisenhower's proposal Wrigley’s Will Close for an international atomic pool, according to Baruch, will be a | worthy endeavor if it succeeds in widening Due to error, Saturday's edition of the Pontiac Press stated that} ‘Still Wrigley’s new supermarket in the Avenue, Pontiac. It is the Wrigley market at 125 W. Huron St. which will be closed. The Auburn Avenue store contin- ues in operation. for Breakin Attempt William Dyson, 27, was sentenced | to 15 to 30 years in prison today | Migheet ond Lowest perstures This by Circuit Judge Frank L. Doty a tm 160 ” em 1980 Fe ad enabbing George Brooks, eee ', Detroit, lowing a party Aipene te ta Kaneee crnn'eo 1 | if Royal Oak Township Feb. 5. Bettie crete $8 3 msing 66-42} - Dyson, of 20516 Kentucky, De- ms 68h 3 32| ‘Toit, pleaded guilty to second de- Cadiliae oe 3s $$ 3S | gree murder April 19. He admitted Ginemastt 42 88 New Oreans o2 97 |e Stabbed Brooks after a party oe th Sea «$83 at, 10151. Alton Ct. HB Brose is Capt. John Skidmore of Royal : Township police said Dyson doctors of os % | turned himself in after the knifing. - ALUMINUM BOATS ‘SLIGHTLY DAMAGED 10% Discount | OPEN SUNDAYS 9 to 5 630 Oakland Avenue __THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, MAY Stafe Accidents Take 19 Lives Traffic Is Cause of 14 Deaths, Three Drown, 2 Are Burned By the Associated Press May’s first weekend claimed 19 lives in Michigan accidents. Traffic mishaps were responsible for 14 deaths and drowning took three lives. Two children burned | to death. | | A car-truck collision 25 miles southeast of Battie Creek killed | three and made orphans of two | injured children Sunday. The scene was the western outskirts of Bur- The Husejnow’s children, Henry, 8, and Karen; 2, were injured and * | reported in fair condition today at 3, 1954 z i | } Ponting Press Phote COMING UP — A 19,000-paund bulldozer, which caused one man's death by drowning Thursday when it collapsed a section of beach on | Harris Lake and plunged into 40 feet of water, breaks water ,in the | first of two attempts to hau! it out Saturday. Three wreckers from an Oak Park towing service and six “frogmen” from the Michigan | Muck-Combers Club worked for six hours to pull the machine from | the lake where Vernon Likens, 23, of Commerce Township drowned | { Killed, 4 Hurt in Auto Crash Saginaw Man, 50, Dies After Head-on Collision Sunday A Saginaw man was killed and four persons injured garly Sunday in a _— collision in Waterford Tow: : Lester Colpean, 50, of 1209 Court St., Saginaw, was dead upon ar- rival at Pontiac General Hospital. He was a passenger in a car driven by his wife, Mae, in fair condition with a wrist fracture and cuts. According te Waterford Town- ship Patrelmen Charies Whitleck and William Stokes, the Colpean auto was on the wrong side of the highway when it collided with another car driven by Mrs. Shir- ley Young, 27, of 6983 Terrell, Drayton Plains, at the iater- section of Williams Lake, Rowley and Lansdowne Rds. Mrs. Young is reported jn fair condition with severe-chest injur- Leila Hospital in Battle’ Creek. Mrs. Jlinski’s husband, the Rev. John L. Jlinski, a Greek orthodox Thursday. The bulldozer slipped out of sight in 6 feet of water shortly after this picture was snapped. A second attempt was successful. Ss ies, a fractured jaw and a possible spinal injury. priest, was injured seriously. | dad's laps during family dives | apparently were well-learned, be- vliet, was killed Sunday morning cause the 25-month-old tot nego-| when his car ran off a road and tiated a 4S-degree turn between the | hit a tree garage and the house without | Watervliet. scraping a fender or attracting | Lenwood Stowe, 40. of Mason, Asked what she thought of her | a road near his home. , son's adventure, Mrs. Morey re- | @ few | sunday on US. 31. | filled excavation where he had = wading. |}ton, Ohio, wag killed Saturday in | ; Lester H. Coleman, 53, of Sagi- Sunday when a car driven by his | wife, May, collided with another |in Waterford Township of Oakland |County. Mrs. Coleman was not | seriously hurt. Five persons in the | other car were hurt. Robert P. Craft, 59, of Detroit, was killed in a two-car collision im Detroit Sunday. William Jordan, 37, By JOE HAAS As we celebrate Michigain Week | that began Sunday, it is hoped that local residents will do everything possible to boost their state. Surely it has plenty of things to boost. No county among the state's 8&3 |has more to add to Michigan's fame in this respect than our own Oakland County. Perhaps its own residents have been too modest in extolling its many attractions. | Arnold Overway, 37, of Holland,| In thie connection, it has been Was ied and two f com- . |" Panions were injured ay Ae car a a a |crashed into a barricaded road land County Week"’ at the same time. In our conversation, letters and otherwise it Is an excellent of Water- four miles north of | Was struck and killed by a car on Leren Shumard, 13, of Jackson, drowned Saturday on a Boy Scout outing at a small iake 11 | time to call attention to what miles southeast of Jackson. | we have to ofier. Deo J. Mann, of Midland,| Second only to Wayne among the drowned Sunday when he fei! from | state's 8&3 counties, in population, a boat he was rowing on Wixom industry, assessed valuation, and | Lake at Edenville |in many Other respects, Oakland Donald Hough, 7, of Muskegon. | also is first in several ways. was struck and killed by a panel! - we top the entire state in the truck in Muskegon Saturday. | umber of state parks and other | Arthur Ehrlich, 7, of Grand Rap- | public recreational areas. No other ids, drowned Saturday in a water- county leads us in the current | percentage of gain in population. Mrs. Beverly Horner, 38, of Day- . a two-car collision in Grandville. Raymond Cook Jr., 4, of near Kalamazoo, was struck and its position as one of Michigan's killed Friday night om U.S. 131 | jeading agricultural counties, eee a EO | ies is 15 le, 0 viene, 25 townships, and several unincor- Dorothy Louise Manke, 16 ted communities, each with a Hi pora population that far exceeds many night in Parma by ‘of its cities, Oakland County of- at v Haughey, 38, Allen Park, i Saturday when his car i FELLER EL alt b | to trying to break into a grocery SLAYBAUGH’S Suggests Boost tor Couhty to Go With Boast for State &=°24.": , liked it so well that they were .| ciate than do the home folks. Conrad Feliks, 26, of 19345 Der- j; by, Detroit, is in fair condition with a dislocated hip and chest pierce. His: wife, Barbara, 23, uffered rib and thumb fractures, The Feliks, and Gere Mager, 71, counted several times. of 989 Oakland Ave., were pas- sengers with Mrs. Young. Mager Oakland County's school ‘system | was treated for minor bruises. is one of the best in the nation. It | fom in new baicngs ora DEtTOiter to Speak on Housing Problem $30,000,000 in new buildings and) Mrs. Beulah Whitby, Detroit edu- equipment in the last few years. | cator and social worker, will speak New buildings with a total value of | over $10,000,000 now are under con- on ‘The Problem of Housing’’ Fri- day at the annual Urban League struction. Numbered among the salem Guild dinner meeting. The event is scheduled to get other substantial attractions for | the promotion of better living are | its 200 churches, 24 state approved | under way at 6:30 p.m. in Highland summer camps, the largest num- | Manor ber of any county in Michigan; | A graduate of Oberlin College | over 100 service clubs with a total | and holding degrees from Univer- membership of over 5,000, and fully | sity of Michigan and New York as many other civic organizations. | School of Social Service, Mrs. Yes, when we're boosting Whitby served as executive secre- Michigan, let’s give a strong |tary of emergency welfare and boost for our own county which evacuation service of the Office of is one of the prime factors that Civil Defense during World War II. make Michigan a fine state. ee Also, let's do a little boosting Hot Jewelry among our own neighbors. The | LANDER, Wyo (UP) — Two writer has found that it often is | Fremont County women got burned own residents comprehend the size | said the earrings they wore con- of the figures that make it what | tained radioactive material and Outsiders sometimes better appre-| caused rash and burns on their ‘ear lébes. — ial he WONDERLAND SHOP| | WELCOMES ok ta OTE aie. * the best on the ‘block’ Ton OS haat, Sex cotton knit basques with matching socks POLO SHIRTS ... . in finest cotton knits, crew str in fast colors. Sizes 2 to 6x... 00... eee $7.39 PLAY SHORTS ... in sturdy, washable gobardine. Well tailored. Choice of blue or brown, weue 5 ~" Matching Anklets... crew styles............ 59 NONDERLANDe Tel-Huron Center FREE CONVENIENT PARKING difficult to. make Oakland County's | wearing “‘hot jewelry.” Doctors : " , THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, MAY 3, 1954 , E OVER PAGES... > ing = of lieittandy pa would at the Basset family for several ieee en FCC to Ins t i wie is oe Neighborhood Feud | [years “Because they tre Truck’s Smashed Driver All This Week—in Pontiac—Ii's S kag “sme “Fat Getto Seoshty F City Wide CLEAN-UP WEEK | 5"°P S : ie FC croequbied eapehinas | Results i in Shooting | MALIBU, Calif. —A wrecker 1 e im machines ” e Diathermy Sets are still in uae, but most of their | MARINE CITY (INS) — A long | ‘Woman Falls 3 Stories, | was summoned yesterday after a SIMMS “SALE-EBRATES” with SAVINGS operators are not aware they are | family fued ended at least tem- | Only Gets Foot Fracture ““lision on Ventura Boulevard, Let's all cooperate and make Pontiac shine. Simms are cooperating 44: oan - ‘ violating the law. The ocommission | porarily over the weekend with | but it didn't show up. Sheriff's b? giving senestional low prices en things you went sed need te meke til lO p Will Enforce Regulations wit! take court action, if illegal | the shooting of a 54-year-old Mar- eg aceon — i wre deputies, anxious to clear the road, (MP. YU" “Ork easier. Here are but a few—shop our store for plenty more. -M ’ * . j t used \i i _¥ ne on Medical Equipment “*!Pmen' continues to be used.) ine City man. cai with ie: ‘walk here last night, but suffered | finally ent two men to look for it. : sas to Cut Plane Mishaps hily tent to kill was Louis J. Green- | ly @ fractured foot. She was re-| Deputies Fred Hadland and Del y) . , : : PS Queen and Her Family ‘ent to kill said he shot Raymond |eased after treatment at St. | Crawford said they found it, weav- , | WASHINGTON (UP) — The Fed- Welcomed at Malta D. Basset Saturday night while | 7°¢Ph's Hospital. jing uncertainly down a thorough- cu Communicate Commi | valuta, Mala — Quen| Bat vag rine nhs yard bn pln ah wa ae" ae he rer is planning to crack down on illegal _ . Basset, shot in the face with a ro) calling from their apartment win-| n iving. ’ p j diathermy machines to keep them aro ioe cae _ seat | | rifle, was in fair condition in Port dow to one of his relatives on the| Then they summoned more tow p from interfering with broadcasting stages.of the monarch's the- | Huron Hospital. ‘sidewalk when. she*.apparently | \trucks to take away the wrecked stations. police and fire calls and mad Gane. round | Greenleaf said he had been mad fainted. fe cars—and the first taw truck a As ; Always You'll WHY PAY “FULL” PRICE? § AVE $1.00! The FCC said there are “‘serious' Prince’ Charles and Princess b wa) ; . . potential dangers” in continued | Anne Jumped up and fom wih ee? — ch d Sa M Save Every Day on Nationally Advertised use of short-wave medical dia- | ©%cte an idge 0 NI an thermy equipment that doesn't "yal yaebt Britannia as fireworks iY) } P ve one at Needs for the Home Gla morene meet its rules. The rules limit both | crackled, crowds cheered,’ ship the number of radio frequencies S!rens screamed and flags flew that can be: used for the heat- | high. treating medical equipment and) A royal barge carried the Queen the amount of radiation they pro- | and the Duke of Edinburgh ashore, Simms --- Pontiac's Bargain Store LADIES WEAR | { 5 Interchangeable Blades Nest of SAVES las Her Gift! CLEANER 2 79 duce where they drove through Vallet- $1.69 Value As an example of potential = 's old and Rasrew Streets. _ | F Th Reg. 3.29 Gallon danger, the FOC said diather. | % | » or at $ 44 sar ed my equipment operating outside {It's New... At Simms | leads B Lea Look eye ” acsigned _ - | | Sharpening are- €g OO Famous Clamorene leaner Just terfere with flight communica- | .177 Cad. —Smooth Bore* ] | he ormhle cae . ee tions and result in- “disastrous Serrated Saw-Tooth Edges s Pictured 7 sts becom cganee. bn ane: airplane accidents.” Complete with 5 aos . . blades -—— regular keyhole mite ‘. “Tl RTLEBACkK” Non-Di ip meee Dupont Sponge | | “Hy-Score’!| Steak Kni Air Rifle |} ....... +49 In case of attack, it said, enemy | planes could use signals from ‘‘ex- cessively radiating diathermy ma- chines’’ as a guide to their targets. ee eae meme ee ee = <= x $ 95 $5.95 Value Each short-wave diathermy ma- Model chine is, in efigt, a radio trans- 80s 6 Keives ia W ” | 10 Quert Reguler 7 ae mitter, An illegal machine can suetime serrated = a | Gelvenized h a saw-tooth edge | é fc cause interference hundreds = $1.00 Helds Yours never needs sharpen ing Stainless Bf | . es miles away, the FCC said . teel blade firmly set molded Pp ] ~ plastic handle will never "eaten ai $s DuPont sponge made of cellulo< Some have disrupted police and’) Pamous ‘Hy-Score” air rifle fire department radio communica. tions and interfered with reception of radio and TV stations, the con | mission said holds lots of water, tree from ait, soft when wet etc. Many uses is accurate. powerful Re- quires no pumping and no ((@ | air valves, cocking is done by simply breaking the ber- rel. Precision German made. ‘Gee it at Simms 98 N. Saginaw —2ad.. Floor Unbelievable Low Priced! | No. 6 Size—Pre-Stretched To minimize interference, the = . ° FCC issued a regulation that all Rified Bore ‘Hy-Score’ 1! MEDICAL TABLET DISCOVERY | Trouble Braided Clothes Line short-wave diathermy equipment | | . o wean Gand Lights _. must be of a type approved by the ir 1 e | f AS J ~. = STOPS ¢ 8 75 Value c commissien or must have an en- 1$ Foot Cord 50 Ft BED WETTING! gineer's certificate that it meets i FCC rules. The regulation took effect last | ' 98 . Solid) Gals snes Wire ¢ Reg $1.7 Value 50 fect... 70 Sturdy non-stretch beraide clothes line at thes low price dune, after six years’ notice, soe | Fer home or ga er ase _ doctors, hospitals and other users $3.00 Holds Yours | \ ment, Saves Laundry | a eee “ENTERPRISE” 100% Pure Bap torment. embai | ast- mt. nervous strais in Same as the 805 Model except the Cal LDREN ° end ADULTS. Safe simple bore x — Shoots DRY-TABS stop functional Bed- Wee ting aes ely, murtie ) | without electrical devices, rubber sheets, velocity is 400 ft siarms or special diets. Medically proved per second Exactiy 18% ellectie e. Don't w ‘ y. as pictured ‘t wait another da SIMM BROS.—98 N. Saginaw Te}. ——- | M M S Try SIMMS tor Your Heavy Duty—16 Inch 4 White House Paint | ee Push Broom / FULL GALLON i 3 f Fume resistant house paint / Sizes 8'2 to 11—51 Gauge 30 Denier Ladies sheer, SEAM-LESS Nylons at tt low ‘price because of very minor tlaw Cr e Pp $2.59 Value cf all the popular shades and hue long lasting exterior pat Easy Famous WISS rer eieleieTer ele SISl lela e's ei 0 sie lt tl ete hTE 41S 414 Hangs on any con- » > a } Dressmaker $ <———--———— ree BEST Possible PICTURES OMIT, Gy you went $128 readings woty to we , —— = — | } ; j ste enroute PS Genuine “MILWAUKLEAN” Model } Sh \ home basement, 3 CalS § | LOWEST PRICES \ LADIES’ ae ae Oe aa : 6 les toch Locally Grown Smooth Rayon Jersey Sweepers > “Tidy-Tainer” | |Gladiolus 7 Clothes Pin Bag SA 44 < Regular $8.95 ; = te Bloom 79c 59 Value é Value d lt Half- Slips Guaranteed by Good Housekeep venient place. Alw ’ sways ing Sweeps on thick or thin rugs s'ays open price Sizes $-M-L-XL Ladies’ smooth rayon Jersey half siips C Bigger—Better—Brighter with lace trim. full elastic waistband SU PER Buy enough for yourself at this low . / -SIZE 4 Prints Cc All Standard Rolls e Bristles One Low Price Rayon Panties il Brush | 12 $9595 Wa rus $19.95 i Sine ar too tm bead or eine For $ $1.49 v r) mm s- : Easy to pinat. Mixed taster earvice tte saat weyiee. "Cheeses ” | 13-inch w alive All steef, built for rugged use Very. very minor colors. All locall a 0 1@ 1@ ef 3 colors in 8-M-L ae eit Easy roiling ball bearing wheels y sha on bristle brush & finishing flaws rown rper prints... sizes sirbo pide makes this low & greater savings. wi th a . Semi-Pneumatic Rubber Tire Long Handle vee | Wheelbarrow LADIES’ Sa in te ieie is ey oie el elelell price possibie. The edges and point are guaranteed” pS rived SIMAS SIMAS styles. NYLON Bristle Long ALUMINUM Handle Fountain Brush Reguler $2.69 Value a | 98 Ts a 81x99 Inch -- CANNON White » $8 N. Saginaw —Main Floor : AAARARARARRAPANAAIDIAS ties ete © NUSLIN Sheets Why Are So Many Sufferers EVERYTHING BUILT IN! [-Re om $4 69 Natural Broom Straw Whisk Broom vere 4Qe High quality bristles Por home or euto- novliie Uses i i bb be be he he he hd Simply attach to your garden hose reaches anywhere Clean autos, windows eft _eerrrrvrrerrrvrvrvrvrvrvrvrervrvervrvrvrewrrwrw-#e:e|(rwvvrrtertyryT Tree eee eee eee eee CeCe ee eee Value 2'., Bushel—Heary Galzanized . ARTHRITIS Sse Value Pillow ¢ cetwe | Rubbish B | ‘alue Pillow Case, to ¢ RHE M Match 42x36 inch 39 Cellulose u is arners k U ATISM White muslin with over 130 Sponges $ ni th d count per square inch, no i | Turning to PRUVO 1. s a5 wetting ‘KG ‘LIMIT Buy ail 24c Value ie | 3 3 4 +1 : Wy ‘ if ' you need atue L tor Soothing Relief? | Wmny WALL Seay [ens 8 9 pee 1] hen Tualkacng PRUVO! Nothing lke Bunr st i Choice of 4 Colors --- Cannon Muslin \ Sfeiy style eibiedh borer be AP: } it! No prescription required. , 9s “sthgae ald cl _ zipper style top. heavy gauge a \E LI _— these handy wire construction — eat Te Sarin Louminatt $529 ca Pastel Color Sheets Full Pint —Liquid Originally Priced 25¢ @ive more aetisfaction than any medicine With Satin luminell the is done when other you have used, regardless of price. Try points heve just begua. o easy coat finishes I 72x99 or 72x 108 Inch 5 of the $1.50 bottle f pr , : 4 — with results, roture PRUVO walls. collingy & tin te every soem. Primer, seater $ 59 Q . —— D st Mits full refund. & vundercect built in. Ne fumes or fuss! Dries : . ' $2.79 $ 24 Gl C] u news ‘ies ema - in 20 minutes te serubbeble sotiny beouty. ‘FREE ; ass Vieaner ¢, Aeeuients Sta: 5 dake aadainn color chort—lovely pastels, deep tones end inter. Deep Tones Volues ; c 2. Salicylamide, an amide . with 5 mines! Slightly Higher | 39 ] 3° Original 4 me etolamis potency oi “erie. Made with Famous Dow Latex |S $2.98 Values — 81x99 81x108 ton vaine 25c Value bone tissue’ production. 98 | | Inch Sheets Cleans window Gat | your bettie ot PRUVO Tablets today. Paints glass without Greak. Fleecy, soft mit fits hand Saves enjoying a more pain-free Jife. Saginaw Y 2nd. Over 130 thread count per square inch, mo Regular 65¢ © ng iim ci sii PRUVO is non-habit forming. 9 out of Street BROTHER Floor weighing. Choice of Pink, Green, Blue, I veins. 49 bans every 100 users have im PRUVO — you, too, can obtain its | = epecial eoothing selict. SIMMS — 98 N. Saginaw Yellow colors. Buy Now Rewuls Vans Gaialies For Autos — For Toilet Bouls — Ete. S GALVANIZED Wood-Back Brush creening [evict si 29e & m water, at BRE SER 5 SOAR AA Another Fresh Shipment —— SEED J Famous J. Oliver Johnson J I l Special Mix > Sete ee Fe | © Standard Pharmaceuticals @5 Registered Pharmacists | ® Savings 10% to 40% Formulette ‘x 7 e : SALE! First FADES Inch Width gems | | 18-94 meshs Pj : : , ~ 5 screening ° ’ 3 on. ae : 4 9 J alue 9: eut any yy : o> vee Oe — Nursing Set » Seat ||| Sa = 2 for $1.11 Complete WITH ROLLER. Requlgr 5 , Value while Cut to Fit Any Windows FREE! La * > r bs ei — The all-in-one complete E: you watt nursing kit contains | . everything you'll need Bronze Sreen ] When Yeor Prescription LOWER Is Filled by Simms .. + ' *4 - WASHABLE ted fibre window shad igi i) _— ee | Sa 7 AN. ee | tee. 1.9 i Pictaret: recommended BI al t F Ld ing pediatricians. ij ONLY rs r~ Sa $4.95 trod We — | , Set w . i - —— | DIFFERENCE ° | ath a a Ih : TT send ion | | 5 ny IAMS 2 ee | BROTHERS | Ni cnet cs ae a cee oe eee ne : ; 98 North SAGINAW St. et —2nd Flaor Sf 6 a F ‘ | ' a a THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, MAY 3, 1954 = PONTIAC'S FINEST INSURANCE SERVICE! H. R. NICHOLIE Cell “BUD” AGENCY H. R. Nicholie — H. Delos “Bud” Nicholie 39 Mt. Clemens St. Opposite Post Office Ph. FE 2-2326 JAKE OVER PAGES USW to Outline New Demands | Serious Efforts to Get! _ the Guaranteed Wage! Seem Unlikely | : PITTSBURGH, ® —The CIO ; United Steelworkers’ 170-member!| © Wage Policy Committee comes here Thursday and Friday to put| finishing touches on the union's contract demands before starting| | negotiations with the nation’s basic steel industry The well-groomed man always And it’s no wonder! makes an_ impression. Good grooming is our busi- ness and we realize what it means to our customers. You'll find that our skill and workmanship save your clothes ond ease your budget Phone FE 4-1536 Fax 719 West Huron St. | The committee's final draft on-| doubtedly wil] include demands for a wage increase and improvements | in the present insurance and pen- | sion programs. But few observers | expect any serious effort to be made for a guaranteed annual | wage. > - * The big industry, which has | granted seven rounds of wage ikes since World War II, is feeling he pinch of a business lag for AT MT. VERNON — Two Washington Junior High School pupils, | the first time in several years! representing their classmates on a trip to the capital last week, lay and this is expected to weaken a wreath at Washington's tomb at Mt. Vernon. Shown are Joan Dudley, | union bargaining power. . Only recently, David J. McDon-| 3 Neome Dr., and Devone Stone, 198 N. Johnson Ave. The group of ald, president of the steelworkers, | more than 200 from Washington and Lincoln schools returned to Pontiac told the union's 39-member Execu-| Sunday. tive Board ,that steel production is down more than he expected it to go. McDonald said there are 189,344 | | USW members furloughed from | basic and fabricating steel plants | it ad z and another 257,026 members on part time schedules | . * | The union's contracts with basic | steel production companies expire | June 3. | Most observers expect the union | to work hardest on getting im- | | provements in the insurance and | wer programs. Any wage increase will likely be | a less than the 842 cent | § Pit a . S hfe hourly hike granted last year to boost average hourly pay to be- | tween $2.14 and $2.24. =a > 1 FOR INSURANCE SERVICE See or Call Maynard Johnson General Insurance 807 Comm. Nat’! Bonk Phone FE 4-4523 Nationalists Slip a Bit | 100 to Attend Conference | TAIPEH, Formosa (#—President Chiang Kai-shek's Kuomintang | (Nationalist party) sustained a few setbacks in yesterday's island- wide election of mayors, magis- | trates and a provincial assembly | but retained its overwhelming | | strength. line creoteat to aaipharorneepbaved HONOR LINCOLN — Pupils from Lincoln Junior High School, on | in the union. In 1880, net earnings |@ trip to Washington last week, placed a wreath at the Lincoln jof the Upper Peninsula mines were | Memorial. Shown above are Kenneth Card, 7 Arcadia Ct., and Pat | greater than those of the precious | Sutton, 19 Tacoma Ct. The Pontiac boys and giris had dinner with | metals mines in California and | Senator Homer Ferguson and Congressman George A. Dondero while + | Colorado. in the capital A.Green, Blue, Grey Misses’ Sizes: 12-20, Half 142-2415 B. Red, Green, Blue Three Patterns: Tulip, Dutch Twins, C. Misses’ Sizes: 12-20, Half 141/-221/, Rabbit and Vegetable NO-IRON COTTON PLISSE CULOTTE 9 PIN MONEY STRIPE in fresh! Just tub and dry, a whisk of the iron on the Mail and Phone Weite’s Princess Peggy Dresses—Third Fioor Call FE 4-251] Exclusively Ours Zips to below the waist! Action back with shirt fullness! E-Z wash, no-iron cotton plisse! NO-IRON COTTON PLISSE Lazy and lovely for all summer . . . so easy to keep pique bios . . . and you're set! Saves time, work, tiny priced to save money! COLORFUL POP-ON it's a Smock and “Apron. Wrapped in crystal clear package for a thought- ful gift. Small, Medium, Large. Fae ss Pa . \ ee i * 2 > . It's Moth e ° @ ' Buy Your Preventive ® e. Moth Time @ Protection at at ; W aite’s Waiute’s! 6 Today! ; is tops Store Furs, Draperies, Clothes Safel y at Home! E-Z-Do Storage Vaults 98 The modern way of storing clothing, woolens, drapes, furs, etc. In your attic, closets, base- ment, or garage. starting at CLOTHING 4 STORAGE VAULT Each storage vault is made of 3-ply kraft-hoard, cedar color, with new Dust-Tile construction. Heavy metal lock on each. BLANKET VAULT wx? DRAPERY VAULT For ates | 98 2.19 SALE! Save up to 1.99 on Whitmor CHROMSPUN GARMENT BAGS 99 @ All with quilted tops; three hook, non-tilt frames! Reg. to 3.98! @ Reinforced seams and quilting, strong zipper enclosure! @ Jumbo, Regular and Suit Size. Buy several today! @ Available in Aqua, Pink and Yellow! Have All Three Reefer Galler Products for Complete Moth Protection Throughout the House! No Moth for Closet Para-Pure Crystals SLA Spray 95° Pr. Sor 0 ¢ 0-0-9 Gee. ~ BB wise 6 2 Quart eee 135. S ibs... ..280 Come 8 Waite's Notions—Street Floor THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, MAY 3, 1954 PE ontiac Church Sunday FuSi RELIEF HEADACHE The Rev. C. George Widdifield preached at All Saints Episcopal jings of Job. He used Job's ulti- wstant you take a@— therefor 1s ready to go to work with aimazng speed pager) FR, ASPIRIN | bellion often may be of more value |companied by. inner resentment All Saints. one of Pontiac's old- lest churches, was founded in Sep- |tember, 1837. The Rev. Mr. Wid- difield has been rector there since March 25, 1953. Following are excerpts from his sermon The mest popular stories in the world are the success stories. They are stories about men and women who begin with nothipg and ended with every- Zemo—a doctor’s soothing anti- | ‘ing. But there is another type septic— promptly relieves itch of | of story that has its own par- surface skin rashes, eczema, psori- | ticular kind ef popularity. It is asis. Zemo stops scratching and so the story about the man or Church here Sunday on the suffer- = lin religion than submission ac- & Job’s Answer to Suffering Shows: Healthy Rebellion mate questioning of God's purpose = to illustrate that a healthy re- © ae REV. Cc. G. WIDDIFIELD began to move toward a great idea. the history of mandi. | | | And rebelling as he did in- wardly ainst the injustice of what happened to him, took |@ new step forward to that idea | which finally came to its | nation on the Cross of Calvary on # | which a man was good to the very | _ | last, not because he got anything out of it, but because it was right to be good. versity, we have to decide some- | times whether to take it or to turn |to God and say, “Tell me what }thou hast against me.” It is not | easy to decide which to do when. | Sometimes, indeed, the proper | attitude is te say, “I accept | this.” Surely this is the will of | Ged. But there are other times in the interest of honesty and a healthy spirit and in the forward culmi- | Fireman Boosts Clean-Up, Drive Chief Schroeder Asks Home Owners to Cut | Fire Hazards | | Pontiac Fire Chief John F. | Schroeder today called upon all | residents to join this year's spring cleanup drive as one of the best ways to decrease fire hazards in | the home. | The fire department, Schroeder | said, is cooperating with the Pon- | tiac Junior Chamber of Commerce | which is sponsoring the week-long drive that start's today. He urged householders to call on the fire department at any time to inspect homes for fire hazards. that home fires account cent of all fire deaths. SFIty | usual victims ef heme fires. aids faster healing. Buy Extra woman who had everything and | movement of the race when the | Strength Zemo for stubborn cases, lest it. Such a story is the story of Job. their money for days and years | thing for a man to-do is to stand up| For spring cleanup, Schroeder |and say, “Tell me what thou hast | suggests the following checklist on WATER HEATERS Job was at the same time the lrichest and the best man in the jcountry. That is a combination }that you do not often find. | And then, without any warning. | thieves stole his oxen, lightning | struck his sheep and his shepherds, |his camels disappeared, and a | whirlwind struck and wiped out j all of his 10 children | And then to make the disaster lcomplete, he was afflicted with ulcers from the soles of his feet to the top of his head How is it that such a good man | should suffer se much? That is | the problem which the Book of trouble- Job presents, bat there is more free service at rock bottom te the beok than simply the _- problem of suffering. There is the unfolding of a religious per- =, sonality, and it is that pers %- ality that I would like te con- only sider today. ~o= Super- Job was not patient. If I do $ effAcient nothing else this morning than to 1 “WOT WAITS | dispel that miscongeption of: the hooting character of Job) L shall be grate- DOWN elements | hy oe |. Job cried out to God, “Tell me | what thou hast against me.” He rebelled against what seemed un- | just, and the theme of our think- | ing this morning therefore is re- _bellion in religion Come in Now I hope that no one will say 4s, Im that it has been said here that 5-veaa wastaatt Compares with Heaters Selling Up te $154.95 “= “99” $2 Gallon Tank Wired FREE on Edison Lines WKC 108 N. Saginaw Ph. FE 3-7114 religion is rebellion or that rebel- iiion, in or by itself, is a good | thing. It is not. It is not a final thing. but it surely can be a tonic in a man’s religion, | Je the first place, Job's rebel- was more honest than his ’ resignation: They . were ae what they had been taught te say: im life sin and Their ; Now over against that frozen pat- |his day as we know in ours ,any | © WEAVY Sam ELECTRIC SEWING MACHINE and were never caught, and on the other hand people who were scrupulously honest and fair who were beset by the worst of trage- dies. Sinners do not always suffer, and good men do not always pros- per Job's courage to say, ‘Look at me. I refuse to say that I was so bad, that I had committed so many sins, had indulged in so many crimes that God sent me this ad- versity as a punishment Ne, Jeb was too honest to say that, and in his rebellion were the very seeds of that kind of honesty Without which you can- not have any real religion. It is not unusual in these days to meet a great deal of criticism of the church, especially from the younger people. Much as we re- gret the rebellion, we can at least appreciate the honesty by which a young person looks at the things he has been given by his predeces- 'sors and says that they do not | square with the facts as he sees | them | Now that kind of hoResty as an | clement in rebellion is a ; | Strong, wholesome thing im any man's religion. Open rebellign is a great deal’ healthier than hid- den unexpressed resentment. One bot the reasons why a great many people are rotting religiously is that they are trying to do some- thing that they do not really feel. And that kind of insincerity is a very unhealthy thing in a man's | life I cannet believe that Ged wants men and women to have no resistance te, anything that happens te thent se that they take it all equally whether it is good or bad. No, it seems to me that Ged mach prefers a man whe, though’ he be mistaken, I de net noderstand.” Once a’Yhan has assumed that ‘tern of popular religion Job set | @ffitude toward God. there is the | his open rebellion. He knew in | begirming of a working together | in a kind of unity in which yoa 'number of people who cheated | can have real religion. God cannot | I-Beams -- Channels others and swindled them out of | make much impression upon a| | doormat | Is it not true in life as we study | the history of humanity that re- | bellion is always the first step for- | ward? And as Job rebelled against | this frozen theéry of popular re- pow. namely, that sin and suf- fering always went together, he ———$—___—— Sews forwards. beckwards. over pins and seams. ond has a 7 speed foot control. Free sewing instructions included! stands up and says, “This thing | against me." Catholics Rejoice as Saint's Blood Melts I Day Late NAPLES, Italy #—Catholic Nqo- politans feared today the city faces | a year of bad luck—the hardened | blood of their patron, St. Januarius, was a day late in melting this year. | The blood is kept in two silver phials in the Naples Cathedral. For the past four centuries, it is said, | it has softened on the first Satur- day of May in answer to prayers. Three times the blood remained 1527, a cholera epidemic in 1884 and. the 1944 eruption of Vesuvius. Bell ringing and fireworks sig- the public joy yesterday when the cathedral announced the blood of the martyred saint finally had liquified. Truman's Birthday Talk ‘to Be on Guarding Liberty NEW YORK \#—Former Preai- dent Harry S. Truman has selected a topic for his 70th birthday speech next Saturday—the President's key role in preserving basic liberties. Treman's speech plans were an- nor, president of the Harry S. Tru- man Library, which is sponsoring |his $70-a-plase birthday dinner at | the Waldorf-Astoria Hotel. Buying: SCRAP IRON and METAL ) Selling: Structural Steel | Angles -- Etc. tS. Allen & Son, Inc. Open Men. thre Friday 8 te & i CLOSED SATURDAYS 1:00 P.M. 22 Congress St. FE 5-8142 108 NORTH SAGINAW 4 FE 3-7114 No OBligation to Buy 3-WAYS TO BUY; hard—before a bubonic plague in| - nounced yesterday by Basil O'Con-.) fire-safe housekeeping: . 1. Dispose of trash and rubbish regularly—old linens, cast-off cloth- ing, old furniture and papers. 2. Keep the grounds around your house free of dead grass, weeds, and dried brush. 3. Enclose dust mops and oily rags in a closed metal container. 4. Promptly replace worn or damaged electrical cords. Don't use makeshift fuses. &. Replace old rotting wood in your home and fencing. Keep the roof in good repair. 6. Keep plenty of ash trays handy for smokers. 7. Clean your chimney and heating system at least once a Call the fire department at FE 2-9271, in case you are in doubt about other questions. Dr. Kato Seen Using Firm Hand as Jap Justice ‘TOKYO, w—Japan's new justice minister hasn't had a chance yet rocked administration. nine condemned murders. Dr. Ryogoro Kato, a 71-year-old obstetrician, took over the minis- try April 22. In his first seven days he signed death warrants for all nine men and told prison war- dens to get on with the hangings. In Japan, justice ministers have traditionally shied away from the unpleasant job. The last minister, Takeru Inukai, let some of the warrants lie on his desk nearly a year added that children under-18~}Ducking Traffic NEW HAVEN, Conn. {UP) — Everything was just ducky in and snarled traffic for nearly minutes (Advertisement) UCE PILES’ SWELLING sint2e SURGERY / In 90% of cases tested by doctors — cmoces Pane NEW STAINLESS FORM now ALSO AVAILABLE! Ointment duced swelling, healed ing... shrunk piles WITHOUT SUR- GERY! Pain was or mate- rially : modern Suppositories at all Seas iy fast relief right away. to shake up his countty'’s scandal- But there's no doubt he's shaken | downtown New Haven when two. ducks decided to take 2 walk. They | HOUSEHOLD FINANCE CORP. Copy No. 2401 MICHIGAN —2 col. x 6 inches Newspapers, Second Quarter, 1954 “/ for SIGNATURE + CAR + FURNITURE \ eel KH ae Spring-Summer 7 needs /__ rt\\ S leteel steels MONTHLY PAYMENT PLANS Daymts | paymts 5.03 9.24 tried to cross a busy intersection | S 6.65 13.11 9.98 19.77 19.55 29.55 31.39 48.09 | 90.02 Household s charge is the monthly rate of 3% om that port of @ balance eet excanding 350, 24% om thet pert af « belemce om excess of 350, but mot excording 3.500, and & % on any remainder, HOUSEHOLD FINANCE of Pontiac —— -_O ° “~ VACATION EXPENSES SHOPPING EXPENSES DOCTOR g BILLS d\ =» \ CAR OR HOME = REPAIRS $20 to +500 One-day service. Simple requirements. Loans made without endorsers. Monthly repayment plana, Up to 20 months to repay. Phone or stop in today for fast, friendly service! 3% South Saginaw St. The Key Bidg., 2nd Floor PHONE: PEderal 4-0535 Loans made te residents of nearby toons You can , fee/ the = ofference 2 enjoy the thi Try wonder-working Sta Nu, the = drycleaning discovery that replaces natural textile oils in fabrics. These VITAL TEXTILE OILS ARE WOMOGENIZED BACK INTO THE FABRIC in the miracle StaxNu PROCESS. Makes your clothes look newer than new! And new clothes keep new looking .. . gives every garment greater resistance to wrinkling and soiling. You can SEE and FEEL the difference at once! Try StaxNu TODAY! WITH EVERY DRYCLEANED GARMENT WHEN FINISHED WITH THE MIRACLE... as ett or ony of the hes. jocated at our ow? vulast 4 HOUR SERVICE AT OUR MAIN STORE 24 Hours Service at Our 8 Neighborhood Stores! FREE PARKING AT ALL STORES emenness/ —— OTe 6 8 ee eee oe Your Shirts Individually Cellophane Sacked and Boxed, 5 ™ $1.09 STA-NU I$ EXCLUSIVE IN PONTIAC AND SUBURBS AT HURON CLEANERS and SHIRT LAUNDRY _ MAIN OFFICE and PLANT 944 WEST HURON STREET PHONE FE 2-0231 1586 Union Lake 4813 W. Walton 524 Pontiac Tral 2005 Orchard 188 North 207 Oréhard take 8987 Aabers B84. Reoad—Oppesite Rivd. at Walled Lake Lake at Light Johnsen st Sthte Across from Opposite Podtiae Giroet Sachadaw Next te Coffee Cop Keege Harber Street Harry's Lenckh State Back Friends end Neighbors — Visit Our Newest Branch ot 8206 Highland Roed ot Pontiec Leke | ——— : ' : ‘ THE Selling immediately after a quiet opening. The volatile near the end of the first hour was ‘ to $2.02%, corn was % lower, May lower to ‘2 [MARKETS | Stocks Deadlock: oe in Slight Drop DETROIT PRODUCE DETROIT (UP)—Whpiesale Public farmers’ markets reported by the bureau of markets Pruits: Apples, Delicious, fancy, 4 00- €.00 bu; No 1, 350-400 bu; opoles, Green- ings, No 1, 2.25-2.75 bu; apples, Northern Spy, fancy, 5.00 bu; No 1, 2.00-3.50 bu; apples, Steele's Red, fancy, 400-450 bu, | NEW YORK w# — The stock | | market exhibited a lower tendency | today in subdued trading. | The effort today represented a | | | | | No 1, 250-300 bu ; 7 Vegetables. Asparagus, No wt 18-2.08 consolidation action following the a hs. ts, topped, No 1, - " p old crop soybean futures dropped bu, fancy. 1.28 dos behs. Carrots, topped. | 4-year highs reached last week. . 100-1 ives, . nas The : around 5 cents before enough re- | $0 ade behs. Horseradish, No 1. 600- | maarhet, started generally! sistance developed to halt the de- $0 D& bskt. Leeks. No 1 1 00-1 28 dos | lower and slower, and it continued ae | behs fons, dry, No 1, 60-85 $0-lb bag: | j a} cline. Corn held up fairly well oaueas. cee a? 90-65, dos bers. | #9 that vein into the early after onions, sets, No 1, 200-235 33-lb bag. | NOON. Parsnips, No 1, 1 00-150 4y-bu. Potatoes, potatoes, No ! Lower divisions included chemi- | cals, coppers, radio - televisions, | higher, May $1.52%, oats were % | hothouse, No 1, 70-80 §-lb box: rhubare, farm implements, motors and | to % lower, May 73%, rye was "| part cuidoor No 1. 66-75 don bens | Steels. The utilities were higher on te % lower, May 93, soybeans | Greens: Spinach. No 1, 125-160 bu balance, and there was a touch of | : — | Collards, No 1, 150 bu Sorrell, No , 4 were 2 to 5 cents lower, May $4.06. | i s0 bu buoyancy about the oils, airlines, ' ahé@-lard was 8 cents lower to 5 ge a rubbers, and aircrafts. : ams a hundred pounds higher, | DETROIT (AP)}—The following — The Lead stock of American Mo- May $19.17. per dozen were paid fob. Detroit by | tors Corp. opened at 11%. The Grain Prices first receivers for case lots (cases in- cluded) of federal-state graded eggs to- company was formed from the | merger of Nash-Kelvinator and PONTIAC PRESS: MONDAY, MAY 3, 1954_ oo Anette + __ MAKE QVER. Business Notes 11 ‘Dream Cars’ Williams Talks on FEPC Bill Developed by GM _on Display May 5 | Eleven of General Motors’ | « 2 loped by GM researchers and Banquet of Southwest V0r at the Milford io ivi iati Grounds, will go on display in Civic Association pabage a tees About 250 persons heard Gov.| Harloe H. Curtice, GM_ presi- G. Mennen Williams describe fair | dent, announced Sunday that the employment practices legislation | experimental cars will be shown and the overall state program last | through May 15 in the exhibit hall | night at the second annual ban- | and lobby of the GM Building. quet of the Pontiac Southwest Civic | The cars have been touring the Assn. in the Roosevelt Hotel. country with the 1954 Motorama. The need for a community cen-| Among them will be Pontiac's ter was discussed by Douglas Wil- | Strato - Streak, a four - passenger liams, director of the Douglas sports sedan, and the gas turbine Community Center in Ann Arbor. XP-21 Firebird. ‘mec Three Injured 1954 aims, according to Morton Harshaw, president. They are: 1. To raise a $100,000 building fund toward construction of a com- Upturn in Steel Now Apparent Chairman Fairless Also Asks End of Dividend Double Income Tax day Whites: G bo 4. 1 43-46 of 1954 has not measured up to CHICAGO GRAIN weighted average 4. mediam 40-41, wtd | Hudson so ge a 4 in 3-Car Crash 1963 but said that neither has it CHICAGO ‘(AP)—Opening grain: | 8¥g 40%: small. 32 6. 40 In mbership to inte “the serious decline Wheat € a ; oa, | Browns: Grade A jumbo 46-47 wtd avg | New York Stocks 000. | gone May .. 2.04% | Soybeans aan i wens big Oo yr 3. To continue to maintain the | : that some: peesimicta”’ predicted sree ss 18% May veeee: ee | inrge 32 S “ . . 6 eet ie ae) pean ore — baby etinic at Lakeside Homes. | Autos Collide Sunday | at the end of the Korean War. : 3 ae elsey Hay ,.. . . Dee OL Bat Beye 0S a aos Poot Pct Mba me! OW oS ae) att rey Telorgddraved [ Rochester Road in Fairies said: “... An upturn May eosee 152% Jan eens 260%, CHICAGO BUTTER AND EGGS Air Reduc .,,, 241 Kresge se. Bag hool site at Bagley | . in demand is beginning to appear: ‘ )- z jeg L Stl.... 333 Kroger 434 - emt LS may... 1930 colpts TE a" wholesale buying, prices | Allied CB 1. a9 LO, Glass". 48.6 and Wessen Sts. ‘for clean, healthy | T'oy Township and we still have a substantial 4 = | Allied Stra .. ¢ . Ses. esses 1.0% — eeece ye Poe 8 conta © pound lower, 83 | Allied sal.) 346 Ligg & Mey .. 683 | recreation for the youth of Pon- Tt pe were injured last backlog of unfilled orders amount May eos. 73% Oct .....157% | score AA 5678: 02 A 5678. 90 B $48:|Alum Ltd ., 817 Lockh Aire .. 347 tiac. . col ing to more than five million tons. - oe 2.. [68% Nov 1475 | Eggs irreguiar: receipts 22.118, whole- | Alum Co Am. 73 Loews . 1s night when three cars collided on He told the stockholders that Sept ........ 68% Soybean Ot) | sale buying prices unchanged to ‘sy cent | Am Alrlin 118 Lone 8 Cem . 356 The Lee Williams Memorial | Rochester road near 19Mile road e Dec cesses «Tle May 14.20 ja doten lower, U. BS large 6 8. | Am Can 30.5 Mack Trucks . 132 Award for promoting better race Troy Townshi ‘ ’ both ingot production and the ship- Rye DO iscecss 1418 | medium 345. U. 8 standards 335 cur-| Am Car & Fay 343 Marsh Pield .. 81 P LJ in y Pp. for the first WBF soccccce 98% Sept ...... 1260 | rent receipts 32.8; dirties 32, checks 31.5./ Am Cyan 1 Le-tage ae . 7 relations throughout Oakland Leonard T. Zaremba, 32, of | Ment of steel products 3 STL wy Dee Tas | CHICAGO POTATOES Am Teco 136 Mead Cp. . 336 County was presented to Dr. | 60430 Mount Vernon Rd., Roch- | Twarter of 1954 declined about 16 ———— | « : Am M & Pdy.. 262 Mid Cont Pet 824 Etta Link of Berkley by Dr. John ester, and Richard Parrish, 59 per cent from last year. Fairless —_ = | CHICAGO (AP)—Potatues: arrivals 55. | an. Nw Gas 46.4 Midi Sti Pa .. 31 y bY gee . ’ stated that down 10-Y Old D * Hit track 268, total US. shipments 722. old Boge Rad “175 Monsan Ch . 861 D. Monroe, Oakland County |of 345 Henrickson, Clawson, both also profits were ear- Fiver FUTS stock supplies light; demand moderate] \™ Smeit 34 Mont Ward .. 60.1 health nine per cent. . Russets steady on other stock.|4™ gt pq 39 Motorola... 343 officer. driving south, told Troy Township na “a Play Pen, Kills Toddler = arte: auil: tdano Russets 630-40: | Am Tei a Tel let 4 Mueller Br |. 234 Police Chiet David Gratopp that | Fairless called for a revision ‘ new stoek _ooderole; demand motorete; res Tob ¢i17 Nat Bise .... 385 The award was first given last | hird ist M Je- | the present federal income tax 3 - = soe ns Fred . Sing CINCINNATI, —Ten-year-old ‘incs “iso ‘Io sacks) $1.00; Texas Round | Anae Cop .. 38 Nar AUR. Tf |year. It honors a Pontiac man |® ¢ pee ae onto |!8¥ Which, he said imposes two James Lykins Jr, kept begging his "e¢# (50 I» sacks) $2.15 peter pag Nat Lead |. 466 who was killed in action during | ‘O". °!. » pulled |income taxes on dividends re- father to let him drive the family | Atl Cst Line 107 Nat Stl $12 World War II, Harshaw explained. the highway without turning on i. 4 by stockholders. * Atl Refin 33q Nat Thee ... 63 apa |his lights. N Last year's igh car. Li Atlas Par... 17 NY Air Brk .. 20.3 y memorial award Finally hig father said he could easaues kiveatend Aves Mfg ..... $3 oe ~~ oe winner, Oakland County Register, Singleton said he turned on his In this conncetion, Falricss - . ; said, a questionnaire answered drive it back and forth in the) pgrporr (ap) — Hogs — Salabie 900 | Balt & Ohio 20 Nort & West 08 | of Deeds Orrin McQuaid, attended | tights but did not see Parrifh ' 8 ery by driveway yesterday. Market opening fully steady with a | oe sooo Tl 3 Nor Pac 51 the dinner as did Pontiac Mayor attempting to pass Zaremba's 40,008 . Steel poimmy lost control The car ape ith coreg cme.) sats Se ey BE Renae din at | ‘Witiam W. Donaldson ‘The mayor| tate terns vv aA ‘s y pen near the, , some he pighet ane =300 — * 33° Onto on leset! | gave a short address. a ; half shareewners had garage and ran over and killed | 300 Ins mostly 62850-2698. other weights | Bond Btrs...135 Backard 34) Be | Singleton Z - = renee coma of ep Gen 0608 5 15-month-old Douglas Byrnside. Ios. $22 80-23 So. tee-000 ee, 990 80-33 00 | aes ate oes 8 Perem Pict 306) 5 } Parki M t today at St. Joseph Marcy — year. Cattle—Salable 3.400 Very liberal | Brist My... 236 penney ic, * 228) [ Ing eters |with a fractured leg and P| He aded that the questionnaires Anve Et Loe se supply siaughter steers and yearlings. Brun Salke. . 15 2 RR 16 ° cuts Parrish was treated for indicated that ‘“‘the pay of the aver- HIP SCHOOL mostiy high commercial to choice about | Budd Co << 183 Pepsi Cola 18 & — Yield $1 000,000 chest ins and a passenger with | WATERFORD TOWNS: 20 per cent receipts cows: sloughteet | Burr Add 181 pheips D 462) 2 7 —_— ; F) : Pond oe erp a age steelworker in our mills was tendent of Schools’ Office reer) pee pooch, sanngapee pave [heel he dlhed = Philco 301) Weer Lee Gasrta es phe . . . im, Pa . 18, o - Jessie | higher than the total income of 53 The of Rducation for Waterford | Choice and low prime grades heifers Cam Dry 14) prisiPpMore-- 407 vance res ree 1) Milwaukee |St, suffered head cuts. ‘per cent of our stockholders.” t Lome 4 County, Michigan, ee ee ee ie eicctore anh | canree + 202° Pills Mills ) JEWELED SHORTS—With a little help from a tie-on skirt this cin urn ; Mrs. Marie Smith, 52. of De-| —s t of Schools’ Office St) teeders offered: few sales steady, early ogg rag “4 la Pony 134 | jeweled linen shorts costume becomes a cocktail outfit. Trim shorts * ILW AUKEE (UP) — Parking troit, a passenger with Zaremba, ° ° 3162, West Welten Telep bulk mostly choice fed steers and year-| Cater T $12 Pullman 50 4| - meters in Milwaukee have yielded . and bruises Reds Fire on Fishermen OR 3-3413 Pontiac, Michigan, will receive | jings §22 50-2475; about five loads high o no sae | Ress Ou 1 ‘| and sleveless blouse allow for plenty of sunning before five é’clock. he tol was treated for cuts . ime Pg 2 ten cats a So ia a 00-28 80, | Ches & Ohio "347 RKO Pico). gy | ———————___— —_——— -——- _ —-—— sac cig — * million dol- | COPENHAGEN (INS) — Danish i= a . mos Gor } ] Wotertord Center School om Airport te low choice steers and yearlings Gi8 oo. | Ct an 114 Redio Cp. 377 . | . . oa P scree ome von when 325 4 MSC's officials announced today that a bs i ; commerce an ~ & ’ rs 5 : | | : : I ; BET. Mey 1h lest at which time’and | $1700-18.00, part loed | prime oil ie. | Cine Muy olan Repub ot... a8! News in Brief | Controller Virgil H. Hurless is- | onor Soviety patrol ship fired on some Z wd and | Betfers $22.78: several lots mostly choice | Chm MO «*- fo) Reyna Met... 68 | | 20 Swedish and Danish fishing Peed elect at the time ena plese stipe: | tata seed’ heifers $16-05-10 68; most wil-{Coce Cola | ..133 Rey Tod B.. 30 ’ | - ee sued a report recently showing the ourna ie boats last Friday in the Baltic lated above ity and. commercial cows $1280-1400.|Colg Palm... 426 oe Strohschein ‘ -| cumulative revenue to be $1.099.- sm - . 384] . : struction off this project shall be. dectg- | "eet? Mplateine $1480, smooth youne | Col Gen, = 13} Bean ALR |. 313 . Anderson St. told Oakland County | 360 through 1953. At the end of _ _| near the Bay of Danzig. nated by the Con @ | ners and cutters mostly $10 00-12 50. few | Con OF a] — aaa et U 0S 0 | e sheriff's deputies Sunday that} last year there were 4,090 meters LANSING uw — More than 3235 (A@vertement) a ghell include all Architee- — good and choice stockers San Gea ae Simmons --- 3 ne took tw kets from his | PCrating in Milwaukee. according editors, newspapermen and form- ond all alternates, Caives— Sa ee gt a ae ce ae Socony Voc... 447] ° someone foe we D8 | to the report. ler students paid tribute Saturday a : r;|Comt OW ..... : 2 ; The accepted bidder will be required | Opening about » cee ce teres.) ore = "727 Sou Pec. .... *) Detroit Woman Thrown ‘2 while it was parked in front of The city hee « a4 so (Might to Prof. A. A. Applegate, is and labor and bonds Sameunl tal Get Gale mts onli Goes we” ae Sparts Ws) 4 an inn in Pontiac Township. ie Sorte oraiaas pad tiniah who retires July 1 as head of the Laxative better for on" NI eee a | and utility 98.00-14.00 Ces bets... 3h Ss al fe Pavement, Reported _ lation, purchase and improvement | Department of Journalism at George . & Co., located at 408 Bhee jable 1.700. No early sales. Doug Aire 1264 gta O41 Calif * 625 ° ane Vandals broke a switch control Michigan State College Street, Detroit 26, Michigan. DuFost ‘abe $ sid ou ind... et) in Poor Condition box and a lock from a signal shed Se ae ee wiere Phil Spelman of Detroit asso- paregemals mast be cunmitted on forme CHICAGO LIVESTOCK sess. {Beate Pich ... be rd Ou NS ee . je ‘he Goren Trem Week: meters are located and for oper- ate editor ef Motor : Vegetable laxatives are much bett accepted untae 00 =. BBT. tag th | oc ee, (AP) — Salntte pep East Air L.. | 233 Studebaker 146, A Collision between a bus and door along r un ating expenses, resulting in a net | ““'* or r News, pre- for you than ‘ones. Dr. 1084. supplemented ty a (bid bond sub- few loads choices 1 ana'2 lightweignis | Bett Kod '.. 974 Buth Pap. 392) two autos injured five persons last erm Railway tracks 1% miles cast| gaim of $612,508. sented Applegate with a scroll are & pure- fncluded in the cations, mot later | carly steady to 38 lower: sows mostly 3) gi @ Mus in 2 Syiv El Pd... 47! 2 outhbound ‘of Holly, according to a report) 7) 44: signed by more than 30 editors and give you s than 6:00 pm. of the same day. In| fue \cadr under 930 Ibe to 2718 and [emer Rad... 101 Texas Co 1... 713/Might when a southbound car oived by the Oakland County! 7 ddition, the report shows the | publications creating a journalism out yet are so Le Tate “een tce ith ae Beara. of | 95, lend 27.00. most 280-200 Ime 2628- /ENG ag” | leg fina m Bear. oi )| skidded on wet pavement at snoritt’s deputies Saturday | CILY collected $329,046 in 1853 from | scholarship fund in honor of Prof. Ra pl Fy ¥ - - ; ™ . 5 * Re eT, Land base | wore woser Ort ie TLSRSR re ee (ete = ee a ee at mwerved | — a foie! No purging! Mo puden “peasy lghtwetghts to 36.00: geod clearance, |Gen Bice 123 Underwood ... 383 | into a northbound auto. . Pag ie Roy, Se Te } aioe 7 ot Cari Saunders, editor of the Jack- co one or two to- _Trepesnis Guo upon the same date Ore | ose. nective. steers ond Relfers generally |"? *4* ae oS —_— $8) A Valley Coach Lines bus , Clarkston, was fi ighest producers of income are | son Citizen-Patriot, and toastmas- | Bight complete satisfaction tae Poor Semen Saved sn Gosey Lake steady to 28 higher; instances $9 up on | Gee a 3 ont Ar Lis “B3 smashed into the rear of north- | $25 costs Saturday for drunk driv- | the _ parking meters in the ter, paid tribute to Applegate's suc- at\the desired time in the morning en acm hg Pl ecg A Bn, bulls strong to $0 higher vealers 1.00 or a en A United Cp. 7 38 bound car to avoid a woman pas- | ing. He appeared before Spring- he on — repert showed | cess in making the MSC Journal- oe bid. so that bidder may, if he so desires, | More higher, a few lotads prime steers | 50) ¢ @ Rub 33. Unit Pruit... 82 | senger of the car who had been field Township Justice Emmett J. | Y yield an aveage of $2.79 a! ism Department one of the top five submit bid covering both schools | up to 1380 Ibe 2778-2880; three loads | Gillette sag US Lines... 14 | SOME “ week. Lowest ‘‘take"” for on-street | ; F Book Arthritis Proposals forms not properly filled out | around 1350 lbs 28.50. mixed choice and | Srodrich ta) U8 Rub 33_|thrown to the pavement by the | Leib. : | in the country. ree on will be rejected _| prime steers 2600-2750, bulk good to | 500d veer 7 U 8S Smelt “47 (th : parking meters is a $1.07 average | Contractors must submit, attached fo| high choice steers and yearlings 30.50- | 572) Paige [fs oe eee 2 ee ee Drunk driving cost Francis L.| on the extreme south side of the And Rheumatism their proposals, the names of their me-| 25.50: utility to low good grades 1480- | 5:°no Re Pt 332 U _ S8teel 463 #9 | ity Mrs David Clasman chanical and electrical sub-contractors, | 20: good to high choice heifers 19 $0- | Sreynound | 6 U.S Tov...... 113 Mrs. Sidney Sutton, 35, of De- | Templeton, 34, of 931 Bryson, De-| city. * Hew te Aveid Crippling Defermities and must § agree awarded the| 2475. several loads 2475 carrying & | 5ui7 Oil "575 Van Raal...,.. 24,4 troit, is reported in condi- | troit $7 with costs Saturday | B . . Cc c contract, that they will submit | prime grate end: utility and commercial |ersn Choc. 412 Welsreen a6 . poor ; : —. Bruised in Car Crash An amazing newly enlarged 4- hat, of sascconeracters tog the orenltee: | ores tas ueiem:, camnere and, cutters |tomestk ”.- 384 Wotnesne ii:, {30] S0@ today at Pentine General jwhen he pleaded guilty to the! 4 Treated for Injuries book. entitled awaee of said contract, for approval. | 14 00-16. 00, coud ted Glues venues. 19 00. pean monk 131 ba me 4 — Se os — plage Town. | Afte 2 c Ili i a levels ") Rw i nd wif be _~—s sayone = san cone = . the eibae mad ae cull to commercial grades 800- |i) Cent 89 wanes Ene . a. pound skull fracture and severe = ship Justice Allen C. Ingle. r -Cor Co sion ae phic ya Laden a pe for it. . Inland 8 , . Pp. Ww ruises Teveals why drugs and medi- Sate ae eae (oe ateeh, et | Salable sheep 1860, not enough wooied |inepie Cop 3.1 Whitt Mot... gos | SCaIP cats when she was towed | 7, yay of sell in Waterford,| Stanley Barber, 32. of 735 Trin-| pontiac General Hospital Sunday | Convenient, easy-access door! It's guaranteed for | year! ‘ gh 18-Ft. . ! 9 May 8th Until 9 PLM for You, Convenience ] mn alt Down v¥ Automatic. Gas, 30-Gallon Galvanized Tank ILLS Trade in your old gas heater today! Size Heavy Step Stools SAVE 1.62! Plenty rugged and dependable! Check Bright Magnesium Finish these sole prices—ond buy now! B thr P Priced Low 7.95 a oom : Workmaster stools are light- A ; Ladder ...cceee. 19.9 22 . weight. easily stored, good- ccessonies iil . looking! Stand alone when Ledder ae loided. 26-in. high, rubber feet ‘ 7-Piece 88 ) : ES Gives a rious modern | ed I ee . s =! ; siV Ku . : “> 1 . . 1 appearan-e Easily installed, i , rt ~ | easy to ciean' Save now' i ' ¥ q . =_ me. 7 ; : = SON] | > ) es ' TELL! i | i ill f am $5 if | | DROP CLOTH ; a * GIVEN AT NO Lp: b; | + eWITH Tvary. Sturdy Stepladders OIL CONVERSION i $10 PURCHASE Extension Planks Retaterced Seasened Wood IN THE PAINT DEPT Speeds Up Painting. Papering —S-F!. Length 4.98 BURNER terete, reo. 95 44.9 5 6-Feet Dive 9.75 Steps ere braced with steel . ay Combines lightweight with de : a. eae Fully braced for sturdiness Re- pendable strength Available Fiberaqlica guaranteed sists sagging. Provides long in other lengths at Sears! against leaks Water connec- waiking surface. Get yours tons on both sides. With now, for Spring painting jobs faucet. Compact size Magnesium J REGULARLY 20-ft. Ladders 229.95 Pull-Up Extension Type J INCLUDES ALL CONTROLS ¢ NO MONEY Priced 49” Lon DOWN ON F.H.A. $5 Down TERMS Made of magnesium for a lifetime of dependable Oil-burning system includes 220 gol. Hooks 5-Ft. Stepladders oil tank, thermostat, —lmit switch, Utility Shower rvi Won't rust or rot. - ‘ Strong. Durable Megnesium service , h borometric damper, combustion ° Lighter to handle, weighs Ideal for Basements, Cottages Pau: : New Only 17.75 less than | /2-Ibs. per foot chamber and stock switch for stand- . ll ' * ip extension Lightweight all-metal Work- Hinged non-skid rubber es on ard forced air installation! See it, Hontart 7.25 & ladder, hooks master stepladder. Easy to feet, ice cleats. Automa- save $20 Installation arranged for, Easy all Rust-resistont So ies ad “Seis bec ar ado tic lock holds upper sec- snes, acute Aome 60 seme i yan tap. With soap dish ™ work sater. use. tion. Also in other sizes. Plumbing and Heating—Perry St. Basement bracket and screws Combination Aluminum Doors Fits Most Standard. Doors ts 39” a Be ete Fo 5 Lege ee eee $6 es Fs :? ¥ » % ey. “ ; ; es me VD Lah il 3 ‘vy aA) 8 — > ~ 4 he $ I > a “ = " - a 4 4 * . ae = Py Fn $ gare ~“o* ~ - . ‘ ‘ ot ll si * | ks Ceo sl _— - ==> ‘ $4 DOWN ts wee wo * oe . 4 Adds a note of distinction , : —<— = oa ee id beetfan. Price ee to your doorway! Can't | Ss ; ee " tust, never needs 2 Homart Gutterin . nied Ss s a a = Door Canopy 10 Ve Off! Homart Tile painting. Interchangeable = jeavywei -Gauge Stee = = 9 Can't Rust. Made of Aluminum The Thrifty Plastic Wall Tile | panels ty changed ; Reg. 2.19 e 1 Sq. Ft from inside tops winter k Heavily galvanized for greater Reg. 13.95 12.95 ' Reg. 3Se 31 Vee drafts — cuts fuel bills rust-resistance. Attractive box ching against snow, rain, Beveled edge plastic tile {o Piano type hinges. Fits style. Full 10-foot length! Other sun asy to instal! yourself beautiful walls that are prac- | fittings available! 48-in. wide Baked-on red, tical, easy to clean. 4\4x4\4-1n even badly warped door green or blue enaMel Save! sq _ in 6 bright colors frames Neg | ; »» i oe ‘ LAST MINUTE SPECIALS ie, we, Kubber Floor Tile Jalousie Window ) 2 Fae INSTALLED BY EXPERTS! erase wacuee Pe 49.95 6x6x'%-inch size...... errs 12° 10% off on om ches... , 15.97 i 3 ° 1 Sh e t Atum. Combination Sash 5.69 tasty installed, oats ZOE“ wetectives 100 roll... 7.75 i - - . eeeerced e - : e . Save 10° Per Badl : in ingies nerves Batts gg Meme SS Mearemutin ge Te eee meme oe ee hae ee Een B40 ER TS BI. 69.95 “ETT 348 Reg. churches schools cott barns: ive Pine Half-Screens Cedar shake Siding Homart Jack Post« 2.45 3.39 | 97% 4 cove ages, 9g 24 x 24-In. bronee wire ....... 3 70 50 sq. ft. with undercoarse 12.79 Reg. 9.20, levels floors 7.69 double rage; guarontee roofs x at ° ec i for 10 yeors! Concrete : ° hove, Covers 391 00 MONTHLY HI Lenger-rosing, ‘heory ME | *St,"TeGrees men’... 49.95 “aoe tis'ne' taining... 7.33 "aerate csc oe 39 ‘ Call now, have. expert roofers install oa ronteed asphalt. Roll covers 100 difing . austen devile, coperage. evemeert Soe on your home at a savings! Add to me og. f. "Peed os bw insects DOLL viReg, 1575, won't rot, bade 13.7 5D* “ar tra on 0 Pet, firemreat 4.59 ‘value of your home—gives added beauty, protection back” — — SEARS 154 North Saginaw St. Phone FE S-4171 = ; ; , ‘ ; * ‘ f . hy